The Francestown Heritage Museum is ready to reopen after completing its second floor addition, curator Bill McAuley said. Visitors will be able to peruse the reorganized collection starting Labor Day weekend, following COVID-19 guidelines.
The Heritage Museum has stored a collection of historic artifacts from town since 2015, after founder O. Alan Thulander enlisted Fire Department members to reassemble a salvaged barn from Weare to house a collection of Francestownโs historic vehicles, McAuley said. Until this year, the townโs collection of domestic, commercial, fire fighting, and agricultural artifacts had been crammed into gaps between the townโs horse-drawn fire wagon, hearses, and Concord stage coach, he said. Other items were stashed away in the loft and totally invisible to visitors, McAuleyโs wife Elly Miles said.
Voters agreed to fund the museumโs expansion a couple years ago, and the barnโs basement was paved last October. Miles and McAuley rearranged the inventory by category over the following months, which posed some difficulties unto itself as residents doubled the size of the collection with donated items, McAuley said. Today, bound guidebooks await visitors with a corresponding page and description for each unique piece. Bound books on the history of the 2nd New Hampshire Turnpike are also available by donation at the museum, developed for a February presentation that drew more than 100 people, McAuley said.
โDo you know how to rope a bed?โ he asked, gesturing to a recently donated antique bed in the basement floor that stood near less identifiable domestic contraptions, later revealed to be a manual laundry agitator and a sturdy metal and wood cabbage shredder. Other antiques stood out from the collection, including gleaming milk bottles from defunct local dairies, and ice harvesting equipment from Pleasant Pond. If thereโs something the museumโs missing, McAuley said, itโs more of a presence from the townโs soapstone industry – but most artifacts are either submerged in the quarry or in the collapsed sawmill building along Route 47.
Heritage Museum typically sees its largest crowds on Labor Day weekend, McAuley said, and has periodically hosted weaving and spinning demonstrations as well as tours for school groups, who walk up from the elementary school. One time, McAuley discussed the potential for maneuvering the museumโs Concord stage coach on sand with a man who claimed to be a prince in his native Saudi Arabia, who stopped in on a whim on his way into Manchester.
Those interested in visiting the museum can contact Bob McAuley atย 547-8320 for updates and the latest protocol for preventing COVID-19 during visits.
