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November 2010

In this issue
-- Garrison Keillor & Emily Dickinson: Face to Face
-- Emily Dickinson's Birthday Open House
-- NEH Teacher Workshop
-- Dickinson-Inspired Gifts
-- Give the Gift of Membership
-- "Seeing New Englandly" Encore Presentation
-- Spotlight on the Dickinsons and Thanksgiving
-- About the Museum
-- Are you on FacebookŪ? Join us!

One Day is there of the series
Termed "Thanksgiving Day"
Celebrated part at table
Part in memory -
---Fr 1110


Museum Hours
:
Wednesday - Sunday 11 a.m. - 4 p.m.

SPECIAL HOURS:
Closed Wednesday and Thursday, November 24 and 25
for the Thanksgiving Holiday.

Open as usual Friday through Sunday, November 26-28


Garrison Keillor & Emily Dickinson: Face to Face

Seating at Garrison Keillor's December 9 benefit performance for the Emily Dickinson Museum is sold out!

In response to popular demand, the Museum has arranged a simultaneous videocast on the big screen at Converse Hall on the Amherst College campus. You can order tickets at $10 each through our website. The videocast will begin at 7 p.m.

Garrison Keillor, host of "A Prairie Home Companion" on public radio, has mentioned and poked good-natured fun at Dickinson numerous times on his show. Upon hearing last fall that the plaster ceiling in the parlor of the poet's home had collapsed, Keillor offered to help the Museum with a benefit performance.

Join us as Garrison Keillor faces off with Emily Dickinson!

ORDER TICKETS HERE


Emily Dickinson's Birthday Open House

Don't miss the Museum's annual Open House on Saturday, December 11, from 1 to 4 p.m. in honor of the poet's 180th birthday (she was born Dec. 10, 1830). The celebration, which is free and open to the public, will once again feature self-guided tours of the Homestead (the poet's birthplace and home), and The Evergreens (the home next door of her brother Austin's family). Throughout the afternoon, visitors will be able to sample Dickinsonian refreshments, make holiday crafts, and enjoy traditional 19th-century folk music.

The 15th annual Open House in honor of the poet's birthday will be the Museum's last, to make way for new celebrations of Dickinson's birthday in coming years. This year will also mark the end of a beloved Open House tradition. For the final time, an anonymous donor will provide a rose to the first 180 visitors.

At The Evergreens, visitors can experience "Art has a 'Palate,'" a new exhibition of Dickinson family dining and entertaining practices created in conjunction with Museums10's collaboration on the theme "Table for Ten." Visitors can also take part in a mini-marathon reading of The Single Hound, an edition of Dickinson's poetry edited by her niece, Martha Dickinson Bianchi, in 1914. The 142 poems in The Single Hound were among the many that the poet sent to her sister-in-law, Susan Dickinson. The two friends were born just nine days apart (Susan on December 19, 1830), so the reading will honor both the poet and her most admired reader.

The afternoon's musicians are Steven Howland, fiddle, and Tim Van Egmond, hammered dulcimer. Howland has been playing the fiddle since he discovered traditional New England-style music and dance in the early 1980s. Van Egmond is a similarly accomplished hammered dulcimer player; as a member of the contra dance band Swallowtail, he has performed nationwide.

In addition, the popular documentary "Seeing New Englandly" will be shown at Amherst Cinema. Read on for details.


NEH Teacher Workshop

The Emily Dickinson Museum has received a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities to host a Landmarks of American History and Culture Workshop for Schoolteachers in July 2011.

Landmarks Workshops provide K-12 educators from across the United States the opportunity to engage in intensive study and discussion of important topics in American history. The one-week academies give participants direct experiences in the interpretation of significant historical sites and the use of archival and other primary evidence. Participants receive a $1,200 stipend to defray costs associated with attending the workshop.

The Emily Dickinson Museum's workshop, "Emily Dickinson: Person, Poetry, and Place," will be offered twice, July 10-15 and July 17-22. Participants will attend lectures, engage in hands-on activities, tour the Museum and other local sites related to Emily Dickinson, and develop curriculum ideas for their classrooms back home.

More information about the workshop, eligibility requirements, and application procedures are available at www.emilydickinsonmuseum.org/nehworkshop.


Dickinson-Inspired Gifts

The Emily Dickinson Museum Shop offers a wide selection of gifts that reflect some of the poet's favorite interests: birds, gardens, baking, and poetry! There are also the indispensable collections of Dickinson's poems and a variety of biographies.

Friends of the Emily Dickinson Museum will enjoy a special 20% discount during Member Shopping Days on Saturday and Sunday, December 4 and 5, and Saturday and Sunday, December 11 and 12. Purchases at the 20% discount must be made at the Museum Shop. Members may still use their 10% discount for online purchases.

Not a Friend yet? Read on for information about how to join!


Give the Gift of Membership

For the person who has everything or even for the person who doesn't, membership in the Friends of the Emily Dickinson Museum is the perfect gift. It's easy to wrap and lasts an entire year! We'll even mail it for you.

Household or Single Membership benefits include:

  • Unlimited free admission to tours.
    Individual: admission for member and a guest
    Household: admission for up to two member adults and two children under 18
  • "A Message from the Meadows" print newsletter
  • Annual Museum program calendar
  • "Emily's E-update," a monthly electronic newsletter
  • 10% discount on Museum Shop purchases (includes online orders)
  • Advance notice and free or reduced fees for Museum programs
  • Invitations to Members Day, special events and previews
  • Two complimentary guest passes good for one-time admission

JOIN NOW!


"Seeing New Englandly" Encore Presentation

Join us at Amherst Cinema on Saturday, December 11, for an encore presentation of the new documentary "Seeing New Englandly." The 11:30 a.m. showing is part of the Museum's Emily Dickinson 180th birthday celebrations. Tickets are available at the Amherst Cinema, 28 Amity Street. Admission is free for members of Amherst Cinema or the Emily Dickinson Museum and $5 for all others.

After the screening a discussion with filmmaker Ernest Urvater and scriptwriter and narrator Susan Snively will be held at the Amherst History Museum, 67 Amity Street, across the street from the Amherst Cinema. Amherst History Museum will host an open house for its two exhibitions, "Emily Dickinson's Amherst" and "The Art and Nature of Mabel Loomis Todd," that day from noon to 3 p.m.

DVDs of "Seeing New Englandly" may be purchased at the Emily Dickinson Museum Shop (280 Main Street) and through our on-line Museum Shop.


Spotlight on the Dickinsons and Thanksgiving

In 1863, Abraham Lincoln declared Thanksgiving a national holiday. Sarah Josepha Hale, editor of Godey's Lady's Book, had successfully led the campaign for a national Thanksgiving day to promote unity during the troubled times of the Civil War.

Before 1863, the governors of individual states were responsible for designating days of Thanksgiving. In anticipation of one such day in Massachusetts, Emily Dickinson wrote to her brother Austin (away in Boston) on November 16, 1851:

"We are thinking most of Thanksgiving, than anything else just now--how full will be the circle, less then by none--how the things will smoke, how the board will groan with the thousand savory viands--how when the day is done, Lo the evening cometh, laden with merrie laugh, and happy conversation. . . . Thanksgiving indeed, to a family united, once more together before they go away!"

Emily Dickinson celebrated Thanksgiving the same way we do now--with family, food, and frivolity. Had she been so inclined, her festivities could even have included football. The first Thanksgiving football game was played in 1876. It was also the first Intercollegiate Championship Football Game in America, Yale vs. Princeton. Yale won 2 to 0.

Happy Thanksgiving!


About the Museum

EDM The Emily Dickinson Museum: The Homestead and The Evergreens is dedicated to educating diverse audiences about the poet's life, family, creative work, times, and enduring relevance, and to preserving and interpreting the Homestead and The Evergreens as historical resources for the benefit of scholars and the general public.

The Emily Dickinson Museum is owned by the Trustees of Amherst College and overseen by a separate Board of Governors. The Museum is responsible for raising its own operating and capital funds.

The Emily Dickinson Museum is a member of Museums10, a collaboration of ten museums linked to the Five Colleges in the Pioneer Valley--Amherst, Hampshire, Mt. Holyoke, and Smith Colleges, and the University of Massachusetts Amherst.

The Museum's Tour Center may be reached at 413-542-2947, Wednesday through Sunday, during museum hours.


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