"Artifacts
Reveal Carroll's Past" When the Historical Society was
founded in 1939, the founders envisioned an institution whose purposes were "to
collect and preserve all papers, books, documents or other matter of things pertaining to
the history of Carroll County..." and "to create a public interest in the
History of Carroll County." The organization quickly began to amass a wide variety of
artifacts donated by local residents. Sixty years later, the Society owns an extensive
collection representing all areas of the county and spanning three centuries. Each
artifact in the collection tells a story about the people who made and used it and helps
us document our rich past. The Historical Society recently
created a new changing exhibition gallery in the Kimmey House, 210 E. Main St. in
Westminster. The first exhibit in the new Shriver-Weybright Gallery is Doorway to the Past featuring 160 objects from the
Society's permanent collection. The exhibition received generous financial support from
the Carroll County Times, other local businesses
and the Community Foundation of Carroll County. The accompanying photographs show a
selection of the objects now on display. |
Before the development of photography, the only way to capture
someones likeness was to paint or draw a portrait. In the 16th century,
Italian artists began creating miniature portraits on materials such as parchment or
paper. Later, British artists developed a
method for using ivory as the base material. Miniaturists
required great skill and special tools to produce detailed images on the slippery, uneven
surface of a tiny piece of ivory. The
finished portrait was enclosed in a case, usually of gold or silver, with glass to protect
the fragile image. Miniatures reached the
height of their popularity at the end of the 18th and into the early years of
the 19th century. By the 1850s,
photography had replaced portraiture as the preferred method of capturing a persons
image and miniatures almost completely disappeared. Historical Society of Carroll County
collection, gift of Margaret Whittlesey Werling, 1996. Photo caption 2: Adam
Good Tavern Lock, 1760-1790 Photo caption 3: Carroll Guards Shako, 1860. Photo Caption 4: Eli Bentley Tall Case Clock, 1815.
Photo caption
5: Silhouette, Mrs. John Ross Key, 1820-1830 |
| The Historical Society's new exhibition Doorway to the Past is open Tuesday-Saturday
(except holidays) from 1:00-4:00 p.m. The Shriver-Weybright Gallery is located at 210 E.
Main St., Westminster.
|