Thursday, June 30, 2011

“Old Time Sports” kids activities at historical museum July 13



July 1, 2011 – Coloma, MI – The North Berrien Historical Museum will hold a free program for kids ages 6-12 on Wednesday, July 13, called “Summer Time Travelers: Old Time Sports.” Time Travelers are a series of free, interactive programs that each bring to life a fascinating theme so we can discover how the past differed from the world today. All programs feature a fun and welcoming atmosphere, crafts, hands-on activities, demonstrations, and real museum artifacts. There is no cost, but registration is required to ensure space. Register by calling the museum at (269) 468-3330 or visit our website (www.northberrienhistory.org).

“Old Time Sports” will introduce participants to the museum’s new exhibit Women in Baseball: Bloomer Girls of Berrien County & Beyond and they’ll meet a re-enactor uniformed as a Western Bloomer Girl, the barnstorming baseball team based in Watervliet a century ago. Our Time Travelers will also try their hand at croquet and other historic games, and make a local sports history pennant to take home.

For more information, contact the North Berrien Historical Museum. Remaining Time Travelers programs in 2011 include Pioneers (July 27), Paw Paw Lake Fun (August 10) and Native Americans (August 24). The museum’s summer hours are Tuesday-Saturday, 10am-4pm.

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Maud Nelson Festival June 24-26, 2011


(Image courtesy of the Tri-City Record)

The first ever Maud Nelson Festival and Girls Baseball Tournamnent will take place on June 24-26. Events will take place at Library Park and Hay's Park in Watervliet and at the North Berrien Historical Museum in Coloma. Women in Baseball: Bloomer Girls of Berrien County & Beyond is now on display at the museum. An opening reception will take place on Friday, June 24 from 5-8pm.

Thursday, June 16, 2011

“Women in Baseball” to feature history of Watervliet’s Maud Nelson


A new exhibit at the North Berrien Historical Museum will highlight the history of women’s baseball from its origins to the present day. “Women in Baseball: Bloomer Girls of Berrien County and Beyond” will be on display at the North Berrien Historical Museum from June 17 through November 11, 2011. An opening reception is planned for Friday, June 24 from 5-8pm.
The exhibit discusses why after more than 150 years as ‘America’s pastime,’ baseball remains a predominately male sport, despite the fact that women have played the game since its invention in the mid-19th century. Although American society in general may have looked at women's involvement in baseball as a curiosity, the exhibit brings to life the images of women who loved the crack of the bat and the thrill of a running one-handed catch with two outs in the ninth, according to guest curator John Kovach of St. Mary’s College.

“Women in Baseball” features nearly 200 objects ranging from picture postcards, game programs, photographs, baseballs, jerseys, and a uniform from the 1993 movie A League of Their Own. Exhibit visitors will get to know Jackie Mitchell, who played for the House of David and struck out Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig in an exhibition game in 1931, and Sophie Kurys, of the South Bend Blue Sox, who still holds the record for the most stolen bases in one season in any league -- 201 steals in 203 attempts in 1946.

The local highlight is the story of renowned pitcher Maud Nelson who lived in Watervliet from 1904 to 1917. Maud was one of the most influential female baseball players in American history with a career spanning over forty years. In 1901 Maud Nelson was playing for the Chicago Star Bloomers when she married her team manager John B. Olson Jr. In 1904 the couple moved into a farm in Watervliet on what is now the Paw Paw Lake Golf Course. At the time John Olson managed the Cherokee Indian Baseball Team, which traveled around the country in a custom Pullman railcar. Newspapers reported that Miss Maud Nelson, the famous lady pitcher, pitched two or three innings for the Indian team starting in 1908. In 1910 Maud Nelson became owner-manager of the Western Bloomer Girls who traveled the country competing against male teams in front of huge crowds.

To compliment the exhibit there will be several speakers and programs during the summer and fall. Guest curator John Kovach will speak at the museum on the history of girls and women in baseball on Tuesday, June 21 at 7pm. The House of David Echoes will play a Vintage Baseball Game behind Coloma Elementary School on July 22 at 6pm. On August 16 at 7pm, the Loma Theatre will screen the documentary The Girl in Centerfield, which tells the story of Carolyn King of Ypsilanti, who in 1973 was the first girl to play in Little League. Finally on September 20 at the museum a panel of former All-American Girls Baseball League players will discuss their experiences playing ball for teams in Grand Rapids, Muskegon, and Kalamazoo during the 1940s and 1950s. Admission to the exhibit Women in Baseball and all programs is free of charge.

For more information call Executive Director Alexander Gates at 269-468-3330 or visit www.northberrienhistory.org.

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Summer Time Travelers are free interactive programs for kids



The North Berrien Historical Museum again looks forward to Summer Time Travelers, a series of free interactive programs especially designed for ages 6-12. With our two main goals of learning and fun, every session features hands-on activities and crafts focused on a fascinating theme, as well as real historic artifacts and exhibits. Summer Time Travelers aims to inspire a lifelong interest in history and historical museums. These programs are free but to ensure space, advance registration is required. To register or for more information, call the museum at (269) 468-3330 or download a registration form and return.

Highlights of Time Travelers this summer include a visit by award-winning Michigan historian and Storyteller Larry Massie on June 29. Time Travelers will be held from 10am – Noon (registration required), followed at 1pm with a free Storytelling show open to all ages called “Adventures in Michigan’s Past” (no registration). Other programs will make use of the museum’s traveling trunks and exhibits throughout our grounds, including the Women in Baseball exhibit this summer. The dates and themes for Summer Time Travelers 2011 include: Lumberjacks (June 29), Old Time Sports (July 13), Pioneers (July 27), Paw Paw Lake Fun (August 10) and Native Americans (August 24).

Volunteers make it possible for us to offer these free programs to the community. If you would like to help with Summer Time Travelers in 2011, please call the museum to sign up.

Popular Michigan historian and Storyteller comes to Coloma June 29



The North Berrien Historical Museum is honored to host Historian and Storyteller Larry Massie at two free public programs on Wednesday, June 29, 2011. Massie is the author of twenty books and hundreds of articles on Michigan history, and was recently awarded the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Historical Society of Michigan. He has shared his enthusiasm for Michigan’s heritage at hundreds of Storytelling performances, and has proven to be a fun and popular guest who gets citizens excited about the history of their state and community.

The first program on June 29, from 10:00am – 12:00pm, is “Summer Time Travelers: Lumberjacks” and is part of a public program series designed for children ages 6-12. Through hands-on activities and demonstrations, attendees will learn about the history of logging and lumber industries in Michigan in the 1800s. Attendees will receive a historical coloring book by the Michigan Forest Association, create a ‘log marking’ craft, and play a game inspired by our local history of shingle-making on the Paw Paw River. The highlight of this interactive program will be Larry Massie’s dramatic Storytelling as a “rough-hewn lumberjack” from Michigan’s lumber era. Advance registration is required to ensure space; download a form or call the museum at 269-468-3330.

The second program on June 29, from 1:00 – 2:30pm, is “Adventures in Michigan’s Past” and will be a free, all-ages performance held in the Nichols Building at the North Berrien Historical Museum. (No registration is required). In this program, Larry Massie’s dynamic Storytelling will bring to life a range of true historical vignettes featuring Indian chiefs, French voyageurs, black-robed Jesuit priests, intrepid pioneers, salty Great Lakes ship captains, and Underground Railroad conductors who risked their lives guiding slaves to freedom. Visitors are encouraged to tour the museum’s exhibits before or after the program, including the new local history exhibit Women in Baseball: Bloomer Girls of Berrien County & Beyond.