9/18/14

Thurs, 10/23 & 30, 7 p.m. FREE Memoir Writing Workshop

PRESS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT: Jean Schweid at 860-441-6750 or jschweid@groton-ct.gov
 
Memoir Writing for Adults, a Two-Part Workshop at the Groton Public Library
Memoir Writing for Adults, a two-part workshop facilitated by Lisa Saunders, will be held at the Groton Public Library on Thursday, October 23 & October 30 at 7 p.m.
The workshop will give participants an opportunity to practice writing their life story to share with family, friends and the public.  Participants only need  bring pen and paper or a laptop to class. Other helpful materials to bring to class include yearbooks or photo albums.
Writing exercises will include some basic questions to start the process of writing a life story.  Answers will be shared in the second class. Some of the questions participants will be asked are:
•        When/where born?
•        What was your childhood home like?
•        What were the happiest times?
•        List your most vivid memories. Pick one and expand upon it.
•        Were you ever in an accident?
•        What major life lesson have you learned?
•        Did someone ever save your life or you save theirs?
•        Were you ever afraid of something?
About the Instructor: Lisa Saunders of Mystic is a freelance writer and author of three memoirs including Mystic Seafarer's Trail.  She is also an award-winning writer, TV talk show host, publicist and columnist for Patherfinder magazine where she features "Widow/ers of History." A graduate of Cornell University, she is a part-time historical interpreter at Mystic Seaport, member of the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) and Mystic River Historical Society, and is the parent representative of the Congenital CMV Foundation.
Participants should plan to attend both sessions. Space is limited. Registration is required. Please call the Library at 860-441-6750 or email the library at reference@groton-ct.gov
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10/25:Tea and Talk on 100-year-old Time Capsule Message from WWI Europe

 
 
 

 
100 Year-Old Time Capsule from Europe During WWI--
Former Confederate Nurse and Great-Granddaughter of Benedict Arnold’s Would-Be Slayer Speaks from Grave
 
 
Message will be read at Anna Warner Bailey Chapter’s annual tea fundraiser on October 25

 
 
Groton, Conn.— After 100 years, the mysterious contents of a time capsule were partially revealed at the meeting of the Anna Warner Bailey Chapter, National Society of Daughters of the American Revolution (NSDAR). The recently transcribed time-capsule letter and the life of the sender will be discussed on:
 
Saturday, October 25, 2014, 2-4 p.m.
"Tea and War-Weary Message from Century-Old Time Capsule"
St. Mark's Episcopal Church, 15 Pearl St., Mystic, CT
Keynote Speaker: Lisa Saunders, author
Admission: $8.00. The Anna Warner Bailey Chapter of the Connecticut Daughters of the American Revolution (CTDAR) will serve tea, finger sandwiches and dessert on bone china. Proceeds from the tea fundraiser will benefit several civic projects such as the Good Citizen, American History Essay and Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) student awards. 
 
Over the past century, the time capsule was held in a safe at the Fort Griswold Monument House in Groton. Abigail (Abby) Day Slocomb sent the soldered-shut tin case to the Anna Warner Bailey Chapter in a wooden box from her hotel in Zurich, Switzerland, in 1914 during the early months of WWI. Slocomb is the great-granddaughter of Abigail Dolbeare Hinman who tried, but failed, to shoot traitor Benedict Arnold with a musket through her window as he marched on New London ordering it burned.
 
The time capsule was opened on September 6, 2014, the 233rd anniversary of traitor Benedict Arnold’s burning of New London and the massacre at Fort Griswold in the Battle of Groton Heights, Conn., on September 6, 1781. The time-capsule message was written by the 76-year-old Abigail Day Slocomb on Thanksgiving Day of 1914. In keeping with her patriotic ancestors, Slocomb, the first regent of the Anna Warner Bailey Chapter, hoped that sending a time capsule to her DAR chapter would inspire someone to read its enclosed uncensored accounts of the war in order to report the truth about it. She wondered how history would remember the Kaiser: “Is he a mad-man? thirsting for blood?”
 
 
Born and raised in New Orleans, Louisiana, on Oct. 5, 1838, Abby Day summered with her family in Stonington, Conn., beginning in 1851. Abby married Cuthbert Harrison Slocomb of New Orleans and served as a nurse for the Confederate Army while her husband served as an officer. Abby found him among her patients after he was badly wounded carrying dispatches to General Robert E. Lee. Cuthbert died in 1873, and in 1888, Abby moved to Monument Street next to Fort Griswold in Groton. She named her home “Daisy Crest Over Groton.” It’s now a condominium.
 
As the great-granddaughter of Abigail Dolbeare and Capt. Elisha Hinman, a New London privateer during the Revolution; and granddaughter of mariner Capt. James Day, “who, during the War of 1812, deliberately wrecked his vessel off Point Judith to prevent its capture by the British,” Abby was asked by the Daughters of the American Revolution (founded 1890) to be the first regent of the Anna Warner Bailey Chapter (organized 1893). Under Abby’s determined guidance, the Chapter was responsible for the design of the Connecticut State flag and organization of the Monument House Museum at Fort Griswold.
 
In 1906, when her married daughter living in Europe became ill, Abby left her Groton home to care for her.  Abby did not, however, stop performing patriotic duties. When what was to become known as the Great War broke out, she was determined that the truth would be told it: “…now in my old age I seek in vain for an absolutely unprejudiced & true History of those trying days!”
 
Janet F. Purinton of Mystic, Regent of the Anna Warner Bailey Chapter, said, “We do indeed have many hours of history which we’re anxious to share. Historic Preservation Chairman Louisa Watrous will be opening, cataloguing and storing all the information in archival boxes, which will take a bit of time."

Abby did not live long enough to see the end of the war, which was one of the bloodiest wars of all time. She died three years after sending the time capsule on December 6, 1917, at the age of 79. The war ended on Nov. 11, 1918, on what is known as Armistice Day or Veteran’s Day. Abby is buried at Enzenbuhl, Zurich, Switzerland.
 

To see images and videos of the time capsule, visit: http://authorlisasaunders.blogspot.com/2014/09/tea-and-talk-on-100-year-old-message.html

For more information, contact Mrs. Janet F. Purinton of Mystic, Regent of Anna Warner Bailey Chapter, CTDAR, at: (860) 572-8780, awbregent@gmail.com.
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Watch time capsule opening on Youtube:
 



     

    The portrait of Abby Day Slocomb, the first regent of the Anna Warner Bailey Chapter, National Society of Daughters of the American Revolution, amid reflections of the artifacts in the Monument House Museum at Fort Griswold, which she helped organize.



     

    Connecticut State flag. Designed by Abby Day Slocomb and her Anna Warner Bailey Chapter, National Society of Daughters of the American Revolution. Based on the 1639 Connecticut seal, the Latin transcription means, “He who hath transplanted shall sustain.” The flag hangs in the Monument House Museum at Fort Griswold.


    The time capsule at Fort Griswold Monument House was sent in 1914 by Abby Day Slocomb, first regent of Anna Warner Bailey Chapter, National Society of Daughters of the American Revolution, from Zurich, Switzerland. She addressed it to regent of the Anna Warner Bailey Chapter,
    DAR. A letter from a U.S. Special Commissioner dated March 1, 1915, stated that the “package is to be passed at the port of arrival without examination of its contents, and WITHOUT DESTRUCTION OF THE INNER METAL CASE.”



    The opening of the century-old time capsule from Abby Day Slocomb to the Anna Warner Bailey Chapter, National Society of Daughters of the American Revolution. Cut open at Fort Griswold Monument House, Groton, by Joe de la Cruz of Hillary Company, a metal-fabrication manufacturer.  The portrait of Abby Day Slocomb is in the background.
     



     
    Letter written Thanksgiving Day in 1914 and inserted into time capsule by Abby Day Slocomb, first regent of Anna Warner Bailey Chapter, National Society of Daughters of the American Revolution, from Zurich, Switzerland.



    One of several hand-sewn linen packets pulled from time capsule.


    The portrait of Abigail Dolbeare Hinman  by Daniel Huntington was commissioned by her grandson, Thomas Day, and completed in 1856. The portrait was donated to the
    Lyman Allyn Art Museum of New London, Conn., by a descendent. 

    Contact: Rebecca Marsie, Communications Coordinator, 860.443.2545 x112 / marsie@lymanallyn.org o
    or

    Erin Walker

    Collections Assistant

    Lyman Allyn Art Museum

    625 Williams Street 

    New London, CT  06320

     
    Image is used on the cover of the 2006 book, Revolutionary Mothers: Women in the Struggle for America's Independence,” by Carol Berkin.
    ***

     
    Lisa Saunders, Public Relations Chairman
    Anna Warner Bailey Chapter, Inc.
    P.O. Box 389, Mystic, CT 06355
    LisaSaunders42@gmail.com


    About the Anna Warner Bailey Chapter, National Society of Daughters of the American Revolution:


    Chapter meetings/luncheons are 2nd Thursday of Oct-Dec, Mar - Jun, 11 a.m. September meetings held on the 6th to commemorate Battle of Groton Heights.

    Mission of the National Society Daughters of the American Revolution: to perpetuate the memory and the spirit of the men and women who achieved American Independence; to promote the development of an enlightened public opinion, and to foster patriotic citizenship.

    Any woman is eligible for membership in the Daughters of the American Revolution who is not less than 18 years old and who is descended from a patriot of the American Revolution.

    For more information, contact Mrs. Janet F. Purinton of Mystic, Regent of Anna Warner Bailey Chapter, CTDAR, at: (860) 572-8780, awbregent@gmail.com.
     

    9/3/14

    A100-Year-Old Time Capsule Mystery Solved!

    IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    Lisa Saunders, Public Relations Chairmen
    Anna Warner Bailey Chapter
    Daughters of the American Revolution
     

    One Hundred-Year-Old Time Capsule Mystery To Be Solved

    Anna Warner Bailey Chapter, National Society of Daughters of the American Revolution, Hosts Public Reception to Celebrate

     

    Reception at Groton Congregational Church free and open to the public

     

    Groton, CT—After 100 years, the mysterious contents of a time capsule held at the Fort Griswold Monument House will be revealed at the meeting of the Anna Warner Bailey Chapter, National Society of Daughters of the American Revolution (NSDAR), on the anniversary of the Battle of Groton Heights, September 6, 2014. The public is invited to view its contents at the following reception held at Groton Congregational Church: 

     

    Saturday, September 6, 2014, 1 p.m.

    Groton Congregational Church

    62 Monument Street, Groton, CT

    Light refreshments

     

    A public reception will be held following the Anna Warner Bailey Chapter 10:30 a.m. business meeting and invitation-only opening of their 100-year-old time capsule. The “Time Capsule,” a soldered shut tin case placed in a wooden box, was mailed from Zurich, Switzerland, 100 years ago by Anna Warner Bailey Chapter founder, Abby Day Slocomb. A letter from a U.S. Special Commissioner dated March 1, 1915, stated that the “package is to be passed at the port of arrival without examination of its contents, and WITHOUT DESTRUCTION OF THE INNER METAL CASE.”

     

    For more information, contact Mrs. Janet F. Purinton, Regent of Anna Warner Bailey Chapter, CTDAR, at: (860) 572-8780, awbregent@gmail.com.

     

    ###

    Chapter meetings/luncheons are 2nd Thursday of Oct-Dec, Mar - Jun, 11 a.m. September meetings held on the 6th to commemorate Battle of Groton Heights.

     

    Mission of the National Society Daughters of the American Revolution: to perpetuate the memory and the spirit of the men and women who achieved American Independence; to promote the development of an enlightened public opinion, and to foster patriotic citizenship.

     

    Any woman is eligible for membership in the Daughters of the American Revolution who is not less than 18 years old and who is descended from a patriot of the American Revolution.

    THE ABOVE PRESS RELEASE RESULTED IN THIS COVERAGE:

    Mystic River Press | Mystic, CT | Time capsule from 1914 a ...

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