Weave a One-of-a-Kind Bird House with Master Basketmaker Mary May
Other
55 Stockton St,Princeton NJ 08540
13 November, 2021
Description
Spend a day with Master Basket Maker Mary May and create this unique home for our feathered friends for the holidays! Master Basket Maker Mary May has designed a special "For the Birds" Bird House Weaving One-Day Workshop specifically for Morven in celebration of our exhibition In Nature's Realm: The Art of Gerard Rutgers Hardenbergh . Ticket price includes museum admission as well as workshop. The body of the birdhouse is based on the South Jersey Berry Basket. Mary makes the glass ovals around the opening of the birdhouse from repurposed wine bottles using a special process she developed. Each glass piece has its own shape so no two birdhouses will look the same. The top of the birdhouse, also made by Mary, is recycled cedar wood. Mary May has been teaching and making baskets for nearly 20 years. Her focus is weaving traditional New Jersey baskets such as berry baskets, pound fish baskets, eel fykes, pack baskets, and market baskets. Don’t miss the opportunity to work with Mary to create this one-of-a-kind home for our feathered friends - may be used outdoors or indoors as a decorative feature. Bring your friends and make it a fun afternoon. All CDC guidelines will be followed and seating will be socially distanced. All materials and supplies are provided. Space is limited for this workshop to ensure every student receives individualized attention. Registration ends November 9. HISTORY Home to one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence and to five New Jersey governors, Morven has played a role in the history of New Jersey and the nation for more than 250 years. Morven was built by Richard Stockton (1730–1781), a signer of the Declaration of Independence, in the 1750s on property granted to his grandfather by William Penn (1644–1718) in 1701. Of course, European settlers were not the first to call this land home. Native Americans lived in the Mid-Atlantic region for more than 12,000 years. Archaeology at Morven has uncovered evidence of Lenni-Lenape tool-making on its five acres. After a fire in 1758, the home was rebuilt and christened Morven, (“big hill” in Gaelic) by Richard’s wife Annis Boudinot Stockton (1736–1801). Richard was a graduate of the first class of The College of New Jersey (now Princeton University) and became a prominent lawyer. In 1776 he was one of five New Jersey delegates appointed to the Continental Congress where he signed the Declaration of Independence. The British ransacked Morven later that year, capturing and imprisoning Stockton. He was released in January 1777. Annis is one of America’s earliest published female poets, immortalizing heroes of the Revolution such as George Washington, who called her “the elegant Muse of Morven.” As wealthy lawyers, the first two generations of Stocktons at Morven owned enslaved men, women, and children. Records indicate that by the time the third generation of Stocktons took ownership of Morven in 1840, enslaved people no longer lived on the property. At first, they were replaced by free African Americans, and then eventually by immigrants from Ireland and Germany. Servants worked at Morven well into the twentieth century. Four more generations of Stocktons resided at Morven through the early 20th century before the property was leased to General Robert Wood Johnson, Chairman of Johnson & Johnson from 1928 to 1944. He was followed by five New Jersey governors when Morven served as the state’s first Governor’s Mansion (1945–1981). After the Governor’s Mansion was relocated in 1982, Morven went through an extensive restoration and archaeological investigation. Morven re-opened as a museum and garden in 2004. To view a timeline of Morven, click here. RESTORATION An unprecedented public and private partnership coupled with an extensive document search and archaeological excavation provided the foundation for a comprehensive renovation of Morven that began in 1999. The program restored historic features of the grounds, including an 18th-century horse chestnut walk and a colonial revival garden. The buildings were returned to original colors, 20th century alterations were removed, and historic features, such as the renowned parquet floors, were re-installed. An extensive nine-zone environmental system allows the museum to regulate temperature and humidity in each gallery, and security, lighting, fire suppression, and handicap-accessibility systems allows Morven to meet the industry standards for museums. STOCKTON EDUCATION CENTER Opened in the summer of 2018, Morven’s newest space is a gracious state-of-the-art building that allows us to expand our range of programming and events steps away from the historic mansion and overlooking the beautiful Colonial Revival Garden. In over 3,000 square feet in three adjoining spaces, the Gathering Space, the Atrium, and our Classroom, we host hands-on workshops, lectures, family days, and so much more.
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