Quinebaug Pomona Grange No. 2 Collection
2003.0141

Summary Information

Repository
Archives & Special Collections at the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center, University of Connecticut Libraries
Creator
Quinebaug Pomona Grange No. 2
Title
Quinebaug Pomona Grange No. 2 Collection
ID
2003.0141
Date
1952.
Extent
0.1 Linear feet
Language
Abstract
In 1952 the Connecticut State Grange sponsored a year long lecture series in the Granges across the state of Connecticut. This collection contains mimeograph copies of the lectures presented by the subordinate Granges of Quinebaug Pomona No. 2.

Preferred Citation

[Item description, #:#], Quinebaug Pomona Grange No. 2 Collection. Archives & Special Collections at the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center,  University of Connecticut Libraries

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History

On 4 December 1867, in a small Washington, D.C. building that housed the office of the Department of Agriculture, the  Order of Patrons of Husbandry, more commonly known as the Grange, was born. A small group of seven men planned an inclusive Fraternal organization that "would bring the farmers of the country together in a fraternity which would bind them as closely as the Masonic fraternity binds its bands..for the mutual benefit and interests of the men who till the soil" [p. 5]. The Seven Founders of the Order of the Patrons of Husbandry were  Oliver H. Kelley,  William Saunders,  Aaron B. Grosh,  William M. Ireland,  John R. Thompson,  Francis McDowell, and  John Trimble (assisted by  Caroline Hall). It was formed in the years following the American Civil War to unite private citizens in improving the economic and social position of the nation's farm population.

The Connecticut State Grange was formed in April 1875 when several subordinate granges met in Danbury. The Quinebaug Pomona Grange No.2 was organized on 6 June 1887 at the Town House in  Pomfret, CT, with a list of 107 charter members [p. 621]. In 1952, the  Quinebaug Pomona Grange No.2 and its subordinate granges participated in a State Grange lecture series on "The History of Connecticut."

Information about the Connecticut State Grange is available on their website.

Excerpts from The Connecticut Granges, 1900. Dodd C4378.

Historical information about the National Grange based on National Grange History.

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Scope and Content

The collection consists of mimeograph copies of seventeen lectures presented by the subordinate Granges of the Quinebaug Pomona Grange No.2 on "The History of  Connecticut" in 1952. The lectures include "The Story of Cotton Thread" (  Obwetuck Grange), "The Cloth Industry in  Connecticut" (  Plainfield Grange, "Famous  Connecticut Inventors" (  Little River Grange), "Historical Churches in  Connecticut" (  Brooklyn Grange), "Prominent  Connecticut Governors" (  Ekonk Grange), "Famous Men in early  Connecticut History" (  Putnam Grange), "Indian Trails in  Connecticut" (  Senexet Grange), "  Connecticut Agriculture from the Days of the 'Yankee Farmer' to the Present" (  Mansfield Grange), "Town Meetings" (  Echo Grange), "  Connecticut Highways and By-Ways" (  Wolf Den Grange), "Historical  Connecticut Homes" (  Quinnatisset Grange), "Education of Yesteryear in  Connecticut" (  Canterbury Grange), "Education of Today in  Connecticut" (  Highland Grange), "Famous Women of  Connecticut" (  Shetucket Grange), "Women's Fashions in  Connecticut" (  Killingly Grange), "  Connecticut, The Arsenal of the Nation" (  Ashford Grange), and "  Connecticut Park and Forest Commission" (  Natchaug Grange). The collection of lectures was distributed by  Mina M. Baxter, Pomona Lecturer of the  Quinebaug Pomona Grange No.2.

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Arrangement

The collection is organized and arranged as received.

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Administrative Information

Publication Information

 Archives & Special Collections at the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center, University of Connecticut Libraries January 2004

University of Connecticut Libraries
405 Babbidge Road Unit 1205
Storrs, Connecticut, 06269
860.486.2524
archives@uconn.edu

Restrictions on Access

There are no access restrictions on this collection.

Restrictions on Use

Permission to publish from these Papers must be obtained in writing from both the University of Connecticut Libraries and the owner(s) of the copyright.

Custodial History

The lectures were sent to Lida Skilton Ives, the mother-in-law of Dr. Jack Stephens who in turn donated them to Archives & Special Collections at the Thomas J. Dodd Center.

Acquisition Information

The collection was donated by Dr. Jack Stephens in December 2003.

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Related Materials

Related Material

Archives & Special Collections has a substantial collection of mateirals pertaining to Connecticut history. For detailed information on these collections please contact the curator or ask at the reference desk.

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Controlled Access Headings

Corporate Name(s)

  • Patrons of Husbandry, Order of

Genre(s)

  • Copies, Mimeograph.
  • Correspondence.

Geographic Name(s)

  • Connecticut--Social life and customs.
  • Pomfret (Conn.)--Social life and customs.

Personal Name(s)

  • Baxter, Mina M.

Subject(s)

  • Agriculture--Connecticut--Pomfret--Societies.
  • Agriculture--Connecticut--Societies.

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Collection Inventory

Lectures 1952 

Box

"The History of Connecticut", 1952 

1:1

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