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Showing posts with label Ohio River Museum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ohio River Museum. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 9, 2017

Buttons, Buttons, and Brailing for Mussels

Every time I visit the Ohio River Museum in Marietta I learn something new. This time it was mussels that fascinated me--not the kind my youngest son has, but the kind that live in the Ohio River and were once harvested for a surprising use.

I wondered about this boat.


What was it? Why so many hooks? I've seen this boat every time I've visited or performed at the museum but never paused long enough to really look at it or read the information panels.

Mussels? Buttons? Really?

Really.

In the early part of the 1900's fishing for mussels became a popular activity along the Ohio River. At first the mussels were a novelty and people looked for them to get the freshwater pearls hidden inside. The mussels were cooked in large bonfires and the cooked meat inside discarded or fed to the dogs--people rarely if ever eate them. What a wastes.

But an industry soon developed that focused not on pearls but on a different use: button-making.

A factory to manufacture shell buttons was built in St. Marys, WV in 1910 and remained in operation until 1928. Another factory was located at Newport, Ohio and there were others further downstream.

from WVGenWeb

mussel fisherman, from the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History collection

Poaching and over-fishing the mussels led to a sharp decline in their numbers, and mussel-fishing was eventually outlawed. It is making a slow, controlled comeback today, under strict regulations. They are no longer harvested for buttons however; that industry died out with the coming of plastic buttons.Before the decline of mussels it was discovered that the shells could be ground into little pellets, which were then shipped overseas to be implanted in oysters--the pellets developed into what are called cultured pearls. This is still the current use for mussel shells.

The zebra mussel, an invasive, non-native species, is now threatening the native mussel population and is a cause of great concern.

But about those boats:
The mussel boats were flat-bottomed jon boats, fitted with a rack on which long poles holding a multitude of strong lines with four-pronged hooks at the end, called brails.

At the Ohio River Museum, Marietta

When brailing, the poles would be lowered and the brails dragged through the water. Each hook had a small ball on the end that the mussels would grab hold of. Musselers could tell by the weight on the pole when it was time to pull the brail in.


Nathan Lynn, who provided music and river history during the Inland Waterways Festival last weekend, used to go musseling with his father, who did this for a living at the time. His description of the process, and the song he wrote about it, made me wish I'd been a river rat when I was young too.

An article in the Parkersburg News by Dianne Hott is quoted on the Newport, OH history page, giving this description of mussel boats: "Each boat was equipped with poles about ten feet long, bamboo if available, or sometimes a straight branch cut from the nearest tree.  These were fastened to upright braces affixed to the sides of the boats. 

 Each pole had 30 or 40 heavy lines going down from it, and at the bottom of each line were study [this is the word used—seems it would have been sturdy mm] hooks, each with four barbs.  The poles were lowered into the water and towed along, lines and hooks dragging the bottom.  As a hook slid into an open mussel shell, the shell closed over it.  At intervals, the workers raised up the poles and the mussels were pried off and tossed into the bottom of the boat."

I had to go looking in my button jar for shell buttons. I found that I did have a few:



Then I looked on ebay and found this mussel hook, a cut shell and blank buttons. These are now on their way to me! Because, you know, I just might be developing a new story about musseling and buttons.




Copyright Susanna Holstein. All rights reserved. No Republication or Redistribution Allowed without attribution to Susanna Holstein.

Sunday, August 6, 2017

Inland Waterways Festival

I'm storytelling this weekend at the Inland Waterways Festival in Marietta, Ohio. This festival happens every two years and I have told stories for it ever since its beginning. It's held at the Ohio River Museum on Front Street, on the banks of the Muskingum River.

It's the most fun! There's much to see and do, all free. The festival continues today. Here are some pics from yesterday's activities.


Josh Wilson of The Sail Loft in St. Albans, WV using a Marlin Spike to make a rope bumper.

Pilot house from the Tell City Steamboat was restored and open for visitors for the first time.

Inside the pilot house

Steam launch. It could spray water a LOT higher than in this pic!

Homemade blackberry ice cream. I couldn't even eat half of this giant cone.

Dragon boat club was there....

and so was part of their dragon!

the fish tank drew lots of lookers.

Learning about musseling. Fascinating.


A mussel boat.

Tellin' tales!


I got to sit at the wheel during the evening's sternwheeler dessert cruise! I didn't wreck the boat either.


The view from the pilot's seat.

Moon over the river

Nathan Lynn, folklorist, singer of roustabout songs and lots of others as well,
born and raised on the river at Paducah, OH, and a reference librarian was
our evening entertainment. He's really fascinating. I sat in on his session on
roustabout songs and enjoyed every minute. Very engaging.

Heading back 

big wheel keeps on rollin'...

It was a fine day, and today will bring more of the same. Hope to see some of you there!


Copyright Susanna Holstein. All rights reserved. No Republication or Redistribution Allowed without attribution to Susanna Holstein.

Friday, September 26, 2014

Tomorrow: Museum Day Storytelling in Marietta, OH



A beautiful autumn day. Soft waters of the Ohio River flowing by. Two museums on the riverbank. Four storytellers. Can it get any better than that?



Jeff and I, on the river in Pomeroy, OH
Tomorrow is Museum Day, a day to get out an enjoy what the museums in your neck of the woods have to offer. Two of Marietta's museums teamed up to celebrate with a day of stories and music. Campus Martius and the Ohio River Museum will be hosting events all day and I am happy to be part of the celebration. I'll be joined by storytellers Judi Tarowsky and Stephen Hollen and my sometimes-partner-in-crime, musician Jeff Seager.



Stephen Hollen as Mark Twain, 2011

If you're in the area, come in and say hello and have a listen to some memorable, funny, touching and spellbinding tales and songs. And if you can't make it to Marietta, be sure to stop by a museum wherever you are, and thank the people who work so hard to create a place of learning and beauty in your neighborhood.


Campus Martius Museum is located at 601 2nd Street, Marietta, Ohio, on State Route 7, minutes from I-77. The museum is just one block away from the Ohio River Museum

The Ohio River Museum is located at 601 Front Street, Marietta, Ohio, one block from Ohio State Route 7, and minutes from I-77. Free parking is available in the museum parking lot. Ohio River Museum is also wheelchair accessible, except for W.P. Snyder. 

If you need more details or directions, call the museums at 1-740-373-3750.   

Copyright Susanna Holstein. All rights reserved. No Republication or Redistribution Allowed without attribution to Susanna Holstein.

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Boats, Summer and Grandchildren

This week we have grandchildren visiting! James and Michaela are so easy to have around, and so self-sufficient. And eating machines, my goodness. Yesterday they ate eggs, bacon, biscuits, grits, tomatoes, juice and jam for breakfast. Later James was fixing a huge toasted rye, Swiss cheese, tomato and ham sandwich (Michaela went to town with Larry and ate out). After that he moved on to tortilla chips and salsa and between them they ate the whole bag of chips and a pint of salsa. He also ate 2 apples trying to get out a loose tooth (it didn't work) and roasted marshmallows over the firepit. I'm sure I missed a few things, but you get the idea. Oddly, neither of them was hungry at dinnertime! I have a feeling they're both in another growth spurt.

We spent Monday on a little road trip. It was too hot to do much outside and I needed to pick up my check at the Marietta Mall so we stopped there first. The kids loved the mall and browsed around, even buying a few things (and got a freebie each from Granny's booth). We then went to the Ohio River Museum where I told stories at the beginning of the month. It's really a kids' paradise with all sorts of items from the steamboat era and early settlement of the Ohio Valley. The part they seemed to like best was the tour of the WP Snyder JR tugboat. It is not in operation but provides an excellent look into life on the tugs 50 years or more ago.



Stories of steamship disasters and the odds and ends that were once part of the furnishings provided a lot to look at and talk about during our visit.


This is the oldest surviving pilothouse (the place where the Captain and pilot steer and plan the boat's course), on display at the museum. Locked when we were there, and probably usually locked to preserve it.


Inside the WP Snyder, Jr, and walking down the corridor in the crew's quarters.


Outside on the deck the river breezes were cool, but inside the steel structure it was warm. Imagine what it would be like on a summer day with the boilers going. Too hot to think about.


The laundry room


Typical crew members' room. The captain's looked very similar, except had one bed and a desk for reading charts. Windows must have been open quite often even in winter to keep it comfortable.


The kitchen (called that on a freshwater boat, galley on the ocean-going ships)


and the refrigerator. They made their own ice on board, using a system similar to the way our gas refrigerator works.


At the helm! Look at the size of that wheel. The Snyder was in operation on the Monongahela River in northern WV/western PA until the mid-1950's, still burning coal to fuel it's engines.


Girls can do this too!


After the tour, the kids fed the huge carp that hung around the boat waiting for a handout. 

We left the museum and drove north to Sistersville and the old cemetery there that is one of my favorite places. More on that later.

What else is going on here:

I'm in catch-up and clean up mode this week. Peaches were waiting for my arrival home, as were tomatoes and cucumbers. The first bunch of peaches are frozen and today there will be more; I'm thinking jam this time. The cucumbers are now dill pickles, and the tomatoes are cooking right now into sauce.

There is still much unpacking to do from my 10 days away from home and a summer of storytelling. My clothes are mostly unpacked and the dirty ones washed and dried, but not yet put away. The summer reading program suitcase, the Appalachian program suitcase and the books and other things I took to Augusta are still waiting to be sorted out. My workroom is a disaster, full of items bought but not yet inventoried or priced for the booths, receipts that need to be entered and filed, eBay stuff...lots of work to be done in here.

And next on the storytelling schedule: The Three Rivers Storytelling Festival in Pittsburgh! That's this coming weekend and I am so glad to be able to be there to tell stories and reconnect with my Pittsburgh friends. Life is bringing lots of good things our way this summer. I must admit, though, that these days with James and Michaela are about the best of the whole summer--nothing equals spending time with grandchildren.





Copyright Susanna Holstein. All rights reserved. No Republication or Redistribution Allowed without attribution to Susanna Holstein.
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