responsive-lightbox domain was triggered too early. This is usually an indicator for some code in the plugin or theme running too early. Translations should be loaded at the init action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home/sundre5/ducts.sundresspublications.com/content/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114Editor’s note:<\/strong> The following prose poems were inspired by photos featured several historical placemats that were produced by the Weld Historical Society<\/a> and discovered by author Ron Singer during his visits to Weld, Maine. This piece is particularly timely because this year, Weld (established in the year 1816) will proudly celebrate its bicentennial, holding several events to reflect on its 200 years of history. We would like to thank Sean Minear<\/span> for providing high-quality copies of four photographs from the collection of the the Weld Historical Society; the fifth image is a photo of the original laminated placemat itself, as provided\u00a0by Elizabeth Yamin.\u00a0<\/em><\/p>\n Ice Leaving Lake Webb (Spring 1906)<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n Photo courtesy of Weld Historical Society<\/a>.<\/em><\/p><\/div>\n In this, the oldest photograph, we see a bateau, big raft, jumble of logs, and a fast-shrinking mass of cloudlike ice, on top of which stand four men, two with pike poles. The third man, hands in pockets, rests his weight on his right hip, and the fourth, in profile, looks back toward the mountains. These last two could just as well have been spectators as log drivers, since the Ice Out was\u2014is\u2014a big event. With foreground raft, bateau and logs, then ice, men, mountains, sky, this tableau welcomes us to Weld Township, in western Maine.<\/p>\n In contrast to \u201cIce Leaving Lake Webb,\u201d the other placemat photographs are set within the confines of the hamlet of Weld, just off the southeastern corner of the lake. All four photos depict buildings along a road that passes through the crossroads, then winds steeply up out of town.<\/em><\/p>\n Houghtons (1910)<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n Photo courtesy of Weld Historical Society<\/a>.<\/em><\/p><\/div>\n \u00a0<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n A formidable pile at the crossroads, just down the road from Mary\u2019s Beauty Shoppe, Houghton\u2019s has witnessed turnover galore: gift shops, groceries, computers, whatnots\u2014including the United States Resettlement Administration Land Utilization Project (USRA), which mouthful bought out, during the Depression, almost all of the farmers of Weld Township. In 1938, the USRA granted a ninety-nine year lease to the State of Maine to convert the farmland into Mount Blue State Park. This lease expires in 2037, not so long from now!<\/p>\n Houghton\u2019s is a freestanding, two-story frame building, foursquare, weathered, nautical (though far from the sea), and boasting a single cupola, mansard roof, five barrels, a bunch of signs on the porch, a barn to our left, a dark, attached shed in back, and, on the right, a small, obscure figure kneeling behind a horse-drawn kerosene-delivery truck.<\/p>\n Weld<\/em><\/strong> Free Public Library (1915)<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n Photo courtesy of Weld Historical Society<\/a>.<\/em><\/p><\/div>\n In 1905, when the Free Public Library was first organized, Weld was the smallest municipality in Maine to boast such an institution. At age ten, it sat for this portrait, and about two decades later, moved to its present brick home, just a stone\u2019s throw (if you have a good arm) from the crossroads. Shockingly, perhaps, the collection today may be smaller than it was a century ago.<\/p>\n Notable features of this wood building include white trim around the dark doors (two) and windows (five), a steep, cross-gabled roof, a second story, also white, a porcelain doorknob, and an illegible sign. Two cement steps lead down onto the lawn\u2014flowers, too, but no path out to the road.<\/p>\n To the rear of the library, on our left, stand two young trees that partly screen a home with twelve-paned windows, common in those days. The lawn beside the library is pocked with large stones, left there for decoration, too heavy to move, or just abandoned.<\/p>\n On the other side, down in a hollow and easily missed, is a gray building with a double line that looks, improbably, like a guard rail, as well as two trees, plus something else I can\u2019t identify. To hazard a wild guess . . . a lacrosse stick?<\/p>\n
<\/a>
<\/a>
<\/a>