Steppingstone Farm Museum Fall Harvest & Craft Festival

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Steppingstone Farm Museum Fall Harvest & Craft Festival September 27th & 28th

11am to 4pm, Admission $10.00 for adults, children 12 & under and members free

This event will feature activities such as craft booths; scarecrow making; pumpkin painting; apple bobbing & pressing; apple butter making; hay rides; straw maze; bluegrass music; clogging and square dancing; food; and tours. Rain or shine event. Additional fees only for items you take home (scarecrows and pumpkins).

 

General Purpose and Expected Outcome of the Museum

    Steppingstone Farm Museum preserves the Harford County farming culture and artifacts of the turn of the 20th century, educates the public about our agricultural heritage, demonstrates the past through rural arts and crafts, and promotes related educational and community activities.

Steppingstone museum is a private, not for profit museum which preserves and demonstrates the rural arts and crafts of the 1880-1920 period in Harford County. The Steppingstone collection is comprised of domestic arts, skilled trades and husbandry. The Artifacts in each category were used by skilled specialists whose talents are scarce in our present urban and industrial society.

The purpose of the collections at Steppingstone is the acquisition, preservation and study of the material culture of America’s last rural generation, as well as the exhibition and demonstrated use of the artifacts. The museum was established for the education of the younger generation and continues to strive to achieve this goal through a variety of guided tours and craft workshop programs.

Visitors can spend the afternoon touring the sites of a once working Harford County farm. The farmhouse, furnished as a turn-of-the-century home, charms the visitor as a guide invites you to share the daily life of the period.

The nearby shops and display barn hold many examples and exhibits which share the industries and implements of the farm family. Visitors is encouraged to discuss the craft skills with the volunteers. The collection of old restored hand tools, started by J. Edmund Bull and augmented by many local gifts, occupy the many implement sheds. Other shops contain the tools of the blacksmith, joiner, woodwright, cooper, potter, wheelwright, dairy farmer, spinner and weaver. In the big barn, there is a replica of the late 19th century general store, an office of the veterinarian and workshop of the decoy carver. The carriage barn houses carriages, buggies and sleighs. The museum grounds are enhanced with a variety of trees and shrubs, perennial flowers and cutting garden and herb garden.

Fall Harvest & Craft Festival 2014

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