Porter-Phelps-Huntington Museum Receives MCFF Grant

HADLEY—The Porter-Phelps-Huntington (PPH) Foundation is pleased to announce that it has been approved for a $16,000 capital grant from the Massachusetts Cultural Facilities Fund (MCFF). This is the third grant the foundation has received from MCFF since it was established in 2006. The matching grant will support preservation and maintenance work not addressed through previous grants, including painting, window restoration, roofing, flashing and gutter replacement, driveway repairs, carpentry repairs and lolly column replacement.

In addition to the capital grant, MCFF’s application review panel suggested that a Systems Replacement Plan (SRP) would benefit the foundation’s overall facility planning efforts. This provides an additional $7,000 to develop a 20-year capital needs assessment for the museum and its mechanical systems.

The Porter-Phelps-Huntington House, known as Forty Acres, is an 18th-century farm on the banks of the Connecticut River that today interprets life in rural New England over three centuries. Through the words, spaces, and possessions of the women and men who lived here, the museum portrays the activities of a prosperous and productive 18th-century farmstead. Members of this household along with numerous artisans, servants, and enslaved people made Forty Acres important social and commercial link in local, regional, and national cultural and economic networks. During the 19th century the generations transformed the estate into a rural retreat. In the 20th century the house was preserved as a museum by family members and now contains the possessions of six generations of this extended family. The house, listed on the National Register of Historic Places, is surrounded by over 350 acres of protected farmland, forest, and river frontage. The Porter-Phelps-Huntington Museum is also the Way-Point Center for the National Connecticut River Scenic Byway, for which it hosts a panel exhibit on the natural history of the Valley, the Museum’s history, and sites along the by-way for travelers.

The Porter-Phelps-Huntington Museum is located at 130 River Drive, Hadley, on Route 47 just two miles north of the junction of Routes 9 and 47 in Hadley. Although the museum and way-point center are closed and the cultural programming cancelled for the 2020 season due to the coronavirus pandemic, information about the museum, the families that lived here, and its collection are available on its website www.pphmuseum.org, where donations can also be made to assist in the maintenance and preservation of the museum and grounds. Additionally, while the facilities are closed, a pedestrian trail system beginning at the museum and traversing the farm fields along the river and to the old buggy path to the top of Mount Warner, remains open, although the museum asks that any users practice regular social distancing and carry masks in case they encounter others on the trail.

Pandemic cancels North Hall Arts Fest, Porter-Phelps music series

5/16/2020

by Steve Pfarrer, Daily Hampshire Gazette

Two weeks after the Green River Festival was canceled for 2020, two longstanding summer arts series have also fallen victim to the COVID-19 outbreak.

Organizers of the North Hall Arts Festival in Huntington, and of the summer concert series at the Porter-Phelps-Huntington Museum in Hadley, have canceled their 2020 seasons because of the pandemic.

The Huntington festival had planned on offering 11 events, ranging from jazz, country and baroque music to theater, at the town’s historic North Hall between May 23 and Sept. 20. But in a statement, organizers said given safety concerns and the uncertainty of the pandemic’s duration, “we believe that cancellation is the safest course of action.”

And at the Porter Phelps Museum, home since the 1980s to the summer music series Wednesday Folk Traditions, organizers say their research into pandemics of the 19th and 20th centuries has convinced them that “the impact of COVID-19 will be with us for a long time.”

Until an effective vaccine is developed, museum Director Susan Lisk said in statement, the Hadley museum will be closed not just for Wednesday Folk Traditions (seven concerts) but for a smaller summer music series, A Perfect Spot of Tea, as well as all other public programs and events.

Music by the river: Porter-Phelps-Huntington House Museum readies summer series

06/26/2018

by Steve Pfarrer, Amherst Bulletin

HADLEY - One of the highlights of summer, aside from beaches, baseball and barbeque, is outside concerts — and the Porter-Phelps-Huntington House Museum in Hadley has no shortage of shows this year.

And, in a tradition that dates back almost four decades, you can hear some of that music as you sip tea and munch on pastries donated by area bakeries and restaurants.

The Hadley museum, an historic farmhouse dating to the mid 1700s that was home to six generations of an extended family, has since the early 1980s featured Wednesday evening summer concerts that explore folk and traditional music from different cultures. On Saturday afternoons, meanwhile, visitors can hear a range of sounds — jazz, blues, a capella — during the “Perfect Spot of Tea” shows, which take place on the museum’s back veranda.

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Porter-Phelps-Huntington House Museum in Hadley preserves centuries of family history

08/24/2016

by Alexi Cohan, MassLive

HADLEY - Generations of family histories abound in Western Massachusetts, and the Porter-Phelps-Huntington House Museum in Hadley preserves an 18th century home where the story of a family is shared with visitors.

Located in the heart of a large farmstead and sitting on 27 acres of land, the museum attracts visitors for tours and to participate in programs and concerts throughout the summer.

One of their most successful programs, "A Perfect Spot of Tea," draws between 40 and 50 fans each week, welcomed to sit "friendly style" to drink tea and eat pastries as they enjoy a musical program on a Saturday afternoon. This weekend will offer the final "Spot of Tea" performance. There is a fee of $10.

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MuseFLASHES: Kathy Greenwood’s ‘A Stitch in Time’ at Porter-Phelps-Huntington Museum and lots of other arts happenings in the Amherst area

06/1/2016

by Amhest Bulletin

AMHERST - “A Stitch in Time,” an exhibit of collage and textile work by Kathy Greenwood, will be on view through July 31 at the Porter-Phelps-Huntington Museum at 130 River Drive in Hadley.

The objects and images that populate the work allude to stories, relationships and observations of daily living. The ephemera of home — heirlooms, implements and cast-offs — can invoke personal memories as well as conjecture about the lives of others.

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