Coal Fired Forging: Blacksmithing and the Orrington Farmers’ Market

On Sunday, May 19, 2024, the Museum is offering a Coal Fired Forging: Blacksmithing Workshop with Instructor Dwight King, This will be from 2-5pm. The cost is $65. Bring a 2.5-3lb. hammer, safety eyewear, wear natural fiber clothes and footwear, gloves (optional), and earplugs (optional). Pay to register by calling: 207-205-4849. You should call by Wednesday.

The independent Orrington Farmers’ Market will be Sunday, May 19; it will consistently be every Sunday 2-6PM until the second week of October. The Market is evolving and new vendors will be added each week.

The Museum will offer Carousel Rides at 3, 4, and 5 for a ticket price of $5. The Museum will have one or more buildings open to the public depending on available volunteers. Donations welcome. We are a 501(c)3 nonprofit entirely dependent on private donations and contributions, We are currently an all volunteer organization.

Coal-Fired Forging, Sunday Open Day, & More

Recently, we started offering a $65 Beginning Blacksmithing Class on Friday Nights, but we plan to start offering this same 3-Hour Class on Sundays during the Orrington Farmers’ Market ( an independent entity).

This Sunday, May 12, 2-6PM the Museum will have several of its building open and hopefully active with volunteers sharing the past. The Letterpress Office will be open, and you might participate in operating a proof press. The Carousel will be operating (2:30, 3, 3:30, 4, 4:30 & 5) and we will be charging a $5 fee for a ride, although the other Museum activities will be free to the public. One great pastime for the kids might be our huge Victorian dollhouse in the Country Store; we have seen many kids get lost in play with this new offering.

Our April 20, 2024, Earth Day Event at 19th Century Curran Village. Rain or Shine.

Saturday, April 20, 10AM-3PM, Earth Day Event. Lots of food choices, including Vegetarian baked beans, Pork & Beans, Chili, Hot Dogs, with Coney Island Sauce, if you like, Kraut Kuchen ( Volga German bacon & cabbage pastry), Strudels, Ice Cream with our own maple syrup, Newly donated wood splitters, Live steam wooden burning traction engine, hit and miss gas engines (a 1919 Fairbank-Morse 5 HP), A Cord Saw with a circa 1905 Economy gas engine performs, Blacksmithing ongoing ( we have frequent classes and this demo is with former students ), our 1917 Ford Model T Depot Hack will be running, a team of Belgian draft horses will be giving wagon rides, try one of our proof presses at the Whig & Courier Letterpress Office ( Meet Jeff Buxton whose family ran the Bucksport [Maine] Free Press for several generations; we were given both type, cuts, etc., and a Chandler & Price Letterpress from the establishment), Crank a vintage Ice Cream Maker, Learn to graft apple tree scions with Nate Coe ( last year we grafted 60 apple trees with heritage varieties [ Oxford Black, Gray Pearlmain, Gravenstein, Spitzenburg, and more,..). This year we will transplant 6 apple trees that have been nurtured at Director Bob Schmick’s house in Bangor for a number of years out of of fear of deer. There are another 30 trees to be dug up in Bangor if there are volunteers next year. In sum, we have 95 trees started for Curran’s own orchard to complement its 1870s cider mill. Fencing is key to survival. Please volunteer to build more deer-proof fencing for the apple orchard). There will be wax paper stained glass-esque book marker and window hangers making going on with dried flowers from the Curran Farm, a scavenger hunt for kids, There’s a lot more going on… Admission is an all-included price; $12 Adults, Ages 12-18: $6, and 11 and Under: Free.

New Additions to the Curran Smithy & Blacksmithing Workshops on April 12, 13, & 14. See details below.

If you haven’t been in the blacksmithing shop at 19th Century Curran Village you might be surprised to see this newly installed coal forge seen here. This forge came up from the former Willowbrook Museum (in Newfield, ME) in recent years and has been sitting unused in the relocated Tom Flagg Smithy, the small 1935 smithy that Tom Flagg built when he was 17 years old on the Davenport Farm (later the Flagg Farm) in Lincolnville Beach, ME. Tom also built this forge from scratch cutting out plates of heavy steel with an acetylene torch and then welding them together. The hand crank bellows was purchased used by Tom and always leaked oil like a sieve according to Jane Flagg, one of Tom’s three daughters who donated the smithy and its contents to Willowbrook ( it was initially offered to Curran but we had already built the new blacksmith shop in 2009). According to Jane one of her childhood chores was to put the oil to that bellows when her father was forging otherwise it would become a real chore to crank. We will be setting up as large Buffalo Forge in the Flagg Smithy that belonged to the late Larry Cook of Meriden, CT, who was a armorer producing Civil War replica swords, rifles and cannons. Cook’s Machine Shop forms the core of equipment in our Machine Shop that awaits volunteer help to get into working order to use it. How about volunteer some time to this project?

We have two blacksmithing classes scheduled.

Friday Night, April 12, 2024, 6-9PM, Coal Fired Forging (Blacksmithing) Learn the foundational skills of coal fired forging including making a coal fire, safety, and hammering techniques. You will complete several projects including J and S hooks. If you decide to the following Saturday and Sunday knife making class we will deduct $15 from the fee for this class ( the Two Day Weekend Knifemaking Workshop is $325). The cost of this 3 hour class is $65. Ages 15 and older. To register, call: 207-205-4849.

Saturday & Sunday, April 13 & 14, 2024, 9AM-4PM, Two Day Weekend Knifemaking Workshop ( Blacksmithing). This a start to finish knife making class. You will begin with a billet of 1095 steel and shape a blade and handle tang through the use of a propane burning forge. You will further shape and refine your blade sanding it to perfection. You will reheat your blade and quench it in peanut oil as the first part of the tempering process. The blade will be heated again in an oven tom complete the temper. Day 2 will include work on completing a handle comprised on brass rivets, hardwood scales and fast drying epoxy. You can put a finish on your knife. You need to bring a bag lunch. You need natural fiber clothing and footwear, safety glasses with side shields, gloves and earplugs (optional), and a 2.5 lb. or 3 lb. pein or drilling style hammer. Cost: $325 Call to register: (207) 205-4849.

Our Saturday, March 16th Maple Syrup and Irish Celebration

was the greatest attendance in a single day event in the history of the museum. More than 450 visitors experienced our sugaring off activities in the old Sugar Shack. There was lots of food choices in the Curran farmhouse including homemade waffles with our own maple syrup drizzled over them. At the Country Store visitors participated in ice cream making; the product was also served maple syrup. We had a coal fired blacksmithing workshop underway in the Smithy with Dwight King, our resident blacksmith. There was a demonstration of old machinery including a 1906 Economy gas engine running a cord saw mounted to a steel wheel carriage. Our newest acquisition is a pair of Clark Foundry of Rumford, Maine wood splitters dating from the 1920s. One of these was demonstrated much of the day with a 1919 Fairbanks Morse gas engine. At the Letterpress Office, we had guest printer Mark Matteau of the Dunstan Press in Scarborough, ME operate a proof press sharing a prints from a newly donated collection of illustration cuts from the former Bucksport Printing Shop & Free Press owned by the Buxton family for several generations. Jeff Buxton was on hand to share stories about growing up in his family’s letterpress office in the 1970s. Jeff has donated a press, type and other equipment from the former business. Pattie Jones and son Simon shared information about our developing pottery program. Last year the museum was gifted a wood burning kiln from the former Antiquity Tile Works in Hampden, ME. The gift from the new owners of the property included the kiln comprised of nearly 10,000 bricks as well as clay and a lifetime of glazes. We are still in process of moving the mortar-less brick kiln to the museum and need additional volunteer assistance. We plan on a volunteer work day this Saturday, March 23, 10AM. If you are interested in helping, give us a call. We should complete the relocation by the Spring. We have a building that will house potters’ wheels and drying shelves. Our Utility Shed includes an electric kiln.

The museum underwent a major infrastructure development project from 2020-2023 with the addition of 15 new structures. In 2023 we opened our doors to large public school field trips at the Orrington/Holden site for the first time unveiling a program that focuses on hands-on history programming using a working collection. We were open more than 100 days in 2023. Certainly COVID has effected donations in recent years, but we are optimistic, especially after Saturday’s gathering, about the future. We plan on an Earth Day Celebration on Saturday, April 20, 10-3; details will soon be posted.

Maple Syrup & Irish Celebration (Sat., March 16, 10-3); Friday Night Coal Fired Forging Blacksmithing Workshop ( Fri., March 15, 6-9PM); Sat. & Sun., March 16 & 17, 9-4, Knife Making Start to Finish Workshop

On Friday Night, March 15, 6-9PM

we will revisit coal fired forging after a long hiatus. Our instructor Dwight King will develop beginners skills in you as you create a series of projects including J & S hooks. You will learn safety, fire starting and strategies for shaping steel once you’ve heated it. You should have natural fiber clothing and footwear, gloves, and a pair of safety eyeglasses with side shields. Cost $65, Ages 15 & Older.

Saturday, March 16, 10AM-3PM, Maple Syrup & Irish Celebration,

Lots of food, including homemade waffles with syrup, homemade ice cream with syrup, baked beans, chili and more…Egg hunt for kids with prizes, fully furnished doll houses to play with, newly donated Rumford, Maine made vertical wood splitter in operation with hit & miss engines, drag saw and cord saw. Blacksmithing and tentatively metal casting. Visit our Letterpress Office where there will be stories of the old Bucksport Free Press along with a perusal of cases of type and furnishings from the former local newspaper… We’re looking for volunteer docents to do things like run the schoolhouse, the country store, the letterpress office, the cider mill & granary, the car culture building, the carpenter’s shop and the horse carousel. Introduce yourself if you are interested in contributing time to the museum. Learn about our evolving pottery program and our wood-burning kiln. Admission: $12 Adults, $6 Ages 13-18, Free: Ages 12 & Under.

Saturday & Sunday, March 16 & 17, 9-4, Blacksmithing Workshop: Start to Finish Knife Making

Begin by forging a blade and handle tang out of 1095 steel. You will grind, file and sand this to your satisfaction. You will do the oil quench and we will oven temper the knife. You will make and fit a hardwood handle to your tang. This includes brass rivets and epoxy. You need natural fiber clothing and footwear, safety eyewear with side shields, gloves, maybe ear plugs, and a 2.5-3lb. hammer ( pein or drilling type hammer ). Cost: $325 Call to register: 207-205-4849. Ages 15 & older.

Saturday, February 10, 2024, 10AM-3PM, Ice Harvest Event

This free public event is always weather dependent. We have not had this event for two years due to warm weather spells

and consequently no ice on Fields Pond. Our goal this year is to harvest enough ice to fill the small, newly constructed ice

house at the Village. This will allow us to use ice in our multiple ice boxes in the Village throughout the year.

  • Free admission
  • Warming Station (Sugar Shack. Maine maple syrup for sale)
  • Primitive log scoot pulled by antique tractor with half-tracks
  • Draft Horses pulling our Marsh Hay Sled (originating from Scarborough, Maine) with bench seating. Rides will be $5.
  • Chili, Homemade bread with butter, Beef Stew, Coney Island Hot Dogs for sale in the Curran Farmhouse Kitchen
  • Blacksmithing. There will be a knife making Workshop in progress,. Sign up if interested. See details on our Facebook page under “Events” or on our webpage on this website.
  • Family Participation. Use ice saws, ice pikes and ice tongs to cut ice cakes from Fields Pond.
  • Demonstration of our 1919 gas-powered Novo Ice Saw. This saw was once used for commercial ice harvesting on Sebago Lake in Maine.

Saturday & Sunday, February 10 & 11, 9AM-4PM, Blacksmithing: Make a Knife Workshop

Forge a steel metal knife using traditional blacksmithing techniques. You will begin with 1095 steel and hammer out a blade and handle tang. Once you have completed the rough shape you will grind, file and sand your blade to perfection. You will drill holes for your brass handle rivets. You will heat treat your blade starting with a heat and quench in peanut oil. The second part of this is an oven temper which will take place after you leave from Day 1. On Day 2 you will clean up your blade and create the parts of your hardwood handle and fix it permanently. Requirements; Synthetics melt whereas natural fibers may scorch so we recommend natural fiber clothing and footwear, safety eyewear with side shields, work gloves, ear plugs (optional), and a 2.5-3 pound pein type, drilling, or metal work hammer. Call for additional info. or to register with a credit card. Cost: $325 Call: 207-205-4849

Blacksmithing: Make a Knife Workshop

Our popular blacksmithing workshop is back. Saturday & Sunday, February 10 & 11, 9AM-4PM, Knife Making Workshop.

Start to finish class. Begin with hand forging a blade and a handle tang from high carbon steel. Grind, file and sand your blade to perfection. You will temper the knife with an oil quench and an oven heat. You will prepare your tang to receive brass rivets and hard wood handle scales, You can sand these and oil finish them. We use a fast-drying epoxy in addition to the brass rivets to hold your handle together. Bring a bag lunch, safety glasses with side shields, ear plugs, leather gloves, natural fiber clothing, leather footwear, and a 2.5-3 lb. metal working hammer ( pein type or drill hammer ). Cost: $325 In case we have to cancel due to snow we will negotiate with you a makeup weekend. Gift certificates available. Call: 207-205-4849

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