30 October 2020

Maine Mineral and Gem Museum

DH holds a piece of moon rock.

 

We recently took our first long-distance field trip in months. Two lures - Maine rescinded travel restriction on visitors from our state, and we read about the Maine Mineral and Gem Museum.  After visiting friends in Portland, on their outdoor terrace, we continued on to Bethel, Maine. 

The museum is right on the main street, and has a rock garden - emphasis on rocks - skirting the building.  This the 200th anniversary of Maine's statehood and  Maine's state gem is the tourmaline. Sadly, the planned celebrations of both Maine and the tourmaline had to be post-poned.  At the time of this writing, the museum has had to shutter its doors again due to a water leak.


Banners give a hint of the goodies inside.

 

One thing we like very much is that this isn't just a display of interesting objects - the museum makes a real effort to tell the stories of the people behind the work of prospecting for minerals such as feldspar, used in the production of porcelain, and for gemstones.  One long-time "rock whisperer" is Frank Perham, a senior statesman among Maine geologists and miners.  The museum founders, Mary McFadden and Lawrence Stifler, acquired much of the core collection from Mr. Perham, whose father Stanley and mother Hazel managed a mineral and gem retail store for many years.  Many of the historic finds in Maine have been acquired by Harvard and the American Natural History Museum, so it is particularly pleasing that many items will remain in the state in which they were  discovered.


Monocline feldspar and paver dedicated to Frank and Mary Perham.

Large samples of Maine's minerals and ores in the rock garden.


Note the crystal motifs of the window grilles.




 

We had the museum pretty much to ourselves when we visited; the masked volunteers were helpful and enthusiastic, but not intrusive.  One highlight is the opportunity to hold a piece of the moon (see first image above). Not a lunar rock retrieved by astronauts, but a chunk ejected from the moon which fell to earth as a meteorite. Very cool. We'll be returning.

29 October 2020

Farewell, Lord & Taylor


Iconic script logo.

 

After almost two centuries in the retail firmament, Lord & Taylor filed for bankruptcy late this summer.  Although insignificant compared to the loss of human life this year, the demise of this store is a passing of a kind, and I am in mourning.

I especially will miss Lord & Taylor's own brand and the petite range.  Petite sizing was championed by Dorothy Shaver, who became the first woman to head a major retail corporation when elected president of Lord & Taylor in 1945, a position she held until her death in 1959. According to her obituary in the New York Times (29 June 1959):

In 1932 she [Ms. Shaver] challenged Parisian domination of fashion by encouraging and developing native American designing talent. During the next eight years she promoted and publicized the clothes and names of sixty young American designers who had previously worked anonymously.
Ms. Shaver also helped establish the Costume Institute at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, among many other accomplishments.

Going out of business sale.








Noted for dresses.


Store fixtures.


Red and black banners signal the end.


The jewelry counter, deserted.

 

I visited the Lord & Taylor store at the Natick Mall, to say goodbye, and perhaps make one last purchase. I ended up ordering something from the Lord & Taylor website. Ironic, as a company called the Saadia Group just purchased Lord & Taylor for online business only.  It won't be the same.