Museum invites people to take Christmas spirit home with wreath fundraiser

A room is lit by a large number of Christmas trees

Festival of Trees and Dickensville courtesy of Queens County Museum

The Queens County Museum is celebrating Christmas like it’s 1999, or thereabouts.

For the past couple of decades, the museum has marked the holiday season with the Festival of Trees and Dickensville displays.

The Festival of Trees showcases over 35 trees, each with different decorations or themes and placed around the museum while Dickensville features scale model recreations of the people and places from Charles Dickens’ novels.

Director Linda Rafuse says after being unable to welcome visitors in during the pandemic they’re excited to continue the tradition once again.

“We’ve been doing this exhibit for so long now, with our two learning trees that we’re now having some of the children that we told this story to many years ago are now bringing their children in to hear the story of the Legend of the Christmas Spider,” said Rafuse. “That’s just so heartwarming.”

Rafuse says the local elementary school classes will be filing in over the course of a week in December to experience the stories and displays for themselves.

The displays are open to the public seven days a week for no charge, but the museum gladly accepts donations.

In fact, for the first time the Queens County Museum is hosting a Christmas wreath auction as a fundraiser.

Wreaths are posted online at the Queens Museum Christmas Wreath Auction Facebook page and people can bid in the comments.

Winners can pick up their wreaths after bidding closes at 4pm on December 4.

The Festival of Trees and Dickensville will be on display until 5pm everyday until the museum closes for Christmas on December 23.

Rafuse says anyone looking to jumpstart their Christmas joy should make a point to drop by.

“If you’re not in the spirit of Christmas yet, come into the Queens County Museum because when you leave, you will be.”

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Historic Liverpool church for sale

The front door of a church

Entrance to Zion United Church in Liverpool. Photo Ed Halverson

A Liverpool church that boasts the oldest established congregation in Queens is being sold.

The Zion United Church closed its doors in December according to chair of the closure working group* Ray Baker.

He says the congregation is getting older and their numbers are decreasing.

“Unfortunately, it’s a sign of the times, we’re not having a lot of younger families become members of the church,” said Baker. “So, it’s more difficult to operate it and find the funds to run it.”

Baker says the with fewer than 40 active members in the church it is no longer possible to pay the bills and upkeep on the 150-year-old building.

Complicating matters further, Baker says their minister retired in June at the same time the church board chair resigned, effectively leaving the congregation without leadership to help guide them through the ever-changing COVID regulations.

At a special meeting October 24, the congregation made the decision to sell and the last service at the church was held in December.

The exterior of a church

Zion United Church. Photo Ed Halverson

Director of the Queens County Museum Linda Rafuse says the Zion United church was formed from congregations that date back to the 1700s, making it historically significant.

The first chapel was built by some of the founding fathers of Liverpool including merchant Simeon Perkins who is buried in the cemetery behind Zion United.

The current church was built in 1866 after a fire destroyed the second chapel the previous year.

Rafuse says the church has already approached the museum about donating several artifacts.

“It will be a loss to the history of Liverpool but we’re here to preserve those memories,” said Rafuse.

Baker says a working group comprised of himself and several church elders have received several options for closing down the church from the United Church regional office.

He says there is a distinction to be made between the church and its people.

“The congregation is the people,” said Baker.  “And the building is just that, the building.”

Baker says there’s a strong desire within the congregation to stick together.

Some of the options are to continue as a congregation and share space in another church or disband and join other congregations.

Selling the church will be further complicated by the fact it is responsible for the upkeep of three cemeteries.

A cemetery covered in snow

Cemetery behind Zion United Church. Photo Ed Halverson

Baker says the working group is in discussions with United church officials and the municipality to determine what options are available for dividing the cemeteries from the church while ensuring the graveyards continue to be maintained.

“We can’t sell the church with the cemetery. I mean, what buyer would want the building, for whatever purpose but also have a cemetery to look after,” said Baker.

A meeting will be held February 12 where the congregation will be presented with their options and decide on how to proceed.

*A previous version of this story mis-identified the closure working group as a disbanding committee. The story has been updated with the correction.

E-mail: edhalversonnews@gmail.com
Twitter: @edwardhalverson

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Welcome mat is out as Perkins House renos complete

An historic home

Perkins House Museum. Photo Ed Halverson

One of the oldest homes in in Nova Scotia is new again.

Liverpool’s Perkins House reopened Monday following an almost year-long renovation.

Director of Perkins House and the Queens County Museum Linda Rafuse says like everything else, the pandemic played a role in the timing of the reopening.

“It was supposed to be opened a couple of weeks ago but that got delayed with the last COVID shutdown because we had to wait for the furniture to be transferred to the house,” said Rafuse.

The historic site has been closed since May of 2015 when staff reported structural issues.

The province stepped in and provided $1.5 million dollars to assess the damage and restore the site.

The house is now structurally sound and ready to resume its role telling the story of Liverpool’s past.

Rafuse says walking into Perkins House transports visitors to a different time.

“When you’re coming into a historic home, you want to walk into a historic home that looks like it’s been lived in,” said Rafuse. “That’s how the staff will interpret it to you and tell you the story.”

Visitors to Perkins House will experience the story of its owner Simeon Perkins through discussions and demonstrations with staff dressed in period costume.

Three women stand in front of an old white door.

Perkins House staff. L-R: Director Linda Rafuse, interpreters Linda Moulton and Jamie Dunn. Photo Ed Halverson

Many of the hands-on activities such as laundry, weaving and sewing will be made available as COVID restrictions lift.

Rafuse says finally reopening the building means a great deal to the entire community.

“This has been an iconic symbol in the community for over 250 years. Everybody always keeps their eyes on Perkins House and [are] always asking how are things coming and when is going to open and always the discouraging answer of, don’t know, don’t know,” said Rafuse. “So it has been a long road but the end result was worth the wait.”

Perkins House is open to the public seven days a week. Check their website for times.

Reported by Ed Halverson 
E-mail: edhalversonnews@gmail.com
Twitter: @edwardhalverson

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