There are always things to do in Northern New England when the weather is cold. Recently we attended a library lecture and heard fiddlers perform in anticipation of St. Patrick's Day. Today's blog is about each of those events!
The Father and son duo Ryan and Brennish Thomson visited the library in mid-March. The two have been performing together for over 20 years. Their large repertoire of Irish music includes jigs, reels, hornpipes, aires, slides and more, which they play on fiddles, accordion, guitar, banjo, bones, Irish tin whistle, and other instruments.
They have performed throughout New England and far away places such New York, California, England, and China. Besides numerous awards for their playing on various instruments, they are the recipients of the 2023 New Hampshire Governor’s Arts Award for Folk Heritage.
2) Local Historical Presentation: 1642 Abraham Preble Garrison in York Maine, excavated in 2021-2022
In October 2021, a team from Northeast Archaeology Research Center began scraping the surface of the site at 142 York St., looking for any traces of historical value. All the artifacts recovered from the Davis land went to the Northeast Archaeology laboratory to be cleaned, catalogued, analyzed and curated. Some of the artifacts were brought to the York, Maine library for attendees of the lecture.
(Photo: The archeological dig. Credit: Seacoast Online)
WHAT IS THE PREBLE HOME? The Abraham Preble Site in York Maine began as a family homestead in 1642 and was later fortified to serve as a militia garrison and place-of-refuge during King William’s War (1688-1697), a destructive frontier conflict that pitted the English Colonists against the native Wabnaki and their French allies.
(Photo: The archeological dig at the Preble Home area in York, Maine.)THE PRESENTATION - The historical presentation was about the Phase III Data Recovery of the Abraham Preble Garrison on York Street in York, Maine. It was excavated in 2021-2022 because there is a proposed building project slated for that area. The developer funded the excavation to ensure any historic artifacts would be preserved.
WHAT WAS UNCOVERED? The team has found a number of interesting artifacts, including many old tobacco pipe stems, ceramics and traces of trenches used by soldiers in the late 17th century. Tables of artifacts from the dig were on display.
NINE BUILDINGS - Intensive archaeological excavations in 2021 and 2022 revealed at least nine buildings stood in and adjacent to successive palisade (fencing) lines, marking the site’s evolution. Confined to an area of 800 m², many of the structures appeared contemporary with the most intensive period of occupation, when the complex housed not just the Preble family, but the militia garrison and as many of 100 refugees from nearby farmsteads.
(Photo: An artifact excavated from the Preble House site)
WHAT WILL BE BUILT THERE? The Mary McIntire Davis Trust, a family trust, currently owns the property, and the York Planning Board okayed the development of 115 residential units on the property, including six workforce housing units and more than 40 units for people 55 and older.














