Showing posts with label visitor stories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label visitor stories. Show all posts

Friday, July 26, 2013

Visitor Questions Answered

Sorry about the lack of posts here lately. We've had a slight time management problem...but it's a good kind! We've had so many visitors it's been hard to get blog posts written!

I'm going to do a quick round-up of a few visitor questions that I've had over the past several weeks. I wasn't able to answer the questions definitely at the time, so I told people to check our blog and I would post when I found out.

Where did Lew and Susan meet?

They met at a party at Susan's sister and brother-in-law's home, Lane Place. Of course, Lew had already had encounters with Susan's family--when he was a boy, he sneaked into the Elston homestead hoping for a glimpse of their piano!


Is that Lew's sink?


It is! We think he had the sink so accessible so he could clean his paintbrushes. (No, that isn't Lew's fire extinguisher.)

Is that a water pipe?

Yes! That is an oriental narghile, or water pipe, that Lew brought home from Constantinopole.  It's made of clear, blue glass with floral designs painted on it and a terra cotta top piece. The flowers appear to be burgundy hibiscus, yellow roses, and bittersweet. On one flower petal is the sultan's tughra in a circle, on the next flower petal is a gold oval with:  "B. Fucmez - Constantinople" around some Turkish writing.  Under this is a small circle with what may be "LEW" in it.





Saturday, October 20, 2012

Visitor Questions Answered

Every now and then I'll have someone ask me a question to which I don't have the answer. I always do my best to find out, but sometimes I don't find the answer until the visitor is already gone. Today I want to answer a few questions I've been asked lately.

What is this pedestal made out of?

This is an onyx pedestal from Rome, pale green with gold and white marbling.  It has seven metal rings around it. The pedestal stands in the mechanical room of the Study building, where our Ben-Hur exhibit is located.

Were the bricks around the inglenook painted?

No. The bricks were made that color, which is also used as an accent color on the outside of the Study building.

How tall was Lew Wallace?

According to his hunting license, he was 5'10".

What is this chunk of rock?

This is a piece of turquoise. Our records suggest Susan might have used it as a paperweight. You'll find it in one of the display cases on the south wall of the Study.


Anyone else have any questions? I love doing research to find the answers to these questions. I always tell people I learn things from our visitors just as often as they learn things from me! Chime in in the comments and play "stump the museum girl!"

Monday, September 10, 2012

Lew's Young Fan

I had a family visiting from northern Indiana recently who already knew a lot about Lew Wallace. The son was a fan of Lew's and wrote a report about him last year in school. This year he is planning to write about Montgomery County for a school report. I'm sure Lew will feature strongly in that report, too.

It's always fun to have visitors of every age, but our young visitors are especially enjoyable. They always have great questions, and it's exciting to see young people so interested in our history!

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Lew's Legacy Continues


I had a great story from one of our visitors the other day. Several years ago they came to see the Study and brought their young son. We have Lew’s violin on display here, as well as several violin pieces that he used to build violins. After seeing the display, the son took up playing the violin. Now, several years later, he still plays!

It’s great to know that Lew Wallace is still inspiring people today.

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Overheard at International Museum Day 4


This is from a Crawfordsville native:

"The Study was very much a part of my youth as my family lived just a few blocks away on Wabash Avenue, I went to school at Wilson from kindergarten through the middle of fourth grade, my Scout Troop met in the Carriage House during some of my early years, and when I was still living in Crawfordsville and preparing to walk in the Indianapolis Mini-Marathon in 2004 and 2005 walking around the blocks near the Study was a regular part of my early-morning training route. So I have fond memories of time spent in the Study and on the grounds during my youth and part of my adult life."

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Overheard at International Museum Day 3


From a previous volunteer:

"I remember that spot up there looked a little shaky back then. There was damage from the leaks, and the plaster around the skylight would flake off."

Thankfully, the Study Restoration Project seems to have fixed that issue!

Overheard at International Museum Day 2


Overheard from a young visitor:

"I remember the bright orange carpet. And that there used to be a lot more stuff in here."

Hang on, Josie. Just a few more weeks and then we plan to move artifacts back into the Study! (The carpet's gone for good, though.)

Overheard at International Museum Day

Today the Museum is participating in International Museum Day with free admission. The theme is Museums and REmembrance, and our visitors are talking up a storm about what they remember from their previous visits! This was overheard from a former teacher during a tour:


"Didn't there used to be a picture of a lady whose eyes followed you? I remember that. All the kids remembered that from their field trips." [The Turkish Princess by C.F. Mueller, hanging in the center of the photo]

Thursday, July 22, 2010

"More than $3 worth"


Last week a group of visitors enjoyed their tour and commented at the end, "We got more than our $3 worth. Thank you so much! You know so much about the building and the history." The additional money dropped in the donation box was nice, too, but satisfied visitors was the real reward.
Just a few more weeks until the Study Restoration Project begins, and then there will REALLY be something to see!

Friday, April 16, 2010

Ben-Hur vs. Twilight

“So Ben-Hur was the Twilight of the 1800s.”

Out of the mouths of babes – an eighth-grader on a recent school visit made a striking connection between the popularity of Lew Wallace’s masterwork and the rise of new novels made into films. One aspect of the Ben-Hur legacy is merchandising in a variety of franchises and media – books, films, comics, you name it. Just as Mel Brooks immortalized in the film Spaceballs, after Ben-Hur rose to great fame they came out with Ben-Hur the children’s books, Ben-Hur the action figures, Ben-Hur the hairpins, Ben-Hur the freezer...and on and on. Merchants figured they could sell just about everything imaginable by attaching the name of a popular novel to the products. The concept has continued into modern literature and films as merchants continue to market lunchboxes, posters, and clothing by attaching images of popular media. It all comes back to Ben-Hur.

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Member Sneak Preview Party, 3/3/10


Larry Paarlberg, Director of the General Lew Wallace Study and Museum, greets guests to the Member Sneak Preview Party for the opening of the Museum's new exhibit, "Sanctuary: Preserving the Legacy of Lew Wallace."

Saturday, May 31, 2008

New Field Trips Prompts a Series of Programs


For the first time, almost every second, third, and fourth grade student in Crawfordsville visited the Museum this year, along with students from throughout the county and region. To accommodate this influx of students - who we hope will return next year - we introduced a series of topical tours catered to the learning standards of each grade. The second graders learned about Lew Wallace as an author, and returned to write stories on the grounds like Wallace did with his world-renowned book Ben-Hur. The third graders focused on local history and what Wallace did while he lived in Crawfordsville, as well as what makes the Study a unique building unlike any they'll see elsewhere. The fourth graders looked at what made Wallace important to the state of Indiana: his fame as an author, diplomat, and soldier. All these students got to look at the Study and Museum, but with a different focus for each group, there will be something new to see the next time they come.



Reasons to Visit and Volunteer at the Study

Hello, I am a volunteer here at the Lew Wallace Study. Approximately one year ago I sought out opportunities to help my community and for those opportunities to be interesting, challenging, and not boring. As a volunteer I work on the newsletter, give tours, and research information upon request from the public regarding Lew's fascinating life. I enjoy these opportunities as it is a vast change from my daily job and additionally I am providing a public service to promote a national treasure.

When I was a small child, my grandmother took me to the study. Many years later I returned to tour the study as a college student. As a child, I was fascinated by the exhibits from the film version of Ben Hur (1959), as the suit of the Roman Legionnaire caught my eye. However, after studying literature and studying history in college, I returned and fell in love with the artifact collection on Lew's life as an author, general, ambassador, and sportsman. It was the memories of both tours plus reading the novel Ben Hur that inspired me to volunteer at this study. Now I take the opportunity to inspire others to study Lew Wallace and appreciate him for his incredible life and the study itself.

When you visit the study, each tour begins with a brief video presentation of Lew's biography. In the film, Lew Wallace is described as a hero for modern times. It makes sense - a best-selling author who followed his true calling in the literary arts after practicing law; a general who volunteered for the Union army leaving his family (wife Susan, son Henry) for the front lines of the Civil War like many men in that era; a foreign ambassador in the infancy of American international diplomacy; a territorial governor sent to clean up New Mexico during the period of William Bonney a/k/a Billy The Kid; and a "gentleman scientist" whose innovations range from a telescoping fishing pole to making a railroad safe for passengers in the late 19th century. He embodies more the Renaissance man of the late middle ages than the Victorian Era in which he lived and thrived. This is a fascinating man who can teach all of us the themes of perseverance and hard work.

Since starting my volunteer work here, I have learned much more about Lew than I ever imagined. I'm now inspired to read his two-volume biography published posthumously and The Fair God, Lew's first novel about the conquest of the Aztec empire by Cortez from the Aztec perspective. He produced a pronunciation guide for the Aztec characters, which some critics disliked at that time. I'm also interested in reading The Land of the Pueblos, a collection of articles produced by Susan, Lew's wife, during their time in New Mexico.

There is an aspect for every visitor at the study. If you enjoy literature, you will enjoy browsing at Lew's collection of books and the monument for the Ben Hur beech tree (90% of the novel was written under the tree). If you enjoy science, you will enjoy our current exhibit complete with a recreation of a Victorian workbench. If you enjoy the Civil War, you will enjoy the study's exhibits on Lew's involvement with the Union army, the Lincoln Assassination, and the Andersonville trial. If you enjoy the outdoors, you will enjoy our groundskeeper's wonderful use of period-era foliage and the exhibit on Lew's love of fishing. If you like architecture, the study itself is a gold mine on the styles and features.

In summation, I enjoy my volunteer work at the Lew Wallace Study and continue to volunteer, receiving the inspiration I need from simply setting foot inside the study and discussing one of America's most interesting figures of the nineteenth century. Visit at least once, then many other times subsequently, to see with your own eyes what I have described in this introductory blog.

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Learning with Lew adds up

The Museum is certainly set to break attendance records this year with scheduled group visits. So far this year we've had 260 people in grades 2-12 come through the Museum! The next six weeks are full of school tours, with 380 more people on the calendar from schools throughout the region. These include high school English classes, home school groups, and fourth-graders studying Indiana state history. We're also set to serve almost 200 adults through bus tours and club meetings. No matter the age, there's always something to learn with Lew!