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Current Exhibits
The Browns, Farmers of Tatnic
Hog Scraper
 
A 19th century hog scraper from the Counting House Museum collection. 
 
New to the Counting House exhibits in 2010 is the story of the Brown or Brawn family of South Berwick’s rural Tatnic area. Implements used on 19th century local farms make up a new small exhibit.
 
Museum visitors can see 17-year old Sadie M. Brown’s recipe for her favorite Indian pudding, and take copies of her recipe to try at home. Her little notebook containing the recipe is now on display.
 
A hill in South Berwick, still called Brown Hill, was associated with Sadie Brown’s parents, John W. Brown and Olive (Chaney) Brown. Sadie was born in 1880 and attended a nearby one-room school house.  She died soon after jotting recipes and other notes in a small notebook, and was buried in a small cemetery near the family homestead.  The cause of her death is unknown.
 
Author Sarah Orne Jewett wrote about the view from Brown Hill in her 1889 story “The White Rose Road.”  
 
“Looking off,” Jewett wrote, “the smooth, round back of Great Hill caught the sunlight with its fields of young grain, and all the long, wooded slopes and valleys were fresh and fair in the June weather, away toward the blue New Hampshire hills on the northern horizon.
 
“Seaward stood Agamenticus, dark with its pitch pines, and the far sea itself, blue and calm, ruled the uneven country with its unchangeable line.” 
 
The Old Berwick Historical Society archives contain over a hundred of John W. Brown’s household receipts. These papers reveal details of the life of a 19th century farm family.  Brown was frugal, yet he also paid for a family vacation at York Beach one year, as evidenced by a receipt for a rental of a cottage there.   

Sadie Brown's Indian Pudding Recipe (1895) 
1 cup sweet apples
1 cup meal (corn meal)
1 cup molasses
piece of butter half the size of an egg
Stir in the meal
add a quart of milk
put in the oven without stirring.

Sauce for Pudding
half cup sugar
one cup milk
tablespoonful flour
one egg
flavor with lemon
Sausage Stuffer
 
A 19th century sausage stuffer from the Counting House Museum collection
 
Family Donates WWII Soldier’s Letters to Counting House Museum

Elaine Pelletier Holland of Rochester, NH, and Norman J. Pelletier of Gorham, ME, contributed their father’s war correspondence, journal and other memorabilia to the Counting House Museum in 2009.  Two other relatives, Lloyd Pelletier of York and Theresa Wilkinson of South Berwick, gave copies of their extensive family genealogy and family photos.

Items from the collection are now on display in a small new exhibit at the museum, open from 1 to 4 pm on Saturdays and Sundays through October, year round by appointment.  Admission is free.

Wildré Pelletier, who grew up on what is now often called lower Main Street, South Berwick, and attended St. Michael’s parochial school in the building that contains South Berwick Town Hall, entered the Army in 1943.  He was one of two sons to do so in his French Canadian immigrant family of nine children.  Their mother, Clementine, raised them alone after their father, Henry, died of pneumonia.

Six months before Pelletier enlisted, his wife, Jeannette, had given birth to a daughter, Elaine.  The couple exchanged letters every day of his almost three-year absence.  Jeannette worked in General Electric and other factory jobs while living in Berwick, caring for Elaine and, like so many young wives, waiting for her husband’s return.

After basic training in 1943 an 1944, Pelletier was about to be sent to Europe for the D-Day invasion when he was singled out for his fluent French language ability and sent to the South Pacific for over 17 months.

In the Foreign Service Association Pacific Theater, he became interpreter for the large Allied base on the French island of New Caledonia, where he was a member of the 208th Army military police and attained the rank of sergeant.

After the war, the Pelletiers settled in Berwick and raised Elaine and her younger brother, Norman.  Wildré worked many years at Portsmouth Naval Shipyard and died in the 1986, and Jeannette in 1999.