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Sep 10 Wednesday
One of Yankee Magazine's top five cemetery tours in New England! Walk Portland's Old Burying Ground with a trained guide. Hallowed? Not officially. Historic? Absolutely. Haunted? You decide. Visit the cemetery's unique field of underground tombs, the oldest gravemarker from 1717, the final resting place of the famed Captains of the 1813 battle between the Boxer and the Enterprise, and the interesting carvings of Portland's first stone-cutter, Bartlett Adams. Tours include early gravestone art, important local historic figures, Portland's historic events, and the landscape of this National Historic Landmark, including segregated sections for Black people, Catholics, Quakers, and strangers. Wear comfortable walking shoes, as the ground is uneven once we leave the main pathway. Tours are held unless the weather is stormy.
Sep 11 Thursday
Sep 12 Friday
Whether you’re caring for your family’s heirlooms, managing a museum collection or volunteering at your local historical society, this class will teach you how to handle delicate objects. You will learn tips for packing them up and safely moving them to their new home. Practice makes perfect, so bring an item that fits into a shoe box to try out the techniques we learn in class.
Sep 13 Saturday
The Jonathan Fisher House will host special tours of the orchard on the historic property during regular visitor hours on Saturday, September 13 from 1-4 PM.
Leslie Cummins and Tim Seabrook will guide visitors through the reconstructed historic orchard and discuss Fisher’s original design and planting, as well as the process of re-establishing the orchard based on the documented apple varieties from Fisher’s original orchard map, including the Roxbury Russet (a then-newly-established American variety), the Golden Russet (a very ancient variety) and the Ribston Pippin (a famous British variety).
Many people are rediscovering old orchards these days, but Jonathan Fisher’s is unique in its level of documentation. Just like Johnny Appleseed and other pioneers, Fisher planted apple seeds first (seeds being easier to carry than saplings) and then later top-grafted a known valued tree onto the young seeded tree. There is an example of Fisher’s top grafting on our 200+ year-old pear tree, which was recently DNA-tested to determine its variety. Curious about the results? Join us to learn more!
Tours of the orchard are free, but donations to support the Fisher House are always welcome. Visitors may also tour the interior of the historic house before or after visiting the orchard ($10 suggested donation for house tour).
Sep 14 Sunday
Sep 15 Monday
Sep 16 Tuesday
Sep 17 Wednesday
2025 Constitution Day Lecture
Nicholas F. JacobsAssociate Professor of GovernmentColby College
Wednesday, September 173:30 PMHill Auditorium, 165 Barrows Hall
Can One Person Save–or Break–a Republic? The Rise of the Presidency-Centered Government
We live in a time when every national issue seems to come back to one office: the presidency. But was the U.S. Constitution ever meant to work this way? This talk explores how the American president became the center of our political system — and why that’s a problem. Drawing on decades of political and constitutional change, we’ll look beyond any one leader to ask a bigger question: what happens to democracy when we place too much power, hope, and blame in the hands of a single person?