Victorian Thanksgiving at Bloomington's Davis Mansion through Nov.
22
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[November 12, 2009]
BLOOMINGTON -- "The Blessings of the Table:
Thanksgiving at Clover Lawn," a recreation of the festive
Thanksgiving celebrations of the 1870s, is featured through Nov. 22 at
the David Davis Mansion State Historic Site in Bloomington.
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The mansion is decorated for Thanksgiving, and each day the
bountiful foods, family celebrations and charitable customs of the
period are being featured. From her birthplace in Massachusetts,
Sarah Davis brought to Illinois the New England fondness for
celebrating Thanksgiving. To observe the holiday, she invited
friends and family to her elegant home in Bloomington, where she
served a traditional feast of turkey, pumpkin pie and "all the
trimmings."
In addition to the mansion's collection of antique china and rare
silver, visitors can see the large variety of delicious foods that
were typical of a Thanksgiving celebration in the Victorian age.
Thanksgiving was the time of year when the dining room was as
magnificently decorated for the holidays as the parlor. Visitors
will feel as if they are immersed in a 19th-century feast for all
the senses, as the guide describes the tastes and aromas of Sarah's
favorite Thanksgiving foods, which formed the traditional cuisine of
colonial New England.
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Tours are free and open to the public, and are offered Wednesday
through Sunday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. The site is closed on Mondays
and Tuesdays.
The Blessings of the Table is co-sponsored by the David Davis
Mansion Foundation and the Illinois Historic Preservation Agency,
which administers the David Davis Mansion.
The David Davis Mansion
State Historic Site, built in the 1870s for U.S. Supreme Court
Justice David Davis and his wife, Sarah, is located at 1000 E.
Monroe in Bloomington. A donation of $4 for adults and $2 for
children is suggested.
[Text from file received from
the Illinois Historic
Preservation Agency]
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