“Blessings of the Table” Victorian Thanksgiving Nov. 1-16 at David
Davis Mansion
Living history program on November 2 will
offer a servants’ view of an 1870s Thanksgiving
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[November 01, 2019]
“The Blessings of the Table: Thanksgiving at
Clover Lawn,” a recreation of the festive Thanksgiving celebrations
of the 1870s, will be featured November 1 – November 16 at the David
Davis Mansion State Historic Site in Bloomington.
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The Mansion will be decorated for
Thanksgiving, and each day the bountiful foods, family celebrations
and charitable customs of the period will be featured. In addition
to the Mansion’s collection of antique china and rare silver,
visitors will see the large variety of delicious foods that were
typical of a Thanksgiving celebration in the Victorian age - a
traditional feast of turkey, pumpkin pie, and all the trimmings.
Thanksgiving was the time of year when the dining room was as
magnificently decorated for the holidays as the parlor, and visitors
will feel as if they are immersed in a 19th century feast.
This year’s Thanksgiving celebration at the Davis Mansion will also
showcase a living history program “A Bountiful Feast” on Saturday,
November 2 which will offer the servant’s perspective on this lavish
Victorian holiday observance. This special live theatrical event
will be offered from 9:00 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. on November 2.
The Davis servants were a major
reason why Thanksgiving at the Davis Mansion was a treat for all the
senses. “A Bountiful Feast” will give visitors a rare opportunity to
experience Thanksgiving at the Mansion almost completely from the
servants’ point of view.
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It’s also a chance for visitors to relive a time when people
produced and ate fresh, locally grown foods. While watching performers
portraying the Davis family enjoying a traditional New England Thanksgiving
feast, visitors will come across the household servants who are busily preparing
Thanksgiving dinner for the family and gossiping about personal events in their
own lives.
“The Blessings of the Table” and “A Bountiful Feast” are co-sponsored by the
David Davis Mansion Foundation and the Illinois Department of Natural Resources,
which administers the David Davis Mansion. Donations are always encouraged.
Regular tours of the Davis Mansion are free and open to the public, and are
offered Wednesday through Saturday from 9:00 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. The site will be
closed on Sundays, Mondays and Tuesdays.
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 Monroe Drive
in Bloomington.
[Illinois Department of Natural
Resources] |