Still snowing today so it looks as though the museum will be closed at least December 26, possibly for the next couple of days. If the feather flag is flying out along the roadside, we are open!
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A much needed improvement allows the museum to be open more hours during the winter months. The propane heating units are now up and running again after necessary repairs. We might be closed for a few days after Christmas if it snows, but will resume our noon to five, Tuesday through Saturday hours January 2.
The museum will close during the winter due to inclement weather, but if the sidewalk is clear and our banner is out, we will be open. For those of you that call to schedule a tour, we will do our best to be here as planned. We are working on lectures, the first will be January 12, followed by February 2 and 9. Check with us to see what is going on! Things have been coming along for the Historical Society and Museum in the past few years and 2018 has been very successful. Much of the credit goes to the volunteers that have spent hour after hour on projects or museum tours and information. We can't thank them enough for all they do.
We hosted field trips again this year, going to Milner Dam and Recreation Area, Hagerman Fossil Beds, Murtaugh Lake, Clarr Tunnel, and the Stricker area. 2019 field trips are currently being arranged. The newspapers - Hollister Herald, Kimberly Advertiser, and Filer Record have been taken to Boise for scanning to be made available to the public as part of the services offered by the Historical Society. Many thanks to the Seagraves Family Foundation and others that donated to this project. There is finally a source of heat working at the museum. For the past several years the roof tops units went usused, but now the propane tank is back and the building is can be open longer through the winter. In April there was a history day at the museum and we will be doing this again in 2019 as well as more lectures and other events. Thanks to everyone that donated, participated or visited the museum in 2018. Our newspaper scanning project is on track. Over 2000 pages of 4 different titles will be scanned. We are exited about The Hollister Herald, it is our link to the past for the Salmon Tract. You may know Hollister was the first Salmon Tract town site, particularly interesting are the reports of the next town sites as they were developed. Rogerson, Amsterdam, Berger, Clover, (not on Salmon Tract irrigation). Reports from Jarbidge and Contact, Nevada tell us about stockmen and miners. The Hollister Herald issues were 4, 8 10 12 or 16 pages, usually 8 and during difficult economic times 4 pages. The lack of water behind Salmon Falls Dam was most often a headline. The Hollister Herald was the newspaper of record for the area. A “newspaper of record” is given all public notices, these city, county, state and federal notices were printed at the expensive open rate and were a sizable portion of the Heralds income. The publisher / editor must have angered many people because a second newspaper, “Hollister New Era” was published, it had more initial subscribers than the Hollister Herald and it was awarded the public notices. Wow! Hollister had two newspapers. Twin Falls, for your historic reference, at one time endured four simultaneous newspaper publications. The TF News, TF Times, TF Chronicle and TF Citizen. |
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