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History...
"My Great
Grand father Samuel and his wife Melissa arrived in South
Williamstown in 1876 in a wagon drawn by horses. They bought a farm
and began a small dairy. In 1874, living in Hancock Ma only a few
miles away and also farming they lost all four of their children in
the span of one week from Black Diphtheria. A 9 yr old girl Eda,
twin boys aged 4, Sherman and Sheridan, (Samuel had been with the
125th NY Volunteers in the great civil war) and a 2 yr
old boy Burton. After the death of her last child, Melissa refused
to stay at their farm and in 1876 bought the farm in Williamstown.
They were to have two more children and the oldest, my Grandfather
Robert, was to stay on the farm and have his children, one of which
was my Dad. I grew up next door to the old farm house and spent much
of my time with my Grandmother who shared old photo’s and stories
about the farm and family. She also spent time reading to me from
the works of great poets such as Emerson, W. Whitman, Frost and many
others. My love of history began even before I could walk. If I
could crawl, wedge or fit into it, I needed to know what was in
there and my grandmother was always pulling me out of places by my
ankles and exclaimed, “I wish Boone, I knew what you were looking
for”. .
I loved
playing on the farm, in the old cow barn, the meadows and pastures
and in the woods where at age 13-14 with my brother and cousins, cut
the logs and actually built a log cabin, about 12’X12’. We spent all
our weekends and summers at the cabin and during the winter months
cut and stacked firewood in preparation for collecting sap in late
winter/early spring to make our own maple syrup, something that had
always been done on the farm. I loved everything about the old farm
including the early farm tools and implements, and the antiques
inside the old house like the Glenwood wood and coal stove, the
furniture and kitchen stuff. If it was old I loved it. At age 19 I
left for the Army and when I returned, sadly, my Grandmother had
sold the remaining land including the farm house and I never got the
chance to acquire some of it for my own home. I did however find a
beautiful old place a few miles away and finally did build a house
of my own which was a colonial of course. I never lost my love of
history or antiques and in 1993 I made a career change and started a
business selling antiques in a building I also built, which looks
like a 18th schoolhouse on property right next to my
residence.
I love what I
do and the people I meet. I never stop leaning new things. My
antiques fuel my passion and the passion fuels my business. We are
all caretakers of history and all this stuff reminds us of where we
came from as well as the people who used them. If we need something
today we go and buy it- they would make it. They not only would make
it, they would make it to last. It is an honor to offer my antiques
to future collectors and not just as items that are great
investments but also things that decorate and bring such beauty into
our homes. I hope you will enjoy your visit here at my shop as much
as I do each and every morning I open. Please feel free to contact
me with any questions about my inventory or perhaps about something
you’re looking for that reminds you of your past. "
- Daniel
Rhodes
We can’t know
where we’re going if we don’t know where we’ve been.
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