Upcoming Society Events


Jun
3

Phila Slade Art Show

Phila Slade has been a member of the NAIS since 2958., a past President who has been involved in many of the most important initiatives that the Improvement Society has undertaken, such as the restoration of Patriots Memorial Park. This event will celebrate Phila’s work with a sale of watercolors from her collection. Subjects in a wide range from scenes around North Andover and New England, to florals, to abstract and non-objective works. An online auction of select works will be open for bidding starting May 28th at https://Auctria.events/PhilaArtShow

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Apr
10

Frederick Law Olmsted 200th Anniversary Presentation

  • Worden Theatre at the Stevens Center, North Andover Historical Society (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

Happy Birthday Frederick Law Olmsted and Patriots Memorial Park!

Join us for the Olmsted 200th Anniversary movie, with remarks by Phila Slade and Leslie Frazier to celebrate the 200th birthday of F. L. Olmsted, the first landscape architect, and 100th anniversary of our Patriots Memorial Park, designed by H.V. Hubbard, Olmsted Brothers Landscape Architects.

Sunday, April 10th, 2:00-3:00pm

Worden Theater, North Andover Historical Society, 800 Mass. Ave.

Registration required, seats are limited.

Register through Stevens Library website calendar tab at:

http://www.eventkeeper.com/mars/xpages/S/STEVENSML/ekp.cfm?curOrg=stevensml

A joint event of the North Andover Garden Club, the North Andover Improvement Society, and Stevens Memorial Library.

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Wisteria House: Life in a New England Home, 1839-2000
Apr
3

Wisteria House: Life in a New England Home, 1839-2000

One Historic Landmark that didn’t become a Museum…

The Field-Hodges House in North Andover, Massachusetts, was completely furnished and packed to the rafters with the accumulated belongings of three generations when its last resident died at 103. 

Sarah Moore Field was born there in 1885 and lived there all her life. When she died in 1988 without heirs, she hoped it could become a historic house museum. It could not. A more creative solution was required. Wisteria House: Life in a New England Home, 1839-2000 by Susan J. Montgomeryjust published by Rowman & Littlefield, is the final element of that solution. The North Andover Historical Society is hosting an event to celebrate the launch of this book.

As Carol Majahad, former Executive Director of the North Andover Historical Society, stated, the book is a “must-have for all students of material culture, social history, museum studies and anyone who enjoys ‘the story of ordinary lives, extraordinarily preserved.”

Named for the vigorous vine that flourished on the veranda for over 150 years, Wisteria House is a local nickname for the Field-Hodges House. Wisteria is also fit analogy for the tenacious woman who was determined that her family’s legacy be preserved. For fifty years, Miss Field maintained the 1839 house, barn, and gardens, and saved furnishings, clothing, personal items, photographs, letters, and financial records of her upper-middle class grandparents and parents, along with her own. 

As a time capsule of a particular family in a particular small town at a particular time, the collection offered a rare glimpse into everyday life in New England. Without the resources to open the house to the public, the trustees decided to distribute many of the objects and archives to over a dozen regional museums including the North Andover Historical Society, Historic New England, the Lawrence History Center, the Peabody Essex Museum and the Monadnock Center for History and Culture. The remaining items were sold at auction to benefit the Field family’s church. Historic New England established preservation restrictions on key architectural elements and decorative finishes, and the property was sold to a private owner, ensuring it would survive.

Wisteria House: Life in a New England Home, 1839-2000 is the permanent record of the occupancy of the house by the Hodges family, from 1839 to 1870, and then the Fields, and concludes with the story of the determined effort by the estate trustees and expert advisors from the North Andover Historical Society and Historic New England to fulfill Miss Field’s intentions.

Both organizations have enthusiastically supported the Field-Hodges House for many years.

NAHS underwrote the publication of Wisteria House: Life in a New England Home, 1839-2000 and is planning a celebratory launch at the Society’s headquarters on April 3. The hardcover book is available at the Society and online (northandoverhistorical.square.site), 188 pages 112 illustrations, $67.50 members, non-members $75.00. Historic New England sponsored a Zoom presentation by Dr. Montgomery on February 17, 2022 at 6:00 p.m. The program is on the Historic New England website (https:my.historicnewengland.org/11338/field-hodges-house). In addition, the Winter 2022 issue of Historic New England magazine will feature “The Legacy of Sarah Moore Field.”

For more information on the book launch, contact the North Andover Historical Society at 978-686-4035 or see Facebook : https://facebook.com/events/s/wisteria-house-book-launch-w-s/329730259118341/

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NAIS ANNUAL MEETING  and PROGRAM: Connecting our Lives to Nature with Biophilic Design
Jun
21

NAIS ANNUAL MEETING and PROGRAM: Connecting our Lives to Nature with Biophilic Design

BIOPHILIC DESIGN - CONNECTING OUR LIVES TO THE NATURAL ENVIRONMENT

Biophilic design is a concept used to increase connectivity to the natural environment through the use of direct and indirect nature and space and place conditions.

The North Andover Improvement Society is excited to bring you this presentation by Xochitl Bielma of Bird and Wolf Restaurant, North Andover.

The meeting will be held in the new theatre at the North Andover Historical Society’s Stevens Center on the common at the Old Center of town. We’re truly excited that our Annual Meeting will be the inaugural event taking place at the newly restored Colonial Revival brick building, which was initially home to the Merrimack Valley Textile Museum!

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Osgood Hill: An Experiment in Aestheticism
Dec
1

Osgood Hill: An Experiment in Aestheticism

Moses Stevens was fully aware of the perennial challenge that Osgood Hill would present to future citizens of North Andover, Mass., when the estate was designed and built in 1886. With the headwinds of progress, as constant at that time as they are today, Osgood Hill was designed as a symbol of strength, of oneness with nature and with longevity, resourcefulness and purpose in mind.

The issues of land and historic asset preservation reflected questions about broader social and economic values and priorities at the time, as they do today.

Find out about the Aesthetic Movement’s influence on Moses Stevens, and how none other than Oscar Wilde may have been the inspiration behind “The House Beautiful” at Osgood Hill.

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ANNUAL MEETING & ANNUAL MEETING PROGRAM: BUTTERFLIES IN MY DINING ROOM
Aug
3

ANNUAL MEETING & ANNUAL MEETING PROGRAM: BUTTERFLIES IN MY DINING ROOM

BUTTERFLIES IN MY DINING ROOM

Kathy Slade's Adventure Raising Monarchs

A Photographic and Video Talk, From Egg to Release

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, we have postponed our 2020 Annual Meeting, which would usually take place in June, until August 3, 2020 at 7 p.m. The meeting and program will be conducted virtually through Zoom. Please sign in at 6:55 p.m. so that you may be admitted to the meeting before the program begins.

Zoom Meeting Link: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/83199350085

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  •  Farm Stories - First Hand Stories of Iconic Farms - this event, a collaboration between the North Andover Improvement Society and Essex County Greenbelt is coming up in Early Summer 2021. More details soon…