OCR Text |
Show ? . SV .--- -r Jcf- VK-"- " - --' " - , -v ; v :j "' v ytr ,J, f J! - - th s ' r3 f A , ' ? s - ; ' - - h 1MMtoK sMMHWM,-, i.i.illf .11 rti,iillMiir BM II 1MU. IUUI jj Gay Ninety House Scene of Spring Opening "Open house was held Sunday afternoon at the Rockport home of Mr. and Mrs William Brown." This might have been a society item in Rockport, Utah during the Gay 90's, but it marked the official opening of the Brown home after it was moved to SUP Pioneer Village Museum. Refurbished and glorified, the entire three-room house has been furnished and decorated in keeping keep-ing with the Victorian era Outside, the house has been painted to highlight the gingerbread, ginger-bread, or fancy carved grillwork, on the porch, the gables and around the windows. Elegant lace curtains and stained glass windows frame the parlor. Inside, a carved oak organ and sideboard share honors with the plush-covered chairs) china closet filled with "company" china, carved oak fireplace and many other items popular more than half a century ago. The carved oak bedroom furniture includes the bed, night stand, highboy a Victorian counterpart count-erpart of a dressing table, marble-topped marble-topped wash stand with porcelain washbasin and pitcher. In the kitchen the metal bathtub bath-tub sits before the old coal range, and mannequins dressed as father mother, son and daughter are preparing pre-paring for the children's Saturday night baths The old pendelum clock sits atop the polished oak cupboard, which matches the oak dough table, on which mother kneaded her weekly batch of bread-Each bread-Each room is -enclosed by a glass wall to keep out the dust. Stepping through the front door of the gingerbread house will be like visiting grandma's housef for the many thousands of visitors expected ex-pected at Pioneer Village this summer. sum-mer. Hours are from 2 to 5 p.m. on Sunday, and by special appointment appoint-ment for groups of 25 or more on , weekday mornings. |