Frankenmuth Historical

Association

613 South Main Street

Frankenmuth, Michigan  48734

Phone:  (989) 652-9701

Fax:  (989) 652-9390

 

 

 

 

 


Now Showing in the Leona Geyer Gallery:

KINDERPLATZ

 Kinderplatz is German for a Child’s Place. For 2008, the Leona Geyer Gallery will be a place where children of all ages can explore. Hands-on activities are combined with displays of artifacts from the museum collection. Each month a portion of the exhibit area will change:

February: First Ladies of Fashion and their children

March: Books (March is Reading Month)

April: Clothing & Dress (with a closet of clothes to “Try-On” adult roles)

May through August: Music, Toys and Games (with hands-one activities)

September: Writing Constitutions

October: Who was Columbus?

November: Michigan Indians

December: A Child’s Christmas

 

 

Reading

When Wilhelm Busch (1832-1908)

wrote his cartoon book, Max und Moritz: eine Bubengeschichte in sieben Streichen, he intended it for adult readers. His satirical picture stories gained him the status of one of the forefathers of the modern comic strip. It is said that some of the practical jokes described in the book were based on memories of Busch’s  childhood escapades. When he ended the story with the pranksters’ demise, Busch knew his adult readers would see this as fantasy. Real pranksters must be dealt with by other methods.

 

Clothing & Toys

 

Henry Fischer's Souvenirs from Cuba

 

 

On October 10, 1898, Cuba first declared its independence after the Spanish-American War ended (formal independence was May 20, 1902).  Soon after that time, Theodore Fischer (Henry Fischer's father), and George Hubinger decided to go to Cuba to buy tobacco for cigars.  Fischer and Hubinger traveled by train to Florida then by ship to Cuba, under the protection of the U.S. Army, based at Guantanamo Bay.  Henry's outfit was purchased on this trip. His pride of possession was recorded by Wm. Stromer, soon after the photographer arrived in the Vassar-Frankenmuth area.


SHAKESPEARE'S MACBETH

 

Pigeon Creek Shakespeare Company presents Macbeth in Fischer Hall

Thursday, May 1 @ 7:30 pm

Friday, May 2 @ 7:30 pm

Saturday, May 3 @ 2:00 pm & 7:30 pm 

 

Tickets are $12 for adults and $6 for students and seniors.

 

Having just finished a run of Shakespeare's comedy A Midsummer Night's Dream, Pigeon Creek follows up that play with one of the Bard's darkest tragedies, Macbeth.  Pigeon Creek's performance style is fast-paced, high-energy and extremely audience-interactive.

 

"Fair is foul and foul is fair" as PCSC returns to the museum with Shakespeare's famous tragedy of character, lust for power, betrayal and supernatural.  "Macbeth" is one of Shakespeare's later plays, and his shortest tragedy.  Long regarded with fear and superstition by theatre professionals, PCSC will recreate the Thane and his wife, along with the wicked sisters and the drunken porter, at their own peril.  Thought to be one of the bard's plays designed for indoor viewing, the "Scottish Play" is rife with unseen sounds, dark night scenes, murder, regicide and madness.

 

Shakespeare's Macbeth does contain scenes of violence and some sexual references.  Pigeon Creek Shakespeare Company recommends parental guidance for children 12 and under.

 

For more information, visit www.pcshakespeare.com

 



A Valuable Work Ethic: A Pictorial History of Frankenmuth Business,
by Jeremy W. Kilar

Purchase Book

Table of Contents

  • Agriculture
  • Lumbering
  • Transportation
  • Businesses
  • Stores along Main Street
Pictorial History of Frankenmuth Business cover
Click image to enlarge
 
This book is a photo-essay of Frankenmuth's most interesting businesses. The hard-cover, 80 page book is available for purchase online for $20.00 plus $1.20 tax and $7 shipping and handling. It is also available at the Museum gift shop as well as in some businesses along Main Street in Frankenmuth.

Here are some excerpts from the Book's Introduction.

"This is a photographic memory of Frankenmuth's historic businesses. The economic life of Frankenmuth has fortunately been documented in photographs for over 120 years and nearly 120 images of that community are shown in this book. The early, "pre-Bavarianization" of Frankenmuth's past is captured here in order to remember the world that we have lost. Indeed Frankenmuth has changed so dramaticallyand continues to do so frequently—that the town of forty years ago is hardly recognizable to an infrequent tourist or distant home-towner. It is that original world of Frankenmuth business and commerce that is highlighted in the historical photographs presented within this book, the first of several planned pictorial histories of Frankenmuth.   The casual, yet perceptive, visitor to Frankenmuth will notice something that is clearly evident to every permanent resident: It seems that everyone is busy. Everybody is doing something. indeed the city appears to epitomize the 'value of the work ethic.'....

A Valuable Work Ethic: A Pictorial History of Frankenmuth Business is an effort to capture the embryonic origins and fulfillment over generations of that work ethic."

 

Page Last Updated: 03/16/07


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613 South Main Street
Frankenmuth, Michigan 48734
(989) 652-9701

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