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IssuesJuly/August 2009Features

Old Home Days: A New England Tradition

Parades and concerts give newcomers roots

by Jim Collins

OldHomeDays
Credit: Walpole Historical Society

Click here for schedule of Old Home Days in New England

I returned to my hometown this week. The Walpole, New Hampshire, "Old Home Days" committee had invited me to give a reading at the library. I arrived early enough to catch the end of the parade and let the familiar landmarks settle in: the big shade trees and stately white Colonial homes lining Main Street, the stone fountain, the compact shops and businesses that have moved upscale since I lived at the edge of the village, but which looked as lovely and Rockwell-esque as ever. And soon enough, familiar faces everywhere I turned: Mr. Perron, my junior-high science teacher; Ken McGill, who used to share the right side of the baseball infield with me; John Chandler, who played second base for the American Legion team a couple of years ahead of me, and whom I looked up to as a god. And I have to say, although I moved away more than two decades ago, it felt like being home.

Many towns around New England put on versions of the celebration every summer, usually for a day or a weekend. Walpole's has grown so elaborate that it takes place just once every three years. This year, some 20 subcommittees organized everything from the opening block party on Wednesday afternoon to the final Sunday-night performance of the Walpole Players' You Can't Take It With You. T-shirt sales, fireworks, chicken barbeque, antique car show, talent show, pet show, 5K race, basketball shootout, band concert, dance, shortcake social, parade--each had a squadron of volunteers and months in the planning behind it, along with part of the event's $10,000 budget.

The whole thing stretches over the length of time that the inventor of the ritual, Frank Rollins of New Hampshire, envisioned back in 1897 when he created an official Old Home Week Association and lobbied towns around the state to take part. Rollins feared that New Hampshire's small towns were dying. He saw the farms and villages emptying out to better-paying factory jobs in the cities and to the promise of prosperity and easier farming in the South and Midwest. In the old homesteads collapsing into cellar holes and brush reclaiming the fields, Rollins saw New Hampshire's place in America's future fading, as well. Taking office as governor in 1899, he responded with a nationwide appeal to native sons and daughters to return home, to rediscover the wholesomeness of small-town life amid an increasingly impersonal urbanized culture. He hoped that once lured back home, many would choose to stay. The whole idea was a public-relations campaign, built around nostalgia and a longing for some lost sense of community.

In truth, I felt some of some of what Rollins intended, although I still live in the state, just an hour or so from Walpole. After the library reading, I walked past the little restaurant that Tom Murray started the year after we graduated from high school, and wandered around the booths and exhibits on the town's broad common. I heard kids' voices ringing out from the ballfield behind the brown stone church, where we used to play pick-up baseball games during the Sunday-evening band concerts. We'd stand while the band played "The Star-Spangled Banner," holding our hats over our hearts, imagining we were pros. Toward the end of the afternoon, I took a drive, passing trout streams where I'd learned to fish, felt rushes of memory, felt the pull that Governor Rollins had once banked on.

But to be honest, in the throng of people crowding the common and the village square, I recognized only a small percentage of the faces, and almost none, like me, who had returned to visit. Walpole, like so many towns in New England, has reversed the emptying out that threatened their existence a century ago. What threatens the town's wholesomeness today is growth: not too many cellar holes, but too many houses.

Most of those attending Old Home Days were residents new to the town. Most of them commute to jobs somewhere else. The celebration is intended to bring them together. Chuck Bingaman, who co-chaired the publicity committee with his wife, Sue, moved to Walpole six years ago from Illinois. He told me that working on the Old Home Days celebration has allowed him to get to know all kinds of people around town, folks with whom he likely wouldn't have interacted otherwise. The work has given him a powerful, geographical sense of community, not just the selective community of like-minded friends and acquaintances he'd found in the various places he'd lived. It has given him the old-fashioned feeling of being home. He's not planning to move again.

Ironically, Old Home Days still serves its original purpose, but from an opposite direction. Its power of nostalgia and connection no longer entices former residents to return, but current ones to stay.

An Old Home Days Summer Sampling

CONNECTICUT
July 9-11
East Hampton Old Home Days, 860-267-8533; easthamptonoldhomedays.org

September 19
Canterbury Old Home Day, 860-546-9377; canterburyhistorical.org

MAINE
July 10-12
Harrison Old Home Days, 207-892-8265; sebagolakeschamber.com

July 31-August 9
Calais Homecoming, 207-454-2308; visitstcroixvalley.com

August 16-23
Phillips Old Home Days, 207-864-5364; rangeleymaine.com

MASSACHUSETTS
July 31-August 9
Beverly Homecoming, 978-232-9559; beverlyhomecoming.com

August 7-9
Scituate Heritage Days, 508-747-0100; seeplymouth.com

September 25-27
Lee Founders Weekend, 413-243-0852; leechamber.org

NEW HAMPSHIRE
July 4
Franconia Old Home Day, 603-823-5661; franconianotch.org

August 15
Pittsburg Old Home Day, 603-237-8939, 603-538-6536; northcountrychamber.org

August 15
Hancock Old Home Day, 603-525-9379; hancocknh.org/hhs/index.htm

RHODE ISLAND
July 4
Scituate Old Home Day, 401-647-3366; scituateri.org

July 24-26
Foster Old Home Day, 401-397-5687; fosterpreservationsociety.org

VERMONT
July 31-August 2
Rockingham Old Home Days, 802-463-4280; gfrcc.org

August 1
Plymouth Old Home Day, 802-228-5830, 802-672-3773; yourplaceinvermont.com, historicvermont.org/coolidge

For additional Old Home Day events, go to: Old Home Days 2009

Reader CommentsRSS

Comment from Kathy Bass on August 12, 2009

LOVED this article! We've been traveling from Texas to New England for the fall foliage for 24 years, and New Hampshire is by far our favorite NE state! If we could live anywhere but Galveston Island, TX, it would be somewhere in New Hampshire!!! We love the Kanc area and the Lakes area and everything about NH. We have monthly block parties in the East End Historical District where we live and this article reminds me very much of our events. We also have weekly band concerts in the park pavillion and it is a "Norman Rockwell" event, much like the one in this article. I love the way this takes you back to the simpler, family oriented days. Keep up the good work, YANKEE Magazine...we've been a subscriber since our first trip to NE in 1985! We can't wait for the next issue to arrive and can't wait until our next trip to NE. THANK YOU for sharing this wonderful part of the US with us.

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