Saturday, December 11, 2010

The Mendelssohn Club of Philadelphia Presents “A Feast of Carols”, the Holiday Tradition Combines Musical Works from the Past and the Present

By Catherine J. Barrier

The Mendelssohn Club is one of the country’s oldest choruses, having been founded in 1874 by William Wallace Gilchrist (1846-1916), a leading 19th-century musical figure in Philadelphia, who was also a choral conductor for several choruses, a composer, and the organist and choirmaster for several area churches.  Gilchrist also founded and conducted the Symphony Society of Philadelphia in the 1890s, one of the symphonies that reorganized into The Philadelphia Orchestra in 1900.  Since its founding, the Mendelssohn Club has been a major force in choral music—in Philadelphia and beyond. 
The Mendelssohn Club in Concert
at Holy Trinity Church

The Club started as an eight-voice male chorus, grew in size, and added female voices.  In December 1879, the Club performed its first subscription concert, which included instrument solos as well as choral works.  Today, its programming is innovative and includes the finest choral music of many cultures, traditions, periods and styles, and the Club enriches the lives of its members and the public, enhancing the Club members’ knowledge and experience of music and assisting in the development of new musical compositions, new artists, and new audiences—all to bring fulfillment to those who listen to and love music.

William “Bill” Walkowiak is one past member of the Mendelssohn Club whose life was enriched by his involvement with the group.

“[Performing with the Mendelssohn Club of Philadelphia] was a fantastic experience,” said Walkowiak, a Club member from 1984 to 1996. “It exposed me to a wonderful, diverse repertoire of music and enabled me to perform with talented musicians in many famous venues, including Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center, the Philadelphia Academy of Music, and the Mann Music Center, among others. I have many, many exquisite memories of my years with the Mendelssohn Club.”

Walkowiak had sung with his church choir for many years before friends told him about the Mendelssohn Club and urged him to audition. “I thought it would be a big step up for my love of music, and decided to give it a try,” said Walkowiak.  “Fortunately, I passed the audition.”

“Working with the Mendelssohn Club, it’s a delight,” said Alan Harler, the Club’s Artistic Director.  “And it has a wonderful history.  It’s a professional dream for me to have such a big, thriving group of singers, with an orchestra, doing our own productions.” 

Since 1988, Harler has led the Mendelssohn Club of Philadelphia while both teaching graduate conducting and serving as the Laura H. Carnell Professor and the Chairman of the Choral Department at Temple University’s Boyer College of Music and Dance.  He just recently retired from Temple, but his work with the Mendelssohn Club is still almost a full-time job.

“I’d been in Philadelphia—at Temple—for about 3 or 4 years and was asked to put together a chorus to do the Verdi Requiem at the Casals Festival in San Juan, Puerto Rico, with the Puerto Rico Symphony Orchestra, so I approached the Mendelssohn Club [to see if they’d be interested],” said Harler.  “At the time, I believe they were between conductors, and they agreed, so I worked with them and several of the choirs at Temple to prepare for that performance.  Soon thereafter, they asked me to stay on and lead them, and I accepted.”

This Saturday, December 11th, at 4:30 p.m. and again at 7:30 p.m., the Mendelssohn Club of Philadelphia will present “A Feast of Carols” at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, 22 E. Chestnut Hill Avenue, in Philadelphia (Chestnut Hill).  This year’s annual event for the whole family will feature holiday music spanning several centuries, a world premiere—as well as other works—by the Mendelssohn Club’s Composer-in-Residence Donald St. Pierre, Benjamin Britten’s Ceremony of Carols (Op. 28), well-loved traditional carols with audience participation, and much more!  General admission: $25; tickets are available online at www.mcchorus.org.  Students receive special discounts; check show time for student ticket price.  For more information, check the Website, e-mail info@mcchorus.org, or call (215) 735-9922.

“We’ve done [these holiday concerts at St. Paul’s in Chestnut Hill] every year, and they’re very popular,” said Harler.  [St. Paul’s] is a beautiful space, a beautiful church, with great acoustics, and there’s a wonderful church organ.  We use the church organ and our Mendelssohn Brass Quintet.  We’ve been going there for a long time.”

Holiday concerts were always a highlight of the year,” said Walkowiak. “They made the season really feel special, and certainly got me into the ‘Christmas Spirit’. Each year we did a concert in Chestnut Hill at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, where we stood on the altar literally surrounded by an enormous pipe organ. The crescendos with the organ and choir literally vibrated through my entire body. I can still feel the sensation. Being part of such a musical performance is the most spiritual feeling that I have ever experienced.”

There have been numerous changes at the Mendelssohn Club since Harler first became its artistic director.

“It’s a much larger group since I’ve been involved,” said Harler.  “When I first started, there were about 75 members.  We’re a much larger chorus now (currently 135 members).  And the real focus now is that we perform new music and are frequently commissioning new pieces.  I guess what I’ve brought to the group is the performing of American music from the current time.  And the Chorus is being choreographed in movement and the audience is [now often] being actively engaged; for example, they’re given the opportunity to sing along with the Chorus on certain songs during performances.  And in fact, in February, we’ll be doing a program entitled The Audience inCHOIRing.  With that, through Facebook and Twitter, the public will be given the chance to learn several simple tunes and a little play that will be incorporated into our performance program.” Evidently, using modern technology is one way the Mendelssohn Club continues to offer innovative programming.

But Harler normally achieves his innovative programming a bit differently.  He often combines new or rarely heard musical compositions with more familiar, traditional works, believing the combination enhances each of the individual component parts.  He recognizes that such programming also provides the audience with familiar contexts for the newer musical experiences.

“I think it’s just really important that at the same time that our Western European traditional music [continues to be performed] that we do American music,” said Harler.  “After all, it’s the music that comes out of our culture.  It’s important to me to champion American music—and new music.  Normally, until the 20th-century, that’s what was usually done (an individual country’s new music was performed by its choirs and choruses).  It was only in the 20th century that we started to focus on repeatedly performing the [older] music of the 18th and 19th centuries.  And when I’ve traveled, [I’ve found that] the choirs from other countries are doing mostly music from their countries.  German choirs are performing German music; French choirs are doing French music.  [Performing our new American music] is a way for us to encourage our own American culture.  We’ve done about 45 new commissioned works during my tenure [with the Mendelssohn Club].”

“New commissions were one of the most exciting aspects of the Mendelssohn Club under Alan Harler,” said Walkowiak. “I was very proud that we were able to commission so many new works, and felt that I was part of something historic.  Of course, some turned out better than others, but each one was performed for the very first time by the Mendelssohn Club, and I was part of it. How many people can experience such a thing?”

“Donald St. Pierre has done a lot of commissions for us,” said Harler.  “He’s our Composer-in-Residence, and it’s his 15th anniversary with us.  He’s also our accompanist.  We’re doing three of his pieces [during this upcoming concert], including his Three Carols, a work to be sung a cappella.  Another, his A Visit from St. Nicholas, is based on what we know as the famous ‘Twas the Night Before Christmas text, and we’re doing his Songs of Sweet Accord for men’s voices and harp.  After we did [Benjamin] Britten’s Ceremony of Carols (Op. 28) a number of years ago, we immediately commissioned Don to write a parallel piece to be scored for men’s voices with harp.  The Britten piece is scored for women’s voices and harp.  So, these are three big pieces of Don’s on this upcoming program.”

St. Pierre is also a faculty member at the Curtis Institute of Music (since 1990) and has served as the principal keyboard player for the Milwaukee Symphony.  Moreover, he served as Music Director of the Skylight Theater in Milwaukee (from 1978-1990), where he composed 3 chamber operas and directed in excess of 50 productions.  He has also held several positions as head voice coach and recital accompanist throughout the United States and abroad.

“And we have a young harpist working with us for the first time,” said Harler.  “Her name’s Coline-Marie Orliac, and she’s a graduate of the Curtis Institute of Music.  We’re happy to have her join us for this performance.”

Coline-Marie Orliac began playing the harp at age 7, studied for nearly a decade after that with Madame Fontan-Binoche, and attended the National Conservatory of Nice (in France)—graduating with first prizes in both harp and piano.  She graduated from the Curtis Institute of Music last spring.  Her technique has been praised as being “flawless”, and she has already won top prizes in five international competitions and has performed with some of the world’s greatest orchestras, including The Philadelphia Orchestra in December 2009.

Also an active chamber musician, Orliac has participated in a number of well-known chamber music series and festivals worldwide and is a member of the Dolce Suono Ensemble, a highly praised ensemble.  For Orliac, who says she deeply loves learning new works because of the fascination involved and the need for a completely different approach to the music, this will be her first time performing Ceremony of Carols (Op. 28), as well as St. Pierre’s new works.

“The [Benjamin Britten Ceremony of Carols (Op. 28)] piece was written by Britten after he’d spent a considerable amount of time in America, and he wrote it on a ship, while traveling back to Europe,” said Harler.  “It’s 11 movements long and based mostly on Old English texts.  It’s probably one of the most famous sets of carols, and it’s a beautiful use of harp and women’s voices.”  Britten was traveling back to Britain in 1942 on the Axel Johnson, and while docked at one of the ports during that trip, found Gerald Bullett’s The English Galaxy of Shorter Poems, a collection of medieval poems, and began composing music for them.  Ceremony of Carols has an opening procession and a closing recession, which together serve as the framework for the other otherwise-unrelated songs. 

Over the years, Harler has prepared choruses for many of the leading orchestras and conductors throughout the United States, and he believes that a good conductor’s strongest characteristic is his/her ability to teach.

“I think it’s just part of the work,” said Harler.  “A conductor is constantly informing the performers about everything—the meanings of the texts, the formal structure of the music, etc., and that’s true of any kind of conducting role, for choral works, for orchestral works.”

“I have not had much formal musical training,” said Walkowiak. “Most of my experience had been with school and church choirs prior to the Mendelssohn Club. Alan taught me how to become a much more professional singer and performer. Every rehearsal was a lesson for me. In addition, I greatly expanded my knowledge of the musical repertoire, as we were constantly working on new (to me) pieces of music.”

“We also were required to re-audition for Alan each year,” said Walkowiak. “These re-auditions were like private lessons. Alan pointed to areas that needed improvement, and gave me instruction and materials to practice.”

Alan Harler is also an active guest conductor, performing regularly at the Festival of Casals in San Juan, Puerto Rico and the Aspen Choral Institute.  The Taiwan Philharmonic Association has also sponsored him to conduct performances in Taiwan and China, as well as to give master classes in conducting in both locales.

The Mendelssohn Club offers a conducting apprenticeship program, and within that framework, Harler works with a young conductor apprentice each year, sharing his knowledge and skill.

“We have a wonderful apprentice program called An Apprenticeship in Community Chorus Leadership,” said Harler.  “And in addition to the musical part, [the apprentices] also find out about the workings of the chorus, what is needed to operate a choral group.  They attend Board meetings and learn about how budgets are done.  The first criteria for their being accepted [into the program] is their musicianship, but many of them will most likely want to have their own choruses in the future, . . . it’s a total immersion into what’s necessary for the running of a chorus.”

Harler has played an important role in influencing choral music in the United States.  In 1995, he was elected to the Board of Chorus America, the national professional association of professional and volunteer choruses, and in 2009, he was awarded Chorus America’s Michael Korn Founders Award for Development of the Professional Choral Art.  He is the recipient of a number of other honors and awards as well.

“I had taken a year leave of absence from the Club when my job took me to Washington DC from mid-1987 to mid-1988,” said Walkowiak. “When I returned to the Club in 1988, Alan had become Artistic Director. His positive influence on the Club can never be overstated. He raised us to higher levels in every aspect of our musicality and performance. He truly loves music and his passion to strive for excellence was contagious to all of us. I think that every member of the Club was willing to work very hard -- on very challenging material -- in order to achieve the performance standards that he strived for.”  Bill Walkowiak has recently moved to San Diego, California and is not currently involved with any chorus.

“A lot of people [at these holiday concerts at St. Paul’s] like that we do sing some of the very familiar carols with the Brass [Quintet] and organ, and I weave these into the overall program, and people always seem to respond to and like that part of it,” said Harler.  Some of the traditional carols the audience will be able to sing with the chorus this Saturday are: Silent Night, Hark! The Herald Angels Sing (music by Felix Mendelssohn), and We Wish You a Merry Christmas.

“A lot of the music for 'A Feast of Carols' is music that goes back to my childhood, and it’s a very joyous but reflective time—to hear this music again,” said Harler.  “Some of it we come back to every year—to these certain arrangements that I know and like.  And there’s a special message that comes through—a message of hope and joy—and that always makes it delightful.”

For a delightful holiday feast of carols, be sure to attend one of the Mendelssohn Club’s performances this Saturday at St. Paul’s in Chestnut Hill.  You will undoubtedly be glad you did.

* Photo by John L. Shipman, Courtesy of the Mendelssohn Club of Philadelphia.

© 2010 by Catherine J. Barrier.  All rights reserved.

Sunday, December 5, 2010

Holly Nights at Pennsbury Manor, a Time to Remember Pennsylvania’s Founder and to Celebrate the Christmas Season in 17th-Century Style

By Catherine J. Barrier

William Penn in King Charles II's Breakfast
Chamber at Whitehall
Although William Penn spent, in total, less than 4 years in America, his influence on what became the U.S. government was great.  During his lifetime, both in England and in his colony of Pennsylvania, Penn fought for freedom of religion, for freedom of assembly, and for the right to a trial by jury.  As a Quaker, he was a pacifist and believed in people being governed by laws of their own making.  When he was first granted the charter for what King Charles II called “Pennsylvania” (literally “Penn’s Woods”), in honor of Penn’s father, Admiral Sir William Penn, the younger Penn wrote to the Swedish, Finnish, and Dutch already living in his colony to assure them that he would allow them a part in making the rules that they would be expected to live by and to state that there would be freedom to worship God according to one’s own conscience there.  Years later, Thomas Jefferson would say of Penn that he was “the greatest law-giver the world has produced”.  Eventually, many of Penn’s values, ideas, and laws for his colony became basic tenets of law in the new United States of America.

On Thursday night, December 9th and Friday night, December 10th, Pennsbury Manor, the home of William Penn along the Delaware River, located at 400 Pennsbury Memorial Road in Morrisville, PA (19067), will present its annual Holly Nights, rain or shine, from 5:30-9:00 p.m.  Step back into the 17th Century, to a simpler time of candlelight in the evenings, season carolers, colonial crafts, period clothing, a crackling bonfire, dramatic skits, and free hot cider.  Adults: $10; Senior Citizens: $8; Children 3-17: $5; Children under 3 are free.  Because the site is along the Delaware River, it can be reached by a short drive from U.S. Route 1, U.S. Route 13, or the Pennsylvania Turnpike.  This is an outside event; dress appropriately.  For directions or more information, call (215) 946-0400, e-mail at willpenn17@aol.com, or see www.pennsburymanor.org.  A coupon, good for $1.00 off an adult admission, can be downloaded from the Website.

“[The Holly Nights at Pennsbury Manor have] been going on for quite some time now—for over 35 years,” said Tabitha Dardes, a spokeswoman for Pennsbury Manor and their Director of Public Relations and Marketing.

“It’s a festive event,” said Dardes.  “And along with the nice holiday event, there’s some education about life in the 17th-Century,” said Dardes.

The Holly Nights event will include the demonstrations of several colonial crafts.

Open Hearth at Pennsbury Manor during Holly Nights

“We get to educate people about the 17th-Century,” said Dardes.  “There’ll be an open hearth demonstration, craftsmen in the Blacksmith’s Shop will be working with metals, and joiners will show people the tools they used and the things they made—and there will be tours of the Manor House.”


“The Manor House has been recreated based on [information in] letters and other correspondence; it’s not the original building,” said Dardes, “but we do have period and reproduction furniture from the period—including some original pieces, so the house is furnished.”

“When people did excavation on the site, they found the foundation of Penn’s home, which he had had built in 1682.  [The present-day Manor House] is a reconstructed building of William Penn’s estate.  We found letters and documents, and the house was reconstructed based on the research available.”

Pennsbury Manor was reconstructed from archaeological evidence found mostly in the letters of instruction to James Harrison, the man Penn appointed his overseer at Pennsbury when Penn left for England in 1684 and to James Logan, whom Penn had brought to America as his personal secretary in 1699.

“The house is all decorated for the holidays and lit by candlelight,” said Dardes.  “And we have people stationed around to tell people about the house—for example, the Great Hall, where [Penn and his family] ate, the nursery, where one of Penn’s children [slept]—the only one born in America, and Penn’s bedroom.”  It was Penn’s son John, called “John the American” who was born in the New World.

A Joyner Working in the Shop
“[Pennsbury Manor] was a working estate, or plantation, with animals, gardens, and all the people making things [that the estate needed],” said Dardes.  “The estate wasn’t self-sufficient; they had to bring some things in, but they had crops, orchards, animals, and many people working on the property, working and living off of what they were doing here.”  Penn did send to town (to Philadelphia) for such things as bricks, lime, locks, nails, chocolate, flour, bacon, coffee, and cornmeal, and these would then be delivered by flatboat up the Delaware River to the landing in front of his manor home.

“The Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission has administered the property since the 1930’s, when the site was reconstructed,” said Dardes.  In 1932, the Charles Warner Company owned the land and gifted 10 acres of the original site to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.  Pennsbury opened in 1939.  But the Commission is not responsible for running the events at Pennsbury Manor.  “We have a non-profit (501)(c3) organization, called The Pennsbury Society [, established in 1966,] that helps administer the site,” said Dardes.  “It’s the organization that runs the special events, such as the Holly Nights, and that’s involved in bringing in the school programs, etc.  Our main focus here (at Pennsbury Manor) is education,” said Dardes.

“What we do is that, throughout the 2 evenings, we have various instrumental and choral groups come in,” said Dardes.  We bring in some local groups, such as the Men of Harmony and some other community groups—and some of the Pennsbury High School and Middle School groups will be performing.”

The Men of Harmony, formerly the United States Steel Chorus, is an organization of singers who exist to preserve the traditional religious, folk, and popular songs of our country while fellowshipping and enjoying the results of learning and performing.  In the 1940’s, many U.S. Steel plants formed choruses to entertain employees, their families, and the communities at large.  Sixty years ago, this group became the sixth U.S. Steel Chorus and from the back of a pick-up truck drove around the construction site singing Christmas Carols for the workers.  After the steel company no longer supported the chorus, the group became independent and today continues the tradition of singing for the enjoyment of others.

“The different groups perform at different spots throughout the [43 acres of the] property, so you can usually find something of particular interest to you going on,” said Dardes.

William Penn was born at Tower Hill, in London, on October 14, 1644.  His father, Admiral Sir William Penn, served in the Commonwealth Navy during the English Civil War and later received estates in Ireland from Oliver Cromwell.  Admiral Penn helped King Charles II return to the British throne, was eventually knighted, and later served in the Royal Navy.  So the younger Penn grew up under the rule of Oliver Cromwell, and he received a strictly classical education and was greatly influenced by Puritan behaviors, such as strictness, somberness, and lack of humor.

At 15, Penn was living with his family in Ireland, where he met Thomas Loe, a Quaker missionary.  During this time, Penn would later say he was “visited by God” and began to understand Him.  Back in England and at Oxford, young Penn rebelled against the rules to worship God only in the way of the official Anglican Church.  Because he was an embarrassment to them, his parents sent him to Paris, where he met a French Protestant theologian, Moise Amyraut, who further influenced Penn’s life.  Penn returned to London, studied law for a while, and lived through the plague in London in 1665, observing the suffering and death caused by it.  He also witnessed the persecution of Quakers who tried to help the sick.

The reign of King Charles II further tightened restrictions against all religious sects except the Anglican Church.  It became illegal to worship any other way, and Quakers were especially targeted.  Their meetings were considered criminal acts.  Despite this, Penn was attracted to Quakerism and began to attend Quaker meetings.  He was soon arrested for doing so, and decided to publically declare himself a Quaker.  So at 22, Penn joined the Quakers (the Religious Society of Friends), and his choice of faith greatly influenced who he was from then on, how he treated the Native American Indians in the New World years later, and eventually the government of the United States of America.

In 1681, King Charles II granted William Penn the charter for “Pennsylvania”, partly in payment for a debt the king owed Penn’s deceased father, the Admiral, and the Founder of Pennsylvania and its first Governor not long afterwards set sail on the “Welcome”, to make the 2-month voyage by ship to come to the New World.  He arrived here in 1682 and began to realize his dream.

Penn, though deeply religious, was not an ascetic, and he wanted to establish a new society based on more freedom in his colony—and to see if people would be better and happier because of this freedom.  Penn believed good government was part of God’s plan for humanity, so he called this plan his “Holy Experiment”.  And Penn, as a Quaker, believed God’s communication came to each individual directly, and consequently, he believed in the rights of the individual, which later became important when Penn was setting up the government for his new colony.  He was a gifted administrator, and unlike many, did not seek personal power.

Penn was also committed to treating the local Native American Indians fairly; it was a Quaker principle to deal justly with neighbors, so he met with them and got their blessing to settle the new land of Pennsylvania.  Although he was given the land by King Charles II, Penn paid the Native American Indians for it, recognizing that they had been there first and would not recognize the validity of the King’s charter.  Thus, Penn was very fair with the Native American Indians, and no treaty he made with them was every broken during his lifetime.  His unfailing sense of fair play won him the Indians’ respect and affection, and his work with the Indians saved Pennsylvania from Indian wars for about seventy years.  After purchasing the land from the Indians, Penn then mapped out the town of Philadelphia, between the Delaware and Schuylkill Rivers and called for an election of representatives for a provincial Assembly before turning to the building of Pennsbury Manor in 1683.  It was also in 1683 that the first Quaker Meeting House was built in Philadelphia.

It took 4 years for Penn to build his country estate along the Delaware; it was completed in 1686, when Penn was abroad in England, and during that time, before sailing for England, Penn was often in Philadelphia, from where he governed his colony.  Once completed, Pennsbury had not only its Manor House, but a large stable, and many small buildings for various tasks, such as brewing and baking.  The original Manor House was a 2-story, Georgian-style home made of the typical 17th-century red brick.  Today, the reconstructed Manor House is a three-story building rebuilt on the foundations of the original house.  It has dormer windows in the roof and is surrounded by the many estate buildings.  And it boasts more than 30,000 visitors per year.

Penn married Gulielma Maria Springett in 1672 and the couple ended up having 7 children, among them William Penn, Jr.  In 1683, Penn began the building of Pennsbury Manor, expecting that he and Gulielma would spend their days there, but circumstances in England forced Penn’s return there in 1684 before Gulielma ever came and before he’d been in the New World for a full 2 years.  Penn did not return to Pennsbury until 1699, fifteen years later.  Penn administered his colony of Pennsylvania via mail across the Atlantic during this time of much political unrest in England.  Political power changed in England while he was there, and Penn found himself suspected and finally accused of treason.  Shortly after being acquitted of those charges, Penn suffered the death of his Gulielma.

When Governor William Penn returned to Pennsylvania in 1699, it was with his second wife, Hannah Callowhill, and his grown daughter, Letitia.  The following year, on January 29, 1700, his son John, called “John, the American”, was born.  It was also during this time, between 1699 and 1701, that the Penns entertained distinguished guests from Europe, the Indian Nations, and even governors of other colonies. 
Bust of William Penn

And during this second visit to Pennsylvania, Penn drew up his Charter of Privileges, a new from of government which outlined a type of self-government for the colony of Pennsylvania and which remained in effect for almost 75 years, until the beginning of the American Revolutionary War.  A type of constitution, the Charter of Privileges was adopted in October 1701.  Year’s later, in 1751, a bell was cast for the 50th anniversary of the Charter of Privileges.  Today, we know this bell as the Liberty Bell, and it is engraved with the words “Proclaim liberty throughout the land unto all the inhabitants thereof”, words taken from the Book of Leviticus (in the Bible), from Chapter 25, Verse 10.

Also during this second visit to Pennsylvania, Penn influenced the governors in neighboring New York and in Virginia to start increasing co-operation with one another.  While true unity between the colonies did not truly happen until later in the century, Penn was already pushing for it in the New World in the beginning of 18th-Century.

Because the administration of Pennsylvania was in danger of politically being taken over by the Crown back in England, Penn needed to cross the ocean again in 1701.  He hoped to return to Pennsylvania quickly, but he never saw America, or Pennsbury, again.  Political machinations, Pennsylvania-Maryland boundary quarrels in England, increasing poverty, bad health, and general old age kept Penn away.  The only Penn to live at Pennsbury after 1701 was Penn’s son, William Penn, Jr. who arrived there in February 1704, but only remained for about a year.  Penn’s wife Hannah and daughter Letitia had insisted on returning to England with Penn in 1701.  In 1711, William Penn had his first stroke.  The following year, he had 2 other attacks and soon became incompetent.  He died on July 30, 1718, at the age of 73.  In 1792, after the United States was established, Penn’s heirs sold the family estate along the Delaware.

“[At Holly Nights,] we have a big bonfire, and there’s free cider, … and the pathways and buildings are lit by candlelight, so people can roam about and see all the wonderful things on those evenings,” said Dardes.

“There will also be 17th-century Mummers present,” said Dardes.  “They’re role players who do little skits, giving people [a visual demonstration] of what went on in the 17th-Century.  It’s just another little thing to see and do.”

Stringing Cranberries at Holly Nights
“I love [Holly Nights] because, … obviously, I work here, but there are people who have been coming for years, and who now bring their kids—kicking off the season,” said Dardes.  “They return every year and say, ‘We look forward to this year-after-year’.  It’s nice to hear the people are so fond of it.  They say, ‘We’re making it a tradition’.  And new people who attend say they’ll be coming back.”

“It’s an absolutely wonderful event!” said Dardes.  “And it’s a rain or shine event.  We’ll be here regardless.  But since it is an outside event, people should dress appropriately.”

“[The Holly Nights are] the only time you can come [to see Pennsbury Manor] at night,” said Dardes.  “It gives you a different feel and air about the place.  It’s a special and festive event.”

So, why not come experience William Penn’s home along the Delaware in much the way he would have known it this holiday season—at Holly Nights on December 9th and 10th.

* Photos of Docents & Craftsmen at Pennsbury Manor, Courtesy of Pennsbury Manor, Administered by the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission (PHMC).

© 2010 by Catherine J. Barrier.  All rights reserved.