The Frugal Housewife

a Pre-revolutionary Cookbook by Susannah Carter

Facsimiles now available for sale! Scroll down for more info…

A facsimile edition of Susannah Carter’s “The Frugal Housewife,” first published in Boston by Edes and Gill in 1772.

An original copy of a prerevolutionary cookbook belonging to Lincoln County Historical Association has an unbroken provenance since Major Samuel Goodwin bought it on Aug. 28, 1772 for his daughter Abigail, through his family and descendants until it came into the ownership of the LCHA in 1954. The cookbook includes two pages of engravings on how to prepare poultry and small game for roasting created by none-other-than Paul Revere. LCHA is now offering facsimiles of The Frugal Housewife for sale online and in person at the Pownalborough Court House.


ABOUT LCHA

The Lincoln County Historical Association (LCHA) was founded in 1954 by noted local artist Mildred Burrage. Our mission is to collect, preserve and interpret the history of Lincoln County, Maine, which once extended from Brunswick to Canada. Key to our work is the stewardship of three historic buildings: the 1761 Pownalborough Court House in Dresden, the 1811 Old Jail in Wiscasset, and the 1754 Chapman-Hall House in Damariscotta.

Lincoln County Historical Association

 

Our three museums feature collections of textiles and costumes, tools, furniture, baskets, housewares, photographs, maps, manuscripts, and other ephemera that help to tell Lincoln County’s stories. The buildings, with the help of our docents, also tell real human stories, of law and order, crimes and punishments, and the lives of residents as our towns became settled communities.

Champman Hall House
Old Jail in Wiscasset

LCHA MUSEUMS

 

1761 POWNALBOROUGH COURTHOUSE DRESDEN

Designed by Boston architect Gershom Flagg and built in 1761 by the Kennebec Proprietors for the newly created Lincoln County, the Pownalborough Court House received such notable visitors as John Adams, Benedict Arnold, Robert Treat Paine, William Cushing, Reverend Jacob Bailey and two future Massachusetts governors: David Sewall and James Sullivan. Numerous trials were held here, including that of Judge North which was featured in the Pulitzer Prize winning book, The Midwife’s Tale by Laurel Thatcher Ulrich, based on the diary of local resident Martha Ballard (1735-1812).

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1811 OLD JAIL WISCASSETT

The 1811 Old Lincoln County Jail in Wiscasset, with attached 1839 Jailer’s House, offers visitors a rare view into an earlier criminal justice system and the lives of the people who enforced and endured it. Displays in the front parlor and dining room change year by year, but the 19th century kitchen, where the jailer’s wife had to cook for up to 50 prisoners in addition to her own family, is always on view. Visitors leave with a real sense of the hard work that came with being the jailer’s family, the hard life of the prisoners and the odd juxtaposition of family life and criminal incarceration.

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1754 CHAPMAN-HALL HOUSE DAMARISCOTTA

Built in 1754 by housewright Nathaniel Chapman, of Ipswich, MA, the residence is not only the oldest building remaining in Damariscotta, but is also considered one of the oldest standing homes in the State of Maine. Chapman constructed the residence at the age of 51 and lived there until his death, at age 101, in 1804. The people who first lived in this house would have been subjects of the King of England because the house was built nearly twenty-five years before the Revolutionary War.

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