Fisher Homestead Showcases Living History The Fisher Homestead is a historical landmark of the Oley Valley. The Georgian-style home built in 1801 fea tures a 13-room interior with two 8-foot wide hallways, six fireplaces, and the finest details of master carpentry. LOU ANN GOOD Lancaster Farming Staff OLEY (Berks Co.) It’s diffi cult to tell where history begins and where it ends at the 1790 Fisher Homestead, where living history continues to unfold around Frank and Hilda Fisher. The feisty 80-year-old Hilda is a long-time compiler of historical landmarks for the Berks County Historical Society. But she has made plenty of history herself. She received a national award from President Reagan for her work with the National Register of Historical Places, and numer ous county awards for preserva tion of historical places and graveyards. Recently Hilda was named Ag Women of the Year for the county. Travelers on Route 662 north of Oley are intrigued by the handsome Georgian-style home and the barn and out buildings of the Fisher Homestead. The house is modeled similar to the mansions in the British Isles. The outer walls of the house are constructed with 18-inch thick limestone. The 13-room interior features two 8-foot wide halls, six fireplaces with intricate wood carvings, nu merous built-in china closets, chair rail panels, friezes, and cor nices such as a miniature of a Corsican general riding his horse. The master bedroom or bridal chamber on the second floor has the most elaborate wood carv ings, which at one time was de sired by the DuPonts of Long wood Gardens as a summer room. Hilda has an abundance of stories to accompany many of the home’s features. For in stance, each window in the house has 24 panes of Bxlo-inches of bubble glass. It is said that some one viewing a crime through the window could not be considered a viable witness because the glass distorted the scene. Still standing is the stone barn, used to provide accommodations for the horses of travelers on the way to Philadelphia during the late 1700 s. The Fishers have compiled an extensive history of their ances tors who inhabited the property before them. At times, the man sion housed four generations of Fishers. Frank and Hilda mar ried in 1942 and moved into the house in 1945. Uncommon for that era, both Frank and Hilda had graduated from high school. Hilda com pleted her education at the Kutz town State Teachers’ College and taught school two years be fore marrying. Frank credits his vocational agriculture teacher for instilling different farming methods. While neighbors were skeptical of “newfangled” ideas, the voca tional teacher garnered Frank’s dad’s respect when he helped shock wheat during an unex pected visit. Through this newly-intro duced ideas, Frank said students learned to feed cattle rations, to keep lights on in the chicken house in order to induce chickens to lay more eggs, and to fertilize wheat, corn, and oats. He remembers when the fami ly purchased one of the first Fordsom tractors. “But tractors aren’t what they are today,” Frank said. The fam ily’s first tractor required “one to cook before the tractor did when starting it,” he said of the labori ous effort. The move to the Fisher man sion had not been anticipated when they first married. Hilda recalls that on their wedding day, Frank’s grandparents, who lived on the property, did not attend their wedding because it was butchering day. The bridal pair decided to drop by the home stead after the wedding. Because of bad weather, Frank carried the bride across the threshold, a custom associated with a couple first moving into their own home. “We never knew that someday we would live here,” Hilda said. Eventually, the couple had two sons, Steve who married Matjo rie Werner, and Gery who mar ried Carol Falter, and a daughter Eloise. Hilda returned to teach about 13 years after the couple had their first child. Frank continued to farm IS2 acres and was a school director for 20 years. Farming methods changed dramatically during Frank’s farming years. He recalls having free-range chickens in every building on the property. “I had to hunt eggs and spend a whole night grading them to take them to the Philadelphia market the next day,” Frank said. £We never lived on Easy Street, but we lived on Happy Street. 5 ank and Hilda Fisher have retained the historical significance of the home with its walk-in fireplace yet added modern conveniences. The “elens fenster,” or soul window, which is a small window at the side of the walk-in fireplace, is reported to have been kept open in accordance with the superstitious belief that if there were no open win dow, there was no way for the soul of the deceased to escape. Elaborate wood carvings are different in each of the six fireplace mantels and the flanking built-in closets that appear in the mansion. While fanning isn’t as labor intensive as those days, Frank considers it more difficult to make it financially nowadays. “Today corn prices are only half of what they were when I started. We must preserve farm land but we must also preserve the farm family to continue to exist,” Frank said. “Market prices must align with the stan Hilda Fisher Berks County Ag Woman Of The Year. dard of living.” This is the first year that Frank is no longer farming. His son Steve retired from his job to take over crop farming. The Fishers have always made vacation a priority. They have also been active in the Interna tional Farm Youth Exchange, with their sons going to Iran and Australia. The family hosted two exchangees from Turkey and one from Iran. While the characteristics of old homes are generally admired today, it wasn’t always so. Dur ing the 19505-19605, many farm houses were modernized, de stroying such features as walk-in fireplaces and brush-painting techniques on wainscoting and doors. Fortunately, the Fishers have always valued the historical sig nificance of the property. “We don’t want to change things,” Hilda said of the home’s unique features. For example the origi nal 1830’s French wallpaper is still on the living room ceiling. Although aged, the decorative paper maintains the elaborate detail of that era. The Fishers pointed out a “elens fenster,” or soul window, which is a small window at the side of the walk-in fireplace. The window was kept open by the su perstitious belief that if there were no open window, there was no way for the soul of the de ceased to escape. Although many of the home’s original furnishings had been passed down to various other families over the years, the Fish ers have been able to purchase or (Turn to Page Bit)