Page 14 - SUSQUEHANNA TIMES A former Briton on the Bicentennial by Paddy Schatz It is thirty years to this very day that I came to America from England, a young wife with an eight month old baby also born in England, but American indeed because of his American father. This son has his own wife now and lives in the South. When I mentioned our anniversary, saying that we are surely both Yankees by this time, he replied, ‘‘You are, Mother, but I'm a Rebel!” Someone asked me re- cently if the American Bicentennial makes me feel awful, being British, and I was quite astonished and then amused, for such a thing had not occurred to me. First of all, I've always thought of America as being peopled from the countries in which the love of liberty is the strongest, and, secondly, 1 certainly wasn’t responsible in any way for the War of Independence. I believe that red. white, and blue is beautiful, patriotic, and American, but to me it is also English, for those colors I grew up with too. 1 get a feeling of emotion and pride when 1 see the Stars and Stripes flying, just as I did when we flew the Union Jack. When 1 was a child in England, we celebrated Empire Day, an Empire which has since experi- enced a succession of quiet constitutional changes and left England as it started— little England, which can easily be put into the state of Pennsylvania. That was a patriotic day, a fun day, and a day to be thankful; isn’t this how America’s birthday anni- versary should be too? When 1 visit my home- land, 1 miss Pennsylvania and find myself thinking of its beauty—the lovely coun- tryside with fields of corn, peaches, and pumpkins, and the mountains and wild geese in flight. My favorite time here is Autumn, all golden and mellow and balmy, but I love snow too. And when 1 remember England, it is Spring with the scent of flower gardens and the constant greenness and gentle serenity. Each country holds so much for me, how fortunate 1 am to have enjoyed both of them. No, this is not my native land—it is my home. Why by Vera Cox W Why not serve Liberty Tea in celebration of the Bicentennial? In the 1760's and 1770’s, an effective boycott of the British East India Compa- ny’s tea took place in the colonies. The boycott was noticed both in the market- place and at the tea tables of patriotic Americans. All along the eastern area, colonial ladies resolved not to serve the imported tea but they had to find something in its place. The herb, loosestrife, was apparently the first to be called Liberty Tea. Patriotic households also served tea made from dried raspberry leaves. In spite of the frequent use of the raspberry leaves, one man declared that the tea was nothing more than vile, but History by Joanne Zink Colonial Donegal Mills Plantation is a restored community dating from a Penn Grant in 1736. From a pioneer village to a rural industrial area, the story of the Plantation reveals the way people lived in the late 18th and the 19th century. In 1784, J. E. Kreybill, a Swiss Mennonite, began to build the community into a successful and productive mill site. The mansion house at Donegal Mills is especially significant since it is only one of seven or eight ever in the area. not serve Liberty Tea? heroic citizens proclaimed it to be a delicate and excellent beverage. Next the colonists turned to bergamot (bee balm) for their Liberty Tea. This herb had been introduced to the colonists by the Indians. Both the leaves and the flowers produced a tea with a minty flavor. Finally the women started to use sassafras root, lemon balm, sage, boneset, pennyroyal, strawberry leaves, ribwort, mint, and rose leaves. These were used either fresh or dried. Today a Liberty Tea may be served that is made from any of the sweet herbs; alone or in combin- ation. Both the teapot and the vessel used to boil the water should not be metal. Cold water should be brought to a quick boil and then poured immediately over the leaves in the warmed pot. Put the lid on the pot and steep for eight to twelve minutes. Sweeten as desired but often a touch of honey smoothens, blends, and enriches the herb flavors. Simple refreshments ra- ther than rich pastries would be suitable to com- plete a Liberty Tea Party. Sugar cookies flavored with herb seeds, small open-- faced sandwiches garnished with a very thin slice of cucumber, nasturtium leaf, or watercress would be light. Another suggestion would be to serve cookies made from an eighteenth century recipe that was typical of both Lancaster and Lebanon Counties. Leb cakes are of German origin. The recipe is as follows: 3 Ibs. yellow sugar % 1b. (1%2 cups) lard 1 lump of butter the size of an egg June 23, 1976 1 qt. buttermilk 2 tbs. soda 1 tsp. hartzhorn (can be purchased at some drug stores) 1 tsp. salt 4 1bs. flour 2 eggs Blend sugar and shorten- ing. Add one egg. Combine hartzhorn and soda in buttermilk. Alternately add milk, mix, and flour. Add salt. Drop onto cookie tin, brush with beaten egg. Bake at 400 degrees about 8 to 10 minutes. (This recipe yields a basket of Leb cakes.) The recipe is used through the courtesy of the Historic Shaefferstown, Inc. the 90-acre farm which is being restored to its origin- al condition as an 18th century Swiss Weinbauern farmstead. of Donegal Mills Plantation Possibly the only one left with a monumental temple front of the Ionic Order. The Kreybill family ex- panded the acreage of the Plantation and the site included five business. It was the focal point of five roads and was a busy bustling community. In the latter part of the 19th century, the site was divided with the miller’s house and mill staying in the Mennonite tradition until 1925 when the mill was then known as Mari- etta Mills or Nissley’s Mill. The mansion was owned in the later 19th century by the Watsons, prominent members of the Donegal Presbyterians pursued their mission by Rev. Robert C. Murphy Even in the midst of war, Presbyterians were con- cerned with the mission of the Church of Jesus Christ on the frontiers, i.e. the South and West. The Synod of New York and Philadelphia, meeting in Philadelphia in 1779, just after the British evacuated the city, received a peti- tion: **21 May 1779) An application by a member of Hanover Presbytery (a league of Churches) pray- ing that some missionaries might be sent into the state of Virginia to preach the gospel, and especially that a few ministers of genius, prudence, and address, might spend some consid- erable time in attempting tc form that people into regular congregations, under the discipline and government of the Presby- tian Church...” (Records, pp.484f) The concern of the Synods of New York and Philadelphia, was, already in this countries’ young life, A REPEAT OF HIS- TORY, with a connection to Donegal Presbyterian Church. **The first pastor of Donegal, "The Rev. James Anderson was born in Scotland, November 17th, 1678; he was ordained by Irvine Presbytery, Novem- ber 17th, 1708; he arrived” in this country April 22nd, 1709; he settled in New- castle; he was called to supply a church in the city of New York, where he re- mained until 1726; he was called, September 24th, to Donegal on the Susque- hanna and accepted it; he was installed the last Wed- nesday in August, 1727. The Donegal Presbytery was organized and held its first meeting at Donegal (Presbyterian Church), Oct. 11th, 1732, and consisted of Messrs. Anderson, Boyd, - Orr, Thompson of Chestnut Level, and he proposed to Donegal Pres- bytery to employ an itinerant in Virginia. In 1738, Anderson was sent to Virginia, bearing a letter to the government of Virginia soliciting its favor in behalf of our interests. The Synod provided supplies for his pulpit and allowed for his expenses in a manner suitable to his design. Anderson performed his mission satisfactorily.” (Ziegler’s History of Done- gal Presbyterian Church) Presbyterian Church. The plantation is now an American Heritage story. The tour includes the man- sion, miller’s house, mill, bake house, gardens, hatchery, and nature trail. An archaelogical excava- tion has begun at the plantation under the super- vision of Dr. Sam Cassel- berry, chairman of the De- partment of Anthropology and Sociology at Millers- ville State College. At present the excavation is conducted four days a week. The purpose is to determine where all of the buildings and other char- acteristics of the site were in order that the commun- ity can be restored to the fullest possible extent. Mother Seuss by Sally Hess At the beginning of the colonial era, most child- ren’s stories emphasized moral and religious pre- cepts, and by 1719, ‘‘Mo- ther Goose Melodies’ had been printed in Boston. American children have loved those stories and fables ever since. In the twentieth century the stor- ies of Dr. Seuss are popular with young chil- dren, and like the Mother Goose rhymes, they contain rhythm, rhyme, humor, and and element of non- sense. Therefore, the room for the Colonial Language Arts class during the Grandview Living History Week, was known as ‘““Ye Old Colonial House of Mother Seuss: 1776-1976.” The primary objective of the class was to expose today’s children to the children’s literature of colonial times and - through this exposure— prompt the composition of their own contemporary rhymes based upon the rhythm and rhyme of Mother Goose. The frame- work of the Mother Goose rhymes plus the added humor and nonsense unique to the Dr. Seuss stories, aided children in creating their own original ‘“Mother Seuss Rhymes.”’ A few examples are as follows: Cary, Cary quite scarey How does your skeleton jangle? With dried up bones and ice cream cones And the skulls all a-jangle. by Andrea Markley Sam Can could eat no pan His wife could cat no lid And so they kissed each other And cooked a little kid. by Sarah Harnish To be printed in Grand- view’s Living History Week book. Pred ed ek SN Fo peed seh ee ff ead SN saad ed a, ee De AS Deed ad pe Py he bt ed PY. RN hd AS - oO bd bgt pe ON