What Remains: The Elizabeth Botsford Mysteries

What Remains:  The Elizabeth Botsford Mysteries

On Saturday, December 8, 2018, Pat Leach presented a lecture at the Milne Public Library to unravel the real-life mystery of Elizabeth Sanford Botsford.  The Williamstown Educated and independent and the only child of a leading Williamstown family, Elizabeth Sanford Botsford died in an automobile accident in 1915.

View a video of the lecture here by clicking on this button:  Elizabeth Sanford Botsford Mysteries Video

How did she meet her end.  Who was with her? Why were they driving on the unpaved Roads in Pownal.  And how, a quarter of a century later, did her death change the face of Williamstown?

Textiles of Williamstown Exhibit: Selections from the WHM Collection

Visit the WHM to view a selection of textiles from the collection featuring a uniform from a woman who served in the Women’s Auxiliary Corps during WWII,  an Emancipation Period sampler, wool blankets from Mt. Hope Farm, a sheet made from flax farmed and processed in South Williamstown, and a velvet opera coat that once belonged to a well known town resident.  Most of the pieces in this exhibit were evaluated in 2016 by a textiles conservator that was funded through a board initiative, and were then conserved at the Williamstown Art Conservation Center with funding from the Community Preservation Act Fund.  The WHM is grateful to the town for its support of this conservation project.

Williamstown and Williams College Book Signing

View a video of Williamstown resident, Williams College alumnus, and good friend of the WHM, Dustin Griffin, who spoke on topics covered in his new book Williamstown and Williams College: Explorations in Local History at the WHM on October 20, 2018.

Williamstown and Williams College Book Event Video

In this engrossing and entertaining book Griffin offers 14 vignettes that detail the local history of Williamstown and Williams College. Well researched and written in an accessible style, each chapter focuses on the stories behind a single feature — the historical plaque marking the site of the West Hoosuck Blockhouse, town-wide celebrations past and present, a hiking trails to Williamstown history in Treadwell Hollow, Flora’s Glen, and McMaster’s Cave, stained-glass windows in the college chapel and St. John’s, those songs Williams alumni sing at reunions, and more.

Copies of the book will be available for purchase at the WHM, with a portion of each sale going to support the Museum.

Dusty Griffin taught English literature at Berkeley and NYU for 40 years before retiring in 2009. A 1965 graduate of Williams College, he has published a number of scholarly books on 17th- and 18th-century English poetry. He has also written on topics in Williams College history, and on the local history of Williamstown, frequently giving talks on local history in the Williamstown Historical Museum lecture series. Griffin curated exhibitions at the Museum on “Williamstown in the Civil War” (2012) and on “Big Days in a Small Town” (2014).