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EXPLORING KENTUCKY - December 2005
by Katherine Tandy Brown

A Shaker Christmas
Pleasant Hill offers a quiet alternative to modern-day festivities

"Shakers believed that the most beautiful instrument was the God-given one…the voice,” says Donna Phillips.

Her own is an exquisite example. As director of the music program at Shaker Village of Pleasant Hill near Harrodsburg, the University of Kentucky grad sometimes presents the seasonal daily a capella music, selections from more than 20,000 Shaker-written hymns.

Dressed in the typical Shaker attire of a delicate lace cap and a wide Bertha collar atop a long, plain black cotton dress, Donna enunciates clearly. “Tis a gift to be simple, tis a gift to be free….”

Her rich contralto fills the room with such lush sound that when she stops, the air in the 1820 Meeting House continues to ring. Spellbound, visitors line wooden benches, the only furniture in a room stark with ordinary cream-colored walls trimmed in Shaker blue and maroon. The Meeting House once served as the spiritual center for the United Society of Believers in Christ’s Second Appearing – known to outsiders as Shakers. Here, they held worship services that included the shaking, whirling dances that resulted in their name. In this order, no one was to be elevated above anyone else.

From its inception in New York State in the late 1700s, the Shaker order grew into America’s largest and best-known communal society and became a fascination to “the world,” the term they used for everyone who wasn’t a member – and with reason. They practiced celibacy and forbade co-habitation of men and women, living together instead as brothers and sisters in a highly structured, utopian social order that was known for being practical, innovative and peaceful.

In addition to believing in equality of race and sex and in freedom from prejudice, they invented dozens of labor-saving methods and devices, such as the flat broom, circular saw, commercial-size washing machine and apple peeler. They crossbred livestock, produced patented medicinal, packaged seeds and contrived a municipal water system. Union leanings did not prevent the frugal, agrarian sect from feeding both Yankee and Confederate troops during the Civil War from their vast stores of food. Astute merchants who dedicated themselves to “the Lord’s work,” the Shakers sold produce and handmade wares all along the Mississippi River and thrived financially.

“For people who avoided contact with the outside world,” mused Diana Ratliff, the attraction’s marketing and public relations director, “they were very savvy about dealing with them.”

Conceived in 1805, the community became the country’s third largest at its mid-18th century height, with some 300 members and 257 buildings. But a lack of new converts drastically reduced the population, and in 1910, the village closed it doors.

Thanks to the 1961 establishment of Shakertown at Pleasant Hill, Kentucky, Inc., a nonprofit, educational corporation, and the continuing efforts of numerous Kentucky visionaries, this 2,800-acre National Historic Landmark property is now the largest of all restored Shaker communities, with 34 original structures. Fourteen of those boast overnight accommodations, complete with Shaker reproduction furniture.

With the exception of Christmas Eve and Christmas Day, this treasure of historic preservation is open year- round and is known for its tours led by well-versed, costumed guides; its demonstrations of traditional crafts and farming methods; a store filled with to the rafters with gorgeous handcrafts; and its Trustees’ Office restaurant, where heavenly Kentucky food fills the groaning board.

Though 100,000 visitors drop in annually, winter is rarely crowded and affords a welcome respite from pre-Christmas weeks of bustling holiday hoo-rah. During the quiet week before New Year’s, from December 26 through 31, Pleasant Hill offers “The Simple Gifts of Christmas,” when guided tours focus on Shaker life and Christmas customs.

During the December, music reverberates from the 1820 Meeting House and “The Shakers,” an in-depth film narrated by Academy Award winner Ben Kingsley, runs daily.

You can grab your boots, your saddle or your bike, because come wintertime, 25 miles of Shaker Village trails for day hikers, mountain bikers and horseback riders turn private. Equine guests and their riders have full use of a 20-stall barn and heated tackroom, and a “Bed and Bridle” package has accommodations for both.

Plan a trip in the wintry present back into the glorious past at Shaker Village of Pleasant Hill’s award-winning Web site, www.shakervillageky.org or call (800) 734-5611.


Upcoming Events Around Kentucky

Christmas Teas
Aspen Hall Manor, Harrodsburg
558 Aspen Hall Drive
Through December 31
www.aspenhallmanor.com


Enjoy a Christmas tea in the Southern elegance of an 1840 Greek Revival Manor House.

New Year’s Eve Murder Mystery Night
Jenny Wiley State Park, Prestonsburg
75 Theatre Court
December 31
parks.ky.gov/resortparks/jw/index.htm
jennywiley@ky.gov


Bring your curiosity and watch the mystery evolve when a “live murder” is committed on New Year’s Eve night. It’ll be up to the audience to help identify the culprit.

Grand Rivers Holiday Festival of Lights
Grand Rivers
Through January 5
www.grandrivers.com
grcofc@vci.net


Catch the spirit of the season amid thousands of sparkling lights in this West Kentucky town nestled between Kentucky Lake and Lake Barkley.

“Driving Miss Daisy”
Owensboro
Theatre Workshop of Owensboro
407 West Fifth Street
January 6 – 21
www.TheatreWorkshop.org
twodrama@bellsouth.net


A touching story of two people from very different backgrounds and how they learn to respect and care for each other over 25 years.

Shout, Sister, Shout!: The Sister Rosetta Tharpe Tribute
Louisville
Brown Theatre
315 West Broadway
January 14
www.kentuckycenter.org
info@kentuckycenter.org


This fabulous tribute concert captures the spirit of gospel great Sister Rosetta Tharpe, unleashing it through the talents of three legendary acts – Marie Knight, the Holmes Brothers and Odetta.

Frankfort Avenue Trolley “FAT” Friday
Louisville
Crescent Hill Gallery
2720 Frankfort Avenue
December 30
www.fatfridayhop.org
evster95@aol.com


Peek into eclectic antique shops, art galleries and boutiques along Frankfort, Mellwood and Story Avenues as they offer special events and shopping hours from 6 till 9 p.m. on the last Friday of the year. Ride the trolley all evening for free.




 

Katherine Tandy Brown is a staff writer for The Lane Report.
editorial@lanereport.com

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