Collections Corner
Windows play a key role in protecting everything inside a building by keeping out the wind, rain, humidity, pests, and anything else that could come in from the outside. Inside the Heurich House are original hand-carved wood fireplaces, hand-painted ceiling canvases, hand-made original furnishings, and thousands of rugs, art, vases, textiles, and more. To protect all of that, we need properly secured and insulating windows.
Moisture from the ground beneath or next to a house, starting in the basement, rises up through a building’s foundation. It eventually will come into the house through the more humid outside ground walls in its search for a drier environment. The Heurich House’s original limestone plaster allows this to happen with relatively little damage. Unfortunately, years of house projects have caused numerous layers of wall paint to bond together, making it more challenging for water vapor to move freely through the walls. Now, the moisture coming into the house will push through the weakest layer, or oldest paint, first. Because the layers of paint are bonded to each other, they all fall off together. That is why you see peeling or flaking paint on the Heurich House’s basement walls.
There’s a lot of preservation, restoration, and maintenance work that needs to be done for a house as old as the Heurich House - 131 years old, to be exact. During many of those years, the ceiling in the Boudoir (Amelia Heurich’s sitting room on the 2nd floor) suffered from water damage, due to its position under a 3rd floor balcony with bad drainage.
We are always trying to learn more about how people would have actually experienced life and work in the home. In general, people’s reactions to Amelia's role often varies, but sometimes visitors express negative comments about her management style. In these cases, I encourage people to think of her role in a more nuanced way and consider the implications this has for the memory of women in power. At the symposium, it was exciting to hear other scholars’ research. There were so many different approaches to looking at food spaces and how people act (and interact) in them. Their reactions and questions about our work at the museum were thought provoking - only emphasizing my feeling that there’s always more research to do!
"Did the Brewery close during Prohibition?"
This is one of our most common questions about the Chr. Heurich Brewing Co. The short answer is: No, the company operated for eighty-three uninterrupted years from 1873 until 1956. So it only makes sense that a common follow up question is:
"How?"
Many people may not realize that a museum’s collections are always growing. Pieces of family history and breweriana are acquired as the Museum continues to research the people who lived and worked within the house, as well as the Heurich Brewery and its workers.
One of these new pieces of family history are two ledgers from Amelia L. Heurich, Christian Heurich’s third wife and the longest resident of the Heurich House. Amelia’s diaries are a key source of information for our research, so we were delighted to acquire her ledgers, where she tracked monthly spending, meal planning, and salaries of the house staff.