MHC Maine Speaks Blue 300x185

Details

Date:   June 11, 2026

Time:   5:30 PM - 6:30 PM

Organizer:   Pejepscot History Center

Category:   Art & Culture

Venue / Location

Pejepscot History Center
159 Park Row
Brunswick, ME 04011

Google Map Link

Venue Website

About this Event

In 19th-century Maine, death was ever present. To grapple with loss, Victorian Mainers could turn to art and craft to mourn and remember their loved ones. Their material of choice was human hair. Mary Baker made a good living crafting flowers, wreaths, and jewelry from human hair. Her Portland home-based business tapped into a national craze for Victorian hair jewelry which not only memorialized the dead, but also connected the living. From snips of a loved one’s hair in a locket, to braided hair friendship rings exchanged between schoolgirls, to a large-scale wreath of flowers containing the hair of an entire family, Mainers embraced hair art as a symbol of mourning the dead and celebrating the living.

The program starts in the PHC Museum and is followed by an optional short tour into the Skolfield-Whittier House.

Presenter: Elizabeth DeWolfe is Professor of History at the University of New England where she teaches courses in women’s history, archival research, and American culture. Dr. DeWolfe is a historical detective: she hunts archives for the traces of ordinary women, piecing together their all-but-forgotten lives from faint clues.

Pejepscot History Center is excited to be selected by Maine Humanities Council to host this Maine Speaks Program!

FREE TO ATTEND, REGISTRATION REQUIRED