Back to the Frontier
Want to fork hay, play vintage baseball or try your hand at tanning deer hide? At Conner Prairie, Indiana, living history is the main event
- By Donovan Webster
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2008, Subscribe
Inside a log cabin on the Indiana frontier, a rugged-looking man in a rumpled linen tunic, trousers of rough homespun and heavy black boots sat at a crude table piled high with pelts. He looked up as I stepped inside.
"Welcome," he said. "What furs do you have to trade today?"
Just outside, a fire smoldered near two bark-and-reed huts, the dwellings of local Lenape Indians. In a nearby clearing, a deer hide, dangling inside a wooden frame used for skinning and stretching, dried in the sun. A log shed next to the cabin housed a bark canoe, hung from the rafters.
Only 40 minutes earlier, I had been driving in an air-conditioned car, radio blaring, cellphone at the ready. Now, in backwoods along the White River—only 15 miles northeast of downtown Indianapolis—I had wandered into McKinnen's wilderness trading post (c. 1816). It was, for the trader "McKinnen" and me, all in a day's role-play at Conner Prairie, an 850-acre living-history museum in Fishers, Indiana. Conner Prairie re-creates the everyday life of 19th-century settlers in the Old Northwest Territory (roughly present-day Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin, Michigan and Minnesota).
McKinnen's trading post was stocked with everything a backwoodsman could want—Hudson's Bay blankets, flintlock rifles, hurricane lanterns, leg-hold traps, trinkets, strings of beads and hanging sheaves of dried and braided tobacco leaves. McKinnen fingered the furs on his table, beginning with a stack of glossy brown pelts. "Perhaps you have brought some pelts of beaver for me?" he inquired. "The beaver has thick and slightly oily fur, very good for warmth and repelling water. It's the height of fashion now." He moved on. "Or you have these, from the otter?"
"I have none at all," I replied.
McKinnen paused theatrically and glared. "Sir," he said at last in mock exasperation. "I am compelled to ask: If you don't want to trade...what brings you here?"
This question, at least, I could answer. I had arrived at McKinnen's doorstep to investigate an attraction that brings more than 200,000 visitors here each year from April to October. (Of the nation's living-history museums, only Virginia's Colonial Williamsburg boasts a larger annual attendance, at some 760,000.) Across Conner Prairie's rolling hills and fields, gravel trails link four thematic areas: the Lenape Camp, as the McKinnen post is officially known (c. 1816); William Conner Homestead (1823); Prairietown (1836); and Liberty Corner (1886). At each, staffers in period costumes invite spectators to join in activities from weaving to milking cows.
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Comments (5)
The article that Eli Lilly bought the property upon which Conner Prarie sits in 1934. Is this Col. Eli Lilly, founder of the Pharaceuticle company, and Civil War veteran, or his Grandson of the same name? Col. Lilly was 38 years old when he founded the company in 1876. I doubt seriously if he died in 1977.
Posted by Bill Sturm on May 7,2008 | 04:29 AM
I worked for Conner Prairie for many years...and it was the best time of my life. Sometimes I think that I might have been born a century too late. The smells, the sounds and the people. All of them so familiar that I can't ever forget them. What an amazing place to learn. Recently, I took my niece there so that she could experience what I so dearly loved and she still talks about and remembers the cow she milked, the candle she dipped and the baby chicks she was allowed to hold. A first impression means the world and Conner Prairie has that down pat! It will always be one of my favorite places to be.
Posted by Amy Stephenson on May 5,2008 | 11:16 PM
I loved this article! I am from Nebraska and as a child many of my summer vacations were spent at historical recreation vacation places. Nebraska is full of stuff like this all over the state. It is wonderful to know there are still young people attending these "living history" places, even if it is on a field trip!
Posted by Melissa Dougherty-OHara on May 5,2008 | 01:16 PM
I am a youth volunteer at Conner Prairie and I work as both a costumed interpreter and a guide. There is no better way to actually go back in time and experience history than at Conner Prairie.
Posted by Sam Grin on May 2,2008 | 05:33 PM
As a child growing up in Indiana, my first field trip in elementary school was to Conner Prairie. It left me with wonderful memories that I have savored and as a result, I try to expose my children to anything historical. We have visited several living history locations and museums and every time I am taken back to my first living history visit to Conner Prairie. I am glad to know that Conner Prairie is still thriving and impressing young minds. Conner Prairie is next on our list of visits! Kellean Truesdell Ocala, Florida
Posted by Kellean Truesdell on May 1,2008 | 02:40 PM
I liked Donovan Webster's article on Conner Prairie, but as a hobbyist blacksmith one mistake in terminology caught my eye. After "sampling Lenape Camp" he "paused at the blacksmith's, where a smithy instructed an apprentice on the art of forging coat hooks." As Henry W. Longfellow's poem* attests, SMITHY is another term for the blacksmith shop, where the SMITH works. So the smithy is the setting for the instruction, but the smith does the instructing. * Under the spreading chestnut tree The village smithy stands The smith, a mighty man is he With large and sinewy hands
Posted by Tom Holloway on April 30,2008 | 01:20 PM