West. Trafford and Co. Wonderful Discovery

West. Trafford and Co. Wonderful Discovery West Trafford’s Wonderful Discovery and Brownell’s Kidney Medicine. The former here sketched life size is of clear glass with a ball neck. Gus Gonet, local authority on bottles, dates it sometime early in the last third of the 19th century. Whether West and Trafford’s Discovery soothed internally or externally […]

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Gleanings from the Past

Fragments of Westport’s History Preserved in Scrapbooks The Westport Historical Society’s scrapbook collection includes more than 30 volumes, amounting to more than 1000 pages. Many of the scrapbooks have been digitized for easy access via our online collections database. The collection provides a valuable miscellany of local news, spanning a timeframe from the late 1800’s […]

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Do you remember Butler’s Donuts?

Revealing their unique recipe for success! Have you ever suffered from a case of food nostalgia – a yearning for tastes and flavors from the past and especially for food produced by a local business that is no longer in operation? Many Westporters of a certain age may suffer from this condition of food nostalgia […]

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Abstract art or frugal flooring?

Explaining the spatter-painted floors of the Handy House. Many visitors to the Handy House ask about the spatter-painted wood floors. Showcasing a variety of colors — ochre, grey, dark blue, brown, and mustard yellow — the floors are reminiscent of Jackson Pollock-style abstract art. For those with imagination, some floors could almost be images of […]

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Westport’s not-so-horrible Parade of Horribles

The oddly named “Parade of Horribles” (also known as Antiques and Horribles) was a traditional feature of Independence Day festivities in 19th century New England. As suggested by the name, it describes a procession of a comically strange nature. Westport held its own version of such a parade, calling it a “parade of Antiques, Horribles […]

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