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Keeler Tavern Museum & History Center Virtual Talks to Explore the Role of Currier & Ives in 19th Century American Mass Media with Collector Joel Third Written by KTMHC
Two of longtime Ridgefield resident Joel Third’s passions have been collecting Currier & Ives prints and volunteering at Keeler Tavern Museum & History Center. In January and February, he’ll bring those passions together for two virtual talks.
In January, Third will present 19th Century American Mass Media, an exploration of the role Currier & Ives had as lithograph publishers in the late 1800s. In February, Third’s program will be View of Women in the 19th Century. In this program, Third will explore the role of women in society, their fight for suffrage, and their role in the temperance movement as seen through the work of Currier & Ives. KTM&HC is hosting both programs on Zoom.
Jan 21, 2021
Aaron Bossinger, 35, of Lewistown, went to be with his Lord and Savior at 11:52 p.m., Thursday, January 14, 2021.
Born April 18, 1985, in Lewistown, he was the son of the late Charles A. Bossinger, Sr., who passed away April 26, 2017, and Kimbra (Wagner) Dodd-Bossinger, who survives.
In addition to his mother, he is survived by his sister, Allana Lee (Dodd) Hartung and her husband Michael, and his nephews, Chase and Lucas, whom he adored. He is also survived by his maternal grandmother, Betty Jane “Janie” Wagner and paternal grandmother, Barbara J. Bossinger, all of Lewistown.
Also surviving are his companion, Alison (Guss) Eckley and her children, Caely and Parcer, and a special family, D.J. and Shannon Bender and their daughter, Aislinn.
On a Trump-loving island in the Chesapeake, a virus outbreak unites instead of divides Peter Jamison Allen Bradford, a lifelong resident of Tangier Island, works on the Courtney Thomas mail boat, which still makes trips between the mainland and the remote Chesapeake Bay outpost. (Katherine Frey/The Washington Post) TANGIER, Va. The news at the dock was bad. As a handful of masked passengers stepped off the Courtney Thomas, one of the only boats still traveling to and from this remote island in the Chesapeake Bay, Susan Parks looked for the oxygen machine that was scheduled to arrive for her patients. The home-health aide could see it was not among the packages and mail being unloaded. The boat’s captain, Brett Thomas, had another reason to look somber as he stepped off his boat beneath a clear December sky.
Jerry M. Hile, 81, of Strodes Mills, passed away Wednesday, Dec. 16, 2020, at his home.
Born June 30, 1939, in Lewistown, he was a son of the late Allen Hile Sr. and Eileen (Reigle) Hile.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by: his wife, Betty Jane (Smith) Hile; and a brother, David Hile.
Jerry is survived by: children, Donald Hile and wife, Bonnie, of Lewistown, and Deborah Robinette and husband, Steven, both of Lewistown; three grandchildren; 17 great-grandchildren; four great-great-grandchildren; and his brother, Allen Hile Jr. and wife, Sharon, of Alabama.
Early in life, Jerry worked at the Giant Food Store, Marlette Homes, Trinity Plastics, and Bossert’s Hardware. Lastly, he was employed by the Mifflin County School District as a food truck driver, from which he retired.