Tag Archives: Weddings

If the Dress Fits…

Baby strollers, jewelry, cameras, cell phones and “clothes galore.”  These are the usual items that can be found in the Lost & Found at Mystic Seaport said Museum security guard of seven years, Jim.
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Well, something a tad more elegant joined the abandoned group this past Valentine’s Day weekend. Something ivory, intricately beaded and bearing a fluttery, chiffon train.

That’s right, ladies and gentlemen. Love is in the air at Mystic Seaport…

Looking awfully lonely in our Communications office.

Looking awfully lonely in our Communications office.

 Exquisite brooch at the neckline.

Exquisite brooch at the neckline.

A faithful Mystic Seaport security guard found the lovely wedding dress discarded in the Museum’s South parking lot early Sunday morning, February 15.  Safely stored inside of a plastic garment bag, the gown is in excellent condition with its size tag still intact. 

Both of the brides that celebrated their Valentine’s Day nuptials at Seamen’s Inne have not claimed the beauty. So alas, the questions arise… Was Julia Roberts back in Connecticut, this time filming a sequel to Runaway Bride? Did a blushing bride use our parking lot to change into her honeymoon wear? Is someone organizing some kind of extreme scavenger hunt? We want to know!

If the dress is yours, or if you have any idea of whose it might be, please email us at news@mysticseaport.org. Correctly identify the size of the dress and we’ll get it safely back into your hands.

And in the meantime, we promise not to take it along on any maiden voyages.

“Here is the Church and Here is the Steeple…

… open the doors and see all the people.”

 

The church we’re talking about here is the Greenmanville Church at Mystic Seaport. The steeple is there and the doors are still open, but these days the only people you’re likely to see in the church are visitors like yourself.

 

It wasn’t always that way. In fact, in the 1850s, and for the next generation as well, this Seventh Day Baptist Church had a vibrant congregation of ship builders and their families. Their beliefs had them involved in all sorts of social issues such as opposing slavery and supporting the temperance movement.

 

However, when the heyday of Mystic’s shipbuilding activity declined in the 1870s and 1880s, the congregation was eventually depleted, and the church finally closed its doors in 1904.

 

Mystic Seaport acquired the church building in 1955 and it was then moved to its present location in the Museum’s Anchor Circle. At that time, the clock in the steeple was added as part of the church restoration process.

 Anchor Circle in Autumn


The clock, manufactured in 1857, is on permanent loan from Yale University where it had been located in the Old South Sheffield Hall of the Sheffield Scientific School. The elaborate clockworks that make this clock tick are quite amazing and can be viewed inside the church.

 

 As devout followers of the Old Testament, Saturday rather than Sunday was the day of worship for the Greenmanville Seventh Day Baptist congregation. Although there are no sermons delivered in the church today, many brides and grooms choose to have their wedding ceremony performed in the historic setting of the Greenmanville Church. Now isn’t that romantic! *

 

So, whether old churches capture your imagination, or old clocks intrigue you, or if you are simply a romantic at heart … there’s a pew waiting for you at Mystic Seaport’s Greenmanville Church. Come sit awhile!

 

Remember to visit our website at www.mysticseaport.org to see all of the Museum’s daily offerings.  

 

*If you would like to get married at the Greenmanville Church, please call Seamen’s Inne at Mystic Seaport at 860.572.5305.