Education Day at Richfield Historical Park
May 13 & 15, 2025
The Richfield Historical Park came alive on May 13 & 15with 130 excited 3rd graders visiting from Erin, HNR, Friess Lake, St. Peter and St. Boniface schools. This was the 14th year for the program that showed the current generation of children how families lived many years ago. The property was once the home of the Messer and Mayer families who operated the Messer/Mayer Mill.
The children were divided into groups and moved from location to location. With the help of volunteers, here is a sample of what the day was like:
Arrived at the Park to get instructions.
Visit the Messer/Mayer Mill to learn what the word "grist" means and how the water once flowed along the raceway to power the
turbine. See an actual millstone. View the gas engine which became the power source after water. Figure out the difference
between oats, wheat, and rye. Have fun sifting flour.
Walk to the Mill House to see how the Messer and Mayer families ironed their clothes and made their own bread.
Leave the Mill House through the summer
kitchen to pump water by hand and ring the dinner bell.
Meander down the hill and wash clothes the old-fashioned way. Then, hang them on the line to dry.
Have some fun playing games that kids may have played long ago.
Stopped for a lunch break.
Go to the smokehouse to learn how the Messers and Mayers cured their meat as there was no electricity in the Mill House until the 1920s.
Not far from the Mill House was the outhouse (there was never any running water for the Messer and Mayer families to use). After a quick peek inside the
2-holer, a short walk along the Coney Creek and past the 150-year-old white oak tree, the children arrived at the Messer log barn.
Outside the log barn, corn was shelled and the corn stalks were shredded. Lots of hard work was needed to keep the animals fed long ago.
On to the Motz log cabin, to learn about foods that may have been eaten in the spring and how to make English muffins using a woodburning stove. Also, winding strips of cloth for weaving.
The "smithie" was hard at work in the blacksmith shop. Blacksmithing was really important long ago.
How is maple sap turning into delicious maple syrup? The children heard the whole story of how this is done--tap a tree, carry sap to the sugar shack and learn how the sap is boiled to make the syrup. Even enjoyed a treat of a vanilla wafer dipped in maple syrup.
A big Thank You to all the children who attended, their teachers, chaperones and the Richfield Historical Society volunteers.