Showing posts with label members. Show all posts
Showing posts with label members. Show all posts

Monday, November 29, 2010

Additional writings by Gerry Barker

Gerry Barker now has a blog for his personal writings: http://historyforfuture.blogspot.com/. I hope you will enjoy them.

Thursday, February 08, 2007

Meet Frontier Resources - Gerry Barker


The Wagoner, Gerry Barker has retired from the Army, taught history and managed museums. He holds a MA in Labor History. He has specialized in Living History, taking part in numerous projects such a building forts and homesteads, wagon trains, military campaigns and reenactments of important events in American history. Gerry has written books and articles on frontier history, military history, living history techniques, mountaineering and survival. His current research is into the lives and work of wagoners in Colonial America.

Meet Frontier Resources - Butch Hauri


Dr. Hauri, the Schoolmaster, was born on a dairy farm in a Swiss/German community in Wisconsin. He started his apprenticeship in commercial beekeeping while still in eighth grade. He was drafted in 1965 and after ten years in the Army returned to beekeeping, becoming a Bee Master in 1975. Dr. Hauri ran a commercial beekeeping company with 1500 hives, on 38 farms in four counties in Wisconsin and Illinois. When health problems forced his retirement from full time beekeeping, he devoted his time to living history and became a “Minister at Large" to the community of historical reactors. He received a Doctor of Divinity in 2002, along with the appointment to Bishop at Large.

Currently he is working on second Doctoral degree focusing on the part that the Protestant reformation had on settling of America from a sociological and economic point of view. And, of course, he is still trying to get people to think.

Meet Frontier Resources - Maria Hummel


Maria was new to the field of living history when she joined us. She brought skill with animals, attention to detail, and a strong determination to “do it right” if she was to do it at all. She has a broad knowledge of textiles and textile equipment, and the work necessary to accomplish a frontier homestead. Capable of writing cogent and engaging school programs, her current offering is Children’s Work on the Frontier.