Where:
Nichols House Museum
55 Mount Vernon Street
Boston, MA 02108
Admission:
FREE
Categories:
History, Lectures & Conferences, Music
Event website:
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/bells-bells-bells-tickets-1203544386659?aff=oddtdtcreator
Margaret (Nichols) Shurcliff and her father, Dr. Arthur Nichols, shared zeal for bell ringing. On their travels they befriended other ringers and chalked up musical achievements. Margaret was celebrated as the first American and only the second woman to ring a peal on tower bells (a feat that took over three hours.) Back home, they helped source bells for local churches and encouraged their friends to try their hands at ringing. Their accomplishments also resonated far beyond Beacon Hill. Margaret’s enthusiasm is even credited with launching the modern day handbell artform.
Join Back Bay Ringers Artistic Director Griff Gall for an engaging conversation exploring Margaret and Arthur’s musical legacy. He will discuss the history of tower ringing, the differences between change ringing and tune ringing, and how this Beacon Hill family revived the tradition of handbell ringing.
This is a hybrid event, with tickets available for in-person and virtual attendance.
The Nichols House Museum on Boston's historic Beacon Hill was home to an early 20th-century family of artists and social activists. Preserved as a museum by Rose Standish Nichols, a pioneering woman landscape architect, the house is furnished with an original collection, including sculpture by Augustus Saint-Gaudens.