Yesteryear Productions

Yesteryear Productions Yesteryear Productions is a not-for-profit, amateur acting group based in Warren, PA. Special accommodations may be made for plays we have already produced.

The group's mission is to bring history alive for children and adults through captivating, dramatic plays. Yesteryear Productions is a small group of dedicated amateur actors who care passionately about bringing the lessons of history alive for today's children and adults. We are available to perform free or low-cost, historically based plays within Pennsylvania, Ohio, and New York. We will work w

ith the sponsoring organization to determine the best play to perform and ask that all play dates be scheduled at least six months to a year in advance. As we are a volunteer troupe, we ask for assistance from the sponsoring organization to secure the necessary funding to produce our plays, whether that be through a grant, donation, or fundraising. This amount is due in advance, with 25% due at the time of reservation.

10/13/2020

President Andrew Johnson gave Dr. Mary Edward Walker the Medal of Honor on November 11, 1865, for her service as a surgeon during the Civil War.

Dr. Walker was born in Oswego, New York, in 1832 and received her medical degree from Syracuse Medical College when she was twenty-two years old. She was the only woman in her graduating class. Raised by an abolitionist family, she left her private practice to volunteer as a surgeon at the beginning of the Civil War. Dr. Walker treated wounded soldiers for four years, serving in Virginia and Tennessee, and was held as a prisoner of war for four months.

Dr. Walker was also a suffragist and preferred to wear what was considered exclusively men’s clothing. She was arrested at least once for clothing choice and when asked by an interviewer how she responded to people harassing her in the streets, she replied, “When anyone does say anything unpleasant I usually have something to say in return which makes us quits. Oh, I tell you, trousers are a great thing.”

After eligibility rules changed, Dr. Walker’s award was revoked in 1917 along with over 900 others as part of a thorough review of Civil War service medal recipients, just a few years before her death. The review board allegedly could not verify examples of her valor in the field or that she was a commissioned officer.

She refused to return the medal, saying, according to her great grandniece, “You may have it back over my dead body and only if you rescue it from rigor mortis.” The Army restored her military service honor on June 10, 1977. She is still the only woman to have received the award today.

Image Credit: National Archives and Records Administration
Library of Congress

09/16/2020

Emma Edmonds specialized in disguises. It was a way of life you could say. One which began in her teens.

Back then she was living on a farm in New Brunswick, Canada, being raised by a doting mother and an abusive father who resented Emma for not being born a boy. He wasn’t good to her. And when he tried to marry her off at fifteen, she decided to leave.

She traveled alone to the U.S. And this is where Emma Edmonds became Franklin Thompson, probably because Franklin had more opportunities than Emma did. And Franklin became a bible salesman living in Hartford, Connecticut, and then a book seller in Flint, Michigan.

Soon the Civil War started. Emma, an ardent supporter of the Union felt a duty to serve. So she joined. As Franklin of course. Physical checks were sparse then.

Emma worked as a nurse, but yearned for something more. She wanted to become a spy.

That chance came.

Emma needed to infiltrate the Confederate camp stationed near her own. So Emma did what Emma knew how to do well. She changed her identity.

Franklin Thompson became Cuff, a southern black man. She used silver nitrate to darken her skin. And then she wandered near the Confederate camp, expecting to be picked up for some work need. Which she was.

She learned important information over a few days in the camp. Information such as the Army building what were known as “Quaker Guns,” or cannons which looked real from a distance, but in reality were just wooden logs. Then she escaped from the camp and returned to her own. Where she told leadership what she learned.

Emma, or Franklin, or Cuff, or an Irish peddler by the name of Bridget O’Shea, which was a future identity, would take part in eleven spy missions during the war.

Sources: Behind Rebel Lines: The Incredible Story of Emma Edmonds, Civil War Spy by Seymour Reit, https://bit.ly/2K6B0DG, https://bit.ly/2HjuHe5

A trail blazer.
09/16/2020

A trail blazer.

She started a school for African-American girls with $1.50. The school bordered the town dump. Make-shift desks and chairs were made from discarded crates and boxes. There were five students at the time, and the students made ink for pens from elderberry juice and pencils from burned wood.

When the the local Ku Klux Klan heard about the school, they threatened to burn it down. There were reports that they waited outside the school, but she stood in the doorway, unwilling to back down or leave her school. Other stories say that she and her students started singing spirituals. The Ku Klux Klan eventually left.

Mary McLeod Bethune was born on July 10, 1875 in a log cabin on a cotton farm in South Carolina, the 15th of 17 children of former slaves. Most of her brothers and sisters were born into slavery; she was the first child born free. She started working in the fields by the age of 5.

One day, she accompanied her mother, delivering “white people’s” wash. When she was given permission to enter the white children's nursery, she saw a book, which fascinated her. A white girl would quickly sn**ch the book from her hands, telling her she didn't know how to read. That's when Mary realized the only difference between white and black folk was the ability to read and write.

When she got the opportunity, McLeod attended a one-room black schoolhouse, walking five miles to and from the school. When she got home, she would teach her parents and siblings what she learned. She then got an opportunity to attend the Moody Bible Institute in 1895, becoming the first African American student to graduate from the school.

She decided then she would become a missionary, sharing what she learned. But, she would be informed that no one wanted or needed a black missionary.

Rather than give up her dreams, she decided more than ever that she would eventually teach.

Flash forward to 1904, when after moving to Florida, she started the Educational and Industrial Training School for Negro Girls, which initially had five girls aged six to twelve. With limited resources, she was determined to make the school a success, even when the Ku Klux Klan threatened her. But, eventually she received donations and support from the community, and the school grew to 30 girls by the end of the year.

Booker T. Washington would tell her of the importance of white benefactors to fund her school, so she started traveling and fundraising, receiving donations from John D. Rockefeller and establishing contacts with Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt.

Her little school would become even more successful after it merged with a private institute for African-American boys and became known as the Bethune-Cookman School. She was president of the college from 1923 to 1942, and 1946 to 1947, becoming one of the few women in the world to serve as a college president at that time.

After she found that one of her students needing medical care was denied the care she needed and was placed on an outside porch of the local white hospital instead of a room with a bed, she used her funding sources and connections to open the first black hospital in Daytona, Florida.

According to the Turning Point Suffragist Memorial Association, McLeod became "one of the 20th century’s most powerful and celebrated advocates for civil rights and suffrage", holding "prominent roles, including president, in the National Association of Colored Women (NACW). She also served as president of the Florida Federation of Colored Women’s Clubs, where she fought against school segregation and sought healthcare for black children. Under her leadership, the National Council of Negro Women (NCNW) was founded as a unifying voice for African American women’s organizations."

As chapter president of the Florida chapter of the National Association of Colored Women, she would become so well known for her work registering black voters that once again she received threats from the Ku Klux Klan. And, like before, she did not back down.

With her friendship with the Roosevelts, she would become appointed as a national adviser to president Roosevelt, becoming part of what was known as his Black Cabinet and advising him on concerns of black people and would be called the “First Lady of the Struggle”.

When she passed away on May 18, 1955, she was recognized across the country. One newspaper suggested "the story of her life should be taught to every school child for generations to come" and The New York Times noted she was, "one of the most potent factors in the growth of in*******al goodwill in America."

In her own words before she died, she wrote:

"I leave you love. I leave you hope. I leave you the challenge of developing confidence in one another. I leave you a thirst for education. I leave you a respect for the use of power. I leave you faith. I leave you racial dignity. I leave you a desire to live harmoniously with your fellow men. I leave you a responsibility to our young people."

“If I have a legacy to leave my people, it is my philosophy of living and serving. I think I have spent my life well. I pray now that my philosophy may be helpful to those who share my vision of a world of Peace, Progress, Brotherhood, and Love.”

Our great cast yucking it up after our performance yesterday! (Left to Right) Joshua Anderson, Adam Ristau, Jean Gomory,...
10/20/2019

Our great cast yucking it up after our performance yesterday! (Left to Right) Joshua Anderson, Adam Ristau, Jean Gomory, Michael Gafner, Russell D Lee, Cliff Guntly, Danica Delois Olson, Jenette Guntly, Debby Hornburg, John Shaughnesy, Sherrie Flannery, Megan VanOrd, Lil Hunkele.

So very proud of us! Thank you to all of our supporters for helping us bring this important production to Warren.
10/20/2019

So very proud of us! Thank you to all of our supporters for helping us bring this important production to Warren.

The historically accurate play was built around the first women's rights convention.

We are loving our time in Seneca Falls! If you can, come experience Convention Days this weekend. Just amazing. Thank yo...
07/20/2019

We are loving our time in Seneca Falls! If you can, come experience Convention Days this weekend. Just amazing. Thank you Women's Rights National Historical Park!

05/30/2019

Due to an unforeseen circumstance, we are looking to fill an important female role. Looking for someone age 40-60 or so, though we will consider younger. Have you dreamed of taking part in a professional production? This is your chance. Private message us or write to [email protected]. We are starting now, so don't wait!

04/25/2019

Come on down to First Lutheran Church, 3rd Ave., Warren, until 9 p.m. tonight! We're ready for your audition. So excited!

Address

Warren, PA

Telephone

+18885488858

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