Page 42 - Newsletter_Spring_2019
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For 49 Years, Carousel Horse has Charmed Houlton Children
By Jen Lynds ’96, Bangor Daily News/Houlton Pioneer Times – Reprinted with permission
Although the memories of it are a bit vague in her
mind, Heather Foster of Houlton can still remember
a time when she was able to take a ride on the
carousel horse that greeted visitors upon entrance to
the Cary Library in Houlton.
“ at was the greatest part of visiting the library when
I was a kid,” the 43-year-old said. “My mother always
made a deal with me. She wanted my siblings and I to
participate in the summer reading program that they
always have at the library, and if we went and picked
out three books and read them and did good on our
book reports to the library staff that week, she would
let each of us ride the carousel horse before we went
home.” Boomerang the Library Carousel Horse
Since 1969, “Boomerang” the antique Spillman merry-go-round horse that was purchased from New Mexico, has
felt the weight of countless children on his saddle as they have grown and aged out of the children’s section of the
library. e all-wood horse has been forced into retirement, with wear and tear and a lack of available repair services
factoring into the decision, Librarian Linda Faucher said.
“I can’t remember exactly, but it was just within the last year I believe that we had to put up the sign saying that
people couldn’t ride him anymore, they could only pet him,” she said. “ at is because his back legs and tail broke
pretty often, and the person who frequently repaired the horse for us moved out of state. We didn’t want to risk
further damage, so we had to make that decision.”
Although Faucher has records indicating that the carousel horse was purchased in the spring of 1969, she is not sure
the true age of Boomerang. She doesn’t know how long it existed as a merry-go-round piece before it was purchased
by the library.
She does know that there was interest in purchasing a carousel horse that was holding its head up higher so that
it could look towards the children more. By the time negotiations were fi nalized, however, such a horse wasn’t
available.
Boomerang was purchased through private donations and completely restored by Mr. and Mrs. L.D. Young Jr.
in Nov. 1969. In August of that year, staff at the library had moved into a new $180,000 addition that had been
constructed to enlarge the facility. e library held a special contest during National Children’s Book Week to name
the horse. More than 1,100 children participated in the contest, and the winning name was submitted by Robert
Snell ‘81, who was then a fi rst grade pupil at the now shuttered Fair Street School in Houlton. Lois Vose and Cora
Hogan of Houlton both served as judges for the contest.
Kathy Henderson, a former Houlton resident who now lives in Boston, Massachusetts, also recalled memories of the
carousel horse. Henderson said that one of her favorite things to do with her siblings was to visit the library and ride
the horse “after story hour.”
“I visit my family there often, but I haven’t been back to the library for years,” she said. “I had no idea that the horse
wasn’t in operation any more. I wish it could still be ridden because I have a lot of good memories there, but I also
see the value in preserving it as a monument to the past. I know I am not the only one who enjoyed that. It is a little
piece of a lot of childhoods.”
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