Off to the Pratt Museum, where we found an exquisite small museum with an enormity of material and a creativity of presentation. They covered the history of the town, the danger of the seas and lives it takes, the different kinds of boats used in fishing, those who lived here prior to white settlement, the 1964 earthquake, and lots of other topics. But we were impressed with the imagination of the presentations. In the Storm Warming Theater, there were pictures of 6 people who barely escaped death when their fishing boats went down. Harrowing stories in the first person where fishing can end your life.
There were drawers to open, artifacts to view, first person stories, ship models and other ways that they presented their material.
Then we went out side to the homestead cabin to talk with Cora Mae who actually homesteaded here in the 1950’s. She still lives in Homer in the same house - with a few additions. This house was not hers but she is the docent in it.
Homer itself was founded by Homer Pennock, an adventurer from Michigan. He landed here in 1896 with a crew of gold seekers convinced that they could make their fortunes here. Not to be and they soon left for the Klondike. But others landed and opened coal mines but soon found that fishing was the way to go Cora Mae and her husband came to farm but then bought several boats and, with their sons, made their living on the sea.
Excellent museum with a garden of local flora out front and a trail through the woods out back.
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