The South Marysburgh Mirror 9 ('Jeanne Minhinnick' con(cid:415)nued from page 1) Jeanne con(cid:415)nued to comb an(cid:415)que stores and collect books - amassing a library of around 3000 volumes on Canadian history and 19th century social life. S(cid:415)ll at Britnell's, she also began wri(cid:415)ng on houses and furnishings for magazines including Canadian Homes and Gardens. Eventually, as her reputa(cid:415)on and income from L-R Jeanne, Charlie Emlaw, Ann, Alix, Joan Emlaw, Floyd Fudge, George Emlaw at Bay House a(cid:332)er a swim wri(cid:415)ng and lecturing grew, she was able to join Ann on the farm full (cid:415)me in 1950. The two threw themselves into rural life. With husbandry books and the pa(cid:415)ent advice and support of neighbours - Colliers, Emlaws, Fudges and Gydes - they raised sheep. And, as if that weren't enough, in 1951, they founded the Milford Public Library - using their own books and dona(cid:415)ons from friends and contacts across Canada. They also started a pain(cid:415)ng group taught by professional ar(cid:415)sts, and organized a hor(cid:415)cultural society, beau(cid:415)fying the township with crab-apple trees for local farms. In 1958, Jeanne was offered work on a grand restora(cid:415)on, Upper Canada Village, and made the wrenching decision to leave farming. S(cid:415)ll friends, Ann kept the farm, and Jeanne, Bay House. At "The Village," Jeanne researched, selected and acquired furnishings for forty buildings, overseeing every interior detail. And her literary mind was hard at work. She and her colleagues every invented individual who lived or worked in building. each Rooms had to look, sound and even smell authen(cid:415)c - right down the dusty "slightly the curtains parlors." As a novel creates a world where its characters breathe and live, so too did Jeanne's houses. Jeanne & Ann at Forest Hill to in Jeanne at her desk at Britnell's In 1961, The Village opened to rave reviews. And soon, other opportuni(cid:415)es beckoned. Jeanne wrote and lec- tured widely and planned and executed furnishings for numerous historical restora(cid:415)ons - several had been home to famous individuals and all presented new re- search and imagina(cid:415)ve challenges. Throughout, Jeanne remained ac(cid:415)ve in the County, spearheading and suppor(cid:415)ng heritage projects, from opening museums to protec(cid:415)ng Loyalist graveyards. She entered flower arrangements at the Milford Fair, occasionally winning. I remember her at Bay House, weeding on summer mornings and clacking away on the li(cid:425)le red typewriter in her library. Her beau(cid:415)fully wri(cid:425)en, me(cid:415)culously researched book, At Home in Up- per Canada, was published in 1970 and became a defin- i(cid:415)ve reference on its subject. In 1973, my grandparents "re(cid:415)red" to Picton. But Jeanne kept working, dona(cid:415)ng her exper(cid:415)se to the res- tora(cid:415)on of Macaulay House in Picton, and consul(cid:415)ng on restora(cid:415)on of historic rooms in the Parliament Build- ings. In 1978, she was awarded the Order of Canada, and in 1979, the Gabrielle Leger Medal for Life(cid:415)me Achievement in Heritage Conserva(cid:415)on. Also in 1979, Prince Edward County hosted a lavish dinner in her hon- our - a tribute that moved her more than the medals ever could. Jeanne sought out - and usually found - the magic and the possibili(cid:415)es in things. And she would find a way to make you see them too. (Although, unfortunately, my poor mother some(cid:415)mes felt like another of Jeanne's projects!) Jeanne's clothes, like her furniture, were o(cid:332)en second hand, but she made them elegant. A school friend of my mother's once asked, "Is your mum- my a movie actress?" In her later years - with her aqui- line nose and high cheekbones - Jeanne conveyed the very image of aristocra(cid:415)c "authoress." And whether lecturing to museum curators, telling you over sand- wiches about her lunch with the scandalous Broadway star Tallulah Bankhead, or describing shopping at Giant Tiger, Jeanne's stories were as de(cid:332)ly composed as an ar(cid:415)cle for An(cid:415)ques or a mantlepiece tableau - and twinkling with magic.