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Society & Culture

Stop 10: "Eli Van Leuven Cabin"

Walk Back in Time by Christopher Boulton

May 20, 20185:59Society & Culture

Here is one of the few remaining homes of the nearly vanished Trapps Mountain Hamlet. Its small size and simple, unadorned lines were typical of the Hamlet. The cabin is a plank house built in 1889 or 1890 by William Hag...

About This Episode

Stop 10: "Eli Van Leuven Cabin" is an episode from Walk Back in Time by Christopher Boulton. Here is one of the few remaining homes of the nearly vanished Trapps Mountain Hamlet. Its small size and simple, unadorned lines were typical of th...

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Episode Details

Published May 20, 2018, 5:59 long, audio available.

Questions About This Episode

What is Stop 10: "Eli Van Leuven Cabin" about?

Here is one of the few remaining homes of the nearly vanished Trapps Mountain Hamlet. Its small size and simple, unadorned lines were typical of the Hamlet. The cabin is a plank house built in 1889 or 1890 by William Hagen and bought by Eli Van Leuven in 1898. Eli’s family occupied the house into the 1920s when the Mohonk Mountain House bought the property. What was family life in the Trapps like during the late 1800s? A typical family was large, with many children all living in a house as small as the one you see here. Trapps men worked at a variety of jobs, including stone-cutting, charcoal-burning, cutting cord wood, and shaping hoops for barrels; they worked, too, as day laborers for the Minnewaska and Mohonk Mountain Houses. Trapps women also worked at a variety of occupations, both at home and at the local mountain hotels. At home, they made butter and cheese, raised chickens, and cultivated kitchen gardens with the help of the children. Some women had hand looms on which they wove a variety of fabrics. Summertime blueberry- and huckleberry-picking was an activity for the entire family, with the sale of berries being another source of cash. Like most Trapps houses, the Van Leuven Cabin lacked plumbing of any kind. There was no electricity, so candles and kerosene lamps were used when required. Electric and telephone lines did not reach parts of the Trapps Mountain Hamlet until the 1950s or later! In the photo, we can see how the Van Leuvens made use of the large boulder located next to their home. Using millstone-cutting methods, a large, crude shelf was fashioned, thereby producing a useful, outdoor, working surface for washing and cooking.

Where can I listen to Stop 10: "Eli Van Leuven Cabin"?

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Which podcast is Stop 10: "Eli Van Leuven Cabin" from?

Stop 10: "Eli Van Leuven Cabin" is an episode from Walk Back in Time by Christopher Boulton.

How long is this episode?

This episode is 5:59 long.

When was this episode published?

This episode was published on May 20, 2018.

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Are there related episodes from Walk Back in Time?

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Quick Answers About This Episode

Where can I listen to Stop 10: "Eli Van Leuven Cabin"?

You can listen to Stop 10: "Eli Van Leuven Cabin" on this page when the episode audio is available from the podcast feed.

Which podcast is this episode from?

Stop 10: "Eli Van Leuven Cabin" is from Walk Back in Time by Christopher Boulton.

What are the episode details?

Published May 20, 2018 and 5:59 long