
What is it? – August 2025
No, it’s not a fossil. It is about 14” at its’ widest point. If you tap the turtles head with your foot, the shell opens

No, it’s not a fossil. It is about 14” at its’ widest point. If you tap the turtles head with your foot, the shell opens

Q1. What year was Lucille Ball born?Q2. What was the name of the production staged at Municipal Stadium for the Sesquincennial?Q3. What was the former

As part of the Fenton’s historic tours series, participants enjoyed an opportunity on Saturday, July 19, 2025, to step inside Jamestown Street Railway Trolley Car

And A History of An Organization Newsletter This month marks the fifth anniversary of the Fenton History Center’s official newsletter, the Walnut Grove Press. Before

I suspect that there are many people within our Fenton Family that have connections to the Mayflower. With proper research, you can apply to the

So much was going on in the world as the calendar turned to August 1945. President Harry S. Truman authorized the atomic bomb drops on

An interesting article appeared in an older issue of Ancestry magazine, March/April 2005. It caught my eye because it fell in with a situation we

Last November and December, we shared the story of John Henry Mann’s death at Hickam Field in Hawaii on December 7, 1941, making him the

If you have been searching for documentation for veterans in your family, we understand your frustration. You may have already checked online by visiting Ancestry,

The Fenton History Center’s July lecture featured Wendy Lewellen, board member and secretary of Chautauqua Rails to Trails, who shared stories and history from her