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Awards ceremony set on June 3
A rare weaving together of the varied and rich threads of Dutchess County history will come together at the historic 1840 Collins Estate, a private home in Union Vale, on Saturday, June 3. While the main purpose of the event focuses on the three traditional Dutchess County Historical Society (DCHS) Awards for 2023, the site, and the site's family history, is extraordinary in and of itself.
A direct descendant of the Collins family that built the home, Fredrika Simpson Groff, will attend with t\vo daughters from her home in Colorado. Groff is central to the cohesiveness of the varied and intricate threads that reveal our county's distinct history. Her careful distribution of items among the DCHS, the Adriance Memorial Library, the Loeb at Vassar College, and the current owners and stewards of the home, Frank and Jennifer Castella, is a model of historic preservation. This preservation involves the home, family histories and genealogy, and objects that range from fine art to photographs and diaries to furniture.
The builder of the home was George Collins (1788-1848) and wife Elizabeth Borden Collins (1795 to 1865). One of the interesting dynamics of the story is the tension caused by the Quaker insistence on simplicity while the couple and their descendants became increasingly successful in business and society.
A family fascination with growing things, and manufacturing things, is reflected in a diary entry of Fredrika Graff's grandmother, Elizabeth Borden Campbell (DCHS Collections). When she attended the US Centennial