Vermont Magazine Summer 19 | Page 63

M y husband Stephen is an artist, and I am a writ- er. For the last 25 years we’ve worked side-by-side, making our creations. The life of a creative person can be challenging, unpredictable, and pock-marked with self-doubt. We’ve learned to lean on one another for assistance in areas outside our expertise (him: words, me: technology), honest feedback (“Does this suck?”), and general moral support (“I love you, but if you aban- don this project now, I will kill you.”) But it wasn’t until the beginning of this year that we had the bright idea to put our skills together and actually collaborate on a creation. “How could we not have done this sooner?” we wondered. It all came together rather effortlessly on a recent project when Steve asked me if I would write some words on one of his works of art. Hand- write?! Directly on his artwork - the product of dozens of hours of his efforts? What if I made some horrible mistake, instantly ruining the whole thing? We entitled our new endeavor EveNSteve, because, well, when you and your spouse rhyme you might as well take advantage of it. We had only made a small handful of the new collaborative works when we were asked to make one featuring the Rokeby Museum in Ferrisburg. If you are anything like me, this is just the kind of place you’ve driven past a hundred times in Vermont and thought idly, ”Huh. Wonder what that is?” Like so many places in this state, all you need is a halfway good reason to pull in and take a look around. As we quickly found out in our research, Rokeby is a National Historic Landmark. This farm homestead was a site on the Underground Railroad. The Robin- son family who lived here for four successive generations were devout, radical Quakers; and for them this also meant that they were impassioned abolitionists. Rowland T. Robinson, who was born at Rokeby in 1796, was one of the organizers of the Hundred Conventions, an abolitionist gathering that travelled throughout New England in 1843, spreading the message of anti-slavery. The former slave and abolitionist Frederick Douglass was one of the featured speakers, and when the tour came to Ferrisburg, he delivered a fiery anti-slavery speech that still rings with conviction for readers today. In addition to being Quakers and abolitionists, the Robinsons were farmers, artists and authors. If anyone ever tells you creativity doesn’t run in families, you should point them to the example of the Robinsons. Rowland Evans Robinson, born in 1833, wrote more than a dozen books. Many of his Vermont folk tales embellished upon his memories of growing up in a house where runaway slaves were sheltered. His daughter, Rachel, grew up to become an important illustrator in New York City. His other daugh- ter, Molly­— in her teenage years— processed her own glass plate negatives to make photographs at a time when photography was a complicated and technical en- deavor. She grew up to become a botanical illustrator. VTMAG.com 61