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Lin
Chapman collects whistles: some small, the size of your thumb, some
that tower over a tall man. On June 18th, a display of his collection
will open at the Eli Whitney Museum in Hamden. Mr. Chapman's fascination
with whistles began a dozen years ago. He was completing a model
of a steam engine. His wife asked "where's the whistle?" and the
pursuit was begun. He was unprepared for the variety and character
of whistles he would discover. The Wallingford resident has collected
over 150 whistles from trains, factories, and boats.
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The
collection marks the great age of steam. By the middle of the 1800's,
factory whistles announced the hour of work to whole valleys. In
the 1940's, great locomotives still breathed raw steam to announce
their arrival. In brass, steel and iron, these whistles gave machines
voices, each with its own character.
"A
whistle is a simple device" notes Chapman, "no moving parts." But
this simple idea takes many forms. The Whistles exhibition explores
this idea of variations on a single theme. Patrick Smith, the exhibition's
science curator, has devised experiments to allow visitors to sort
out what they know about this everyday phenomenon. "We whistle without
thinking" Smith points out. "In the exhibition we encourage visitors
to stop and think, to ask what's going on."
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