Click on the map
for directions
Greetings
from the Brooder House!
Greetings from
the Brooder House!
Now that lot's of people are enjoying their vacations
(or planning to), we are just gearing up to work! Hang on, we've got a busy
schedule in the next few weeks! Here it is:
Saturday,
August 18....1:00 p.m.. We will be
conducting a benefit auction ON LOCATION for the West
Frankfort Fire Department (Please note, this is in WEST Frankfort,
not to be confused with "out town" Frankfort, which is the town center
you would normally pass through on Route 1a as you drive towards Bangor.) This
will be an exciting auction of donated goods and services in a comfortable country
atmosphere. Good times guaranteed, bargains galore and great home cooking by
Ruth and Millie! Help us support this local volunteer Fire Department! Directions
to West Frankfort are in detail on our Auction Zip site at:
http://www.auctionzip.com/Listings/322916.html
Saturday, August 25....10:00
a.m.. We'll be back here at the Brooder
House with an exciting Warehouse Clearance Auction. This is NOT our typical
auction! We will be conducting a "no frills" sale with box lots,
repairables, and great winter projects for you fixer-uppers! There will be
tons of stuff, so bring a truck! Everything goes! Great flea market and yard
sale stock! (Sorry, Paul, I'm on a cleaning binge and anything you don't hang
onto is going out the door! LOL!) Doughnuts and coffee will be available,
no regular catering, sorry!
Thursday, September 6....6:00
p.m.. Back to as normal as we get around
here. This auction will feature the contents of the Isabel Z. Ames estate of
Northport/Lincolnville Beach (the home was located on the town line). This will
be a quality auction, as the home was virtually untouched in the nearly 100
years Ms. Ames resided here. We will also be offering the contents of a Union
farmhouse (permission to release the name at this time is pending, sorry) with
lots of local historical items. Pictures and listing are in progress and should
be fully set up by Friday, August 17. You may check out what's there so far
at:
http://www.auctionzip.com/Listings/329009.html
Saturday, September 8...6:00
p.m.. Brooder House is pleased to invite
you as we support Freedom Riders of Warren
with their annual benefit auction right here at our hall. Catering will be provided
as usual by JoAnn & Company. Lots of great items are being collected for
this event, such as gift certificates, merchandise and services. Freedom Riders
is a local program which provides therapy with horses for handicapped children
and adults. No buyer's premium. All proceeds benefit Freedom Riders. Come on
out and help us support this great program!
Whew! Well, I guess that's it for now. I've heard
rumors that Paul and Richard, our right hand man, are talking about going
union on me (LOL), so maybe I should schedule them in a break soon. <grin>
Remember, our auctions are always open to the public,
and registration is FREE (what a deal!).
If you or someone you know needs assistance in estate
liquidations, we have over 35 years experience and there is never a charge
to view or estimate estate items. Complete liquidation service is provided
with care by professionals, at reasonable consignment rates with no transportation
or advertising charges. Referrals greatly appreciated!
Looking forward to seeing you all soon!
And don't forget to visit the Union Fair...it's
a great family outing!
See ya! ~ Linda
How
Brooder House Auction Service Came to Be...
Brooder House Auction Service
was destined to become! This was not some off-the-cuff scheme that was just
thrown together. A great deal of life altering events had to happen to make
this operation a reality.
A native son of Union, Paul's family owned and operated Payson's Farm Machinery,
a Ford tractor dealership for several years. Linda is also a Maine native,
having grown up in Searsport, the unofficial Antique Capital of maine, proud
to be a second-generation auctioneer.
One early evening in 1972, Linda and her dad, Charles "Chuck" Morse, were
riding home from a long and boring auction. Jokingly, Chuck stated that he
could be a much better auctioneer. Having bought a tape recorder at the auction,
he began pretending to sell a few items. Well, it did sound better
than what they had spent the day listening to. So, a short time later he followed
through with his idea and became a licensed auctioneer. Linda operated the
concessions, selling soda, hot dogs, twinkies and coffee. Chuck's wife, Joyce
(Linda's Mom), did the auction recording, and her younger brother, Ted, worked
long and hard as a 'runner', holding up and displaying the items for sale.
"Today," Linda says with a slight grin, "we call doing this, the "Vannah-thing."
For several years the Morses held auctions on an almost-monthly basis at the Lion's
Club House in Searsport, Maine. Chuck had a reputation for running a good, clean auction
where you could really find a bargain.
Time passed, life went on. Linda set her sights on becoming a bookkeeper and went to work
at Waldoboro Ford, where she met and fell in love with Paul Grevis Payson. Paul's family
had owned and operated Payson's Farm Machinery, a Ford Tractor dealership in Union. The
Payson name was well established in the area by Paul's dad, Grevis, and his honest, upright
business practices.
In 1989, Paul and Linda received a wonderful addition to their lives
--their son, Brian Charles Payson. Trying to create more living space
in their home, they were constantly changing furniture and accessories.
If they had a larger item that just had to be saved, Paul would
say, "Well, we can put that into the Brooder House for a while, until we
have more room." After hearing this expression several times, Linda, fairly
green in the poultry industry, said, "Paul, just what is a Brooder House and
just what do they do in it?" With a grin, he explained that the
Brooder House is the place that the baby chicks go while they are growing up.
In 1994, when Brian went off to school, Linda opened Brooder House Antiques,
Etc., a small shop built on the lot just below the brooder house on Route 17
in Union. At that time, Paul was working hard at his firewood operation, cutting
and fitting firewood to customer's orders. It took alot of whining to convince
Paul that she could do this antique shop and make it work. "Okay," he relented.
"You can build a shop there. Just don't expect me to spend one hour in that place!"
One year later, Paul laid down his chainsaw. Taking a real shine to
restoring furniture, Paul read every piece of literature he could find
on the subject. He wanted to see things refinished properly, not just
thrown together. His work today is considered to be some of the best
quality in the area, his love for the proper care of wood being very
evident. Throughout all her past,
Linda has worked on-call for several different auction companies.
Having had the experience of working for her dad, she was familiar with
every job involved in the business and what was expected to be done.
However, one job she had never tried was auctioneering. "This is Maine.
If a young woman in the 1970's and 1980's worked at an auction, she was
either a recording clerk, cashier or caterer. Only on occassion did
many women work as 'runners', to say nothing about actually
auctioneering." Linda reflects. "And my dad was probably one of the
worst offenders. 'A woman auctioneer?! HAH!' he would scoff."
So, being ever more
determined by the challenge of making it in a "man's world", Linda
decided to finally take the plunge. Oh, there were other women in the
auction world. But not more than one or two in this area of the state.
And none with their own auction company.
In 1998, Linda Payson became
a licensed auctioneer in the State of Maine. A second generation
auctioneer. In April 1999, at the Thompson Community Center in Union,
Maine, Paul and Linda Payson held their first auction. Linda's dad,
Chuck Morse,
presented her with his gavel, a truly cherished possession to this day.

Presently, Brooder House Auction Service employs more than one dozen part time
auction workers. They import container loads of antiques, uniques &
furniture from England and Europe, with the assistance of Paul's
brother, Jeffrey, owner of NorthEast Transport, one of mid coast Maine's largest and
fastest-growing trucking operations.
A new auction hall was
constructed a the site of the original Brooder House on Route 17 in
Union, and a grand opening celebration was held in August, 2001.
Registration is FREE and all auctions are deliciously catered.
Brooder House Auction Service
is proud to provide an excellent, first rate service to both their
consignors as well as their customers. Paul and Linda welcome any
questions or comments about this website or their auction service. They
try to make attending their auction as comfortable as possible. They
also work to make estate and consignment sales as simple, fast and
painless as possible. As Brian said in his first local television
commercial--"We are low on stress and high on friendly!"
|
|