Saturday Salon Series: The Two Wives of George H. Morgan is a one-hour talk held in Lenox, Massachusetts, that explores the intertwined lives of George Hale Morgan and his two wives, Sarah Spencer Morgan and Sarah Mifflin (née Learned). Sitting in a room where local history hums just below the plaster, the presenter traces domestic maps—family homes, marriage dates, and personal letters—to reveal how loss, remarriage, and social ties shaped a turn-of-the-century household. George Hale Morgan's first wife, Sarah Spencer Morgan, died in 1896; on February 14, 1899 he married Sarah Mifflin. The talk focuses on the two Sarahs, their homes, and their relationship with George, offering close readings of period interiors, household records, and the social rhythms of small-town life. For outdoor travelers who come to Lenox for woodlands and trails, this salon provides a cultural waypoint: a chance to warm up indoors, learn local stories, and reframe the landscape through personal lives that once shaped it. The presentation is compact—about one hour—and suited to anyone curious about genealogy, regional social history, or the architecture and domestic routines of late 19th-century New England. Seating for up to 80 people creates a communal atmosphere where questions and local anecdotes are welcome. Practical details are straightforward: check booking and arrival details via the referral link, expect a roughly hour-long program, and bring a notebook if you plan to record names, dates, or reading leads. The speaker layers archival detail—marriage records, domestic inventories, and preserved room descriptions—with accessible storytelling, so listeners leave with both facts and a sense of the personalities behind them. What makes this salon special is its focus on ordinary lives that intersect with broader historical currents: grief and remarriage, social networks in a small town, and the material culture of homes. In a region often visited for trails and seasonal scenery, the series deepens a visit by connecting landscape to lived experience—where houses, gardens, and the community's memory frame the same terrain hikers and paddlers explore. This is a good short stop for history lovers, curious travelers, and locals who want a richer sense of place. Accessibility and specific check-in logistics were not provided in the listing; please consult the booking link for arrival times and any accessibility needs. Group size is listed at 80. No age minimum is specified. The program makes a sharp, friendly companion to a day of outdoor discovery in Lenox, offering human-scale history amid a town known for its cultural offerings. Bring layers for unpredictable Lenox weather, arrive early to secure a seat, and pair the salon with a nearby walk or museum visit to turn a single hour of history into a fuller day of discovery in Lenox's compact cultural landscape today.