St. Philip’s Episcopal Church

St. Philip’s Episcopal Church, next to the Town Beach in Mattapoisett, continues their 134 year tradition of visiting clergy from Massachusetts and beyond.

Services using the 1928 Book of Common Prayer are conducted at 8:00 am and 10:00 am each Sunday through Labor Day weekend.

The Reverend Marc Eames, Rector, The Church of the Advent, Medfield, MA will officiate the services on July 22.

Come visit our historic chapel by the sea in Mattapoisett! All are welcome.

Mattapoisett’s Movers and Shakers

Mattapoisett usually isn’t thought of as having a rich history full of icons and innovators. Sure, the little oceanside town maintains its fair share of wealthy visitors and whaling artifacts, but to the uninformed outsider, Mattapoisett is mainly a small New England town full of everyday people.

That being said, upon further investigation, Mattapoisett has been home to a number of influencers and creatives. This isn’t a very well-known fact, though, as Mattapoisett’s history of housing impactful difference-makers is often swept under the rug, forgotten and unacknowledged. The Mattapoisett Historical Society is trying to change this, one “mover and shaker” at a time.

Museum Curator Jeffrey Miller has prepared a new exhibit being shown at the Mattapoisett Historical Society Museum on Church Street titled “Mattapoisett’s Movers and Shakers,” and the intent is to highlight a number of distinct innovators coming from all different eras and accomplishing a variety of different things.

Miller places his emphasis the most on one thing with the exhibit: difference makers. Miller defined a “mover and shaker” as “someone who achieved something and made a difference.”

“The scale [of what the movers and shakers accomplished] varies, but the fact that they all accomplished something and made a difference is what links them all,” said Miller.

Whether it be toymakers, inventors, ship captains, or even basket weavers, the 12 movers and shakers all called Mattapoisett home at some point in their lives and accomplished something very influential.

The different innovators chosen are a broad miscellany of people, ranging from local, little-known figures like Gladys Sherman Ellis to more well-known Americans such as author and activist Huybertie Pruyn Hamlin. They all made a big difference in their own way, accomplishing both the little and the enormous along their life path.

One of the more unique pairs highlighted in the exhibit are the Atsatt brothers. Growing up in Mattapoisett 10 years apart, Isaiah and John Atsatt went on to invent a number of various apparatuses, including peanut roasters, chicken feeders, and much more. They earned a Bronze Medal at the 15th Exhibition of the Massachusetts Charitable Mechanic Association for their Acme Peanut Roaster, which was manufactured at their self-run Mattapoisett factory on the corner of Pearl and Hammond Streets. The two went on to achieve even more in their adult lives, as Isaiah served in the Massachusetts House of Representatives and John become a contractor in Los Angeles.

Another neighborhood creative included in the exhibition is Gladys Sherman Ellis, a lifelong Mattapoisett resident and basketry extraordinaire. Ellis made her hometown famous when she pioneered the Mattapoisett Basket, a type of completely-homemade basket that takes several years to entirely finish and is made using scrimshaw, thin strands of raffia, and coiled southern pine needles. The intricate and detailed baskets take an amazing amount of skill, dedication, and focus to complete, and Ellis even taught classes where she would instruct people on how to make her wildly complex basket design.

While Ellis and the Atsatt brothers were more local inventors than anything else, there were also some nationwide innovators — meet Charles Bryant and Huybertie Pruyn Hamlin.

Bryant grew up in Rochester and eventually retired to Mattapoisett, but accomplished his prominence in his middle years out at sea. Bryant became a whaleship captain, visiting remote regions of the Arctic and Pacific Oceans. His expertise led the U.S. government to ask him for help when deciding whether to buy Alaska from Russia. One thing led to another and Bryant eventually became administrator for the entire Alaskan Territory in 1868, developing the territory’s infrastructure and foundation. His efforts were very influential in the purchase and maintenance of Alaska, furthering our country’s reach and helping America become a global superpower.

Bryant’s accomplishments stretched far beyond Mattapoisett, but Hamlin used her countrywide clout for the establishment and betterment of the little town she loved.

After coming from a wealthy and politically well-to-do Albany, New York family, she married Charles Hamlin, assistant secretary of the U.S. Treasury. Following Charles’ law practice being moved to Boston, the couple purchased a beat-up house adjacent Ned’s Point Lighthouse and fell in love with the oceanside town.

Hamlin went on to become president of the Mattapoisett Improvement Association for over 30 years, accomplishing a number of important necessities in the town in the early 1900s. From organizing the town’s first trash collection to maintaining the town beach to planting more than 400 shade trees, Hamlin kickstarted a lot of important town affairs. Until her death in 1964, Hamlin did a whole lot for Mattapoisett as a community, uniting its people and helping build it up to the strong, accomplished town that it is today.

Through all the movers and shakers, the exhibit accentuates the importance of believing in your town and its people, no matter how small or insignificant the little community may seem to the world as a whole. After all, big ideas can come from small places, and Mattapoisett’s Movers and Shakers proves this without a single doubt.

By Caleb Jagoda

Rochester Completes ADA Compliance Projects

Rochester’s Facilities Director Andrew Daniel has accomplished what he set out to do nearly a year ago – to make Rochester facilities accessible to all; and there isn’t much else left to do in order for the municipal buildings of Rochester to comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act. Aside from a couple narrow secondary doorways at Town Hall, Daniel told the Rochester Board of Selectmen on July 16, Rochester is now ADA compliant.

Daniel last year secured two ADA grants: one for $75,000 for the Town Hall and one for $25,000 for the Council on Aging Senior Center, and with much of the labor done in-house, Daniel was able to add in additional projects and still come in under budget.

In addition to the automatic door openers at both entrances at Town Hall and the COA, with leftover money Daniel was able to install one for the handicap ramp side door at the Plumb Library and inside the COA for the restrooms, as well.

“[The restroom door openers] were the most beneficial,” said Daniel “I see them being used every day.”

Daniel was also able to add in some ramp work at the library, and purchase a beach wheelchair for residents to borrow to make the beach accessible to all.

All the other planned projects have been completed, including the new accessible restroom at Town Hall, now placed next to the meeting room in space that was underutilized for some time, the audiovisual room that was installed in that same space near the new bathroom, and the widened doorways with automatic openers. Furthermore, all doorknobs have been replaced with levers for those with dexterity challenges, and handicap van parking spaces were added.

At the COA, the concrete walkway linking the rear exit to the parking lot is finished, and all doorways are now ADA compliant.

“It came out real nice,” said Daniel. “I’m very pleased with it.”

“You did a great job,” said Board of Selectmen Chairman Greenwood “Woody” Hartley. “We’re lucky you were able to do all that.” He continued, “I think the town needs to appreciate the fact that we’re closer [to total ADA compliance].”

Reimbursement for all the projects should be delivered to the Town in about six weeks, Daniel said.

Daniel said he’s now moved on to the next project: the installation of the Town Meeting-approved generator at the Town Hall, which should be completed by the middle of next week.

Daniel is also working with Town Administrator Suzanne Szyndlar on acquiring another grant for up to $100,000 for one substantial capital improvement project only open to Community Compact Agreement municipalities, of which Rochester is one, with a population of 7,000 or fewer.

The next meeting of the Rochester Board of Selectmen is scheduled for August 6 at 6:00 pm at the Rochester Town Hall.

Rochester Board of Selectmen

By Jean Perry

 

From Jazz to Rock: America’s Popular Music

On Friday, July 20, the Marion Concert Band continues its Friday evening concert series with a program of American popular music. The program, which features a horn quartet and a variety of pop styles from the 1900’s to the present, is as follows:

Thundercrest March – E. Osterling

Second American Folk Rhapsody – C. Grundman

Haunting Horns – B. Hardin

The Symphonic Gershwin – G. Gershwin

Big Band Signatures – arr. J. Higgins

Sinatra! – arr. S. Bulla

Salute to American Jazz – arr. S. Nestico

Pop and Rock Legends: The Beatles – arr. M. Sweeney

Pop and Rock Legends: The Association – arr. T. Ricketts

Tower of Power’s Greatest Hits – arr. V. López

Spain – C. Corea

The Circus Bee – H. Fillmore

The concert will be held at the Robert Broomhead Bandstand, Island Wharf off Front Street in Marion. The program, under the direction of Tobias Monte, will begin at 7:00 pm. All concerts are free and open to the public. “Like” us on Facebook at “Marion Town Band” for up-to-date announcements and rain cancellation notices.

SHS Receives Paintings from Taber

Tabor Academy recently transferred 35 extremely significant oil paintings by American painter Cecil Clark Davis (1877-1955) to the Sippican Historical Society on permanent loan.

Davis was born in Chicago in 1877. She was primarily self-taught and started painting at age 16. She was greatly influenced by her friend John Singer Sargent. Her family summered in Marion during her childhood, eventually building a house on Water Street. Davis continued this tradition into adulthood and was active in artistic and intellectual circles during the town’s heyday as a summer colony, also enjoying tennis and golf at the Tennis Club and the Kittansett Club. She was married in St. Gabriel’s Episcopal Church to Richard Harding Davis, the famous author and war correspondent, and was a year-round resident for many years before her death in 1955. She is buried in her family’s plot in Old Landing Cemetery.

Davis accompanied her husband on many exciting war assignments, such as the Boer War in South Africa. She was introduced to and painted many famous people such as Charles Lindberg; Captain Lord Charles Carnegie; Polar explorer Roland Amundsen; Mr. Larsen Danish, a tennis champion; Admiral William Sowden Sims (his account of “The Victory at Sea” won a Pulitzer prize); the bee hunter Schuyler Smith, who was Cecil’s tennis partner; Miss Prescott Bigelow; Contessa Maud Provanna from Rio de Janiero; and numerous others.

According to Tabor Academy archivist Sophie Arnfield, “During Davis’ lifetime, she loaned a collection of her paintings for display in Lillard Hall for the edification of the students. In her will, she left the paintings and contents of her studio to Tabor, including many paintings of Marion residents. While a small selection of paintings continued to hang at Tabor until this year, many have remained in storage.”

In acknowledgment of the strong connection between Cecil Clark Davis and the Town of Marion, a permanent loan of the Tabor paintings has been arranged between Tabor Academy and the Sippican Historical Society, where there is also a significant Davis collection. Through this agreement, these two local collections of Davis’s work are now joined, allowing wider access to the artworks for town residents and the general public through the Historical Society’s exhibition program. The Golden Age Room at the Historical Society is already dedicated to the display of many of Davis’s paintings and the new acquisitions may be periodically rotated in and exhibited in the downstairs galleries.

Frank McNamee, President of the Sippican Historical Society said, “The Sippican Historical Society hopes to display some of the larger works at the Music Hall with the permission of the Selectmen and Town Manager. It already has one outstanding work by Cecil Clark Davis on loan to the Music Hall which can be viewed in the Reading Room.”

He added enthusiastically, “This collaboration between Tabor Academy and the Sippican Historical Society will ensure these paintings remain a part of Marion’s history forever and will provide improved public access to this important American Painter’s work.”

The Sippican Historical Society is open to the public on Tuesdays from 11 am to 2 pm and Saturdays from 9 am to 1 pm.

Pickles Appears in Court

A real estate attachment to the civil action against Ray Pickles and his wife Diane Bondi-Pickles will remain for now until the judge issues his decision in the next few days after the preliminary injunction hearing on Tuesday, July 17, at the Plymouth District Court.

The Carver, Marion, Wareham Regional Refuse Disposal District’s motion for real and personal property attachments for Pickles, Bondi-Pickles, and Moss Hollow Management Corporation were reduced somewhat from the total amount of $838,457 allegedly embezzled to $590,250 in real property, the combined total of the amounts the CMWRRDD says Pickles and Moss Hollow misappropriated — $308,341 and $281,909, respectively.

Bondi-Pickles was listed as the owner and president of Moss Hollow.

CMWRRDD Attorney Gregg Corbo of KP Law said Pickles’ account with Eastern Bank (a Reach and Apply defendant), part of the original ex parte motion to freeze Pickles’ and Bondi-Pickles’ assets, has a zero balance, and Mutual Bank did not reply to the complaint.

Attesting that they meet the elements of a preliminary injunction claim, Corbo asked Judge Jeffrey Locke to “preserve the funds until the trial,” saying, “Once these funds are gone, the taxpayers of the district are forever denied.”

Attorney John Markey, in defense of Pickles and Bondi-Pickles, tore at the CMWRRDD’s complaint and preliminary injunction request, saying the district has not provided the forensic accounting Markey requested. Furthermore, Markey said, he had an affidavit from Barden’s Boat Yard, the only vendor mentioned in the fraud complaint by name, attesting that the $13,793 in fuel the district alleges Pickles paid for with district funds and used for his personal boat is an incorrect amount. According to the affidavit, Markey stated, $4,000 was spent on fuel that was used by district-owned equipment.

Markey told the Court that Pickles is an 84-year-old retiree, unable to access his pension payments and the district has failed to provide a basis for it.

“He has less than $3,000 in his bank account,” Markey said, and that’s all from monthly pension payments. “This is not the time to be tying up someone’s retirement account, when they’re 84 … and trying to pay [his bills].”

Markey said an attachment of real property for the lesser amount of $590,250 was appropriate, adding, “They’re not selling the house and moving to Aruba.”

The district hasn’t met the basic elements for the preliminary injunction, maintains Markey, “And it’s unfair to deny a person’s ability to pay their monthly bills,” he said.

The judge asked Markey questions such as what exactly did Pickles manage as executive director, and was Moss Hollow still an active corporation, which it no longer is, as of June 2017.

Markey defended Pickles’ management of the district, saying, “Mr. Pickles is now 84 … He was more on top of things.”

Markey also defended a third defendant, former health agent for the Town of Carver, Robert Tinkham, also a part-time employee of the district performing inspections of the Carver CMWRRDD facility. Markey said the district’s complaint only alleges two things: that Tinkham “signed a contract with Bondi-Pickles in 2001” of which Tinkham has no recollection, and that Tinkham was double-dipping working as a health agent, while he also allegedly performed inspections for the district.

“I still don’t know what my client is being accused of,” Markey said. That should be taken up by the Town of Carver, he added.

“He’s not a wealthy man,” Markey said of Tinkham, adding that Tinkham is worth only about $7,200 in liquidated assets. Furthermore, the company Tinkham owns, a “campground” known as 33-35 Wareham Street, LLC, may not be attached, as it is property owned by an LLC, Markey said.

Judge Locke took the matter under advisement, but said, as long as both parties agree, Locke would stipulate the real property of Pickles and Bondi-Pickles, and the real property of Tinkham, 10-12 Irene Drive, if they are of sufficient value.

Both parties agreed.

The Plymouth County Retirement Board was also released as a Reach and Apply defendant at the board’s request and with agreement by the two parties.

“Okay, go away,” the judge ordered.

The CMWRRDD filed civil charges on June 22 against Pickles, Bondi-Pickles, the Moss Hollow Management Corporation, and Tinkham, accusing the three of having conspired to defraud and embezzle over $800,000 in public funds between 2012-2017.

The district fired Pickles in January after a financial documents review uncovered suspicious transactions that might not have been kosher. Pickles remains the elected town clerk for the Town of Marion.

The matter is also under investigation by the Inspector General for possible criminal charges.

By Jean Perry

Pony Rides at Harbor Days

Mattapoisett Land Trust (MLT) will sponsor pony rides and face painting at Harbor Days on Saturday, July 21from noon to 4 pm. Bowen Stables from Rochester will bring two ponies and offer rides for children of all ages. The ponies will carry riders up to 125 pounds. Rides will cost $8 each or two rides for $15. The rides will take place at MLT’s Munro Preserve, next to Shipyard Park on the west side. Cowboy and cowgirl attire are welcome!

For more information, please email info@mattlandtrust.org.

Marion Art Center’s Summer Members’ Show

The Marion Art Center’s Summer Members’ Show will open on Friday, July 20, with a reception honoring participating artists from 6 pm to 8 pm. All are welcome. Come join us and find out directly from the artists how they do what they do and where they get their inspiration. The Summer Members’ Show will run from July 20th to August 25th.

Please note: membership for the 2018-2019 year begins on August 1, 2018. Membership to the Marion Art Center is open to all, and the annual membership drive will be underway shortly.

For more information on the Summer Members’ Show or membership with the Marion Arts Center, call 508-748-1266, visit www.marionartcenter.org, or stop by the Center during gallery hours: Tuesday – Friday, 1 pm to 5 pm and Saturday, 10 am to 2 pm.

Academic Achievements

A number of Tri-Town students have been named to the Spring 2018 dean’s list at Stonehill College. To qualify for the dean’s list, students must have a semester grade point average of 3.50 or better and must have successfully completed all courses for which they were registered. The list included: Rachael Chandler of Marion, Sarah Rogers of Rochester, Dallis Silvia of Marion, Lauren Ovian of Rochester, and Zoe Smith of Rochester

Charles E. Tirrell of Marion has been selected for inclusion on St. Lawrence University’sdean’s list for academic achievement during the Spring 2018 semester. Tirrell is a member of the Class of 2021. Tirrell attended Old Rochester Regional High School. To be eligible for the dean’s list, a student must have completed at least four courses and have an academic average of 3.6 based on a 4.0 scale for the semester.

The following students were among the largest graduating class in UMass Lowell’shistory: Morgan Collings of Marion, Mass. received a Bachelor of Science in mechanical engineering; Andrew Ryan of Rochester, Mass. received a Bachelor of Science in business administration.

At the University of Rhode Island’s132nd Commencement on Saturday and Sunday, May 19-20, 2018, about 3,300 undergraduate and 750 graduate students became the University’s newest alumni. The following students from the Tri-town graduated:

– Michael Barrus of Marion received Bachelor of Arts, Economics

– Nancy A Benson of Mattapoisett received Doctor of Philosophy , English

– Juliana Nicolosi of Mattapoisett received Bachelor of Science, Health Studies

– Bruce Pawelczyk of Mattapoisett received Professional Science Masters in Cyber Security

– Lauren Smith of Mattapoisett received Bachelor of Arts, Communication Studies Magna Cum Laude

Rachel J. Scheub, of Rochester, was awarded faculty honors for the spring 2018 semester at Trinity Collegein Hartford, Connecticut. Faculty honors are awarded to students with a semester GPA of at least 3.667 on four graded courses, with no individual grade below B-, and no incomplete grades pending.

The Water Dance of the Loon

As a birdwatcher, one sight to remember is one of a common loon in the backwaters of our freshwater lakes or ponds. And there is good news of a gradual increase in the New England population as reported by The Loon Preservation Committee of Lake Winnipesaukee, New Hampshire.

As an independent conservation organization with an annual mid-Summer count, the preservation committee has documented a greater number of sightings of adult pairs carrying chicks on their backs. It has been successful in creating and protecting more nesting sites by introducing artificial floating wooden platforms where needed. Their main accomplishment, however, is to inform and educate the public the importance of quiet placid water habitat to protect the nesting sites by keeping their distance from traditional locations of annual reproduction.

The nest of a loon is never more than a few feet from the water because, evolving from dinosaurs with amphibian ancestry, their legs similarly are so far back in their body frames as to be unable to stand up or walk on land. Nesting privacy and peace of mind are essential to successful hatching and rearing of only the usual two chicks, so the parents get visibly upset at any approach of intruders. Their defensive reaction is to rush out from the nest, standing up in the water frantically flapping their wings to splash everywhere in a frightening feathery warning. This gives the appearance of getting the title of ‘dancing on the water,’ as in my illustration.

This aquatic feathery display of anger is to protect and defend the offspring and is accompanied by an alarming angry high-pitched yodel of antagonism called a tremolo. The parent with the excited tremolo can get so worked up that if the intruder does not go away, the end result can be a seizure and death. Such heroic, martyr-like acts of protection are similar to the partridge and killdeer plover, for example, feigning a broken wing and flopping down before a predator to draw attention away from fledglings.

The loon also has another unforgettable communication. It is a wail especially vibrant when heard by lakeside campers in the closing quiet of the day. It is to locate other loons along the shoreline and sounds like, “ Where are you,“ as if in the mood for a little closing-day company.

Henry David Thoreau at Walden Pond as one of the first transcendentalists said that the wail of the loon was one of the most unearthly sounds he had ever heard. And to the lake country Penacook Indians of Lake Winnipesaukee, so in tune nature, a frequent atmospheric variation in the wavering tone could be detected as a weather prediction of impending rain.

Loons also have a third call of a short guttural squawk when they talk quietly amongst themselves and their offspring. When nature talks, I hope you enjoy with me my inclination to stop, listen, and learn to appreciate the message conveyed.

By George B. Emmons