Joseph M. Sylvia

Joseph M. Sylvia, 91, of Mattapoisett passed away on Saturday, September 6, 2025 at Our Lady’s Haven Fairhaven, MA. He was the loving husband of the late Nancy D. Sylvia for 65 years and the father of the late Sharon N. Rezendes of Marion, MA.

            Born in Acushnet MA, son of Domingo F, Sylvia and Margret T. (Maloney) of Fairhaven. Lived in Mattapoisett for over 50 years. Joe worked at Otis Air Force Base in Bourne, MA for 30 years as a Crash Fire Fighter then became Captain. He served in the US Navy for 2 years as an ABAN during the Korean War. Joe enjoyed deer hunting in Maine with his son and friends.

            Survivors include his daughter, Karen M. Sylvia of Fairhaven and son, Wayne F. Sylvia and his wife Anne of Fairhaven, sister Faith Hungsinger of California and brother James Sylvia of Fairhaven, grandchildren Jarell Purello and Gabriel Sylvia, several nieces and nephews.

            Private services were held at the Massachusetts National Cemetery in Bourne, MA and were under the direction of Fairhaven Funeral Home, 117 Main St, Fairhaven, MA. For memorial register please visit, www.hathawayfunerals.com.

Dale S. Barrows

Dale S. Barrows, 67, of Rochester died September 11, 2025 peacefully at Tobey Hospital.

            He was the husband of Marjorie L. (Wilborn) Barrows with whom he shared 40 years of marriage.

            Born in New Bedford, son of Betty A. (Linhares) Barrows of Mattapoisett and the late Bradley L. Barrows, he was raised in Mattapoisett and lived in Rochester the last 40 years.

            Dale was formerly employed as a police officer with the Rochester Police Department. He then was the Board of Health Agent in Mattapoisett for 32 years until his retirement. He also served on the Board of Health in Rochester for 27 years.

            He enjoyed collecting dye cast models of heavy equipment.

            Survivors include his wife Margie; a daughter, Nichole Barrows and her husband Corbin Martin of Freetown; a son, Bradley Barrows and his girlfriend Taylor Connor of Fairhaven; a brother, Barry Barrows of Rochester; a sister, Karen Barrows of Mattapoisett; and a grandson, Cody Barrows.

            His Celebration of Life will be held on Friday, October 17, 2025 from 4-8 pm in the Freetown VFW 89 Middleboro Road, East Freetown, MA 02717 For online guestbook, please visit www.saundersdwyer.com

World Class Musicians to Perform Benefit Concert

“Musical Belles – A Benefit Recital for the Restoration of the Clocktower” is a delightful concert featuring flutist Wendy Rolfe and pianist Deborah DeWolf Emery on Sunday, September 28 at 4:00 pm, at the First Congregational Church of Marion. This musical offering will benefit the church’s 1860 E. Howard Clocktower restoration project.

            The performance will highlight flutes and music from around the globe including Brazil, Hungary, Germany, and more. The selections range from lively dances and tunes to stirring romantic virtuoso melodies.

            Wendy Rolfe is Professor of Flute at the Berklee College of Music. She has toured the United States with a Solo Recitalist Grant from the National Endowment for the Arts and has been a guest artist at festivals in Brazil, Ecuador, China, Finland, and more. Pianist Deborah DeWolf Emery has just returned from performing with the Boston Symphony Orchestra at Tanglewood. She often appears with the BSO at Symphony Hall and performs with musicians from all over New England. Wendy and Debbie have been collaborating since they were classmates at the Oberlin Conservatory of Music and have recorded together including their CD, “Images of Eve”, released on Odyssey Discs.

            The First Congregational Church is located at the corner of Main and Front Streets in Marion, MA, and is handicapped-accessible. Tickets are $25 for the benefit of the Clocktower restoration, and are available at The First Congregational Church Office, Penny Pincher’s Exchange (Marion), The Marion General Store and online at marionfirstchurch.org.  Any remaining tickets will be sold at the door.

Mattapoisett Rail Trail

The Mattapoisett Rail Trail just received another embellishment on September 10. A new bronze plaque on the bridge over the Mattapoisett River recognizes Old Colony Regional Vo Tech High School, The Community Preservation Committee, the Town of Mattapoisett, the Friends of the Mattapoisett Rail Trail, and The Bike Path Committee for the extraordinary collaboration that expanded a 6’ wide utilitarian pedestrian bridge into the 14’ wide bridge we use on the bike path today.

            The bridge at Mattapoisett River was completed in 2015. Labor was provided by seniors in the Old Colony Carpentry Program under the direction of Stu Norton, Carpentry Program Director. Pictured here with the installed plaque is Trent Arancio, grandson of Stu Norton. Materials and other costs were paid for by a grant from Community Preservation Committee and from the Friends of the Bike Path.

            The bridge was built in stages: First laminated beams were prefabricated and shipped to Old Colony Carpentry Shop where railings were fitted and bolted in place. The beams (with railings) were trucked to Fairhaven then barged to the bridge site and installed on the existing train bridge abutments by crane. After everything was secured in place, the Old Colony students removed the old bridge planking and railings and installed the new, wider planking.

            The community and region is grateful. The Friends gratefully acknowledge that every aspect of the popular path we enjoy today has been a product of dedicated staff and elected officials in Town Hall, especially Selectboard members who supported the project and the Town Administrators. Mike Bohtehlo, Mike Gagne, and Mike Lorenco, who each managed different kinds of complexity for State construction and funding. We also acknowledge recent new plantings by the Tree Committee and the Highway Department.

Academic Achievements

Southern New Hampshire University congratulates Samantha Grasso of Marion and Stephen Sauerbrey of Marion on being named to the Summer 2025 President’s List. The summer terms run from May to August.

            College of the Holy Cross congratulates Failenn Fitzpatrick, of Marion, Class of 2027, Joel Michaud, of Mattapoisett, Class of 2025, and Laura Pardo, of Marion, who were named to the Spring 2025 Dean’s List for outstanding academic achievement during the spring semester of the 2024-25 academic year.

            Luke Oliveira of Mattapoisett, received the Elmira College Key Award for academic and community leadership. A tradition that goes back to 1935, the EC Key Award is presented to outstanding students in their junior year of high school or preparatory school.

Public Hearing Begins for Route 6 Development

The Marion Conservation Commission met on Wednesday, September 10, to grant a Certificate of Compliance as well as conduct a public hearing for Toll Brothers, Incorporated’s proposed residential development at 78 Wareham Road.

            First, a Certificate of Compliance was granted for Laurence E. Reinhard at 17 East Avenue. Before addressing a second Certificate of Compliance request, the public hearing for a Notice of Intent filed by Toll Brothers, Incorporated, began. The developer seeks approval to construct a 48-unit residential development with associated clearing, grading, roadways, utilities, and stormwater-management systems. Chair Matt Shultz stated plans are available at the Town House (annex building, 14 Barnabas Road) for review.

            Toll Brothers recently took up work from the previous contractor, Matt Zuker, who had been granted a Special Permit from the Planning Board for work on a 48-unit, townhouse-style village. The new developer seeks an amendment to the original article: Rather than 12 duplexes and 36 single-family units, all 48 dwellings would be single-family.

            Toll Brothers also now are looking into adding walking trails to the site, following recent conversations with the Planning Board. Those paths were later said to be mulch and unpaved. The representative from Toll Brothers stated, “we’ve gone through a pretty painstaking effort here to try to keep the amount of impervious area at a minimum, as much as possible.”

            It was restated that the development will be linked into the town sewer system. Some questions were raised by the commission over water runoff and environmental impacts, with the representative saying water runoff into the nearby Weweantic River would be slowed with redirection efforts to “minimize the potential for erosion downstream.”

            With Toll Brothers still waiting on comments and the completion of a peer review, the public hearing was continued two weeks out to September 24. The next meeting of the Marion Conservation Commission will be held, likewise, September 24 at 7:00 pm in the Marion Police Department.

Marion Conservation Commission

By Sam Bishop

Parking Key to Gym Approval

The Rochester Zoning Board of Appeals on September 11 granted a Special Permit for a personal fitness training business at 12 Mayflower Lane with conditions directly related to board members’ and abutters’ concerns about the nuisance and traffic the operation might bring to the neighborhood.

            Applicant and homeowner Jorge Rodriguez began the public hearing by noting he had written answers to the concerns his neighbors had expressed when the hearing began on August 28. He will keep his fitness classes in his small garage, and all parking will be off the street, on his driveway or behind his home only if there is a need. Noise will be kept down. Class sizes won’t necessarily be as many as 10, his original ask for his permit.

            Board member Richard Cutler expressed the first concern, that rear parking could trigger the need for a Planning Board site-plan review. Rodriguez quickly agreed there would be no customer parking in back.

            Comments from both opponents and supporters of Rodriguez’s business plan then followed. Neighbor Doug Sims, who had just been appointed as a ZBA associate member but recused himself from his role as a board member to speak as a resident, expressed the strongest objections. While he acknowledged that Rodriguez was a good neighbor, Sims noted this business is a big imposition on the neighborhood. He is still concerned about the increase in traffic and the fact this operation violates terms of the development’s covenant of regulations to which all residents agreed. That covenant excludes businesses. “This is not what we signed up for,” Sims said. ZBA Chair Donald Spirlet noted the panel does not deal with covenants. They are beyond its jurisdiction, he said.

            Another neighbor said he had no problem with the business plan because it would be hard for more than five students at a time to fit into the garage there.

            Ultimately, the Zoning Board approved Rodriguez’s permit with multiple conditions. Customers shall park only along his driveway on existing pavement and not behind the home. Hours of operation will be Monday-Saturday from 8:00 am to 6:00 pm, no Sundays. There will be a five-customer limit per class. The permit will be reviewed in nine months.

            In other action, the board opened a public hearing on variances requested for a plan to build a three-car garage in excess of the permitted 1,000 square feet in the front yard of 447 Neck Road. The hearing, which seeks two variances, was quickly continued to the board’s next meeting because the petitioner’s engineer had not submitted certified plans.

            The next meeting of the Rochester Zoning Board of Appeals will be held on Thursday, September 25 at 7:15 pm at 1 Constitution Way.

Rochester Zoning Board of Appeals

By Michael J. DeCicco

Peter Franceschina

Peter Franceschina did not so much live by his own rules as relish breaking the rules of others.

            His problem with authority was colossal. His appetite for mischief, insatiable. The qualities combined might easily have landed him in trouble had he not found a useful outlet for them — as a journalist in Florida, where he became one of the most dogged and creative investigative reporters of his generation.

            Across thousands of stories filed from the late 1980s to the early 2010s, Peter, who died of liver failure last week at 60, was a relentless challenger of conventional wisdom, a devoted tormenter of crooked officials and a vivid chronicler of the serial killings, hurricanes, scandals, Ponzi schemes and abuses of power that shaped life in Florida at the turn of the 21st century.

            He was also, more quietly, a generous mentor to younger reporters, a loving son and brother and a loyal and caring friend.

            On or off the job, he was stubborn, profane, contrarian and fiercely principled, with zero patience for the dishonest, the petty, the puffed-up or the unkind.

            Screaming around turns in his red Alfa Romeo Spider, top down, hair flying, cigarette dangling from his mouth, he could cut a dashing if sometimes lopsided figure, the result of a hip gone bad after too many days spent windsurfing on the choppy waters of southwest Florida.

            It gave him the rolling gait of a pirate as he moved through the newsroom or down the halls of the county courthouse, armed with a notepad and a red Bic Flair, always in pursuit of his next big story. It rarely took him long to find it.

            Once, he elicited a murder confession while drinking beer in a buddy’s kitchen, cradling the phone in one hand and a bottle of Heineken in the other.

            On another occasion, he was subpoenaed by prosecutors who were furious over his refusal to disclose the whereabouts of an itinerant victim of police corruption.

            Not long after that, they subpoenaed him again over a different story, about the illegal phone tapping of public officials, and he chose to risk jail time rather than give up the name of a confidential source.

            A judge ruled in his favor both times.

            Peter John Franceschina was born in Washington, D.C., on Nov. 3, 1964, the son of Louis Franceschina, a manager for Giant Foods, and his wife Helen, a public health nurse.

            He attended Centennial High School in Columbia, Md., where he was a standout on the lacrosse team, and studied engineering and English literature at the University of Pittsburgh.

            He began his newspaper career at the lowest rung, as a clerk in a remote bureau of the Fort Myers News-Press, in 1987.

            His first story was about politicians smoking pot. Within three years, he was the paper’s star courthouse reporter and on his way to becoming one of its most formidable diggers.

            He avoided press conferences, making no effort to ingratiate himself with the elected leaders, developers and moneymen in power. Instead, he wrote about a former dean of the state legislature who let drug smugglers land planes on his ranch in Glades County; documented the plight of migrant workers in the tomato fields of Immokalee; and penned a series on the wanderings of a serial killer who reached out from jail.

            His trademark was the tight, unadorned sentence, and even his workaday cops items had the power to stop the reader short.

            “Crawl inside the mind of Robert Cline Clay,” began one story about a murder suspect in April 1992. “His passions are aroused by an obsession with young boys, images of violence, torn emotions. He writes breathlessly of handcuffs and love. His desires, he reminds himself, are powerful enough to kill for.”

            When not on deadline or windsurfing, he was usually in the garage. A believer in buying cars he couldn’t afford – at least two Alfa Romeos, a handful of BMWs, including one M3 in striking Estoril Blue – he made up the difference by doing the repairs himself, no matter how complex or intensive.

            His fluency in wrenches, bolts and gaskets and his utter lack of pretension belied an intellect of frightening power. He might have been the only person his friends knew who could change a clutch slave cylinder in the afternoon and then, over stiff drinks, riff on Bukowski, Pynchon and Gaddis late into the night.

            He was also a skilled cook, and his seafood gumbo, pan-seared snapper and expertly sauced scallopini were often better than any restaurant’s around.

            In the early 2000s, he was recruited to the South Florida Sun-Sentinel, one of the largest newspapers in the state, where he covered courts in Palm Beach County.

            When The Boston Globe broke the Catholic Church abuse scandal soon after, he was among the first reporters to document its reach into Florida, and into the Archdiocese of Miami in particular.

            But it was after he was promoted to the paper’s investigations team that he made his biggest mark.

            A master of finding and parsing stacks of arcane records, he worked with other reporters to expose inequities within the cloistered world of the Seminole Tribe of Florida and abuses stemming from the state’s lax regulation of daycares and nursing homes.

            Still, he kept a hand in breaking news, dominating coverage of the $1.2 billion Ponzi scheme perpetrated by a former Florida lawyer, Scott Rothstein.

            Then one day in 2012, as the local news industry was imploding, he became fed up with the endless cuts and the constant more-with-lessisms. He used his company’s generous health plan to get his busted hip fixed and then politely gave it the finger, moving back to Mattapoisett, Mass., where he is survived today by his father, Lou, and brother, Paul.

            He cashed out his 401k and, after months spent scouring business filings and other records, decided to dump a big chunk of it into shares of a company he thought might do well for itself – Nvidia.

            Before long he had taken up the lifestyle of one of his favorite literary characters, the antihero Travis McGee from the novels of John D. MacDonald. Mornings he would don his threadbare T-shirts, old cargo shorts and beat-up loafers, light a Marlboro and spend time wandering the local beaches.

            He painted yachts and historical buildings. Pulled blue crabs from the marshes and ate them. Flirted with the waitresses at Turk’s Seafood around the corner.

            And, without heed to town regulations, he went to war with several stands of white poplar, an invasive species that had cropped up in his backyard to block his views of Buzzards Bay, felling one after another with a whisper-quiet electric chainsaw.

            Seeing the trees come down, one especially testy neighbor turned him in to the conservation commission, leading to a protracted battle and the specter of hefty fines.

            Outraged at the injustice of it all, at the idea of an environmental board punishing the removal of a harmful invader, Peter marshaled his resources. He put in hundreds of hours of botanical research and tracked down an expert witness, an arborist, to testify on his behalf.

            In the end, as always, he prevailed.

            A private service will be held in the future.  For online guestbook please visit www.saundersdwyer.com

Mattapoisett Library Children’s Department

After a very busy summer, we are excited to share our upcoming fall events.

            Next week we have a stress ball workshop for ages 8 and up on Thursday, September 25, from 4:00 pm to 4:30 pm. We will be using colorful balloons to make stress balls, which are perfect for squeezing during anxious or frustrating moments. Due to limited supplies, registration is required. Our Graphic Novel Book Club, for ages 9 and up, is also making a return this week, starting on Friday, September 26, at 3:30 pm.

            To register for our events or for more information, please check out our website, mattapoisettlibrary.org, or give us a call at 508-758-4171. We hope to see you in the library soon. Until then, keep reading.

Friends Meeting Yard Sale Donation Drop-Off

The Mattapoisett Friends Meeting (Quakers) will be holding a yard sale on Saturday, October 11 from 8:00 am to 12:00 pm, and donations will be much appreciated. They are looking for clean, sellable items in good repair including housewares, jewelry, collectibles, small furniture, and clean, ready-to-wear clothing. They are not taking large furniture, large appliances, electronics, or books at this time. Please drop off donations at 103 Marion Rd. (Route 6) on either of the following days:

            Wednesday, September 24 from 4:00 pm to 7:00 pm.

            Saturday, September 27 from 9:00 am to 12:00 pm.

            Monday, September 29 from 4:00 pm to 7:00 pm.

            Saturday, October 4 from 9:00 am 12:00 pm.

            Someone will be in the community hall (the building in the back) to receive you.

            If none of the above times works for you, please email mattquakers@gmail.com in case something can be arranged.