The Wanderer: A Short History of the Last Whaling Bark

Imagine, if you will, Mattapoisett’s Shipyard Park full of raw white gleaming wooden planks and timbers. Can you hear the cacophony from men and tools being plied in the making of wooden ships? Imagine standing on Water Street looking out towards the harbor and there before you, towering some thirty feet up are the massive ribs of a vessel that would one day sail around Cape Horn heading to the Pacific Ocean hunting whales.

The air would be thickly scented by freshly-cut logs being shaped into various jigsaw-like parts for the boats, as specialized craftsmen pounded long brass spikes into locally sourced pine planks, while others carefully chinked oakum and cotton caulking into the seams. The very air would be alive with the industry of boat building as you stood looking up and up at the soaring structures before you.

On September 16 Seth Mendell described all of this and so much more as he gave a talk on the last whaling ship to be built and launched from a Mattapoisett boatyard – the bark Wanderer.

Mendell said the ship’s construction began in 1877 and it was eased into Mattapoisett Harbor a year later with tugs maneuvering it towards Gifford and Cummings, the owners, in New Bedford where the sails would be installed.

Live oak trunks were shipped north from southern states to Mattapoisett where they would be turned into keels. Mendell talked about the need for these long perfect trees whose branches were shed giving the trees’ cell structure a seamless quality.

Where the gazebo sits today, the keel of the Wanderer rested some 120 feet long. Mendell explained that, as whales in the Atlantic were fished out, sailors, nay hunters, had to travel farther away, requiring ships that could withstand the rigors of open ocean navigation.

The ribs of the vessel were built on the ground and then hoisted into place using teams of oxen pulling block and tackles until high above the workmen rose the skeleton of the vessel. Mendell said that the bow piece had to be solidly constructed to take the waves head on or handle the ice in the colder waters of the Artic.

As if seeing the magnificent bark as it was being constructed before his eyes, Mendell said you could tell when you were near a shipyard by the ringing of the caulking irons. Calling whaleboats “factory ships,” he said the three-masted ships, called barks, carried about 30 men and were between 130 and 150 feet in length.

“The Wanderer had a figurehead,” Mendell said, “… a six-foot tall gilded eagle carved by Henry Purrington.” He said that figurehead is now on display at the New Bedford Whaling Museum.

Mendell said, “It was April 16, 1878, a flood tide in the harbor as the Wanderer slid into the ocean.” He asked the audience to join him in imagining a cheering crowd that would have gathered there, one that most likely arrived in Mattapoisett via train, as the Wanderer began its journey, its destiny.

The captain of that first voyage was Captain Heyer whose pregnant wife traveled with him. This bit of sailing history reminds us that women didn’t always stay home walking the widow’s walk waiting for their loved one’s return. Mrs. Heyer, however, had to be taken off the ship and transported to the island of St. Helena due to medical complications. Captain Leighton replaced Captain Heyer as he stayed on shore with his ailing bride. Captain and Mrs. Heyer paid the ultimate price. She passed away in childbirth. The captain returned to port with his infant daughter in arms.

After decades of service to its various owners and captains, the Wanderer was grounded off Cuttyhunk in August 1924.

Holding a place of pride in the Mattapoisett Museum is one of the masts from the Wanderer. Hanging high overhead in the Carriage House, the mast reminds us that Mattapoisett was once a critical center for shipbuilding, a place known around the world for craftsmanship.

Following Mendell’s talk, there was a ribbon cutting ceremony to open the newly created Mendell Gallery in the museum’s cozy room near the Carriage House. Jennifer McIntire, the chairman of the board of directors, announced that the museum would now be known as the Mattapoisett Museum, which the directors believe will be a more welcoming and concise name for the structure, the collections, and the services provided therein.

To learn about upcoming events at the Mattapoisett Museum you may visit www.mattapoisetthistoricalsociety.org.

By Marilou Newell

 

Mushroom Walk at SLT’s White Eagle Property

Curious about what a turkey tail mushroom looks like? Join the Sippican Lands Trust (SLT) and The Boston Mycological Club on Sunday, September 30at 10:30 am to learn more about the turkey tail mushroom and other mushrooms inhabiting Sippican Lands Trust’s White Eagle property in Marion.

Ken Fienberg and other guest experts from The Boston Mycological Club, the oldest amateur mycological club in the United States, will guide participants on an exploration of mushrooms living in our local forests. In case you were wondering, the word mycology means the study of fungi. Early fall is the perfect time of year to come on a mushroom walk and learn more about these spectacular fungi.

The White Eagle property supports a rich diversity of habitats including upland pine, mixed hardwood forests, shrub and wooded swamp, freshwater marsh and cranberry bogs. The White Eagle property and surrounding land make up a 482-acre contiguous parcel of land that is home to several rare and threatened species including the Eastern Box Turtle, the Spotted Turtle, and the Water-willow Stem Borer.

Sippican Lands Trust’s White Eagle property is located off of Route 6 in Marion. Take Parlowtown Road across from the town cemetery and follow road until you reach the cul-de-sac. Bear left onto the dirt road and follow past the abandoned cranberry bog on your right. Parking is available directly past the bog. The kiosk is a short walk beyond.

The walk is free and will start at the White Eagle kiosk and run approximately 90 minutes. Registration is required for this walk. Please call the Sippican Lands Trust at 508-748-3080 or send an email to info@sippicanlandstrust.org to register for this walk. Please bring water and dress appropriately for the day’s weather as only the worst weather will cancel an SLT walk. If the walk is canceled, then information will be posted to SLT’s website and Facebook page. For additional information visit www.sippicanlandstrust.org or call Sippican Lands Trust at 508-748-3080.

The Halloween Cover Contest

Are you ready for some spooktacular fun? Dust off the cobwebs and sharpen those scary pencils! Your best Halloween artwork could be on the cover of The Wandererand you could win a cash prize! Submit your best original Halloween drawing, photo, compilation, or artwork to enter for publication on our November 1 cover.

Deadline for submitting artwork is Friday, October 19 at noon. Online voting will take place from October 21 to October 29. The cover winner will win $100 and his or her artwork will be on the November 1 cover of The Wanderer! All entries must be original; cover entries must contain completely original artwork and/or photos. No copied items, including traced clip art, will be considered for the contest. All entries must be accompanied by a completed and signed entry form, available in our office or on our website. A full list of rules and regulations can be found at www.wanderer.com. For more information, call our office at 508-758-9055.

This year we will also be accepting scary stories from the public, which we may possibly publish in The Wanderer. If we publish your submitted story, you will receive a great Wanderer T-shirt and coffee mug for your talent. We will accept literary works from now until noon on October 23. Email literary submissions to news@wanderer.com!

Town Considers Curbside Textile Recycling

The Rochester Board of Selectmen likes the sound of a possible savings in trash and recycling costs by adding a curbside service that will collect old, used textiles right alongside residents’ recycling bins.

Stephen Lisauskas of WasteZero, a waste reduction company, told the Rochester Board of Selectmen on September 17 that clothing, shoes, and other cloth items like old drapes, bedspreads, and towels make up about 10 percent of the solid waste stream in southeastern Massachusetts, as opposed to 6 percent statewide. It is also one of the top 5 contaminants in single-stream recycling, “which creates all sorts of problems curbside,” said Lisauskas. According to Lisauskas, about 95 percent of textiles thrown away are recyclable.

Those old sweaters and jeans that are not fit for donation or resale, Lisauskas said, “we don’t need to destroy them.” There are companies that will recycle the material.

These textile recycling companies take used clothes and cloth and find the best use for them, whether they are sent directly to used clothing retailers or salvaged by grinding the material up for manufacturing carpet padding and sound insulation among other things.

The process is simple, said Lisauskas. WasteZero will provide each residence with two pink plastic bags to fill with unwanted textiles. Those bags can be left out on the curb beside the blue recycle bins, and a WasteZero van would follow the same municipal curbside trash/recycling route on the regular pickup day. WasteZero will retrieve the two bags and leave two more in its place tied to the handle of the recycle bin so they don’t blow away.

The cost to the Town: $0.

Furthermore, WasteZero will reimburse the Town $20 per ton of textiles collected.

WasteZero would handle the public outreach by mailing out informational postcards to residents as well as the pink bags. Lisauskas said anyone could call WasteZero for any number of additional bags at anytime and they will deliver them.

“And if they don’t want to do it, they don’t have to, but it’s an option for folks,” said Lisauskas.

“It sounds too simple,” said Selectmen Chairman Greenwood “Woody” Hartley.

“How do we sign up?” Selectman Brad Morse quickly added.

Lisauskas said once the board approved the service, a contract could be signed and the service would likely begin within six to eight weeks.

“As simple as that,” said Hartley.

The selectmen asked the town administrator to contact neighboring Middleboro, the first town in the southeastern part of the state to employ the service, for feedback before agreeing to sign on, and town counsel would then review the contract.

In other business, the board appointed Police Officer Nathan Valente to the rank of sergeant.

Valente has been an officer with Rochester since February 2014, and took the sergeant exam this past February, scoring well, said Police Chief Robert Small. Valente has also completed field training officer school, is now certified as a field training officer, and has already trained several new officers this year.

“It’s always great to have the opportunity to promote and to promote from within,” said Hartley.

The selectmen also voted to pass on exercising its right of first refusal for property located at 0 Mary’s Pond Road, the site of the old Boy Scouts camp. The Conservation Commission on September 4 voted to recommend that the board exercise its right of first refusal and consider purchasing the land, while the Planning Board recommended the board not exercise its right of first refusal.

“Right now we just don’t have the funds,” Hartley said.

The next meeting of the Rochester Board of Selectmen is scheduled for October 1 at 6:00 pm at the Rochester Town Hall.

Rochester Board of Selectmen

By Jean Perry

 

Big Play Catapults Old Colony Football Ahead

Old Colony football improved to 2-0 on the season after its Saturday 21-14 win over Keefe Tech.

The Cougars controlled the tempo of the contest at Oliveira Field, rushing for 342 yards on 40 rushing attempts throughout the contest. But in the end, it was one play that set the two teams apart.

Old Colony led 14-7 with seven minutes left in the contest. Instead of punting with the ball on their own 25-yard line, the Cougars elected to run on fourth-and-2. Quarterback Kyle Scholzfed the ball to running back Mitchell Wilsonand he went off to the races, scoring on a 75-yard touchdown.

“I knew we’d get the first down: I knew we’d get the yards,” Wilson said. “Because we always run that play great, our guys are always good at blocking for it. I saw the opening, but I’m kind of used to plowing through for five yards. But I saw it off to the sideline, I’m pretty sure it was Kyle (Scholz) who kicked the guy back in and I just shot up.”

Old Colony coach Brandon Mendez made the call with full confidence in his running back and offensive line, though he did not expect the result he witnessed.

“I believe in the kids,” Mendez said. “I called [Scholz] over and told him, ‘You need to get on them and tell them this is the play.’ I believe in them and they believe in themselves.

“Once we got the first down my thought was ‘cover the ball up’ and all of a sudden it popped,” Mendez continued. “I knew [Wilson] would run hard; we had kids chasing downfield trying to block. They made good blocks, tried to keep it in front and be smart football players. The play call itself was belief in the kids and their ability, and then the rest just took over.”

Wilson would finish with 126 yards and a touchdown on only eight rushing attempts. Matt Bumpusalso scored a touchdown and ran for 101 yards on 15 attempts. Scholz was the first Cougar to rush for a touchdown in the win, gathering 69 yards on 10 attempts. Rounding things out was Phil Proctor, who had 46 yards on seven attempts.

“I have complete faith in all four of them,” Mendez said. “And it starts up front. Those kids block hard and block well. I don’t have a problem putting the ball in any one of [our running backs’] hands. You go with what’s working. We take what the defense is giving us and go from there.”

The Cougars start Mayflower Athletic Conference Small Vocational Division play on Saturday at 1:00 pm when they host Cape Cod Tech.

Old Colony (3-1, 0-1 Mayflower Small Vocational) volleyball rallied past Diman’s opening set win in Monday’s match to win 3-1. Kat Kirbyhad eight kills and six aces for the Cougars. Hannah L’Heureuxfinished with three kills and two blocks in Old Colony’s win.

Old Rochester Regional

Never mind not losing a game, Old Rochester Regional football has yet to allow another team to score through the first two weeks of play, shutting out Apponequet 39-0 in their Friday night matchup. The Bulldogs have now outscored their opponents 81-0.

Will Garciaonce again led ORR in rushing, scurrying for 138 yards on 15 attempts, while scoring once. Anthony Childs(70 yards on one carry),Jackson Cote(66 yards on 10 carries), and Desmond Dias(54 yards on six carries) each scored once, as well.

But it was quarterback Cole McIntyreand wide receiver Tyler Noewho were responsible for the most points on the day, connecting twice through the air for touchdowns. McIntyre finished with 93 yards on 3-4 passing. All three of McIntyre’s completions were to Noe. Old Rochester (2-0) visits GNB Voc-Tech on Friday at 7:00 pm.

ORR (5-1, 4-0 South Coast Conference) girls soccer remains undefeated in the South Coast Conference play after winning Monday’s 4-1 matchup against Apponequet. Meg Hugheshad another big game for the Bulldogs, scoring three goals and assisting ORR’s fourth.

“I think Meg has a really good I.Q. of how the game is played,” ORR coach Jeff Lombard said. “She’s got a really great touch with the ball and her speed with the ball is almost as fast as others without the other ball. Right now she’s a major part of what we’re trying to do.”

Jillian Kutashscored the Bulldogs’ fourth goal and also assisted one of Hughes’ goals. Mary Butlerand Kate Beaulieueach assisted a Hughes’ goal, as well.

High School Sports

By Nick Friar

 

Protect Yourself from Medicare Fraud

New Medicare cards are coming with new random numbers. Did you know that $60 to $90 billion of our tax dollars are lost to Medicare fraud each year?

On Tuesday, October 16, meet Tom Clarke, a representative of the Massachusetts Senior Medicare Patrol (MA SMP) Program at Mattapoisett Senior Center, 17 Barstow Street, Mattapoisett and participate in a discussion on how to prevent, detect, and report healthcare errors, fraud, and abuse. We all can have an active role in protecting Medicare for ourselves and future generations.

This free information workshop will provide you with the tools to become a more informed and engaged health care consumer including information about the upcoming distribution of new Medicare cards with random numbers rather than Social Security numbers. Lunch will be provided.

For more information and to reserve your seat, please contact the Mattapoisett Senior Center at 508-758-4110 or at coadirector@mattapoisett.net.

If you cannot attend this workshop but have questions about your healthcare bills, Medicare Summary Notices, or other health insurance explanation of benefits statements, please call the MA SMP Program office at 800-892-0890.

This event is jointly sponsored by the Mattapoisett Council on Aging and the Massachusetts Senior Medicare Patrol Program. The Massachusetts Senior Medicare Patrol Program is funded in part by grant number 90-MP 0226-03-01 from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Administration for Community Living, Washington, DC 20201.

Marion General Store to be Preserved by SHS

The Sippican Historical Society, a small group of supporters, and the Cheney family, owners of the General Store, have forged a unique partnership.

The Sippican Historical Society and supporters are providing funding to restore the exterior of the building and to renovate the building’s structural support and electrical system. The restoration project will be managed by members of the Sippican Historical Society’s General Store Committee: Jack Cheney, Whitney Cheney Wynne, Amy Cheney Spirito, Frank McNamee, Judy Rosbe, Charlie Larkin, David Croll, and Hans Ziegler.

A Historic Preservation Restriction will be placed in the deed to protect the exterior of the building. There will be a right of first refusal granted to the Sippican Historical Society if the General Store is ever sold. These restrictions will ensure the exterior of the building will always remain the same. This agreement will ensure that this significant historical building will be preserved in perpetuity.

The General Store was originally built in 1794 as a Congregational Meeting House. It subsequently became the Village focus for spiritual, commercial, and social life in Marion.

The Cheney family has owned and operated the General Store since 1974, and it continues to be an important gathering spot and the center of the Village.

Some past properties that have been preserved by the Society include the Marion Post Office, the Captain Hadley House, Browne’s Pharmacy (which is now Kate’s), the Doctor Ellis house (now the historical society), and the bandstand. The Sippican Historical Society continues its campaign to protect and preserve important historic buildings in Marion.

Cannabis Bylaw Advances to Town Meeting

One resident attended the Marion Planning Board’s public hearing on September 17 on the proposed bylaw for adult recreational use of cannabis in Marion. The bylaw was easily recommended to Fall Town Meeting by the board.

The purpose of the proposed bylaw, which has been extensively discussed by the Planning Board over the past few months, is to provide a framework for regulating adult use cannabis establishments within the Limited Industrial Zoning District. The bylaw puts forth definitions, general requirements, and the conditions for a Special Permit. The bylaws are consistent with the laws and regulations developed by the Massachusetts Cannabis Control Commission, specifically 935 CMR 500.00.

Planning Board member Chris Collings brought attention to the ability of the Town to collect fees from applicants under this bylaw. Town Administrator Paul Dawson was consulted in drafting the language so that it was suitably vague to allow the Town to assess any fees allowed by law. Collings was satisfied, stating, “My goal was that there was an avenue and not to be pinned down … by specificity.”

Resident Henry Mauro of 19 Ichabod Lane suggested the Town consider charging a fee up front during the process rather than collecting an annual fee. Mauro cited the Towns of Tewksbury and Salem, which have assessed a $25,000 fee over four years, and other towns that have charged up to $100,000.

Board member Andrew Daniel remarked that, with the wording in the bylaw, “If it’s legal, we can do it.”

Chairman Will Saltonstall mentioned that the Board of Selectmen would be charged with determining and imposing the fees. The board moved to place the proposed bylaw on the warrant at Fall Town meeting.

In other business, town resident Sherman Briggs and developer Bill Curley met with the board to further discuss the proposed Inclusionary Housing development on Briggs’ Spring Street property. At issue this evening were the setbacks required by current zoning.

Saltonstall had spoken previously with town counsel who determined that the Planning Board cannot issue a special permit regarding dimensional requirements, further stating that setbacks are the purview of the Zoning Board of Appeals. Saltonstall suggested that the board has leeway with performance standards with construction and timing of the completion of the market units versus the LIP (Local Initiative Program) affordable housing units.

The board felt comfortable being flexible with the schedule of completion and occupancy of the units, with Vice Chairman Steve Kokkins standing firm in the idea that it was only the ZBA that could provide relief on setbacks.

Kokkins observed that the board needed to start with the original bylaw guidelines, recognizing the intent to keep a ratio of LIP units to market units and underscoring the importance of seeing that “the spirit [of the bylaw] is followed”.

Board member Eileen Marum, speaking in support of being flexible, reminded the board that “Mr. Briggs is doing something … on behalf of the town and providing affordable housing.”

After a lengthy discussion, Briggs spoke with some frustration that he had given his word to Town Meeting, adding “If I can’t build 27 units within 10′-15′ of the lot line instead of 20′, I could do 42 units, 12 per acre.” He mentioned that he thought the Planning Board should get town counsel to support the ZBA’s decision if they were to approve reduced setbacks for the project.

Town Planner Gil Hilario’s conversation with Town Counsel Barbara Carboni, in which she suggested there be a simultaneous application process, was the catalyst for a discussion of a possible joint meeting of the two boards.

Collings expressed support for initiating a more efficient process and providing evidence for the hardship required for a special permit to be issued for the project by the ZBA. Collings observed that the project was in line with the objectives of the Master Plan, saying, “We are going to need a way to do this. Co-joined meetings [to address] overlapping and conflicting ideas for the town versus the [town] bylaws.”

Saltonstall requested that Briggs and Curley draft a letter explaining their hardship, which, he said, would help with his conversation with the chair of the ZBA.

In other matters, the board approved a letter drafted by Saltonstall to Building Commissioner Scott Shippey regarding the request by Dwight Crosby of Tri-Town Motors at 149 Wareham Street to add towing to his existing business. The board agreed that the towing was an accessory use to the existing permitted use.

The next meeting of the Marion Planning Board is scheduled for Monday, October 1 at 7:00 pm in the Marion Town House.

Marion Planning Board

By Sarah French Storer

 

ORR Holds First Ever Bulldog Bash!

Old Rochester Regional’s AmbassadOR Club held their very first, but soon to be annual, Bulldog Bash on Saturday, September 15. Various booths and activities were set up on the athletic field, including a baked goods booth, cornhole, a bouncy house, and more.

            Emily Humphrey, member of the Board of AmbassadORs, said the idea was formed because, “We thought it would be a great idea to bring the community back together, since there’s not a lot to do during the fall here other than Friday night football games.”

            The AmbassadOR Club is responsible for representing the school in the community and during school events. During the school’s annual open house when the parents go around the school meeting their children’s teachers, the ambassadors line the hallway, ready to assist and guide parents throughout the building. Michael Devoll, principal of ORR, is the club’s advisor.

            Members from Showstoppers Performing Arts, Inc. performed multiple songs at the beginning of the day, including a beautiful rendition of “Somebody to Love” with soloist Brianna Lynch, adlibers Sam Guillotte and Emma Whynacht, and an impromptu air guitar solo by Olivia Guillotte. The group is a nonprofit organization from Mattapoisett, and they sing at fairs, festivals, schools, charitable fundraisers, retirement homes, and other civic events.

            One local business set up a booth selling their Tri-Town t-shirts, which are individualized for each town with the town’s animal and coordinates. Also being sold were ORR bulldog shirts and sweatshirts.

            Running another booth was a local Mattapoisett-based restaurant selling wraps, soups, and salads for the hungry individual.

            For the children, games and a bouncy house were scattered around the field. Games included cornhole, volleyball, and a dunk tank. Luckily for the boy in the dunk tank the weather was warm because many of the attendees had amazing aim. Cornhole was monitored by ambassadors Evan Smith and Emma Williamson, who gave the young players the prize of a caramel apple lollipop.

            “We try to target it for little kids, since there’s not a lot to do for little kids in the Tri-Town,“ said Humphrey.

            Many of the booths were run by ORR students and parents, like the ORR Athletic Booster Club, which sold school merchandise like sweatshirts, sweatpants, shirts, scarves, and multiple other items. A bake sale run by ambassadors sold homemade goods and store-bought pastries.

            To the extreme delight of many kids, the cheerleaders ran a face painting booth, and could do a variety of designs from a sparkly pink butterfly to a ferocious dinosaur. Across the way, ambassadors were doing henna tattoos.

            Like most festival-type events, there was an ambassador-run booth that sold cotton candy, popcorn, and snow cones. At the entrance, there was a raffle with a multitude of prizes like gift cards and restaurant coupons.

            The Bulldog Bash was a great start to the school year for the ambassadors, and many more events are soon to follow.

ORR Update

By Grace Mastroianni

ORR Mural Honors Life of Becket Kiernan

The entire Old Rochester Regional community was there lining the road that February day when USMC PFC Becket Kiernan travelled one last time by the school on his way to his final resting place at the Bourne National Cemetery. The young Marine, just weeks after completing basic training, died tragically on February 5, 2018, after succumbing to necrotizing fasciitis while temporarily stationed in California.

A community mourned for a young man from Rochester they knew first simply as Becket Kiernan, an ORR graduate of the class of 2017.

Now months later, dozens who gathered at a stairway in the history wing at ORR on September 18 did so to remember the kindhearted, likeable young man as one of Becket’s close friends, Amber Jones, unveiled the grand mural she had spent months painting in honor of Becket.

Jones, who graduated this past June, was granted permission and given the support of the school administration to create the mural dedicated in Becket’s memory.

Jones said it took her a while to design the mural because nothing seemed good enough to represent the wonderful person that Becket was.

“I didn’t feel like anything was really worthy for him to be remembered,” said Jones. In time she pieced together a concept for the mural, encompassing various symbols that meant something to her and something that Becket would be proud of.

Within the 5 by 9-foot mural, one can see the front of an old brick building that resembles an Irish pub – Flanders Field, the sign reads, and an Irish flag hangs above the doorway.

“Becket always wanted to see Ireland,” said Jones. “He was very proud that he was Irish. One of his bucket list things was to go to Ireland.”

The name of the establishment is a reference to the 1915 John McCrae poem In Flanders Field, and McCrae’s poppies referenced in the poem cascade down from a window box above the doorway in Jones’ painting. Along the stone walkway below is a quote of something Becket once said, advice to his fellow graduates he gave in an article Jones wrote for the school:

“Do something that, when you look back on life, you will feel fulfilled. Don’t chase money, do something that makes you happy, and don’t stop working until you get there.”

“That was what I wanted him to be remembered for,” Jones said. “Becket never said much, but when he spoke, it was always something kind or thoughtful.”

Jones said she wished none of them had to be present on that staircase that day, and that she never had to paint Becket a mural in his memory. But this mural and the message of wisdom that he left with the world will serve as a reminder to those who pass by it, not just of the love and friendship many had for Becket, but also of the essence of who he was and what he stood for.

“I don’t want people to walk by it and feel sad and think that the mural just represents someone who died,” said Jones. “He was so, so happy, and that’s what I want him to be remembered by.”

Becket’s mother Linda Kiernan and sister Mallory Kiernan both attended the unveiling, with Mrs. Kiernan helping Jones to remove the curtain revealing the mural for the first time. Jones and Mrs. Kiernan embraced and stood together in front of the mural as she thanked Jones for the beautiful gift to Becket and to the school community.

“I’m very proud of it,” said Jones. “I know that Becket would be, too.”

By Jean Perry