The Tale of the Mattapoisett Swordfish

High above the end of Long Wharf next to Mattapoisett’s Shipyard Park flies an iconic symbol: the swordfish weathervane. It has greeted thousands over the decades, moving with the shifting winds, witnessing the tides of time.

But what is its history, its story, how did the swordfish get there and what does its future hold? To get to the bottom of those questions, The Wanderer sought out the descendants of Sophia Means, F. Gilbert Hinsdale, and William DeYong Field, gathering oral histories from cousins Horace Field III and William “Billy” DeYong Field.

The story begins with Sophia Sword (no pun intended) who married William Allen Means in 1877. The couple had two daughters, Mary and Martha. As a widow, Sophia bought the land at 20 Water Street and built a home on the site.

Martha would marry F. Gilbert Hinsdale and they lived together in the house at 20 Water Street. Mary wed Horace F. Field, the son of William DeYong Field, a prominent landowner in Mattapoisett.

On June 16, 2017, Horace Field III would share his family’s history with the swordfish:

“My Great-Uncle Hinsdale had the swordfish made as a weathervane for the top of his boathouse at 20 Water Street,” Horace said. Hinsdale, known to Horace as ‘Uncle Gibby,’ had an interest in maritime memorabilia, amassing a collection of whaling-era materials that was later gifted to the New Bedford Whaling Museum.

The swordfish was modeled after an actual fish harpooned by Hinsdale. Although the exact date of its creation is not known, Horace believes it had to be in the 1920s.

Horace explained that during the 1938 hurricane, the boathouse that was situated at the 20 Water Street homestead ended up across the street, pushed there by the unrelenting storm surge.

“It landed in the back of the lot,” he said. Today, that former boathouse is 23 Water Street, a bed and breakfast. As you walk down Water Street, the homes numbered 20 and 23 both bear historic plaques that read “Sophia Means.” Of the boathouse, Field concluded, “It must have had good bones.”

After the hurricane, the swordfish was placed in storage deep within the recesses of the garage at 20 Water Street, never seeing the light of day until the 1950s. At that time, the swordfish was gifted to the Town by Hinsdale’s widow, Patricia, and was erected at the end of Long Wharf where it’s been flying ever since.

It’s interesting to note that Shipyard Park, the tiny but brilliant gem next to the wharves, was also gifted to the Town by Mr. Hinsdale during his lifetime. In fact, the Hinsdale and Field families have a long history of service to the community.

John Field was a selectman from 1966 to 1973, while Horace F. Field was a selectman from 1902 to 1916. And many boat owners know Horace Field III as the former harbormaster serving in that capacity from 1999 to 2013.

On June 13, 2017, the Mattapoisett Board of Selectmen gave William “Billy” DeYong Field’s great-great grandson to his namesake a Certificate of Appreciation for the decades he has dedicated to keeping the swordfish in viable condition. In a follow-up, he explained how the weathervane was crafted.

Billy said that Manuel Perry, who had been a local craftsman working for Hinsdale, was the artist responsible for its creation. “He was a master model ship builder,” Billy said.

“The swordfish is sort of like a model airplane,” said Billy. “There’s a frame and over that, wooden slates.” He said the swordfish is constructed of native white pine with a solid tail, fins, and sword. The weathervane is painted to mimic the blue hues of the animal in the wild. Then, a coating of epoxy is applied to protect and seal the wood.

“Through the years, about half of the original has been replaced,” Billy shared. He said that a major renovation was done in the 1970s.

He also confided that the hollow interior contains no less than three time capsules.

The first capsule he said holds a letter from Seth Hinsdale that describes the construction of the swordfish. The other two capsules hold unknown items.

Of the current condition of the swordfish, Billy said, “Well, it’s like an old man’s teeth,” lots of bits and pieces have been replaced. He hopes that in the not-too-distant future, a mold can be made of the weathervane and a fiberglass model created to replace the original.

“Maybe the original one can go into the Mattapoisett Museum,” said Billy.

For now, the wooden swordfish continues to grace the end of Long Wharf, having its picture taken and inviting the public to enjoy a place rich in history and steeped in the goodwill of those who love Mattapoisett.

By Marilou Newell

 

Grassi Bog Slated for Invasives Control

The frontline for the next battle in the Town of Marion’s war against invasive plant species will be Grassi Bog, and the Marion Open Space Acquisition Commission’s chosen weapon for the wetlands is the appropriately primeval-sounding “bloody glove method.” No phragmites shall be spared its wrath.

The Marion Conservation Commission approved the Notice of Intent for a plan to eradicate and manage invasive species at Grassi Bog, funded by a government grant that MOSAC acquired.

When one commission member wondered if they should go for a site visit to view the areas on the plan for invasive eradication, commission member Jeffrey Doubrava stated, “We’ve been to Grassi Bog enough times,” which was met with agreement.

The aforementioned bloody glove method, MOSAC Chairman John Rockwell said, involves saturating a cotton glove with glyphosate and hand applying it to the flower heads of the phrags. This method is favored in sensitive wetlands areas such as at Grassi Bog since the spraying of herbicides is considerably limited.

The application received approval with an Order of Conditions.

In other matters, Tabor Academy received a Negative Determination for its plan to install an underground grease trap (already approved by the Board of Health), two exit door locations, paved walkways, and a new electrical transformer with new trench at 215 Front Street. Some of the proposed work is within a flood zone.

Mark and Elizabeth Fredericks of 11 Bass Point Road were granted permission to raze an existing deck and replace it with a larger deck, 10 feet by 16 feet in size. The application received a Negative Determination.

Also during the meeting, the public hearing for a RDA for N. George & Laurie Host of 456 Point Road was continued until June 28. No one on behalf of the applicant was present for the hearing.

The public hearing for a RDA for Brian Dupras of 13 Card Drive was also continued until June 28 because the commission visited the wrong property during its site visit.

The next meeting of the Marion Conservation Commission is scheduled for June 28 at 7:00 pm at the Marion Town House.

Marion Conservation Commission

By Jean Perry

 

Fatal Motocycle Crash

On Saturday, June 24, 2017 at 10:16PM, the Marion Police Department and Marion Fire/EMS responded to a motorcycle crash on Route 6 in the area of Hermitage Road. The male operator was pronounced dead at the scene.

Initial investigation indicates that the motorcycle was travelling east on Route 6 and struck the sidewalk curb on the eastbound side on the road, then struck a utility pole. There were no other vehicles involved in the crash. The operator was wearing a helmet at the time of the crash.

The identity of the operator is being withheld, pending family member notifications.

The cause of the crash remains under investigation by Officers Kris Smith and Jeffrey Habicht, with assistance from the Massachusetts State Police Collision Analysis and Reconstruction Section, State Police Crime Scene Services Section, and the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner.

Route 6 was closed in both directions for about three hours, while the crash was investigated. Mass DOT assisted at the scene.

Marion Police Department Press Release

Birds of Prey

The Marion Natural History Museum will be hosting a Birds of Prey program to be given by Blue Hills/Mass. Audubon on Friday, July 7, 7:00 – 8:00 pm. Find out why hawks, owls, eagles, and falcons are considered birds of prey, and discover their diversity while meeting live birds of prey native to Massachusetts. We’ll share some tips to help you see these birds more often where you live. There are many more out there than you might think. This program is supported in part by a grant from the Marion Cultural Council, a local agency that is supported by the Massachusetts Cultural Council, a state agency. Cost is $10/members, $12 nonmembers, $5 for children under 12. Event to be held at the Marion Natural History Museum, 8 Spring Street, Marion, MA. For more information, please go to www.marionmuseum.org.

School Committee Celebrates Successful Year

During its final meeting of the school year on June 12, the Mattapoisett School Committee lingered over the events, celebrated the end of the current school year, and discussed its goals for the next academic year.

In her introduction to the committee of the School Improvement Plan, Center School Principal Rose Bowman first thanked the School Council members, who developed the plan, for their dedication, saying, “It was a very committed group, strong attendance at the meetings and a great cross section of community members, teachers and parents.”

With a strategic plan being developed in the spring of next year, this plan will only cover one year but was replete with many challenging initiatives.

Bowman highlighted the use of the standards based report cards, and expressed her hope that parents will take an active role in providing feedback to the school on the report cards’ effectiveness after the first trimester.

Bowman also underscored the new Salty program, which is modeled after a successful program in Marion in which parents and students are brought together monthly to learn in a variety of workshops developed by the school.

Tina Rood, who heads up the Destination Imagination program for ORR, will be speaking to parents in September about starting a program in the younger grades. Students will also be exposed to a variety of local organizations that provide opportunities for experiential learning.

“We are very fortunate to have strong relationships with organizations in the area like the Mattapoisett Land Trust, the Buzzards Bay Coalition, and the League of Women Voters [which] has helped us tremendously in the fifth grade,” said Bowman.

Superintendent Doug White thanked everyone “for a very good year, for demonstrating a commitment to the students.”

“Everyone should be proud of this school year,” White said.

Continuing in the celebratory tone, Associate Principal Kevin Tavares described the Senior Walk, in which the graduates from ORR come back to Center and Old Hammondtown Schools to visit.

The students at the schools made banners and posted pictures of the seniors as younger students. For their part, the seniors wore their caps and gowns, and while at Center School broke into song, singing the old Center School theme song written by a former music teacher.

Tavares described the moment, saying, “The kids lined the hallway and they started singing. There were a lot of tears!”

Bowman highlighted the major transition that all students are going through at this time of year, saying, “As we think about transition, it is so important – every grade has little nuances you have to address…. The kindergarteners coming in to see their classroom, so they have a visual for the summer. One kid brought his backpack – and asked if he could come back tomorrow!”

The third-graders, Bowman said, are excited to move on to Old Hammondtown after their visit to the school, in which they eat in the cafeteria and visit the classrooms. However, there is also a let-down, she says, and so the day after the last day of school, the third graders are sent to the YMCA for the day to be with their friends, play, and eat pizza to help ease the transition.

Bowman recognized retiring kindergarten teacher Audrey Riley, who unfortunately was unable to attend the meeting. Bowman spoke of Riley’s dedication to her students as well as to her generosity with her colleagues and broader school community. Bowman detailed Riley’s many attributes, thanking her for “her extraordinary leadership.”

“Audrey has supported each kindergarten teacher by sharing strategies … [and] the knowledge she has gained over the years with her colleagues,” said Bowman. She then held up a copy of Mother Goose Rhymes that will become part of the Center School collection in Riley’s honor, noting that rhyming is a gateway to reading in early childhood.

In other business, School Business Administrator Patrick Spencer provided a brief financial report, noting that the committee will be returning approximately $70,000 to $100,000 back to the Town at the end of the fiscal year.

The committee elected Rachel Westgate as its new chairman, keeping Patrick LeClair as vice chairman.

The next meeting of the Mattapoisett School Committee is scheduled for September 18 at 6:30 pm.

By Sarah French Storer

 

Conservation Restriction Will Ensure Water Protection

The Marion Board of Selectmen on June 20 approved a conservation restriction for an approximately 165-acre property off Wolf Island Road that will protect even more of the Mattapoisett River Valley drinking water supply for many years to come.

Town Meeting back in May had approved spending $20,000 towards the acquisition of the land, but the majority of the funding was provided by a state drinking water protection grant for which Marion Water & Sewer Superintendent Rob Zora had applied.

Alan Decker from the Buzzards Bay Coalition said the land, which straddles the Mattapoisett and Rochester town lines, would provide for up to four additional source wells for the Town of Marion within one four-acre area allotted for the purpose.

The closing on the property purchase is set for next week, and the Towns of Fairhaven and Mattapoisett, as well as the Town of Rochester, are all working towards the permanent conservation restriction of the property for the perpetual preservation of drinking water.

The land would be open to the public for passive recreational use.

Before voting to allow the conservation restriction process to begin, Selectman Norm Hills pointed out the language in the paperwork that assigns maintenance of the property to the Town of Marion, so the other two selectmen should be conscious of the maintenance costs the Town would incur.

In other matters, Town Administrator Paul Dawson told the selectmen that efforts on behalf of the Town to find an alternative non-monetary solution to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineer’s ‘mitigation fee’ for the unpermitted construction of a “seawall” near Sprague’s Cove have failed.

Town counsel, in a letter to the board, stated that he had sought alternatives to the $33,500 mitigation fee – essentially a fine – but he concluded that any legal attempts to appeal the decision in court would be unsuccessful for the Town.

“Any attempt to litigate this would be ultimately unsuccessful,” said Dawson.

Town counsel also sought to offer up partial payment in lieu of the full amount, which was also unsuccessful.

“I understand, it’s a bit of a pill to swallow,” said Dawson to the board. “We have really worked hard to come up with a different alternative. I don’t see one and I don’t think one is likely.”

Town Meeting had already approved the expenditure of the funds in May. The board voted to approve the payment of the fine.

The selectmen also discussed two additional “Little Free Libraries” that need permanent homes in town. The Elizabeth Taber Library acquired two more Little Free Libraries, in addition to the one currently standing at the Marion Music Hall.

Hills suggested a number of locations, including Silvershell Beach, the new community center, and Old Landing. Chairman Jody Dickerson charged Hills with meeting with Library Director Libby O’Neill to assist in finding the two Little Free Libraries homes.

“It would be great if we could make more of them,” said Selectman Steve Gonsalves.

The public hearing for Shea Doonan’s aquaculture permit application was continued until September 19 at the request of the applicant.

The next meeting of the Marion Board of Selectmen is scheduled for July 11 at 7:00 pm at the Marion Police Station.

Marion Board of Selectmen

By Jean Perry

 

Cardboard Boat Race

ORRJHS held the 6th annual Cardboard Boat Race on June 15 during S.C.O.P.E. week for 7th grade students. S.C.O.P.E. – Student Centered Opportunities for Personal Enrichment – is a week-long program that offers activities that challenge students while having fun! In addition to the cardboard boat race at the Mattapoisett YMCA, the week was filled with trips, tours, and activities, such as team building and the ropes course at the Dartmouth YMCA, a visit to Historic Faneuil Hall, Boston’s Freedom Trail, Fort Phoenix, and Roger Williams Park Zoo. Photo courtesy Kathryn Gauvin

 

Mattapoisett Recreation

Mattapoisett Recreation’s Seahorse Summer Explorer Camp Program starts next week. The program will run June 27 through August 11. Seahorse Explorers is a Monday-Friday program run out of Center School. Drop off is 9:00 am – 4:00 pm with early drop off and late pick up available if needed. Each day, campers will have a tennis lesson, swim lesson, do arts and crafts and play games. Each week has a theme that activities are geared around. Many weeks will involve field trips and shows. Mad Science of Southeastern MA will be doing a show and running experiment stations, High Flying Dogs will be performing, and trips to the movies and Buttonwood Park Zoo are also planned. Full day/Full week camp cost is $150, ½ Day/Full Week is $100, 3 Day/Full Day is $125. Visit our website, www.mattrec.net, to see theme weeks and more information. New this year is a CIT – Counselor in Training two-week session from July 24-August 4 for Ages 12-14. Cost is $275 for two weeks and First Aid training.

Spaces are still available in our one-week specialty clinics:

Brian Rudolph Competitive Basketball Training Clinic: July 10-14, 9:00 am – 12:00 pm at Old Rochester Regional High School. This program is geared towards competitive level basketball players in Grades 4-8. Cost is $150.

Shooting Stars Girls Basketball Camp: July 24-28, 9:00 am – 12:00 pm at Old Hammondtown School. Open to girls in Grades 3-6. Run by Julie Letourneau. Cost is $150.

Nature Explorers Camp: July 24-28, 9:00 am – 12:00 pm. Join MATTREC and the Marion Natural History Museum to explore some of Mattapoisett’s unique natural areas. Each day will be a different location and activity. Have fun exploring and experimenting with Elizabeth Leidhold. Open to ages 8-11 years old. Cost is $125.

Tennis Lessons will be Wednesdays, 5:00 – 7:00 pm, July 5-August 9, taught by Stevie Lake, Asst. Pro at the Casino. Cost is $80. Spots are still available in the 5-7year age group. Later session for 8-13 years is full.

Summer Golf Clinic held at the Bay Club, Wednesdays, July 12-August 2, 5:00 – 6:00 pm Snag golf for 5-8 year olds, 6:00 – 7:00 pm for 9-12 year olds. This program is run by the Bay Club’s PGA professionals and focusses on the fundamentals of golf. Cost is $100.

Youth Swimming Lessons. Group lessons run for three weeks on either Mondays & Wednesdays or Tuesdays & Thursdays. Age groups are Pre-school 11:00 – 11:30 am, Youth Beginner 10:30 – 11:00 am, Youth Intermediate 9:30 – 10:15 am. Cost is $45. Private lessons are also available.

Online registration and more information is available at www.mattrec.net.

Sippican Lands Trust StoryWalk

Starting July 1, the Sippican Lands Trust will offer a StoryWalk at its Hagemann Woods property in Marion. This year’s StoryWalk at Hagemann Woods features The Snail and the Whale by Julia Donaldson and Axel Scheffler.

StoryWalk is an innovative and delightful way for children and adults to enjoy reading and the outdoors at the same time. Laminated pages from a children’s book are attached to wooden stakes, which are installed along an outdoor path. As you stroll down the trail, you’re directed to the next page in the story.

Hagemann Woods is a 23-acre parcel acquired by Sippican Lands Trust in 1998 and features white pines, oaks, red maples and mixed wetlands providing a wide range of wildlife habitat. The parking area for Hagemann Woods is located off of Point Road approximately two miles south of the intersection of Route 6 (Wareham Road) and Point Road in Marion.

StoryWalk at Hagemann Woods will be open from sunrise to sunset from Saturday, July 1 through Tuesday, August 1. Adults and kids of all ages are welcome and for further information about the StoryWalk at Hagemann Woods, go to www.sippicanlandstrust.org or call Sippican Lands Trust at 508-748-3080.

Exotic Birds of Peru

The Mattapoisett Library will hold an Exotic Birds of Peru Slide Show on Tuesday, June 27 at 6:30 pm. Skip Bedser will present the slide show from his spring trip to Peru. Guides well known in birding professionally choreographed the tour. Come join us for an adventurous evening of the true birds of paradise from a country that has more than 1800 species of exotic birds.

The Mattapoisett Library is located on 7 Barstow Street and is accessible through the side entrance. Come early because parking is limited due to construction. Refreshments will be served.