Marion Republican Town Committee

The Marion Republican Town Committee will conduct its next monthly meeting on Tuesday, August 2 at 7:00 pm at the Marion Music Hall, 164 Front Street, Marion. Please join us. The public and new members are welcome.

Hula Hooping

On Saturday, July 23, kids at the Plumb Library in Rochester tried a little hula hooping with Pinto Bella. The event is part of the library’s summer reading theme of health and wellness. Photos by Colin Veitch

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Michael L. O’Brien

Michael L. O’Brien, age 66, passed away July 28, 2016 after a period of declining health.
He was the son of the late John and Alice (Norton) O’Brien. He was the beloved father of Oliver, Molly, and Katherine and grandfather of Sophia and Lola. He is also survived by his brothers Kevin, Sean and Peter; his sister Jane; and his former wife Nancy L. O’Brien.

Born in New Bedford on May 10, 1950, he graduated from Old Rochester Regional High School and UMass Dartmouth. He taught at Rochester Memorial while earning a Master’s degree in Public Administration from Suffolk University. He worked at SRPRED for several years and then earned his J.D. from New England School of Law. He served as an assistant district attorney in both New Bedford and Fall River before entering private practice.

Michael spent most of his life in Mattapoisett, a town that he loved and the place he felt most happy. He served for many years on the Finance Committee and as an assessor. He took pleasure in coaching his children’s MYAA basketball teams. A lifelong Democrat he worked on many area political campaigns and served on the Town Democratic Committee for years.
Visiting hours Tuesday, August 2nd from 4-8 PM in the Saunders-Dwyer Mattapoisett Home For Funerals, 50 County Rd. (Rt. 6) Mattapoisett. In lieu of flowers, remembrances may be made to Mattapoisett Recreation, P.O.Box 435, 16 Main St. Town Hall, Mattapoisett, MA 02739. For directions and guestbook, please visit www.saundersdwyer.com.

A Stitch in Time

Mattapoisett’s deep and rich history as it went from being a seaside agrarian and fishing culture to a pivotal shipbuilding center is fairly well documented. Museums along the eastern seaboard, and certainly those more closely situated to this tiny notch in Buzzards Bay, are full of reference materials hailing Mattapoisett as a major global economic player between the 1700s and 1800s.

But one man whose heritage is also deeply woven into the very fabric of this community’s history believes people – especially the women who lived in Mattapoisett – were industriously employed in the mid-to-late 1800s as garment workers. David Anderson is exploring that possibility.

Anderson, retired attorney and native son, spent the majority of his adult life in the District of Columbia and New Mexico. With family still living in the local area and frequent visits home, he stayed connected to Mattapoisett and the Pine Island Road property that has been in the family for more than a century.

Now with time to devote to the study and organization of his family’s historical documents, he believes he has hit on a new economic connection, a thread if you will, between Mattapoisett and events that helped to shape our nation.

“Before the Civil War,” Anderson said, “there weren’t standard clothing sizes.” He explained that clothing was made at home primarily by women who beavered away by candlelight to keep their family members warm and covered. “But during the Civil War, Union soldiers needed uniforms,” and through his research he has learned that sizing had to become standardized in order to keep up with military demand.

Yet, how did Anderson come to these conclusions? His great-great-grandmother’s journal helps to tell the story.

Among the many family papers and documents of which Anderson has come into possession, making him the family historian, were the personal journals of Sarah Dexter Ransom and her husband Nathaniel Cushing Ransom, Anderson’s ancestors on his mother’s side.

“My mother gave several of the journals to the Whaling Museum in New Bedford,” Anderson said. Most notably was Ransom’s journal kept while he was crewing on the whaling bark John Wells during its ill-fated arctic journey. “All the logs books were destroyed when the ship was lost in the ice,” he says, “so my great-great-grandfather’s personal journal from that trip was important.”

As he tenderly handles the one journal that remains in the family collection – a small delicate text connecting the here and now with the past – Anderson tells his great-great-grandparents’ story.

Sarah and Nathaniel lived nearby one another. They were eventually married. The journal speaks, “This afternoon was quite pleasant on the whole. Sarah and I went to Sippican and were married by Reverend Cobb, from there we came home again. My dear wife and I spent a part of the evening at father’s…”

            Along with a day-by-day chronology of weather conditions and the social aspects of life long before human communications were usurped by radio, television, and all manner of electronic devices, Sarah writes how she was employed as a seamstress doing piece-work.

Anderson is drafting Sarah’s story by gleaning information from her journal. From his draft we find, “For a deposit of as little as $50.00, jobbers could obtain pre-cut cloth and patterns for a batch of coats from the textile mills in New Bedford and Fall River…” He says that women like Sarah were given bundles to work on and the jobber in turn wholesaled the finished pieces. Anderson speculates that because Mattapoisett was connected to New Bedford via a railroad, the movement of goods could easily be accomplished.

Sarah documents that she worked on men’s coats turning out as many as ten units a day. Women employed by a jobber would receive bundles of cloth and would perform one or two aspects of stitching on the coat. Thus, garments were turned out via a cottage industry of women throughout the area who were paid by the unit.

Sarah’s journal speaks primarily to the everyday comings and goings, and one has to carefully read the fading lines of text to pull out significant bits of history. Yet, the very gentle ebb and flow of everyday living, one’s ancestors calling from long ago, is significant to Anderson.

“To have mementos of the family means a lot. It cements your roots,” he shared. Drifting along on that thought, he added, “Every time I pull into the driveway at Pine Island, I think ‘Nathaniel walked here.’”

While Sarah and Nathaniel may have been well known around town in their day, Anderson’s parents were most likely very well known.

“My mother was the postmistress and my father was the Center School principal,” he said with a smile. Anderson’s mother was Louise Pickering Ransom and his father, Hayden L.V. Anderson. “My father created the first yearbook for Center School,” he said. “It was called The Wanderer.”

Anderson hopes to complete his research on the local garment industry while pulling together as much family history as possible, not only for his own family, but those who study local history, especially the economics of those times. And to that end, he is slowly unraveling the threads that Sarah sewed.

By Marilou Newell

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Marion COA to Celebrate One Year Anniversary

On Monday, August 1, you are cordially invited to lunch and musical entertainment in honor of the Marion Council on Aging’s one-year anniversary of senior programming at the Music Hall, 164 Front Street, Marion.

Lunch – pulled pork, corn on the cob, watermelon – at 11:45 am will be provided by R.W. Catering of Marion and at 12:15 pm, enjoy the musical entertainment of Steve Caddick & Avalon who will perform songs from the Tin Pan Alley era! All welcome, reservations required, 508-748-3570, $3 suggested voluntary donation.

St. Philip’s Episcopal Church

Clergy from nearby and around the country visit the “Church at the Town Beach” in Mattapoisett from July 3 to September 4. Services using the 1928 Book of Common Prayer are at 8:00 am and 10:00 am.

On Sunday, July 31, The Rev. Robert Malm, Rector, Grace Church, Alexandria, Virginia will be officiating. All are welcome.

Thelma L. (Leahey) Storer

Thelma L. (Leahey) Storer, 86, of Mattapoisett passed away Thursday, July 28, 2016 surrounded by her beloved family after a courageous fight with a brief illness. She was the loving wife of the late William J. Storer.

Born in Fall River, a daughter of the late Frank E. and Sarah C. (Farnham) Leahey she was a lifelong area resident and a long time communicant of Holy Name of the Sacred Heart of Jesus Church.

Thelma was a graduate of Bryant College who enjoyed traveling and spending time with her family.

She is survived by her four sons, Daniel E. Storer and his wife Rebecca of Lakeville, Brian F. Storer and his wife Lisa of E. Sandwich, Christopher J. Storer of Mattapoisett, and William J. Storer and his wife Elsa of Oceanside, CA; nieces, Kim Goncalo of Tiverton, RI and Sharon Coffman of San Antonio, TX; nephews, George Leahey, Jr. of New Bedford, Dennis Leahey of Fairhaven, and Timothy Leahey of New Bedford; grandchildren, Melissa, Chris, Ryan, Nicholas, Sarah, Thomas, Shane, Jessica, and Jillian and sister-in-law, Jean Pelletier of New Bedford. She was the sister of the late George F. Leahey and June E. Laubach and aunt of the late Kenneth Olsen.

Her funeral will be Monday, August 1, 2016 at 8 am from the Waring-Sullivan Home at Fairlawn, 180 Washington St., Fairhaven followed by a funeral mass at 9 am in Holy Name of the Sacred Heart of Jesus Church, 121 Mt. Pleasant St., New Bedford. Burial will be private. Visitation will be Sunday 4-7 pm. In lieu of flowers, donations in her honor may be made to Alzheimer’s Association , 311 Arsenal St., Watertown, MA 02472. www.waring-sullivan.com for directions/online tribute.

Claire A. Flynn

Claire A. Flynn, age 75, of Hidden Bay, South Dartmouth, formerly of Mattapoisett, died on Monday July 25, 2016 after a courageous fight against cancer. She was the devoted wife of the late Joseph Flynn, and dedicated mother of Joseph, Jr. and Margaret, and cherished grandmother of Deirdre and Brighid. Claire was a daughter of the late Eugene and Donalda Boivin, and is survived by her sister, Diane Sullivan.

Claire was born in Rumford, Maine on July 14, 1941. She was graduated from Stephens High School. She earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in French and Spanish from Regis College. Claire’s career in public education began in 1963, teaching at Brockton High School. After leaving public education to raise a family, she returned to teaching at Bridgewater-Raynham Regional High School and later moved to Old Rochester Regional Junior High School. She subsequently joined the teaching staff of Old Rochester Regional High School (ORRHS) and taught French, Spanish, and World History over the course of her career there. She was actively involved with the American Field Service Intercultural Program at ORRHS, participating in numerous cultural experiences and field trips with fellow colleagues, foreign exchange students, and hosting family students at ORRHS.

Upon her retirement from ORRHS in 1998, Claire took great pleasure in family events and activities and delighted in good conversation, usually sparked by the most recent book she enjoyed. Additionally, she was an inveterate traveler who frequented the Caribbean and Marco Island, FL. She volunteered as a patient advocate at St. Luke’s Hospital and most recently volunteered as a teacher assistant at Nativity Preparatory School in New Bedford.

At Claire’s request, funeral services will be private. Visiting hours are omitted. In lieu of flowers, remembrances in Claire’s name may be made to the Nativity Preparatory School, 66 Spring Street, New Bedford, MA 02740. Arrangements are with the Saunders-Dwyer Mattapoisett Home For Funerals, 50 County Rd., Route 6, Mattapoisett. For online condolence, please visit www.saundersdwyer.com.

Sippican Historical Society

In late June, the Sippican Historical Society received a phone call from the Woburn Public Library that it was de-accessioning items from its collection. In 1901, a donor had given the library the shoe buckles of Major Earl Clapp from Rochester, who fought in the Revolutionary War. In 1776, Rochester included Marion, Mattapoisett, Rochester and part of Wareham. The Woburn Public Library asked if the Sippican Historical Society would be interested in adding the buckles to its collection and SHS responded with an enthusiastic “yes.”

The impressive pair of men’s shoe buckles exhibits a series of overlapping circles with raised dots that form the brass decorative outline of each buckle. The circa-1776 buckles include an iron inner support for attaching to the shoe and one buckle has a leather fragment attached. Each buckle measures approximately 3 inches across.

Major Earl Clapp was born in 1741 and was also a soldier in the French and Indian War. He took a very prominent part in the affairs of “Old Rochester,” where he lived, his name appearing on several committees appointed by the town during the time of the Revolution. His first services in the Revolutionary War were as Captain of a Company of Minute Men. Afterwards, he was appointed a Major in the Army and served through the war, bearing the character of a brave and energetic man. The Sippican Historical Society invites the public to visit its museum on Saturday mornings to view the buckles. The SHS museum is free and open to the public.

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Community Unites to Support Police, Pray for Peace

“This is simply the right thing to do,” said Reverend Amy Lignitz Harken of the Mattapoisett Congregational Church on Saturday, July 16, during an ecumenical service held at ORR Junior High to show community support for local police. “…In a time when the world seems to be falling apart,” said Harken, in reference to these days following the tragic assassination of five police officers in Dallas, Texas, and three officers in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

To be a police officer these days would, indeed, be difficult, said Harken, “Wherever you are.”

The Marion, Mattapoisett, and Rochester Police were reassured of their communities’ support that morning as over 100 residents turned out to pray for the men and women in uniform and to also pray for peace and an end to racism in America.

“We’re here to acknowledge our law enforcement officers,” said Harken. “We’re also here to acknowledge the scourge of racism in our country … to acknowledge that it is alive and well … and this sin has deadly consequences.”

Mattapoisett Police Chief Mary Lyons stressed the importance of the community and the police coming together in peace during these days.

“We are a nation in crisis,” said Lyons. “I want to thank all of you for your outpouring of support…. It has renewed our faith.”

Rochester Police Chief Paul Magee acknowledged the strength, dedication, and professionalism of his officers, which elicited applause from those in attendance.

“I encourage you to remain positive and to continue to focus on serving your community,” Magee said, adding that he was disheartened after hearing about the Dallas killings on July 7. But then, one by one, the residents young and old went to the officers and arrived at the station bringing hand-written cards, cakes, pizzas, and gifts of words of support for the police department.

“There is very strong support for police in the Tri-Town, and I want to thank each and every one of you,” said Magee. “We need to come together in unity and stay together if we want things to change for the better.”

“It’s not just a job for them,” said Reverend Robert Ripley, the chaplain for the Rochester Police. “It’s not just a place to go every day … or a thing to do. It’s their calling, their duty, their destiny.”

Marion Police Chief Lincoln Miller said a Marion resident approached him shortly after the first shootings and asked him, “Aren’t you afraid to be wearing the uniform right now?”

“No,” said Miller. “I’m proud to be wearing the uniform.” Be proud, he told his fellow officers. “Don’t let things that have happened … all around the country dishearten you … and continue to do the great job that you are doing.”

Attendees shared a moment of silence to pray for the protection of the police and for peace, and the Showstoppers led the audience in the singing of “Let There Be Peace on Earth.”

“I think everybody’s heart is breaking … and we need to come together,” said Harken. “We have to find a place to start, so let’s start here…. It begins with all of us. Light always dispels the darkness.”

By Jean Perry