A Midsummer Night’s Dream

The Old Rochester Regional High School Drama Club is very proud to present A Midsummer Night’s Dream, based on the writings of William Shakespeare. This classic story of misshaped love is set in Italy, 1910 and promises to be a magical night to remember. It stars (Jr) Sara Achorn, (So) Alice Bednarczyk, (Sr) Rikard Bodin, (Sr) Lillie Farrell, (Sr) Emily Faulkner, (Sr) Holly Frink, (Sr) Jessica Keegan, (Jr) Cammi Kidney, (Sr) Sara Lafrance, (Sr) Alyson Maguyer, (Sr) Victor Morrison, (Jr) Adam Perkins, (Sr) Kaeli Peters, (So) Isabelle Rodrigues, (Sr) Drew Robert, (So) Jack Roussell, (Jr) Mary Roussell, (Sr) Evan Roznoy, and (So) Chris Savino.

A Midsummer Night’s Dream with costumes by Helen Blake, sound by John Farrell, and directed by Paul Sardinha, will be presented in the Gilbert D. Bristol Auditorium of Old Rochester Regional High School on Thursday, November 19 through Saturday, November 21 at 7:30 pm and Sunday, November 22 at 2:00 pm. Tickets, which are $10 for students and seniors and $12 for general public, are available at The Pen & Pendulum in Mattapoisett, The Marion General Store in Marion, and Plumb Corner Market in Rochester. Tickets may also be available at the door. ORR is located on Route 6 in Mattapoisett.

For information and ticket reservations, please call 508-951-5302; tickets may also be purchased at the door. (Note: Tri-Town seniors attending Wednesday evening’s dress rehearsal must pick up their free ticket from their local Council on Aging office.)

Voters Say Nay to Sewer Expansion Grant

Marion Special Fall Town Meeting voters on October 26 finally accepted a new ambulance, but they flat out rejected the Board of Selectmen’s article to appropriate $50,000 to match a potential grant of $200,000 that could have led to expanded municipal sewer service to the Indian and Aucoot Cove area neighborhoods of Marion and Mattapoisett – something neither the voters nor one vocal Indian Cove resident wanted.

Town Administrator Paul Dawson and the selectmen over the past several weeks had expressed their optimism over the funding opportunity offered by the Buzzards Bay and Narragansett Bay Estuary Programs, which Dawson and selectmen were hoping would lead to an eventual nitrogen load decrease that the EPA, the entity that holds the fate of the town’s wastewater treatment in its hands, would look favorably upon.

Selectmen Chairman Stephen Cushing introduced Article S4, explaining that the town would partner with Mattapoisett to provide sewer service to the Aucoot Cove Mattapoisett residents as well as Marion residents – an opportunity for Marion to increase its sewer service revenue while decreasing nitrogen pollution in the cove.

The Buzzards Bay Coalition supported the proposal and grant opportunity, and the Town of Mattapoisett would have contributed $10,000 towards the feasibility study – an amount that some Marion Town Meeting voters found unsubstantial.

Resident Joseph Zora reminded voters present of the looming NPDES (National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System) permit the EPA will issue any day now, which could cost the town tens of thousands of dollars should the EPA enforce its strict new standards for wastewater treatment. He wondered how adding more residents to sewer service, despite a moratorium on the addition of sewer hookups, would benefit the town, given the NPDES circumstances.

Referring to the impending NPDES permit, Zora told voters: “If you’re not frightened then you should be … when the EPA comes.” Because, when it comes to a potential $25 million in wastewater treatment plant upgrades, “This is going to kill us.” As for the support of the BBC, Zora said, “I’m a little bit leery of the ‘buzzards’ because they keep picking our bones.”

Dawson defended the article to no avail. Finance Committee Chairman Alan Minard gave no recommendation on the matter, saying he did not receive the information he needed in time to make an educated decision.

Former Planning Board member Stephen Kokkins rejected the proposal as well, arguing that adding new households to the current sewer system would do nothing to decrease nitrogen pollution, despite the elimination of private septic systems, because the town’s current wastewater treatment plant is already operating in excess of its capacity.

“I think this proposal is premature,” Kokkins said.

A resident made the motion to table the article, and the voters unanimously supported it.

The ambulance article, which was passed over during the Annual Town Meeting so that specifications on the vehicle could be reviewed by the new incoming fire chief, passed with little objection from voters and no objection from FinCom this time.

Selectman Jody Dickerson pointed out that the timing of the purchase was perfect, given new federal standards for ambulances that would take effect July 1, 2016 and cost an additional estimated $40,000.

“We are confident that this ambulance is not only suitable … but adds flexibility,” said Finance Committee Chairman Alan Minard. “All in all, I think it’s a reasonable, although very expensive, piece of equipment.”

With the approval, $150,000 of the appropriated total sum of $241,000 will be transferred from the capital stabilization fund and the remainder from free cash.

Approval for Article S2 to appropriate $10,000 to undertake aerial spraying to combat winter and gypsy moths passed with a slightly lesser margin after a couple of residents voiced their discontentment over the limited scope of the spraying – only a few major public ways and throughout Marion village.

“I pay taxes in this town,” said Wareham Road resident BJ Barrows, who wanted Route 6 to be part of the spraying. “Why don’t you ask for more money and do the whole town?”

Tree Committee Chairman Margie Baldwin said Route 6 was a state highway, not under the jurisdiction of the town, which Barrows said he could not accept.

Another resident said she lives on a private road and also pays taxes and would want the spraying extended to private ways as well. Baldwin agreed it would be nice, but “We can’t do all the roads in town.”

The vote passed; however, there was a significant number of ‘nays.’

Town Meeting voters approved Article S1 to allow the town to collect water bills from area town residents to whom the Town of Marion provides water, including the right to issue liens on the properties as if they were Marion properties should water bills go unpaid.

Article S5, to appropriate $12,006.19 to cover damages caused by a significant rainstorm was passed over at the request of the selectmen. Selectmen knew they would pass it over if the insurance company responded favorably toward covering the costs of the damages.

By Jean Perry

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Football a Huge Win in Homecoming Game

A wild Homecoming football game resulted in a 46-45 victory for the Bulldogs, who have now won two in a row. Meanwhile, the volleyball team earned a playoff spot with a win over Apponequet on Friday night. Note that both Cross Country teams had a bye week prior to the SCC Championship.

Football: Coming off last week’s 41-13 beating of Wareham, much was expected of the Bulldogs in their Homecoming battle against Seekonk. This week’s game wasn’t as one-sided, and it featured tons of big plays and offensive action. At one point early in the second quarter, the Bulldogs were trailing 21-6, but they came back to tie the game at 27 before halftime. Each team scored one touchdown in the third, and the game was tied at 33 heading into the fourth. It was a touchdown run by sophomore running back Harry Smith that separated the two teams, and led to a 46-45 victory as the defense made a crucial stop to hold the lead with the clock running out. The trifecta of Smith, junior tight end Grant Reuter, and junior quarterback Cam Hamilton was the key ingredient in the win. Smith ran 10 times for 142 yards and three TDs, while Hamilton was 5-8 passing for 189 yards and three scores. He added a 41-yard touchdown run, which was the game’s first score, and ran for 53 more yards and another touchdown. Reuter caught three of Hamilton’s passes for 153 yards and two touchdowns. After the thrilling victory, the boys stay at home to take on Case on Friday.

BoysSoccer: Starting off at Wareham on Monday, the boys engineered a 9-0 rout. Sophomore Ben LaFrance had a hat trick, while senior Shane Desousa added two goals. While their female counterparts were on the road, the boys were at home to face the powerful GNB Voc-Tech Bears on Wednesday. They were defeated 3-0, as Voc remained undefeated in the SCC. Friday, the Bulldogs looked to redeem themselves and generate some more offense in a road contest against Apponequet, but fell short 2-1. This week, the boys face Apponequet again and will also play Case.

            Girls’ Soccer: After a tough week, Girls’ Soccer looked for redemption with three contests in five days. First up was Wareham at home, a game that resulted in a blowout 6-0 victory. Sophomore Ava Ciffolillo and senior Serena Jaskolka each scored, and seniors Amy Bichajian and Sarah Beaulieu had two goals apiece. The victory snapped a four-game losing streak and sealed a postseason berth on Senior Night. On Wednesday at GNB Voc-Tech, the girls dropped a 3-1 decision. Freshman Maddie Demanche scored on an assist from sophomore Leah Przybyszewski. On Friday, the Lady Bulldogs took on Apponequet and lost 1-0. The girls have three important games this week: Case, New Bedford High, and a rematch against Apponequet.

            Volleyball: Looking to get back on the right track, the girls played Wareham at home on Monday where they won on three consecutive sets: 25-21, 25-13, and 25-8. The game was played in honor of Breast Cancer Awareness month, and the team’s success was driven by senior captain Hayli Marshall (seven kills, six aces) and fellow senior Olivia Bellefeuille (nine aces). The girls traveled to play GNB Voc-Tech on Wednesday, where they lost three sets to one. On Friday night facing Apponequet at home, the girls tasted sweet success as they made their way to the playoffs by winning on consecutive sets: 29-27, 25-17, and 25-11. Senior Michaelah Nunes had 19 assists and seven digs, while Zoe Smith, also a senior, added seven kills and three aces. Volleyball will warm up for the postseason with three games this week, two of which are non-conference.

            Golf: After a second place finish at the SCC Championship, the Golf team looked to dominate at the State Sectionals in Dennis on Monday. However, their season came to an end as they finished in third place at the event, shooting a combined score of 330. The team was led by sophomores Collin Fitzpatrick and Jason Gamache, who each shot an 80, and senior captain Jared Nye, who finished his golf career by shooting an 85. Nevertheless, it was a terrific season for the Bulldogs, as they came within a stroke of winning the SCC Championship, and of course, were undefeated in their conference this year and suffered only a sole non-conference loss to Dartmouth High. The team’s youth movement, led by sophomores Fitzpatrick, Jacob Yeomans, and Gamache, and freshman Alex Henrie, indicates that this team will be a force to be reckoned with in future seasons.

            Field Hockey: The Lady Bulldogs started their busy week on Monday against Bourne at home, where they recorded a 2-0 victory. The goals were supplied by senior Morgan Middleton (on Senior Night, no less) and junior Alexis Parker. Staying at home on Wednesday against Apponequet, the girls locked into a close battle that resulted in a 1-1 tie, as Parker scored the only goal. On Friday at Case, Parker continued her strong week by scoring two goals in a 4-1 win. Sophomore Sophie Hubbard also had two, and assists came from sophomores Arissa Francis and Ali Hulsebosch as the Lady Bulldogs’ youth movement continued to pay off. On Saturday at home against non-conference Somerset-Berkeley, the team suffered a 1-0 loss. The girls are at Case on Thursday, and then face off against non-conference Falmouth High in a re-scheduled game this Sunday.

Below are the overall fall team records, followed by the conference records in wins, losses, and ties as of October 25.

Boys’ Cross Country: (6-1-0)(6-1-0); Girls’ Cross Country: (7-0-0)(7-0-0); Golf: (17-1-0)(16-0-0); Football: (2-5-0)(2-4-0); Volleyball: (10-8-0)(8-8-0); Field Hockey: (8-5-4)(7-2-4); Boys’ Soccer: (6-10-0)(5-7-0); Girls’ Soccer: (8-7-2)(8-5-1).

By Patrick Briand

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Silver Bells Christmas Fair

The Women’s Guild will hold its annual Christmas fair, Silver Bells, on Friday, November 13 from 4:00 – 7:00 pm and Saturday, November 14 from 9:00 am to 2:00 pm at the First Congregational Church, 11 Constitution Way, Rochester.

There will be many handmade items, a silent auction, baked goods, candy table and old to new items. Steamed hot dogs will be served on Friday night and chicken soup and delicious sandwiches on Saturday. Also, there will be pictures with Santa on Friday night.

New Bedford: The City of Light

In 1851, an English noblewoman wrote home to say, “I have been invited to visit New Bedford … it is said to be the ‘City of Palaces,’ from the beautiful buildings it contains.” New Bedford was once the jewel of Massachusetts, called by some the “City of Light.” It is this glimmering history that author Peggi Medeiros has explored in her newest book, New Bedford Mansions.

Medeiros, a research librarian and historic preservation expert, arrived at the Mattapoisett Free Library on a brisk, chilly Saturday, October 24, to discuss her latest book. She has written a book that details a New Bedford, which to many seems to be veiled firmly in the mists of the past.

“The brightest age of New Bedford,” said Medeiros, “begins at the end of the American Revolution, when the Rotch family moved to New Bedford from Nantucket, and ends at the onset of the Civil War.”

It was in this era, Medeiros said, that New Bedford became the whaling capital of the world and the wealthiest city per capita in the United States. She said proudly, “I wanted to write the biography of that New Bedford.”

During New Bedford’s reign as the City of Palaces, world-renowned politicians, painters, naturalists, and architects flocked to its shores. Frederick Douglass began his life as a free man in New Bedford. Bronson Alcott (the father of Louisa May) lectured in the city routinely. Harriet Tubman sought and received shelter in New Bedford to avoid fallout from the raid on Harper’s Ferry in West Virginia. John Quincy Adams visited the city as a young man; so did Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau. Ironically, Moby Dick author Herman Melville only spent about two weeks in the city.

John James Audubon used the whaling merchants as a patron bank; Medeiros described how he would “go from house to house of the different whaling merchants, selling them first editions of Birds of America.” One such edition, reputedly the seventh ever published, remains at the New Bedford Public Library. The book was bought by wealthy whaling merchant James Arnold and was donated to the library by his descendants.

These numerous luminaries were drawn to New Bedford through their friends, the whaling merchants of New Bedford. The people who lived in this glittering city inside great mansions bordering the deep blue Atlantic would define New Bedford in the years to come.

James Arnold and his wife Sarah, the buyers of the seventh Birds of America, were staunch abolitionists and also the aforementioned protectors of Harriet Tubman. The two were the benefactors of the famous Arnold Arboretum in Jamaica Plain, and they also built a beautiful mansion at 427 County Street.

“The old mansion is still easily visible,” said Medeiros. “Just look at the central brick building. What we have is a wonderful, original Federal Revival mansion, flanked by two Colonial Revival wings.” The building described is now known as the Wamsutta Club.

Modern New Bedford, however, possibly owes most to a strong and willful young bride. Rachel Smith Howland arrived in New Bedford in 1842, the new wife of Matthew Howland. Howland’s family was one of the richest whaling families in the country; Matthew himself kept the books of the family company. Rachel, to this day, manages to knock the socks off of everyone who learns about her. When she was not praying with Abraham Lincoln or serving on a school board for black children with Harriett Beecher Stowe, she was organizing useful public works for the city. She was active in the New Bedford school system, which Medeiros notes was “not any easier” in the 1860s as it is today.

“She did a remarkable thing. When the school board in one instance disagreed, she threw a party,” said Medeiros. “She invited the school board to the party and was able to make them all talk. What an accomplishment that was!”

In 1866, Howland organized the Association for the Relief of Aged Women of New Bedford. This charitable organization was meant to feed, clothe and care for elderly women in the city who had no family. The organization still exists to this day. So does Hazelwood Park – the rolling green space sits on the former grounds of Howland’s summer cottage.

It is often very difficult to imagine what New Bedford must have been like in these golden years. So much of its cultural history lies dormant, even when reminders of a glorious past loom directly before you. The mansion of Joseph Grinnell, a four-term Massachusetts senator, was for many years the library of the Swain School of Design.

Rachel Howland’s summer cottage still stands in Hazelwood Park, resting in what Medeiros terms “demolition by neglect.” Its windows are boarded up. Sections of roof cave in and green vines climb steadily up the fence that walls it off from the park. Here, the buildings that remain are often so removed from their history that the history is lost entirely.

Traces of the shining city history remain, observed by the sharp eyes of researchers like Peggi Medeiros. That day, Medeiros’ eyes shone as she recounted the grand buildings, famous visitors, and strong minds of old New Bedford.

For a moment, as Medeiros spoke, it was as if Rachel Howland herself was standing there behind us all: The mists part and I can see the great ships, the brick mansions and crowds of people. The history of the city often seems so far away, separated by a curtain over 100 years thick. Now though, I can feel their presence in the history that remains.

By Andrea Ray

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Marion’s Master Plan – A Work in Process

On Saturday, October 24, about 50 people in Marion gathered in the Music Hall for another round of workshops to discuss a master plan for the town. Navigating through the multi-layered process was SRPEDD’s Grant King, principal comprehensive planner. As he has done in previous planning workshops, King noted that SRPEDD’s role is assisting cities and towns who are building master plans – a process that takes many months and many minds.

The majority of those who came out on this autumn weekend morning were already well entrenched in the needs of the town. Nearly everyone present was or had previously been a member of a town board or committee. Members of the Planning Board, Board of Health, School Committee, Marion Open Space Acquisition Committee, and Townhouse Building Committee were present. However, one resident said she was new in town.

SRPEDD’s presentation included an overview of previous workshops where data had been collected from contributing residents on a vast number of topics. Data such as demographics of the community, transportation needs, infrastructure, rising water levels, and preservation of the historic nature of the town was collected and displayed on charts and graphs in an effort to bring focus to the most pressing and important changes the town is facing.

“We’re here to present draft elements that will be finalized by the end of the year,” King said, explaining that the main goal of the public workshops was to collect data that could indicate what the town needs and then for SRPEDD to aid the town “in getting there.”

The data collected thus far held such common themes as improving transportation and safety, creating zoning bylaws appropriate for growth, and protecting the harbor and the village. Woven throughout each common theme was a desire on the part of the community to maintain its present characteristic – a small New England seaside town.

King reminded the attendees that the town’s aging population, decreasing school enrollment, and dependence on residential property taxes would remain significant drivers or deterrents to growth well into the future.

Those striking data points were: a population that has aged by a decade since 1990 with 30 percent of all households having a least one person 65 years of age or older, and a steep decline in school enrollment with 50 percent of the entire student body now in junior and senior high school.

Sewer issues were also on the minds of residents. The public sewer system that services sensitive coastal neighborhoods is plagued by fresh water infiltration, King told the group. Federal and state clean water regulations that had become far stricter since the construction of the sewer system would have to be addressed soon, King noted.

After his presentation, King asked the assembled to break up into two groups for further informal discussions on the future of Marion. Additional data was collected and a final SRPEDD planning meeting is scheduled for sometime in January.

For more information or to give input to the master plan process, you may contact the Marion Planning Board at 508-748-3517 or via email to tsantos@marionma.gov. To view SRPEDD data, you may go to www.srpedd.org/marion-master-plan or visit www.facebook.com/marionplan.

y Marilou Newell

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Rochester Man Sentenced for Break In

A Rochester man has been sentenced to 15 months in the House of Correction after pleading guilty to a number of charges stemming from a break in at the Rochester Golf Course in July of this year.

Michael J. Eldridge, 31, of Wordell Street, pleaded guilty in Wareham District Court to breaking and entering in the night time, malicious destruction of property over $250, malicious destruction of property under $250, breaking into a depository and larceny from a building.

Eldridge was arrested July 23 by Rochester Detective Donald Kemmett after a week-long investigation into the break in. The suspect was identified from video surveillance footage.

Rochester Police Chief Paul Magee said, “This was great police work that resulted in jail time for an individual who has a long record. I am happy he is off the streets.” Rochester Police Officers Dylan Hicks and Nathan Valente assisted with the investigation.

George M. Barden Jr.

Long-time Mattapoisett resident George M. Barden Jr., musician, mineralogist, research genealogist, skilled carpenter/cabinetmaker, polymath, died September 28 2015, aged 97. His Big Band swing era arrangements and compositions were played by three dozen bands and performers, including a million-selling record among nearly 50 recordings of his arrangements.

George M Barden Jr. was born on November 6, 1917 in Wollaston, MA and spent his early years in and around Quincy, MA, and his junior high school and high school years in Miami, FL. He grew up in a musical household and started piano lessons at the age of six – and was still playing the piano and arranging until a few days before his death at the age of 97. But his great musical love was the trumpet; as a teenager he played first trumpet in the award-winning Miami Junior Symphony Orchestra as well as various local bands. The Miami Junior Symphony was awash in talent, and he played with and continued as friends with Leonard Rose (principal cellist of the New York Philharmonic, later a celebrated instructor at the Curtis Institute of Music and Julliard School of Music), Louis Elie (violinist in the New York Philharmonic), and Lowell “Skip” Martin (who played with Tommy Dorsey, Woody Hermann, and had a successful writing and arranging career in Hollywood).

His interest turned forever to big band swing jazz in his high school years, but he recognized the need for formal musical training, and attended Boston University School of Music starting in 1933, where he studied harmony and music theory and had the opportunity to play trumpet in the BU Symphony and was invited to play in Arthur Fiedler’s City Symphony. At the end of his third year, he was invited to join the Dean Hudson Orchestra, a swing band touring the east coast of the US. Barden jumped at the chance, correctly assessing this as an opportunity to further his education at an accelerated rate. He toured with Dean Hudson from 1937 through 1941, becoming the band’s arranger as well as trumpet player. When Dean Hudson and several other band members were drafted early in WW II, he joined the Royce Stoenner Orchestra, also an east coast swing band, for six months.

Many Big Bands were losing members as World War II began and personnel either enlisted or were drafted. In 1942, Glen Miller’s band was the house band at the famous Café Rouge in New York (perhaps the most prestigious Big Band booking in America), but Miller and selected band members enlisted in the US Army Air Force with the mandate to make swing music part of the military marching repertoire, leaving the Café Rouge with no house band. Amid much speculation about Miller’s successor, the Bob Allen Band was booked into the Café Rouge, and Bob Allen asked Barden to become the band’s arranger. The band opened to high critical acclaim, including specific mention of Barden’s arrangements (“Bob Allen Band Now Sensational,” Down Beat, Nov 1, 1942 and “Manhattan’s Music Makers,” The Host, Oct 1942).

In the USAAF, Miller needed a larger staff to fulfil his mandate to modernize military music. The Draft was taking its toll on the Bob Allen Band and Barden was invited to join Miller’s organization in the USAAF as an arranger, which he did, enlisting and then joining the Glen Miller USAAF Band in Atlantic City and then moving with them to New Haven. However, there were strong traditional elements in the USAAF, and Miller was encountering stiff internal opposition to his project. In 1944, Miller gave up on the idea of modernizing military music, dismantled the organization, and took a smaller band to England, while the rest of his organization was dispersed. Barden stayed behind and was trained to serve as a radio operator. Yet wherever he was stationed during the war, he always also served in the band attached to that post, both as arranger and performer. Having a true eye as well as perfect pitch, he also earned a rifle marksman medal.

In 1941, Barden had married Clyda Magee of Washington DC, and they had a son in 1944, George M Barden III. But with the separations and stress imposed by military service the marriage ultimately did not survive, and they divorced. When Clyda remarried, the young boy was renamed Tom Edwards by his adoptive father, Congressman Don Edwards.

Upon his release from active duty in late 1945, Barden immediately joined the Randy Brooks Orchestra, where he initially shared arranging assignments with John Benson Brooks (no relation to Randy), eventually taking over all arranging for the band. The Randy Brooks Orchestra thrived in the post-war years, playing in many of the top venues of the day, including the Café Rouge, The Latin Quarter, Frank Dailey’s Meadowbrook, the Beverly Hills Country Club, and others, recording a number of hit records, and playing many radio spots. Randy Brooks’ largest-selling hit record was “Tenderly” which sold over a million records and which was arranged by Barden. The story of that particular arrangement is described in the Time-Life series of books The Swing Era, Volume 1946. This became Barden’s most celebrated arrangement, and continues as a well-known musical standard to this day.

The Randy Brooks Orchestra failed in 1948 due to Brooks’ failing health and an ill-advised linkage with Ina Rae Hutton’s band. Barden based himself in New York and found himself in high demand as a free-lance arranger, providing arrangements for many of the top names of the day, including Vincent Lopez, Art Mooney, Vaughn Monroe, Skitch Henderson, Dizzy Gillespie, The Ames Brothers, Johnny Desmond and many others. He formed many friendships in the New York music scene, including with Emile Charlap, the premier music copyist of the day and later the 802 Music Union Contract Agent for New York City; they kept in touch until Charlap’s death in 2015. He also became the staff arranger (1948-50) for Vincent Lopez, the venerable band leader whose band had permanent residence at the Grille Room in the Taft Hotel, with a radio program once per week.

Barden married Virginia Rossney in January 1947 and had two sons, Robert born in 1947 and Richard in 1948. Within a few years, seeing the direction of music changing and not wanting to follow the new trends, he quit the music business in 1951 and moved his family to Long Island, where he lived until 1980. Here, he invented a new career for himself in mechanical and electronic manufacturing, and actively participated in his sons’ lives through the scouts, Little League, and school activities. During this time, he honed the carpentry skills taught to him by his father by expanding and finishing the interior of his Levitt house, and acquired a new interest in geology, mineralogy, and fossils that would stay with him for the rest of his life. He and his wife Virginia went on many rock and fossil hunting expeditions in the north eastern US, Canada, Colorado and New Mexico. They spent many happy hours polishing and finishing the rocks and making them into jewellery to sell at local craft fairs.

In 1980, Barden retired and moved to the house on Aucoot Road in Mattapoisett that his grandfather had built in 1935 and in which his mother had lived the last thirty years of her life. Together with Virginia, and doing most of the construction and finish work themselves, they doubled the size of the house and changed its character from a small cottage in the woods to a more functional family home. Together, they lived in this home until 2006 when they felt the need to downsize and moved into Mattapoisett village. Virginia died in 2012.

During the 1980’s while living in Mattapoisett, he revamped the Marion Museum geology, mineralogy and fossil collection and used his cabinet making skills to build display cases to show off parts of the collection that had been stored out of sight for years. At the same time, he served on the Board of Directors of the Middleborough Historical Society and was a frequent contributor The Antiquarian magazine. Also during the 1980’s through the 2000’s, he served as a research genealogist with the Middleborough Library, answering queries about family history from all over the country. He was Managing Editor of a book published by the Library to be used as a research tool, Old Cemeteries of Southeastern Massachusetts (1995), the print run of which was totally sold out.

George M. Barden Jr. is survived by his sons Tom Edwards, Robert Barden and Richard Barden, and by three grandchildren and five great-grandchildren.

 

Tabor Welcomes Students from Spain

On Friday, Tabor Academy welcomed 20 students and two teachers from Beques, Spain. One of the teachers was returning to Tabor, as well as several siblings of past exchange students who visited two or even four years ago when the exchange began.

Day students and some faculty families volunteered to host the Spanish students in their homes for 12 days, allowing them an immersion into American culture and life at Tabor. These American host students and their friends will find the opportunity equally rich. If experience holds, the Spanish students will make friends far and wide at Tabor, making quite a splash! In June, twenty Tabor students – not necessarily the hosts – will travel to Spain to live with the Spanish students in their homes, allowing an even broader reach to this successful cultural exchange.

After a weekend where they were free to be with their host families or attend the school trip to Cambridge to enjoy the Head of the Charles Regatta, the students arrived for a very full day at Tabor. They started in Chapel with a great talk about community, followed by a day of classes and sports. They ended the day with the keynote speech by Brown University’s Alan Harlam about ways college students are changing the world through social entrepreneurship. What a first day!

The rest of the week they are scheduled to visit area attractions such as the New Bedford Whaling Museum as well as learn about Tabor and Marion’s own history and charm. Of course, they will also be treated to a sail on Tabor Boy! Mostly, however, the students will be doing what they love best: shadowing their new American friends and enjoying all that Tabor has to offer at the school by the sea!

Scary Halloween Walk

The Sippican Lands Trust is hosting a super spooky, extra scary Halloween event for kids 8 years and older this Friday, October 30 beginning at 5:00 pm. Renowned SCARY storyteller David Mello will be featured as we walk through Aucoot Woods, property managed together by the Sippican Lands Trust and the Marion Open Space Acquisition Committee (MOSAC). Join us if you dare!

The event begins at our White Eagle Property. Take Parlowtown Road, located off of Route 6 in Marion across from the liquor store by the graveyard and follow the signs. Parking instruction will be provided. Please try to carpool if you are able. Make sure to wear proper footwear and warm clothing for trail walking in the evening. A small flashlight is suggested.

In case of inclement weather, the rain date is Sunday, November 1 at 5:00 pm.

Founded in 1974, the Sippican Lands Trust strives to acquire, protect and maintain natural areas in Marion. Its purpose is to conserve land, protect habitat and offer public access to the beautiful protected lands of our town. Currently, its main focus is to develop more events and educational programs for nature lovers of all ages!

Please do not hesitate to contact Head Steward Yelena Sheynin with any questions at 508-748-3080 or Yelena@sippicanlandstrust.org.

Visit us on Facebook and www.sippicanlandstrust.org.