Alan G. Inman

Alan G. Inman, 82, of Marion, died Thursday, December 28, 2023 at his home unexpectedly.

            Born in Taunton, he was the son of the late Clayton and Lillian (Rogers) Inman. A longtime resident of Marion, Mr. Inman worked as a utility operator for the Town of Marion Water and Sewer Division for many years. He retired in 1999.

            Known to friends and family as “Lanny”, he could be found boating on Buzzards Bay in his vessels, “Leprechaun” and “Bossa Nova”. He took many trips to Red Brook Harbor and the Chart Room. He enjoyed clamming and quahoging so much that his friends and family also called him “Clamming Lanny”.

            Alan was an animal lover and enjoyed cat, “Susie”. He also enjoyed New England sports teams, especially the Patriots and taking trips to Florida to visit family.

            He was the brother of the late Stephen J. Inman and his late wife Virginia Inman.

            Services were private.

            Arrangements by Chapman Funerals & Cremations – Wareham. To leave a message of condolence visit: www.chapmanfuneral.com

Marion Fire Department Recognizes Eversource Employee

Fire Chief Brian Jackvony and Town Administrator Geoffrey Gorman wish to recognize a local Eversource Energy employee who alerted first responders to a carbon monoxide incident on Tuesday, December 19, 2023.

            Following a rain and windstorm that caused widespread damage and power outages in eastern Massachusetts, Eversource employee Ed Gonet was working as a damage assessor when he noticed a generator running at a Front Street home that had power.

            Gonet smelled fumes and saw a cord running into the home through an open door. Feeling that something wasn’t right, he called 911.

            Marion firefighters arrived at 9:21 pm and found the occupant was sleeping upstairs. Firefighters measured low levels of carbon monoxide inside the home and determined there was a potential for levels to rise during the night. The generator was shut down and windows and doors were opened to vent the home.

            The resident was evaluated at the scene and declined transport to an area hospital.

            “We are thankful that Mr. Gonet was in the right place at the right time this week and reacted quickly when he felt something wasn’t right,” Chief Jackvony said. “His actions ensured we could respond to and resolve a carbon monoxide incident before it became a tragedy.”

            Added Town Administrator Gorman, “We are grateful for our partnership with Eversource Energy and thank all of their team members, including Mr. Gonet, who work diligently during weather events to evaluate outages and ensure power is restored for our residents quickly and safely.”

            Community members are reminded that a generator should always be placed outdoors facing away from doors, windows and vents. Always follow the manufacturer’s instructions and learn how to use a generator safely before an outage. Carbon monoxide alarms should also be installed on every level of the home and tested regularly. If a CO alarm goes off or you suspect CO exposure, get out of the house to get fresh air and immediately call 911.

Sippican Choral

Come Sing with Sippican Choral This Spring. Rehearsals for our Spring 2024 concert will begin on Monday, January 8, at 7:00 pm, at Wickenden Chapel, 86 Spring Street, Marion. Please note new, earlier start time. Doors open at 6:30 pm, so come early to register and pick up your music envelope. Are you unsure about being able to sing with us? Come anyway! Try us out for two weeks, then decide. Dues of $40.00 are due by the third rehearsal for all singers.

            Our Spring Concert will be held at Wickenden Chapel on Sunday, May 5, at 4:00 pm. Our featured work will be French composer Gabriel Fauré’s Requiem in D Minor, a prayerful lament for the dead, noted for its serene and peaceful outlook – and its sublimely beautiful music. Full program details will be posted on our website at sippicanchoralsociety.org in mid-January.

Big Books, Little Books and Sea Monkeys

Books are my preferred Christmas gifts, and this year was no different.

            Last year my son gave me a rather large book, nearly 1,000 pages, which is the size of a concrete block and about the same weight. He should have given me a set of barbells along with it because I had to train until Valentine’s Day just to be able to pick it up. I’m kidding, but I am proud to say I have finished about half of it. The type was so small an eagle couldn’t have seen it if he were perched on the back of my recliner. I had to purchase a magnifying glass, which was appropriate since the book was about the FBI.

            This year he gave me a few more books, also big and heavy. (I really must talk to that young man and remind him just how old and infirm I am.) Had he asked, I would have suggested he give me comic books. The rage these days are graphic novels, but they are still comic books to me. They are much thinner and lighter and have fewer words, mostly drawings, which I can more readily relate to.

            They do remind me of the comic books I devoured in my youth. There was a drug store at the corner of Main Street and Route 6 that had a huge magazine section as you came in the back door. I’d sneak in so as not to be noticed and sit there reading all the popular comics until Mr. Lariviere, the owner and pharmacist, spotted me and shooed me away. “Buy one or go home.” he’d scold.

            Off I’d march down Route 6 until I reached Tinkham’s Pharmacy, near the Post Office. It shared the building with a baseball factory, which later became a convenience store and a dry cleaner. The drugstore became the infamous “wind tunnel,” the depository of all town gossip. There are hair and nail salons there now.

            Tinkham’s had an even bigger comic book selection than Lariviere’s. The magazine racks were by the front window, out of view of the pharmacist, so I could sit there all day perusing the pulp pages of Archie Comics, Superman and Captain America. (I might accidentally glance at the Police Gazette, Hollywood Confidential or Modern Romances.)

            The end pages would always have advertisements. One promised you could “create life before your very eyes,” just added water and Walla, “Real Sea Monkeys” which were actually brine shrimp. Another was the Charles Atlas ad that proclaimed “97-lb. weakling becomes the world’s most perfectly developed man” and how “in only fifteen minutes a day, you too can become a real man.” A tempting deal for a skinny, bespectacled kid like me.

            One ad I did fall for was the Art Instruction School’s “Draw Me” contest. Just copy the pirate on the page and you could “win” a scholarship to their correspondence course. I did win and, though the course was free, my folks had to pay for the textbooks. Thankfully they succumbed to my begging, and I am still drawing today. Unlike with college now, the debt has long been paid.

            Alas, comic books took a hit in the late forties and nearly disappeared by the late fifties. Claims that comics corrupted youth, making mush of our minds and turning us all into delinquents spread like wildfire across the country. Town meetings were held, comic books were burned at public rallies. Groups cleaned out drugstore shelves to protect “our youth” from corrupt ideas. Words like indoctrination were bandied about in newspaper editorials.

            There were even Senate Hearings held, and a Comic Book Code was adopted, which resulted in a small stamp appearing on all comic books declaring “Approved by the Comic Code Authority.” By then I was reading Sports Illustrated, which I had to pay for. Comic books were for kids.

I sure wish I had gotten comic books for Christmas.

            Editor’s note: Mattapoisett resident Dick Morgado is an artist and retired newspaper columnist whose musings are, after some years, back in The Wanderer under the subtitle “Thoughts on ….” Morgado’s opinions have also appeared for many years in daily newspapers around Boston.

Thoughts on…

By Dick Morgado

River Junction Fixes Paperwork

            The River Junction, the recently rebuilt tavern that sits at the site of the old Gilda’s at 27 Wareham Road (corner of Route 6 and River Road near the Wareham town line), got approval on a state-mandated correction to its alcohol license during a brief, public hearing held by the Marion Select Board on December 29 at the Town House.

            “This is an administrative action only and does not change the setup, layout or previous request,” explained Town Administrator Geoff Gorman to the board.

            The board approved an application for an Alteration of Premises to an existing, on premises license for the sale of all alcoholic beverages, per the request of the state’s Alcohol Beverage Control Commission (ABCC.) The information in the original application filed by the owners did not match the other information on the premises, so a public hearing was necessary to correct the documentation.

            No comment on the case was forthcoming from the board or the public during the public hearing.

            In other actions, the board voted to accept an anonymous, $150 donation to the Harbormaster Department.

            The board approved three Water/Sewer commitments: $1,322,932.31 (quarterly billing December 19, 2023), $155 (sewer-reconnection fee December 19, 2023) and $1,241.60 (final readings December 20, 2023.)

            Gorman publicly recognized retiring Finance Director Judy Mooney, whose final day on the job was on December 29, the day of the meeting. New Finance Director Heather O’Brien, whose finance background is in the business world, has spent the last few months working with Mooney to learn the ropes.

            The Select Board entered executive session under state law for Purpose 3 for strategy for negotiations with nonunion personnel (the town administrator) and/or to conduct collective-bargaining sessions or contract negotiations with nonunion personnel and did not return to public session.

            The Marion Select Board scheduled its first regular meeting of the new year on Wednesday, January 3 and has also scheduled a special meeting for 12:00 pm on Thursday, January 4. With Martin Luther King Jr. Day on Monday, January 15, the board has also set its second regular meeting of 2024 on a Wednesday: January 17 at 6:00 pm. Until further notice, the Select Board is meeting in the conference room at the Town House Annex Building (Main Street entry.)

Marion Select Board

By Mick Colageo

Native American Archaeological Sites

On Friday, February 9 from 6:30 to 7:30, the Marion Natural History Museum will be hosting a presentation on “Native American archaeological sites in and around Marion.” Principal investigator Erin Flynn of The Public Archaeology Laboratory, Inc. will be discussing some of the local Native American sites they’ve been studying and reviewing a few articles from the museum’s collections. Please RSVP on the museum’s website: www.marionmuseum.org/login. A $10 donation to the museum will be much appreciated.

Book (re)Marks: What’s up this Month at Plumb?

Happy New Year everyone. Book (re)Marks is back for 2024, offering up all the info you need about books, what’s happening at the Library and more.

            Since it’s a new year, we’d like to remind you of all the things happening at the Library that you can participate in.

            Let’s start with book clubs. The COA Book Club will be meeting at 1 pm, Tuesday January 16 to discuss “What Happened to the Bennetts” by Lisa Scottoline. This suspenseful page-turner will keep you guessing right to the end. Books & Babble Book club will be discussing “The Book of Hope: a Survival Guide for Trying Times” by Jane Goodall at 6:30 pm, Thursday January 25. This is the first book under our 2024 theme: It’s Wild Out There.: Animals and Nature. Books for both clubs are available for pickup at the Library.

            Do you like to knit, crochet, or cross-stitch? If so, join us on Monday nights from 6 to 8 pm for a social gathering of handcrafters. Bring your latest project, something from the stash, or a problem pattern to work out.

            Baby, Toddler, and Preschool Story times return this month for a combined Winter/Spring session running from January 16 thru March 29, except for the week of February school vacation. All sessions are currently full; please contact Ms. Lisa for waitlist information. Email: lfuller@sailsinc.org.

            For kids, the Scrambled Word will return in January, changing every Monday. There will also be a Snowman Seek and Find in the building. Completing either of these activities earns you a prize from the treasure chest.

            If you’re interested in helping out the Library with fundraising, activities and events, come see what the Friends of the Library are all about. They will be meeting at 6:30 pm Thursday January 4 to wrap-up the Holiday Auction, as well as discuss plans for upcoming spring fundraising opportunities, including a book sale and a clothing drive.

            The Board of Library Trustees is meeting at 6:30 pm Monday, January 8. This meeting is open to the public and the agenda is posted here: www.townofrochestermass.com/node/425/agenda.

            And don’t forget about our selection of Zoo and Museum Passes, offering you free or discounted admission to seven attractions in the area. Our newest pass is for the Trustees of Reservations Properties, offering admission to trails, preserves and historic properties across the State.

            Questions? Please call 508-763-8600 or email info@plumblibrary.com. As always, we hope to see you soon at the Library.

Good-Bye to a Stormy 2023

The Year 2023, as displayed this week with 49 of our 52 Wanderer covers, saw Mattapoisett residents and the town’s water-treatment plant survive an EF-1 tornado that left a spectacular damage path north of I-195.

            The short-lived twister uprooted many trees, taking toolsheds (and at least one generator) with them and blocking roads. A hot tub even flew over a shed and landed across the street multiple properties away from its home. One resident told The Wanderer that his cell phone received an emergency signal and in 30 seconds, the forest had landed in his front yard – sideways.

            Towns are still collecting from insurance companies on damage to public property.

            Speaking of the water-treatment plant, the Mattapoisett River Valley Water District Commission took significant steps toward the 2024-planned installation of a state-of-the-art filtration system in the plant that feeds five MRV member communities.

            Concerned about the potential loss of control of the water produced in its own lakes and ponds, officials in member town Rochester took issue with a deed restriction orchestrated by the Buzzards Bay Coalition that the latter says is meant solely to protect water supplies. Rochester water officials have long disagreed with the state’s redistribution of its water to the City of New Bedford, with no say in the matter nor compensation due Rochester.

            Meantime, Rochester has appointed committees to study feasibility and construction in hopes of making major upgrades to its Fire and Police stations affordable to the town’s taxpayers. Two steps taken that are meant to lower costs: Rochester became the first municipality in the state to opt out of the state’s Green Communities program and has also opted out of building according to the stretch code.

            Upon complaints, Rochester’s Plumb Library no longer hosts a Tri-Town Against Racism Little Free Library, but word on the street is a new location is being considered by the community-based group.

            In Marion, site preparation began for the construction of the new harbormaster’s headquarters, while design continues in preparation for a new DPW operations center at Benson Brook.

            Nitrogen, a threatening word in harbors, became a scary one for Tri-Town homeowners who have apparently, for the time being and because they reside on the mainland side of the Cape Cod Canal, been spared a mandatory upgrade to their home septic systems. Albin Johnson, a founding member of the Marion Board of Health, is pushing to get that town to rescind its bylaw requiring denitrification technology in any new construction.

            A second young sailor with local ties who crossed the Atlantic on a solo journey survived an attack of Orca whales in a follow-up sail that had just left Portugal for Greece. Locally, hundreds cheered as Arabella, a 38-foot wooden sailboat built in western Massachusetts, set sail out of Mattapoisett Harbor.

            Among many significant losses, the community will most remember WWII veteran and centurion Howard Tinkham, a cranberry grower whose donations of hundreds of acres of land have been key to the Tri-Towns’ water-conservation effort.

            Finally, The Wanderer wishes happy 2024 to all retirees from public service in the Tri-Towns, including former Mattapoisett Schools Principal Rose Bowman, Marion Finance Director Judy Mooney and longtime Rochester Select Board member Woody Hartley.

By Mick Colageo

Elks Student of the Month

The Elks of Wareham/New Bedford Lodge No. 73 sponsors the Elks Student of the Month and Student of the Year Awards for students enrolled in local area high schools. The criteria used in nominating a student includes a student who excels in scholarship, citizenship, performing arts, fine arts, hobbies, athletics, church, school and community service, industry and farming.

            We congratulate Jacob Newton of Mattapoisett for being selected as Student of the Month for December by the Old Rochester Regional High School Faculty and Staff.

            Jake is a senior on the Unified Basketball team and exemplifies the Unified Sports mission of “meaningful inclusion.” He is a rebounding machine and creates countless opportunities for his teammates to score. Jake is a positive role model for his teammates and always has a smile on his face. If not on the court, Jake is cheering on the sidelines and high fiving his teammates. He is an outstanding example of what it means to be a Bulldog.

Tracks and Traces with MassAudubon and MLT

MassAudubon and Mattapoisett Land Trust have partnered up to run a fun family hike this winter, Tracks and Traces. Join us for a hike on Saturday January 13 in the Old Aucoot District where we will be searching for signs of wildlife. We will learn about animal tracks and other clues that help us to identify wildlife.

            The hike will go from 10:00-11:00 am, beginning from the Mattapoisett Land Trust trailhead at the Prospect Road parking lot (between 29 and 33 Prospect Rd.) All folks are welcome – this is a family-friendly program.

            Please dress appropriately for the weather and wear sturdy shoes that don’t mind some mud. This hike is free but registration is required beforehand on MassAudubon’s website; search the date ‘January 13th’ on www.massaudubon.org/programs.