Mattapoisett Yacht Club Results

There were two beautiful sailing nights this week for the Tuesday and Wednesday races. The Ensigns raced in a shifty and dying wind but that didn’t hinder Black Ice as they won both races. Odyssey got second for the night with a second and third, and Brou Ha Ha got a fourth and second placing them one point behind Odyssey for third for the night. Hamburgler finishes one point behind Brou Ha Ha in fourth. It’s still a very tight series with one week to go.

Series standings to date:

            In the Wednesday Night PHRF Racing, Class A, Restless lead the way in this Wednesday night race which now places her in first overall for the August series. Second place for the night goes to No Quarter Given with Coconuts placing third. In B Class, it was Chickadee with a 45 second win over Firn a Tine. Third place went to Kinsail.

            Close races for both classes and like the Ensigns, one week to go.

New Play Coming to the MAC Stage

The Marion Art Center is pleased to present These Shining Lives, written by Melanie Marnich and directed by Pippa Asker. Performance dates are October 13, 14, 15, 20, 21, 22, 27, and 28. Friday and Saturday shows will start at 7:30 pm, while Sunday matinees will begin at 2:00 pm. The cast includes Kiah Allaire, Oliver Asker, Ron Biever, Jack Boesen, Ann-Marie Foley, Allie Goodman, Bethany Lamoureux, Tristan McCann and Gary Sousa. Suzie Kokkins is stage manager, with Steven McManus and Owen Osterday as sound/lighting technicians.

            These Shining Lives chronicles the strength and determination of four women considered expendable in their day. The beauty of Catherine and her friends’ relationship with one another and with those they love, is a story of survival in its most transcendent sense, as they refuse to allow the company that stole their health to kill their spirits – or endanger the lives of those who come after them.

            Tickets, $20 for MAC members and $23 for nonmembers, can be purchased online at marionartcenter.org/events. The MAC is also a participant in Mass Cultural Council’s Card to Culture program, in collaboration with the Department of Transitional Assistance, the Women, Infants & Children (WIC) Nutrition Program, and the Massachusetts Health Connector, by broadening accessibility to cultural programming. Learn more about the MAC’s free or low cost ticket offerings at marionartcenter.org/about.

The Town-Wide Scavenger Hunt Continues

In case we didn’t give you enough time to complete your scavenger hunts, the Rochester Historical Society is extending the time to bring in your pictures until September 30 when you can bring them to the Museum during our Open House for our new exhibit: Maps, Signs, and Celebrations, Part 2 and our annual Cranberry Bake sale.

            You don’t need to find all of the places to earn a prize and we’d love to see what you’ve found. There should continue to be copies at the Rochester Library.

Bauer Doggedly Determined to Create Park

            Eight years ago, a 16-year-old Freemin Bauer was going to make a dog park in Mattapoisett his Eagle Scout project.

            “The head council, they were like, ‘it’s too much work, too much effort and it’ll take too long,’ which I can see now why,” the 24-year-old said, recalling his teenage idealism. “For my actual project, I went to the Fairhaven dog shelter and fixed that place up and gave a bunch of leftover materials and (orchestrated) funding for buying a washer to clean all the stuff, the beds, all their cleaning materials.”

            Bauer’s uphill climb to get Mattapoisett a dog park rages on, and the key is the land. His mother, Select Board member Jodi Bauer, is at his side pitching in however she can and hoping it happens.

            Saturday was the annual fundraiser dog walk in Mattapoisett, and participants walked their dogs around a prescribed village course beginning and ending at Center School, participated in a survey, and walked away with T-shirts promoting the cause.

            “I just need to secure a piece of land, make a committee for a dog park and then apply for a nonprofit 501(c)(3), then I can apply for the Stanton Foundation (grant), which is built for dog parks,” said Freemin Bauer.

            In 2017, Wareham voters approved a $20,000 commitment in Community Preservation Act funds that qualified the town for its 10% match and $225,000 in Stanton Foundation Grant funding for its 6-acre dog park. Freemin Bauer says Wareham’s dog park is several times larger than the one acre he would like to see dedicated for the purpose on Mattapoisett’s Holy Ghost Grounds.

            “I just want a little piece of land, one acre, not that much,” said Freemin Bauer. “It’s not like I’m asking for 100 or a whole giant piece of the town, I’m just asking for a little piece of property so that dogs can run around off leash. They need that. You let them free, they run around, they have their freedom.”

            Following Wareham’s lead, Freemin Bauer describes the proposed layout for a dog park on the Holy Ghost Grounds to be oval shaped much like a horse ring. The entrance, he said, would have a “sally gate” so that if a dog escapes as another enters, the exiting dog would go no farther than the outer gate. The plan would include separation of large and small dogs and elderly dogs.

            More than 35 other Massachusetts municipalities are listed on the Stanton Foundation’s website as participants in the foundation’s Dog Park Program. Freemin Bauer is trying to make Mattapoisett the first of the Tri-Towns to participate.

            Survey results are anticipated by the middle of September, at which point the Select Board would presumably discuss the matter at its next public meeting. Residents can find the Holy Ghost Grounds survey online at Mattapoisett.net and mattrec.net, and hard copies are available at the Town Hall, Mattapoisett Library and the Council on Aging.

By Mick Colageo

Town Party Beats Forecast

            The August 26 Marion Town Party at Silvershell Beach was a huge success by all available accounts, but the town’s Select Board first needed to hold a brief public meeting on August 23 to approve a Special, One Day Liquor License for ICJ Corp so it could serve alcoholic beverages at the event.

            Executive Assistant Donna Hemphill explained at that meeting that there was a last-minute change in bartenders, necessitating the special meeting of the board for the issuance of the license.

            There had been concern about the weather forecast going into last weekend, but in light of a promising afternoon, as noted by Select Board member Norm Hills, the town remained committed to Saturday as opposed to pushing the event to Sunday.

            “We’ve had that happen in past years as well, and I always find that we have better attendance on a Saturday,” Hemphill told the board.

            “How many times have I not gone fishing and it’s been fine, right?” asked Select Board member Randy Parker, agreeing with the decision to forge ahead on schedule.

            Due to town offices being closed on Labor Day, the next meeting of the Marion Select Board has been pushed to Wednesday, September 6, at 6:00 pm at the Police Station, where the board anticipates two public hearings for applications from Eversource to install an underground conduit and a utility pole.

Marion Select Board

By Mick Colageo

Elizabeth Croll Atkinson

Elizabeth Croll Atkinson, of Mattapoisett, passed away peacefully early Friday, August 25, 2023 at the age of 93. Born in Sayre, PA, she was the youngest daughter of LaRue and Charlotte Croll of Waverly, NY.

            Mrs. Atkinson was predeceased by her loving husband of 63 years, Robert, and her sister Roberta Paden. She is survived by her two children, Robert H. Atkinson, Jr. and his wife, Christine, of Charleston, SC and Sarah Atkinson Cammiso and her husband, Marty, of Vienna, VA. Elizabeth also leaves behind seven grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren.

            Elizabeth attended Stephens College in Missouri and received her Bachelor’s degree from Boston University. She taught elementary school on a military base in Salzburg, Austria and then returned and worked for Horticulture Magazine in Boston. After she met Robert, they raised their family together. During this time, she worked as a substitute teacher. In her early 50s, she became an interior designer focusing on Colonial homes.

            Mattapoisett was very special to her; she loved sailing, biking and spending time at the beach, as well as anitiquing and tending to her gardens. She was a beloved wife, mother, grandmother and great grandmother.

            In lieu of flowers, donations may be made in Elizabeth’s name to the Mattapoisett Public Library (www.mattapoisettlibrary.org), the Mattapoisett Land Trust (www.mattlandtrust.org) or Veterans on Deck (www.veteransondeck.org). A private family service will be held in Winchester, Massachusetts.

            Arrangements are with the Saunders-Dwyer Mattapoisett Home for Funerals, 50 County Rd. (Rt. 6), Mattapoisett. For online guestbook, visit www.saundersdwyer.com.

Suzanne Crancer Byron

Grace Suzanne was born in St. Louis, Missouri to Florence and Lester Crancer on 2/17/43. “Your mother has more grace wearing a potato sack than most women have in an evening gown” Dad used to say. She was still Grace when she graduated from Principia in ’60, but by graduation from Wellesley College in ’64, she was Suzanne Crancer Byron.

            Sue met Alex in Cambridge. She was an editor for the Teamsters under order by family friend Jimmy Hoffa to interview Alex. Mom would say “I knew immediately I was going to marry this man”. She was a sharply dressed, pirate-eyed beauty, he was a dashing Marine who swept her off her feet. “Saved me from a life of mere luxury” Mom would say with her wide, infectious smile. They couldn’t wait to marry, so they eloped.

            “I couldn’t not live on the ocean, not since the first time I saw it”, Mom used to say. So they moved to Marion where they raised four children and were happily married for 52 years.

            Sue and Alex owned and operated Byron’s Landing, a waterfront landmark in Buzzards Bay. She volunteered for political and humanitarian causes, saved historical buildings, fundraised for vets and managed town parties.

            Sue was humble. “Classy” Dad would say because of the way she made people feel. She was a legendary beauty, a bonafide genius and a gifted writer, but she refused to flaunt her many talents.

            A voracious reader and a lifelong student, Sue was an expert in antiques and New Bedford whaling history. An eternal optimist, Sue was fun and wickedly funny and always curious. “Only boring people get bored” she used to say.

            Sue was a profoundly kind and selfless mother. She believed in romance and added magic daily. Mom was love personified. She knew what was important and in what order. She taught us to seek seemingly impossible solutions to unasked questions.

            Sue died as she lived, in charge, with a song in her heart. An indomitable spirit to the end, surrounded by adoring family, gunning for Alex, the love of her life. Sue and Alex got married. “Best decision ever” us kids like to say these days.

            Sue died unexpectedly at St. Luke’s Hospital on 12/13/22. A private service was held August 27th in Marion.

            Sue is preceded in death by husband Alexander Byron, daughter Florence Marie Byron, brothers Lester Jr. and David Crancer and wife Rosie, sister Mary Horton and niece Faith Horton.

            Sue is survived by her children James Allen, Suzanne Elizabeth and Christopher Charles Byron, granddaughter Anthea Tripanier and husband David, great grandchildren, Delilah, David, and Artemis Tripanier, brother Robert Crancer and wife Barbara Hoffa, nephews Michael, David Jr., Jeffrey and Joe Crancer and David Horton, and nieces Holly and Barbara Jo Crancer.

Bit Player Critical to Ocean Life

            In preparing to write this story, we found that Dr. David Wiley’s August 15 presentation, hosted by the Marion Institute, covered a wide range of interconnecting topics. From the types of climate events he dubbed as “chaos” to migration habits of Right Whales to feeding and hunting strategies of the whales and of the shearwaters, a type of petrel who prefers temperate seawater, Wiley told a story of survival.

            Wiley, a research ecologist, has written hundreds of technical papers and published articles; his affiliation with such organizations as the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management is a small sample of his credentials. Add to that, Wiley’s research helped bring about policy changes resulting in the realignment of Boston’s Traffic Separation Scheme, a move that set a precedent for similar changes in the future.

            Wiley has been studying the Gulf of Maine and the Stellwagen Bank for decades in his quest to gather data on the interconnectedness of marine animals, especially the Right Whale and the shearwaters. Uniting these two disparate species in a fight for life is a third animal, the sand lance, a seemingly bit player in the daily battle of survival but in reality, the star of the show. Whales and shearwaters feed on sand lances.

            Wiley told the full house at the Marion Music Hall that sand lances live on the sandy bottom of the now-protected Stellwagen Bank. The large, sand, bank-like ocean bottom feature was created during the last ice age, Wiley explained. It was first noted by mariners in the 1800s, but it wasn’t until November 2, 1992, by President George H.W. Bush that it became fully protected, having the effect of providing some protection to the highly endangered Right Whales.

            The stated mission for protecting these 638 square nautical miles is to, “conserve, protect and enhance the biological diversity, ecological integrity and cultural legacy of the sanctuary.” Today whale-watching trips departing from Boston to Provincetown all head to Stellwagen in the summer to view the animals that migrate to the Stellwagen to feed in cooler waters than those found in southern climes in the summer.

            But, of course, we all know that warming seawater is endangering sea animals and the tiny prey they feed on. Wiley noted that everything from plankton to the sand lances are feeling the impact of global warming.

            Wiley said that test data indicates that even the smallest rise in sea temperatures is threatening sand-lance eggs, rendering them nonviable. The collapse of this primary food source may not survive acidification of the seas.

            In the meantime, there is study meant to build a more complete picture of just what is happening today in our offshore world. Wiley has studied whale behavior that indicates whales cooperate and hunt together for sand lances. By pointing their heads in a downward posture and nose to nose, they ferret out sand lances hiding beneath the sea-bottom soils. Above, as the whales feed, shearwaters take advantage of the action and are also feeding. This plowing activity by the whales creates an “up welling” of nutrients, an added bonus.

            An exciting development in the study of whales has been new tracking technology, Wiley said. He participates in tagging activities that collect a multitude of data points, including feeding habits, travel/migration patterns and even what the whales are hearing beneath the sea.

            And what about the numbers? The increasingly sad truth is that Right Whales may all be gone in our lifetime, Wiley commented. Current estimates indicate some 300 whales in the wild with possibly only 100 breeding females. “Two thirds of all Right Whales in existence are currently in our area.”

            Scientists like Wiley continue to explore new ways to collect data in an effort to find new ways to keep not only Right Whales part of the ecological scene, but to engage with those who have the power to balance human activity against the needs of the natural world.

            To learn more about Stellwagen and about Wiley’s work, visit stellwagen.noaa.gov and sanctuaries.noaa.gov.

By Marilou Newell

Mattapoisett Library Author Talk

On Sunday, September 10 from 2:00 pm – 3:00 pm, come to the Mattapoisett Free Public Library to hear Mattapoisett resident and author Shirley Haley talk about her new biography Angel in Mink: The Story of Mary Lasker’s Crusade for Research and the National Institutes of Health. Mary Lasker is one of those amazing women who have affected our lives in a powerful way, yet few of us have ever heard of her. She was a wealthy socialite, who could have used her status to achieve whatever goal she aimed for, yet with intelligence, intensity and focused action, her sponsorship turned the government’s small, poorly funded medical research effort into the largest public funder of that research in the world. The multifaceted enterprise we now know as the National Institutes of Health (NIH) grew essentially from Mary’s activities as what she called a “citizen advocate.” She was supported by her wealthy husband, Albert Lasker, and her close friend Florence Mahoney, a powerful advocate in her own right. Through their efforts, the first of which was to convince Congress and the administration that the health of the nation was their business at all, NIH grew from a single small agency with a budget of less than $3 million to a $4 billion enterprise in 1984, the year they named a building after her. A limited number of copies of Angel in Mink have been made available free of charge at the event by the ACT for NIH foundation. It is also available in electronic form on Amazon and as a free pdf download on the foundation’s website. Shirley Haley is retired from a career in science policy and medical research journalism that started in 1988 as managing editor of “Washington Fax,” a daily science policy publication via a remarkable new technology: the fax machine. The goal was to provide institutions that depended largely on federal funding for their research efforts current reports on happenings in Congress and the administration that might affect them. From there, Shirley moved to covering drug discovery and development for industry and investor-focused publications and attended national meetings focused on the latest discoveries, as well as the biotechs emerging to develop them. She retired in 2014, but was called back into service for what turned out to be a labor of great love: researching and writing the story of a great woman who changed the world. The talk is free and open to all.

Douglas “Doug” W Menard

Douglas “Doug” W Menard of Marion, Massachusetts peacefully passed away August 25 at his home in Marion, Douglas “Doug” W Menard of Marion, Massachusetts peacefully passed away August 25 at his home in Marion, Massachusetts. Doug was born on October 3rd, 1946 in New Bedford, Massachusetts. After high school he was in the Air Force, and upon finishing his duty he relocated to Miami, Florida and attended college for landscape design. He soon moved back up to the Northeast and to Marion where his landscape company flourished. He had an eye for creating distinctive garden designs and displayed his work in the Boston Flower and Garden show. Doug had a brief stint with fame when he had a small role in the 2012 Chris Messina movie, Fairhaven (2012). He loved simple pleasures, having good food and a cold beer on his deck looking out to the river, listening to the Allman Brothers, watching college basketball, attending concerts in the area, tinkering in his yard, and reminiscing about his childhood summer days on Long Pond. He is the loving father of Kyle Menard and Jarrett Menard. Doting grandfather to Gavin Menard and Logan Menard. He is survived by his sisters, Claudia Warrington, Marilyn Watts, nieces, and countless friends and colleagues. Rifty-boo! Contributions in Doug’s name can be made to SCVNA Hospice 200 Mill Road Fairhaven, MA 02719