Paula J. Paulino

Paula J. Paulino, 71, of Mattapoisett died unexpectedly on Tuesday, October 11, 2022 at Charlton Memorial Hospital with her family by her side.

            Born in Cambridge, daughter of Albert Tirrell and the late Joan (Tierney) Tirrell, Paula lived in Brighton, Framingham, and Ashland, MA, before retiring to Mattapoisett.

            She is survived by her loving husband Richard, her daughter Julie Cowern, her son Scott Paulino, her two grandsons Connor and Aiden Cowern, her brother Ron Tirrell, and her sister Diane Ford.

            Paula was formerly employed as an administrative aide for the Town of Ashland DPW and later for the Ashland Fire Department for 18 years until her retirement.

            Her greatest joy in life was spending time at the beach with her family, friends, and especially her grandsons.

            Her Memorial Visitation will be held Sunday, October 30, 2022 from 2-4 pm in the Saunders-Dwyer Mattapoisett Home for Funerals, 50 County Rd., Mattapoisett. In lieu of flowers, donations in Paula’s memory may be made to a charity of your choice. For directions and guestbook, visit www.saundersdwyer.com.

Mark Robertson Davis

Mark Robertson Davis of Marion, MA passed away on Monday, October 10, 2022 at St. Elizabeth’s Hospital in Brighton, MA at the age of 51.

            Mark was born on March 9, 1971 in Wareham, MA. He is the son of the late Charles R. and Lucia (Jenkins) Davis. He was raised and lived in Marion most of his life.

            Mark was a graduate of Old Rochester Regional High School class of 1989. He then went on to graduate from New England Institute of Technology. He spent 25+ years in the construction business where he was well respected in project management positions and often worked as a structural engineer. In his final position he worked as facilities manager at Teledyne Marine of Falmouth, MA. He was very conscientious in any task he performed.

            Mark had numerous interests which included baking, music, as well as walking the beach. He was very artistic and loved playing his guitar.

            He is survived by his wife, Jennifer (Souza) Davis, sons Caleb, and Jacob Davis and daughter, Hannah Davis, his siblings, Robert Davis, Stephanie Davis, Scott Davis, Glenn Davis and Charles Davis all of Marion and fourteen nieces and nephews.

            His celebration of life will take place on Saturday October 22, 2022 at Nickerson Funeral Home on 40 MacArthur Blvd. Bourne, MA. at 9:30-11:30. Burial immediately following the service at Center Cemetery in Rochester on 30 Dexter Lane.

            In lieu of flowers expressions of sympathy can be made in Mark’s memory to the American Heart Association https://www.heart.org/en/get-involved/ways-to-give.

Water District Committed to Upgrade

            The economic plates that have shifted under everyone’s feet these last few months are also posing big-picture complications but not stalling all possible preparation work on a filtration upgrade project for the Mattapoisett Water Treatment Plant.

            In reporting to Tuesday’s public meeting of the Mattapoisett River Valley Water District Commission, Jon Gregory of engineering firm Tata & Howard identified a key concern: the lead time in the supply chain where it concerns a State Revolving Fund (SRF) is “not good.”

            SRF offers affordable loan scenarios to Massachusetts municipalities for the improvement of their water-supply infrastructure and drinking-water safety.

            The state-of-the-art membranes that the MRV is working to buy from the Koch Company is 12-18 months off course. In delivering his WTP Upgrade Project Budget update, Gregory said the MRV needs “to get the procurement ‘spec’ on the street as soon as possible and look at the other funding options.”

            He said there is still some time as to whether the district will receive funding. He recommended that the MRV decide on two separate contracts, one to get the project on the street and the other to fund full design.

            Gregory said he will meet with MRV attorney Blair Bailey (also member town Rochester’s town counsel) to tweak the application just so with all the appropriate language to maximize the district’s consideration at the state level. He stressed that none of that work will change the project or the price.

            Bailey explained to the membership that there is a 45-day waiting period in which one of the member town’s select boards can hold a meeting to object to a decision. He and Gregory will presumably amend the application to get the language they want, give it to the select boards, then wait.

            It is anticipated that the commission will schedule a special meeting well in advance of its next scheduled public meeting (November 7) in order to take any strategic action based on what select boards have to say at their next meetings.

            Paul Howard of Tata & Howard said, “We want to be ready to go with that 12- to 18-month procurement.”

            Member Nick Nicholson asked about potential cost increases with the delay. Gregory said that so far, costs have not changed, only the lead time to get the equipment on site. “We’re comfortable with the contingency that’s in there,” Gregory said.

            Fairhaven town employee Anne Carreiro, freshly voted on to serve as the MRV District Water Commission and the closely related Water Supply Protection Advisory Committee, asked if funding could come from the American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA), but multitown districts are ineligible for consideration according to Howard.

            It was clarified that the MRV is not seeking alternative funding for the project’s entire $7,200,000 price tag, just the material costs.

            In his Tata & Howard Report, Gregory told the commission that a site visit was held a couple of weeks ago, after which an additional piping location was confirmed. He said, “Everything is going to work as it should with the existing piping at the plant – everything is going to be a retrofit.”

            Also approaching the calendar for the member towns is Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) training that Gregory said Tata & Howard is available to conduct ahead of Thanksgiving.

            In his Treatment Plant Operations Update, Henri Renauld discussed compressor problems, the HVAC system on the roof and one low lift-control problem that has been repaired.

            Bailey encouraged Carreiro to make sure the Fairhaven Board of Selectmen signs off on her additional job. She is scheduled to earn $34 per hour while doing MRV business.

            Commission Treasurer Wendy Graves announced a total month-ending balance of $153,378.97, and Committee Treasurer Jeff Furtado listed several invoices for approval and announced a total ending balance of $96,001.50.

            The next meeting of the MRV Water Supply Protection Advisory Committee is scheduled for Tuesday, November 8, at 3:30 pm with the MRV Water District Commission meeting to immediately follow at 4:00 pm on the same Zoom call.

MRV Water District Commission/Water Supply Protection Advisory Committee

By Mick Colageo

Fall Free Family Fun Festival

Mattapoisett Lions Club’s sixth annual Fall Free Family Fun Festival (FFFFF) is just around the corner.  Make plans to bring the entire family out to enjoy a beautiful fall day in Mattapoisett. No registration required. Saturday, October 22, noon to 4:00 pm. Rain date: Saturday, October 29, Shipyard Park, Mattapoisett

            Hay rides (two tractors this year), face painting, fortune teller, pumpkin patch (each child may take one home, while they last), pumpkin bowling, Pin the nose on the pumpkin, coloring station, corn hole toss, refreshments and goody bags (while they last), music. Kids–Wear your costumes!

            In case of questionable weather, please check Mattapoisett Lions Club’s Facebook page for last minute announcements: www.facebook.com/MattapoisettLionsClub

Grieving During the Holidays

Grieving during the Holidays is a workshop designed to help you “make it through” the holidays and honor your loved one too! Join us for tips and coping skills to help you navigate in a healthy way through the end of the year Holiday season! In-person workshops: Thursday, November 3 at 9:30 am at the Mattapoisett Council on Aging; Monday, November 7 at 6:00 pm at the Somerset Public Library; and Thursday, November 10 at 5:00 pm at the Fairhaven Council on Aging. Call 508-973-3227 to register for an in-person workshop. Or access the video at: www.southcoast.org/visiting-nurse-association/our-services/bereavement-services.

Grace-fully Emerging on The Music Scene

            “Throughout my travels this year as I see other parts of the country, it just reminds me how much I love it here.”

            Rochester resident Grace Morrison-Hartley is talking about her cross-country tours as the town’s most-accomplished singer-songwriter versus pining for the homebase she has shared with her husband Scott Hartley and three-and-half-year-old son Brayton Hartley for the past five years.

            “Every time I travel, I realize I love it here more,” the Wareham native explained. She said it’s the reason one song on the album she will release early next year is titled “Massachusetts.”

            “The song is just about that feeling,” she said.

            But travel she has had to accept in order to grow a career that is blossoming more within the last year than in any of the 20 years before it. She said she manifested her career growth by deciding one day to do more than just teach music lessons to 65 students a week and perform in local bars. “I decided to fully go after what I wanted to do,” she said. “I decided to walk through the doors already open for me.”

            Morrison-Hartley signed up for songwriting contests, acquired a booking agent and cultivated the relationships she was starting to have with fellow artists. “It’s a relationship business,” she explained.

            The strategy has worked very well. In January, she went to Nashville, Tennessee, to do some songwriting and recording. In February, she was back home to perform at the Zeiterion Theatre in New Bedford. In March, she drove to New Mexico and Arizona for concerts in the southwest.

            Out there, she learned she had been nominated for awards in two songwriter competitions. In May, at the first of those, the Songwriters Serenade competition, in Austin, Texas, she met Susan Gibson, who wrote the song “Wide Open Spaces” for The Chicks. Gibson was a judge in that competition.

            Morrison-Hartley said she was honored when Gibson said to her, “I have no critique for you. I’m just a fan.”

            “To have that said to you by someone like her was pretty validating,” Morrison-Hartley noted.

            Then came regional concerts in Pennsylvania, New Jersey and locally in Onset, followed by the Gatlinburg (Tennessee) Songwriters Festival in August. There, she shared the stage with singer-songwriter Dana Hunt Black, who has written two number-one hits for country star George Strait.

            In September, she had her Bluebird Cafe debut in Nashville, then played the Whitefish (Montana) Songwriter Festival, closing out the month in Austin as an Official Showcase Artist at the Southwest Regional Folk Alliance Conference.

            In the middle of that, Morrison-Hartley got a call from the “Blast on the Bay Songwriter Festival” in Port St. Joe, Florida, inviting her to perform on October 20th. “All thanks to songwriter Dana Hunt Black championing me,” Morrison-Hartley said. “Truly a ‘pinch me’ moment! She said she loved what I did and wanted to write with me. We’re planning to get together while I’m in Florida.”

            On Thursday, November 3rd, Morrison-Hartley will perform at The Spire in Plymouth (tickets are now on sale at spirecenter.org. On Saturday, November 5th, she’ll perform with Connor Garvey at the Linden Tree Coffeehouse in Wakefield; and on Tuesday, November 15th, she will be back at The Spire to open for Chris Smither. And soon her new single, “Fumbling In” will be released.

            In March 2023, Morrison-Hartley will return to Austin for a tour timed to the release of her new album, “Maybe Modern.”

            Meanwhile, you’ll be able to find her in Rochester. The day she spoke to The Wanderer, she was heading to pick cranberries with her father-in-law Woody Hartley. Look for her YouTube video of her song “Daughter.” It was partly filmed at Eastover Farm in Rochester.

            What are the other secrets to her success?

            “The old trope about entertainers is that they are lazy and not good at business,” she said. “My way has to be good at those things.”

            Morrison-Hartley said she treats her career everyday as a full-time job, with morning vocal practice and two hours of songwriting. She also points to her family support. “The support of my husband and in-laws and my mom,” she said. “I couldn’t do all this without them. They are a great gift.”

By Michael J. DeCicco

Murders Most Foul

Well, you know Halloween season has arrived when stories of mass murderers, true crime real drama, are on offer. That was the case on October 6 when the Mattapoisett Museum hosted Chris Daley.

            By day, a history teacher and by night, a researcher and author, Daley has specialized on researching the gory, bizarre and unexplainable details of mass murders in New England. For some 30 years, he has been providing crime-hungry seekers with what they want: details, horrific details of true crimes.

            In this presentation, a Zoom audience heard the backstories of four infamous killers, one very well known in this area, Ms. Lizzie Borden, and the others less well known until now. There was “The Boy Fiend,” Jesse Pomeroy of Boston; “The Merry Widow,” Grayce Asquith and “The Angel of Death,” Jane Toppan.

            Skipping to those murderers who might be lesser known locally, let’s first focus on The Boyfriend, Jesse Pomeroy. As one can guess, murderers have backstories, histories that one may find equal to the evil thrust upon the victims.

            Pomeroy was an abused child, Daley said. He suffered beatings that were really a form of torture from an early age at the hands of his own father, an alcoholic. Pomeroy would display frightening behavior by today’s standards, killing animals for instance, but by the age of 12, as several young boys went missing and subsequently found dead in states too horrific to write here, Pomeroy was found to be the culprit.

            Due to his young age, he wasn’t sent to jail but to the Westborough Reformatory where he excelled as a student and model resident. Within two years, he was released. Soon thereafter, the young Horace Millan was found dead. Pomeroy was soon fingered as the perpetrator. During the police interrogation, Pomeroy confessed to also killing Katie Curran, a missing little girl later found in the basement of the home that the killer shared with his mother.

            Pomeroy was convicted and sentenced to life in solitary confinement. He spent 43 years alone and another 15 years at Bridgewater Hospital until his death in 1932.

            Jane Toppan started life deprived of warm, nurturing parents. Her mother died when she was very young, leaving her to a father more interested in drinking than fathering. Jane Toppan would be placed in an orphanage by the age of six and then indentured to the Davis family, which by all accounts treated her well. Her relationship with the Davis family seemed the best solution, and she’d spend many years with them after her indentured status had ended. She called the Davis’ daughter her sister, so close was the relationship.

            But unbeknownst to all, Toppan had been secretly mixing toxic medications together and injecting her charges at the old-age home where she worked as a nurse. Because of the age of the residents, no one thought their sudden deaths were suspicious, leaving Toppan to use their bodies for her sick and twisted experiments. She’d inject just enough anesthetics to keep them teetering at the edge of death before seeing through their demise.

            Daley went on to share that when one of the Davis family members met Toppan at her home in Cambridge to collect summer rents owed, she served an innocent-looking cup of tea. The laced beverage did its job, killing off Mattie Davis. In a twisted sense of duty, Toppan accompanied the corpse back home to Cataumet. Within a short period of time, the remaining members of the Davis family would be dead.

            After an investigation of wrongdoing championed by one of the Davis family friends, toxicology studies proved they had all died from strychnine. Toppan was found guilty by reason of insanity and committed to the Taunton State Hospital. Before her death in 1938, she would admit to killing 31 people before wiping out the Davis clan.

            “The Merry Widow,” as dubbed by the press in the 1930s, was Grayce Asquith. Before sharing her tale, Daley said that Asquith by the 1930s standards was a bit of a wanton woman until she met her fiancé John Lyons. This is a story not really of serial killings but of a killing under mysterious circumstances and a disappearance that has never fully been solved.

            Asquith would go missing, as would Lyons. When body parts began turning up in Whitman Pond and Boston Harbor, police were able to identify the victim as Asquith. Daley said she had very small feet, which was confirmed by her friend. An investigation of her home confirmed that a dismemberment had taken place there. Evidence at the scene clogging the bathroom pipes – well, better left to your imagination.

            Police learned that at the home had been a visitor named Oscar Bartolini. At his apartment, police found the same materials that had been used to wrap up Asquith’s body parts. He would subsequently be found guilty of her murder and sentenced to death, which was commuted to life. He was released from custody in 1961 and summarily deported to Italy.

            As for the case of Lizzie Borden, Daley reviewed known facts of the case and the public sentiment towards the accused at the time. The mystery remains: Even though Borden was found not guilty, did she do it and, if not, who?

            To learn more, visit daleyhistory.com.

Mattapoisett Museum

By Marilou Newell

FMCOA Annual Meeting

The Annual Meeting of the Friends of Marion Council on Aging (FMCOA) will be held at 5:00 pm on Thursday, October 20 at the Benjamin D. Cushing Community Center, 465 Mill Street, (Route 6), Marion.  Following the meeting, light refreshments will be served. It will be a time to reflect on the past year’s accomplishments and to assess future needs.  We continue to promote the emotional wellbeing of the Marion community by proving financial support for programs, activities and needs for our ever-growing Marion Council on Aging. Funds are raised through fundraising efforts, membership dues, sponsorships and/or corporate gifts. 

            Anyone who wishes to learn about the Friends of the Marion COA is encouraged and welcome to attend the annual meeting on Thursday, October 20 at 5:00 pm. For further info on the FMCOA, please refer to the Friends website:  www.fmcoa.org.

Sippican Historical Society

Marion (Old Rochester) is one of the oldest towns in the United States, and the Sippican Historical Society maintains an extensive collection of documentation on its historic buildings. In 1998, the Sippican Historical Society commissioned an architectural survey of Marion’s historic homes and buildings. Over 100 were cataloged and photographed. SHS will feature one building a week so that the residents of Marion can understand more about its unique historical architecture.

            The dwelling at 306 Front Street is a one-and-one-half-story, cottage-scale Greek revival residence with classical elements. Built in the 1840s, this was the residence of the Joseph Blankinship family until 1875. Blankinship was a master mariner and past master of the Pythagorean Lodge. Blankinships had lived in Marion since at least the mid-18th century, intermarrying with the Nyes and living at Charles Neck, later called Converse Point. From the late 1870s until 1910, this house was owned by Charles D. Hall, a carpenter and constable of Marion. Hall’s widow, Henrietta, lived here until 1920.

Board Finds Fault with Study

            A study by a group concerned about the drainage and water-level problems on the Nemasket River, which Rochester’s waterways connect to, is telling the town to enact a large, expensive action plan that no one in town had input on.

            The Planning Board Tuesday night said the town won’t go willingly in on such a plan.

            Local water-resources expert Fred Underhill said the group, which includes the Assawompsett Pond Complex board that controls the use of area ponds such as those in Rochester, along with the SRPEDD regional transportation agency, Nature Conservancy and Mass Audubon, “managed to get a couple $100,000 of grants to do a study that appears to me more concerned with climate change than the immediate (water level) problems facing the area.”

            Underhill said the study details 89 specific recommendations. The problem is that most of them ask local towns to do the heavy lifting and the funding.

            “Fifty-eight of these list local town staff as the funding source to initiate,” Underhill said. “Fifty-two of these list the local Conservation Commissions (as) the responsible party. Thirty-one list other local town boards to be the responsible party.”

            Underhill noted, as an example, that the program recommendations include adopting the Community Preservation Act (which Rochester has already rejected by town-wide vote.) They would also establish a Uniform Water Resources Protection Overlay District” and provide “a larger annual budget for the APC ranger program.”

            “The program does not determine what effects these changes can make on the groundwater levels in Rochester and the effects on private wells in the area,” Underhill complained.

            He said this group has used the 100-year flood event in 2010 to create a new regional governmental district headed by nonelected persons without Rochester and Freetown having full voting rights. (The two towns do not have such voting rights on the APC board.)

            Planning Board members agreed these recommendations would be good for Rochester and complained townspeople never had input in compiling this study.

            Planning Board Chairman Arnold Johnson said these recommendations won’t be good for Rochester’s water resources but would actually strain those resources. “There is some common sense here,” Johnson said. “But they have to balance that with real life.”

            Underhill said he just wanted the board to be aware of what proposals are coming the town’s way and to be ready to speak up about them at public hearing time.

            Referring to the lack of Rochester’s input into the plan so far, Johnson said, “If these ideas are so great for the town, why didn’t they show them to us first rather than shove them down our throats?”

            The board was also cool to the MBTA’s plan to require towns near new MBTA tracks to develop more housing close to those areas.

            Town Planner Nancy Durfee said the MBTA has updated its rationale and its requirements under this proposed regulation. A town like Rochester will only be required to build 105 of such units, rather than the previously required 750 units.

            An action plan on the new requirements, she said, will be due by January 31, 2023, and will have to be adopted by December 2025. Johnson was blunt in his reply, saying there was no chance the town would adopt such a regulation.

            Durfee agreed. “This is a heavy, top-down approach,” she said. “We have to say, ‘You cannot force us.’”

            Durfee recommended speaking to legislators about the issue and to do so before the November election because that’s when they will be more attentive to such demands.

            The board also approved and signed the “Arch at the Meadow” site-plan-review decision and the “Buzzards Bay Scenic Highway” (Marion Road) decision.

            The Rochester Planning Board will meet next on Tuesday, October 25, at 7:00 pm at Old Colony Regional Vocational-Technical High School library and will be accessible via Zoom.

Rochester Planning Board
by Michael J. DeCicco