Mattapoisett Library September Programming

This September the Mattapoisett Free Public Library has programs planned for teens and adults. Starting Tuesday, September 12 at 3 pm, Craft Tuesday returns to our Media Lab. Stop by for a quick craft and some fun. No registration is required.

            The Teen Advisory Board returns after a long break on Tuesday, September 12 at 4. Light refreshments will be served. New members are always welcome. No registration required.

            On Saturday, September 16 at 1 pm, Devin (NivedArt) returns to lead us, step by step, through the painting ‘Falling for Fall’. Either follow along step-by-step or make changes as we go to customize your artwork. All materials are included – Each participant will receive a large 11×14 stretched canvas to work on and take home. Recommended for ages 12 and up. Registration is required.

            All programs are free and open to the public. If you have any questions or need special accommodations, please contact the library at 508-758-4171 or email mflp@sailsinc.org.

From the Files of the Rochester Historical Society

Over the course of Rochester’s almost 350 years of history, it has been home to many illustrious men and women. Some served in town, state and federal governments, while others stood out in the fields of religion and education. One resident, however, who fits in none of these categories, has had an enduring hold on the imagination of those who have chronicled Rochester history.

            Eugenia Haskell, daughter of Nathaniel Haskell, was a lovely woman who won the hearts of many suitors but never married. She was a delightful hostess and an intelligent conversationalist who was up to date on world affairs and popular literature. She also capably ran the family homestead and farm with the help of her “hired man”.

            While we know quite a bit about Eugenia’s life and her death in her late 80’s, what is less well known is the controversy that swirled around the disposition of her last will and testament. That will was contested by heirs of Nathaniel Haskell in the case of Harriet E. Little et al vs. George H. Silveira.

            To go back, Nathaniel Haskell owned considerable property, including a house built in 1771 on Walnut Plain Rd. When he wrote his will in 1837, he left his sons certain swamp lands. He left his wife, as long as she remained his widow “the use of all the rest of his estate and in any event the use of one third thereof for her life, together with $500.00.

            As a concerned father, he saw to the future of his three daughters. His will states,” to them (the daughters) and their heirs as tenants in common, all the residue and remainder of my estate, real and personal, so long as they shall remain sole and unmarried, and if either of them should marry, my will is that those who remain single shall have the portion so devised to the one who is marrying”.

            The will went on to explain what money would change hands in the event of any marriage. However, these clauses were never enacted as for some reason, none of the three daughters, Charlotte, Julia and Eugenia ever married. Julia and Charlotte died “testate” which meant all the real estate and any interests went to their surviving sister, Eugenia. She carried on living in the home and maintaining the farm with the help of George H. Silveira, her “tenant, a Portuguese who had been in her employ for many years”. It was to this man, often referred to as the “hired man” that she left the farm, homestead and the bulk of her personal property in her 1901 will.

            The Haskell heirs in their attempt to overthrow the will made the argument that the daughters were only given a life estate in their father’s will. It was therefore, the construction of Nathaniel’s will, written in 1837 and probated in 1941, that came into question.

            Judge C. T. Davis disagreed with their interpretation of that will. Concluding that when Nathaniel included the words “and their heirs”, he meant to give the property to his daughters” in full”. After two years of litigation, George H. Silveira became the owner of the Haskell homestead which he, along with Eugenia, had tended for many years.

By Connie Eshbach

Marion Ramps up Commitment to Be ‘Dementia Friendly’

            There are now more people over the age of 60 than under the age of 20, according to Dementia Friendly America Massachusetts. Marion’s Council on Aging is taking this seriously.

            On Tuesday, September 12, at 1:00 pm, the COA will host Dementia Friendly Massachusetts Project Director Patty Sullivan to introduce interested community members to a statewide initiative to expand dementia awareness. The grassroots movement is looking for locals in town to join the cause.

            “All are welcome to attend, no commitment required, to learn more about expanding dementia care, resources and acceptance in Marion,” according to a written release issued by the town.

            Dementia Friendly America Massachusetts is an initiative of the Massachusetts Councils on Aging and a member of Dementia Friendly America, according to the release. Reached recently, Council on Aging Director Karen Gregory said she expects a robust attendance at the event.

            “We have had people call and there is interest,” she said.

            The informational session on September 12 is an initial step in establishing a team of community members engaged in DFM’s support programs through their local organizations, in this case the Marion COA. The town will sign the DFM pledge and, in return, receive a certificate of recognition.

            The pledge is to provide supportive programming and welcoming environments critical to removing the stigma traditionally associated with memory loss. Promoting inclusivity and acknowledging the human dignity of those afflicted and working to improve their quality of life is the end game of this centralized effort focusing on education and support for those with dementia and their caregivers.

            Since 2016, Marion’s COA has hosted a Waterfront Memory Café, in which people diagnosed with early to moderate Alzheimer’s or other memory loss, as well as their caregivers, partake in activities to improve memory. Gregory said, when patients forget words or run into other memory roadblocks, there is “no stigma attached. … They share a lunch and an activity together.”

            “With the support of our community, we hope to strategically implement programming to better serve our community members with dementia,” added Gregory in the press release.

            According to Dementia Friendly America Massachusetts, an estimated 130,000 people in Massachusetts live with Alzheimer’s disease, and that number is expected to climb.

Marion Council on Aging

By Jeffrey D. Wagner

Audition for the MAC’s Holiday Play

The Marion Art Center announces open auditions for its December production of Miracle on South Division Street, written by Tom Dudzick and directed by Donn Tyler and Maura Van Voris. Auditions will take place on Saturday, September 16, 12:00-2:00 pm and Sunday, September 17, 1:00-3:00 pm in the MAC’s Anne Braitmayer Webb Theater, located at 80 Pleasant Street in Marion. Performance dates are scheduled December 1, 2, 3, 8, 9, 15, and 16, 2023.

            Synopsis: Clara Nowak and her three grown children have always known they were special, ever since the miraculous Christmas Eve when the Blessed Mother appeared to Grandpa. Now it is Christmas Eve once again, and they may need to revise their family history.

            The director will be casting the following roles: Clara Nowak (female, 50+), No-nonsense matriarch who defends the traditions and values of her immigrant parents; Beverly (female, 30’s), oldest daughter, an avid bowler, outspoken and opinionated; Ruth (female, 20’s-30’s), middle child, a storyteller and aspiring actress who wants to move to the big city; Jimmy (male, 20’s-30’s), youngest child, a big-hearted garbage man who is happy with his life.

            Learn more and view sides/script samples at marionartcenter.org/events. Questions may be sent to co-director Donn Tyler at tyler.donn@gmail.com.

The Macy Women at the MAC

The Macy Women are back. After 10 years of going their separate ways, three sisters born of artistic heritage unite their art to tell their individual stories. Discover expressive illuminating palettes of color, with styles unique to each artist. The exhibit is a tie; a family ribbon that binds.

            The Macy Women: Separate Lives; One Epiphany of Color, with paintings by: Beth H. Macy, Deborah Macy and Maggie Macy. Show dates are September 30 to November 3 at the Marion Art Center with an Opening reception on Saturday, September 30, from 3:00-5:00 pm.

            Beth Heather Macy, with her years of traveling for business, through many countries and cultures, presents the beauty and joy of nature, inviting the viewer to look again to see something new. She uses bold, impressionistic strokes, often depicting the marshes, shorelines and wildlife around her Newbury, Massachusetts home. Beth’s works are in collections from New York to Australia. Beth’s work can be seen online at www.islandpainter.com, and she can be contacted at beth@islandpainter.com.

            Margaret Rose Macy brings the simplicity of her upbringing in rural Westport, Massachusetts, and her years of living on the magnificent coast of Maine to her paintings. She has found her roots and peace in painting the landscapes, seascapes, horses and florals from her surrounding area.

            Deborah Beth Macy from Dartmouth and New Bedford, Massachusetts, shows her love of the multicultural in costume in her figurative work, and her portraiture celebrates a diversity of complexions and cultures. Deborah is a juried member of The Catharine Lorillard Wolfe Art Club, and has won numerous awards from the Cape Cod Art Center, Cape Cod Cultural Center, North River Arts Society and from the CLWAC at The Salmagundi Club. Deborah’s work can be found at: www.deborahmacy.com, and she can be contacted through her website.

Speaking of Surprises

Some years ago, there was an art gallery in the building that once held the J.A. Hagen Toy Factory next to the old fire station across from the Cathay Temple restaurant. I worked in the factory one summer before college.

            It was a summer of misery, working in front of 100-degree ovens dressed in jeans and long-sleeve shirts covered with a rubber apron, standing in heavy rubber boots filled with liquid rubber that dripped down the apron, lifting heavy molds, enduring late nights on the second shift. But it supplied me with a wealth of stories I later wrote about.

            The woman who ran the art gallery was searching for stories about the toy factory. When I heard that, I kindly obliged her by sending her a copy of one of the columns. She contacted me – I lived away at the time – and asked if she could chat with me next time I was in town.

            As I walked into the gallery at the arranged date and time, surprise! There was an arrangement of chairs and a stool set up facing the group. I was expecting a casual chat, but it was clear a presentation was expected. I had to think quickly. Good thing I studied storytelling in grad school.

            As invited guests settled in, I began my impromptu presentation with an anecdote. I told them that the last time I had been asked to speak in Mattapoisett was when I was a struggling artist; my first children’s book had just been published. I was invited to speak to third and fourth graders at Center School, my old elementary alma mater. I was honored to return … as a “celebrity.”

            I should note that the week before my visit, Norman Bridwell, creator of “Clifford the Big Red Dog” children’s books, was the guest speaker. The week after me came Marc Brown, who created “Arthur the Aardvark” books.

            Both artists, neither of whom were struggling, were rich men with their own TV series and all the accompanying profits garnered from shrewdly marketing their cartoon characters across America. I, on the other hand, eventually became but a humble, public-school art teacher in a high school far away from here.

            In one of the classes I spoke to was a little red-headed sprite of a girl, sitting with her legs crossed in a circle of other diminutive third graders in the same classroom where I once sat. All those cute kids were attentively listening to me explain the ins and outs of illustrating a children’s storybook.

            Years later, as a member of a committee interviewing candidates for a recently vacated art teacher position, a freshly minted art school graduate bounced into the room with her portfolio eager to impress. She did and got the job. Later she told me she grew up in … Mattapoisett. Surprise! And, she had attended Center School. A coincidence indeed.

            I described the last time I was there, all those many years earlier. Again, to my surprise, and chagrin if you “mature” folks know what I mean, she said she remembered me. She said she remembered being fascinated with how I blended the colors and wondered how I did it. She now knew.

            Could it be because of me she became an art teacher? I don’t think so, but who knows? I do know this: Every time I saw her, I was reminded of just how old I had become. There was another surprise. In addition to becoming a good teacher, she was a trained EMT. A valuable classroom neighbor at my “advanced” age.

            By the way, the presentation at the art gallery went off without a hitch. A couple of coworkers at the toy factory were there, and their memories covered my lapses.

            All’s well that ends well. That was a surprise.

            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

Phragmites Eradication Planned

            There is no easy way to eradicate the nemesis of many coastal property owners – Phragmites. But mere mortals do try to curb this tenacious, rhizome-driven weed.

            On Monday night, the Mattapoisett Conservation Commission heard a Notice of Intent filing by Elizabeth Cannell of 5 Holly Woods Road. The applicant proposed a management plan for the eradication of phragmites in a bordering vegetated wetland, salt marsh, coastal beach and land subject to coastal-storm flowage.

            The plan, as described by members of LEC Engineering, included the use of a drip system to kill off the weeds preceded by cutting down the massive field, a process that would take two to five years and require the use of chemicals. After the first two years, a planting plan would be submitted to the commission for establishment of native plants and a report outlining the status of the process.

            While on the one hand, environmental agent Brandon Faneuf believed in the importance of removing phragmites whenever possible, the other hand was giving the thumbs down on the success of the project. Abutting Cannell’s property is another massive sea of phragmites on someone else’s property. Faneuf cast doubt on the success of the endeavor unless the neighbors are willing to perform a similar project on their waterside property.

            Commissioner David Nicolosi was concerned that shellfish beds nearby would be negatively impacted. Both he and Faneuf were in agreement that before the project begins, the contractor needs to provide details such as protocols, procedures and associated processes to the commission. The project was conditioned with that stipulation.

            A Request for Determination of Applicability was filed by Michael Smith, trustee of 6 Whaler’s Way, for the construction of a shed measuring 10×12 feet in a FEMA-mapped flood zone. The project received a Negative Box 2 decision with the stipulation that the shed be tied down using helical bracing.

            The next meeting of the Mattapoisett Conservation Commission is scheduled for Monday, September 11, at 6:30 pm.

Mattapoisett Conservation Commission

By Marilou Newell

Mattapoisett Congregational Church Yard Sale

On Saturday, September 9 from 9 am to 1 pm, the Mattapoisett Congregational Church will once again host their annual yard sale in Reynard Hall, rain or shine.

            Lots of great items will be available, including small antiques, collectibles, home furnishings, housewares, sports equipment, books, small furniture, toys and games as well as new handmade crafts, baked goods and so many more treasures. Cash and checks accepted.

            All proceeds will benefit the ministries of the Mattapoisett Congregational Church.

Rochester Women’s Club

The first meeting for the 2023-2024 season of the Rochester Women’s Club will be held on Wednesday September 13 at 6:30 pm. The Rochester Women’s Club is located at 37 Marion Road in Rochester.

            The mission of this club is support our objective of promoting civic, educational, intellectual and social interest among our members and in our community, as well as to seek out other areas in need of support.

            We have an excited community of dedicated ladies that work very hard to support our clubhouse and our community.

            Women from all towns are invited to join our club, or just stop by on a meeting night for a cup of tea or a glass of wine. Being a resident of Rochester is not a requirement.

St. Philip’s Episcopal Church

The 139th Summer Season at St. Philip’s Episcopal Church concludes on Sunday, September 3. The Rev. Jeffrey Paull Cave, Retired Diocese of Atlanta, GA will conduct services at 8:00 am and 10:00 am using the 1928 Book of Common Prayer.

            Then at 4:00 pm, the Rev. Cave and the Rev. Benjamin Straley, Rector St. Stephen’s Church, Providence, RI will lead the congregation in an old-fashioned Hymn Sing. Hymns are introduced along with their history and background, and requests for favorites are encouraged. The Rev. Straley, prior to becoming a clergyman, was the organist and choirmaster at The National Cathedral, Washington, DC.

            Three priests will be honored at the Hymn Sing for their 40 years each of service to St. Philip’s: the Rev. Cave, the Rev. Robert Malm, and the Rev. Philip Jacobs. A reception follows the Hymn Sing in the side yard. All are welcome to St. Philip’s located at 34 Water Street, next to the Mattapoisett Town Beach.