Open Space Not for Yard Waste

            Trees are expected to be obstacles to the Point Road Path — but not yard waste. To that end, the August 5 meeting of the Marion Open Space Acquisition Commission discussed ways to get that message across to the pathway’s abutters on Joanne Drive.

            Having asked new MOSAC member Deb Ewing to write a draft letter, Commission Chair John Rockwell offered his own version that was admittedly pointed.

            Rockwell read his draft, introducing the topic by noting the small fire last year on Sippican Lands Trust property, followed by MOSAC’s hope that Marion’s Fire Department gains access to the large interior wooded parcel in case of a fire. Improvements to the access road would be needed near the stormwater basin to pave the way.

            Alluding to his latest visit with MOSAC member Amanda Chace, Rockwell noticed places where yard waste had been dumped.

            “The town open space is not there to be a leaf dump or brush pile,” read Rockwell, pausing to invite suggestions on how the letter might be better received. He noted the difference between leaves and grass clippings, which make effective compost, and brush, which is conducive to spreading fire. “If you’re not sure where your property ends and the town property starts, please contact us so we can work with you to determine the property boundaries.”

            Agreeing with Rockwell’s opinion that Ewing’s draft letter would be appropriate for a more general audience notice, Chace suggested grouping Rockwell’s final paragraph with the “leaf dump” statement and opening it with “As a reminder…”

            “I like the tone of Deb’s letter more than I like the tone of mine,” said Rockwell, who at the time of the meeting was trying to find out if the town is taking yard waste. Town Administrator Jay McGrail has since confirmed that Marion does accept yard waste.

            In explaining why no MOSAC members replied to Ewing’s email sharing the draft letter that Rockwell asked her to write, Rockwell explained the implications of Open Meeting Law, including in emails where he advised commission members to “never hit ‘reply all.'”

            Two commission members can discuss a matter in person, by phone, or via email or some other online platform, but a third member represents a quorum and any substantive discussion violates the state’s Open Meeting Law.

            “This is what I do,” explained Rockwell. “I send something out and say, ‘This is for discussion at the next meeting.'”

            In their early-August visit to Point Road, Rockwell and Chace set offset stakes for the centerline of the path, expanding on the first 500 feet to reach 1,000.

            Over the first 1,000 feet, the pathway avoiding large trees, but with 2,000 feet remaining, some trees at the curve near Joanne Drive cannot be avoided, according to Rockwell. “It’s that last thousand that’s problematic for us,” he said. “It’s a little bit windier, but it will save us some money from tree removal.”

            Every tree that the pathway can avoid eliminating saves the project $1,500 for tree removal plus $400 more to remove the stump. Five trees salvaged adds up to $10,000 that can be spent another way, said Rockwell.

            Rockwell hopes that the Marion Department of Public Works can assist with the underbrush clearing, making it easier to access the pathway. “They do have a crew that’s capable, and they do have a woodchipper,” said Rockwell, who is pleased that the DPW is using local firm G.A.F. Engineering. “I’m sort of glad they got them; they do decent work. … Every dollar counts. … The most satisfying thing in a project is if you can turn money back.”

            “At the very least, it’s more money for unforeseen costs,” said Chace.

            Attending as a guest, former MOSAC Vice Chairman Alan Harris asked if Grassi Bog is scheduled to get its grass cut again. The grass there has been cut once this year. Rockwell said he would send DPW Director Nathaniel Munafo all of MOSAC’s maintenance protocols to ensure they carry over from before the department’s reorganization.

            The next meeting of the Marion Open Space Acquisition Commission will be held on Thursday, September 2, at 7:00 pm.

Marion Open Space Acquisition Commission

By Mick Colageo

Plymouth County Genealogists

Plymouth County Genealogists, Inc. is looking for new members. Membership includes access to the holdings of the PCGI library which are stored at the East Bridgewater Public Library. Those holdings include, but are not limited to, genealogical handbooks, member pedigree charts, maps, and videos. As a member you will also receive our newsletter, The Genealogical Inquirer, by email.

            PCGI meets on the first Saturday of each month at the East Bridgewater Public Library, 32 Union Street, E. Bridgewater, MA to discuss genealogy and listen to an educational speaker. Our first meeting of 2021 will be held on September 11 at 11:00 am with guest speaker, Michael McClellan.

            McClellan is a certificate holder of Boston University’s Genealogical Research course, along with holding degrees in Computer Programming and Accounting. He is passionate about his family history research, specializing in Swedish and New England research. He has deep roots in the U.S., being a descendant of the Mayflower through both of his parents. He has been involved with genealogy for over a decade and he loves to talk about it whenever he can. Guests of members are always welcome, but a donation to the organization is always appreciated.

            Membership fees are $25 and help defray the cost of monthly lectures. Membership applications can be completed at the meetings or by visiting their website: www.plymouthcountygenealogists.org.

            Plymouth County Genealogists, Inc. was founded in 1975 as part of the Massachusetts Society of Genealogists, formerly known as the Plymouth County Chapter. PCGI is a registered 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization dedicated to the study of genealogical research.

            PCGI assists the public in genealogical standards and best practices, educates its members with lectures, and builds social connections between people residing in Plymouth County, Massachusetts and beyond. They collaborate with area libraries and make available the tools and guidance needed for all who need help with their genealogical research.

Teaching Tiny Tots about Turtles

            The meeting room conveniently located next to the children’s department at the Mattapoisett Free Public Library was flooded with tiny tots eager to see and touch anything and everything associated with turtles. The occasion was the arrival of volunteers from Wareham-based New England Coastal Wildlife Alliance. They were visiting to share their love for ocean creatures in terms that helped even the smallest in the audience grasp the relevance of amphibious animals.

            The NECWA was founded by Carol “Krill” Carson, a marine biologist studying and working the New England shorelines since 1980. Her biography notes that she was bestowed with the nickname Krill by Captain Aaron Avellar while crewing on his whale-watching boat. Today she spends her summers whale watching and autumns rescuing ocean sunfish, sea turtles, and other marine wildlife. She has written the story of “Salt,” dubbed the “most famous humpback whale in the world.”

            Carson’s all-volunteer army of conservation-minded, young, interning animal lovers studies turtle-nesting sites, collects data shared with various state and other non-profit agencies, and performs rescues for marine animals in distress on land and in local waters.

            It is never too soon to begin teaching children the importance of taking care of nature in all its forms. Parents seemed to agree as a steady flow of little ones eagerly assembled themselves in chairs or across the carpeted floor with faces turned up and ready to absorb new information. And they were amazingly attentive, listening to Erin Maloney, the lead presenter from the NECWA.

            Maloney gave the wiggly squiggly participants the basics of turtle anatomy, flippers, paws, shell markings, and how the NECWA tracks the animals throughout their homes, aka habitats. The children were delighted but didn’t really believe when Maloney said that the turtles also have mustaches, prompting one tyke to shout out, “Not human ones, though?!” No, not quite like humans, she explained.

            Several of the children were also interested in what had happened to the turtles whose remaining shells bore evidence that these were once living animals. Straightforward, one child ventured, “How did that one get deaded?” Maloney, clinically but with careful attention, explained that at least one of the exhibits had been killed by a car while another may have been sick. Satisfied, the young gent smiled and simply responded, “OK, thanks.”

            The kids loved hearing about what the animals eat: small fish, mollusks, crabs, and snails. And they learned that, while turtles prefer saltwater locations, they can survive in freshwater as well. 

            In talking about turtle identification, Maloney said that the markings on the shell are unique to each animal, giving them their own signature appearance. She even talked to the little children about the turtles’ nesting habits and how they can lay an average of 17 eggs per nest. This occurs in late spring through early summer. Hatching is anticipated any day now. Maloney also touched on the work that the NECWA performs in checking new hatchings for abnormalities that might signify stress that the breeding animals are suffering or the general health of the local populations.

            One of Maloney’s young assistants explained how she became a volunteer for NECWA. Upon finding a stranded, distressed turtle on her neighborhood beach near her summer home in Marion, Emerson Bowens checked the internet to find a rescue agency to assist. She found NECWA. After learning about their work, she was all in for the rest of the summer, doing her part to help local wetlands’ wildlife. It’s an experience she’ll remember all her life and has further sparked her interest in environmental studies when she graduates from high school next year.

            After the fast-paced but incredibly detailed presentation, the children, and not just a few of the grown-ups whom they brought along on this day, had an opportunity to touch the exhibits, and then it was off to the fully stocked craft table with materials for creating turtles from shells or folded paper.

            On hand to ensure that everything anyone might need was being attended to was Children’s Librarian Ms. Chris, also known as Assistant Library Director Chris Matos.

            To learn about upcoming programming, visit mattapoisettlibrary.org.

Mattapoisett Free Public Library

By Marilou Newell

COAs Provide Exercise and Much More

            Every week several hundred people are benefiting from movement and exercise classes offered at local councils on aging. These classes provide expertise geared toward understanding how to use one’s body correctly and what types of movements to practice in order to gain or regain flexibility, strength, and forward mobility.

            But today, the need has never been greater. The uptick for such classes is in direct correlation to the increasing number of baby boomers entering their “golden years.” Baby boomers may be the first segment of the population to fully embrace the importance of staying as fit as possible for as long as possible. After all, their life expectancies are pretty darn long. They are fighting to stay vertical and take care of themselves independently. A recent needs assessment conducted by Coastline Elderly Services found that 24 percent of respondents said they needed physical activity programs.

            The Councils of Aging in Rochester, Marion, and Mattapoisett have been providing movement classes for years. Each community-based organization is slightly different from the othersregarding what types of movement programming are offered and at what cost, but the end game is keeping seniors strong well into those golden years and beyond.

            Marion COA Director Karen Gregory shared her point of view: “We look for something for every level of a senior’s ability.” She said that between chair yoga, line dancing, Zumba, strength and balance, and tai chi, there is something for just about every need.

            “But it’s more than just physically moving; it’s the relationships, the connections that they develop with one another and with the instructors,” said Gregory, noting that the instructors are invested in the whole individual, and they take the time to get to know the participants and their individual needs, including that extra moment to ask, “How are you doing today?” and really listen to the response.

            “The instructors don’t just do a class and leave,” Gregory said. “They interact positively with the people.” She also noted that most classes ask for a small $2 donation or nothing at all. All the directors interviewed said they are always looking for grant opportunities to further remove the cost burden for seniors.

            Mattapoisett’s movement programming has been a hallmark of service for many years and today offers Zumba, chair yoga, strength and balance, and Barre.

            Barre instructor Shawn Sweet explained the concept of this newly emerging movement style for seniors. “People think you have to have a ballet background, but that’s not true,” Sweet began, adding that the class does not demand a specific level of ability. “You move at your own pace,” but for those looking for a bit more of a challenge, that opportunity is also available. “It builds cardio strength and adds to flexibility, and it is zero-impact,” Sweet said, differentiating this form of movement class from others. Sweet believes her participants realize that one of the bigger takeaways is to “not let fear rule your life. … Keep moving.” Amen, sister.

            Mattapoisett COA Director Jacki Coucci talked about the importance of sourcing qualified instructors and instructors who are the right fit for seniors.

            “Firstly, it isn’t always easy finding instructors for certain programs. We ask current instructors for referrals, we contact other organizations that may have instructors or may certify instructors, and as with most successful ventures, many of our instructors have been found by word of mouth, especially from participants who have taken a class at another location,” Coucci stated. “Second, the instructors are trained and certified in their respective programs. They carry personal liability insurance and have CPR training as well. Third, we have to ensure instructors are quality, quality of knowledge and training plus quality personalities.”

            Eric Poulin, Rochester’s COA director, talked about not only the regularly scheduled classes such as chair yoga, strength and balance, line dancing, or the recently debuted Tai Chi Qigong classes but also the full equipment fitness room in which the community has invested. Membership appointments are suggested for exercise room use, but expanded hours have been recently added.

            “Here at the Rochester Senior Center, I try to take a holistic approach towards addressing the physical, social, and emotional well-being of our community members,” said Poulin, explaining that folks participating in classes or using the equipment range in age from 60 to 95 and at any given time may be grappling with profound health issues. “Many view our exercise programming as a form of rehabilitation or a way to improve and maintain strength and balance.”

            Poulin said that seniors tell him, “They see improvements in their balance, endurance, and flexibility, and they also express great satisfaction with the social connections that they make with other people in the programs.” He said for all concerned, “It’s a win-win proposition.”

            One instructor who has been helping seniors get moving and stay moving for more than 25 years is Strength and Balance instructor Larry Bigos of Dartmouth. Bigos began his fitness career in commercial fitness centers, but after many years of a corporate approach to fitness Bigos made the leap to becoming an independent fitness instructor.

            Taking his years of training and knowledge of human anatomy into senior centers just made sense to Bigos. “I saw a need for the older population. It ignited a light in my head; I could provide the type of programming seniors needed,” he said. “The feedback I get from the people inspires me to go on; it is rewarding.”

            Bigos also merits the exercise classes with providing those unquantifiable extra, social interactions. “It’s equally as important; we keep each other going!” said Bigos, whose Strength and Balance classes are available in Rochester and Marion COAs.

            Karen Corcoran was one of the area’s first senior fitness instructors to identify the need and peruse the proper training and certifications necessary for the health and safety of her participants. Today her classes are highly sought. She also acknowledged that it is a business, and as such, there are certain investments she’s had to make. “There’s liability insurance, CPR training, and the two-year requalifications cycles,” Corcoran shared. The required continuing education credits always bring her to a new level of understanding senior movement, which she believes is critical.

            “I’ve been a fitness instructor since 1989,” Corcoran said. As a younger woman, she embraced the high-impact, fast-paced exercise regimes that were sweeping across the nation. “But after seeing some seniors struggling through an aerobics class I was observing, I knew I could do something else for their level of need,” she said.

            In 1990, she started Senior Stretch in Marion at a local church hall. The rest is history. Today Corcoran remains focused on the whole-person approach to movement classes with mindful instructions throughout a class that aid the participants in achieving the maximum benefit. Of the people Corcoran interacts with daily, she said, “They inspire me. We have to stay independent, and that takes different forms of activity.” Some of her participants may only be able to tap a toe, while others can move about in synchronized footwork; all have a place in her programs.

            As the ancient wisdom states, “The journey of a thousand miles begins with the first step.”

            To learn more about exercise programming in the Tri-Town area, visit Mattapoisett.net, townofrochestermass.com, or marionma.gov.

By Marilou Newell

Mattapoisett Free Public Library Events

Everyone at the Mattapoisett Free Public Library would like to thank all of you who participated in our Summer Reading Programs! If you participated in the Children’s Program and finished your minutes, be sure to stop by the library to pick up your prizes. If you participated in the Adult and Teen Program, we will announce the winners this week! For those of you who are not ready for the summer fun to end, we have some upcoming programs to help you get the most out of the last weeks of summer.

            On Tuesday, August 17, at 6:30 pm, the Cookbook Club will meet in person to discuss Quick & Simple by Jacques Pepin. In Quick & Simple, Pepin gives us 250 recipes for surprisingly achievable, impressive fare. Covering homemade staples and every course, with tips for kitchen tools and equipment, pantry staples, and techniques to simplify and improve every dish you make, this foundational, classic collection is essential for every busy home cook who refuses to eat poorly. Visit our website to learn more or to register.

            On Saturday, August 21, at 12:00 pm, join us for Bingo on the library lawn (weather permitting)! Everyone wins! All ages welcome. No registration required.

            On Friday, August 27, at 12:00 pm, join us for the End of Summer Tailgate. Join us as we celebrate the end of summer with the last hurrah! Come and play all sorts of lawn games, such as Jenga, Kerplunk, Snakes & Ladders, and more! There will also be a simple craft and snacks. No registration is required. Bring the whole family!

            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 the Adult Services/Reference Librarian, Michelle Skaar at mskaar@sailsinc.org.

Yaeger Music Scholarship

The 58th Yaeger Music Scholarship will be awarded this year. The scholarship has been awarded for the past 57 years from a fund established by the late Clement L. Yaeger, a Fairhaven resident and longtime New Bedford library employee. The committee wishes to recognize outstanding music students in this 58th year.

            To apply, music students must submit a letter of application to include details about their personal background and future educational plans, a transcript of their grades, and two letters of recommendation from music teachers or directors. Upon receipt of application packet, candidates will be contacted to schedule interviews; please be sure to include your contact information in your application to include phone and email address.

            Please submit applications electronically either to yaegermusicscholarship@gmail.com, or by postal mail to Yaeger Music Scholarship, c/o Douglas R. Leatham, CPA, 492 Pleasant Street, New Bedford, MA ,02740.

            Application deadline is Saturday, August 28, 4:00 pm. For more information, contact email yaegermusicscholarship@gmail.com. Students from the Southcoast communities of Acushnet, Dartmouth, Fairhaven, Freetown, Marion, Mattapoisett, New Bedford, Rochester, and Wareham are eligible for this scholarship.

FinCom Names New Rep to Capital Planning

            As the Rochester Finance Committee took care of old business on Monday night, August 9, and talked out its anticipation of the town’s October 18 Special Town Meeting, its members also voted to appoint Richard Munroe as FinCom’s new representative to the Capital Planning Committee.

            Munroe is familiar to the Finance Committee as the recently retired president of Tibbetts Engineering Corporation in New Bedford.

            “I think he’ll be very good on this,” said Town Administrator Suzanne Szyndlar.

            In identifying Munroe as his father-in-law, FinCom member Jim Austin abstained from the vote but noted that Munroe is “extremely detail-oriented.”

            The Finance Committee voted two FY21 year-end transfers of funds, one for $23,763.96 from group insurance that had gone unspent and therefore became available to other categories, the other transfer in the amount of $19,022.95 from the reserve fund to cover a snow removal and ice-treatment deficit.

            Szyndlar told FinCom that Rochester had $53,405 remaining in its reserve fund prior to the transfer.

            “We never know what [the snow and ice budget] is going to be,” said FinCom Chairman Kris Stoltenberg.

            In the case of the group insurance transfer, Szyndlar cited scenarios in which town employees come off plans. “There’s a lot of moving parts in a year of a health-insurance budget,” she said, referencing a couple of retirements and resignations. Szyndlar also explained that the retirement of Assessor Chuck Shea triggered a payout of accrued vacation time from the regular budget.

            Szyndlar told the committee that she plans to attend the August 25 meeting of Tri-Town finance committees that the Town of Marion will host to discuss the Old Rochester Regional agreement that has to pass in all three town meetings.

            The agreement, built around a three-year average rather than being based on the prior fiscal year, has been approved by the state Department of Elementary and Secondary Education (DESE).

            The key talking point will be ORR’s request to establish a stabilization fund that presumably will cut the amount of red tape for smaller capital spending projects. Larger projects, such as the high school track rehabilitation that failed to pass, will presumably still be subject to borrowing, but the August 25 meeting of tri-town finance committees is meant to explain the agreement and answer any questions.

            FinCom member David Arancio suggested that the ORR School Committee give the process transparency with town meeting voters by showing them how the new agreement would have affected last year’s assessments. As town moderator, Arancio told fellow committee members that transparency and thorough presentations would help limit questions on Town Meeting floor.

            The next meeting of the Rochester Finance Committee is scheduled to be held in a joint session with Marion and Mattapoisett finance committees on Wednesday, August 25, at 7:00 pm.

Rochester Finance Committee

By Mick Colageo

Emergency Repairs Ordered for Ship Street

            On August 10, Mattapoisett’s Highway Surveyor Garrett Bauer met with the Mattapoisett Conservation Commission to discuss an emergency repair. Recent heavy rains and the need for maintenance to a drainage outfall system that discharges into the harbor at the end of Ship Street had been reported as failing by residents in the area. “The water was backing up through the manhole,” Bauer stated.

            A historic drainage outfall pipe is located at the end of Ship Street, which terminates into a small public beach wedged between private properties. That pipe had become clogged, and the surrounding beach seriously eroded, becoming a safety hazard, Chairman Mike King detailed.

            While emergency repairs to wetlands and jurisdictional areas don’t generally require beforehand approvals, Bauer contacted the commission to alert its members of the need and obtain permission for the repairs. The request was unanimously affirmed.

            Earlier in the meeting, it was noted that Notice of Intent filings by Randall Lane Solar, LLC, and Alexander Bauer, 7 Nashawena Road, were again continued until August 23.

            New business heard included a Request for Determination of Applicability filed by Jessica Nicolosi for property located a 5 Perkins Lane and a Notice of Intent from the same applicant for the construction of an oversized accessory building planned within a buffer zone of a bordering vegetated wetland.

            Represented by Carmelo Nicolosi of Charon Associates, the RDA requesting ratification of the wetlands delineation was confirmed via a negative determination of applicability. Regarding the NOI for the structural elements, approval in the form of an order of conditions was provided. Nicolosi said that the project as presented would also require review and special permitting by the Zoning Board of Appeals.

            An Abbreviated Notice of Resource Area Delineation [ANRAD] was affirmed for property located at 17 Ned’s Point Road and represented by Robert Field of Field Associates.

            Conditional approval for an NOI filed by Bart O’Brien for property located at 34 Prince Snow Circle was granted provided that the Massachusetts Wildlife Natural Heritage and Endangered Species Program confirms that there would not be a wetlands taking.

            The commission also reviewed pictures submitted by concerned residents for what was considered substandard repairs to roadways by Eversource along Pine Branch Way after utility work had taken place in the area. As a result, King said he has contacted the Massachusetts Public Utilities Commission and filed a complaint with the Department of Environmental Protection. The commission also issued an Enforcement Order to be sent to the utility.

            The next meeting of the Mattapoisett Conservation Commission is scheduled for Monday, August 23, at 6:30 pm.

Mattapoisett Conservation Commission

By Marilou Newell

From the Files of the Rochester Historical Society

We are lucky in Rochester that so many of the residents who came before us took to pen and paper to leave us records of how life used to be. We’re doubly lucky that so much of their writings can be found in the museum. We have ledgers that give us an idea of business activities as far back as the 17th century. Then there are daybooks like the ones of C.L. Maxim that let us take a peek into a farmer’s life in the 1800-1900s. His writings tell of the work on the farm, the weather, crop yields, and even the occasional Sunday drive. We have letters from a mother to her son who had gone whaling and others from sons to their mothers while they were away at war. There are diaries and stories written by successful men about their naughty boyhoods. Longer memoirs have been written with different formats and aims.

            Vera Bisbee Underhill wrote ” Blessings of a Legacy” to pass on the history of her family in North Rochester. This book was inspired by the large collection of legal papers, letters, and other documents that she found after moving into her family homestead in 1950. There are pictures and copies of some of the old bills and deeds, like the one for Elizabeth Ellis’s sale of the title and interest in pew # 19 at the First Congregational Church in Rochester Center to William Stetson in 1846.

            Abraham Holmes’ memoirs (1754-1839) were written expressly for the ” amusement and information” of his children and grandchildren but also for posterity. His writings are extensive and have formed the basis for several articles. They provide us with a deep look into the history and daily lives of residents in 1800s Rochester and Massachusetts.

            L.C. Humphrey’s Papers were gathered between 1940 and 1953. Born in 1864, he left school in 1884 and began his adult life as a dairy farmer among other occupations. Most of his papers include his answers to questions being asked of him. They are particularly interesting because they touch on topics not covered in history books. While he discussed Rochester’s long history, he interspersed that with personal stories. We learn that he tried many different things to keep his dairy barnyard dry and clean for his cows. He tried corn husks, seaweed, pine needles, and lastly and most successfully, cranberry vines. He made and sold butter to New Bedford families for $0.35 a pound. In 1906, he set the boulder marking the site of Rochester’s first meetinghouse using his stone machine and a team.

            In a section on roadways, Humphrey recounts an experience he had around 1930. After going to a woodlot to find a man who was in the process of cutting logs for the Hathaway Mill, he was then headed to Marion. The man told him that he could save a mile of travel by taking the old road and crossing the river on an old bridge made of oak stringers and planks. Taking that advice, he approached the apparently ancient bridge and, since it looked safe and his horse showed no reluctance, the two of them proceeded. The horse went down the center of the bridge, which was set on a solid timber, but as they moved forward the wagon jolted and, looking back, he saw that his wagon wheels were cutting off the old, decayed planks. Speeding up he was able to cross the river safely, but it was the end of the bridge.

            We also should thank, not just the authors, but also the dedicated people who figured out the faded cursive writing and inventive spelling that characterize these documents.

By Connie Eshbach

Cameron Powell Fordyce

Cameron Powell Fordyce was born on August 24, 1937, in St. Louis, MO. He passed away on July 22, 2021, in New Bedford, MA, surrounded by family. He leaves behind his devoted and beloved wife of 46 years, Jackie Fordyce, his children Cameron Fordyce, Dr. Hilary Fordyce, Lori Lynch, and Rob Bennett, his grandchildren, Isabelle and Bennett Lynch, Ilaria Fordyce, Lucy Donaldson, and Levi and Georgia Bennett, his sister Dr. Nancy Fordyce, and nephews and nieces Joel Nevison and Lisa Abney, Hans, Mark, Leigh and Michael Tiedemann, James Dartt, and Amy Ashton.

            Cam’s life was full of adventure, music, and dedication to his family and friends. He was a man of contrasts—deeply private and charismatic, quick-witted and unassuming, dynamic and reverent. He was adored by everyone who knew him for his natural ability to make those around him feel loved and at ease.

            He grew up in St Louis in the 1940s. While attending John Burroughs School, he built enduring friendships. He spent his summers in Massachusetts, split between work on a family friend’s farm, and on Naushon Island with his mother, sister, and cousins. Following high school, Cam enrolled at Harvard and then Columbia Business School, beginning a more permanent life on the east coast.

            Music shaped Cam’s life. During college, he became a founding member of the Raunch Hands, a folk band defined by complex and gorgeous harmonizing that highlighted Cam’s distinctive baritone voice. They became a fixture in the Cambridge folk scene and cut two records with Epic before disbanding to pursue their careers. Their friendship and connection have endured, and in 1982, they reunited for the first time during a vacation in Nantucket, introducing their children to their music. These reunions would continue sporadically for almost 40 years, culminating in one last gig on Naushon Island in August of 2019, bookending an extraordinary bond of friendship and music.

            Cam started his family in 1963, with the arrival of Cameron (aka Smokey the bear), with Hilary following in 1965. When Cam and Jackie married in 1975, two families merged, with Lori and Rob joining the fray. Cam had his hands full with four young kids, but he was a natural and gifted parent—always providing support, advice, and encouragement. He coached Smokey’s and Hilary’s basketball and baseball teams when they were in elementary and middle school, and taught all four kids to ski, sail, canoe, fish, drive a car and even handle a chain saw. Whether it was showing them around in a sailboat, helping them with their backhand in tennis, or guiding them with homework assignments, Cam parented with patience and consistency. The four kids adored Cam for his steadfast love, encouragement, and devotion to being a constant presence in their lives.

            Cam was a supportive, loving husband to Jackie. Their relationship began in Boston when Jackie summoned up the courage to ask him for a date – they never looked back. Annie’s Song became their love song. When Cam sang it – which he did at every anniversary – Jackie would melt.

            Cam dedicated most of his career to banking, first with the Bank of New York and then at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, where he helped to establish the Automated Clearing House in New England in the late 70’s. After Cam retired from the Fed in 1994, he and Jackie spent four months traveling in Italy and Greece, before returning to Cambridge. He started a second career mentoring students in the Master of Finance program at Northeastern University’s Graduate School of Business, helping to place them in internships. Cam had a unique ability to teach, and he was generous with his time and knowledge.

            Cam’s natural inclination to help others also spilled into his home life as he supported Jackie’s passion for renovating real estate. He tirelessly helped paint, clean and refurbish many properties in Marion, Cambridge and later, Tucson. When he wasn’t working or having a paint brush thrust into his hand, he loved to explore the coast of Buzzards Bay by sailboat or kayak. Travel became a mainstay for Cam and Jackie over the years. When the kids were small, the trips took place in New England and Canada in their tired and iconic 1972 Ford Econoline Van. As the kids grew, they began traveling out west to ski and hike, and eventually to explore Europe, including visits to Smokey and his family in Italy and to visit Rome, their favorite city.

            Cam and Jackie returned to Italy several times over the following years, including a memorable four months in Rome, during which Cam studied Italian and took voice lessons from a professional Italian tenor. He rediscovered music during this time and began singing in the St. Gabriel choir and Longey School of Music in Massachusetts, which prepared him for a fourteen-year run with Tucson’s Sons of Orpheus Men’s Choir from 2004 to 2018. During this time, he joined their concert tours twice in Europe, and he also participated in summer sessions with the Berkshire Choral Festival. The annual Sons of Orpheus Christmas concert at Mission San Xavier del Bac was always a highlight of his year. Cam’s voice was extraordinary, and while he was self-deprecating about his vocal talent, he delighted in singing at family gatherings and impromptu folk sessions with friends in Marion and Tucson.

            What truly defined Cam was how deeply he cared for those in his life. He was profoundly kind. He was a world class listener. He was a man of his word. His calm was legendary. Cam could always be relied upon to provide sage advice and navigate the trickiest of family and personal conflicts. He was the family’s safe harbor, providing unconditional love to those around him by being loving, accepting, and available for them, however and whenever necessary.

            Cam served on the board of the Buzzards Bay Musicfest for six years, which he considered an honor and a pleasure. Donations in his memory may be made be made to: The Buzzards Bay Musicfest P.O. Box 433 Marion, MA 02738.