Friends of Marion VNA Funds

Community Nurse Home Care has received funds from the Friends of Marion VNA to provide Marion residents health-related services not covered by insurance. These funds may be used for the following Community Nurse services:

• Care Transition Consultations

• Caregiver Guidance & Navigation

• Comfort Care

• Community Health Worker Outreach

• Complimentary Nursing Evaluation Visits 

• Dementia Care & Support

            Requests can be made by residents, their family members, the Marion Council on Aging or medical personnel by email: grants@communitynurse.com; phone: 508-992-6278; or fax: 508-996-0781

Marion Republican Town Committee

The Marion Republican Town Committee will conduct its next monthly meeting on Monday, September 9at 7:00 p.m. at the Marion Music Hall, 164 Front Street, Marion. The public and new members welcome.

OC Football Takes Advantage of Week 1 Bye

            While everyone else in the Massachusetts high school football world plays their first game on Friday, Old Colony football will still be planning. Typically, the Cougars have their bye in the middle of the season, but this year, things somehow shook out where they’re just starting their season one week after everyone else.

            There are pros and cons to the odd scheduling, but Old Colony head coach Brandon Mendez is focused on the positives at this point. Though he’s not getting hung up on his guys being fresher than Holbrook, who the Cougars face in Week 2, Mendez’s focus is on the fact that the Cougars will be able to spend a little extra time on technique.

            “It’s not the worst thing in the world,” Mendez said. “We have a veteran team, so it allows us to get a little bit more in before that first real game.

            “I feel OK because we scrimmaged up quite a bit,” he continued. “We went and scrimmaged a very good Nauset team, Nantucket, and we treated the whole jamboree against Fairhaven like a real game. As far as being game-ready, with a veteran team, I don’t worry as much. It’s going to give us an opportunity to focus on technique a little more. We don’t have to rush through things.”

            Old Colony is returning eight players on the offensive side of the ball and nine on defense, some of which can play both sides of the ball, like Matt Bumpus. Among those returning are Bumpus, Kyle ScholzPhil ProctorRyan RegoNoahVertigoElijah SmithBen Kingsbury,and Blake Dennison.

            With so many players returning from last year’s roster, Old Colony doesn’t need to spend as much time on the scheme or the general concepts. This group already knows how things work in the program. Instead, the Cougars are trying to refine the little things so they can gain an edge against any opponent.

            “We’re certainly more advanced at this point than we were last year,” Mendez said. “It really gives us a chance to focus on technique more and improve the little things a bit more. Where in the past we’ve had to make sure certain coverages are in, the coverages are there. It’s nothing new.

            “I think the thing that stands out more this year is the kids are asking more valuable questions of the coaches about the scheme than we ever have in the past,” Mendez continued. “It just proves that they get it. They know and they’re hungry to get the right answers and want more out of it, which is great for us.”

            Last year, the Cougars’ defensive was lockdown. No team was going to light up the scoreboard against Old Colony – on the road, or at home. The Cougars offense, however, wasn’t able to match the defense’s consistency.

            But now the Cougars have defined Bumpus’ role as the team’s play-caller, and someone who will be on the field at all times, even when Scholz is lining up at quarterback. Between the two, Mendez fully expects Old Colony to improve off of last year.

            “[Scholz] hit the gym hard this offseason. He’s fully committed,” Mendez said. “He’s looked much more comfortable this pre-season than he did last year. Last year, he got a little worked up. He seemed a little tense. We’d try to slow him down. He’s been very composed this preseason, which is where he needs to be.

            “[Bumpus is] the leader. He’s the guy. He’s calling out the plays in the huddle. … He’s the one who brings the composure. His leadership ability this year has really stood out for us. It’s been outstanding.”

High School Sports Update

By Nick Friar

School Superintendent to Retire in June

            The superintendent of the four Tri-Town school districts is retiring after 10 years.

            The official word on Dr. Doug White’s impending retirement set for June 2020 was announced during the joint meeting of the Tri-Town School Committees on August 26, kicking off the conversation on how best to start the search for his replacement.

            White called the upcoming school year one of big transitions as several new faces step into administrative positions and the districts continue the search for a new business administrator once Paul Kitchen leaves his post in the upcoming month.

            School Committee members reviewed materials left over from the prior superintendent search a decade ago, although regulations surrounding the Request for Proposal (RFP) process have changed relative to the selection of a consultant to assist in the search. An RFP is no longer required to solicit quotes from competing consultants, a bonus for committee members eager to accept White’s suggestion that they should start the search process sooner rather than later.

            “The further you wait, the longer you go, the further you push that out,” White said. “And if you have any glitches, you’re going to get closer and closer to the start of another school year.”

            The goal now is to have someone for the position who meets all the qualifications by the end of January 2020.

            Right away the school committees voted to form a small committee consisting of the four chairs from each district school committee to solicit quotes from hiring consultants and form a list of the desired qualifications and experience they wish to see in their next superintendent.

            Old Rochester Regional School Committee member Jim Muse (Mattapoisett) suggested the districts consider starting the search internally for candidates that might qualify for the job, an approach he says would save time and money in the process of replacing White.

            “…It would behoove us to establish the criteria and see if those … people are already on our radar and not from some unknown state who are interested … before we go to a full-fledged outside process,” said Muse. “We don’t have to go across the country to take applicants.” Muse continued, “If we find that we don’t have somebody … we could still leave the process open….”

            Muse also emphasized that the members of the school committees are the ones who will select the final candidate and that the committees aren’t required to hold a public opinion session on the matter.

            ORR School Committee member Heather Burke (Marion) in response suggested, “Even though … we are the body that decides, given the nature of a regional school district, we do need to solicit the input from teachers, towns, general public, parents – things like that just to make it as inclusive a process as possible.”

            The ensuing vote was to allow the four chairs to hold a special meeting on October 9 at 6:30 pm in the junior high school media room and to allow any other committee members to join them in the discussion. From there, they will solicit quotes from hiring consultants and make suggestions for a small search committee to set the criteria for the new superintendent and eventually narrow down the pool of prospective candidates.

            “No matter what we do, we’re going to make an informed decision,” said Muse.

            White affirmed that funding for a hiring consultant had been allocated from each of the four districts’ fiscal 2020 budgets.

            The next regularly scheduled joint meeting of the Tri-Town and Old Rochester Regional School Committees is scheduled for September 26 at 6:30 pm in the media room at ORR Junior High School.

Southcoast Health

To the Editor;

            On Monday, September 26th, Southcoast Health razed the Tobey Homestead and on Wednesday, September 28th, they ‘announced’ the closing of Tobey’s Makepeace Center for Women and Families at the end of the year.  A coincidence of timing? 

            I have to wonder the rationale behind this sudden closure, beyond the cost savings. There must have been a master plan to do so for some time, especially considering the 14 million dollar expansion to St. Luke’s Maternity Center. 

            Yes, Tobey is a small community hospital with less than 500 annual births. But the key word here is ‘community’. Southcoast is slowly, but systematically, dismantling what makes our local hospital so special to the community it serves.

            I will forever be grateful to the Makepeace Family, to the incredible doctors, compassionate maternity nurses, and to the special midwifery program, for making maternity care such an integral part of Tobey and the communities they have served since 1940. It is painful when ‘business’ decisions are made with what appears to be a disregard for how it ultimately affects patients and the medical care they receive locally.

            Nancy McFadden, Marion

                  The views expressed in the “Letters to the Editor” column are not necessarily those of The Wanderer, its staff or advertisers. The Wandererwill gladly accept any and all correspondence relating to timely and pertinent issues in the great Marion, Mattapoisett and Rochester area, provided they include the author’s name, address and phone number for verification. We cannot publish anonymous, unsigned or unconfirmed submissions. The Wandererreserves the right to edit, condense and otherwise alter submissions for purposes of clarity and/or spacing considerations. The Wanderermay choose to not run letters that thank businesses, and The Wandererhas the right to edit letters to omit business names. The Wandereralso reserves the right to deny publication of any submitted correspondence.

Marion Codification Committee

The Marion Codification Committee will bring forward more Bylaw Improvements for Fall Town Meeting. In 2016, the Town of Marion hired General Code, a consultant company who specializes in reviewing municipal bylaws for content and conflict. General Code provided some 280 comments on discrepancies, ambiguities, and misplaced items in the Town of Marion bylaws.  

The Bylaw Codification Committee, a subcommittee of the Planning Board, has since been meeting regularly to resolve the comments. Similar proposed corrections and improvements have been submitted at subsequent Town Meetings. 

            For this Fall Town Meeting, another set of improvements to various sections in the Marion bylaws will be provided. Some are filling blank zoning determinations in the Table of Use Regulations, changing titles, removing duplicate sections, adding clarification language, removing wording redundant to the MA Building Code, defining the volume of a building, among other changes. 

            The Planning Board is holding a public hearing on Monday,October 7at 7:20 pm on the proposed bylaw changes for this Fall Town Meeting. Anyone interested is invited to attend the public hearing or visit the Planning Board Office to view the text of these proposals.    

Marion Art Center

The Marion Art Center is pleased to present an artist’s lecture by Robert Seyffert, currently exhibiting in the MAC lower gallery.  Seyffert will present on Saturday, September 28at 11am at the Marion Art Center.  This is the final day of the exhibition, featuring paintings by Nancy Dyer Mitton & Robert Seyffert.  The event is free – guests may RSVP by emailing marionartcenter@verizon.net or by calling 508-748-1266.

            Robert Seyffert lives and paints en plein air in NYC. This exhibition of paintings focuses on his love of vintage American cars parked on obscure city streets. He paints in a classic Contemporary American Realist style not unlike Edward Hopper. Seyffert received his BFA from the Maryland Institute, College of Art and his MFA from Parsons School of Design. His prizes have included the Yale at Norfolk Award, the Helena Rubenstein Grant, 1st Prize National Arts Club in 1999, Greenshields Fellowship, and in 2019 the Poe Award for Excellence in the Arts from the Bronx Historical Society. American Artist magazine said “Whether it’s a big tree or a 1965 Pontiac, there’s something about the light hitting the subject that excites me, and that’s what I paint. I’m trying to get the sensation created by the thing I’m looking at, and not just copying it” (Howell, 2003).

            Actor Stephen Collins will be playing Herman Melville in Sailing Towards my Father on the Marion Art Center stage on Saturday, September 28at 7:30pm. This one-man play by Carl A. Rossi “chronicles Melville’s life from youth to old age, concentrating on his evolution as a writer and his complex relations with God, his parents and siblings, his wife and children, and Nathanial Hawthorne.” Tickets to this one-night performance are available for purchase in person, by phone, or online at marionartcenter.org/theatre.  Pricing is $18 for MAC members and $20 for non-members, with a special rate of $15 for students under 18.

Mendell’s Lectures Inform and Entertain

            Seth Mendell, president emeritus of the Mattapoisett Historical Society, gave his audience another slice of Mattapoisett’s early years when he spoke at the museum on September 1 about how the town had been on a speedy path of growth and economic diversity from its earliest days when it separated from Rochester.

            Mendell delved into the years between 1812 and 1857, years that saw the community’s fortunes and its people ebb and flow like the tide. As he shared his research and insight honed from many decades of study, Mendell’s ability to weave a story was on full display.

            Starting with 1815, Mendell spoke of three major blows the budding community felt and ultimately survived. The first of these was a hurricane named” The Great September Gale”.

            “It was a tremendous storm that hit at midday during a high tide,” he said. Ships that were under construction along the Water Street shipyards were driven into buildings. The salt works, an important area of business, was flooded; trees stripped of their leaves wouldn’t be green again until next spring. Crops were ruined.

            “The landscape was changed by the storm,” Mendell said, noting that an area that had been marshland was filled in by tidal surges and is today a residential neighborhood, Mahoney’s Lane. The roof of a church in the Hammondtown enclave was blown completely off, ultimately causing the church to be moved, he said.

            Taking a pause from natural disasters, Mendell told the audience that Route 6 meanders in its curvy fashion because, he said, “It is an old Indian trail.” These kinds of anecdotal details make listening to Mendell more like listening to old tales, ones that never grow tiresome as new tidbits are uncovered.

            Churches sprang up throughout the community and its many neighborhoods, as did schools, Mendell said. Tiny residential groups each had their unique name, oftentimes originating from the first family such as Hammondtown, Randallville, Dextertown, and Cannonville. The village of Mattapoisett was growing, and by 1857, Mattapoisett would finally be released by Rochester, something Rochester had resisted for many years.

            Then the second blow to pound the area was spotted fever. It was reported at the time that a sailor in Fairhaven had arrived carrying the infection. Ultimately, Mattapoisett alone would lose 200 people to the terrifying disease. It was even more frightening because, Mendell said, “It struck the young and healthy of the community. Sixty heads of households died…. No one knew how to treat it … [then] after six months it petered out.”

            The third major blow was a weather event in 1816, one that had global ramifications: “the year without summer.”

            Mendell said that a volcanic eruption large enough to block out the sun for months occurred that year in Indonesia. He said that frost destroyed crops throughout the growing season, forcing local residents to pay dearly for imported food stocks.

            But life goes on, as they say.

            Mattapoisett continued to enjoy prosperity from shipbuilding for the whaling industry, and later on for a newer, faster type of ocean vessel – the clipper ship. Robust trade from around the globe, sale of whale oil to Europe, its most lucrative trading partner, lumbering, fishing, salt production, sawmills, Mendell said, “It was a bubble of economic growth.” A bubble, of course, that would once again burst.

            In 1849 there was an economic depression caused by the collapse of banks in England and other parts of Europe. Mattapoisett, as a major exporter to England, felt the sting as boat building came to a halt. It’s not surprising, then, to learn that when gold was discovered in California and the tales of vast wealth arrived via ships returning home, many men in the local area hightailed it to “them thar hills.” From Mattapoisett, 120 men headed west seeking gold.

            Mendell told the story of one New Englander, Doctor Samuel Merritt, who sought his fortune in gold. However, he, like nearly every other gold miner, found his efforts were for naught. But Merritt had something most of the other forty-niners didn’t – he was a doctor. Mendell said he hung a shingle out in San Francisco, “In the first year he made $40,000.” A princely sum, indeed.

            Merritt’s history is now deeply intertwined with that of the gold coast’s. He was a founder of the City of Oakland, a participant and prime mover in many business ventures, and, today, one can find his name throughout northern California. The wife and children he had left behind joined him. “They lived happily ever after,” Mendell said with a chuckle.

            Throughout his presentation, stories of human interest gave the listener not only a grasp of life during those early years, but also the experiences of the people in terms that brought them to life once more.

            One story that was especially endearing was that of a captain who was sailing from New England to San Francisco. During the trip, the first mate fell into the ocean during a terrible storm and the captain was knocked out cold from swing gear. There was no one left onboard who could navigate the ship. Absent someone who knew how to use a sexton, the ship would flounder aimlessly in the mighty sea. But, wait! The captain had taught his 17-year-old daughter who was traveling with him how to use a sexton. “It was she, a slip of a girl who navigated the ship around the horn and north to San Francisco,” Mendell shared. The stuff that movies are made of.

            Mendell will be giving another chapter in the story of Mattapoisett on September 10 at 7:00 pm at the Mattapoisett Museum, and you can catch his walking tour of Mattapoisett Village on September 7 at 2:00 pm stepping off from the museum.

By Marilou Newell

Mattapoisett Cultural Council Seeks Grant Proposals

Mattapoisett Cultural Council Seeks grant proposals for community-oriented arts, humanities, and science programs until October 15.  Grants are available to support cultural projects and activities in and around Mattapoisett — including exhibits, festivals, field trips, short-term artist residencies or performances in schools, workshops, and lectures.

            This year, Mattapoisett Cultural Council will distribute about $9,800 in grants. Previously funded projects included: theatrical, literary, and science programs for children and adults at Mattapoisett Free Public Library, concerts by Seaglass Theatre Company, SouthCoast Children’s Chorus, and Tri-County Symphonic Band, youth concerts and music education for Mattapoisett students by New Bedford Symphony Orchestra, programs and exhibits at Mattapoisett Historical Society and in-school and after-school arts and science programs sponsored by the Mattapoisett PTA, New Bedford Art Museum, Showstoppers Performing Arts, and Friends of ORR Drama, among others.  

            Mattapoisett Cultural Council is now accepting online applications at www.mass-culture.org/.  Paper applications will not be accepted. Applicants are encouraged to review local funding priorities at www.mass-culture.org/Mattapoisett. Questions may be addressed to MattapoisettLCC@gmail.com.  

Sippican Choral Society

Now is the time to secure your place on stage for one of the region’s best-beloved annual traditions.  The Sippican Choral Society will begin rehearsals Monday, September 9, at 7:15 pm for its annual Christmas concert.  

            Yes, Christmas! The holiday season seems a long way off right now, but there’s a lot of music to learn and rehearse, and that takes time, said Mike Chaplain, Sippican Choral Society president.  Rehearsals will take place every Monday evening at 7:30pm in the Wickenden Chapel at Tabor Academy.  

            “It’s hard work, yes,” said Chaplain.  “But it’s a lot of fun, too.  That’s why so many members keep coming back year after year.  We are accountants and shopkeepers and nurses and engineers, but we share one great passion; the joy of creating music!”

            Sippican Choral Society does not require auditions.  Anybody who wants to sing can just show up.  “If you don’t know how to read music, it’s okay.  By the end of rehearsals, you’ll be up to speed,” said Chaplain.  

            Please arrive a little early (7:00pm) for the first rehearsal to get signed in, pay dues of $35, and pick up your music (which the dues help to pay for).  

            The 2019 program, “Christmas Past & Christmas Present,” will be staged December 6 in New Bedford, and December 8 in Marion.  It features compositions by Charpentier, Billings, Poulenc, Rutter and Mannheim Steamroller.  Darry Dolezal is returning as music director, with Michelle Gordon as accompanist.  

            All voices and all levels of experience are welcome, including high schoolers.  

            For more information, leave a message for Bob Hlady at 508-748-2639, or visit the Sippican Choral Society website at www.sippicanchoralsociety.org.