Showing posts with label Berkshire County. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Berkshire County. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

United States Post Office, Lee, MA - c1910

United States Post Office, Lee, MA, c1910

Settled in 1760 and incorporated in 1777, the town of Lee is one of the gems of the Berkshire hills.

In 1910, according to the U.S. census, the population of Lee was 4,106. In 2010, the head count was 5,943. Paper mills, stone and limestone quarries were a few of the town's early industries.

Marble quarried within the town's 27 square miles is known for its fine quality and graces such sites as St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York City and the U. S. Capitol building in Washington, D.C.

Although they are home to new enterprises now, the buildings in the photograph above can still be found along Lee's charming Main Street, witnesses to the past 102 years and looking none the worse for the wear.

As always, thanks for stopping by and take care.



Photograph source: Library of Congress; Prints and Photographs Division; Washington, D.C. 20540 USA; Reproduction No.: LC-USZ62-33801; http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/2012649405/



Official town website: http://www.lee.ma.us/



Friday, June 22, 2012

Independence Day Celebrations in Western Massachusetts

The summer skies of June and July will soon be bathed in brilliant blossoms of color and sound as Western Massachusetts celebrates the spirit of 1776 once again with fireworks and festivities galore. Here's a sampling of some of the pyrotechnic displays towns and cities are planning for this season of independence in the year 2012. While most of the following events are free, some do request a donation and others charge an entry fee. It's best to visit the applicable websites to get the scoop on all of the details of each venue (as well as any additional planned holiday happenings the town or city may offer, such as parades or concerts) before heading out.


Brimfield
Saturday ~ June 23
139 Old Palmer Road
Brimfield, Massachusetts
Directions to Old Palmer Road


Easthampton
Saturday ~ June 23 ~ 9:30 p.m. (Rain date: June 24)
Galbraith & Daley Fields
Easthampton, Massachusetts
Directions to Daley Field
More info: http://www.easthamptonspirit.com/


Monson
Saturday ~ June 23 ~ 9:15 p.m. (Rain date: June 24)
Monson High & Quarry Hill School
Monson, Massachusetts
Directions to Monson High School
More info: http://www.monsonsummerfestinc.com/events.htm


Northampton
Saturday ~ June 23 ~ 9:15 p.m. (Rain date: June 24)
Look Park
300 North Main Street
Florence, Massachusetts
Directions to Look Park
More info: http://www.northamptonfamilyfourth.com/


Holyoke
Friday ~ June 29 ~ Dusk (Rain date: June 30)
Holyoke Community College
Homestead Avenue
Holyoke, Massachusetts
Directions to HCC
More info: https://www.facebook.com/HolyokeCommunityCollege


Chicopee
Saturday ~ June 30 ~ 9:30 p.m. (Rain date: July 1)
Szot Park
Front Street
Chicopee, Massachusetts
Directions to Szot Park
More info: http://www.festofall.com/


Lenox
June 30 ~ 9:30 p.m.
Elm Court Estate
Lenox, Massachusetts
Directions to Elm Court Estate


Ware
Saturday ~ June 30 ~ 9:30 p.m. (Rain date: July 1)
Grenville Park
Walter Drive
Ware, Massachusetts
Directions to Grenville Park
More info: http://www.townofware.com/Pages/WareMA_MeetingCal/S037ECD82-037ECE06?formid=161


Westfield
Saturday ~ June 30 (Rain date: July 1)
Stanley Park
400 Western Avenue
Westfield, Massachusetts
Directions to Stanley Park
More info: http://www.stanleypark.org/page/fireworks-freedom and http://www.cityofwestfield.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/Community-Celebrations.pdf


East Longmeadow
Tuesday ~ July 3 ~ 9:00 p.m.
East Longmeadow High School
East Longmeadow, Massachusetts
Directions to ELHS
More info: http://www.eastlongmeadowma.gov/


South Hadley
Tuesday ~ July 3 ~ 9:15 p.m. (Rain date: July 5)
Michael E. Smith Middle School
100 Mosier Street
South Hadley, Massachusetts
Directions to MSMS
More info: http://www.southhadley.org/Pages/SouthHadleyMA_Recreation/specialevents


Sturbridge
Tuesday ~ July 3 ~ Dusk (Rain date: July 4)
Old Sturbridge Village
1 Old Sturbridge Village Road
Sturbridge, Massachusetts
1-800-733-1830
Directions to Old Sturbridge Village
More info: http://www.osv.org/orders/listprograms.html?ID=29&G=


Agawam
Wednesday ~ July 4 ~ 9:30 p.m. (Rain date: July 5)
Six Flags New England
1623 Main Street
Agawam, Massachusetts
1-413-786-9300
Directions to Six Flags
More info: http://www.sixflags.com/newengland/index.aspx


Amherst
Wednesday ~ July 4 (Rain date: July 5)
McGuirk Alumni Stadium, University of Massachusetts
Amherst, Massachusetts
Directions to Alumni Stadium
More info: https://www.facebook.com/Amherst.July4th.Fireworks/info


North Adams
Wednesday ~ July 4 ~ 9:30 p.m. (Rain date: July 5)
Joe Wolfe Field
North Adams, Massachusetts
Directions to Wolfe Field


Pittsfield
Wednesday ~ July 4 ~ 9:30 p.m. (Rain date: July 5)
Wahconah Park
Pittsfield, Massachusetts
Directions to Wahconah Park
More info: https://www.facebook.com/pittsfield.parade


Springfield
Wednesday ~ July 4 ~ 9:30 p.m. (Rain date: July 5)
Memorial Bridge
Springfield/West Springfield, Massachusetts
Directions to the Memorial Bridge
More info: http://www.spiritofspringfield.org/starspangle/index.html


Stockbridge
Wednesday ~ July 4 ~ 10:00 p.m. (Following performance)
Tanglewood Grounds
Stockbridge, Massachusetts
Directions to Tanglewood
More info: http://www.bso.org/


Chesterfield
Friday ~ July 6 ~ 9 p.m. (Rain date: July 7)
Cummington Fair Grounds
Cummington, Massachusetts
Directions to the fair grounds
More info: https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=308875732539382&set=a.244076865685936.55776.244039579022998&type=1&theater


Southwick
Friday ~ July 6 ~ 9:15 p.m. (Rain date: July 13)
STRDS Athletics Field
Powder Mill Road
Southwick, Massachusetts
Directions to STRDS Athletic Field
More info: http://www.southwickma.org/Public_Documents/SouthwickMA_CommCal/S037FC76C-037FC7B0?formid=161


Greenfield
Saturday ~ July 7 ~ 9:30 p.m. (Rain date: July 8)
Beacon Field
Beacon Street
Greenfield, Massachusetts
Directions to Beacon Field
More info: http://www.greenfield-ma.gov/Pages/GreenfieldMA_Recreation/Fireworks



Elsewhere in Massachusetts:


Fitchburg
Tuesday ~ July 3 ~ 10:00 p.m.
Rollstone Hill
Fitchburg, Massachusetts
Directions to Rollstone Hill
More info: http://fitchburgcivicdays.com/


Worcester
Tuesday ~ July 3 ~ 9:30 p.m. (Rain date: July 5)
East Park (Christoforo Columbo)
Shrewsbury Street
Worcester, Massachusetts
Directions to East Park
More info: https://www.worcesterchamber.org/event-register?event=371


Boston
Wednesday ~ July 4 ~ 10:30 p.m.
Along Charles River, between Longfellow & Mass Ave. bridges
Boston & Cambridge, Massachusetts
Directions to Boston fireworks
More info: http://www.july4th.org/


Salisbury Beach Center
Wednesday ~ July 4 ~ 10:15 p.m.
North End Boulevard
Salisbury, Massachusetts
Directions to Salisbury Beach Center
More info: http://www.beachfests.org/fourth-of-july.html


Pepperell
Saturday ~ July 7 ~ Dusk
Field behind VFW Post 3291
Pepperell, Massachusetts
Directions to VFW Post 3291
More info: http://pepperell4thofjuly.org/



In Connecticut:


Hartford, CT
Saturday ~ July 7 ~ Dusk (Rain date: July 8)
Riverside Park & Riverfront Boathouse
20 Leibert Road
Hartford, CT
Directions to Riverside Park
More info: http://www.riverfront.org/events/festivals/#Riverfest


Stafford, CT
Saturday ~ July 7 ~ 9:00 p.m. (Rain date: July 8)
Stafford High School
145 Orcuttville Road
Stafford, Connecticut
Directions to SHS
More info: http://www.staffordct.org/calendar_civic/calendar.php?op=cal&month=7&year=2012&catview=0


Enfield, CT
Sunday - July 8 ~ 9:45 p.m.
Town Green
Enfield, Connecticut
Directions to the Enfield Town Green
More info: http://enfieldcelebration.org/


Please contact explorewmass@yahoo.com with suggestions for local fireworks displays we may have missed or corrections we need to make.

As always, thanks for stopping by and take care. (And have a safe and super holiday!)



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Monday, June 4, 2012

The Maplewood, Pittsfield, Massachusetts

The Maplewood in Pittsfield, Mass., has been both witness and participant to American history spanning two-hundred years. The property's saga of transformation started in 1812, when the site began to play host to a U.S. military base and later, a military prison. In the two centuries hence, The Maplewood has assumed a variety of identities including: boys' school, girls' school, resort hotel and currently, upscale condominiums. For a great timeline of The Maplewood history, check out the condo webpage: http://www.maplewoodcondos.com/history.html.



The above photograph of the The Maplewood's stately columned entryway was taken sometime between 1900 and 1920. The Maplewood was a popular Berkshire resort at the time, proprietor Arthur W. Plumb placing an ad in the May 25, 1901, Boston Evening Transcript promising, "the largest and best equipped hotel in the County" and offering "special rates for June."



In this and the following two photographs of The Maplewood, snapped between 1900 and 1920, one can note the progression of the entryway on the left from simple porch and walk to sheltered carport straddling a horseshoe driveway.



Arthur W. Plumb oversaw improvements to the property for decades, beginning in 1887. A 1927 advertisement trumpets the resort hotel's "40th season" under his ownership and management.



After two centuries of expansion and contraction, buildings raised and buildings razed, The Maplewood land has retreated a bit now: bid farewell to a multitude of rooms of secrets, rolling lawns of respite, constructions of a gilded age lost to the stretching of days. The pace of an automobile world cold assassin to the concepts of rest and relaxation. Today, condominiums: another adaptive turning of a metamorphic plot.

As always, thanks for stopping by and take care.



Photographs are from the American Memory Collection (http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/index.html) of the Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Detroit Publishing Company Photograph Collection:
Digital ID photo 1: det 4a24512 http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/det.4a24512
Digital ID photo 2: det 4a17894 http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/det.4a17894
Digital ID photo 3: det 4a24538 http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/det.4a24538
Digital ID photo 4: det 4a23821 http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/det.4a23821


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Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Free Croquet Match at The Wicket Grounds in Tolland this Sunday

Croquet matches FREE for all backyard players ages 13 and up at The Wicket Grounds, 1043 Burt Hill Road, Tolland, Ma, Sunday, July 31, from 1 to 5 PM.

"The Bicentennial Cup II" awards three trophy cups to the top three points scorers. Bring a mallet or use one of ours. Cool, leafy, friendly afternoon of croquet in the mountains where it has been played since 1935. Free traditional strawberries and whipped cream!

For more information, contact macroquet@gmail.com or visit www.thewindsoftolland.com.

More about the history of The Wicket Grounds and directions for getting there: http://explorewmass.blogspot.com/2010/07/tolland-bicentennial-cup-croquet.html


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Pittsfield Hoopla Festival Returns To Springside Park

(Pittsfield, MA - PRESS RELEASE) On Saturday, July 30, from 10am to 10pm, the Pittsfield City Hoopla festival will return to the public gardens of Springside Park - Pittsfield, Massachusetts’ largest public park, located at 874 North St - for its third year of festivities inspired by the craft, craze and creativity of the hula hoop. Boasting a full day of hoop related classes, contests, jams, art, vending and performance, the Pittsfield City Hoopla is a unique family-friendly event that celebrates the value of the movement arts in our everyday lives and community.

In addition to free hooping workshops for all ages and abilities on the lawn with professional teaching hoop dance artists from the Boston Hoop Troop and Hooping Harmony between 12 noon - 3pm there will also be more focused smaller workshops available for a fee.

***

Workshops with Pittsfield based movement professionals include:

10am: Openings: A Yoga Class for Entering the Hoop with Rachael Plaine of Berkshire Pure Movement and Yoga Depot

3pm Intro to HoopTap with festival maker and founder Stefanie Weber

6pm Hip Hop for the Hooper with dancer Marie Georgefils

7pm Sundown Stretch & Flow with Gillian Gorman of Radiance Yoga.

***

Workshops from visiting guest artists include:

11am Hoop Tutorial with Robin Rapture of Hoopium in New Hampshire

3pm Putting the Dance in Hoop Dance with Laura-Marie from Hooping Harmony in Greenfield , MA,

4pm On & Off Body Axis Flips & Twists with Lolli Hoops and Core Hooping: Navigating Between Waist and Neck with Rachel, both from the Boston Hoop Troop.

Space is limited for the above workshops and pre-registration is suggested. The cost is $10 per workshop and lower if you attend 3 or more.

***

Participants can begin the day by making their own hoop on site at 10am for $25 guided by Hoopla artists. Pre-registration is required and space is limited.

This year’s Hoopla will introduce some new activities for participants. ‘Yogaslacker’ Danielle Gismondi from Frog Lotus Yoga in North Adams will facilitate a slackline throughout the day. According to Slackline.com, slacklining is the sport of walking a small, flat nylon rope between two points. It is practiced in the backyard, on college campuses and city parks, and even 3000 feet above the ground. Some people do it for fun, others for the obvious athletic benefits, and others still for a meditative purpose, in seeking a higher state of mind. Since slacklining’s development in the late 1970s, slacklining has grown into an international craze, and is a common and popular pastime within the outdoor community. Also a part of the circus arts scene, slacklining is making it way back to the stage in more creative ways.

Artist Bridgit Noone will facilitate a table for coloring mandalas. The Mandala Project, founded by Lori Bailey Cunningham, explains a "mandala" as being from the classical Indian language of Sanskrit loosely translated to mean "circle”. “Far more than a simple shape, it represents wholeness, and can be seen as a model for the organizational structure of life itself--a cosmic diagram that reminds us of our relation to the infinite, the world that extends both beyond and within our bodies and minds”, she states. Both Navajo and Tibetan cultures are known for their colorful mandalas.

Returning again this year, David Frazier from the Vincent Hebert Arboretum will be leading walks along the trails at Springside Park for any one interested in learning more about the trees, gardens, and history of the grounds.

At 5pm the Hoopla will offer its first-ever hooping contest featuring prizes from local businesses. Sign-ups for the contests will occur through out the day and are open to all interested.

Food will be available for purchase on site and vendors will be selling handcrafted hoops and other creative items.

The grand finale of Pittsfield City Hoopla begins at 8pm with an “enchanted illuminated spin extravaganza” featuring live drumming by Aimee Gelinas and her Rhythm Keepers from Pittsfield, and fire hoop and dance performances by Lita Lundeen-Setchfield, Angyl Fyre, Maria Mariposa and more.

Pittsfield City Hoopla is created by Stefanie Weber/Creatures of Habitat in partnership with Pittsfield’s Office of Cultural Development and is supported in part through funding from the Massachusetts Cultural Council, Pittsfield Cultural Council and Greylock Federal Credit Union. Additional community supporters and sponsors include Mark Tomasi, Day Mountain Sound, The Earth Shoppe, BerkshireGirl, Elm St. Barber Shop, New Image Salon, Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival Community Day, Lenox Community Center and Berkshire Dance Theater.

The 3rd annual Pittsfield City Hoopla festival will be held Saturday, July 30th, from 10am to 10pm, rain or shine. For more information visit www.pittsfieldcityhoopla.org. To pre-register for a workshop email Stefanie@fertileuniverse.com or call 413.281.6734.



Pittsfield City Hoopla festival
Free, family friendly, outdoors, rain or shine
Saturday, July 30th, 10am to 10pm
Springside Park
874 North Street, Pittsfield, MA 01201
www.pittsfieldcityhoopla.org
413-281-6734


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Wednesday, March 9, 2011

A Main Street Moment, North Adams, c1908


Still damp from a recent pass of the watering wagon, Main Street, North Adams, stands frozen eternal, the calendar forever turned to 1908.



Amidst the bustle, a pair of barefoot boys stop to examine a window full of magic. Posters proclaim: The circus is coming to town!



Main Street's commercial offerings include druggists and (painless) dentists, loans and lunch.



On steel rails slicing the center of the street, a streetcar runs its rounds: Unshackled from the horse team only to be bridled to the wire.



Drivers and cyclists and folks on foot are caught in the camera eye unaware, life forever paused on a dry plate negative.



The sidewalk has long since dried in front of Wilson department store, the people have moved on. For though the moment's before us, time waits for no one.

As always, thanks for stopping by and take care.



More on EWM...

Map: Bird's-eye View of North Adams, 1881: http://explorewmass.blogspot.com/2009/04/map-birds-eye-view-of-north-adams-1881.html


Photo source: Library of Congress; Prints and Photographs Division; Detroit Publishing Company Photograph Collection; Call Number: LC-D4-70516; http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/det1994020399/PP/

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Monday, March 7, 2011

This Month in Western Massachusetts History: March


BORN:

2 Mar 1904 - Theodor Seuss Geisel, aka Dr. Seuss - (2 Mar 1904 - 24 Sept 1991) - Author; Illustrator, Green Eggs and Ham, etc. - Born and raised in Springfield

5 Mar 1955 - Penn Fraser Jillette - (5 Mar 1955 - ) - Illusionist; Magician; Entertainer - Born and raised in Greenfield

12 Mar 1948 - James Vernon Taylor - (12 Mar 1948 - ) - Grammy Award-winning Musician, Member of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame - Resident of Washington

17 Mar 1951 - Kurt Vogel Russell - (17 Mar 1951 - ) - Actor, Silkwood, etc.; Baseball Player - Born in Springfield

26 Mar 1850 - Edward Bellamy - (26 Mar 1850 - 22 May 1898) - Author, Looking Backward 2000-1887 - Born and died in Chicopee Falls

26 Mar 1874 - Robert Lee Frost - (26 Mar 1874 - 29 Jan 1963) - Pulitzer Prize-winning Poet; English Teacher at Amherst - Lived in Amherst

27 Mar 1969 - Johnny April - (27 Mar 1969 - ) - Musician; Drummer, Staind - Resided in Springfield


DIED:

13 Mar 1906 - Susan Brownell Anthony - (15 Feb 1820 - 13 March 1906) - Temperance Activist; Abolitionist; Suffragette - Born in Adams

16 Mar 1985 - Edward William (Eddie) Shore - (25 Nov 1902 - 16 Mar 1985) - NHL Hockey Player; Player, Owner, AHL's Springfield Indians - Resided and died in Springfield

19 Mar 1988 - Estelle Condit (Suzy) Frelinghuysen - (1911 - 19 Mar 1988) - Abstract Artist; Opera Singer, Philanthropist - Married to George L. K. Morris - Resided in Lenox

22 Mar 1785 - Jonathan Edwards - (5 Oct 1703 - 22 Mar 1785) - Fervent Preacher; Theologian - Lived in Northampton

22 Mar 1798 - Justin Morgan - (28 Feb 1747 - 22 Mar 1798) - Composer; Horse Breeder, Morgan Horse - Born and lived in West Springfield

24 Mar 1882 - Henry Wadsworth Longfellow - (27 Feb 1807 - 24 Mar 1882) - Professor; Poet, Paul Revere's Ride, etc. - Resided in Pittsfield


HAPPENED:

Mar 1643 - Springfield settlers vote to build a bridge over the Mill River in Springfield.

Mar 1648 - The section of Springfield known to natives as Woronoko is annexed to create Westfield. Springfield had acquired the land per an order of the General Court in 1647.

Mar 1750 - Residents of South Hadley, requiring more space for worship and civic affairs, vote at assembly to build a new meeting-house. Fifty meetings and thirteen contentious years later, the structure is finally built.

Mar 1847 - Springfield's Main Street train station burns beyond repair. It is replaced with a larger, brick structure.

Mar 1848 - With debate whether to advance from town to city growing, a committee of the state legislature sitting in Springfield is presented with opinions pro and con.

Mar 1931 - The aqueduct connecting the Ware River and Wachusett Reservoir is completed, as Boston looks west to increase fresh water supplies to the city and its suburbs.

Mar 1674- Ferry service is established on the Connecticut River, just south of inlet of the Agawam (now the Westfield River). The ferry shuttled passengers, animals and freight across the river at this spot for almost 200 years, until the construction of the South-end bridge in 1879.

1 Mar 1651 - Joshua Parsons, young son of Hugh and Mary Parsons, passes away, leading an already-unnerved Mary to declare her husband a witch and murderer to Magistrate Pynchon, confirming many Springfield residents' suspicions. Mary, claiming to be possessed by Satan, recanted her story shortly after, taking responsibility for the death of the boy. Joining her jailed husband in Boston, she was held for trial. Although Mary was exonerated on the charge of being witch, she was convicted in May, 1651, and sentenced to death for Joshua's murder. Too sick to be hanged on the scheduled day, Mary was found dead in her cell on the next. Hugh Parsons was also convicted, but ultimately was spared the hangman's noose, leaving the area in due haste.

1 Mar 1842 - The Northampton and Springfield railroad corporation is formed.

2 Mar 1798 - The Berkshire County town of Clarksburg is incorporated.

3 Mar 1802 - West Springfield grows in area with the annexation of Westfield land.

4 Mar 1629 - King Charles I grants charter to the Company of the Massachusetts Bay.

4 Mar 1816 - Enfield holds its first town meeting. Enfield was one of four Massachusetts towns disincorporated in 1938 to make way for the Quabbin Reservoir, part of Boston's water-supply system.

6 Mar 1762 - The Franklin County town of Bernardston, formerly known as Falltown, incorporates.

6 Mar 1762 - The Berkshire County town of Sandisfield is incorporated.

6 Mar 1762 - The town of Tyringham, in Berkshire County, is incorporated.

6 Mar 1930 - Frozen food makes its worldwide debut as seven markets in Springfield offer curious patrons a variety of Clarence Birdseye's icy edibles for the first time in history.

7 Mar 1888 - The Springfield Daily Union newspaper offices on the corner of Main and Worthington Streets are swept up in a rapidly spreading fire, causing several deaths and injuries. Some victims jumped from the upper floors, where fire had trapped them. Others met their end in the blaze itself, unable to get out of the building. The tragic event prompted the city to buy the fire department's first aerial ladder.

7 Mar 1938 - Dana holds its last town meeting. The Swift River Valley town (and three others) would cease to exist on April 28, 1938, drowned by the man-made Quabbin Reservoir, a massive undertaking to expand Boston's water supplies.

9 Mar 1848 - Main Street, Springfield, was a somber scene as the body of President John Quincy Adams passed mourning dignitaries, military companies, politicians and residents on its way to First Church at Court Square.

9 Mar 1855 - The town of Norwich changes name to Huntington.

11 Mar 1864 - The Westfield Athenaeum is incorporated by legislative act.

12 Mar 1783 - The Hampshire County town of Middlefield is established.

12 Mar 1830 - The Massachusetts railroad corporation is established. The corporation's mission is to build a railroad between Boston and the Hudson river near Albany or Troy by January 1, 1835, passing through Springfield.

14 Mar 1793 - Cheshire is incorporated as a town in Berkshire County.

14 Mar 1805 - Great Island, in the Connecticut River, is annexed to the town of Gill, effective April 1, 1805.

15 Mar 1833 - The Western Railroad Company is established by charter of the Massachusetts legislature. The incorporation is charged with extending the western end of the Boston and Worcester railroad to the state's border with New York.

16 Mar 1854 - Holyoke firm Lyman Mills is incorporated.

16 Mar 1868 - The Springfield Street Railroad Company is incorporated. Before electrification, the rail cars were pulled by teams of horses

17 Mar 1801 - Dana holds its first town meeting.

20 Mar 1651 - Hugh Parsons, accused of witchcraft, is brought from Springfield to Boston to stand trial.

20 Mar 1784 - The town of Dalton is incorporated in Berkshire County.

20 Mar 1837 - The Westfield - Southwick border is adjusted.

21 Mar 1785 - Heath holds its first town meeting.

21 Mar 1936 - Springfield and other Connecticut River towns are devastated by a major flood.

21 Mar 1940 - Quabbin Reservoir receives its first flow of water from Ware River diversion. Quabbin reaches full capacity on June 22, 1946, 412 billion gallons.

25 Mar 1938 - Enfield Town Hall serves as site of town's farewell gathering, an emotional night well-attended by residents and friends alike. Just over a month later, Enfield is no longer, officially disincorporated to make way for the Quabbin Reservoir.

26 Mar 1855 - The border between Northampton and Easthampton is defined.

28 Mar 1938 - Final plans are filed by the Metropolitan District Water Supply Commission for the massive land-taking required for the creation of Quabbin. In all, 117 square miles become watershed property. By the year 2005, the reservoir quenches the thirst of over 2.2 million people in eastern Massachusetts daily.

31 Mar 1933 - The Civilian Conservation Corps is created as a result of the Reforestation Relief Act. The Corps was also referred to as the "3 Cs". Taming Holyoke's Mt. Tom State Reservation was one of the first local projects the Corps tackled.


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Sunday, March 6, 2011

A Berkshire Brook in Black & White, c1906

"A View near Greylock, Berkshire Hills, Mass, c1906"
Hawthorne in Berkshire

Mountains and valleys! dear ye are to me:
Your streams wild-wandering, ever-tranquil lakes,
And forests that make murmur like the sea;
And this keen air that from the hurt soul takes
Its pain and languor:-Doubly dear ye are
For many a lofty memory that throws
A splendor on these heights.-'Neath you low star,
That like a dewdrop melts in heaven's rose,
Dwelt once a starry spirit; there he smote
Life from the living hills; a little while
He rested from the raging of the world.
This Brook of Shadows, whose dark waters purled
Solace to his deep mind, it felt his smile-
Haunted, and melancholy, and remote.

~Richard Watson Gilder, 1897


Photo: Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Detroit Publishing Company Photograph Collection, http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/det1994006026/PP/
Poem: The Century; Volume 55; Issue 2; Dec 1897


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Wednesday, September 8, 2010

The Legend of Wahconah Falls

Wahconah Falls
From Myths and Legends of Our Own Land, Vol. 4, Tales of Puritan Land by Charles M. Skinner, 1896

The pleasant valley of Dalton, in the Berkshire Hills, had been under the rule of Miacomo for forty years when a Mohawk dignitary of fifty scalps and fifty winters came a-wooing his daughter Wahconah. On a June day in 1637, as the girl sat beside the cascade that bears her name, twining flowers in her hair and watching leaves float down the stream, she became conscious of a pair of eyes bent on her from a neighboring coppice, and arose in some alarm. Finding himself discovered, the owner of the eyes, a handsome young fellow, stepped forward with a quieting air of friendliness, and exclaimed, "Hail, Bright Star!"

"Hail, brother," answered Wahconah.

"I am Nessacus," said the man, "one of King Philip's soldiers. Nessacus is tired with his flight from the Long Knives (the English), and his people faint. Will Bright Star's people shut their lodges against him and his friends?"

The maiden answered, "My father is absent, in council with the Mohawks, but his wigwams are always open. Follow."

Nessacus gave a signal, and forth from the wood came a sad-eyed, battle-worn troop that mustered about him. Under the girl's lead they went down to the valley and were hospitably housed. Five days later Miacomo returned, with him the elderly Mohawk lover, and a priest, Tashmu, of repute a cringing schemer, with whom hunters and soldiers could have nothing in common, and whom they would gladly have put out of the way had they not been deterred by superstitious fears. The strangers were welcomed, though Tashmu looked at them gloomily, and there were games in their honor, Nessacus usually proving the winner, to Wahconah's joy, for she and the young warrior had fallen in love at first sight, and it was not long before he asked her father for her hand. Miacomo favored the suit, but the priest advised him, for politic reasons, to give the girl to the old Mohawk, and thereby cement a tribal friendship that in those days of English aggression might be needful. The Mohawk had three wives already, but he was determined to add Wahconah to his collection, and he did his best, with threats and flattery, to enforce his suit. Nessacus offered to decide the matter in a duel with his rival, and the challenge was accepted, but the wily Tashmu discovered in voices of wind and thunder, flight of birds and shape of clouds, such omens that the scared Indians unanimously forbade a resort to arms. "Let the Great Spirit speak," cried Tashmu, and all yielded their consent.

Invoking a ban on any who should follow, Tashmu proclaimed that he would pass that night in Wizard's Glen, where, by invocations, he would learn the divine will. At sunset he stalked forth, but he had not gone far ere the Mohawk joined him, and the twain proceeded to Wahconah Falls. There was no time for magical hocus-pocus that night, for both of them toiled sorely in deepening a portion of the stream bed, so that the current ran more swiftly and freely on that side, and in the morning Tashmu announced in what way the Great Spirit would show his choice. Assembling the tribe on the river-bank, below a rock that midway split the current, a canoe, with symbols painted on it, was set afloat near the falls. If it passed the dividing rock on the side where Nessacus waited, he should have Wahconah. If it swerved to the opposite shore, where the Mohawk and his counselor stood, the Great Spirit had chosen the old chief for her husband. Of course, the Mohawk stood on the deeper side. On came the little boat, keeping the centre of the stream. It struck the rock, and all looked eagerly, though Tashmu and the Mohawk could hardly suppress an exultant smile. A little wave struck the canoe: it pivoted against the rock and drifted to the feet of Nessacus. A look of blank amazement came over the faces of the defeated wooer and his friend, while a shout of gladness went up, that the Great Spirit had decided so well. The young couple were wed with rejoicings; the Mohawk trudged homeward, and, to the general satisfaction, Tashmu disappeared with him. Later, when Tashmu was identified as the one who had guided Major Talcott's soldiers to the valley, the priest was caught and slain by Miacomo's men.


Wahconah Falls State Park: http://www.mass.gov/dcr/parks/western/wahf.htm



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Tuesday, August 24, 2010

No Rest for Rust: Images of Becket's Hudson-Chester Quarry

Abandoned in the 1960s, the rusting remains of machines and materials dot the Hudson-Chester Quarry in Becket, on rescued land maintained for public use by the Becket Land Trust.

For more photos and information on this valuable and historic regional resource, visit the EWM post, The Historic Hudson-Chester Granite Quarry in Becket, Massachusetts.


Cylindrical Tank ~ Hudson-Chester Quarry

Top of Stiff-armed Derrick ~ Hudson-Chester Quarry

Truck Cooling Fan ~ Hudson-Chester Quarry (Nathaniel Hemingway Photo)

Steel Cable ~ Hudson-Chester Quarry

The Becket Land Trust welcomes volunteers and donations. To learn how you can help, visit http://www.becketlandtrust.org/

For more about Becket, Chester and mining in the Berkshires, check out the EWM posts, 'The Keystone Arch Bridges Trail: Magic in the Berkshire Mountains' and 'Map: Bird's-eye View of Chester, Mass., 1885.'

As always, thanks for stopping by and take care.



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Friday, August 20, 2010

Fairs and Festivals in Western Massachusetts

Updated: July 7, 2012


Adams


Adams Agricultural Fair
August 2 - 5, 2012

Bowe Field
Columbia St. (Route 8)
Adams, MA
wheel2148@aol.com

http://aafadams.tripod.com/adamsfair/



Ashfield


Ashfield Fall Festival
Annual/October

Main St.
Ashfield, MA
info@ashfieldfallfestival.org

http://www.ashfieldfallfestival.org/



Becket


Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival
June - August 2012

358 George Carter Rd.
Becket, MA 01223
(413) 243-0745

http://www.jacobspillow.org/



Belchertown


Belchertown Fair
Annual/September

Belchertown Town Common
Main St.
Belchertown, MA
(413) 323-7201
questions@belchertownfair.com

http://www.belchertownfair.com/



Blandford


The Blandford Fair
August 31 - September 3, 2012

Blandford Fairgrounds
10 North Street
Blandford, MA 01008
(413) 848-0995

http://theblandfordfair.com/



Brimfield


The Brimfield Antique Show
2011 Schedule:
May 8 - 13, 2012
July 10 - 15, 2012
Sept. 4 - 9, 2012

Route 20
Brimfield, MA 01010

http://www.brimfieldshow.com/about_the_show.htm



Chicopee


Borrowed Talents Craft Fair and Art Show
July 28 & 29, 2012

The Moose Lodge and Family Center
244 Fuller Road
Chicopee, MA
(413) 827-8748
borrowedtalents@hotmail.com

http://borrowedtalentscraftfair.weebly.com/index.html



Cummington


Cummington Fair
August 23 - 26, 2012

Cummington Fairgrounds
97 Fairgrounds Rd.
Cummington, MA 01026

http://www.cummingtonfair.com/



Granville


Granville Harvest Fair
October 6 - 8, 2012

Town Center
Main Rd. (Route 57)
Granville, MA

http://townofgranville.net/default.aspx



Greenfield


The Green River Festival
July 14 & 15, 2012

Greenfield Community College
College Drive
Greenfield, MA
(413) 773-5463
balloon@crocker.com

http://www.greenriverfestival.com/


Franklin County Fair
September 6 - 9, 2012

Franklin County Fairgrounds
89 Wisdom Way
Greenfield, MA 01302
(413) 774-4282
info@fcas.com

http://www.fcas.com/


Brick + Mortar International Video Art Festival
October, 2012

Various Downtown Buildings
Greenfield, MA
Walking maps available on Town Common

http://greenfieldvideofest.org/about.html


Hancock


Country Fair
September 29 & 30, 2012

Hancock Shaker Village
34 Lebanon Mountain Rd.
Hancock, MA 01237
(413) 443-0188
(800) 817-1137
info@hancockshakervillage.org

http://www.hancockshakervillage.org/



Heath


Heath Fair
August 17 - 19, 2012

Heath Agricultural Society, Inc.
9 Hosmer Rd.
Heath, MA 01346
info@heathfair.org

http://www.heathfair.org/



Middlefield


Middlefield Fair
August 10 - 12, 2012

Middlefield Fairgrounds
7 Bell Road
Middlefield, MA
(413) 623-6027
middlefieldfair@gmail.com

http://middlefieldfair.org/



North Adams


Fall Foliage Festival Parade
September 30, 2012

Main St.
North Adams, MA 01247

http://www.fallfoliageparade.com/



Northampton


Three County Fair
August 31 - September 3, 2012

Three County Fairgrounds
54 Fair St.
Northampton, MA 01060
(413) 584-2237
info@threecountyfair.com

http://www.3countyfair.com/


Paradise City Arts Festival
October 6 - 8, 2012

Three County Fairgrounds
54 Fair St.
Northampton, MA 01060
(800) 511-9725

http://www.paradisecityarts.com/



Old Deerfield


Old Deerfield Craft Fairs
June 16 & 17, 2012
September 15 & 16, 2012
November 16 - 18, 2012

Village of Old Deerfield
Deerfield, MA 01342
(413) 774-7476, ext. 18
info@deerfield-craft.org

http://www.deerfield-craft.org/



Springfield


Caribbean Festival
Annual/August

Springfield Carnival Association
Parade: Catherine St. to Blunt Park
Springfield, MA
(413) 726-9006
cariq69@hotmail.com



Glendi Greek Festival
September 7 - 9, 2012

Greek Cultural Center
St. George Cathedral
22 St. George Road
Springfield, MA 01104
(413) 737-1496

http://www.stgeorgecath.org/Glendi.htm


Mattoon Street Arts Festival
September 8 & 9, 2012

Mattoon Street
Springfield, MA

http://www.mattoonfestival.org/



Stockbridge


Stockbridge Summer Arts and Crafts Show
August 18 & 19, 2012

Berkshire Botanical Gardens
Routes 102 & 183
Stockbridge, MA

http://www.stockbridgechamber.org/arts_crafts.html


Stockbridge Main Street at Christmas
November 30 - December 1 & 2, 2012

http://www.stockbridgechamber.org/christmas.html

Above two events hosted by:

Stockbridge Chamber of Commerce
50 Main Street
Stockbridge, MA 01262
(413) 298-5200



West Springfield


The Big E
September 14 - 30, 2012

Eastern States Exposition
1305 Memorial Avenue (Rte. 147)
West Springfield, MA 01089
(413) 205-5115
info@TheBigE.com

http://www.thebige.com/fair/



Westfield


Westfield Fair
August 17 - 19, 2012

Westfield Fairgrounds
Russellville Rd.
Westfield, MA 01085

http://www.thewestfieldfair.com/


For more local activities and events check out EWM's Things To Do In Western Massachusetts and Museums of Western Massachusetts.

Your suggestions for additions to this list are welcome. Please leave a comment below or email: explorewmass@yahoo.com. Thanks!



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Thursday, August 19, 2010

NY Times Samples Berkshires Farm Fare

Travel
In the Berkshires, Dinner’s Not Far Away
By MARK VANHOENACKER
Published: August 18, 2010

What Hawthorne and Melville found out in 1850, tourists know today: the region is very farm friendly.

Read the article: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/22/travel/22journeys.html



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Sunday, August 15, 2010

Artist's Reception And Wine Tasting This Saturday At The Wit Gallery In Lenox

The Wit Gallery, located at 27 Church St., Lenox, is pleased to announce that an Artist's Reception and Wine Tasting will be held at the Gallery on Saturday, August 21st, from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m.

(Lenox, MA - PRESS RELEASE) The Wit Gallery of Art and Wine presents a reception for three artists: painter Suzanne Howes-Stevens, mixed media artist Carol Staub and sculptor Barbara Scavotto-Earley. During this event, the gallery will also be holding a wine tasting of select wines from it’s inventory of organic, artisan wines. Adam English, of Café Europa distributors will be pouring a tastes of new South American wines that we think are perfect for the upcoming fall season.


Portal #12 - Suzanne Howes-Stevens

Suzanne Howes-Stevens paints scenes of waterways in oil paint onto maps. Her paintings are subtle, filled with natural light and the atmosphere of the season during which she is working. Her paintings show us the beauty of these waterways and emphasize the importance of wetlands conservation; so much so that she has received a grant from the George Segal Foundation in the past.


Oriental Influence #6 - Carol Staub

Carol Staub’s multi media collage and paintings have garnered over 70 National and International awards and have been featured or published in several magazines and newspapers around the country. Her work is earthy and warm, often with an Asian influence. In addition to teaching workshops in Mixed Media and Collage, she serves on the Board of Directors for the National Association of Women Artists (the Florida Chapter) and is a member of several artistic clubs and societies.


Earley Choice of Freedom - Barbara Scavotto-Earley

Barbara Scavotto-Earley depicts stories of the human experience with her ceramic and mixed media sculptural work. Throughout her art career, she has modeled, assembled, painted, carved and welded virtues, intemperance, social concerns, spirituality, humor and other pieces in the epic puzzle of human conduct.  A sprinkling of wit is common, even in her most reflective sculptures.


Event Date:

August 21, 2010 ~ 3 p.m. - 6 p.m.

Event Location:

The Wit Gallery of Art And Wine
27 Church St..
Lenox, Mass.
413-637-8808
info@thewitgallery.com
http://www.thewitgallery.com/



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Friday, August 13, 2010

Williams College Tops Forbes List of Best Colleges in the U.S.A.

A View of Williams College* (c1884)
Williams College in Williamstown, Mass., has been ranked the top college in the country by Forbes in the publication's annual pick of "America's Best Colleges," with Amherst College placing third on the list.

The Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University ranked fifth and eighth, respectively. Wellesley College ranked twelfth.

Of course a list is hardly necessary: The fine quality of higher-education has long been recognized here in the Bay State - especially in Western Massachusetts - but it's still nice to see five of the top twelve of Forbes' ranking of over six-hundred colleges and universities are from the home team. Kudos.

Here's a link to the article at Forbes:

http://www.forbes.com/2010/08/11/best-colleges-universities-rating-ranking-opinions-best-colleges-10_land.html


*Image from the book, Williamstown and Willliams College; author, Nathaniel H. Egleston; published 1884. Original caption: "The Old College Chapel, Griffin Hall, and Soldiers' Monument." Digitized version of the book available at the Internet Archive: http://www.archive.org/details/williamstownwill00egle



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Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Free Fun Fridays Courtesy of the Highland Street Foundation

Since 1989, the McGrath family and the Highland Street Foundation have been ardent champions of children and families in Massachusetts.  According to the foundation's mission statement:

"The Highland Street Foundation is committed to addressing the needs of children and families primarily within the states of Massachusetts and California. We direct our efforts to provide access and opportunities in the areas of education, housing, mentorship, healthcare, environment and the arts."

The Highland Street Foundation doesn't skimp in its "efforts to provide access" either, sponsoring 'Free Fun Fridays,' a series of cultural events happening around the Bay State on Fridays (and Saturday during the Grand Finale Weekend) throughout the summer, with every attendee's admission fee to each venue paid in full by the foundation.

A few of the fun events that have already taken place this summer include a visit to the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, a day at the Franklin Park Zoo and a look back at Pilgrim life at the Plimoth Plantation.  Just these three happenings alone resulted in the Highland Street Foundation paying the way of nearly 40,000 people into some of the finest offerings of the cultural buffet that is Massachusetts!

So far, taking advantage of the foundation's generosity has entailed a bit of traveling for folks out here in the wild west, with this summer's Free Fun Fridays events calendar pointing to venues in Beantown or beyond in the early part of the season.

This Friday, August 13th, though, the fun happens a little closer to home, with free foundation-paid admission to Old Sturbridge Village, all day and for everyone. Just show up and you're in!

Other upcoming free events in or close to Western Massachusetts include, a day at the EcoTarium in Worcester (Friday, Sept. 3), the Worcester Art Museum, the Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield and the Berkshire Museum in Pittsfield (Saturday, Sept. 4), all courtesy of the McGrath family and the Highland Street Foundation, fine and admirable folks, indeed, and well-deserving of our support.

To learn more about the Highland Street Foundation and the many good things it does for kids and families (and how you can help the foundation continue to provide those services), head over to their website at: http://highlandstreet.org/.

The foundation is also on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Highland-Street-Foundation/336718788790

For a calendar of Free Fun Friday Summer 2010 events, visit the foundation's webpage devoted to the details at: http://highlandstreet.org/special-programs/free-fun-fridays.html




Links and dates of some of the upcoming foundation-sponsored, admission-free events:




For a handy and frequently updated list of over 80 local activities indexed for usability, check out the EWM page 'Things To Do In Western Massachusetts!'

EWM also has the most comprehensive list of regional museums on the web: 'Museums of Western Massachusetts.'



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Tuesday, August 10, 2010

The Historic Hudson-Chester Granite Quarry in Becket, Massachusetts

Becket Quarry Trail Map

You don't have to walk far up the trail into the historic Becket granite quarry to come face to face with yesterday. Less than half a mile from the ample parking lot, two abandoned trucks, a dilapidated electrical generator shed, the remnants of a stiff-arm derrick and other rusted ghosts of the granite harvesting trade greet visitors, at the area known as the quarry junction.


Electrical Generator Shed
The setting aside of more than 300 acres of Berkshire forest off Quarry Road in Becket, Mass. - including the old Hudson-Chester quarry - was made possible through the commendable generosity of town residents, whose financial contributions allowed the Becket Land Trust to acquire the plot for public recreation and historic preservation.

Hastening the process and lending urgency to the fund-drive was talk of the possible re-opening of the land for modern quarrying, a development Becket citizens preferred not see come to fruition lest the quiet, small-town character of the peaceful burg be changed.


Electrical Generator Shed (Nathaniel Hemingway Photo)
The Becket Land Trust will celebrate its 20th anniversary next year. According to the Trust's website: "The Becket Land Trust was founded in 1991 by a group of concerned citizens who were interested in maintaining the rural nature of the Town of Becket and of preserving its natural resources."

Perusing (and printing) the detailed area maps and history on the Trust's website is sure to add depth to your experience visiting the Hudson-Chester quarry. A kiosk in the parking area - maintained by the Trust - also provides printed resources to quarry explorers. To learn more about this valuable and necessary organization, and ways you can donate or get involved, head over to: http://www.becketlandtrust.org/.


Quarry Truck #1
Parked in forest pristine but for the vestiges of man, who was the last to walk away from the just-stilled engine, warm, beginning to tick its cooling contractions?


Quarry Truck #1
The Hudson-Chester Quarry was prolific in its produce, rail cars rolling blocks of granite to Hudson, NY and Chester, Mass. to be worked into monuments and tombstones, memorials carved to withstand the ages, cruel eraser of soft recollection. From the middle of the 19th century to the middle of the next, the Becket granite quarry cut stone prized for the quality of its grain.


Quarry Truck #2
Door swung open in invitation: Take her for a spin in your imagination. "Tis a drive into simpler times of hard-won, muscled reward, hearty hot meals and nights at home on porches under Berkshire stars. Unwinding, the Universe: Always unwinding.


Quarry Truck #2
No matter how many turns we make along the way, or how hard we crank the wheel, there is only one direction we are steering: Into the future.


Remnant of Stiff-Armed Derrick
The last slab of granite rolled down the track generations ago, a toppled loading hoist rests on the south side of the quarry junction, a splintered appendage once integral to mining operations. Stiff-armed derricks are also known as stiff-leg derricks, a type of crane used in quarries internationally.


Remnant of Stiff-Armed Derrick
Wood and iron and steel-braided cable return to the earth drippingly slow, layers of leaves and passed forest flora speeding to decomposition in comparison. Chronology intertwined but snowflake different: Not every moment spans the same length of time.


Mobile Power Source
Where once activity whirred and roared, creaked and grumbled with stones heavy as hearts storing wishes unfulfilled, the breathing now are greeted with a silence that even the lazy-stirring August leaves can't break. They wait, these machines, broken and twisted. They wait for the quarrymen, arms strong and tan in the afternoon sun, gone these five long decades past and not likely to return.


Granite Blocks
And the garden of granite surrounds us. In the magical Berkshire hills. In the bustling cities of America. We build our caverns where we don't find them and find them where they lay. Waiting. Cold canvases ready for the chisel. Ready for a human hand to set the names, to tell the dates, to memorialize our being.

As always, thanks for stopping by and take care.

For more information about Becket, railroad development and granite quarrying in the area, visit previous EWM posts, 'The Keystone Arch Bridges Trail: Magic in the Berkshire Mountains' and 'Map: Bird's-eye View of Chester, Mass., 1885.'



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