Turning Back The Pages - November 5

100 years ago — 1909

SHARON — Mr. and Mrs. Frank Northrop took an automobile trip to Pittsfield this week.

The Observer (editorial): Judging from the amount of cider being made other things than cucumbers will be pretty well pickled before spring.

This section was treated to the unseasonable spectacle of quite a severe thunder storm on Tuesday night.

SALISBURY — William Traver shot a large hoot owl in the swamp near his home last Thursday. The bird measured four feet from tip to tip and was blind in one eye. Mr. Traver will have it stuffed and mounted.

50 years ago — 1959

CANAAN — Fire of unknown origin destroyed the barn on the Ivor Madsen farm, Clayton Road, Thursday. Several goats and sheep were tethered in the barn and Mrs. Madsen had milked the goats that morning about 9 and her children warned her of fire on the floor of the barn about 11 o’clock.

James van B. Dresser of Mt. Riga, Salisbury, and New York City, was named administrative manager of Canada Dry International Inc. on Oct. 1.

25 years ago — 1984

Active at age 92, Al Gload was seen recently on a step ladder taking down a magnolia tree in front of his Lakeville home.

Anthony Nania, Republican candidate for the 63rd Assembly seat, got a little help from his old boss this past week when President Reagan visited Fairfield. Nania ran Reagan’s Connecticut campaign in 1980.

Taken from decades-old Lake-ville Journals, these items contain original spellings and phrasings.

Latest News

South Kent School’s unofficial March reunion

Elmarko Jackson was named a 2023 McDonald’s All American in his senior year at South Kent School. He helped lead the Cardinals to a New England Prep School Athletic Conference (NEPSAC) AAA title victory and was recruited to play at the University of Kansas. This March he will play point guard for the Jayhawks when they enter the tournament as a No. 4 seed against (13) Samford University.

Riley Klein

SOUTH KENT — March Madness will feature seven former South Kent Cardinals who now play on Division 1 NCAA teams.

The top-tier high school basketball program will be well represented with graduates from each of the past three years heading to “The Big Dance.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Hotchkiss grads dancing with Yale

Nick Townsend helped Yale win the Ivy League.

Screenshot from ESPN+ Broadcast

LAKEVILLE — Yale University advanced to the NCAA men’s basketball tournament after a buzzer-beater win over Brown University in the Ivy League championship game Sunday, March 17.

On Yale’s roster this year are two graduates of The Hotchkiss School: Nick Townsend, class of ‘22, and Jack Molloy, class of ‘21. Townsend wears No. 42 and Molloy wears No. 33.

Keep ReadingShow less
Handbells of St. Andrew’s to ring out Easter morning

Anne Everett and Bonnie Rosborough wait their turn to sound notes as bell ringers practicing to take part in the Easter morning service at St. Andrew’s Church.

Kathryn Boughton

KENT—There will be a joyful noise in St. Andrew’s Church Easter morning when a set of handbells donated to the church some 40 years ago are used for the first time by a choir currently rehearsing with music director Susan Guse.

Guse said that the church got the valuable three-octave set when Harlem Valley Psychiatric Center closed in the late 1980s and the bells were donated to the church. “The center used the bells for music therapy for younger patients. Our priest then was chaplain there and when the center closed, he brought the bells here,” she explained.

Keep ReadingShow less
Picasso’s American debut was a financial flop
Picasso’s American debut was a financial flop
Penguin Random House

‘Picasso’s War” by Foreign Affairs senior editor Hugh Eakin, who has written about the art world for publications like The New York Review of Books, Vanity Fair, The New Yorker and The New York Times, is not about Pablo Picasso’s time in Nazi-occupied Paris and being harassed by the Gestapo, nor about his 1937 oil painting “Guernica,” in response to the aerial bombing of civilians in the Basque town during the Spanish Civil War.

Instead, the Penguin Random House book’s subtitle makes a clearer statement of intent: “How Modern Art Came To America.” This war was not between military forces but a cultural war combating America’s distaste for the emerging modernism that had flourished in Europe in the early decades of the 20th century.

Keep ReadingShow less