Community remembers Millerton librarian

MILLERTON — The surrounding community gathered last Saturday, Aug. 28, to acknowledge the passing of Sharon resident Margaret Quick, the longtime director at the NorthEast-Millerton Library.

Quick, known to many as “Midge,� succumbed to breast cancer on Aug. 23 after being diagnosed last January. A celebration of life was held at the library’s Annex off Century Boulevard on the afternoon of Aug. 28, led by the Rev. Heidi Truax and musician Amy Jordan.

During remembrances, Quick’s professional impact on the Millerton community was highlighted.

“I was blessed to have been hired by her,� said Sarah Bellora, who recently joined the library’s staff as its youth services coordinator. “She and I had a connection to each other. She had really gotten into my heart in a short period of time.�

Quick’s first cousin, Tom Moritz, is also a librarian out in California.

“A librarian’s job is a great help to other people, when practiced well,� he said, “and I know Midge practiced it well.�

Local resident Carol Falcetti said that Quick’s personality always shone through to library patrons, even in the usually brief “three- to five-minute� interactions she had with people.

“Her personality, it was like slow fingers that grabbed me,� Falcetti remembered. After seemingly innocuous chit-chats, she said, Quick would go above and beyond, reserving books for her based upon their conversations that would be waiting for Falcetti when she returned.

“One of the first people we met was Midge,� said Mark Liebergall, remembering when he first moved into the area.

“She was instrumental in making us feel that Millerton was a place we wanted to settle,� he continued. “I’m part of a book discussion group that Midge started at the library. It’s a very enriching part of my life. She was very important to me personally and to the community.�

Quick joined the Millerton library in 1997, according to her daughter, Anne Quick. Her contributions to the librarian’s profession were illustrated by Rebekka Aldrich, the coordinator for library growth and sustainability at the Mid-Hudson Library System.

Aldrich said Quick routinely donated her time on committees and took on projects outside of her scope of work.

“She was the brains behind our ‘Book Club in a Bag’ program and the driving force behind our children’s catalog,� Aldrich said. “Midge was very important to us at the system and we’re going to miss her dearly.�

Amenia Free Library’s librarian, Miriam Devine, said she and Quick often shared long car rides to Mid-Hudson meetings in Poughkeepsie.

“We are two very different libraries, but we were able to talk about everything,� she remembered.

Finally, local resident Mary Howard remembered Quick’s contributions to the local food pantry at the St. Thomas Episcopal Church in South Amenia.

“She came along with an article on a food pantry in the Midwest which had set up a children’s book section,� Howard said. Quick donated the first collection of books for the Amenia church’s children’s bookcase.

“Since then there are more books than we know what to do with,� Howard said. “That was Midge’s gift to all of us, the many gifts, and they will continue to live on and on.�

In lieu of flowers, the family has asked that any contributions be made in Quick’s name to the NorthEast-Millerton Library.

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