Turning Back The Pages

100 years ago — April 1920

SALISBURY — The Parsonage cellar is still full of water and everything afloat, but the furnace fire is again on in consequence of low tide.

 

LAKEVILLE — An up-to-date Chemical Engine, mounted on a motor truck, will add 100 percent to our protection against fires. Help to swell the purchase fund by attending the minstrel show and dance on the 23rd.

 

LIME ROCK — Much sympathy is extended to Mrs. G.W. Belcher who is ill with scarlet fever at her brother’s home in Torrington.

 

CANAAN — St. Joseph’s Church has purchased the Barnes property at the corner of East Main and Elm streets to be used as a residence for a parish priest.

 

Advertisement: Wanted — From now until June 10th, a waitress and chambermaid in a small school. Telephone 46 Cornwall or write to L.R. Sanford.

 

LAKEVILLE — Edward Webb has purchased a pair of general work horses of W.B. Rand.

 

50 years ago — April 1970

There’s a wealth of activity in the sky these nights for those who look in the right places at the right times. The chief attraction is John Bennet’s comet, which was discovered during the past Christmas season and is now visible over northwest Connecticut during the very early morning hours. The time of its daily appearance has earned it the nickname “The Milkman’s Comet.”

 

SALISBURY — Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gostout, new owners of the Salisbury Farms Milk Bar, started off their new career in fine style but this past week have run into some bad luck. At 2 a.m. Saturday Mr. Gostout was rushed to Sharon Hospital for emergency surgery on an ulcer he had no idea he had. He is making a good recovery according to report, but can hardly expect a return at once to his post as chief Chef in his restaurant.

 

SALISBURY — Mr. and Mrs. William Pulver, who usually have taken a winter vacation somewhere where they could enjoy sailing, decided this year to vary the pattern. Instead of the blue Caribbean, they took off for the ski slopes of Austria. In a skiing accident Adie Pulver broke her leg and now wears a hip-high cast. “Maybe we should stick to sailing,” she says.

 

25 years ago — April 1995

SHARON — Cub Scout Keith Godfrey scored a first place runoff in the Regional Tunxis District Pine Wood Derby car race March 25 in Goshen. The Sharon contingency was well represented also by Adyn Mette and Ben Rathbun.

Latest News

Letters to the Editor - 4-25-24

Applauding government responsiveness to citizen concernsThis is a shout-out to our local legislators, Representative Maria Horn and Stephen Harding. The Housatonic Herbicide Working Group has been expressing concerns about the use of certain herbicides that can reach nearby waterways, wetlands, and aquifers to control vegetation along the Housatonic Railroad’s right-of-way for several years now.

The Lakeville Journal has also covered this topic, most recently in an article by Riley Klein.

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Turning Back the Pages

100 years ago — April 1924

Chet Thurston has sold his Durant Six to Torrington parties. He says he just naturally has to get some kind of a car but he hasn’t made up his mind whether he will purchase a Buick, Jewett, Hudson, Chevrolet, Dodge, Olds, Oakland, Nash, Dort, Studebaker, Cadillac or Rolls Royce.

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John Fisher Polhemus

DOVER PLAINS — John Fisher Polhemus, 86, of Coventry, beloved husband of the late Gayle (Cronin) Polhemus, passed away Sunday, April 7, 2024, at home surrounded by his loving family. He was born July 30, 1937, in Sharon, the son of the late John A. and Gertrude (Fisher) Polhemus.

He grew up in Dover Plains, where he excelled in sports and academics. His mother, Gertrude, was his 3rd grade teacher and he couldn’t get away with anything. He loved to hike with his dad and brother Dick to the Stone Church and through the hills around Dover Plains. He graduated Dover High School and went to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, graduating with a degree in Aerospace Engineering.

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Nicholas Warner McClelland

CORNWALL — Nicholas Warner McClelland, 78, died peacefully in hospice care on Feb. 25, 2024, surrounded by his family. Nick was born in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, on April 29, 1945, to the late Mary (Sharpless) McClelland and David C. McClelland. Nick was a graduate of the Cambridge School of Weston and Boston University.

After spending his formative years in Middletown Connecticut, Nick moved to Cambridge Massachusetts with his family. He spent many summers in Cornwall, later living in the greater Boston area and ultimately moving to Marblehead, Massachusetts, where he resided until his death.

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