In appreciation: George Thomas Smith

The officers, trustees, and friends of the Berkshire Litchfield Environmental Council (BLEC) would like to express our deep sadness and eternal gratitude for the life and long service of our fellow trustee, George Thomas Smith, of Egremont, Massachusetts.

George was one of BLEC’s original founders in 1972 and one of our longest serving trustees who always attended our annual meetings in his signature inimitable style, typically sporting one of his colorful bow ties. Among BLEC’s other prominent founders, which included my father, Edward “Ted” Childs, were Donald “Don” Walker, Lincoln “Link” Foster, Alice Yoakum, Robert “Tap” Tappscott, William “Bill” Binzen, and William “Bill” Morrill, as well as the inventor, legendary race car driver, and George’s lifelong friend, John Fitch, from whom George had acquired his beloved 1948 MG TC sports car.

George’s professional skills and service to BLEC in those early days — as well as long after — forged our organization’s early environmental advocacy and legal challenge to the then Connecticut Light and Power Company’s ill-conceived efforts to site and construct a massive pumped-storage, empound-and-release hydroelectric project that would have forever adversely changed the region. In early 1970, CL&P released plans to construct and operate this power generating/transmission scheme either on the highlands of NW Connecticut’s Canaan Mountain that would have also flooded Robbins Swamp in Falls Village, or alternatively in nearby Mt. Washington on Plantain Pond and the Schenob Brook wetlands. George joined Fitch and several of his Connecticut neighbors/friends, along with other south Berkshire County friends, to establish BLEC, forming a first-of-its-kind cross-border environmental advocacy group with a unique focus on infrastructure. It was their unflagging resolve to deny CL&P’s permits to proceed at either of those ecologically fragile/scenic locations that eventually won the day and sent the utility company packing. George continued on, as did John Fitch and all the other BLEC founders, to assure that our special mountainous and wildly wet landscapes of this tri-state corner would remain free from such industrial/commercial despoilation right to his last breath. Without those efforts, pumped-storage electric generation had the potential to create large-scale environmental wastelands as water was pumped to the tops of mountains, then suddenly released downhill through giant turbines, making wildlife habitat at either end impossible.

I came to know George best when his accounting firm, Watson and Smith, agreed to take on auditing and financial oversight of my family’s fledgling forestry foundation at Great Mountain Forest atop the very Canaan Mountain he had helped protect and save. He shared with me how he and his father would bring their newest model Chevrolet pickup truck from their Winsted dealership out to my dad’s forestry operations in Norfolk in hope that my dad’s lifelong dedication to Ford trucks and cars might give way to Chevrolet. George explained that his father was sure my dad would never alter his allegiance to Ford, but that “driving on the gravel forest roads and enjoying the mountain scenery, ponds, and fresh air” was his father’s main purpose for taking the drive. Clearly, his devotion to — and admiration for — our region’s forested mountains and ecologically unique marble valleys and fens never faltered.

2022 is BLEC’s 50th founding anniversary. The organization went on to challenge a massive lighted radio tower also proposed for Canaan Mountain; the often poor siting of cell towers throughout the tri-state area; the widening of Route 7 into a super highway that would have bifurcated Litchfield County and spurred over-development in ecologically fragile corridors; industrial-scale wind turbines in inland areas with comparatively little wind but much potential damage to aerial wildlife, as well as other battles. George was steadfast throughout. Thanks to our founding members setting the bar high, we have also maintained a regular analytical presence at both state and federal agencies, clocking in over myriad legal issues.

A sincere thanks to George and the entire Smith family, for a life exceptionally lived and for his service to our lands and livelihoods. Were it not for our dedicated visionary founders, Litchfield County would look very different today.

Starling W. Childs,

President,

The Berkshire-Litchfield Environmental Council

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