Monday, August 23, 2010

Bauer Urges Historic Commemoration In Street Naming

Common Council member David Bauer feels that Middletown's historic and cultural heritage is so rich as to be a ready source for new street names in Middletown.


Both the Public Works Commission and the Common Council (along with Public Safety) must approve the naming of Middletown public roads.  We have often acceded to the wishes of developers to name streets generic, almost meaningless names, such as Windy Hill Road, and Newberry Lane, and Autumn Lane.

Middletown has over 350 years of history that we should remember.  I believe that in the naming of public roads and buildings we should celebrate our rich cultural heritage.  If the public understood our local process of naming roads, perhaps we would become more active in promoting Middletown history.  The Public can petition the Public Works Commission to add names to the official list of proposed street names.  I believe that more public attention to this process will insure that we can convince developers to adopt street names that are specific, appropriate, and unique to Middletown.

The following are the Public Works guidelines for street naming:

The following list of suggested street names is not exhausting but it is meant to provide a developer with some example of names the Public Works Commission may find acceptable.  Developers should feel free to respond with their own proposals celebrating events or persons or the heritage of Middletown or otherwise provide unique identification feature of our City.
 
Suggested Street Name     Background
 
General Rose Drive   WWII General born in Middletown
Thomas Harding Drive   Medal of Honor Recipient-Capt. U.S. Navy, Civil War
Benjamin Douglas Drive   Mayor of Middletown, manufacturer, abolitionist, Lt. Gov. Ct.
Abigail Lucas Drive   Ran home for orphans in Middletown
Kate Campbell Hard Mead  Early female physician-incorporator MX Hospital
Civil War Soldiers   Soldiers who gave lives (100+) Contact Historical Society
Alice Wrubel Drive   Composer from Middletown
Henry Clay Work    Composer from Middletown
Tony Pastor Drive   Musician from Middletown
Seb Garafalo Drive   Four-term Mayor
Gionfriddo Drive    Mayor
Holzberg Drive    Mayor
Jack English Drive   Director of Parks  
Jessie Salafia Drive   Councilman
Larry McHugh Lane   Chamber of Commerce President
Captain Sebastian Pagano, Jr.  Captain Middletown Fire Dept. – died on duty

Sunday, August 22, 2010

Hundreds Brave Cloudbursts To Sample Locavore Delights

Despite the intermittent downpours, hundreds of enthusiastic supporters of local agriculture, food and arts crowded the lawn of Wadsworth Mansion Sunday morning for the annual Open Air Market and Festival.

Rain has frequently been part of the festival ritual, so knowledgeable attendees clutched umbrellas, or wore parkas as they sampled bread, cheese, jams and dozens of varieties of local vegetables. 

While the musical entertainment was consigned to a safe, indoor spot, the vendors braved the elements to offer their goods to attendees.

The festival runs until 4PM at Middletown's Wadsworth Mansion.

Follow up- A Night with Ghost hunters



Please see the first article for back ground on the Guided Lantern Tour here.

I have to admit, when I asked Stephanie Hewes Borelli Middletown resident & co founder of Paranomal Association of Central Connecticut (PACC), about doing an article about the Guided Lantern Tour at Indian Hill Cemetery and 3 other Middletown locations, I was going in wanting to be a believer in this sort of thing , but I'd never seen evidence of my own of spirits. With the popularity of the tv show "Ghost Hunters" on SyFy and "Paranomal State" on A&E, the phenomenon of seeking out evidence of an afterlife has grown in popularity in recent years. While many with psychic abilities choose to stay "closeted", keeping their abilities secret, a term introduced to me by psychic medium Laura Cartwright of PACC (also of Middletown), Laura has always felt at home with her abilities.

I asked Laura how long she had been able to communicate with the dead, and she responded 'forever'; "I'm around the dead at work, and at home." Laura joked. "I'm a medium, mom, professional figure skater, teacher for the deaf, and a student of mortuary science." A shared sense of humor and willingness to include others so that they may experience the phenomenon of the paranormal world as they do s is something very wonderful I quickly picked up on when being introduced to the group. Auggie DeFrance of the Indian Hill Cemetery Association gathered a group of roughly 25 participants just inside the cemetery at 7 pm last night. He spoke about the history of the cemetery and welcomed everyone. Indian Hill is a private cemetery, and so were the other locations we visited last night. I was asked by PACC to not name them as to not draw unwanted trespassers.

That is one thing the PACC does not want to do, cause disturbance to historic sites or offend families of the departed who may be entombed therein. PACC founders Stephanie Hewes Borrelli and Laura Cartwright opened the evening with rules on how to respect the spirits and the physical cemetery. Participants were divided into smaller groups of on average 8 - each group was teamed with a technical analyst to capture photos, evp ( electronic voice phenomenon) and use a K2 (light meter the spirits can interact with), and a temperature and static electricity meter. One goal was to back up sensory evidence of the paranormal with more tangible evidence and look at it from a skeptical standpoint when analyzing it afterwards. During the event I found Mike Kalinowsky and I happened to have the same digital SLR camera, and I enjoyed geeking-out a bit with him trading photography tips. Technical analyst Mike Kalinowsky was one of many trying to capture more tangible phenomenon that he explained he would later try first to find a logical or scientific explanation for - dust on a lens, light refracting etc. Laura and the other psychic medium/shaman in our group Dee White Dove (Suffield, CT), showed us how to use digital voice recorders to pick up noise hard to hear for the human ear. A few in our group prayed for guidance. "I don't like to force beliefs on anyone, I am just hear to interpret." added Laura, who as a member has been on dozens of investigations with PACC. I had three friends attend the event with me, one of which Mary*, is extra sensitive to paranomal activity, spirits seem drawn to her and since childhood she has been able to hear, and sometimes even see spirits. Mary does not like to call herself a psychic medium, but rather a "sensitive" sense she does not feel she has developed her skills as of yet. Ironically, immediately after forming the group and going through introductions, both psychic's in our group knew Mary had a gift.
I spoke with Dee White Dove about this: "I saw my first spirit when I was 5 years old. Back then yes, it was frightening. I grew up in Maine in the 60's, so it was the 60's everywhere else and 1940 there." Dee went on about her childhood," It was a little backwards there, I started seeing things and my parents weren't supportive; it was right around when that movie with the child who is the "bad seed" came out (in reference to The Omen) plus I was adopted too so it freaked my parents out."
Today Dee is a ordained minister, shaman, reiki healer, and psychic consultant just to name a few of her many jobs.
"So is everyone psychic? Can everyone see spirits? Because I can't; so are people like me broken?" I asked. I was beginning to feel like the only one who couldn't see anything and hadn't photographed anything cool either.
"No, (laughingly) everyone to some degree has psychic abilities, its like when you think of a friend and then maybe a few days later they call, well for me its just I'll be holding the phone and suddenly it will ring. Now that's something else!" responded Dee, " Imagine stars in the sky, we all look at the bright ones first then notice the fainter ones, but for spirits, its the same, they see the bright stars first, they see those of us who are sensitive first, and flock to us. Sometimes I'll walk in a place and its like a deli line literally, so many people."

I began to understand. I asked "Ok, so what do you see physical people or people in your head, or say your minds eye?" Dee answered, "Well for me its both, sometimes I just see shadows, most times, like black and white negatives on the world. It would be a lot easier if its like the in the Sixth Sense and suddenly someone solid & real is next to you." Dee followed this up by a pretty good Haley Joel Osmond imitation, "I see dead people oooooooo."
I thought it was a little funny, yet sweet when someone shouted out to Dee asking to use her dowsing rods, hand held non electronic instruments that cross in the presence of activity, because Dee replied non-chalantely as if they had asked is she had any gum, with an "of course hun, in my bag back pocket" PACC really is family and I cannot stress enough how welcoming they were to new participants.
During the investigations at each location participants were encouraged to take photos to try and capture "orbs" or balls of light that often show up on film, which in the paranormal world are a sign of the presence of a spirit. Repeatedly, Laura throughout the night pointed out where she thought there were some, or she had seen a lingering spirit. Throughout the night, other team members provided what they liked to call validation; other evidence to confirm the first type. If Laura or Dee sensed a presence, sometimes through hearing them, seeing smell, or physically touch, a team member would ask the spirit to make the lights on the K2 meter flicker. At one of the crypts at our first location, my friend and I tried this device against the door of the tomb, asked if anyone was there and got flickering right away. "He thinks we are bugging him but this lady over hear really is enjoying the company."said Laura. This happened multiple times during the evening, Laura felt it was necessary to respect the wishes of the deceased who wanted to be left alone, however, according to her many times they are happy to be heard or seen or just plain visited. Historically, from an architectural standpoint, cemeteries build during the 1800's were like stroll gardens, designed as places where family even brought picnics to so-to-speak visit dead relatives.
During the photo investigations everyone started passing around digital cameras with the light phenomenon they had captured. I noticed that the 11 year old girl in our group seemed to be getting a lot more interesting things than the rest of us had on camera. Laura explained that spirits love children, they are fascinated because they are pure souls, and closer to the other side if you look at life cyclically. This seemed to be very evident this evening, in location 2, Laura had the girl speak out load and call spirits to the recording device, and got immediate blinking lights on the K2.
Dee has a noticeably fiery personality, she often left the group to wander into the shadows on her own seemingly fearlessly, and come back. She demonstrated drawing with the direction of the spirits while she sat at a grave site. Her pen aggressively hit the paper and her and Laura went back and forth in a constant chatter interpreting what the spirits were saying. At this point, I listened to the live voice recording and both myself and Mary heard a definitive male laugh. Dan Riviera of Above the Realm, a paranormal investigative team, monitored audio while Dee continued to receive. The group agreed we could all smell faint cigar smoke. According to the PACC group, we were in a hot spot of activity, and some not so nice, we however were cautioned not to show fear.
I asked Dee about fear & her experiences with evil entities. "Well higher level demonic entities are rare, rarer then the TV shows make it seem, that's not to say not to take precautions. I once got tricked, as evil spirits manifest as friendlies." she explained, Dee went on" I was at a place where monks used to live, however some had started practicing Santeria before the place closed. I was on the investigation and on break, and I saw plain as day a three year old child in a white pinafore dress with pig tails less than 10 feet away. She was so real I stood up and thought she was someones lost child, and I went over to her and tried to pick her up. When I looked closer though she had liquid solid black eyes.. that was the sign it was a demonic force tricking me, and I know now I'll never be tricked again." I asked more about the good vs evil idea, and Dee told me that she tells people to rent the movie "Exorcist II The Heretic", because in it ,she says is a good explanation of good spirits and people -those who "walk with the light" vs. evil spirits. Rest assured, Dee reminded me of what was discussed in the beginning of the investigation; always ask the "god of your understanding," for protection and guidance in times of peril. I really liked this term as a universal way of incorporating spiritual respect for all in the PACC group, another feature and goal of the group is not to make anyone uncomfortable.
I asked Dee:" Why does she do all this? She explained, again in a enthusiastic tone, the she gets a kick out of helping people, and getting others to see what she can, not to convert them to anything, but to experience this other level of the world she finds so fascinating."Once you see it its addicting, now I'm addicted to meditation, and now I see so much more, its incredible whats out there and I wish everyone could have these experiences. Now that I've seen it and I'm not afraid, I want to go out and learn more.. then poke it with a stick!"
I asked Dee to explain why spirits necessarily stayed around, "Does it ever follow you home?" Dee explained, that spirits are either object, place, or person bound, because they either a) don't know they are dead b) have unfinished business C) or are stuck and need help crossing to the other side. According to Dee, say if one buys a wooden chest at a flea market the old owner's spirit might be attached to it, if said spirit is not at rest, however, time and place over lap after death to spirits, so say the chest was cut from a tree used to hang someone, that person's very unsettled soul may be attached in place of or in addition to the owner's. If you brought this object home, they may attach to your house, and either play nice or become a nuisance. Basically spirits are complicated, and groups such as Above the Realm, Visions of the Past, PACC come into offer either guidance or simple documentation in paranormal areas.

Later on at the third location, I got to see first hand what this meant. Under an ancient tree overlooking a breathtaking view of Middletown, the group found a spot that they felt was out of place. The temperature was at least a degree colder, another sign I am told of paranormal activity. When spirits try and manifest they can take energy such as body heat, battery power, or electrical power to try and break through with is a basic explanation I was given by the tech crew. Three mediums including Laura and Dee said they felt the spirit of a child killed immediately after birth that had been dumped near by. The three formed a meditative circle which they said they were able to meld with each other psychically and help the child cross over. Afterwards, all three mediums appeared to have been crying. "Sometimes I feel what the spirit feels, empathy, it takes a lot out of people with this gift, but it feels good to help someone cross." explained Laura. I felt privileged to have been allowed to witness the intimacy of the group watching out for each other and being honest with their emotions. Several other times during the visit to location 3 Dee and Laura physically supported one another, or asked for assistance from others, because they were experiencing what they call "channeling."
Channeling is when a medium makes a strong psychic connection with an entity, sometimes allowing that spirit if a friendly human one, to enter into them. This was difficult for myself and others to grasp, but watching appear Laura physically have difficultly standing up from a grave or stumble was convincing and exciting for the other participants. A group member took photos that showed orbs and blue lightening like light appearing to emanate around the mediums during the incident when Laura channeled. Apparently then the man who she was speaking with had a lot to say, which Laura stated and the group found humorous, and another medium took over so we all could move on from the chatty man.

Lastly, at the fourth location other mediums joined the group. Technical members set up dvr video recording and demonstrated its usage for the participants. Participants took over k2 light meters, and voice recorders. I should mention also that before each recording everyone says their name so that his or her voice can be eliminated as not being a spirit. Later they would analyze these many hours of tape and audio to see if evidence would validate other evidence. Again Laura and Dee were overwhelmed with emotion; Laura stated she saw a figure on the roof of the building that was once a private residence and got a sense of overwhelming sadness. A Middletown local man in the group was able to confirm the historical significance of the placement of this figure and whom it most likely was.
Laura got immediately excited." I love that! I love stuff like that when what I see or hear is validated with actual history. I had no idea the history of this place but this is proof to me." Smiles of accomplishment followed by high fives ending the night; this was followed by hugs, followed by email exchanges with newly made friends and well wishes.

Last night raised $1800 after expenses to be divided equally amongst the Indian Hill Cemetery Association, the Middletown Old Burial Ground Assoc. and the Godfrey Memorial Library.

As a reminder the locations visited are private property where trespassing laws apply. PACC takes its work very seriously and professionally not to disturb the deceased, property, or hurt or harm others. Obviously, do not try an recreate this investigation on your own.

More information on Paranormal Association of Central Connecticut, Above the Realm Paranormal, Visions into the Past, and all the mediums & investigators, most of which do private sessions can be found on the websites below:

*name changed

From 1910: Baseball in Middletown

This article is from exactly 100 years ago today, published in the Hartford Courant on August 22, 1910. The Middletown Jewels played in The Connecticut Association, which was a Class D minor league, four steps below the Majors. I believe that the Trolley League refers to an amateur or semi-pro league of teams that competed in the area. Other box scores from 1910 mention teams at the Hospital for the Insane, and teams sponsored by individual manufacturers, all playing in the "Trolley League". The Connecticut Association had three other teams besides Middletown, the New London Whalers, the Norwich/Meriden Bonbons/Doublins, and the Willimantic Colts. The formal relationships between major league teams and minor league teams had not been established in 1910, so Middletown was not specifically associated with any particular major league team.

A few decades earlier, in 1872, Middletown fielded a bona fide Major League team, the Middletown Mansfields. The Mansfields played in the National Association, playing against teams such as the Boston Red Stockings, the New York Mutuals, the Philadelphia Athletics, the Hartford Dark Blues, the New Haven Elm Citys, the Brooklyn Atlantics, and the Troy Haymakers. Unable to compete with teams from big cities, the Mansfields only played one season.

Unfortunately, the Middletown Jewels also only competed in one season, 1910. Thus, at the end of this year's baseball season, it will have been a full century since professional baseball was played in our city.
----------------------

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Motorcycle Accident on Highland Ave.

From the Middletown Police Department

On Friday, August 20, 2010 at approximately 10:50 P.M., a motorcycle collision occurred on Highland Avenue in the area of Stevens Lane.  

The preliminary investigation indicates that a 2002 Suzuki GSX R750 motorcycle, operated by, Mr. Armand Gore, age: 24, of Middletown, was traveling in a southerly direction on Highland Avenue.  Mr. Gore failed to negotiate the curb, and subsequently lost control of the motorcycle. The motorcycle traveled off the west side of the road, and the operator reported that he jumped from the motorcycle to avoid serious injury.  

As a result of the collision, Mr. Gore was transported by LIFESTAR Air Medical Helicopter to Hartford Hospital and is listed in stable condition. 

Witnesses to the collision are asked to contact Officer Doug Clark of the Middletown Police Department’s Traffic Unit (860) 344-3288.
 

Middlesex Coalition For Children September Meeting Scheduled

Middlesex Coalition for Children
2010-11 Public Forums

I. The Coalition's first public forum will be Thursday, September 9, 9 - 10 AM, at deKoven House:

What's New? Our annual "open mike" on new developments in children's services.
This is always fun and informative. Let us know ahead of time that YOU have news to share. Hit "reply" with your name and topic. It's first come, first served to get on the agenda, but we'll try to fit everyone in.
II. Here's the basic info for the coming year.

DATES. Second Thursdays of the month, September through May. Those dates are: September 9, October 14, November 11 ?, December 9, January 13 ?, February 10, March 10, April 14, May 12.  Please mark your calendars. The November and January dates are tentative, as Nov. 11 is Veterans Day and our annual Legislative Breakfast in January may be scheduled for the third Thursday, January 20th. Reminder notices with details will be sent one week in advance.
TIME: 9 - 10 AM (no change).

PLACE:
deKoven House, 27 Washington Street, Middletown (no change).

III. Please make suggestions.
Please email your ideas for topics and speakers. If you have an idea for a topic, please suggest a speaker or panel too. There are always more ideas than dates, but we'll do our best.

Friday, August 20, 2010

A Night of Ghosthunting--for a Cause


There's a Guided Lantern Tour at Indian Hill Cemetery tomorrow, Saturday, August 21, 2010. Let me be clear--”Guided Lantern Tour” is a euphemism for “a serious night of ghost hunting in local cemeteries.” I just want to make that clear right from the start.


But it’s also a fundraiser. Yup, you heard that right, too.


I’m sharing this event information with the Middletown Eye community not as a ghost hunter myself but as a member of the board of directors of one of the two nonprofit organizations that will benefit from this fundraiser--the Godfrey Memorial Library and the Indian Hill Cemetery Association. I also share this event info as a lover of Middletown history and with a deep respect for the people who made Middletown the community that it is today. All the Mighty Titans of Middletown are buried at Indian Hill Cemetery--the Hubbards, Russells, Southmayds Baldwins, Alsops, and Mansfields are just a few of the names that shaped Middletown. Many common heros are buried there, too, including those who gave their lives for the sake of the Union; the great and unsung hero soldiers of the Civil War should not be forgotten, either. Indian Hill Cemetery is a jewel in the crown of this community and the Association is proud to show it off in whatever way folks wish to experience it--including its paranormal possibilities.


I’m also sharing this event information with acknowledgement and respect for the varied interests and beliefs of a contemporary society--people are now, more than ever, interested in all things paranormal. The nonprofit organizations involved neither endorse nor condemn that interest; we just recognize that it’s something that some people wish to experience, and if that interest creates an opportunity to help us fundraise, then why not.


So (and this is the last of the disclaimers), this fundraiser is an experiment. A possible win-win for the nonprofits involved and an opportunity to advance the mission of a volunteer-based organization called the Paranormal Association of Central Connecticut. If it works, then we all might make this an annual fundraising event. If it flops, well, we tried. Simple as that.


Anyway, the Guided Lantern Tour is a marathon night of ghost hunting. It’s an event uniquely designed for people who have an interest in “things that go bump in the night.” It will have a little bit of Middletown history thrown in, and it costs $60 a person to participate. But please, don’t let neither a history lesson or the cost dissuade you. Read on.


The event begins at 5:00 p.m. with a welcome and overview of the history of the cemetery provided by Augie Defrance, President of the Board of Directors of the Indian Hill Cemetery Association. Some historical objects from the collection of a private individual will be shared including an original copy of the Addresses Delivered at the Dedication of the Indian Hill Cemetery, photographs of members of the Hubbard family from the 1850 era, and an original Autograph Book owned by J. W. Bailey with the signatures of many of Middletown’s well-known names from the 1860-1880 era (including Sawyer, Roberts, Vance, Neale, Southmayd, Hubbard, Atkins, Petras and Burke.) Several of these folks are buried at Indian Hill Cemetery because, after all, in the mid- to late-1800s and into the 20th century, Indian Hill was “the” cemetery to be buried in. Anyone of any status in Middletown wanted to be buried there. In fact, many families even disinterred their relatives from other cemeteries in town just to put them into the higher-status Indian Hill. Mortimer Cemetery, for example, on the corner of Main and Liberty, “lost” about 20% of its population once Indian Hill opened.


Participants in the Guided Lantern Tour will learn that Indian Hill Cemetery opened on September 30, 1850 with great pride and day-long fanfare including an elaborate program of speeches, a processional and music and “singing on the way to, and around, the Cemetery Grounds.” We will share some of the words spoken and music sung on that proud day as we open the program. For those interested, we will host a graveside storytelling about one of the many Civil War soldiers who are buried at Indian Hill, including a reading from some of the detailed letters he wrote while serving as a member of the mighty 14th regiment of the Connecticut Volunteers--an unsung, but unforgotten, hero.


The remainder of the event will be hosted by Stephanie Borrelli of the Paranormal Association of Central Connecticut (PACC). Stephanie is co-founder of the PACC and a Middletown resident (you may know her husband Ron from Planning & Zoning Commission). She and her team promise an evening of ghost-hunting with “respectful consideration to the hallowed grounds that we will be touring and with consideration to the varying beliefs of all participants.” Stephanie describes herself as a “spiritual Christian” but recognizes that people of many beliefs and faiths will be participating in the event; she promises to host the event in a non-denominational way, respecting the diversity of the participants and respecting those buried there.


The PACC will provide instruction in the tools and equipment they use to investigate paranormal activity; participants are invited to bring their own equipment including digital cameras and digital tape recorders. Sturdy walking shoes and flashlights are also a “must”. The event will include a pizza social at the Indian Hill garage at approximately 9:00 p.m., shuttle transportation to and from the locations, and experienced guides to lead small teams of participants. The ghost hunters will be touring several cemeteries in Middletown including Indian Hill, Vine Street, and the Farm Hill Cemetery on Ridge Road throughout the night. The PACC has also secured permission to access the grounds of the Wadsworth Mansion after midnight. The event is scheduled to end by 3:00 a.m. but attendees are welcome to exit the event anytime they wish.


The directors of Indian Hill Association have one request; please do not disturb the headstones while on the tour. The engravings of some of the cemetery markers are very fragile. Even rubbing some of the old brownstone headstones may cause permanent damage. This is why cemetery documentation projects now use only photography methods, not rubbings, to document the history recorded there. Think of old cemeteries as genuine historic ruins.


If you have an interest in participating in the Guided Lantern Tour and becoming a ghost hunter, then this is the event for you! The cost of the fundraiser is $60 a person and proceeds will be split 50/50 between Indian Hill Association and Godfrey Library after expenses. To register for the event or for more information, contact Stephanie Borrelli at 860-301-0204.


Happy ghost-hunting and thank you for supporting the event, if you are so inclined, and if you dare!


Macdonough Back To School Neighborhood Walks

Teachers from Macdonough School visited more than one hundred homes Wednesday to greet children and families, deliver back to school information, and answer questions about the upcoming school year.

Due to city-wide redistricting, approximately 50% of Macdonough students will be new to the school this year.   The idea for neighborhood walks came from the School-Family-Community Partnership Team at Macdonough School as a way to help start the school year on a positive note for those new to the school as well as for those returning.

Families received school calendars, school newsletters, and information about upcoming events from the teachers.  In addition to information packets, every child was presented with a fiction or non-fiction book.  Copies of a CD recording of the school's song, "Knowledge is Power," were given to new Macdonough families.

Additional events for Macdonough School students and families include:

• Thursday, August 26th:  A special program at Kid City Museum for incoming kindergarten students at Macdonough School from 5:30 p.m. to 7:00 p.m.
• Saturday, August 28th: A Back to School Bash celebration featuring games, music, and fun from 4:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. at the school’s playground area.
• Tuesday, August 31st: An Open House for students and families to meet teachers and visit classrooms from 3:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.
• Wednesday, September 1st: A First Day Celebration featuring a welcome breakfast for parents at 9:00 a.m. and an all-school assembly for students, staff, and parents beginning at 9:30 a.m.

Jewish Genealogical Society Meeting, August 29

The Jewish Genealogical Society of Connecticut will meet on Sunday, August 29, at 1:30 PM, in Middletown. The free program, open to all, will be held at Godfrey Memorial Library, 134 Newfield Street.
The first part of the program will be a report on the International Association of Jewish Genealogical Societies Conference held in Los Angeles in July. More than 1000 family researchers came together for a week to hear speakers presenting a wide range of topics, to use unique resources, and to network with other genealogists from around the world.
The second part of the meeting will be an opportunity to use an array of works in the JGSCT Library. Among the reference materials available, will be the new, two-volume Yad Vashem Encyclopedia of the Ghettos During the Holocaust. The reference work gathers data from research studies, historical information, testimonies, and documents about more than 1,100 ghettos during the Nazi period.
A non-profit research center serving genealogists and historians worldwide since 1947, Godfrey is the only public library in Connecticut solely devoted to genealogy. Its resources will be available for research before the program.
The Jewish Genealogical Society of Connecticut, formed in 1988, houses its library at the Godfrey. JGSCT members can borrow items from the collection of books, periodicals, and audio and visual resources.
Go to www.jgsct-jewish-genealogy.org to learn more about JGSCT. Contact Marcia Indianer Meyers 860.638.3819 for more information.
Directions:  From I-91, exit 22S onto Route 9 South. Exit 15 onto Route 66 West (Washington Street).  At 5th traffic light, turn right onto Route 3 North (Newfield Street). The Library is ¼ mile on the right. From I-95, take Exit 69 onto Route 9 North. Take Exit 15 and follow above directions.

Thursday, August 19, 2010

New Community Program Addresses Children's Behavioral Health Issues

submitted by Peg Arico / Middlesex Hospital:

A newly formed partnership program among a group of community organizations will provide early identification of behavioral health needs and early intervention for children during their elementary school years. The key partners in this program, entitled Identifying Children and Responding Early (iCARE), include Middlesex Hospital and its Family Advocacy Program and Center for Behavioral Health, Middletown Public Schools and the Middletown Youth Services Bureau, and the Middletown-based Ministerial Alliance. The new initiative is funded through the Connecticut Health Foundation’s Children’s Mental Health Initiative.

Middletown is one of only four communities in the state to receive funding for this program, which will initially be piloted for children and families of Bielefield School.

“As a school district, we are looking at early intervention as a key to school success,” said Middletown Superintendent of Schools, Michael J. Frechette. “iCARE is able to respond to children’s social and emotional needs, with a focus on prevention and a connection to valuable community resources.”

Bishop William McKissick, president of the Ministerial Alliance, stated, “It is important that families feel connected to their community and their schools. Kids are successful when families are supported.”

According to Terri DiPietro, Director of the Middlesex Hospital Outpatient Center for Behavioral Health, “For many years, the Middlesex Hospital Behavioral Health Department has been committed to providing specialized services to help improve the lives of children and their families. The new iCARE Program will be another valuable resource for the Hospital and its community partners to continue to provide additional support for children and families in need.

The Connecticut Health Foundation is the state’s largest, independent health philanthropy organization dedicated to improving lives by changing health systems. Since it was established in July 1999, the Foundation has supported innovative grantmaking, public health policy research and technical assistance to improve the health of the people of Connecticut.

Remembering a Gem

For twenty years, Record Express was a Middletown Main Street fixture. The store was part of a small independent chain of music stores owned by a local businessman. At its peak the chain had 14 stores in Connecticut and Massachusetts. In 2004 and 2005, the Record Express chain stores closed one after the other in rapid secession. The West Hartford store in the Center closed. The Hartford store on Pratt Street closed. The Cromwell store closed. And on and on until only one remained, right here in Middletown. It remained open for an extra year plus after all the other unlucky thirteen had closed. What Middletown's Record Express had that the others didn't, what allowed it to persevere and remain open, was the charismatic personalities of its managers. The last of those managers was Ian, who managed Record Express from 1998 until its closing in 2006. He followed in the footsteps of those before him and to some he was a Middletown icon. Ian always treated his customers and his employees with kindness and respect. He knew his customers, he knew his store, and he knew Middletown. He was at home behind the counter. He had an amazing talent for identifying music that a customer would like based on knowing what they liked and bought in the past. He never tried to convince a person to buy something that he or she wasn't interested in, or to like something that was not his or her taste. He understood that music was about what makes you happy, not what is cool or trendy. Ian brought the human element into the quest for new and different music that will never be found at the mega-chains or online. He never made much money; he sometimes joked that he could probably make more money working at McDonald's. He worked six days a week. He didn't use most of his company provided paid vacation time. It was a labor of love.


Despite Ian pouring his heart and soul into Record Express, business was still business. Rent increased, profits decreased, music sharing technologies gained momentum, and eventually the last of the once thriving chain shut its doors. When Record Express of Middletown finally closed in June 2006, it hardly came as a surprise to most. Barely a week went by when there wasn't another news story about the dying music industry and all the competition that traditional music distribution was getting from modern technology like Napster, mp3s, disc copying, dowloading, and iTunes. While the store closing may not have been a surprise, it was still a very sad and painful development for many. The store wasn't simply a place to buy music, and music simply wasn't a thing to be bought. Music could change your life and make you see things in a different perspective. The store was a place to be.

One person who clearly recognized the profundity of this was Brendan Toller. Brendan grew up in Portland and began visiting Record Express with his father at a young age. He continued discovering music there throughout his childhood. When he went off to college, he studied film, and when it came time for his senior film project, his subject became record stores and the reasons why so many of them were closing down. In a stroke of bittersweet but not quite ironic coincidence, Brendan's home town favorite Record Express closed during the time that he was making his movie, allowing that day to be captured in his film. Some of that footage is unarguably the most touching and memorable of the whole film.

Brendan's senior project became the acclaimed documentary I Need That Record! The Death (Or Possible Survival) of the Independent Record Store. The film has been making waves on the festival circuit where it's been well received at dozens of festivals around the world, and has been reviewed in countless magazines and newspapers including Rolling Stone, The Boston Globe and many more. At the North by Northwest film festival in Toronto, there were more people trying to see the film than there were seats in the theater, and viewers were turned away due to the capacity being maxed out. The film won an audience favorite award at the Melbourne International Film Festival in Australia, beating out It Might Get Loud, the Sony Pictures release which featured guitarists Jimmy Page, The Edge and Jack White. The latest print review was just recently published in the British magazine Uncut.

In the film, lovable and heartbroken Ian is contrasted with fiercely proud and determined Malcolm Tent, of Danbury's Trash American Style, another Connecticut record store that met its unfortunate demise around the same time. The tales of Ian and Malcolm and their stores are interwoven with commentary by an impressive bunch of musicians and insiders such as Thurston Moore of Sonic Youth, Ian Mackaye of Dischord Records, Fugazi and Minor Threat, Mike Watt of the Minutemen, guitarist Lenny Kaye of the Patti Smith Group, Chris Frantz of Talking Heads and Tom Tom Club, Patterson Hood of Drive-by Truckers, and more. The interviews are insightful and smart. The filmmaker paid as much attention to the visual aspect of this documentary as he did to the spoken content, including wonderful collage animations and lots of great footage including clips shot at a working record manufacturing facility in Tennessee.

The film was just released on DVD in July and is available to buy at many of the usual modern online outlets, as well as independent record stores (they aren't extinct) such as Red Scroll Records in Wallingford. Red Scroll is also featured in the film, as the “possible survival” part. And surviving they are.

Lantern Tour at Indian Hill Cemetery on Saturday