EVENTS: Small Business Saturday is Nov. 30

Small Business Saturday is this coming Saturday after Thanksgiving, Nov. 30, 2024. Are you interested in writing a story on the holiday shopping season or want to arrange an interview with a small business advocate in the area? The National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB), the nation’s leading small business association, is here to help. NFIB State Director David Clough is available to discuss the importance of Small Business Saturday to the local economy and how shopping small benefits consumers, employees, and business owners alike.

NFIB State Director David Clough can be reached at (207) 807-4900, and you can contact Senior Media Manager Mike Donohue at (202) 525-9835.

“In addition to creating good-paying jobs and strengthening the local economy, small businesses shape our communities by volunteering their time and financially supporting charitable organizations,” said Clough. “A recent NFIB report highlights how small business owners and their employees benefit their communities, beyond operating their businesses. As we kick off the holiday season, I encourage all Mainers to shop small, especially on Small Business Saturday, and thank a small business owner for how they enrich your community.”

Sandwiched between Black Friday and Cyber Monday, Small Business Saturday began in 2010 as a way to help local stores and restaurants recover from the Great Recession. It has quickly transformed into a Thanksgiving weekend tradition, becoming one of the busiest sales seasons for small business owners nationwide.

Windsor select board recommends abolishing Conservation Commission Committee

by The Town Line staff

At their October 22 meeting, the Windsor Select Board voted unanimously to recommend a warrant article to abolish the Conservation Commission Ordinance at the June 2024 town meeting.

Adrian Prindle, chairman of the Conservation Commission Committee reported they were going through the process of the ordinance and there is legal technology within the ordinance that is confusing and is causing the committee members to have many questions..

The conservation commission committee members are entertaining to have the ordinance abolished and then create a Belle Grove Parke Advisory Committee. The same members of the conservation commission would want to be part of the Belle Grove Parke Advisory Committee and would submit by-laws/rules.

They are meeting on Tuesday, December 10, at 6 p.m., and will suggest the process of forming a new group. Chester D. Barnes Jr. said the legal terms of this ordinance are for them to maintain a list of wetlands public and private property and he feels the town does not have the authority to do that, commenting, “We are not DEP.”

In other business:

– Town Manager Theresa Haskell said she has two letters from the assesdor’s agent regarding abatements and an abatement denial. The board approved an abatement in the amount of #3,761.88 for errors in building valuations for the Hysom, Shelia, heirs of $439; Carver, Ryan and Loralee of $958.62; Castle, Marcella and Collins, Matthew of $701.04; Bradbury, Joseph and Debra of $153.74 and Shorey, Timothy of $851. The board also approved the recommendation of the assessor’s agent for the denial at 139 Casey Road which lacks supportive documentation to substantiate what the assessment should be and is unclear as to how they calculated the reduced assessment.
– Public Works Supervisor Keith Reed reported on multiple issues with town trucks. He said the new truck was shipped November 14. Also, truck #5 needed to have transmission lines replaced at a cost of $3,000; when asked about what the future is going to bring for plow truck drivers, he said everyone that drives wants $30-plus per hour. He said, “we’ll have to go with what we have since we have not had many applicants.”

On the backhoe, locking pins, control switch and wiring had to be replaced at a cost of around $2,000.

– It was reported the medical marijuana petition will need to be formally voted and denied by the select board and for them to state the reason. The Maine Municipal Association recommends that it’s OK to have an ordinance ready before any vote. It was approved by the board on Select board member Allison Whynot’s motion to deny the petition as the wording is not a specific warrant question.
– Haskell handed out an updated Windsor Educational Foundation and Reed Fund Statment of Investment Policy for the select board to review until tne next meeting, and having someone from Kennebec Wealth Management attend the meeting as well.
– Haskell said the June 30, 2023, audit is complete and will be receiving the final audit soon.
– Finally, Haskell received a request from Aaron Ready to allow his truck to be parked in the town’s parking lot because he comcommutes to his job at Bath Iron Works with another driver. The select board said they had no issue at this point but would suggest they do not utilize the parking lot during snowstorms.

The next meeting of the select board was held on November 5.

EVENTS: China flag retirement ceremony set for Dec. 5

by Mary Grow

A flag retirement ceremony is scheduled for 5:30 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 5, at the Boynton-Webber American Legion Hall, in South China. Transfer station safety officer Cheyenne Houle said it will honor the more than 300 worn-out United States flags that have been left in the flag disposal boxes provided at the transfer station, plus others from Boy Scouts and other local groups.

The event is open to the public. Anyone with a worn-out or damaged flag is welcome to bring it to be added to the ceremony, Post Commander Neil Farrington said.

An on-line document from the National Flag Foundation describes a typical procedure for this ceremony, which honors the used flags. One is selected as representative of all: it is hoisted to the top of a flagpole by a color guard, saluted by the audience, who then recite the pledge of allegiance; and respectfully lowered and folded.

The best-known way to dispose of used flags is by burning them and burying the ashes. Farrington said the Dec. 5 ceremony will use an alternate method, cutting flags in half vertically and again horizontally, without damaging the block of 50 stars. The pieces are returned to the transfer station.

EVENTS: Benefit holiday online auction open to all

Eileen Ronco, left, and Cindy Shorey holding two of the 14 Boyd’s Bears available during a 10-day online auction to benefit Vassalboro United Methodist Church. (contributed photo)

A 10-day holiday season online auction starts on Black Friday to benefit the Vassalboro United Methodist Church (VUMC) beginning Friday, November 29, at 8 a.m. through Monday, December 9, at 8 a.m. Browse more than 130 items and place bids from the warmth and comfort of your home at ANY time of the day or night during those ten days. The option to “buy now” is included with each item or place bids instead.

A wide variety of entries are being donated and added daily. Some include an overnight at the Iron Fence Inn; a queen size homemade quilt; a microwave, a linkable two-piece slow cooker and a food dehydrator all like new; designer purses by Chanel, Louise Vuitton and Vera Bradley; an Ashton-Drake baby doll and six outfits; a Derby silver tea set; several pieces from a Lang & Wise Colonial Williamsburg Christmas village; Boyd’s bears; books, games and toys; a realistic children’s kitchen set with accessories; medical equipment; books, puzzles and games; new infant sweaters and a fleece coat and pants set; glass paperweights; corning ware and Pfaltzgraff dishes; an eight place setting of stoneware; a Stansport backpack; a Knight golf bag; gift certificates to several local businesses including restaurants, a golf course, car service centers and so much more!

Proceeds from this auction will benefit the VUMC building fund. FMI about the auction visit Vassalboro United Methodist Church on Facebook; call or text (207) 441-9184 or email crossings4u@gmail.com. To browse and bid visit https://new.biddingowl.com/VassalboroUMC.

Local Modern Woodmen members honor Jeff Meader

Jeff Meader, left, of Oakland, received the Modern Woodmen’s Hometown Hero award from Patrick Linehan, Modern Woodmen volunteer leader. (contributed photo)

Local volunteer Jeff Meader, of Oakland, Maine, was recently recognized for countless hours of service to the community during a Modern Woodmen of America member event on November 18, 2024. Meader was honored through Modern Woodmen’s Hometown Hero program for his dedication to the Sons of American Legion and American Legion Post #51, where he serves as Assistant Finance Officer.

Jeff ís attention to detail, willingness to accept any challenge, stick-to-it-iveness and willingness to volunteer are a major key to the success of Decker Simmons Post #51. As part of the Hometown Hero program, members of the The Capitol District Modern Woodmen Chapter presented Meader with a certificate and an award grant to be donated to the charitable organization of the honoree’s choice. Meader selected The American Legion Post #51 Entertainment Committee to receive the donation. “Volunteers form the foundation of a strong community,” says Patrick Linehan, local Modern Woodmen volunteer leader. “Modern Woodmen’s Hometown Hero program gives us the chance to thank those who selflessly give their time to make the world a better place.”

Coordinated by local Modern Woodmen members, the fraternal financial services organizationís chapters and youth service clubs provide opportunities for members to take part in social and educational activities and volunteer projects to meet local needs. For more information or to get involved, contact Linehan at 207-465-4800 / Patrick.r.linehan@mwarep.org.

Modern Woodmen was founded in 1883 as a fraternal benefit society. The organization supports members, families and communities with a unique blend of financial services, fraternal programs and local-impact opportunities. Learn more at www.modernwoodmen.org.

* Securities offered through MWA Financial Services Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Modern Woodmen of America.

Issue for November 21, 2024

Issue for November 21, 2024

Celebrating 36 years of local news

CRLA inspectors find no invasive plants in China Lake, Three-mile & Webber ponds

The boat inspection period at China area lakes was extended by a month, an additional day was added to the weekly schedule, inspections were extended to cover anchors and other gear, and the weather cooperated…

Festival of Trees set for upcoming weekends

Alfond Youth & Community Center and Mid-Maine Chamber of Commerce combine efforts to present Festival of Trees this holiday season, continuing a proud tradition…

Town News

CMP reps: No new power line planned through China

CHINA – In response to China voters’ Nov. 5 approval of a moratorium on new power transmission lines through town, three representatives of Central Maine Power Company (CMP) attended the Nov. 18 select board meeting to ask about local concerns…

Planners set hearings on two applications

CHINA – The three China planning board members at the Nov. 12 meeting scheduled Nov. 26 public hearings on both applications on their agenda. They decided the first hearing, at 6:30 p.m., Tuesday, Nov. 26, in the town office meeting room, will be on the application to add a records storage vault to the town office building…

Committee, manager continue talks on transfer station changes

CHINA – China Transfer Station Committee members and Town Manager Rebecca Hapgood continued discussion of pending changes at the China facility at a Nov. 12 meeting…

Select board ponders changing bank, town attorney

VASSALBORO – The Nov. 13 Vassalboro select board meeting included two phone-ins, as board members debated whether to change the town’s bank and the town attorney…

Board listens to plans for school building upgrades

VASSALBORO – At their Nov. 12 meeting, Vassalboro School Board members heard and watched on screen a presentation from three representatives of their consultant on building upgrades, Energy Management Consultants (EMC), of Portland…

Transfer station committee reviews changes manager claims are overkill

VASSALBORO – At a Nov. 13 meeting, Vassalboro transfer station task force members reviewed plans for changes at the transfer station that new station manager Adam Daoust thinks may be overkill…

Palermo foundation seeks grant

PALERMO – Once again, the Living Community Foundation is in the running for the annual crowdfunding grant from the Maine nonprofit, SeedMoney.org. This fundraiser only lasts from noon on November 15 to noon on December 15, and your support is greatly appreciated. It’s easy!…

North Pond Assn. to hold annual fundraiser

CENTRAL ME – The North Pond Association of Mercer, Rome and Smithfield, is ho- ho- hosting a wonderful opportunity for you to be the highest bidder on gifts for holiday gift giving season! (Of course these items make great birthday, anniversary, wedding gifts, and more, as well.)…

Local Rotary Club selected as nonprofit beneficiary for November Hannaford Helps Reusable Bag Program

WATERVILLE – Rotary members in Waterville are encouraging community members to shop at Hannaford Supermarket, 140 Elm Plaza, and purchase reusable bags to help raise funds for community projects…

Parade of Lights set for November 30

WATERVILLE – The Children’s Discovery Museum is excited to be collaborating with the city of Waterville to host this wonderful event…

Name that film!

Identify the film in which this famous line originated and qualify to win FREE passes to The Maine Film Center, in Waterville: “Striker: Surely you can’t be serious.” Email us at townline@townline.org with subject “Name that film!” Deadline for submission is December 5, 2024.

Webber’s Pond

Webber’s Pond is a comic drawn by an anonymous central Maine resident…

Local happenings

CALENDAR OF EVENTS: Vassalboro tool sale to benefit local nonprofits

VASSALBORO – Three local nonprofits will benefit from a tool and supplies sale at the former Suga Country Products Store, 871 Cross Hill Road, Vassalboro, on two Saturdays, November 23, and 30, 8 a.m. – 3 p.m… and many other local events!

Obituaries

CHINA – Wayne Louis Bengtson, 78, passed away at home Monday, November 11, 2024, following a brave battle with lung cancer. Wayne was born October 24, 1946, in Caribou, to Erwin A. Bengtson (d. 2021) and Ellen (Peggy) M. Peers Bengtson (d. 2023), of New Sweden…

Up and Down the Kennebec Valley: Jeremiah Chaplin & James Hanson (new)

CENTRAL ME HISTORY — Instead of moving to the next town, this article will provide abbreviated biographies of two men mentioned in last week’s story of educational development in Waterville… by Mary Grow

Up and Down the Kennebec Valley: Education: Waterville, Winslow high schools

CENTRAL ME HISTORY — Before moving on to 19th-century Winslow and Waterville high schools, your writer will share one more item about Waterville grammar schools. With its ramifications, it was too long for last week’s article… by Mary Grow

Up and Down the Kennebec Valley: Education in Winslow & Waterville

CENTRAL ME HISTORY — The northernmost of three area towns incorporated on April 26, 1771, was Winslow, on the east bank of the Kennebec River, then including Waterville and Oakland on the west bank… by Mary Grow

Up and Down the Kennebec Valley: Education in Vassalboro & Sidney

CENTRAL ME HISTORY — Another Kennebec Valley town incorporated April 26, 1771, simultaneously with Hallowell (then including Augusta), was Vassalboro, then including Sidney. Vassalboro’s and Sidney’s early educational systems will therefore be examined next… by Mary Grow

Common Ground: Win a $10 gift certificate!

DEADLINE: Wednesday, November 14, 2024

Identify the people in these three photos, and tell us what they have in common. You could win a $10 gift certificate to Hannaford Supermarket! Email your answer to townline@townline.org or through our Contact page. Include your name and address with your answer. Use “Common Ground” in the subject!

Previous winner: Carrie McGrath, So. China

Town Line Original Columnists

Roland D. HalleeSCORES & OUTDOORS

by Roland D. Hallee | There I was last Thursday, driving down the China Road, minding my own business, listening to Johnny Cash; just cruising on a beautiful, pleasant fall afternoon. The leaves on the trees fallen to the ground. That’s when it happened…

VETERANS CORNER

by Gary Kennedy | Each monthly article will focus on seasonal, useful information to keep everyone informed about AARP topics, events, or just fun stuff to do. AARP was founded 60 years ago by a retired school teacher, Dr. Ethel Percy Andrus…

Peter CatesREVIEW POTPOURRI

by Peter Cates | Palace was one of many record labels that came and went during the 1950s. The jacket had a list price of $4.98 which was the usual retail price for stereo releases on major labels – RCA, Columbia, Capitol , Atlantic, MGM, Decca etc…

FOR YOUR HEALTH

HEALTH | A bout of COVID-19 or the flu will put a damper on any holiday celebration. One of the most effective ways to help prevent these illnesses is by staying up to date on immunizations…

Up and Down the Kennebec Valley: Jeremiah Chaplin & James Hanson

Rev. Jeremiah Chaplin

by Mary Grow

Instead of moving to the next town, this article will provide abbreviated biographies of two men mentioned in last week’s story of educational development in Waterville.

Jeremiah Chaplin (Jan. 2, 1776 – May 7, 1841) was primarily a Baptist minister. Born in the section of Rowley, Massachusetts, that separated in 1838 to become Georgetown, he took his first position as a minister in 1802. He preached in Massachusetts, New York, Maine (including while he was college president in Waterville) and Connecticut.

James Hobbs Hanson (June 26, 1816 – April 21, 1894) was primarily an educator. Born in China, Maine, he began teaching when he was 19 and continued until a few days before his death.

* * * * * *

The Massachusetts legislature chartered the Maine Literary and Theological Institution in 1813, at the request of the Baptist church leaders in the District of Maine. Waterville was picked as its site, and in 1818 Rev. Jeremiah Chaplin was appointed professor of theology.

The institution became Waterville College in 1821; recognized donor Gardner Colby by becoming Colby University in 1867; and in 1899 became Colby College.

This work by James Hobbs Hanson, has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it.

Chaplin’s family was Baptist, Wikipedia says. He graduated in 1799 from Brown University, “a school with an historical Baptist affiliation,” as class valedictorian, with a B.A. He tutored at Brown for a year (or two or three; sources differ) and then studied for the ministry under Thomas Baldwin at Boston’s Second Baptist Church.

His first position was in Danvers, Massachusetts, in 1802, where he preached (except for a brief period at New York City’s First Baptist Church) until called to Waterville in February 1818. On April 16, 1806, he married Marcia Scott O’Brien (born March 6, 1784), of Newburyport, Massachusetts.

Edward W. Hall, in his chapter on Colby in Rev. Edwin Carey Whittemore’s Waterville history, wrote that in Danvers, Chaplin “had charge of the theological students of the Massachusetts Baptist Education Society,” perhaps explaining why he was chosen for the Waterville job.

Arthur Roberts, in his chapter on Waterville teachers in the same book, said Chaplin first intended to refuse the position, but changed his mind “after a night of prayer and what he regarded as a special revelation of the will of God.”

According to FamilySearch, by the time the Chaplins came to Waterville on June 25, 1818, the family included John, 11; Hannah, nine; Jeremiah, four; Marcia, three; Adoniram, two; and Annie, who had been born in January 1818. Three more daughters and (maybe; evidence is inconclusive) a son were born in Waterville.

Your writer assumed the children came to Waterville with their parents. However, Hall wrote that the Chaplins came with two children and “several of his pupils” (seven, George Dana Boardman Pepper suggested, in his chapter on churches in Whittemore’s history).

Several sources summarized the journey, quoting Mrs. Chaplin’s letters and diary. The family sailed up the Kennebec to Augusta on a sloop named “Hero.” From Augusta to Waterville they were in a longboat with sails; when the wind died, “the young men of the party landed and dragged the boat by a rope.”

Mrs. Chaplin was pleased to meet friendly neighbors whom she described as not “such ignorant, uncultivated beings as some have imagined,” but “people of education and refinement.”

The Chaplins’ house, at the north end of the present downtown, was also the Institution’s first instructional building. Henry Kingsbury wrote in his Kennebec County history that Chaplin taught there from 1818 until 1821, when South Hall was finished.

Three more buildings went up in the 1820s and 1830s, and the campus moved a few blocks north on College Avenue. Its buildings dominated that part of Waterville until 1931, when Colby College relocated to Mayflower Hill, on the west side of the city.

Pepper called Waterville’s First Baptist Church “in a sense, a child of the college.” He wrote that when Chaplin arrived in Waterville, he was promptly invited to preach on Sundays. On Aug. 27, a group of 20 men and women, seven (include both adult Chaplins) connected with the Institution and 13 former members of the Sidney Baptist Church, met at the Chaplin house and organized the First Baptist Church of Waterville.

Pepper said Chaplin’s sermons drew large and attentive audiences. Adjectives he quoted to describe his style included “clear” and “cogent” from one source; from another “chaste, simple, suited to the subject” and “enlivened with striking illustrations.”

Professor William Mathews, author of the chapter on Waterville in The Olden Time in Whittemore’s history, gave a different view.

Mathews wrote that until the Baptist church was dedicated in 1826, Waterville’s only religious meeting house was “an unpainted building resting on blocks, afterwards converted, with some changes, into a town hall” on the common, facing south (downriver). This hall was used by multiple denominations, but mostly by the Baptists, led by Chaplin.

Mathews wrote: “He was a tall, spare man, very grave in look and utterance; and well do I remember how weary at the age of six or seven I used to be, when, to my inexpressible relief, he finished his sixthly, or seventhly, or eighthly, and closed the big quarto Bible, and – as it seemed to me – his protracted and ponderous discourse.”

Mathews also gave Chaplin credit for an occasional “dry and pungent witticism.” The example he gave was Chaplin’s announcement that a Unitarian minister was going to preach in the church building that afternoon, while the Gospel – emphasized – would be preached at the same time in the nearby schoolhouse (by Chaplin).

Chaplin was made the college’s first president in 1821, a position he held until he resigned in 1833. According to Pepper, he continued as the Baptists’ minister, for free, until the church hired its first pastor in October 1829 (or, Kingsbury said, co-pastors in 1823).

After leaving Waterville in 1833, Chaplin preached in Rowley, Massachusetts, and Wilmington, Connecticut, before moving to Hamilton, New York, where he died in 1841.

Chaplin’s books included biographies of Henry Dunster, Harvard College’s first president; Charles Sumner; Benjamin Franklin; and Ulysses Grant. He also published, in 1881, “Chips from the White House; or, Selections from the speeches, conversations, diaries, letters, and other writings, of all the presidents of the United States.”

Chaplin helped raise money for a building for Waterville Academy, the college’s preparatory school, in 1829. More significant was his help to Gardner Colby (1810 – 1879) and his family after Colby’s father died in 1814. By the 1860s, Colby was a wealthy Boston businessman, and Waterville College was struggling; Colby’s generous donations saved – and renamed – it.

* * * * * *

After James Hobbs Hanson’s death in 1894, the Colby University trustees published a 42-page booklet of prose and verse tributes “in memory of an honored and beloved associate.” The first essay, by W. H. Spencer, D.D., began with biographical information that supplemented Kingsbury’s brief account.

Both writers were clear that Hanson came from a farming family.

Kingsbury wrote that when Hanson was 18, he “left the farm” in China to go to China Academy, in China Village, “where he was fitted for college.”

Spencer said “before he left the farm” he had a life-changing religious conversion under China Baptist Church pastor Daniel Bartlett. Bartlett baptized Hanson in China Lake on March 26, 1835, “the ice being cut for the purpose.”

His first teaching position was in 1835, in Penobscot County, Spencer said (no town named). Next he taught two terms on Vinalhaven Island, then a term in “a village school in Searsmont.”

Earlier, Hanson’s mother had persuaded him to try singing school, where he displayed unexpected talent. In Searsmont, Spencer said, he taught a singing school; finding it paid better than ordinary schools, he taught three more singing schools “the next winter.”

These teaching jobs paid his tuition at China Academy and at Waterville College, from which he graduated in1842.

After graduation, Kingsbury said, he taught continuously, and in the five decades to 1892 “he has not been absent from the school room for a week altogether for any cause.”

His first job, Spencer wrote, was in Hampden, Maine, for three terms. He applied to be principal of Hampden Academy, did not get the job and “was obliged to return to his old home on the farm in China.”

Spencer credited this disappointment to Providence, because, he said, it led Hanson to the principalship of Waterville Academy, where he found “the real work of his life” and “his destined career.”

(As summarized last week, Waterville Academy, founded in 1829, was renamed Waterville Classical Institute in 1865 and Coburn Classical Institute in 1882.)

Starting in 1843 with five students (two of them girls, Kingsbury said), Hanson brought the Academy to a peak enrollment of 308 and led to its informal name, “Dr. Hanson’s school,” before he resigned in 1854.

Invited to become principal of Eastport High School, he worked there from 1854 to 1857. Next, he became principal of Portland Boys High School, “which he brought up from a state of lax discipline to excellent efficiency.”

He stayed in Portland eight years, 1857 to 1865, the last two “in charge of a private school,” Spencer said. In 1865, Waterville College President James Tift Champlin brought him back to Waterville Classical Institute. There he stayed until the week he died, when he “turned over his classes to the substitute teachers” and went home.

Writing in 1892, Kingsbury called Hanson “an untiring and energetic principal.” Spencer summarized: “It was duty before pleasure with him, and the habit of a lifetime brought him his pleasure in duty.”

Speaking at Hanson’s funeral, Rev. A. L. Lane talked about the many hours Hanson spent helping students, not only in class but outside when they needed extra tutoring or to make up work after an absence.

He also mentioned the debt Waterville’s public high schools owed to Hanson and the Institute: the Institute was the only high school from 1864 to 1876, and since 1876, he said, “every high school principal” and many teachers had been institute graduates.

Colby University President Beniah Longley Whitman called Hanson “An untiring student, a great teacher, a consecrated Christian, a faithful friend,” and praised the quality of the students his school sent to Colby. Hanson was a Colby trustee from 1862 until he died.

The alumni tribute, prepared by Rev. C. V. Hanson, summarized Hanson’s personal life. (Rev. Charles Veranus Hanson [Aug. 30, 1844 – November 1899] was not closely related to James Hobbs Hanson.)

Hanson’s first wife was Sarah Boardman Marston, of Waterville; they were married in 1845, and she died in 1853. On Sept. 16, 1854, he married Mary E. Field, from Sidney. They had three children, a daughter who died in infancy, a second daughter who graduated from Colby in 1881 and a son who graduated from Colby in 1883.

The daughter, Sophie May, married a man named Pierce and lived in Waterville in 1894. Her brother, Frank Herbert Hanson, was in 1892 general secretary of the Zanesville, Ohio, Young Men’s Christian Association (YMCA) (Kingsbury), and by 1894 principal of the Washington School, in New Jersey (C. V. Hanson).

Mary Hanson “was for many years the principal of the primary department in the Institute.” She was also the first president of the Waterville branch of the Women’s Christian Temperance Union, organized in 1878. In 1902, she wrote the chapter on the Waterville Woman’s Association in Whittemore’s history of Waterville.

Main sources

Kingsbury, Henry D., ed., Illustrated History of Kennebec County Maine 1625-1892 (1892)
Whittemore, Rev. Edwin Carey, Centennial History of Waterville 1802-1902 (1902)

Websites, miscellaneous.

FOR YOUR HEALTH: Help Protect Your Family Against Respiratory Illness Before the Holidays

You can arm yourself and your family against respiratory illnesses that can ruin the holidays and much more.

(NAPSI)—A bout of COVID-19 or the flu will put a damper on any holiday celebration. One of the most effective ways to help prevent these illnesses is by staying up to date on immunizations. If you haven’t received an annual flu vaccination and updated COVID-19 vaccination yet, it’s not too late to do so. Vaccinations to guard against respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) and pneumococcal pneumonia are also available and recommended for those eligible.

Who Should Get Vaccinated

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), people six months and older, with rare exceptions, should get the updated annual flu vaccine. The CDC also recommends that everyone ages six months and older should get the updated 2024-2025 COVID-19 vaccine, unless otherwise noted, to help restore and enhance protection against the currently circulating virus variants.

It’s especially important to protect those at increased risk of complications from severe flu or COVID-19 illness, such as adults 65 and older, people with certain immunocompromising or chronic medical conditions, infants, young children and pregnant women.

The CDC also recommends a single dose of any FDA-authorized RSV vaccine for adults ages 75 and older and those ages 60-74 at increased risk of severe RSV. The CDC just expanded the age group that pneumococcal vaccines are recommended for to adults 50 and older (previously it was 65 and older); the vaccine is also recommended for children younger than five years and adults at increased risk for pneumococcal disease.

“Crowded airports and train stations, large gatherings with family and friends and more time spent indoors as temperatures drop are all contributing factors to the spread of respiratory viruses,” said Dr. Sree Chaguturu, executive vice president and chief medical officer at CVS Health. “Immunizations are the best protection against these viruses, and getting vaccinated now, before Thanksgiving and the winter holidays, makes sense because it takes about two weeks for the body to build up protection.”

What Else You Can Do

Chaguturu also recommends covering coughs and sneezes, frequent handwashing throughout the day, and avoiding close contact with those who are sick to help prevent the spread of germs.

Who Can Help

Most insurance plans cover flu and COVID-19 vaccinations at no cost, and other preventive vaccines may be available at no cost, as well. Check with your health care insurance provider to determine coverage.

Getting the vaccines can be easy. One way is to visit CVS.com or the CVS Pharmacy app to schedule an immunization appointment at CVS Pharmacy or MinuteClinic.

EVENTS: Parade of Lights set for November 30

Downtown Waterville aglow in lights, and bustling with activity during the Parade of Lights in 2023. (photo by Galen Neal, Central Maine Photography)

by Mark Huard

The Children’s Discovery Museum is excited to be collaborating with the city of Waterville to host this wonderful event.

While we have loved partnering with Winslow each year for the parade, due to ongoing bridge construction, we believe it is safer to keep the parade on one side of the river.

The 2024 Parade of Lights will be held on Saturday, November 30, at 6 p.m. Floats will assemble along College Ave., travel down to Main Street, stopping at Castonguay Square for the lighting of the giant spruce and Santa’s arrival at Kringleville. We would like to invite all area schools, businesses, churches, organizations and municipalities to participate in the parade by entering a float, marching band, or other appropriate entry.

There is a $25 registration fee to participate, which helps keep the event sustainable. We are limiting the number of floats to 30, so register early to ensure participation. All floats must be decorated and we encourage holiday or winter-themed decorations and lights, lights, lights! The more lights the better! Please note that the official Kringleville Santa is the only Santa allowed in the parade.

If you have any questions please contact the Children’s Discovery Museum at kringleville@childrensdiscoverymuseum.org.

This event will take place, rain or shine! No rain date.

PROBATE NOTICES for Thursday, November 21, 2024

STATE OF MAINE
PROBATE COURT
COURT ST.,
SKOWHEGAN, ME
SOMERSET, ss
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
18-A MRSA sec. 3-801

The following Personal Representatives have been appointed in the Estates noted. The first publication date of this notice November 21, 2024. If you are a creditor of an Estate listed below, you must present your claim within four months of the first publication date of this Notice to Creditors or be forever barred.

You may present your claim by filing a written statement of your claim on a proper form with the Register of Probate of this Court or by delivering or mailing to the Personal Representative listed below at the address published by the Personal Representative’s name a written statement of the claim indicating the basis therefore, the name and address of the claimant and the amount claimed or in such other manner as the law may provide. See 18-C M.R.S. §3-804.

2024-081 – Estate of RICHARD L. WEYMOUTH, late of St. Albans, Maine deceased. Jodianne L. Weymouth, 146 Ripley Road, St. Albans, Maine 04971 appointed Personal Representative.

2024-343 – Estate of LELAND B. HILLS, late of Solon, Maine deceased. Teresa Anne Hills, 417 Brighton Road, Solon, Maine 04979 appointed Personal Representative.

2024-345 Estate of LESLIE ELIAS-HENDSBEE, late of Madison, Maine deceased. Bruce Hendsbee, 29 Myrtle Street, Madison, Maine 04950 appointed Personal Representative.

2024-346 – Estate of DWIGHT W. FOOTE, JR., late of Carmichael, California deceased. Kathleen Newton Foote, P.O. Box 276, Rockwood, Maine 04478 appointed Personal Representative.

2024-347 – Estate of COLLEEN E. BRADSTREET, late of Hartland, Maine deceased. Taylor Bradstreet, 8 Hill Crest Drive, Clinton, Maine 04927 appointed Personal Representative.

2024-348 – Estate of JONATHAN G. CAYFORD, late of Athens, Maine deceased. Samantha J. Reid-Oliver, 16 Emerald Acres Drive, Madison, Maine 04950 and Mackenzie J. Cayford, 69 Mallard Road, Madison, Maine 04950 appointed Co-Personal Representatives.

2024-349 – Estate of RONALD K. SARNER, late of New Portland, Maine deceased. Elliott Barden, Sr., P.O. Box 363. Temple, Maine 04984 appointed Personal Representative.

2024-350 – Estate of WAYNE L. PARLIN, late of Madison, Maine deceased. Travis Parlin, 3 Andrea Ave., Benton, Maine 04901 appointed Personal Representative.

2024-351 – Estate of PATRICIA HUGHEY, late of Jackman, Maine deceased. Karen Finnegan, P.O. Box 65, Jackman, Maine 04945 appointed Personal Representative.

2024-355 – Estate of JACQUELINE L. PIO, late of Palmyra, Maine deceased. Dustin Pio, 9 Eastland Ave., Millinocket, Maine 04462 and Brian Scott, 784 Warren Hill Rd., Palmyra, Maine 04965 appointed Co-Personal Representatives.

2024-356 – Estate of MARK G. WALRAVEN, late of Brighton, Maine deceased. William Walraven, 60 Justine Road, Plymouth, Massachusetts 02360 and Mark A. Walraven, 49 Blue Gill Lane, Plymouth, Massachusetts 02360 appointed Co-Personal Representatives.

2024-357 – Estate of ARTHUR A. GAGNE, SR., late of Canaan, Maine deceased. Shawn Gagne, 15 Warren Ave., Canaan, Maine 04924 appointed Personal Representative.

2024-363 – Estate of EDWARD A. WILLS, late of San Bernardino, CA deceased. Lewis Wills, 919 River Road, New Portland, Maine 04961 appointed Personal Representative.

2024-364 – Estate of APRIL M. PALMER, late of St. Albans, Maine deceased. Bridget Gould, 511 Rome Road, Rome, Maine 04963 appointed Personal Representative.

2024-365 – Estate of SCOTT B. LUDDEN, late of Hartland, Maine deceased. Rosalie DeRaps, 262 Ford Hill Road, Hartland, Maine 04943 appointed Personal Representative.

2024-366 – Estate of JANUSZ A. JANKIEWICZ, late of Skowhegan, Maine deceased. Beata J. Jackson and Jeffrey Jackson, CMR 402 Box 1961, APO AE 09180 appointed Co-Personal Representatives.

2024-372 – Estate of FREDERICK J. FOSS, SR., late of Norridgewock, Maine deceased. Holly Mullen, 13 Colonial Lane, Condo #8, Norridgewock, Maine 04957 appointed Personal Representative.

TO BE PUBLISHED November 21, 2024 & November 28, 2024

Dated: November 24, 2024
/s/Victoria M. Hatch,
Register of Probate
(11/28)

STATE OF MAINE
PROBATE COURT
41 COURT ST.
SOMERSET, ss
SKOWHEGAN, ME
PROBATE NOTICES

TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN ANY OF THE ESTATES LISTED BELOW

Notice is hereby given by the respective petitioners that they have filed petitions for appointment of personal representatives in the following estates or change of name. These matters will be heard at 10 a.m. or as soon thereafter as they may be on December 4, 2024. The requested appointments or name changes may be made on or after the hearing date if no sufficient objection be heard. This notice complies with the requirements of 18-C MRSA §3-403 and Probate Rule 4.

2024-368 – BRYSYN JAMES CLARK. Petition for Change of Name (Adult) filed by Brysyn J. Clark, of 49 Pleasant Street, Hartland, Maine 04943, requesting name to be changed to Brysyn J. Clark-Stoots for reasons set forth therein.

2024-371 – DARCY MADELINE LITTLE. Petition for Change of Name (Adult) filed by Darcy M. Little, of 1430 Main Street, Pittsfield, Maine 04967, requesting name to be changed to Damien Mosher Little for reasons set forth therein.

Dated: November 21, 2024

/s/ Victoria Hatch,
Register of Probate
(11/28)