MY POINT OF VIEW: Labor Day, the beginning of another season

by Gary Kennedy

Well, here we are again, Labor Day September 2, and for many Mainers the beginning of another season. Children begin another school year while mama makes all the necessary preparation for all the coming events. Dad starts thinking about wrapping up the home in preparation of whatever the Farmer’s Almanac has extrapolated using the wisdom of Father Time. Of course, there are some pleasurable preparations that will be shared by all like checking out the ice fishing equipment, cleaning the camp, if we were fortunate enough to have acquired one during our productive years.

Finding and developing the pleasures that our four seasons bring is extremely important to living in the state of Maine. Winter gives us everything, snow, skiing, sledding, ice skating, ice fishing and the acknowledgement and love of God. (Xmas), Spring gives us aspirations of warmer weather, poor man’s fertilizer for our future crops and my favorite, fresh season maple syrup. Umm, those pancakes are great on a cold spring morning.

Last but not least is the sowing of the seed for the late summer, early fall crops. Don’t you just love that fresh Maine corn on the cob! Then comes summer which allows the children to enjoy their youth and to build and store memories to pass on at story time during those cold, frosty fall evenings; stories that will perhaps be similar to those told to them by their parents. Time through labor produces unimaginable growth to story time, but none the same, hearing grows with telling. Last, but certainly not least, is winter, where we enjoy and curse the winter wonderland. For me winter is a time of reflexions. Did I do all that I could do for God, country and family?

I take a serious look at who I am and what I have done, good and not so good, and make my new year’s resolution encompassing all results from my evaluation. This is my Labor Day. I shall then go to work on helping my world grow.

Labor Day is an annual holiday celebrating social and economic achievements. It is celebrated in most of the world. In most cases the dates are different but most of us have basically the same theme. Mine is personal and mostly private while others are very open and openly shared. It really makes no difference, if you have respect for other opinions and themes. As Americans we are a very long way from this holiday’s origin, the “American Labor Management”, which was a result of poor working conditions during the Industrial Revolution. However, if you look at our current situation we are in a very different place. It’s an election year and full of many things to think of before we vote.

The working environment is one of them, once again. Also, all minorities all the way up through the middle class need to think with intellect, in a soap-opera atmosphere. We have our employment to look at, our morality to question and to deal with, as our fore fathers once did. Our future and our children’s future depend on who and what we are and do.

Labor Day became a national holiday in 1894. That was 130 years ago. Labor Day is in part a fight for the welfare of our country and the security of our families. Mainer’s have always been respected workers; it’s the work environment that has now become the issue.

Windsor Fair is open for Labor Day. Stay safe and God bless you and your family. Remember “it’s not what you take with you; it’s what you leave behind”. Keep America safe and strong. Our children need us. We are the example that they rely on.

The views of the author of this column are not necessarily those of The Town Line newspaper, its staff and board of directors.

LETTERS: Maine won’t wait on climate change

To the editor:

Your voice matters in Maine’s fight against climate change!

The Maine Climate Council is updating the state’s action plan, “Maine Won’t Wait” and they want your input. This action plan addresses important topics such as strategies to protect our communities and prepare for the future.

Earlier this year, expert statewide working groups compiled draft climate strategies and presented them to the council. All Mainers now have the opportunity to provide feedback regarding these draft climate strategies.

The state’s action plan is incredibly important to our future and generations to come, which is why we should make our voices heard. Please consider taking the survey and sharing your thoughts so that the Maine Climate Council can continue to advocate for positive enhancements to our state plan.

To access the survey, visit www.maine.gov and search for “2024 Draft Climate Strategies & Survey”. The deadline to participate is September 20th.

Jane Margesson, Director
AARP Maine Communications

China voters to decide amendments to land development code

by Mary Grow

At the polls on Nov. 5, China voters will be asked to approve amendments to two sections of China’s Land Development Code and to the development district map.

The Aug. 20 planning board public hearing, intended to answer voters’ questions and collect their comments on the changes, almost certainly set several records.

One was for smallest attendance at a China public hearing: no members of the public came. Therefore acting chairman Michael Brown probably set records for shortest hearing – he held it open for three minutes in case someone came in late – and shortest meeting, six minutes.

The proposed amendments to Chapter 2 and Chapter 11 of China’s Land Development Code and the District Map are on the town website, chinamaine.org, under the Planning Board, which is under “Officials, Boards & Committees.”

The simpler changes are in Chapter 11, the section on definitions. The definitions of “expansion of a structure,” “expansion of use” and “shoreland zone” are all recommended for amendment.

Chapter 2, the Land Use Ordinance that is a major part of the code (69 pages on the town website) has multiple changes. Most, planning board chairman Toni Wall said when the board discussed the changes at an Aug. 13 meeting, are aimed at simplifying, clarifying or updating language.

The first change says that “all references to other local, state and federal regulations, rules, laws and the like” mean to the current version, so that voters will no longer need to amend the Land Use Ordinance every time an outside document is updated.

Many changes, codes officer Nicholas French said at the Aug. 13 meeting, will bring China’s ordinance into compliance with state law and regulations, something that should be done whenever state laws or rules that set local standards are enacted or amended.

A major change, if voters approve, will eliminate about eight pages of local regulations by transferring jurisdiction over timber harvesting in China’s Resource Protection, Stream Protection and Shoreland Districts to the Maine Forest Service.

Planning board and select board members, and town attorney Amanda Meader, have reviewed multiple drafts of the changes. At their Aug. 26 meeting, select board members approved them for the Nov. 5 ballot.

The next regular China planning board meeting is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 10.

China select board approves final version of November ballot

by Mary Grow

At their Aug. 26 meeting, China select board members approved the final version of a Nov. 5 local ballot that will include asking voters to adopt or reject several documents.

In a series of unanimous votes, board members approved asking for voters’ action on:

A “High-Impact Electric Transmission Line Moratorium Ordinance” that, if approved, would ban new electric transmission lines through China for 180 days, renewable by the select board for another 180 days.
Amendments to Chapter 2 of the Land Development Code, a 69-page section titled “Use Ordinance” that says it “shall apply to all land uses and structures within the Town of China with special emphasis on the shoreland area.”
Amendments to Chapter 11 of the Land Development Code, titled “Definitions.”
The development district map that relates to ordinance changes approved in June to conform to the revised state law on affordable housing.
The third amendment to China’s Tax Increment Financing (TIF) Program.

The moratorium ordinance was inspired by the LS Power transmission line, proposed in 2022 to bring wind-generated electricity from Aroostook County to a substation near Windsor. The project is currently on hold.

A public hearing at the beginning of the Aug. 26 China meeting attracted half a dozen people. Select board and audience members agreed the moratorium is a good idea, and voters should have a chance to enact it.

It is intended to provide time to develop and approve a local ordinance that would set standards and guidelines for future electric utility lines in town. Several towns along LS Power’s proposed route have already approved moratoria and developed ordinances.

Joshua Kercsmar, of Unity, vice-president of Preserve Rural Maine, called such ordinances ways for towns to regulate transmission lines, not to ban them. For example, he mentioned national best practices that recommend burying lines wherever possible, and locating them along highways.

China resident Joshua LaVerdiere recommended new lines use existing transmission corridors.

Preserve Rural Maine is a nonprofit organization founded in the summer of 2023 in response to the LS Power plan. Kercsmar said its members help towns develop appropriate ordinances, and offered to provide copies China could adapt.

The land use amendments were prepared primarily by China Planning Board members, especially board chairman Toni Wall. The TIF amendment was drafted by TIF Committee member Jamie Pitney and endorsed by the committee. Select board member Brent Chesley led expressions of appreciation to Pitney for his many hours of work that “saved the town a boatload of money.”

A public hearing on Nov. 5 warrant articles is scheduled for 6 p.m., Monday, Sept. 23, in the town office meeting room.

In addition to election preparations, select board members talked again about the long-discussed new secure storage space for official town records. They, building committee chairman Sheldon Goodine (who was expected at the Aug. 26 meeting, but did not attend) and others have considered an addition to the south side of the existing office building, or a remodeling of the old garage behind the old town house.

At the Aug. 26 meeting, Town Manager Rebecca Hapgood said funds are available to pay for an addition to the town office, at the earlier price of $267,489. The bulk of the money would come from the federal ARPA (American Rescue Plan Act) money that China needs to commit by the end of the year (or return it to Washington).

However, the price is probably outdated; and select board members are interested in potentially saving money by further exploring using the garage building. Hapgood said when she discussed with other staff members storing documents in a separate building across the parking lot, their reaction was, “Do you know how many times we access those records?”

Board members asked Hapgood to prepare up-to-date summaries of options and costs for a future discussion.

Weeks Mills Fire Chief William Van Wickler attended the Aug. 26 meeting to brief select board members on his department’s need for a new tanker. When their 1988 former oil truck was last inspected, the news was unexpectedly bad, he said – so bad that the department promptly sold it (for $2,000, having paid $3,500 for it).

Van Wickler is exploring one used-truck option, a 1996 vehicle currently owned by Chelsea. He intends to look into grant possibilities, though he said writing grant applications is not his specialty and he is not optimistic.

Nomination papers must be returned by Sept. 6

China’s local elections are Nov. 5. Signed nomination papers must be returned to the town office by the close of business Friday, Sept. 6, for candidates’ names to appear on the ballot.

China Town Clerk Angela Nelson reported Aug. 26 that there are still no candidates for a seat on the Regional School Unit #18 board of directors, or for three budget committee positions: District 2 (northeastern China), the secretary and the At Large representative (both elected from anywhere in town).

For three select board positions currently held by Blane Casey, Brent Chesley and Janet Preston, Edwin Bailey and Thomas Rumpf have turned in signed papers and Chesley, Tod Detre and Shawn McGlew are circulating papers.

Select board chairman Wayne Chadwick offered to join Van Wickler in an inspection of the Chelsea truck. Van Wickler intends to keep select board members updated on his search. Meanwhile, he said, his department still has two trucks, though it is without its main water supply.

In other business, Hapgood said she plans to end the 911 municipal sign program that provides residents with conspicuous house numbers by Nov. 30. Select board members approved.

The manager reminded those present that all town departments will be closed Monday, Sept. 2, for the Labor Day holiday.

The next regular select board meeting will be Monday evening, Sept. 9.

Central Maine ATV Glow Ride illuminates the night with community spirit

ATVs parade down Main St., in Waterville. (photo by Mike Guarino)

by Mike Guarino

The Central Maine ATV Club hosted its highly anticipated ATV Glow Ride, on Saturday, August 17, 2024, with approximately 300 machines and over 1,000 participants for a night of community, fun, and charity.

Melanie Dickinson, and her dog, are ready to roll. (photo by Mike Guarino)

The event kicked off at the Best Western. The parade of brightly lit ATVs made its way through Waterville’s Main Street, continued up Front Street, College Ave, and eventually over to North Street.  From there, riders continued their journey through the Fairfield trail system towards Norridgewock before looping back onto the scenic Kennebec Valley Rail trail, in Fairfield, and parts of Oakland.  The ride culminated back in Waterville, completing an unforgettable night of camaraderie and celebration.

The event was a true testament to the power of community partnerships. The Central Maine ATV Club joined forces with the Mid-Maine Chamber of Commerce to help organize and promote the Glow Ride.  In addition, a marketing grant was secured from the Kennebec Valley Tourism Council, playing a vital role in attracting riders from throughout Maine and a variety of New England states.

In addition to providing an evening of entertainment and community spirit, the Glow Ride also served a charitable purpose. Proceeds from the event were split between the Club and the Fairfield Food Pantry, supporting their mission to provide essential services to local families in need. “The Glow Ride is more than just a parade of ATVs; it’s a celebration of our community coming together for a great cause,” said Kevin Kitchin, President of the Central Maine ATV Club.

“We are thrilled with the turnout and the incredible energy that everyone brought to the Glow Ride this year,” Kitchin added.  “This event showcases the family fun and excitement of ATV riding and highlights the strong sense of community we have here in Central Maine. We are grateful to our partners, the Mid-Maine Chamber of Commerce, and the Kennebec Valley Tourism Council, for their support in making this event a reality.”

The Central Maine ATV Club is dedicated to promoting safe and responsible ATV riding while fostering a strong sense of community among riders in Central Maine. The club organizes events and rides throughout the year, with a focus on community engagement, trail stewardship, and charitable giving.

Windsor benefit concert

Photo by Roberta Barnes

by Roberta Barnes

When was the last time you enjoyed a live concert put on by experienced, highly-skilled musicians and singers for a worthy cause?

Friday evening, August 16, a concert upstairs in the Windsor Town Hall was a musical tribute paid to the life and music of Nat King Cole. The enjoyable music the Downeast Brass Quintet played is part of this country’s musical history.

This concert, with superb music and narrations on the life of Nat King Cole, born in 1919, was free. The donations jar on the table near the entrance was for the Maine Lung Association. The musicians donated their time and talents. This was an excellent way to celebrate the American Lung Association’s 120th anniversary.

Nat King Cole (Nathaniel Adams Cole) the American singer, jazz pianist, and actor who made television history in 1956, unfortunately, was a smoker. In 1965 at the height of his stardom, when he was only 45 years old, lung cancer ended his life.

The concert began at 7 p.m., but musicians were present doing sound checks around 6 p.m. Andy Foster, on trumpet and sang, Peter Suart, on trumpet, Dwight Tibbetts, on trumpet and piano, Rick Gadway, on trumpet, Loren Fields, on French Horn and sang. Michael Peterson, on trombone, Erica Scarano, on tuba, Andrea Buckland, on banjo and guitar, Richard LaChance, on percussion, and Dakota Ryder, who sang, made up the group of skilled and experienced musicians.

The concert began with background piano music while Marianne Tibbets gave the first of several short narrations on the life and career of Cole. She also managed the slides appearing on a large screen that related to the narrations she gave.

One of the first songs in the concert, Straighten up and Fly Right, written by Nat King Cole and Irving Mills, became part of the soundtrack in a 1943 movie and was the first of vocal hits for the King Cole Trio.

Each narration was followed by songs selected from Cole’s hits. Most of those attending could feel their body naturally moving, if only a hand or foot, with rhythm of the music that filled the town hall. Each song was followed with smiles, clapping by those attending, and at the end of the two-hour concert a standing ovation.

At some time you no doubt have heard the phrase “Route 66”. One of the songs played was, Get Your Kicks on Rte. 66, which became the iconic American road song first recorded in 1946.

When Tibbetts was explaining that in the 1950s Cole emerged as a popular solo performer she introduced Ron Marlowe, who lives in Maine. He shared that in 1950 he happened to be in the same building where Cole was practicing. Cole came to the floor where he was and gave him and another boy musical tips. On the table near the door was a photograph of Ron and another boy standing on either side of Cole.

One of the songs in the concert was Cole’s version of Mona Lisa, released in 1950. In the middle of this selection Ryder and another woman did a dance routine to the musical beat. This produced extra smiles and clapping from those attending.

The concert ended with a selection of Cole’s music different than his jazz. The song, Those Lazy-Hazy-Crazy Days of Summer, was Cole’s final top ten hit.

Following the standing ovation at the end of the concert everyone enjoyed refreshments provided by Windsor’s Ladies Aid. They were a varied selection of snack foods and beverages designed to fit different people’s diet restrictions.

The amazing music of the evening gave such positive energy that no one was in a hurry to leave.

PUBLIC NOTICES for Thursday, August 22, 2024

TOWN OF VASSALBORO

Public Notice

The Town of Vassalboro is applying to the Maine Board of Emergency Medical Services to permit the Vassalboro First Responder service to provide care at the AEMT level on some calls. The service is licensed as a non-transporting EMS agency at the EMR level, with a primary service area of Vassalboro, Maine. There is no change to the way the public will request emergency services; citizens should continue to call 911 for all emergencies. The public is invited to make comments regarding the proposed application. Comments must be received by the Board of Emergency Medical Services within 30 calendar days of the publication of this notice. Comments must be mailed to Maine EMS,  152 State House Station, Augusta, Maine 04333-0152.

Issue for August 22, 2024

Issue for August 22, 2024

Celebrating 36 years of local news

Waterville troop scout earns Eagle rank

Isaac Benn, of Westbrook, son of Shawn and Sarah Benn, reached the highest peak in Scouting – the Eagle Scout rank – during a Troop #436 court of honor held Sunday, June 2, at the Waterville Lodge #33 A.F. & A.M. The ceremony was led by Colby College Professor Bruce Rueger who was Scoutmaster of the same Troop in 1987 when Isaac’s father received his Eagle Scout award… by Chuck Mahaleris

Town News

Resident begins discussion about local pits; County Commissioner Crockett gives background report

WINDSOR – At the July 16, 2024, meeting of the Windsor Select Board, the board authorized Town Manager Theresa Haskell to purchase the 40-yard open top container for the transfer station. Haskell had reported the unit cost $11,600 in 2022, however, the price dropped to $11,000 this year…

Transfer station committee continues improvement talks

CHINA – Members of China’s Transfer Station Committee and station manager Thomas Maraggio discussed plans for continued improvements at their Aug. 13 meeting…

New tax rate to bring in more TIF money than previously anticipated

CHINA – Members of China’s Tax Increment Financing Committee were pleased to learn that the new China tax rate will bring the TIF program over $44,000 more in 2024-25 revenue than they had anticipated…

LETTERS: Elise Brown will listen

from Michael Sirota (Searsmont) – Mainers have the luxury of meeting the people who are running for office to represent us. Getting to know candidates personally makes a difference. I have met Elise Brown several times, and I’m voting for her to be Waldo County Commissioner in District #3…

LETTERS: Mike Ray for District 40 State Representative

from Bob Kohl (Liberty) – Mike Ray is my idea of a great neighbor. He’s a regular volunteer for the Waldo County Woodshed, has served on many local committees and is currently on the Lincolnville selectboard. Mike deeply respects our natural environment, having led camping trips as a registered Maine guide and managed a woodlot. He’s a down-to-earth, regular person…

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: “Be the ball, Danny.” Email us at townline@townline.org with subject “Name that film!” Deadline for submission is September 5, 2024.

Webber’s Pond comic

Webber’s Pond is a comic drawn by a local central Maine resident (click on the thumbnail to enlarge)…

KPAC introduces new director

KENNEBEC VALLEY – Kennebec Performing Arts Company (KPAC) has announced the start of its 2024-2025 season under its new director. John Neal, of Greene, was selected to lead the wind ensemble and chorus following the retirement of longtime director Charles T. Milazzo…

Local residents attend iconic night concert

BANGOR – July 26, 2024 brought beautiful summer weather along with an outstanding concert featuring Godsmack, Nothing More, and special guests Flat Black. The Maine Savings Amphitheater and the Bangor Waterfront set an exceptional stage for this iconic night… by Mark Huard

PHOTOS: Boat inspectors do a great job

PALERMO – Sheepscot Lake’s Courtesy Boat Inspection (CBI) program was very successful again this year. A huge thank you to 2024 Courtesy Boat Inspectors Sorrel Vinci and Reid Sutter. Thanks to their hard work Sheepscot Lake remains healthy and free from invasive plants…

Give Us Your Best Shot!

The best recent photos from our readers!

Maeve Blanchette named to Goodwin University’s president’s list

AUGUSTA – Maeve Blanchette, of Augusta, earned a place on Goodwin University’s President’s List, in East Hartford, Connecticut, for the Spring 2024 Session. The Spring 2024 President’s List includes 291 students, all of whom scored a perfect 4.0 GPA.

Kasen Sirois inducted into Lambda Pi Eta National Honor Society

SIDNEY – Kasen Sirois, of Sidney, was welcomed into the Western New England University chapter of Lambda Pi Eta National Honor Society, in Springfield, Massachusetts, during the annual induction ceremony held on April 26.

Local residents named to Clark Univ. dean’s list

SoCHINA/UNITY – The following local residents were named to Clark University’s Spring 2024 dean’s list, in Worcester, Massachusetts: Sam N. Golden, of South China, and Brexton E. Getchell, of Unity, were both named to second honors.

Simon McCormick graduates from Bates College

WHITEFIELD – Simon McCormick, of Whitefield, graduated from Bates College, in Lewiston, with a major in psychology.

Local happenings

EVENTS: Spectacular laser show & concert to benefit Winslow Community Cupboard Food Pantry

WINSLOW – The Winslow Community Cupboard food pantry – which serves thousands of food-insecure children, seniors, and other adults from Winslow, Waterville, Skowhegan, Fairfield, and 20 other surrounding towns – will benefit from a spectacular Drive-in Laser Show & Concert coming to the Clinton Fairgrounds, 1450 Bangor Rd., Clinton, Friday and Saturday, August 23 and 24, with gates opening at 5 p.m. Cost is $39 per vehicle…

EVENTS: St. Cecilia Chamber Choir holds auditions for December lessons and carols

NEWCASTLE – St. Cecilia Chamber Choir is holding auditions for all voice parts as they begin preparing the December Ceremony of Lessons and Carols concert…

CALENDAR OF EVENTS: Madison Legion school supplies drive

MADISON – American Legion Auxiliary, Unit #39, Madison, is collecting school supplies for students in MSAD #59 and RSU #74… and many other local events!

Obituaries

BENTON – Cecile A. DeLisle, 99, passed passed away on Wednesday, August 14, 2024. Cecile, the oldest of nine children in the LeClair family, had a good life. Oh, the stories she would tell of her upbringing, and how she would look after all her siblings. There were fun times and some very hard times, but she was such a trooper, handling any challenge that came her way…

Up and down the Kennebec Valley: Lovejoys & Marshes (new)

SIDNEY HISTORY — Previous articles in this series have mentioned two other early Sidney families who intermarried with Bacons and Faughts, the Lovejoys and Marshes. This article will provide more information about both… by Mary Grow

Up and down the Kennebec Valley: Sidney early settlers: the Faught family

SIDNEY HISTORY — The Faughts were another early Sidney family. The first Faught your writer came across was Marlborough Packard Faught, a name that sounded refreshingly unusual; but she soon found that the Faughts, like the Bacons, enjoyed repeating more common names – Frederick, Jacob, Samuel – through generations… by Mary Grow

Up and down the Kennebec Valley – Bacon families: Sidney early settlers

SIDNEY HISTORY — Among early settlers in Sidney against whose lives your writer brushed while trying unsuccessfully to learn why someone chose to name the town after a long-dead Englishman were the Bacon, Faught, Lovejoy, Marsh and Snow families… by Mary Grow

Up and down the Kennebec Valley: Sidney

SIDNEY HISTORY — The town on the west bank of the Kennebec River south of Waterville that is now Sidney began as part of Vassalboro, the town on the east bank… by Mary Grow

Common Ground: Win a $10 gift certificate!

DEADLINE: Wednesday, September 12, 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: Tracie Kelley, Palmyra

Town Line Original Columnists

Roland D. HalleeSCORES & OUTDOORS

by Roland D. Hallee | They swarm down from the heavens in flocks and take over the ground. They stay for a while, and then all leave together, like someone giving an order to evacuate the location. They are also a nuisance if you have a garden…

Peter CatesREVIEW POTPOURRI

by Peter Cates | Perry Como – That Christmas Feeling; Winter Wonderland. Recorded August 8, 1946. RCA Victor 20-1968, ten-inch 78 disc…

ROTARY CLUB NEWS

by Gary Kennedy | To many of you I begin my articles in a superfluous manner. Much of the old methods of doing things have become redundant. I have been doing this with you for more than 40 years. I have watched a couple of groups come and retire. Things are forever changing so I endeavor; in part to start my explanations in an archaic manner as for me simplicity helps avoid words like, “what”?…

REVIEW POTPOURRI: Perry Como & Pablo de Sarasate

Peter Catesby Peter Cates

Perry Como

Perry Como

Perry Como – That Christmas Feeling; Winter Wonderland. Recorded August 8, 1946. RCA Victor 20-1968, ten-inch 78 disc.

I might be jumping the gun here seasonally speaking but I found the key words of That Christmas Feeling most apt in the 78 years and 10 days since this record was released in 1946 – “What a blessed place this world would be/If we had that Christmas feeling all year.” – especially with the constant cycles of anger, selfishness and greed roaring throughout the country these days.

And Perry Como was the kind of vocal artist who could convey such words and notes so persuasively not only with this song but such ones as May the Good Lord Bless and Keep You, Bless this House, When Someone Cares, etc. that were recorded during the ‘50s – the kinds of seemingly sentimental fluff that other lesser talents botched. He made singing seem so easy with his casual relaxed style.

That casual relaxed style disguised the sometimes two to three hours he would spend laboring over a song, trying out different keys and blendings with the best arrangers in the profession – Russ Case on this session and others of the mid-’40s (Case recorded some classy mood music instrumentals for MGM records during the same decade into the ‘50s); RCA’s head pop arranger Hugo Winterhalter; Como’s longtime conductor for his recordings and TV shows, Mitchell Ayres, until he resigned to become music director for the 1960s variety show, The Hollywood Palace; and finally Nick Perito, who would arrange and conduct for Como until his last Christmas special in Dublin in 1994.

Side 2’s Winter Wonderland has a swinging Big Band style with the saxophones and brass and a backup vocal group.

Wikipedia mentions that Sinatra would ask Como to fill in for him at the sold out Paramount theater concerts with the swooning bobby soxers.

Pablo de Sarasate

Pablo de Sarasate

Sarasate: Zapateado – Jan Kubelik, violinist; Victor Red Seal 74255, recorded 1911, a twelve-inch one-sided acoustically recorded shellac disc.

Pablo de Sarasate was a Spanish violinist and composer of show pieces for his chosen instrument. Violinists who have recorded his pieces range from Jascha Heifetz to Itzhak Perlman; Czech violinist Jan Kubelik (1880-1940) gave a performance of the composer’s Zapateado that combined the required lightning speed bowing and plucking with a breathtaking range of dynamics other fiddlers didn’t always match and an expressive beauty and depth that made this disc one splendid listening experience for its four minute duration, despite the limited fidelity of 113 years ago.

Kubelik’s son Rafael (1914-1996) was a superb conductor who served as music director of the Czech Philharmonic, Chicago Symphony, Royal Opera House at Covent Garden and the Bavarian Radio Orchestra.

The Como and Kubelik recordings can be heard via YouTube and other sources.

Up and down the Kennebec Valley: Sidney settlers: Lovejoys & Marshes

by Mary Grow

Part III

(See Part I here, and Part II here.)

Previous articles in this series have mentioned two other early Sidney families who intermarried with Bacons and Faughts, the Lovejoys and Marshes. This article will provide more information about both.

The first Lovejoy in Sidney is named Abial (in the on-line source Find a Grave and in Henry Kingsbury’s Kennebec County history) or Abiel (in the on-line source minerdescent and in Alice Hammond’s 1992 bicentennial history of Sidney), and is known as Captain Lovejoy and Squire Lovejoy. His second son and namesake also gets both spellings, more commonly Abial. Your writer will try to minimize confusion by using the senior Lovejoy’s titles.

Lovejoy was called “Captain” based on his Massachusetts military service. Minerdescent says he acquired the title “Esquire” when he was appointed a Justice of the Peace in 1781.

Kingsbury listed Esquire Abial Lovejoy and John Marsh as two other 1763 grantees of land from the Kennebec Proprietors (with Levi Powers, whose house on the National Register of Historic Places was described last week).

* * * * * *

Hammond’s history includes a 1991 summary Lovejoy family history that she credits to descendants Betty Bennett and Anita Lovejoy. It also includes the 1892 Kennebec Journal article (referenced in previous articles in this series) that mentions the Lovejoys.

The newspaper writer included two generations, “old Squire Lovejoy, the old slave holder” (Dec. 16, 1731 – July 4, 1811); and “probably his son,” Abial Lovejoy (Feb. 8, 1764 – Nov. 3, 1858).

Captain Lovejoy was born in Andover, Massachusetts, and married Mary Brown on Dec. 14, 1758, in Charlestown, Massachusetts (which one source says was her birthplace).

Mary Brown was born March 29, 1734 (Minerdescent), or July 19, 1741 (most sources), and died Jan. 19, 1812. She and her husband had two, seven, eight or 14 children, depending on the source.

Minerdescent lists seven sons and seven daughters, born between Aug. 8, 1759, and Oct. 1, 1785. The two oldest, Nathaniel (named after his maternal grandfather, Nathaniel Brown) and Polly, were born in Charlestown; the next 11 (including Abial, Jr.) in Pownalborough, Maine; and the youngest, Phebe, who married Ebenezer Morse (mentioned in the Aug. 8 article on the Bacon family), in the western part of Vassalboro that became Sidney.

(Find a Grave, usually a reliable source, names seven children born between Aug. 8, 1759, and Oct. 31, 1780, and lists birthplaces, after the first two in Charlestown, in Vassalboro, Waterville or Sidney – no mention of Pownalborough. The names and dates duplicate the longer minerdescent list.)

Minerdescent, citing older sources, describes Captain Lovejoy’s career in Pownalborough (now Dresden), a town farther down the Kennebec River that was incorporated in 1760.

This source says he first came to Maine, specifically Fort Halifax, with British troops from Massachusetts in 1755. By 1758 he was a captain, headquartered at Pownalborough. Hammond wrote that he served with the British in Maine from 1758 to 1771, and later in the Americans’ Revolutionary Army.

He was also a ship captain out of Charlestown. Various sources say he went to Nova Scotia and the West Indies, and Mary sometimes sailed with him.

On Sept. 29, 1760, Captain Lovejoy bought 35 acres in Pownalborough, and in 1761 he, Mary and their first two children moved there. He became a prominent citizen, owning an inn, building an elaborate house, running a ferry, building ships, buying and selling land and serving as selectman in 1762 and 1764.

Minerdescent calls Mary “handsome” and “cultural,” and says the Lovejoy house was famous for its hospitality. The June 19, 1766, Pownalborough census said Captain Lovejoy “owned a two-story house with 152 squares of glass, one chimney, three rooms with fire places, supported seven persons under sixteen years, and ten persons above sixteen years and he owned one other house one story high with 44 squares of glass and two fireplaces.”

Goff Brook, in Sidney.

According to minerdescent, on Nov. 12, 1764, Captain Lovejoy and his father-in-law, Nathaniel Brown, “purchased half of a saw mill and adjoining land and a half interest in a dam on a small stream eight miles above Fort Western.” Your writer believes this stream was originally Bog Brook; by 1764 Hastings Brook; and today Goff Brook.

In Vassalboro, too, Captain Lovejoy ran a ferry. Lovejoy’s Ferry, operating in the early 1800s at Riverside, was the southern and earlier of two Kennebec ferries connecting Sidney and Vassalboro (the other was at Getchell’s Corner) that operated into the 20th century.

On-line sources say the oldest Lovejoy son, Nathaniel, born Aug. 8, 1759, took over the ferry, and later Nathaniel’s son Hiram, born Jan. 8, 1805, ran it for a while before moving to Massachusetts.

Minerdescent says the Lovejoys moved to Vassalboro in 1776. The account says they brought their household goods on “flat boats and scows which were towed by row boats”; the boat carrying their best furniture sank in a bad storm.

Their riverside farm remained in the family for several generations. Minerdescent has a long list of Captain Lovejoy’s positions in first Vassalboro and then Sidney, including being elected a selectman in each town. In 1777 he was involved in getting the Massachusetts legislature to expand postal service in Maine.

Captain Lovejoy’s son Abial was the constable who convened Sidney’s first town meeting after Sidney became a separate town on Jan. 30, 1792, Hammond said. In May of that year, Captain Lovejoy was one of the four-man committee chosen to settle accounts with Vassalboro. Later he served on Sidney’s fish committee for more than one term; on the committee that planned the town pound; and in 1798 on the school committee.

Captain Lovejoy served in the Massachusetts legislature for many years, minerdescent says. Your writer found no dates except the early 1780s, when some of his constituents questioned his support of the American cause against Britain.

Minerdescent presented evidence Captain Lovejoy was a staunch patriot. He stirred up opposition to local Tories, and lost $30,000 by giving members of Benedict Arnold’s 1775 expedition to Québec (including Arnold himself) hard money in exchange for paper Continental currency. The currency became worth so little that Captain Lovejoy reportedly wallpapered a room with it.

Captain Lovejoy and Mary died in Sidney in 1811 and 1812. Most sources agree they are buried on the Lovejoy farm, on a slope toward the Kennebec; some call this family graveyard Plain or Old Plain cemetery.

Minerdescent says an infant son or daughter, born and died in 1784, and at least three of the family’s black slaves are also buried there, with all graves marked alike by fieldstones. (When Massachusetts abolished slavery in 1783, Lovejoy offered his slaves their freedom.)

Henry Kingsbury wrote in his Kennebec County history that Old Plain was the oldest cemetery in Sidney and “is thought to hold the remains of over one hundred pioneers.” In 1892, he wrote, “That part of it that has not been plowed shows plainly the forms of many graves and has one shattered slate-stone slab, inscribed ‘Elizabeth Milliner —1785.'” Elizabeth Milliner was the Lovejoys’ housekeeper, minerdescent says, and Lovejoy had her gravestone put up.

Hammond also described the Old Plain cemetery, saying it was on River Road about a quarter mile south of Hastings Brook, “high above the river on a plain that was part of Abiel Lovejoy’s grant.” She, too, estimated 100 people were buried there.

“After many years the land was cultivated so that there are no signs of a cemetery now,” she wrote a century after Kingsbury’s account. But, she said, in 1908 a monument to early settlers was installed.

In another chapter, Hammond wrote that Captain Lovejoy donated land to the town for the Lovejoy cemetery on Densmore (now Dinsmore) road, “in which approximately a hundred of the earliest settlers are buried.” This cemetery is the one your writer visited on July 29; it is not on the bank of the Kennebec.

Kingsbury, minerdescent and other sources tell many stories about Captain Lovejoy and his household. Here is one of your writer’s favorites, paraphrased:

Squire Lovejoy went to the field where some of his farm help, free and slave, had been mowing, bringing them a jug of liquor (he himself was a heavy drinker, even for colonial days, minerdescent says). Dissatisfied with the work, he demanded to know who did it.

The other hands one by one blamed Boston, a slave who had been with the family since Lovejoy bought him in 1758. Well then, said Lovejoy, if Boston did all the work, he can have all the liquor.

Boston is named as one of the slaves buried in the Old Plain cemetery with Squire and Mary Lovejoy.

Minerdescent gives summary information on all 14 Lovejoy children. All married at least once (son Abial, Jr., and daughter Sarah each lost a first spouse and married again), and several spent their entire lives in Sidney.

* * * * * *

John Marsh was another man to whom the Kennebec Proprietors granted land in Sidney in 1763. By Hammond’s account, he was the great-grandson of a John Marsh who emigrated to Salem, Massachusetts, from England around 1634; he and his wife Susannah had six sons, including Samuel (1651 – 1693).

Samuel and his wife Priscilla had a son John (1681 -1727, called John, Sr., in some sources). He and his wife Abigail were parents of six children, including John, Jr. (born Oct. 8, 1718; or 1723). In 1763, John, Jr., came to Sidney with his wife Elizabeth (a widow; maiden name Caryl or Carryl, previous husband Cornelius Claflin, born in 1712, 1716, 1723 or 1725).

Of John Jr., and Elizabeth’s five children, born in Mendon, Massachusetts, one died young and four came to Maine. Two married Sidney men: Abigail (1747) married Dr. James Bacon (as reported two weeks ago), and Hannah (1755 – 1840) married Moses Hastings.

Hammond said the Hastings family owned an adjoining property, and Moses and Hannah inherited the Marsh farm. In 1892, Kingsbury wrote, John’s great-grandson, Lieutenant Gorham K. Hastings, owned the farm, “that has never been out of the possession of the family.”

He added, “The outlines of a block house and stockade are still on the bluff a few feet south” of the Hastings house. Settlers sometimes “took refuge” there fearing attach by Natives, he said.

Hammond wrote that Hastings descendants owned the farm “until Sarah Park Hastings [1857 – 1946] married William Lester Reynolds [1853 – 1926)].” Reynolds descendants owned the property until 2004. (See box.)

John Jr., and Elizabeth’s only son, also John (born in 1751), ended up in the Bangor area. Youngest daughter Mary (born in 1774; this birth date makes her mother’s earlier birth dates unlikely) lived in Paris, Maine.

Hammond wrote that John Marsh Jr., bought his 250 acres on June 8, 1763. He also bought a sawmill on Hastings Brook, which was his south boundary; had a grist mill close to River Road; and was involved with area mill projects.

Several sources say Elizabeth Marsh died June 19 and her widower died Aug. 19, both in 1802, both in Sidney.

Sidney’s Reynolds Forest

Part of John Marsh’s 1763 land grant is now Sidney’s Reynolds Forest, on the west side of West River Road near the Dinsmore Road intersection. This Kennebec Land Trust preserve is recommended for birding, wildflowers and hiking trails along what is now Goff Brook.

Visitors can see the waterfalls that powered the early mills, mill foundations and a cellar-hole in the woods. KLT warns of poison ivy near West River Road.

An online source says in 2004, Sidney resident Bea Reynolds donated the 35-acre Walter W. and Alice B. Reynolds Forest to KLT to honor her parents. In July 2003, a former resident named Leann Diehl added seven adjoining acres of hayfield.

Reynolds Forest, in Sidney.

Main sources

Hammond, Alice, History of Sidney Maine 1792-1992 (1992).
Kingsbury, Henry D., ed., Illustrated History of Kennebec County Maine 1625-1892 (1892).

Websites, miscellaneous.