Westport Tech Museum: Way More Than Toys In The Attic

Westport is filled with hidden gems. Haskins Preserve, the pedestrian path on Compo Cove, the miracle auto repair workers at Vautrin and J&J, any dish at Jeera Thai … not everyone knows about those jewels. But everyone should.

Yet perhaps the coolest — and most secret — of all is inaccessible to nearly everyone.

There — in the attic of a private home — Jay Babina runs the Westport Tech Museum.

You can tour it online. And on Facebook.

Because it’s in his parents’ house (Jay is finishing up his first year at Manhattanville College), it’s not open to the public.

But one of the great perks about publishing “06880” is the chance to go where almost no one else can.

I’ve posted twice about Jay’s Westport Tech Museum (click here and here).

I’ve described his astonishing collection of over 500 computers, video games, calculators, cameras, radios and more.

Just a portion of the Westport Tech Museum. (Photo/Jay Babina)

From a Commodore Amiga 1000, Osborne 1, Apple IIe and original Macintosh, to a 1910 Edison light bulb that still shines, and a 1905 crank telephone that still rings, Jay has scoured the world (and eBay) to find rare, important, classic, quirky and historic products.

The other day, I paid my third visit to what may be the most astonishing private museum in America.

Jay — who haunts the internet with the tenacity and instincts of Kojak, Columbo and Jessica Fletcher combined — proudly showed off a host of new acquisitions.

He began with the most beautiful object in his collection: a hand-painted horn from an early Thomas Edison phonograph.

That was impressive enough. But then Jay picked up a wax cylinder — the precursor to “records.”

I was astonished.

But I was even more gobsmacked seconds later, when Jay placed the cylinder on the phonograph — and played it.

Music recorded well over a century ago filled the attic. I could have ended the tour right then, and been thrilled.

But Jay had much more to show.

Decades after the phonograph — as LP records were being replaced by 45s (kids: ask your grandparents) — the transistor revolutionized radio.

Of course, Jay had a transistor radio.

Of course, it was one of the first ever produced.

Of course, he also had a very early transistor. That’s how Jay rolls.

Transistor radio (right); transistor in a plastic cube (left).

Soon, we got into the “modern” era. (Still: Kids, ask your parents.)

Jay recently added the first commercial beeper pager (a 1964 Motorola Pageboy) to his collection.

The first two-way messaging pager was the 1995 Motorola Tango. But — because Jay does not do things half-heartedly — he has it in a pre-release version, when it was called SkyTel. He searched for 5 years, and finally found it on eBay.

Who remembers answering machines? A better question: Who remembers the very first ones — with little tape reels inside?

Jay does. (Even though he was not born for another 3-plus decades.)

His museum now includes the first consumer residential answering machine: the 1971 Phone-Mate 400.

It was complicated. Callers had to be instructed what to do.

It still works. Unfortunately, Jay’s Tech Museum lacks one thing: a landline to plug it into.

The first answering machine included separate tape reels for the outgoing message, and incoming calls. 

Then came an early cellphone with camera …

… and one of the first VHS recorders …

… plus another item Jay searched for for years: a Sony Walkman. This 1980 model was the first in the US; it came a year after the device took Japan by storm.

Jay showed me — and explained, in historical detail — an HP35 (the world’s first scientific pocket calculator, the “slide rule killer” that some feared would lead to the decline of math skills across America); a Rocket e-book reader, which retailed for $499 and debuted 9 years before the Kindle, and a PalmPilot, with a whopping 128K of memory.

Of course, Jay also found an original box.

There are plenty of original iPhones floating around.

But who has an original bag (rear in photo below), issued by Apple only to customers ordering on the very first launch date (June 29, 2007)?

Jay Babina, of course.

Every item has a back story. And Jay tells them all well.

Of the Commodore home computer, he describes the company’s price war with Texas Instruments.

Commodore slashed the price from $525 to $49. They lost $300 million in one quarter, and went bankrupt in 1994.

Jay has a Commodore (below) and a TI99. Both have dial-up modems. Both still work.

Jay is fascinated by failure.

In 1995, Nintendo’s Virtual Boy — a 32-bit tabletop console, marketed as the first to display stereoscopic 3D graphics — caused headaches and eye strain. It was a spectacular flop.

His Westport Tech Museum celebrates it all: failures and successes. Innovation and improvement. Products that look silly, and those that are beautiful.

Which brings us to one of the newest items on display in Jay’s attic: David Pogue’s just-published sweeping and mammoth (608 pages) book, “Apple: The First 50 Years.”

(All photos/Dan Woog, unless otherwise noted)

Like Jay, he is obsessed with both the broad arc of technological history, and the countless unique, often overlooked stories that contribute to it.

Pogue spent 2 decades in Westport.

Somehow, he never found his way up to Jay’s attic.

Now — as a regular contributor to “CBS Sunday Morning” — would be a great time for him to check it out.

But if he does, both he and Jay may never come down.

(“06880” often shines a light on remarkable young Westporters. If you enjoy stories like this, please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

Pic Of The Day #3287

Compo Cove, from Hillspoint Road (Photo/JD Dworkow)

Photo Challenge #590

Eleven readers identified the old cast iron box stuck to the side of a brick building — last week’s Photo Challenge. (Click here to see.)

But only 2 of them knew what it was used for.

Morley Boyd and Andrew Colabella noted it’s an alarm box, on the side of what for decades was the Westport Bank & Trust building, where Church Lane runs into Post Road East.

They did not explain exactly what kind of alarm. But it was a lot more important for a bank than for its next use (Patagonia).

Soon, the building will house the offices of Compass real estate. No need for alarm!

Besides Morley and Andrew, the other readers who knew the location — though not the function — were Seth Schachter, Jaime Bairaktaris, Clark Thiemann, Susan Iseman, Pete Powell, Jude Siegel, Jack Backiel and Sal Liccione.

This week’s Photo Challenge is an outdoor sculpture — that much is clear.

We have plenty of great art, all over town.

But where exactly is this one?

If you know where in Westport you’d see it, click “Comments” below.

And if you know the title and sculptor, please add that in too.

(Photo/Janine Scotti)

(Every Sunday, “06880” hosts this Photo Challenge. We challenge you too to support your hyper-local blog. Please click here to make a tax-deductible contribution. Thank you!)

Roundup: Primary Trust, Free Seedlings, Remarkable Bookcycle …

Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward’s long and loving association with the Westport Country Playhouse is well known.

Melissa Newman is keeping up that tradition.

The couple’s daughter — still a local resident — says, “in honor of my lovely parents, I encourage everyone you to head to the Playhouse to see ‘Primary Trust.’

“It’s a sweet and thoughtful play, and a lovely production. Please go if you have a chance, and spread the word.

“As my dad once said, ‘Your local theater is like your ball team. You don’t just go when they win.’ To me, this one is a winner.

Theater does not just have to be a diversion. Revivals and classics are its bread and butter, but when you take chances on less familiar plays, you signal to the Playhouse that you support the idea of a communal journey, an opportunity to analyze and discuss, give feedback, and be part of a real theater community.

“So: Make a night of it!”

“Primary Trust” runs through May 2. For show times, tickets and more information, click here.

From left: Alphonso Walker Jr. and Lance Coadie Williams in “Primary Trust.” (Photo/Carol Rosegg)

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Get your seeds!

The Westport Tree Board celebrates Arbor Day with a tree seedling giveaway this Friday (April 24, 3 to 5 p.m., rear of Town Hall near the softball field).

You’ve got your choice of ninebark, blackgum or witch hazel. First come, first served!

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One more sign of spring: The Compo Beach Bookcycle is back!

The free lending library — with a nod to Westport’s beloved 20th-century bookstore — has for several years enjoyed a special spot at the start of Soundview Drive, near the drop-off and pick-up spot.

But this winter, it was damaged by a snow plow.

With its creator, author Jane Green, no longer living nearby, what would happen?

“06880” posted a photo.

Within minutes, Larry Roberts offered to help.

The Remarkable Bookcycle has been repaired. It’s ready for readers.

But remember: It only works if you give, as well as take.

That — along with Larry’s great volunteer efforts — is the Westport way.

(Photo/Totney Benson)

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We’re still enjoying daffodils, all over Westport.

And by “we” I mean Yogi Bear. He posed for today’s “Westport … Naturally” feature photo at Bedford Middle School.

(Photo/Cat Malkin)

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And finally … this is Big Brother/Big Sister Appreciation Week.

Here’s the Big Brother I appreciate:

(Sometimes these Roundups are long. Sometimes they’re not. But every day — without fail — we provide news, information, photos and music. Please click here to support our 24/7/365 work. Thanks!)

Dear Jackie Robinson …

Jackie Robinson is a towering historical figure. Thanks to Major League Baseball’s ongoing efforts, every young fan today knows he was the first man to break the sport’s Black barrier.

He went on to become a business executive, political advisor, bank and housing development company co-founder, and equal justice advocate.

But only older Americans have first-hand memories of the Brooklyn Dodgers star (and longtime Stamford resident). They were youngsters or adolescents when he played, or had recently retired.

In an effort to keep his memory alive, reach younger residents and inspire dialogue, the Westport Library Common Ground Initiative recently sponsored its second Jackie Robinson Essay Contest.

Along with the Westport Center for Senior Activities and Meryl Moss Media, “Dear Jackie Robinson” challenged individuals and inter-generational pairs to write a personal letter to him. The goal was to explore how his courage, dignity and perseverance continue to shape their lives and relationships.

First-place winner Marty Erdheim’s deeply personal and collaborative submission did just that. The 85-year-old retired business owner (and former captain of the Columbia University basketball team) collaborated with his 10-year-old grandson Dylan Henschel. The Saugatuck Elementary School 4th grader plays lacrosse and tennis, and practices jiu jitsu.

Their letter bridged generations, while offering a shared reflection of Robinson’s impact. (His and the other winners’ full letters are below.)

Erdheim received 4 tickets to a New York Mets game, and commemorative items.

Mark Rosenblatt, who spent his career in radio broadcast tech, earned second place — along with 2 tickets to the Jackie Robinson Museum, and a $100 gift certificate — with a powerful letter.

Tobias Slavin took third, and gets a 1955 Brooklyn Dodgers yearbook. A Staples High School 9th grader who plays football, basketball and baseball, he wrote his letter with his 82-year-old “god-grandpa,” Phil Wexler.

Finalist AJ Battersby receives a 1955 Dodgers stamp collection. He’s a 4th grader at Coleytown Elementary School who plays Little League and travel baseball. He collaborated with his grandfather Greg Battersby, a semi-retired attorney who in 40-plus years in Westport has coached over a dozen Little League and Babe Ruth teams (and headed the Babe Ruth program). He invented and patented a baseball pitching machine called the ProBatter pitching simulator, and serves as its CEO (with A.J.’s dad Adam, who is president).

Winners were also recognized by the Library on Friday — the 79th anniversary of his MLB debut — as part of their Jackie Robinson Day programming

“These essays show that Robinson’s legacy is not something we simply remember,” says Library executive director Bill Harmer.

“It lives in how we treat one another, and how we choose to show up in the world.”

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Marty Erdheim and Dylan Henschel

Dear Jackie:

I was one of your very first fans. You came to Brooklyn and I was there, among so many others, to welcome you. I was there when our Dodgers lost the 1951 pennant race as well as the 1952 and 1953 World Series. And of course, I was there when you brought us our first World Series in 1955. Jackie, you changed me, changed Brooklyn and changed the world.

My grandson Dylan Henschel recently asked me about you, Brooklyn and the impact you had on this world. And so began a series of questions and answers.

Dylan: Poppy, you keep on telling me about how great Jackie Robinson really was. So explain to me why he was so great and what was it like growing up in that era?

Marty Erdheim

Poppy: It was magical! Brooklyn was a safe, multi-ethnic borough, with one common adhesive holding us all together: the Brooklyn Dodgers. Actually, I do not recall any Brooklynite, child or adult, who did not root for the Dodgers. And into this mix, a genuine hero emerged. A hero who would change America spiritually but also lead the Dodgers to several National League pennants and finally to a World Series championship.

Baseball was so important to Brooklyn, that when the Dodgers played in the World Series, the games were broadcast over the public schools’ speaker systems and afternoon classes were postponed; this delay would last until the World Series ended.

Dylan: Who introduced him to you?

Poppy: I don’t recall one person who specifically told me that we had a great new player, but I do recall that was the focus of our conversations. We discussed how the Dodgers had never won the World Series and that Jackie just might be the guy who would help get us this championship. We talked about his having to play a position he had never played before, first base. And we of course were aware that he would be the first Black player to play Major League Baseball.

Dylan:  What was the greatest thing you think he ever accomplished?

Poppy: This is easy! By singlehandily integrating baseball, he changed the world. The athletic world now viewed athletes solely by their ability to perform, rather than the color of the skin. Jackie began this! Martin Luther King’s powerful admonition at the Washington Monument to judge people by the content of their character, rather than the color of their skin, needs a bit more time for full implementation. But it’s coming and Jackie opened this door.

Dylan: What are some lessons that you learned from him?

Dylan Henschel

Poppy: I learned some very simple lessons from Jackie Robinson! First and most significant in my view, was the importance of striving for excellence. And Jackie was the epitome of a man or woman who focused on excellence. He won varsity letters in 4 sports at UCLA: football, basketball, track and field, and baseball. This didn’t just happen. The coaches at UCLA didn’t put Jackie on their teams because they liked him. It took a focus on excellence plus strong athletic skills to accomplish this. That’s why so few people have accomplished this.

Dylan: How did he make such an impact on everybody?

Poppy: First of all, for us Brooklyn kids of Jackie Robinson’s Brooklyn, he provided a genuine hero and a world championship. Never before in Brooklyn! But for our nation he brought us the wisdom to recognize each other by who we are, not what we are. Eighty two years after the Confederacy and slavery were eviscerated, this man was sent to finish the job. We as a nation are still putting finishing touches on this job, but without Jackie, this existential endeavor would not have begun.

Jackie, I am so grateful that I was there, living in your Brooklyn, to bear witness to your impact on America’s most vital dream!

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MARK ROSENBLATT

Dear Mr. Robinson:

I write to you as a Westport resident, a guy who grew up in Brooklyn in the 1950s, a lifelong baseball fan, and a student of American history. Mr. Robinson, before I shuffle off to Buffalo, I have a question for you about your life and your career, on and off the field.

Let me frame my question for you. In 1968 I was a freshman at Brooklyn College and would walk off campus between classes to a nearby Chock Full o’ Nuts store, with its serpentine sit-down counters, good coffee, and a staff of Black women wearing Chock Full o’ Nuts uniforms.

On the shop walls were large black-and-white photographs of other Chock Full o’ Nuts shops in New York, and I recall that there was a large photo of you at work at the Chock Full o’ Nuts offices on Lexington Avenue wearing a suit, seated behind a desk, with a phone in one hand and a pen signing papers in the other.

At that time I was 17, and I knew all about your baseball career, your civil rights work for fair employment alongside Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and your management position at Chock Full o’ Nuts, a major New York coffee company that had a chain of coffee shops all over New York City. My family drank Chock Full o’ Nuts at home. You were Jackie Robinson. ‘Nuff said.

Staring at your photo at that Chock Full o’ Nuts shop, I wondered whether it was more important to the women working in this shop and the customers coming in that you became in 1957 the first Black vice president of a major U.S. corporation, Chock Full o’ Nuts, than your breaking the MLB color barrier in 1947. So, I ask you as a longtime admirer, what do you think? What’s more important to you? Your MLB career, or your work after your Dodger days were done?

Here’s some background to that question. I was born in 1951 and grew up 3 blocks away from where you first lived when you came to Brooklyn in 1947. I first learned about your Dodger career because my dad would point to Ebbets Field and recite your name and the names Roy Campanella, Pee Wee Reese, Duke Snyder and Don Newcombe, all fellow Brooklyn Dodgers, and how much the Dodgers were Brooklyn, as we took family drives on Flatbush Avenue to Prospect Park.

Marty Rosenblatt

By 1958, I thought it perfectly natural that baseball players were white and Black and Caribbean and South American. Why? Because the baseball cards I collected displayed faces that were white and Black and so on and so forth. When I became a Yankees fan, I realized that the only Black Yankee in 1958 was Elston Howard, although I recall that Harry “Suitcase” Simpson was acquired by the Yanks in a mid-season trade.

In early 1959, and in 2nd grade, my family moved to Hicksville in Nassau County, and I looked around at my new classmates and noticed there were no Jackie Robinsons, no Hank Aarons, no Ernie Bankses, no Luis Aparicios, no Roberto Clementes, no Willie Mayses, and certainly no Elston Howards. All of my classmates were Mickey Mantles and Whitey Fords, and I had little hope for a midseason trade to bring in a Harry “Suitcase” Simpson.

During the summer of 1959, my family moved again to Riverhead, in eastern Suffolk County, where I soon started 3rd grade. At that time, Riverhead was the end of the line for many farmworker families who traveled across the U.S. to pick crops, and in Suffolk County, cabbage and potatoes were farming mainstays and were harvested in the Fall.

Most of these itinerant farm worker families were Black, and their kids went to school with me, and in the spring played Little League baseball with me before heading west with their families.

In 1961 I discovered The Baseball Encyclopedia, a book that contained countless baseball statistics and a definitive history of baseball. From this book I learned that you, Mr. Robinson, were the first Black major leaguer, but only a little bit about the stoicism you had to publicly display on and off the field. When I learned that there were Negro Leagues before you broke baseball’s color barrier, it reminded me of an absurd parallel universe portrayed by Bizarro Superman in DC Comics.

So now it’s 2026, and I have a 9-year-old granddaughter who plays Little League baseball, and much to my eternal dismay, is a Baltimore Orioles fan. She’s an avid reader, and I sent her a book on your life, and my question about your life and work came back to me.

What’s more important? Your MLB career, or your achievements afterwards? When my granddaughter’s done with your book, she and I can talk about you.

Respectfully,
Mark Rosenblatt

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TOBIAS SLAVIN and phil wexler

Dear Mr. Robinson,

I am a 15-year-old high school student attending Staples, playing baseball, basketball and football. As you know, competing in multiple sports takes discipline and determination.

In reading about you, you did far more than play baseball. Both on and off the field you encouraged Americans to reassess what was keeping us apart and showed us how courage, dignity and persistence could unite us. When you showed up, society stepped towards justice and decency.

I am lucky enough to have a “God-Grandpa” named Phil Wexler who, at 82, is a fellow sports fanatic. We love to talk about all kinds of sports, teams and players. Phil comes to my games since my grandparents live across the country. (Phil is the father of my Godmother, which is how I came up with the name God-Grandpa). Since I knew he would love this topic, I asked Phil about you over lunch and here is what he shared:

“I was 4 years old when Jackie Robinson made his Major League debut with the Brooklyn Dodgers (1947). I was too young to realize the momentous impact he would have on baseball, professional sports and, more importantly, on segregation and the civil rights movement.

“Growing up in Los Angeles, I loved playing Little League baseball. My coach taught me the fundamentals of hitting, bunting, base running, often referring to Jackie Robinson as a great example. Coach also gave me a ‘Jackie Robinson comic book that I still have.

“In the 1950s, I worked at the Parasol, a local ice cream and sandwich shop. The sandwich maker, Frances, often talked to me about her idol, Jackie Robinson. I adored Frances, and this was my first real understanding of the impact Jackie had on people beyond the playing field.

“Later, I attended the University of Southern California. In 1963 I was a counselor for a summer teen tour around the U.S. In Birmingham, Alabama, I first encountered the shock of segregation. City buses, bathrooms and drinking fountains were marked ‘Black Only.’ I was jolted to my core.

“Safely back at USC, I began to realize how Jackie Robinson paved the way for other athletes. My fraternity brother Mike Garrett became the first Heisman Trophy winner at USC, and later played in Super Bowl I for the Kansas Chiefs vs. the Green Bay Packers. After his football career ended, Mike went into education administration and became the athletic director at USC. We stayed in touch and became life-long friends.

Tobias Slavin

“In 1925 Brice Taylor was USC’s first Black player and first All-American in football. In 1970, 45 years later, I listened to a radio football broadcast of USC defeating Alabama on the road 42 –21. Featuring an all-Black backfield of Sam Cunningham, Jimmy Jones and Clarence Davis, the USC team was a stark contrast to the (then) all-white Alabama team. After the game, Paul ‘Bear’ Bryant, the legendary coach of the Crimson Tide, brought Cunningham into the Alabama locker room and said to his team, “this is what a football player looks like, and next year we will have Black players too,” an important and enduring change for the sport.

“Many exceptional players were able to further shape and grow the foundation of those who came before: Willie Wood, Mike Garrett, O.J. Simpson, Ricky Bell, Lynn Swann, Charle Young, Anthony Davis, Charles White, Marcus Allen, Rodney Peete, Chip Banks, Reggie Bush, Tyron Smith, Robert Woods, Leonard Williams, Adoree Jackson, Amon-Ra St. Brown, and Caleb Williams, among many others.

“When the Dodgers moved to Los Angeles, it was exciting to watch Willie Mays, Henry Aaron, Frank Robinson and Maury Wills play in person. Similarly, the Lakers showcased Elgin Baylor, Wilt Chamberlin, Kareen Abdul Jabbar, Shaq, Magic Johnson, and played against Oscar Robertson, Julius Erving, Willis Reed, and more.

“I’ve seen Muhammad Ali, Tiger Woods, Carl Lewis, Rafer Johnson, Arthur Ashe play live. I’ve attended 3 Super Bowls, NBA championships, NCAA championships in football and basketball, the Olympics, world skiing championships, and more. As a role model and pioneer, Jackie Robinson influenced a different life in America and the world, and I can’t think of a better or more meaningful legacy. I only wish he would have gone to USC instead of our archrival, UCLA. But, even with that, he is still the ultimate winner for all of us.”

I couldn’t say it better myself. Your work ethic and confidence were extraordinary. On top of your athleticism, you carried the weight of history on your shoulders. From you, I learned that personal values make a big difference, both in sports and in the classroom. I am working hard to improve the person that I am every day, and your legacy is a large part of what inspires me most.

Sincerely,
Tobias Slavin (and Phil Wexler)

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a.j. battersby and greg battersby

Dear Mr. Robinson,

This is a thank you letter for not only what you achieved on a baseball field but, more importantly, for being a role model for young athletes. You taught us all how to live our lives and be prepared to overcome those obstacles placed in our paths on the road to success. The fact that you did it for our favorite baseball team, the Dodgers (even though they were in Brooklyn at the time), makes it that much more important to us.

Your talent as an awesome baseball player as well as being a great guy sets you apart from most athletes, no matter how young or old they may be. Your accomplishments despite the hardships you faced serve as a personal inspiration for every young athlete. You were a great example of how to overcome hatred, bigotry, and prejudice to achieve your goal.

A.J. Battersby

When we think of you, the first thing we remember is your Hall of Fame career with the Brooklyn Dodgers, playing in several World Series where you performed at the highest level of the game. Watching you play the game we love, whether in person for my dad or on videos for me, was an exciting experience. The time you stole home in the World Series against the Yankees was a particular highlight. Few, if any, players ever attempted to steal home, let alone in a World Series game. You not only tried, but you succeeded. What was particularly exciting and gratifying as a Dodgers fan, was seeing the umpire call you safe and the Yankees catcher Yogi Berra, jumping up and down complaining. We have a framed photo of that play in our office at ProBatter Sports.

There is no question that you were one of the greatest baseball players of all time, but what set you apart from others is what you had to overcome to reach that level. In today’s world,  great athletes are adored or revered. In contrast, you were hated and despised by bigoted fans, not only for being on an opposing team but because of your heritage. Playing baseball at the Major League level is difficult enough for any athlete….playing under those circumstances was something few, if any, other athlete ever had to face.

You played at a top level in front of fans at opposing ballparks, many of whom lacked your skills, intelligence, or grace. Nevertheless, they hurled racial barbs without even knowing you. That made a difficult task almost impossible. Lesser men would have slinked down in a corner and never even tried. Yet you did and succeed. You managed to hold it together and perform at a Hall of Fame level, which is a tribute to you and serves as a model to all players. It is difficult to imagine that any person could achieve what you achieved under those circumstances.

The lesson you taught us was that if you have a dream and the talent to achieve that dream, you should go for it. You must ignore the haters, most of whom lack your talent but are full of hatred. Haters will hate — that is what they do. Being able to deal with those people as you are trying to climb the ladder of whatever career you choose is the challenge. You were a great role model on how to deal with those types of people.

Greg Battersby

It is hard to imagine the amount of bigotry and hatred you experienced when playing for the Dodgers. I hope and pray that we as people have come a long way since the 1940’s and people are now more accepting for who and what you are rather than what they look like or the color of their skin. Aas a society, we have hopefully come a long way, but there is still room for improvement. Your career and the dignity you showed during your years while “climbing the ladder” went a long way in moving us in the right direction but there is still room for improvement.

You have served as a role model for every young person and an example that they should be evaluated based  on their abilities and performance as well as their grit and determination rather than on their appearance. You are an example of the idea that anyone with the ability and determination can achieve their dream regardless of how they look or where they come from. Your efforts have allowed me and my friends to play baseball and other sports with others, regardless of their race, creed or color which has improved all of our talents and abilities.

Sincerely,
A.J. Battersby and Greg “Pop Pop” Battersby

(“06880” highlights the accomplishments of Westporters of all ages. We cover sports, the Library, Senior Center, and much more. If you enjoy these stories, please click here to support us. Thank you!)

Pic Of The Day #3286

These trees were planted on Turkey Hill Road South just a few years ago. They’ve grown in nicely (Photo/Bob Weingarten)

Roundup: Parks & Rec Summer Kickoff, Co-op Nursery Touch-a-Truck, Chabad Golf Outing …

In just 3 years, the Westport Parks & Recreation Department “Kickoff to Summer” has become a — well, great kickoff to summer.

This year’s event is May 23 (11 a.m. to 3 p.m., Compo Beach).

In addition to the now-traditional kids’ activities, music, food trucks and raffle, they’ve added helicopter rides, and the unveiling of young artist Luke Bernier’s mural by the concession stan.

Parks & Rec personnel will provide info on programs and other offerings for the upcoming year.

Part of the fun, at last year’s Kickoff to Summer.

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It’s not easy coming up with a creative, on-brand fundraiser.

For 19 years though, little kids (and their parents) have loved the Westport Weston Co-op Nursery School‘s Touch-a-Truck event.

This year’s edition is May 2 (9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., Imperial Avenue parking lot).

As always, it features fire trucks, police cars, ambulances, cranes, dump trucks, buses, big rigs and more.

Kids of all ages can get up close, climb in and on, and pose for photos with their favorite vehicles.

Also on tap: face painting, food trucks, live music, and other family-friendly activities.

NOTE: It can get loud. Children with sensitivity to noise are invited to quiet time (9 to 9:30 a.m.), with no sirens or horns.

Admission is $35 per family; click here for tickets.

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Question: Where is the newest trivia night in town?

Answer: Emmy Squared.

This Monday (7 p.m.) — and every 2nd Monday after — the pizza-and-more spot in Bedford Square will host a pop culture quiz.

It’s run by Best Trivia Ever. The same group organizes events at the Blind Rhino, and other restaurants.

For more information, click here.

Next question: Will we see you there?

Trivia Night site. Though the action will probably be at the bar.

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Golf and giving back are par for the course on May 4 (Great River Golf Club, Milford).

Chabad of Westport’s annual golf outing includes on-course snacks, lunch, a cocktail/dinner reception, raffles and giveaways, a $25,000 hole-in-one prize — plus an opportunity to meet visiting IDF soldiers.

Proceeds from the event support Israel, local youth services, and Camp Gan Israel.

Non-golfers are welcome. Sponsorships, foursomes and dinner tickets are now available. To register or learn more, click here.

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Tony Rizza has done it again!

The Westport resident — a University of Connecticut business school graduate, and former Husky soccer player — has donated $1.5 million to the school.

The gift will support the “pursuit of sustained excellence across all of UConn’s athletic programs.”

Rizza — an investment manager — previously contributed $10 million. Those gifts helped revitalize Morrone Stadium, and helped build a state-of-the-art sports performance center.

 

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Yesterday’s brief rain shower produced one of the better rainbows in a while.

This was the view over Cross Highway:

(Photo/Mark Yurkiw)

… and by the Saugatuck River, on Riverside Avenue …

(Photo/Michael Chait)

… and above Clinton Avenue:

(Photo/Jen Rago McCarthy)

Today’s forecast is for clouds, and a high of 62.

Tomorrow: rain, and 52.

Hey, summer was nice while it lasted.

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The Weston History & Culture Center continues its celebration of America’s 250th birthday next month.

“Sarah Treadwell: Connecticut Mom, American Patriot” opens with a reception May 9 (2 to 4 p.m.).

The exhibit honors a local woman who supported her family’s role during the Revolutionary War, highlighting the often-overlooked contributions of women during the era.

Treadwell’s family lived in North Fairfield, a section of the town that later became Weston, then Easton.

The exhibit explores her life during and after the war, her family and community roles, the pension process for veterans and widows of veterans, and her resilience as a wife and mother.

After the reception, it will be on view every Thursday (1 to 4 p.m.), and the first and last Sunday of each month (1 to 4 p.m.).

Also on view: the new interactive exhibit “Weston at Work,” in the Coley Barn; the exhibit “Local Patriots and Loyalists” in the Visitor’s Center, and guided tours of historic Coley House.

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OnwardWell Foundation — a therapeutic recovery support non-profit founded by 1992 Staples High School graduate Mark Lassoff last year — does great work.

To do it even more well, they seek donations of gently used furniture to outfit a new meeting room at their Trumbull offices.

The room will host recovery and support groups for families and friends of young men recovering from addiction and mental illness.

The small room can accommodate a small couch or loveseat, and a couple of comfortable chairs. Donations are tax-deductible, and can be picked up.

To donate, or for questions, email mark@onwardwell.com.

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These flowers, and this cardinal, provide a nice pop — and contrast — of color, for today’s “Westport … Naturally” feature.

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And finally … in honor of the Westport Weston Co-op Nursery School’s Touch-a-Truck event (story above):

(We are “grateful” for our “06880” readers — and “touched” that some support us with tax-deductible contributions. If that’s your jam, please click here. We thank you!)

Online Art Gallery #314

We’ve got a record 19 pieces in this week’s online art gallery.

Many are for sale. Browse — enjoy — and buy!

And next week, you too can be part of next week’s exhibition. No matter your age; the style or subject you choose — and whether you’re a first-timer or old-timer — we welcome your submissions. Watercolors, oils, charcoal, pen-and-ink, acrylics, mixed media, digital, lithographs, collages, macramé, jewelry, sculpture, decoupage, needlepoint — we want whatever you’ve got.

Just email a JPG to 06880blog@gmail.com. And please include the medium you’re working in.

“Imagine” (Patricia McMahon — Available for purchase; click here)

“Pussy Willows” (Bonnie Connolly)

“In Bloom” (John Maloney)

“Lexi” — pencil on paper (Bill Fellah)

“We the People” — collage acrylic pouring (Dorothy Robertshaw; Available for purchase — click here)

“Dots” — pastels/gouache (Toby Michaels — Available for purchase; click here)

“Juicy Fruit” — watercolor (Lucy Johnson)

“Floating Serenade” — original signed mixed media on paper, 14 x 11 (J. Haffey Jr.; Available for purchase; click here)

Untitled (Tom Doran — Available for purchase; click here)

Untitled (Duane Cohen — Available for purchase; click here)

“Saugatuck Riverline” (Nancy Breakstone — Available for purchase; click here)

Untitled — watercolor on paper, 9 x 11 (Kathleen Burke — Available for purchase; click here)

“Rustic Cottage for Sale or Rent. Convenient Transportation to and from the City” (Mike Hibbard)

“Harvey” (Mark Yurkiw — Available for purchase; click here)

“Kemosabe” (Martin Ripchick — Available for purchase; click here)

“Rick” — graphite ink on tinted paper (Werner Liepolt)

“Great-Grandfather Bosch” — pencil sketch (Eric Bosch)

“Grief” (Lawrence Weisman)

“Have We Seen the Last Snowstorm of 2026?” — graphite pencil on blue paper (Steve Stein)

(Entrance is free to our online art gallery –as it has been for 6 years. But please consider an anniversary donation! Just click here — and thank you!)

Karlin Gray Links Kids & Books: Read All About It!

This is a thriving tech and entrepreneurial community. Just go to any StartUp Westport evening (or coffee shop at midday).

But we’ve got our share of writers too. A particularly interesting subset is children’s authors.

In the 7 years since I first wrote about that group, they’ve grown even more numerous and active.

Now, a Westport writer has created a way for young readers to find authors who interest them — all over the country.

Karlin Gray is a 20-year resident. She writes fiction and non-fiction picture books (and credits fellow Westporter Victoria Sherrow with helping transform her manuscripts into publications).

Gray’s subjects include tennis star Serena Williams, Olympic gymnast Nadia Comaneci and giraffologist Dr. Anne Dagg.

Two years ago she wrote “Mia and Friends: Mia Hamm and the Soccer Sisterhood that That Changed History,” about the heroes of the 1999 Women’s World Cup.

Karlin Gray, with one of her books.Karl

Each time, Gray heard from young readers who related to a book — perhaps for the first time — because it was about a subject they loved.

So — in an effort to promote picture-book biographies that young kids can relate to — Gray has launched True Story Bookshop.

The online resource helps parents and educators find true stories that match youngsters’ interests.

As a children’s author and mom, Gray has read hundreds of narrative nonfiction books for kids.

True Story Bookshop highlights her favorites. All are searchable by interest.

“Do you know kids who love soccer, space or singing?” she asks. “Dogs, drawing or dance? Food or fashion?”

Recommendations for all those subjects — and many more — are available for students from kindergarten through grade 5.

It’s searchable too by theme — for example, Black History Month, LGBTQ+ Pride, and Contributions of Immigrants.

The goal, Gray says, is to help find “true stories that celebrate diversity, promote understanding, and initiate important conversations about culture and society.”

While each book has links to buy from Amazon and Bookshop (where she earns a small affiliate commission), Gray also includes a link to WorldCat, enabling users to find the book at a nearby library.

“Whether you buy or borrow, these books encourage kids to pursue their passions, and help them build their nonfiction literacy skills. Win-win!” Gray says.

(“06880” regularly covers interesting Westporters doing important things. If you enjoy stories like this, please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

Pic Of The Day #3285

Kings Highway North (Photo/Ed Simek)