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Monthly Archives: December 2018
Patty And Paul Ring The NASDAQ Bell
It’s been a year since Patty Haberstroh’s family started the Hot Pepper Challenge, to raise funds for ALS. Three months earlier, she’d been diagnosed with the neurodegenerative disease.
It’s been 3 years since the Frates family first did the Ice Bucket Challenge, for the same important cause.
This morning, Patty — the energetic, creative program specialist in Westport’s Human Services Department — her family, and the Frateses, were in New York. They rang the opening NASDAQ bell, in their continuing efforts to raise both funds and awareness of ALS.
They were joined by Westporter Paul LaHiff and his family. He too has ALS (also called Lou Gehrig’s Disease). Also on hand: ALS Foundation members, and representatives of the company that produces the Radicava drug.

Paul LaHiff (front, left) and Patty Haberstroh (front, right), with families and friends, this morning on the NASDAQ floor.
The ceremony was televised live on CNBC. And in case anyone missed Patty with her pepper shirt — well, look here:
Patty continues to advocate for ALS causes — and treatments. Yesterday, she was interviewed by WSHU. Click here for that inspiring story.
Posted in Economy, Organizations, People
Tagged ALS, ALS Hot Pepper Challenge, ALS Ice Bucket Challenge, Lou Gehrig's Disease, NASDAQ, Patty Haberstroh, Paul LaHiff
Friday Flashback #121
On Christmas Eve, Westporters flock to many different churches.
Methodists will worship on Weston Road. The building is 50 years old, but it still looks beautiful and new.
It’s the successor to several Methodist churches.
The first was built on Poplar Plains, in 1790. It’s near the site of the longtime Three Bears restaurant. Today it’s once more a home of worship — for Chabad.
In the 1850s the Methodists moved to the corner of Myrtle Avenue and Main Street. There’s a law office now, at the tip of what was then a much larger town green.
A new church was built on (appropriately) Church Lane in 1908. In 1966 — to help pay for the move to Weston Road — that building was sold to the church next door, Christ & Holy Trinity. The Episcopalians still own it; it’s been rechristened Seabury Center.
But look at this photo:
The caption says “Saugatuck.”
This is clearly not Seabury Center on Church Lane. But the Myrtle Avenue/Main Street intersection is not in Saugatuck — not by a couple of miles.
Of course, the original name of Westport was “Saugatuck.” We became our own town in 1835 — a couple of decades before the Myrtle Avenue church was built.
Is this that one, simply mislabeled? Was there another Methodist church somewhere in Saugatuck?
And if so, what other churches have we lost? Click “Comments” below.
And whichever you worship at: Merry Christmas!
Remembering Ann Gill
As Westport boomed in the 1950s, families flocked to new homes on new streets carved out of thick woods and empty meadows.
The Gill family was one of the first on High Point Road, off Long Lots. Staples High School was rising, just to the west. The street was filled with kids, riding bikes, playing kickball, and going to nearby Long Lots Junior High and Burr Farms Elementary.
The dads commuted to New York. The moms threw themselves into volunteer work.
Ann Gill was particularly active. A 1951 University of Connecticut graduate with a degree in horticulture, she served on PTAs, and with Girl Scouts and the League of Women Voters.
She spent 8 years on the Planning & Zoning Commission — 2 as chair — and was the Conservation Commission’s hearing officer. She also was treasurer and a director of the Westport Library Riverwalk, and was active in town Republican groups and committees.
Like many women of her time, Ann also joined the workforce. She earned a teaching degree from Western Connecticut State University, and taught 5th grade in Trumbull for 7 years.
Ann was married for 63 years to Ed Gill. She took great pride in her home, her plants and flowers. As High Point Road changed — with longtime families moving away, new families replacing them, and 1950s-era homes torn down for bigger 2010s ones — the Gills remained. After Ed died, she stayed — the last remaining link to an original family.
Ann Gill died earlier this month — in her beloved home.
Donations in her name may be made to the Ann Collins Gill Fund (#31170), in support of plant science at the University of Connecticut: UConn Foundation, 2390 Alumni Drive, Unit 3206, Storrs, CT 06269.
Posted in Local politics, Organizations, People
Green’s Farms United: Neighbors Band Together
Greens Farms means many things, to many people.
It’s filled with rolling hills, old homes, a small beach, a friendly train station and post office, and a stately elementary school.
That school sits on the northern edge of the neighborhood. It’s an area that residents feel is under siege.
Just across the Post Road, a 94-unit apartment building is quickly filling up. Twelve apartments have been constructed on the site of the former Geiger’s property, with 32 assisted living apartments being built next door.
The bank/office complex at the Post Road/North Morningside corner has just been sold. That too may be converted into apartments.
Now 19 townhouses have been proposed for 20-26 South Morningside — the Historic District directly opposite Greens Farms Elementary School.

Green’s Farms United created this map to show recent and planned housing developments near Greens Farms School.
A group called Green’s Farms United has had enough.
Energized families created a website and GoFundMe page. They’re on Facebook and Instagram. They organized an email list, alerting Westporters about upcoming hearings.
They hired an environmental engineer. And a lawyer.
They’re mad as hell, and they’re not going to take it anymore.
They want everyone to know what’s coming up — and what’s come before.
They’ve seen the effects after the Morningside South developer removed trees near Muddy Brook in 2017: soil erosion and flooding increased.
But something else happened.
“We started as a group of Greens Farms families, concerned about the 20-26 Morningside Drive South future,” says one of the organizers, Aurea de Souza.
“We are now a group of friends and neighbors fighting for a cause, while enjoying and appreciating meeting so many incredible people on the way.”
They take heart from neighbors on the other side of town, who are battling the proposed 6-story, 81-unit apartment complex between Lincoln and Cross Streets, off Post Road West.
They are Green’s Farms United.
That’s more than just their name.
It’s their neighborhood.
And their lives.
Senior Citizens And Staples Teens Share Stories. And Lunch.
Besides their grandparents, most Staples High School students have little contact with older Westporters.
Some grandparents live far away. And others are no longer living.
But senior citizens and Staples seniors (and juniors) share more than this town. They all eat.
So food in its many forms — cooking, meals, restaurants — was on the menu last week. The Senior Center hosted its 2nd annual Intergenerational Writing Workshop.
Teenagers and men and women 4 and 5 times their age sat down together. They read what they’d written. They commented on each other’s memoirs and fiction. Then they dug into lunch — and kept talking.
The project is a collaboration between the Senior Center’s Writing Workshop and Staples’ English elective, “Reading and Writing Fiction.” Both are immensely popular — and both are well known for turning people who think they can’t write into agile, insightful writers.
David Stockwell teaches 2 sections of the class. To prepare for the day at the Senior Center, the high schoolers wrote about food. Writing Workshop instructor Jan Bassin’s students did the same.
“It’s universal,” Stockwell explains. “There are so many topics: food at the holidays. Families and food. Cooking. Restaurants.”
Whatever trepidation the teenagers and senior citizens may have had melted away as soon as they sat together, at small tables. They read, commented, laughed, told stories, then rotated to another group.
For more than 2 hours — without a cellphone in sight — the writers read.
One man wrote about tinned pineapple rations during the Korean War. They did not look appetizing. But an Army buddy told him to eat; pineapple is good for you. He did — and remembers that day more than half a century later.
Another Senior Center writer described a traditional English breakfast: pudding, bangers, ham, and 2 cups of tea. “Even the terminology made it come alive,” Stockwell says.
An English breakfast was the same topic chosen by a Staples senior. His perspective was different — but equally intriguing.
And so it went: stories about eating watermelon. Descriptions of chocolate. Thanksgiving dinner. Anyone can write about food — and everyone did.
But food was just a starting point. As they chatted, a student asked an older woman if she had known what she wanted to do with her life when she was in high school.
No, the woman said. But she described how her life unfolded, and advised the teenager to pay attention to what she loved most from an early age on.
Another Workshop participant realized that she had worked for the father of one of the students for nearly 10 years.
All that reading and talking made them hungry, of course. Lunch — pizza, veggies, hummus, chips and dips — was welcome. It was also a chance to get to know each other even better.
“In today’s world, there is little opportunity for seniors to share fascinating and valuable life experiences with these emerging adults, or for the younger generation to ask questions and seek perspective and guidance from those who have lived long and varied lives,” Bassin explains.
At the same time, she says, the topic she and Stockwell picked “de-emphasizes the age gap. We can all relate to food.”
The Senior Center Workshop writers were impressed with the Staples students’ writing and demeanor. The teens were awed by the seniors’ sometimes humorous, sometimes tearful stories of war, loss, hardships and lessons learned.
And the pizza was just topping for the day.
Just In Thyme: Free Holiday Cards (And More!)
Just 5 shopping and card-sending days are left before Christmas.
Which means I’m getting some last-minute requests to post stories about gifts and cards.
Tomorrow, Bonnie Marcus opens her private design studio to the public. She’ll be giving away — yes, free — hand-painted, Westport-designed holiday cards, as a thank-you to the town.
You won’t find these at CVS. Or anywhere else.
The “free card” idea came when Bonnie realized that she had a supply of holiday cards stored away in her office. She posted the giveaway on Facebook, and was overwhelmed.
The 2nd round is tomorrow (Thursday, December 20, 12 to 2 p.m., Bonnie Marcus Collection studio, 5 Riverside Avenue, next to Arezzo restaurant).
Meanwhile — thanks to Amazon — there’s still time to buy a cookbook gift, and support a great Westport group that supports a wonderful Bridgeport one.
AWARE — Assisting Women with Action, Resources and Education — is made up of local women. Each year, they pick one worthy organization. They dive into it: learning about the cause, the people behind it, and hosting a fundraiser for it.
This year, AWARE partnered with Caroline House, a center that educates and empowers immigrant women, and provides programs for their children.
As part of their effort they published “Thyme to Share Cooking with AWARE.” It’s a collection of recipes by Caroline House clients. Dishes come from around the world.
All proceeds from the book go to AWARE. Click here to order.
PS: Got a great gift idea to promote? Click “Comments” below.
Comments Off on Just In Thyme: Free Holiday Cards (And More!)
Posted in Arts, Local business, Organizations
Tagged AWARE Westport, Bonnie Marcus Collection, Caroline House
Unsung Hero #79
The other day, alert — and compassionate — “06880” reader Elaine Marino sent me an email.
Earlier that morning, she said, she dropped off her husband at the Greens Farms train station.
Elaine noticed a woman who had just gotten off the train. She began walking, and turned left on Greens Farms Road, toward Morningside Drive.
Elaine pulled over and asked, “Can I give you a ride?” The woman gladly got in the car.
Elaine drove her to a house on a side street, just past the Sherwood Island Connector. Her name was Maria, and she was very grateful.
That was not the first time Elaine gave a ride to someone walking from the train station. For the past several years she’s done it for people who are household staff — nannies, cleaners, gardeners — who don’t have a ride from the train to their destination.
“I have met lovely people this way,” Elaine says. “I have never felt unsafe. It gives me a good feeling to help someone — especially in below-freezing temperatures. It would be great if even more people did this.”
Elaine did not expect me to name her this week’s Unsung Hero. She just wanted more Westporters to be aware of needs like this in our midst — and to reach out and help those who need it.
I’m sure she’s not the only one who has done something like this.
But I’m also sure there are many more — like me — who have not.
Thanks, Elaine, for stopping, and caring. And for reminding us all to do the same.
Posted in Transportation, Unsung Heroes













