Compo Beach: 2 scenes from Saturday’s storm


(Photos/Gara Morse)
Compo Beach: 2 scenes from Saturday’s storm


(Photos/Gara Morse)
Yesterday’s “06880” lead story included a shout-out to a Westport woman and her 2 young sons.
Inspired by the Sunrise Rotary/Westport Rotary Club/Westport PAL drive at Stop & Shop to collect non-perishable goods for Homes with Hope, they made a special trip just to shop for the non-profit’s Gillespie Shelter and food pantry.
But there’s even more to this great story.
The woman — still insisting on anonymity — emailed me yesterday. She noted:
“When my children and I were in line to pay for the groceries, the cashier overheard them discussing the plan to donate all the food in the cart to Homes with Hope.
“I am not a regular Stop & Shop customer, so I did not have a rewards card or coupon fliers. Nevertheless, the cashier went out of her way to find us all the coupons we could utilize.
“She saved us over $70 on our cart full of food — a gesture she was under no obligation to make.
“What an incredible community we belong to!”

==================================================
“Dial M for Murder” is over.
But the Westport Country Playhouse “Script in Hand” series continues.
“Maytag Virgin” — a class love story — is set for Monday, August 21 (7 p.m.).
The play reading follows Alabama school teacher Lizzy Nash and her new neighbor, Jack Key, over the year following the tragic death of Lizzy’s husband. The play explores the ideas of inertia, self-enlightenment, and the bridge between the two.
All tickets are $25. Click here to purchase, and for more information.

==================================================
Yesterday, Scott Smith noted the dearth of butterflies in his garden.
Jay Petrow has plenty. “My meadow has had active visitors,” he writes.
As proof, the landscape architect offers today’s gorgeous “Westport … Naturally” image.

(Photo/Jay Petrow)
==================================================
And finally … in honor of both Scott Smith and Jay Petrow (see above):
(Butterflies are free. Producing “06880” is not. Please click here to donate, and support our work. Thank you!)
As Westport grapples with the need for a new Long Lots Elementary School, the options — renovate or rebuild? — find echoes in a debate more than a quarter century ago.
In 1996, town officials debated what to do with Greens Farms Elementary.
The parallels with today are not exact. GFS had been closed more than a decade earlier, then converted into the Westport Arts Center.
But the controversy over the possible displacement of a major town institution — the WAC then, the Westport Community Gardens now — are similar.

100 plots, at the Westport Community Gardens just south of Long Lots Elementary School. (Drone photo/Franco Fellah)
On October 20, 1996, the New York Times published a long story in its Connecticut section about the issue. It was written by James Lomuscio, editor of the Westport News.
Alert “06880” reader (and former educator) Werner Liepolt found the piece online, and sent it to “06880.” It’s worth reading, to see how much has changed since then.
And how much has not.
======================================================
In 1920, in a gray-shingled house near Compo Beach in Westport, F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote ”The Beautiful and the Damned.” In 1950, J. D. Salinger holed up in a house on South Compo Road to write ”The Catcher in the Rye.” And James White, a native of Westport, recalls chatting with a struggling, young screenwriter named Rod Serling as he labored over ”Requiem for a Heavyweight” in the Westport Public Library.

The iconic (and Photoshopped) shot of F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald, Photoshopped in front of their Westport home.
Other kinds of artists have also been drawn to the town, a little more than an hour by train from New York City. The illustrator Stevan Dohanos, for example, gleaned many scenes for Saturday Evening Post covers from Westport. James Earle Fraser, famous for his ”End of the Trail” sculpture and for designing the buffalo nickel also lived in town. And there have been scores of Broadway and Hollywood performers, from Bette Davis to to Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward. ”Maybe it’s the geography, the folklore, or just something in the air,” said Burt Chernow, first president of the Westport Arts Center and current chairman of the town’s Arts Advisory Council.
It was that artistic heritage that Mr. Chernow, William Seiden (the First Selectman at the time) and others wanted to preserve when they formed the town-sponsored Westport Arts Center in the Greens Farms school in 1984. The building was one of five elementary schools shut down due to declining enrollments in the late 1970’s and early 1980’s.
When it opened, Mr. Seiden said the center would provide affordable studio space to struggling artists.
”Typically, when people with money come into communities the artists pack up and leave for less expensive areas,” said Mr. Seiden in 1984. ”We want to keep the artists here.” (Mr. Seiden himself had been a child actor who appeared in the ”Boys Town” movies and ”The Hunchback of Notre Dame.”)
With studio space in the center starting at $8.50 a square foot a month — compared to upwards of $25 a square foot elsewhere town — scores of artists have adopted the classrooms just as in other places they moved in on vacated factory space.

Burt Chernow
”We have over 100 members in the Theater Artists Workshop using the center, and there are more than 30 visual artists here,” said Mr. Chernow. ”At any given time you have close to 150 to 200 people, including musicians, using it.”
Over the years, many artists have come to consider the Greens Farms school a permanent location. Heida Hermanns, the concert pianist and president of Performers of Connecticut, even sold a Chagall painting to finance converting the school gymnasium into a concert hall in memory of her husband, Artur Holde.
But a lot has changed in Westport over the last 10 years. The elementary school age population has nearly doubled, going from 975 students in 1987 to 1,869 in 1996, according to school officials, and now the Board of Education wants to reclaim the Greens Farms building, a proposal that pits two town hallmarks, art and education, against each other.
The arts center is currently in its sixth year of a 10-year lease, and tomorrow the school superintendant, Dr. Paul Kelleher, is expected to deliver a list of options to the Board of Selectmen. Among them are: discontinuing the arts center’s lease in 2000, dissolving the lease sooner, or figuring out a way school children and artists can share the building.
”Let me tell you, we’re out of space, and if we have any more elementary growth as of next year we’ll have no classrooms for them,” said Dr. Kelleher. He said that despite additions and the use of modular classrooms the town’s three remaining elementary schools — Coleytown, Bedford and Kings Highway — are already at capacity.
”We’re beyond the point of posturing,” said Ira Bloom, chairman of the Westport Board of Education. ”We need space, and we need it quick.”
Of the five elementary schools closed more than a decade ago, school officials say the Greens Farms building, on nine acres at the corner of the Post Road and Morningside Drive South, is best suited to reuse. The Bedford Elementary School is now used as the town hall. Last month, the Saugatuck School officially opened as housing for elderly people. In the early 80’s the Burr Farms School was razed, and three years ago the town subdivided the land and sold the lots. The Hills Point school building, now being used for nursery schooling, is not properly designed for reuse as a school, Dr. Kelleher said.

After the original Saugatuck Elementary School on Bridge Street closed, it was adapted for use as co-op housing for older residents.
That leaves Greens Farms. School officials say it would cost substantially less — $11.5 million — to renovate there than it would to build a new school on town-owned property — $16 million.
The executive director of the Westport Arts Center, Marilyn Hersey, argued that students would be better served by a new building.
”Listen, the kids need a school, but they deserve a state-of-the-art new school,” said Ms. Hersey. Greens Farms, constructed in the early 1900’s, lacks accessibility for those with disabilities as well as adequate parking; there are asbestos-covered pipes and a driveway with an incline too steep for school buses in icy weather, she said. ”And why anyone would want to put an elementary school on the Post Road is beyond me,” she added.
Dr. Kelleher responded by citing engineering and architectural reports that say the old building can be reused. ”I am respectful of the history of the arts in Westport and the commitment of time and money to the arts center over the past 10 years,” he said. ”But I feel less respectful of their comments over the suitability of the building as a school.”

Herzl Emanuel, at work.
Herzl Emanuel, a sculptor, was one of the first artists to get a space at the center. A W.P.A. artist who later spent more than 30 years working in a small studio in Rome, Italy, Mr. Emanuel now works in the same room that was his son Adam’s third-grade classroom more than 25 years ago. Mr. Emanuel said he believes the school board wants the Greens Farms building because art is no longer a community-wide priority.
Westport, he said, ”is no longer characterized by a huge knowledgeability and appreciation of the arts. Their foremost concerns are the usual prosaic interests in material things: their homes, their vacations and their shopping malls. In short, we are no longer different from other communities in the area.”
Caroly Van Duyn, a multimedia artist who works in paint and clay, and who has been at the center for four years, agreed the character of the town has changed. ”I grew up in town near Old Mill Beach, and my mother was an artist and my father a designer, and all of their friends were artists,” she said. ”So, growing up as an artist in Westport was nothing unusual.
”This conflict has been a real eye-opener to me because I’ve come to realize that not everyone here is supportive of the arts,” added Ms. Van Duyn. ”Where are we going to disperse to? If this building is reclaimed, some people will go into their homes and be less visible, or they will move out of town, which is sad for the community.”
Ms. Hersey describes the center as a community resource through its concerts, art shows and educational programs. ”We give back to the town’s children $100,000 a year in programming,” said Ms. Hersey. ”There are also scholarships to high schools in Westport and Weston. There’s the Young Artists Competition.”
Mr. Bloom, of the Board of Education, said that while he acknowledged the arts center’s value to the community there was a more pressing need. ”I spent a lot of time there with my own daughter who is involved in the theater groups,” he said. ”But I think you have to look at the big picture and the changes in demographics in recent years. Our primary responsibility has to be to adequately educate our children.”
Mr. Bloom added that reclaiming the Greens Farms building would not preclude establishing an arts center elsewhere in town. ”In my judgment that’s a problem that can be solved,” he said.

Greens Farms Elementary was ultimately reclaimed, and reopened …
Joseph Arcudi, Westport’s First Selectman, has suggested that the artists and the Board of Education share the building. ”The win-win situation would be for both the arts center and the Board of Ed to share it,” said Mr. Arcudi. ”I think it can be done.”
But Mr. Chernow fears a shared use would be ”the worst of both possible worlds.”
”You wouldn’t get the school of the 21st century, and you wouldn’t get the art center that Westport deserves,” he said.
Mr. Chernow added that any savings the town would net reclaiming Greens Farms would be offset by the cost setting up a new arts center.
Early this month, art and education stood side by side at a ceremony at the Kings Highway elementary school, celebrating the restoration of two John Steuart Curry frescoes, ”Comedy” and ”Tragedy,” painted in 1934.
”I’ve looked through decades of old newspaper clippings,” said Alice Shelton, a chairwoman of the Kings Highway P.T.A. ”In 1925 Westport was described as the town that believed in schools. In another article I found it was called a town made famous for its artists.
”I hope that these trends will continue,” she added, ”so that Westport will be known in the 21st century as a community that continues to care about its schools and its artists.”
Ultimately, Greens Farms was reclaimed, and reopened as an elementary school. The Westport Arts Center moved to its own building on Riverside Avenue (today it’s MoCA of Westport, on Newtown Turnpike.).
What’s next for Long Lots, and the Westport Community Gardens? That chapter has not yet been written.

… and the Westport Arts Center moved to its own building, on Riverside Avenue.
(“06880” was the first media outlet to report on the Long Lots/ Community Gardens story. We’ll continue to cover it. And we hope readers will continue to support our work. Please click here to contribute. Thank you!)
Posted in Education, Environment, Looking back, Media

Compo Beach kayaks (Eric Bosch)
First it was National Hall. The handsome brick building on the west side of the Saugatuck River housed — among other things — a bank, newspaper, meeting hall, and (in 1884) the first few months of Horace Staples’ new school.
In the 1900s it became Fairfield Furniture. Painted white, its 3 floors were filled with — you guessed it — sofas, tables and the like.
The roof was filled with something else: a century of bird droppings.
When the Tauck family considered buying it in the late 1980s, that almost became a structural-defect deal-breaker.
But the Taucks persevered. Their painstaking renovation returned it to its original splendor, this time as a boutique hotel and high-end restaurant.
In the years since, the rechristened National Hall has been the site of other restaurants, offices and a real estate firm.
Last week it — well, the top floor window and adjacent molding — was the subject of our Photo Challenge. (Click here to see.)
Fred Cantor, Rick Leonard, Diane Silfen, Andrew Colabella, Molly Alger, Jonathan McClure, Jim Dickenson, Seth Braunstein, Kenny Gilbertie, Jodie Aujla and Clark Thiemann quickly knew the answer.
Most of them are longtime Westporters. All have, I am sure, sat in traffic often, gazing up at that sight: one of our town’s most historic structures.
Speaking of history: Who remembers Ross Perot’s run for president in 1996? (I didn’t; I thought his only attempt was in ’92.)
It lives on in Westport. But where?

(Photo/James R. Morgan)
If you know where you’d see this, click “Comments” below.
Posted in Downtown, Looking back, Photo Challenge
Tagged Fairfield Furniture, National Hall, Ross Perot
The storm that blew through Westport yesterday evening brought little rain, but strong winds.
They were brief — but enough to bring down tree limbs, and cause power outages in scattered neighborhoods.
They also produced a nice rainbow. “06880” readers all around town sent images. This one, by Theresa Anovick, captured it best:

(Photo/Theresa Anovick)
Meanwhile, Eric Bosch snapped this dramatic post-rain view …

(Photo/Eric Bosch)
… and a few yards away, so did Richard Abramowitz:

(Photo/Richard Abramowitz)
==================================================
Scott Smith is one of many Westport gardeners and environmentalists who has observed something troubling outdoors. He writes:
“Where are the bees? The butterflies?
“The sunflowers in my garden are 10 feet tall. The purple coneflowers, black-eyed Susans, milkweed and other native flowers and bushes are blooming (at least the ones the deer don’t nibble).
“Yet I find our pollinator friends are few and far between. At least in my yard.
“It’s been a good summer for fireflies, the wasps are out and about, and with the recent rains the mosquitoes are ascendant. But where are the pollinators?
“I’ve not sprayed pesticides or any chemicals on my property for years, nor do most of my neighbors. So let me ask my fellow 06880 gardeners and backyard apiarists: Can you send some bees and butterflies my way?”

Scott Smith’s garden is beautiful — but bee- and butterfly-less.
==================================================
Westport resident Jay Norris and chef/restaurateur/TV personality Marcus Samuelsson are breaking bread together.
The noted entrepreneurs have partnered to offer performance-based leases to minority-owned food businesses.
Norris is CEO of Guesst Software. Crain’s New York Business says the company — which facilitates short-term retail leases in dozens of the country’s leading malls — will now give “artisanal, mom-and-pop restaurants access to ‘A+’ locations–without the upfront cost or standard 15-year lease.”
For example, UrbanSpace — which runs food halls through New York City — will commit 10 spaces at their Bryant Park holiday market to qualified minority-owned businesses who set up leases through Guesst. Norris says that allows them to “explore the world” beyond their own neighborhoods.
Samuelsson told Crain’s that large restaurants like his usually sign 15-year leases. His partnership with Norris allows landlords to be flexible and patient with rents.
Norris plan to launch a “women’s merchant movement” in the fourth quarter. His goal is to “give a voice to voiceless minority business owners,” no matter who or where they are.
To read the full Crain’s story (behind a paywall), click here.

Jay Norris (left) and Marcus Samuelsson,
==================================================
For several years, Saugatuck Shores residents have worried about speeding on their narrow streets.
After pursuing conventional means of trying to control the problem did not help, residents began a friendly “slow down” sign campaign.
Two slogans were chosen. Two young children — 4-year- old Valery Kolotnikova and 5-year-old Anya Jain — contributed artwork.
Miggs Burroughs — Westport’s very talented, very generous graphic artist — pulled together the text and illustrations.
The result: beautiful bespoke signs that appear to be helping.
To order a sign, email Liz Milwe: lizmilwe@gmail.com

Valery and Anya, and their sign.
==================================================
A sobering opinion piece in today’s New York Times, exploring the sad state of public swimming lessons and pools in the United States — leading to 11 drowning deaths a day across the country — does mention several bright spots.
Including Westport.
The final 2 paragraphs of Mara Gay’s piece, “When It Comes to Swimming, ‘Why Have Americans Been Left on Their Own?'” read:
Coral Gables, Fla., has a colossal, stone-ringed public pool known as the Venetian, complete with waterfalls and grottoes. Austin, Texas, boasts a three-acre public pool fed by underground springs. Ann Arbor, Mich., has public pools with giant water slides. In 1960 the elegant Connecticut shore town of Westport bought the deed to a country club. Residents there swim in a public pool that sits beside the shimmering waters of the Long Island Sound.
Every American deserves the chance to swim somewhere just as nice.
(Hat tip: Robin Jaffee Frank)

Longshore pool (Photo/Pamela Einarsen)
==================================================
Tom Kretsch provides today’s “Westport … Naturally” photo, with this comment:
:A little touch of color on our beautiful river, the Saugatuck. A river runs through us, and little treasures abound.”

(Photo/Tom Kretsch)
==================================================
And finally … on this date in 1975, Teamster leader Jimmy Hoffa disappeared from the parking lot of a Detroit-area restaurant. He was never seen again.
(“06880” is your hyper-local blog — and a non-profit. Please click here to support us with a tax-deductible contribution. Thank you!)
Posted in Beach, Environment, Longshore, Restaurants, Weather
Tagged Compo Beach clouds, Compo cannons, Jay Norris, Marcus Samuelsson, Miggs Burroughs, rainbow, Saugatuck Shores
Tacombi does not open until August 7.
But the much-anticipated restaurant has already made a great impression on Westport.
Tacombi Community Kitchen launched in 2020, during the early days of the pandemic. The goal was to provide food relief in New York City, where the restaurant began.
Today, under the auspices of the 501(c)(3) Tacombi Foundation, it provides over 9,000 meals weekly out of all 16 taquerias, in New York, Miami and Washington, DC.
They’ve given away over 750,000 meals to people in need. Each one is prepared specifically to be donated, with the same care as meals served to customers.
On Friday, Tacombi brought their generosity to Westport. They donated 50 meals to clients at Homes with Hope‘s Gillespie Center and Westport Community Kitchen. They gave another 200 to other area organizations.

Tacombi meals, in the Homes with Hope kitchen.
“This is amazing,” says Homes with Hope CEO Helen McAlinden.
“They are a truly welcomed partner to Westport. Our clients loved the food!”
Friday’s delivery was just the start. Tacombi will continue to provide Homes with Hope with 50 meals a week.
Imagine what they’ll do for the town once they’re actually in business here.
FUN FACT: The name “Tacombi” is a combination of “taco” and “combi” — what Mexicans call a VW bus. The restaurant started as a retrofitted combi, serving as a food truck selling tacos on the beaches at Playa del Carmen.

It’s been a big — and hopeful — few days for Homes with Hope. Yesterday, 4 important groups — Sunrise Rotary, the Westport Rotary Club, Westport Police Department and Saugatuck Rowing Club — joined forces at Stop & Shop for a perishable food collection.
Some folks donated cash. Others picked up a flyer listing most-needed items, purchased them, and dropped them off as they left.
One family — a woman and 2 young sons — came for only one reason: to shop for the Gillespie Center.
“How generous!” McAlinden says.
The generosity continued all day long. Homes with Hope thanks the hundreds of donors and volunteers who stood outside for hours in the heat.
In a town with plenty, there are plenty who give back.

Rob Hauck of Sunrise Rotary with a cart full of groceries, donated by a woman and her sons.
(Homes with Hope can always use help. Click here for information on its food pantry needs; click here for information on all its programs.)
The Long Lots School Building Committee holds a special meeting on Tuesday (August 1, 6 p.m., Town Hall Room 309).
The first part of the meeting includes public comment and/or questions about the project.
Members will then meet for a work session with the design team, for project status updates and review. The public can attend the work session, but cannot participate.

Discussion continues on next steps for Long Lots School. (Drone photo/Brandon Malin)
==================================================
Stephanie Retcho just sent a great email. There was no better way to start the morning.
She writes:
“I was traveling for work this week. I arrived at La Guardia last night around 7:30 p.m. to a ground stop, and complete chaos.
“We sat on the plane for 3 hours waiting for a gate. I’m still unclear about the issue. The person in front of me, who seemed to have access to FAA information, suggested it was a bomb threat.
“I can’t find any news about it this morning. I’ve traveled for work for almost 30 years and I’ve never seen so many planes on a tarmac at once.
“The passengers held it together amazingly well — all except one older gentleman who unspooled on the pilot and crew upon deplaning. I wanted to tell him that ground stops have nothing to do with the airline, pilots or crew. They want to get where they are going too.
“I resisted, knowing that the nervous system, when triggered, doesn’t respond well to reason. The 5-year old girl behind me, on the other hand, was a marvel. She only cried twice. No one complained. We all felt it too.
“That context makes it easier to understand my response to what I experienced this morning.
“I’m an early riser. So despite getting home from the airport around midnight, I was up early this morning. I took my dog on her early walk along Long Lots Road as usual.
“I’m a regular on that walk. My neighbors wave at me when they see me, and I wave back. That interaction may mean little to a lot of folks. I love it. It’s community.
“As I approached the intersection at North Avenue, I noticed the CT Challenge bike event was going on. A police officer guided the riders to turn right up North Avenue.
“As I approached them, I heard everyone saying good morning to the officer — and thank you.
“Maybe that doesn’t seem like such a big deal, or maybe I’m just a softie. But I love to see it so much. I stopped to watch them for a minute (so did my dog). It refilled my tank.
“Kindness takes little. And it does so much good. After witnessing the other side of it last night, I felt the order of the universe restored. My heart is full, and I’m ready for whatever today brings.
“Thank you to the officer who was there, and to the riders for their kindness.

==================================================
Next weekend, more than 6,000 riders from around the globe — including 14 from Westport, and 3 from Weston — will pedal in the 44th Pan-Mass Challenge.
Their goal: raise a record-breaking $70 million for cancer research and patient care at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute.
The nation’s single most successful athletic fundraiser includes 1 and 2-day routes, from 25 to 211 miles, for all levels of cycling and fundraising ability.
Westport riders include Matthew Barry, Tina Cerrito, Maria Chatman, Adam Drake, Tom Epes, Doug Fincher, Tony Howell, Bill Loftus, Theodore Lundberg, Peter Massey, Scot Parnell, Christopher Powers, Steve Rowland and Suzanne Slade.
Representing Weston are Robert Krauss, William Lomas and Walter Shanley.

Team captain Dave Hazard and Bill Loftus crossing the finish line at mile 192 in Provincetown last year.
=======================================================
The Staples football team’s conditioning sessions usually begin at 6 a.m., at Paul Lane Field.
Yesterday was different. They gathered at Compo Beach.
After their workout, they cooled off in the Sound.
They beat the heat. And the whole idea is: This fall, they’ll beat their opponents.

(Photo courtesy of Instagram/Hat tip: Anna Bernier)
==================================================
Every “Westport … Naturally” photo is special.
This one — a zinnia, taken by Jonathan Prager — is especially so. The colors offer a brilliant way to start the weekend.

(Photo/Jonathan Prager)
==================================================
And finally … Randy Meisner, an original member of the Eagles, died Wednesday in Los Angeles. He was 77, and suffered from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Click here for a full obituary.
(“06880” is your hyper-local blog. We rely on readers for support. Please click here — and thank you!)
Comments Off on Roundup: Long Lots Meeting, Bike Challenges, Football Workout …
Posted in Education, Sports, Staples HS
Tagged CT Challenge, Long Lots Elementary School, Pan-Mass Challenge, Staples High School football