Category Archives: Looking back

That Heavenly Coffee…

The death of 97-year-old Page Morton Black — the singer whose “Chock Full o’Nuts” jingle is embedded in the brains of anyone living in or around New York in the 1960s and ’70s — on Sunday led to a nostalgia-filled obituary in today’s New York Times.

It also led to memories about her ties to Westport.

Page Morton Black and her husband, William Black — the founder of Chock Full o’Nuts — lived for many years on Bluewater Hill. The Mediterranean-style mansion was easily spotted from Hillspoint Road.

Longtime Westporter Wally Meyer recalls that she hosted “fabulous dinner parties.”

He does not say whether she sang at them.

But I’m sure the coffee was very, very good.

Page Morton Black and her husband, William Black, in the early 1960s. (Photo/New York Times)

Page Morton Black and her husband, William Black, in the early 1960s. (Photo/New York Times)

Helen Thomas’ Westport Connections

The death this weekend of Helen Thomas — legendary dean of the White House press corps — has a Westport angle.

Longtime Westport obstetrician/gynecologist Danny Adler met her at a press function in the early 1980s. Despite vastly different occupations, they struck up a unique, distant friendship that lasted through their lifetimes.

Danny was introduced to Helen by his son, William Adler, a UPI correspondent in Washington, D.C.  Danny wanted to meet her because he sensed they were kindred spirits: progressive, outspoken, feisty and unafraid of making people mad.

Helen Thomas

Helen Thomas

William cautioned his father not to get his hopes up about connecting with Helen — after all, she was the busiest, hardest-working journalist in Washington, arriving at work before her much-younger colleagues, and staying in the office until the wee hours.

But Danny and Helen hit it off immediately.  They exchanged phone numbers. And when Danny was home in Connecticut they had occasional  long chats about politics. He encouraged her to “give ’em hell” — and she always did.

Helen was impressed by Danny’s knowledge of history and international politics. (A voracious reader, he harbored a secret wish to be a political correspondent, not a doctor).

Dr. Danny Adler

Dr. Danny Adler

Their friendship continued for decades — eventually moving to email. It was easy for Danny to remember their birthdays. He was born on August 3, 1920. She was born a day later, that same year. Danny died 7 months ago.

The fact that Helen Thomas made time for someone she met incidentally — and established such a strong connection — adds private testimony to her public greatness.

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William Adler — who grew up in Westport, and has returned here to live — has his own Helen Thomas story. In 1983, as UPI spokesman, he asked her to help him get a group of Latin American editors into the White House for a private reception with President Reagan.

The date was set. But right before the visit the U.S. invaded the small island of Grenada.  Press secretary Larry Speakes wanted to cancel the editors’ visit, but relented on the grounds that Helen Thomas could not ask the President about the invasion.  William passed Speakes’ condition on to Helen, who tacitly agreed.

The editors were ushered into a reception room. Helen immediately scooted to the front, charged up to Reagan and shouted, “Mr. President, what’s the latest from Grenada?”

(One more Helen Thomas-Westport connection: Current resident Allan Siegert worked with her in Washington in the 1980s.)

40 Years Later, Green’s Farms Renews Shopping Center Battle

In 1971 the owner of a 6-acre vacant lot on the Post Road, between South Morningside and Church Street, proposed a new shopping center.

It would include a supermarket, drugstore, retail shops and 366-seat movie theater. Plans included a driveway on the southern part of the property — directly on South Morningside. Directly opposite Green’s Farms Elementary School.

The Green’s Farms PTA swung into action. They quickly got 700 signatures — from all over town — on a petition that claimed the driveway would be hazardous to children. (The PTA was not against the shopping center itself.)

Their protests led to a new traffic plan. For 4 decades, traffic from (then) Waldbaum’s and the Post Cinema, and (now) Barnes & Noble and Pompanoosuc Mills, has exited only onto the Post Road and Church Street.

The main entrance and exit for Post Plaza Shopping Center.

The main entrance and exit for Post Plaza Shopping Center.

But everything old is new again. This Tuesday (July 23, 7:30 p.m., Town Hall) the Zoning Board of Appeals will consider a zoning variance. It’s a request — you knew this was coming — for a new commercial driveway to be built in the rear of the Post Plaza Shopping Center, onto South Morningside. Directly across from the Green’s Farms School bus exit.

Owners estimate that 20% of shopping center traffic — cars, commercial vehicles, and delivery and garbage trucks — would use the new driveway.

RTM members John Suggs, Dewey Loselle and Matt Mandell are not pleased. They’re concerned about safety — particularly at school pickup and drop-off times, when vehicles parked on both sides of Morningside make sight lines difficult.

A truck navigates through cars parked on both sides of South Morningside Drive...

A truck navigates through cars parked on both sides of South Morningside Drive…

Morningside is also clogged for events like plays, Back to School Nights and softball games.

Opponents point out too that Westport prohibits the construction of a driveway within 400 feet of a school driveway. That ordinance was waived in January by the Board of Selectmen. No RTM member or  Green’s Farms Association member attended the meeting. The selectmen have been asked to rehear the matter for several reasons, one of which was that the public notice was “deficient.”

The State Traffic Administration — which in 1971 forbid construction of the driveway, thanks in part to the PTA petition — has been asked whether it is legal for the town to now permit the driveway, without seeking state approval.

...and a bus squeezes through, while a student crosses the street.

…and a bus squeezes through, while a student crosses the street.

Back in 1971, Green’s Farms PTA president Penny Heatley said, “We want to be certain that there will be no access to South Morningside Drive across from the school, even if the present owners were to sell out to somebody else in a year or two.”

Or even if the current owners, 40 years later, decided to try the same thing.

“The Girl Next Door” Comes Home

What do you get when you cross “The Girl Next Door” with hardcore porn?

“The Girl Next Door XXX — A Hardcore Parody,” of course.

And of course — this being “06880” — there’s a tight Westport connection.

"The Girl Next Door"The Girl Next Door” — a 2004 film — was directed by 1990 Staples grad Luke Greenfield. The plot — a teenager’s dream comes true when a former porn star moves next door and they fall in love — was rooted in Greenfield’s home town. Twenty years earlier, Marilyn Chambers earned worldwide fame as the Ivory Snow girl-turned-“Behind the Green Door” star.

Mike Kulich — a Staples 2004 grad — is now the owner of Assence Films, which specializes in exactly what “Assence” sounds like. He just gave the green door light to “The Girl Next Door XXX.”

According to a press release — yes, porn companies send out PR —

Assence Films is known for its more hardcore gonzo-type movies, but has released successful parodies in the past including “Vote For Rush,” a take on conservative Rush Limbaugh and what he does with sexy coeds once he goes off the air.

Describing “The Girl Next Door,” Mike says:

 Luke Greenfield’s movie was my childhood. We grew up in the same town, we went to the same school, and we did the same things. There are so many aspects of the movie that I lived: late nights at the Sherwood Diner, evading Robocop to get to the beach, crazy road trips with my buddies, and of course dreams of making it big in the adult entertainment business. This movie is not only going to be a great hardcore parody, but a homage to my childhood in Westport.

Westport Cinema Initiative: are you listening?

Sally’s Place To Close; A Westport Era To End

Sally White has been selling music on Main Street since 1956.

Sometime this summer, her song will finally end.

The beloved owner of Sally’s Place — the record/CD store where Keith Richards and Mary Travers shopped (and schmoozed) with Sally, and any other music lovers who wandered up the steps at 190 Main Street — is closing down.

She’s not sure when (probably later this summer). And she has no idea what she’ll do with the hundreds of posters, autographed photos and musical tchotchkes that line the way (maybe sell them?).

Sally White, standing underneath a photo of one of her all-time favorites: Frank Sinatra.

Sally White, standing underneath a photo of one of her all-time favorites: Frank Sinatra.

She does know, though, that she’ll leave a business she’s loved from her 1st day at Melody House, a few doors away, 57 years ago.

She also knows why she’s closing. The internet dragged too many customers away. The stagnant economy dragged business down further.

Sally’s Place has a niche in Westport that will never be replaced. I walked in this afternoon at the same time as another customer. She wanted a vinyl copy of “Rubber Soul.” Sally promised it would be in by Saturday.

When Melody House closed in the late ’50s, Stanley Klein offered her a job in his department store’s record section. Raising 2 sons alone, she said she could work only 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. She also told him how much she needed to be paid. He hired her on the spot.

She worked there for more than 20 years. Her gentle nature, loving presence and encyclopedic knowledge of music influenced generations of Westporters — myself included.

Sally's Place is at 190 Main Street -- on the right, just past Avery Place.

Sally’s Place is at 190 Main Street — on the right, just past Avery Place.

When Klein’s record department closed in 1985, she decided to open her own store. Her brother-in-law wrote a business plan. She showed it to the president of Westport Bank & Trust.

He gave it right back. “We don’t need it,” he said. He trusted her word.

She offered her house as collateral. He refused. He was happy to back Sally’s Place without it.

It’s been an “amazing” 27 years, Sally says. “The bank, the record companies, my landlord — everyone has been fantastic.”

Especially her customers. “They make me feel special,” says Sally. “But I’m just doing what I love.”

Another customer this afternoon asked Sally for a turntable needle. She handed him a phone number. “This is the Needle Doctor,” she said. “He has everything.”

Sally’s musical roots run deep. She’s seen Frank Sinatra on stage. Also Count Basie, Duke Ellington, Tommy Dorsey, Glenn Miller, Benny Goodman and Artie Shaw.

Brubeck and Gerry Mulligan were close friends. So are many customers who never played a note. All are bound by a love of music — and the treasure that is Sally.

Sally doing what she loves most: interacting with one customer. Another one browses in back.

Sally doing what she loves: interacting with a customer. Another browses in back.

“I’ve been working since I was 14,” Sally says. “I’ve been a part of this town for a long time. This is my heart and soul. I wouldn’t trade places with anyone.”

She’s survived as long as she has on special orders. Bluegrass compilations, rap, the “Roar of the Greasepaint” soundtrack — all are hand-written, in old-school logbooks. People find her from around the country.

She does not charge for mailing. “It’s my way of saying thanks,” she says.

As if on cue, a customer requested “old Polish-American polka music” for a wedding. She mentioned a composer. “S-t-u-r-r,” Sally spelled. “Right!” the woman said.

There is plenty of new vinyl -- and CDs, and random stuff, and musical knowledge -- at Sally's Place.

There is plenty of new vinyl — and CDs, random stuff, and musical knowledge — at Sally’s Place.

She does not stock Lady Gaga. “You can get that at Walmart for 10 bucks,” she says.

You can get it online, too — along with virtually everything Sally sells. Which is why she has written this message (by hand):

After 27 years of business I have decided to retire. The economy and internet sales have made it impossible for me to continue.

I thank you for your support, and hope you wish me well in retirement. I’ll miss you.

“Quick and easy,” she says. “I don’t need the schmaltz.”

But we need to say “thank you” to Sally White. Please hit “Comments” to share  your memories, or offer praise.

And then — whether you’re a longtime admirer, a former customer who faded away, or someone who always meant to stop by but never did — go see Sally.

She’ll be glad to see you.

And her broad, loving smile will make your day.

(Click here to read a previous post about Sally’s Westport Arts Center award.)

Back to the Basics: A Portrait of Sally White from Claire Bangser.

 

7-Sided Barn Holds Several Wonders

The Westport Historical Society has plenty of cool stuff tucked away in the attic and basement.

But its most amazing artifact may be hidden in plain sight: the 7-sided cobblestone barn.

Located right behind the Wheeler House headquarters, opposite Town Hall, it’s the only barn of its kind in the state. And its doors are always open.

The Westport Historical Society barn

The Westport Historical Society barn

When you wander in, the first thing you see is a 5-foot square historical diorama of downtown. Created for the Society by Tom Clough in 1999, it represents Westport in the mid- and late-19th centuries.

Clough calculated the size of buildings and other features from photos. When he actually measured Toquet Hall, he found his estimate was just one inch off.

A small detail of the Saugatuck River waterfront, from the WHS diorama.

A small detail of the Saugatuck River waterfront, from the WHS diorama.

The tallest object — the spire of Christ & Holy Trinity Church — is 4 inches high, on a 270:1 scale. The smallest are the minuscule spokes on a bicycle, leaning against the old library. (Where was that? Push a button on the display, and you’ll see it was on the corner of Post Road and Main Street, in the building that now houses Starbucks.)

The diorama also includes 50 and 60-foot sloops, which docked where Parker Harding Plaza now stands. (You didn’t know that parking lot was landfill? Ah, the things you’ll learn!)

A 20-minute narration describes Westport’s maritime commerce, including our staple crop (onions) and manufactured goods (tinsel ribbon cord, fringes, candlewicks, shoes, valises and buttons).

In true Westport fashion, the narrator is Joanne Woodward.

Upstairs, there’s an even larger display: the miniature train holiday scene that — every Christmas for decades — entertained Main Street shoppers from Swezey Jewelers’ front window.

Model railroad specialist Hank Teller fine-tuned the 4-track display. It includes small replicas of the Saugatuck Congregational Church, Saugatuck firehouse — and of course Swezey’s itself.

The barn has its own history. Built by blacksmith Farmin Patchin during the late 1840s or ’50s, it was in disrepair when the WHS bought the property in 1980.

It took 10 years to restore the structure, under the supervision of Leo Cirino. Stones were painstakingly removed and catalogued, then returned to their original positions as the walls were rebuilt.

There’s plenty to see at the Historical Society. Including an odd but intriguing 7-sided barn that most of us pass by often, without really seeing.

(For more information on the Westport Historical Society, click here or call 203-222-1424.)

Double Parked In The Twilight Zone

Carl Addison Swanson is many things. He’s a Staples graduate. A lawyer who spent decades in Texas, before returning to Westport several years ago. A frequent contributor to the “06880” comments section.

He’s also an author. His Hush McCormick series has done enormously well, thanks to social media marketing.

But in his latest book, Carl steps away from the “boat bum adventure” genre.

Double ParkedDouble Parked in the Twilight Zone: Summer of 1960 is set in Westport. The protagonist, Justin Carmichael — and yes, that’s the name of a 1988 Staples grad, though the similarity ends there — graduates from Bedford Elementary School during that 1960 year.

Suffice it to say, Justin has a very interesting summer.

Carl is a Bedford El grad. (It’s now Town Hall. Carl remembers it well — including the basement, where the Westport Community Theater has replaced civil defense drills of yore.)

“Reaching 65 years of age in February made me aware that I suddenly wanted to talk about my life some more,” Carl says. His return to Westport sparked many memories, some of which he mines in Twilight Zone. (Note the subtle homage to Rod Serling, who lived in Westport when Carl was at Bedford.)

So is this book autobiographical?

Carl Addison Swanson

Carl Addison Swanson

“In a sense, all writing is about your life and experiences,” he says. “The summer of 1960 was particularly intereseting to me, because a lot happened.”

For instance, Carl started playing golf at Longshore. His Little League team went to the town championship. He went steady with a girl for the first time.

“A lot of fun stuff,” he says.

Though Carl has a satirical streak, this is hardly satire. It is, he says, “a critique on the town back then, through my eyes.”

Westport was a great place to grow up, Carl says — “especially back in the ‘Wonder Years’ of the 1950s and ’60s. There was plenty to do, and a lot more freedom to do so.”

But there were not, he says, “as many adult eyes around as there are today.”

So why the title?

“I was pretty much of a goofball back then,” Carl says. “I got into a lot of trouble.

“I was also scared to death to walk by the Famous Artists School for fear of Rod Serling coming out. It was a terrifying television show.”

But a great title, half a century later.

(Double Parked in the Twilight Zone and Carl’s other books are available at Amazon (click here) and on Kindle. All proceeds from his latest book go the Wounded Warrior Project. His website is www.carladdisonswanson.com.) 

Ripples Of Hope

Last November — the day after his re-election — an emotional President Obama thanked scores of young campaign workers.

He said, “I am absolutely confident that all of you are going to do just amazing things in your lives. And what Bobby Kennedy called the ripples of hope that come out when you throw a stone in the lake — that’s going to be you.

The “ripples of hope” phrase was significant. In 1966, a group of anti-apartheid students invited Senator Robert F. Kennedy to the University of Cape Town. To their amazement, he accepted.

In perhaps his most famous speech, Kennedy said:

Few will have the greatness to bend history, but each of us can work to change a small portion of events….

Each time a man stands up for an ideal, or acts to improve the lot of others, or strikes out against injustice, he sends forth a tiny ripple of hope, and crossing each other from a million different centers of energy and daring, those ripples build a current which can sweep down the mightiest walls of oppression and resistance.

In August 2011, PBS aired “RFK in the Land of Apartheid:  Ripples of Hope.” It was produced and directed by Westonite Larry Shore, a film and media studies professor at Hunter College.

The film’s outreach director, John Suggs, lives — and serves on the RTM — in Westport.

RFKThe film tells the story of Senator Kennedy’s influential visit to South Africa. It also explores the role of individual South Africans who challenged the oppression and made a commitment to change.

It’s been shown all over the world — including the JFK Presidential Library in Boston; Washington, DC for dignitaries including Ethel Kennedy; the UN’s Geneva office, and throughout South Africa.

Today it’s in the news again. Because — once again — President Obama cited RFK’s impassioned plea.

Two presidents in the South African news.

Two presidents in the South African news.

Yesterday, in Cape Town, the president stood in the exact same spot where Kennedy spoke 47 years ago.  He delivered the words as firmly and passionately as RFK had.

Much has changed in the decades since. Nelson Mandela — 4 years into his 27-year prison sentence in 1966 — has been freed, won the Nobel Peace Prize, served as South Africa’s president, and now lies on his deathbed.

Like Mandela, Barack Obama has been elected as his nation’s 1st black president.

Still, there is work to be done. As President Obama reminds the world, Robert Kennedy’s words are as relevant as ever.

Today, the world remembers both Mandela and Kennedy. And — thanks to John Suggs and Larry Shore’s film — they have a deeply affecting way of doing so.

(Click here for 2 stories on the speech and film: Northeast Public Radio; Africa’s Mail & Guardian. Also of interest: John and Larry are hard at work  — and seeking funding — on a new film, chronicling Sen. Edward Kennedy’s picking up the US anti-apartheid banner after the death of his brother.)

Ethel Kennedy, Larry Shore and John Suggs, at the RFK film's screening in Washington.

Ethel Kennedy, Larry Shore and John Suggs, at the RFK film’s screening in Washington.

 

 

The Mianus River Bridge — 30 Years Later

Thirty years ago today — at 1:28 a.m. — the Mianus River bridge collapsed.

Anyone living in this part of the country in 1983 remembers that tragedy. Three people were killed when 2 cars and 2 tractor-trailers plunged 70 feet from I-95 in Greenwich.

If it had happened during rush hour, or any time during the day — as it easily could have — the toll would have been far worse.

A gaping hole shows the Mianus River bridge collapse.

A gaping hole shows the Mianus River bridge collapse.

The Mianus River Bridge collapse was caused by the failure of 2 pin-and-hanger assemblies that held the deck in place. The culprits were corrosion from water buildup, due to improper roadwork 10 years earlier; the long-term effects of salt (put down during winter storms, and in the salt marsh below) — and inadequate inspection resources.

Two tractor-trailers and 2 cars plunged 70 feet into the salt marsh below.

Two tractor-trailers and 2 cars plunged 70 feet into the salt marsh below.

It took 6 months for the bridge to reopen. All that time, the Post Road and other streets in Greenwich were gridlocked. Simple trips between Westport and New York lengthened substantially.

The Mianus River bridge has been completely reconstructed. The disaster caused other pin and hanger bridges throughout the country to be re-examined, and reconstructed too.

But 30 years later — and in the aftermath of the I-5 Skagit River bridge collapse in Washington state — fears are rising again about the state of the nation’s infrastructure. Concern is particularly high in places like Connecticut, where age, harsh weather and heavy traffic enact a heavy toll.

We seldom think of the I-95 bridge that spans the Saugatuck River in Westport. It’s just part of the landscape, and the new Saugatuck redevelopment — harnessing the beauty of the water, handsome architecture and the vibrancy of a very walkable neighborhood — makes it even easier to ignore.

Yet according to Transportation for America, that bridge (and the less traveled, but also important Merritt Parkway span between Exits 41 and 42) are “structurally deficient.”

The Westport News says that term is applied when

the National Bridge Inventory evaluation system gives a rating of “poor” or worse to the deck of the bridge, the superstructure underpinning the roadway deck or the substructure, which includes piers as well as columns and crossbars that hold up the substructure and deck. These are bridges that require significant “maintenance, rehabilitation or replacement.”

Fortunately, the News added,  state Department of Transportation spokesman Kevin Nursick

said the deficient bridges do not compromise public safety immediately. The “structurally deficient” category is a serious concern, he said, but does not mean a bridge is unsafe for travel, though repairs are needed to restore the bridge’s original load standards when new.

But bridges do collapse. Thirty years after life in Greenwich was thrown into chaos, let’s hope the lessons learned are still being heeded.

(For a History Channel video on the Mianus River tragedy, click here.)

Congratulations, Graduates!

As Staples’ Class of 2013 graduates this afternoon, it’s a good time to celebrate past classes.

Like the school’s Class of 1933.

At Staples 80 years ago they witnessed the 1st issue of Inklings, the school newspaper; the formation of a student council, and — big news! — the purchase of a mimeograph machine. In a student straw poll before the fall election, President Hoover outpolled Governor Franklin Roosevelt, 111-83.

Alert “06880” reader John Karrel passed along Jimmy Restaino’s late Aunt Sadie’s graduation photo.

SHS Class of 33

Like students today, Staples seniors showed a variety of emotions. Some looked happy and confident; others were a bit anxious. (Hey, it was the depths of the Depression.)

There are differences, of course. In 1933, 45 seniors graduated. Today, Staples hands diplomas to 463.

And check out those jackets, ties and dresses. It’s been a long time since Staples students dressed like that for their class photo.