Photo Challenge #471

In the Middle Ages, barbers were busy.

They cut hair. They extracted teeth. And they performed surgery.

Part of their profession was a pole. Patients were encouraged to grip onto it, to encourage blood flow (blood-letting was a key to success). The bloody bandages  were symbolized by red and white stripes.

That’s a far cry from today’s barbers, who are more at home with scissors and gels.

Most barber poles have gone the way of leeches. But a few remain in Westport.

One is at the Riverside/Saugatuck/Treadwell Avenue intersection, across from the VFW.

It’s easy to notice. It’s outside Riverside Barber Shop, a small spot where owner Tammy serves many satisfied customers.  (Click here to see.)

The barber pole was also last week’s Photo Challenge. It proved to be a snip — er, snap — for Dan Vener, Stan Skowronski, Matthew Mandell, Celeste Champagne, Jeff Jacobs, Fran Thomas, Fred Cantor, Dave Eason, Seth Schachter, Cindy Shumate, Karen Como, Jim McKay, Rick Benson, Claire Faucher, John Lisée, Mark Soboslai, Jerry Kuyper, Clark Thiemann, Michelle Garvey, Todd Ehrlich, Walter Rescorla, Pete Powell, Andrew Colabella, Nancy Axthelm and Michael Simso.

FUN FACTS: Decades ago, the small parking lot for Riverside Barbers was the site of a milk vending machine for Clover Farms … the forerunner of Stew Leonard’s.

And Martha Stewart’s catering business began just a few yards away.

This week’s Photo Challenge is much tougher.

If you know where in Westport you would see this, click “Comments” below.

And sorry — saying “a house at #68” is not acceptable. Be specific!

(Photo/Jay Dirnberger)

(If you enjoy our weekly Photo Challenge — or any other “06880” features — please support our work with a tax-deductible contribution. Just click here. Thank you!)

 

 

Roundup: Snowpocalypse, Dog Doos (Don’t!) …

As the first snowstorm in a couple of years headed to Westport yesterday, residents took to the grocery stores as if preparing for the Blizzard of ’88, Hurricane Katrina and The End of the World As We Know It, simultaneously.

This was the scene at Trader Joe’s:

If you survived this meteorological disaster, click “Comments” below.

==================================================

Speaking of snow: Jerry Kuyper calls this “the joy of the first 90 seconds of shoveling”:

(Photo/Jerry Kuyper)

And this was the scene on the Sherwood Island Connector, before plowing:

(Photo/Tracy Porosoff)

Here’s Cross Highway:

(Photo/Claudia Sherwood Servidio)

Snow showers and flurries are predicted through 1 p.m. today.

==================================================

In the wake of yesterday’s story about unleased dogs at Winslow Park, an alert “06880” reader writes about another favorite spot:

“On a walk through Longshore this morning, I encountered no less than half a dozen cases of dog owners leaving their pet’s droppings in little plastic bags, some prominently decorating the posts supporting the wooden roadside guard-rails. Quite pleasant.

After viewing 4 or 5 such transgressions, I came across this egregious scene. One or more selfish and inconsiderate dog owners designated this intersection as their official dog-doo drop off place.

In addition the half dozen doo bags I witnessed, I saw 3 or 4 unbagged transgressions along the way.

Winslow Park has long since gone to the dogs, and Compo Beach is a doggie domain for most of the spring, fall and winter.

We know that dogs are forbidden from the Longshore golf course at all times, so why not make Longshore a dog-free zone entirely?

The dog-culture aesthetic pictured above represents a strong argument for reserving Longshore as strictly human-friendly haven.

We should also consider the possibility of carving out a portion of Winslow Park as a “human only,” zone because is not a very welcome place for us non-dog-owning taxpayers!

=================================================

A couple of days before Snowmageddon, Les Dinkin captured this Compo Beach view, for our “Westport … Naturally” feature:

(Photo/Dinkin Fotografix)

==================================================

And finally … in 1955, Marian Anderson becomes the first Black artist to perform at the Metropolitan Opera, in Giuseppe Verdi’s “Un Ballo in Maschera.”

A decade and a half earlier, the Daughters of the American Revolution refused to let her sing to an integrated audience in Constitution Hall. Thanks to First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt, Anderson performed on Easter Sunday on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, before an integrated crowd of more than 75,000. Millions more listened by radio.

(What to do on a snowy day? Help support “06880.” Just click here — and thank you!)

Do You Remember These?

The retail history of Westport is littered with ghosts.

From banks to restaurants, record stores to grocery stores, once-thriving businesses are today only memories.

That’s the way the world works, of course. Westport is no different.

For every Gold’s and Mitchells — businesses nearing their 70th anniversaries — there are scores more that lasted 7 years.

Or 7 months.

Several years ago, Erin Regan made a list of places in Westport that no longer exist.

Some were well-remembered. Others were vague. A few were obscure.

This list is spectacularly incomplete. There are many blanks.

It is also by no means exhaustive. Thousands more places could be added.

And it does not include spaces that have been demolished or substantially altered (for example, Gene Hallowell’s gas station on Main Street which is now Vineyard Vines, or DeRosa’s restaurant and Riverside Barber, which are now a kayak rental and the recently closed Saugatuck Sweets).

But for a walk down memory lane, on a mid-winter day, it will do. (NOTE: The current tenant is listed in parentheses.)

Arnie Place — now Ulta — remains a Westport legend, 40 years later.

Arcudi’s, Chef’s Table (Aux Delices)
Arnie’s Place, Anthropologie (Ulta)
Arrow #1, Chinese Takeout (Lomito)
Arrow #2, Jasmine, Blu Parrot, Mystic Market (empty)
Barker’s, King’s, Ames (Super Stop & Shop)
Barnes & Noble #1 Pier 1 (BevMax)
Baskin-Robbins (AT&T Store)
Beefsteak Charlie’s, Mongolian BBQ (Shake Shack)
Cedar Brook (Patio.com)

The Cedar Brook Cafe — at one time the oldest continually operating gay bar in the country — was a few yards away from both a strip club and the state police barracks.

Chef’s Table, Wild Pear, Java (Mrs. London’s)
Charpentier’s Butcher Shop, Tacos or What? (Border Grille)
Colgan’s, Thompson’s Pharmacy, Ships, Eddie Bauer (Tiffany)
Connecticut State Police barracks (Walgreens)
Dairy Queen, Swanky Frank’s, Woody’s (Little Barn)
Franklin Simon, Carousel, Sam Goody’s #2 ([solidcore])
Hay Day (Maserati of Westport)
Fine Arts I & II Theaters, Restoration Hardware (Barnes & Noble)
Fine Arts III, Matsu Sushi (Basso)

The Fine Arts Theater was a longtime Post Road mainstay.

Fuddrucker’s, Leong’s Palace (Westport National Bank)
Genovese Pharmacy (Marshall’s Shoe Store)
Grand Union, Shaw’s (Fresh Market)
Häagen-Dasz (Finalmente)
Herman’s (Trader Joe’s)
IHOP, Westport Pancake House, Thaeroa Nail Spa (now empty)
Klein’s, Banana Republic (Oka)
Krazy Vin’s, Starbucks (Earth Animal)
Manero’s, John Harvard, Conte’s (Rizzuto’s)
Players Tavern, The Dressing Room, Positano (Gabriele’s Steakhouse)

The Dressing Room, next to the Westport Country Playhouse, was owned by 2 celebrities: Michel Nischan, and the even better known Paul Newman.

Post Cinema, Zany Brainy, Pompanoosuc Mills (Bassett Furniture)
Remarkable Book Shop, Talbots, Local to Market (next: Eleish Van Breems Home)
Rocco’s (Tengda)
Sam Goody’s #1, Alphagraphics, Pierre Deux, Qdoba (Salsa Fresca)
Vigilant Fire House, DeRosa’s Brick Oven Pizza, Neat (Oko)
Schaefer’s Sporting Goods (Dovecote, now closed)
Waldbaum’s, Barnes & Noble (the probably-never-opening Amazon Fresh)
Westport Bank & Trust (the recently departed Patagonia)
Westport Public Library (Domain, HSBC, Guess, Pop’TART, Freshii (Starbucks and Bond Vet)
Ye Olde Bridge Grille (Mar Silver).

Click “Comments” for additions, corrections, and — of course — memories.

(“06880” is your hyper-local source for news — and nostalgia. Please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

A few decades later, Susan Malloy created this “Main Street 1960” map for the Westport Historical Society.

Pics Of The Day #2454

“06880” photographer Claudia Sherwood Servidio says of this first-of-the-winter-snow photo on Cross Highway: “I was surprised to see a trick of light displayed a nonexistent full moon!”

Meanwhile, Jonathan Alloy captured this early snowfall scene.

Roundup: Michael Bolton, Long Lots Meeting, Cobs Bread …

Westporters are wishing a quick recovery to our neighbor, Michael Bolton.

In a note to fans yesterday, the worldwide pop star revealed he was diagnosed with a brain tumor just before Christmas. He was operated on immediately.

“Thanks to my incredible medical team, the surgery was a success,” he said on Facebook. “I am now recuperating at home and surrounded by the tremendous love and support of my family.”

Bolton will take a “temporary break” from touring, he added. Click here for a full story. (Hat tip: Leah Nash)

Michael Bolton

==================================================

The next meeting of the Long Lots School Building Committee is Tuesday (January 9, 6 p.m., Town Hall Room 307/309).

After an executive session to discuss contracts, a work session will include “possible modifications to plans and benchmarking.”

The public is welcome to attend, but may not participate in the work session.

Discussion continues on the Long Lots Elementary School project.

==================================================

Cobs Bread opened this morning. They replace Jersey Mike’s, in Compo Acres Shopping Center between Trader Joe’s and Pokeworks.

The “artisan bread” chain has over 700 franchises in Australia, New Zealand and Canada, with a smaller presence in the US.

Two other Connecticut locations are Stamford and Greenwich. Click here for the company website (and the menu).

(Photo/Sal Liccione)

===============================================

A box truck struck a utility pole on Post Road East yesterday morning, near Colonial Green.

Power and cable access was knocked out to nearly 600 customers in the downtown area.

Kudos to Eversource and Optimum, for their near lightning-quick response. Both restored service in about an hour.

Thanks too to the Westport Police, who quickly blocked off and diverted traffic between Compo Road, and Imperial and Myrtle Avenues.

Crews working on Post Road East utility pole. (Photo/Sal Liccione)

================================================

Though car thefts have declined recently in Westport, vigilance is still needed.

Ray Broady sends along a brief video from Ring (click here to see). It was posted by someone at the Westport train station, who saw a car pull up next to a parked vehicle.

A man jumped out and attempted to open the doors of several cars.

This is NOT what was filmed at the train station. 

==================================================

44 Compo Cove — perhaps the most-photographed house in Westport, standing proudly and oblivious to hurricanes and nor’easters for over a century just over the pedestrian bridge from Old Mill Beach — has also drawn plenty of attention as its new owners have begun the process of renovating and moving it a bit from the shore.

This was the scene yesterday, as workers began to place it in its new location:

(Photo/Matt Murray)

==================================================

This is not the first pileated woodpecker to be featured in our “Westport … Naturally” series.

But it may be the most active. Here he is, mid-peck:

(Photo/Paul Delano)

==================================================

And finally … David Soul, half the star of the 1970s hit TV show “Starsky & Hutch,” died Thursday. He was 80.

He also had a #1 hit in 1977, with this song:

Click here for a full obituary.

(“06880” is your reader-supported source for hyper-local news. Please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

Online Art Gallery #195

Ken Runkel opens the door to 2024.

Now our artists just have to walk on through.

This year — as we’ve done every week since this feature began, early in the pandemic — we welcome all kinds of submissions.

Watercolors, oils, charcoal, pen-and-ink, acrylics, lithographs, collages, macramé, jewelry, sculpture, decoupage, needlepoint — whatever you’ve got.

Email it to 06880blog@gmail.com. Share your work with the world! (PS: Please include the medium you’re working in — art lovers want to know.)

Age, level of experience, subject matter — there are no restrictions. Everyone is invited to contribute.

“Open Door Policy” (Ken Runkel)

Untitled (Kathleen Burke)

“1912 Model T — Touring.” Photographer Peter Barlow says, “despite Henry Ford’s famous line, ‘You can have any color you like as long as it’s black,’ there were red ones.  Also green and blue.”

“Just Out of the Bath” (Lawrence Weisman)

“Will it Ever Snow Again in 06880” (Steve Stein). Hey Steve: Maybe today!

(Entrance is free to our online art gallery. But please consider a donation! Just click here — and thank you!)

History Museum Bricks: An “06880” Apology

Yesterday, in an “Opinion” piece, “06880” reader Jamie Walsh stated that in the process of creating a new walkway, the Westport Museum for History & Culture had eliminated the personalized bricks donated in a fundraising drive a decade or so ago.

In fact, the Museum kept all the bricks, and reinstalled them alongside a new path, beginning on Avery Place.

Personalized bricks line the new pathway.

The post has been removed.

“06880” apologizes to the Westport Museum for History & Culture, and invites readers to see the bricks — and exhibits — for themselves.

Close-up view of the bricks. (Photo/David Krasne)

[OPINION] Pet Protections Needed At Winslow Park

Katerina Medina is the mother of 3 young girls. She writes:

When we moved to Westport in the summer of 2022, I could no longer withstand my daughters’ pressure to get a dog.

Our beloved Mishka is now a 1-year-old German shepherd. He is growing into his name, which means “Little Bear.”

A few short months back though, Mishka looked more like a fluffball who all humans wanted to pet — and some not very friendly dogs aggressively wanted to show him his place in the dogs’ hierarchy.

So with Mishka came not only joy, but also worries and responsibilities. After enjoying the local beaches last winter, we were forced to search for a new venue to walk Mishka in spring.

Mishka enjoys a Compo Beach sunset. 

That is how we discovered Winslow Park. From the first glance it struck me as an underdeveloped gem in the middle of Westport.

While some may prefer to see Winslow the way it is now, underutilized and not well maintained, I could not help but think how this park would benefit from having an enclosed dog space where young puppies, small breeds, fragile old dogs with health issues or dogs still learning to come back on recall, would run and play safely.

There would be well-paved roads, and beautifully landscaped native shrubs and flowers; maybe even a playground in a corner field at the Post Road and Compo Road North, while leaving most of the park and its trails to the hikers and responsible dog owners who may stroll the park instead of having their pets play in a confined space.

This vision was reinforced by an aggressive dog, who bit Mishka.

While most dog owners and their pets were friendly and happy to provide dog training advice, a very few did not belong in an open play area.

Having fun at Winslow Park. (Photo/Mark Mathias)

I did not feel safe having curious young Mishka attempting to interact with their aggressive, imposing dogs. After seeing another puppy injured by the same dog that attacked Mishka, we stopped visiting Winslow Park until recently.

And while dog bullies are less likely to pick on Mishka now, I still think an option to separate vulnerable dogs from all others would be a great addition to Winslow Park.

If the above is not a convincing argument, think of public safety. There are no barriers at Winslow Park to prevent dogs from running away. It is not surprising to read about runaway dogs, or those saved from traffic by good Samaritans.

While we are lucky to live in such a caring community, safety measures must be in place.

An accident last month prompted me to share my concerns with the community.

My mother was visiting. She was driving home from Trader Joe’s when a dog running away from Winslow jumped on Compo Road North, right in front of her.

She swerved to avoid hitting the dog. She hit the curb instead, getting a flat tire.

While she was shaken by the experience, I thought of how this event ended in the least bad scenario of all possible ones.

What if she jumped a curb and hurt someone else, or damaged someone’s property? What if she ended up injured? What if a dog was killed?

Winslow Park (Photo/Laura Robinson)

It is my opinion that the town should apply all efforts to prevent these sorts of situations in the future. With the growing human population, the dog population grows too. While most dog owners are responsible and caring, we as a public cannot count on their pets always acting as directed.

Local authorities should consider putting an enclosed dog play area at Winslow Park, or redeveloping it altogether to accommodate a wider public while still allowing our beloved pets their space.

Pic Of The Day #2453

Pedestrian bridge between Imperial Avenue and Westport Library/Levitt Pavilion parking lots (Photo/Toni Simonetti)

Friday Flashback #380

It’s been 10 years since the Westport Weston Family Y left downtown, for their new building by the Merritt Parkway.

Nearly a decade’s worth of newcomers live in Westport with no knowledge of what that area of downtown was like, from 1923 to 2013.

If you don’t know: the Y’s original Bedford building is now Anthropologie. It looks pretty much the same.

But Church Lane looked very different. The original main firehouse …

… was replaced in the 1970s by an expanded Y that managed to be as cramped and difficult to navigate as it was ugly.

David Waldman’s Bedford Square project took a couple of years to complete. The first step was moving the Kemper-Gunn House across Elm Street, to its present location (as Serena & Lily).

Kemper-Gunn House, at 35 Church Lane … 

… and in mid-move. (Photo/Wendy Crowther)

Then came a couple of years of construction.

Church Lane, near the corner of Elm Street. The large structure is the old YMCA.

A fence hid much of the construction from sight. It was decorated by artists, with Westporters as models.

Here’s a view from a construction vehicle:

A construction crane hovered over downtown. Onlookers were fascinated by its many moves, and its length and height.

At Christmas, a tree dangled at the top.

36 Elm Street was the site of several restaurants. The last was Villa del Sol. It was demolished (photo below), and replaced by parking in front of and adjacent to Bedford Square. In return, new stores were built across the street, next to Brooks Corner.

(Photo/Jen Berniker)

Anyone who has moved to Westport since 2015 thinks that Church Lane always looked the way it does now.

Anyone who lived here before remembers a very different scene.

==================================================

50 years ago today:

After a snowfall of over 7 inches of snow the night before, Elisabeth F.S. Solomon petitioned the town to build a new school for the disabled on 47 Long Lots Road, adjacent to Hall-Brooke Foundation. 

She had taken over the former “sanitarium” — founded in 1898 — in 1964, as its director. A stern leader, she posted guards and guard dogs at the entry to the Long Lots Road property.

The facility had endured scrutiny after one patient fatally strangled another, another set fire to the Compo Inn, and numerous lawsuits were fired for malfeasance. 

The establishment eventually fell into disrepair. Under severe government regulation, it was sold to St. Vincent’s Hospital in 2008. 

Part of the Hall-Brooke Hospital property.

(“06880” covers Westport from yesterday to today, and on to tomorrow. Please click here to support our work. Thank you!)