Tag Archives: Frederick T. Bedford

Futures And Options: Bridgewater And Nyala Farms

Ever since Edward T. Bedford bought a farm in 1910, and his son Frederick raised award-winning Guernsey milk cows there, “Nyala” — named after antelopes he saw in Africa — has been one of Westport’s most cherished sites.

There was concern in the late 1960s, when Stauffer Chemical Company bought the 53-acre property between Greens Farms Road and the Sherwood Island Connector.

They planned a large office park on the site — the first of its kind in Westport. After long negotiations with the town and the Greens Farms Association, an agreement was reached.

Stauffer’s worldwide headquarters — just a few yards from I-95 Exit 18 — would be unobtrusive. The rolling hills and meadows — including an iconic well — would remain largely undisturbed.

Nyala Farms office complex. I-95 is at the right; the Sherwood Island Connector is at the bottom.

Similar fears arose nearly 20 years later, when Stauffer — facing financial difficulties over pollution issues, and an audit by the government — sold Nyala Farms to Bridgewater Associates. for $130 million.

It was one of 2 Westport properties owned by the world’s largest hedge fund. The other was Glendinning Place, off Weston Road.

Much to neighbors’ relief at both sites, Bridgewater has been a largely responsible steward of both sites.

Nyala Farms, last week. (Photo/JD Dworkow)

The Glendinning land was sold to David Waldman in 2023, for $10.6 million, and Bridgewater moved out. Last month, the family office of Bridgewater founder Ray Dalio and his wife Barbara bought it back, for $20.4 million. No announcement has been made as to its future, but 15 units of housing proposed by Waldman will not be built.

Last week, a few miles south, neighbors of Nyala Farms were surprised to receive notices about a meeting to be held in the Bridgewater office park 4 days later. The letter said Bridgewater would “share some exciting updates about the future of the Nyala campus and, importantly, to hear your perspective.”

At that session, one attendee tells “06880,” they and others — listening in person and online — were told that the hedge fund is considering selling the property.

Five buildings (brown), set amid hills and meadows. 

The potential buyer is Hartford HealthCare. The network — with 500 locations in 185 towns, including 3 on Post Road East and Post Road West, plus St. Vincent’s Behavioral Health on Long Lots Road (the former Hall-Brooke) — would consolidate those locations at Nyala Farms, meeting attendees say.

Bridgewater currently uses 3 of the 5 buildings there. The remaining 2 would continue to be rented to other tenants. The total area is 372,000 square feet.

One neighbor tells “06880” that while Bridgewater has “largely” kept to its agreement regarding care and upkeep of the open space — as evidenced by the abundance of wildlife on the property — there are concerns about additional traffic Hartford HealthCare might bring.

Nyala Farms well, with an office building far in the background. (Photo/Mary Beth Murray)

According to someone familiar with the situation, there has been no sale. For many years, Bridgewater has evaluated a range of long-term options for Nyala Farms.

This includes a sale in which the firm would remain, but as a tenant — not an owner.

The hedge fund continues to assess a wide range of options.

Over time, Bridgewater has expanded its footprint globally. With offices now in New York, Singapore and Shanghai, it looks to increase proximity to clients, expanding its talent pool, and better serving its employee base.

Buildings (right), and the original Nyala Farms structure (left).

The person familiar with the situation says that Bridgewater and Hartford HeatlhCare have met with town officials, as well as neighbors, to discuss HHC’s preliminary vision if they were to purchase the property.

The discussions included Bridgewater as a tenant — with preservation of the external footprint, and the natural integrity of the grounds.

The only change proposed by Hartford Healthcare would be to use one of the 5 buildings for medical use, during normal business hours.

Other parties have also expressed interest in the property. Discussions will continue, with no timeline urgency.

In the meantime, Bridgewater continues to be Westport’s second highest taxpayer.

60 Nyala Farms LLC — the company that officially owns the complex — had an assessed value of $83,331,700 on the 2024 Grand List. That trailed only Connecticut Light & Power ($144,150,180). In third place: Bedford Square Associates LLC, at $51,520,000. (Hat tip: Andrew Colabella)

(“06880” covers Westport businesses, real estate, the environment and local history. Sometimes they all intersect. If you enjoy stories like this, please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

Friday Flashback #465

Summer is over — realistically, if not literally.

Kids are back in school. If they still write that traditional “What I did over summer vacation” essay — hundreds of Westport boys and girls will recount their weeks at Camp Mahackeno.

They’ve done it for 80 years. The Westport Weston Family YMCA’s camp has grown and evolved quite a bit, since the original Y camp began in 1938, at Doubleday Field (between Saugatuck and Kings Highway Elementary Schools — or, as they were then known, Staples High and Bedford Junior High).

No photos exist from the original camp at Doubleday. This is an early scene from the present Mahackeno site.

That first year 58 boys enjoyed sports, nature study, crafts, songs, storytelling, and swimming at Compo Beach.

In 1942 the Y was offered 32 acres, near the then-new Merritt Parkway.

F.T. Bedford — son of the Y’s founder, Edward T. Bedford — said his family’s trust would pay half the price, provided the town ponied up the other half.

Within a few weeks, Westporters pledged their portion:  $10,000.

In 1945 — exactly 80 years ago — the YMCA camp had a home of its own.

An early scene: Pledge of Allegiance.

The next year — at F.T. Bedford’s request — the name was changed to “Mahackeno.” That honored “Mahackemo” (with an “m”), a chief of the Norwalke Indian tribe who in 1639 met Roger Ludlow and traded land between the Saugatuck and Norwalk Rivers — including that very spot — for wampum and other goods.

Generations of boys swung on a rope suspended from the parkway bridge, clambered over (and almost drowned under) a giant World War II-surplus float, and swam, canoed and fished in the river.

Fun on the river.

They played baseball on dusty fields, did arts and crafts in rustic cabins, and slept out in the woods.

There was boxing, too.

Girls joined Camp Mahackeno in 1969,

It expanded over the years. Mahackeno now includes a heated outdoor pool with a splash pad, a dock for canoeing and paddle boating, 2 large slides, a climbing and bouldering wall, laser tag and mini-golf.

Campers also enjoy an archery pavilion, playgrounds, a gaga pit, basketball courts, sports fields, picnic areas, fire pits, wooded trails, and an amphitheater.

This year, over 1,000 youngsters attended Mahackeno. Plenty are 2nd, even 3rd, generation campers.

They were joined by nearly 200 teenage and young adult counselors — many of whom had been campers themselves.

Registration for Camp Mahackeno’s next season begins in January.

Until then, enjoy these photos of the early years.

 

(Most photos courtesy of Westport Weston Family YMCA archives)

 In 1953 — 8 years after the camp opened at Mahackeno — Westport artist Stevan Dohanos drew this Saturday Evening Post cover.

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Y’s Bedford Fund: Ruth’s Gift Keeps On Giving

The Bedford family is the gift that keeps on giving.

In 1923, Edward T. Bedford endowed and built the YMCA downtown.

In 1944 his son, Frederick T. Bedford, provided the funding to buy Camp Mahackeno, on Wilton Road.

Camp Mahackeno, shortly after the name was changed from Camp Bedford.

In 2015 — 92 years after the Y opened, and soon after it moved to the Mahackeno campus — the organization received $40 million from the estate of Ruth T. Bedford: Edward’s granddaughter, and Frederick’s daughter. She died the previous year, at 99.

She gave similar amounts to Norwalk Hospital (where she volunteered for decades), and Foxcroft, the private girls’ school she had attended in Virginia.

Ruth — a trustee emeritus of what is now known as the Westport Weston Family Y — wanted the Y to change lives for the next 100 years.

In 2015, the YMCA board of trustees established the Bedford Family Social Responsibility Fund. Earnings from the endowment support organizations that provide direct or supplemental educational opportunities. As a result the Fund supports a wide range of programs.

Ruth Bedford, with longtime YMCA supporters Lester Giegerich and Dr. Malcolm Beinfield.

Last week, the Y honored the 2023 grant recipients of the Bedford Family Social Responsibility Fund. 31 organizations local non-profits received over $315,000

At the ceremony, Westport Y CEO Anjali McCormick said, “Ruth had no patience for ostentatious displays of wealth and shunned attention for her philanthropic contributions. She is the embodiment of the Y’s social responsibility pillar standing firmly by the idea that you don’t need more money than you need to live on, and that you have a responsibility to give back.

“Ruth’s legacy is enduring. Though she had no children, she continues to touch the lives of hundreds and thousands of children and youth each year, through and because of your organizations. The breadth and depth of creativity and innovation in your programming is inspiring. We love that you are forward thinking, we love that you are solution oriented, we love that you are preparing future generations and the world to be a better place.”

Recipients include:

  • A Better Chance of Westport
  • Achievement First Bridgeport Academy
  • Adam J Lewis Academy
  • Bridgeport Caribe Youth Leaders
  • The Carver
  • CT Institute: Refugees & Immigrants
  • Family & Children’s Agency
  • First Serve Bridgeport
  • Greater Connecticut Youth Orchestra
  • Hall Neighborhood House
  • Horizons: CT State Norwalk, Greens Farms Academy, Notre Dame Catholic High School

Middle school students in Greens Farms Academy’s Horizons program.

  • Housatonic Community College Foundation
  • Kids Empowered by Your Support
  • The Klein Memorial Auditorium Foundation
  • Mercy Learning Center of Bridgeport
  • Neighborhood Studios of Fairfield County
  • New Beginnings Family Academy
  • Norwalk Community College Foundation
  • Norwalk Housing Authority
  • Norwalk Symphony Orchestra
  • Person to Person
  • Project Morry
  • Shepherds Mentors
  • Silvermine Arts Center, Art Partners Program
  • Smart Kids with LD
  • Staples Tuition Grants
  • University of Bridgeport, STEM on Wheels
  • Suzuki Music School
  • Wakeman Memorial Association

Edward T. and Frederick T. Bedford would be very proud.