Tag Archives: Jackson Cregan

Roundup: Adam J. Lewis Academy, Wakeman Town Farm, Schools’ Code of Conduct …

Westporter Julie Mombello and her longtime friend Patty Lewis — former colleagues at Greens Farms Academy — have done spent a decade creating, building and growing Adam J. Lewis Academy.

The Bridgeport pre-K through 6th grade school honors Patty’s husband, who was killed on 9/11. He grew up poor in the Bronx, and never forgot the educational opportunities he was given at Dalton School and Hamilton College.

Adam J. Lewis Academy serves as a similar beacon of hope for 250 youngsters, who thrive in its child-centered, small-class, joyful and discovery-based environment. It is a shining example of the power of education to change lives, one youngster at a time.

Many Westporters support the school. A number of them were at Bridgeport’s Hartford HealthCare Amphitheater Friday night, for a fundraiser celebrating AJLA’s 10th anniversary.

Funds raised will help add one more grade each year, so students can continue to explore, learn and grow under the guidance of a superb staff.

To learn more about Adam J. Lewis Academy — including how to help — click here. For a 2021 “06880” story on Julie, Patty and their work, click here.

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There’s always something going on at Wakeman Town Farm.

Westport’s sustainability center offers educational workshops for all ages, internships, after-school environmental clubs, children’s summer camp programs, a farm stand and much more.

Evenings are packed with programs too. Many take place in Tim’s Kitchen, the homey, versatile space created in memory of Liz Milwe and Peter Wormser’s son.

One of the lesser-known, but not-to-be-missed, events there are “chef farm dinners.”

Noted local chefs cook fantastic meals, often using produce and herbs straight from WTF. Guests enjoy them at communal tables. In good weather, they stroll around the farm.

It’s a “hidden magical night,” says Alison Milwe Grace (Liz’s niece).

She should know. The founder of AMG Catering is one of the most popular of all Town Farm chefs.

She was at it again last week, offering a 4-course meal highlighted by bucatini with asparagus, pea shoot Meyer lemon pesto and local buratta, or lamb chops with fennel slaw and spiced yogurt. (No, the lamb did not previously live at the farm.)

Several students of one of Alison’s cooking classes came together. Two people who are in the same (non-Farm) woodworking class were surprised to see each other. Conversation was lively at the long tables, with folks who had just met.

“Food brings people together,” Alison notes. “For 3 hours, in beautiful surroundings, you can just enjoy yourself.

And, of course, the food is terrific.

There will be more chef farm dinners soon. Allison is already planning for her next ones — including October.

“There’s so much available then, right at the farm,” she says. “Kale, squashes, tomatoes, fresh herbs …”

Yum!

Alison Milwe Grace, with za’atar roasted carrots, served over whipped feta with mint-date “jus.”

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Over 40 parents have reacted to recent incidents of antisemitism and racism in Westport schools by looking at codes of conducts and restorative justice practices in other districts.

They’ve launched a website — Kind WPS — as the Board of Education examines revisions to its own policies, suggesting stronger measures than already planned. Click here for details.

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There’s plenty of great art on the walls of the Westport Woman Club’s annual art show.

At Friday night’s opening reception, and yesterday, there was also a Rock & Roll Hall of Famer providing piano music.

Mark Naftalin — inducted as the Paul Butterfield Blues Band’s keyboardist in 2015 — made the show even more special.

He won’t be there this afternoon. But you can still see this excellent show today (Sunday), from 2 to 5 p.m., at the WWC’s Bedford Hall (44 Imperial Avenue).

Mark Naftalin, at the Westport Woman’s Club piano. (Photo/Rowene Weems Photography)

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A proposal to develop 125 Riverside Avenue — the site of the historic Crossman-Coley house at the foot of Burr Road — will be explained this week.

Tomorrow (Monday, May 6, 7 p.m., Zoom), the Planning & Zoning Commission meeting begins with a pre-application by Vita Design for their plans. There will be no public comment, or vote.

The next night (Tuesday, May 7, 7 p.m., Zoom), a joint meeting of the Historic District Commission and Architectural Review Board will review and discuss the plans, including the notice of intent to demolish the house.

125 Riverside Avenue.

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The beaches are open for residents with stickers. Memorial Day, Camp Compo, REC-ing crew and the fireworks are around the corner.

Westport’s Parks & Recreation Department welcomes summer with a special Compo Beach family event on Saturday, May 25 (11 a.m. to 3 p.m.).

Activities include touch-a-truck, bouncy house, obstacle courses, food vendors and more. Everyone there gets a free raffle ticket too!

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Americans discard 20 million mattresses and box springs annually. 55,000 end up in incinerators and landfills each day.

Sustainable Westport Earthplace and Bye Bye Mattress can help.

They’re hosting a free mattress/box spring recycling event on Saturday, May 18 (8:30 to 11:30 a.m., Earthplace).

Used mattresses can be turned into carpet pads, exercise equipment cushioning, bike seats, insulation, air filters, and steel materials.

Unable to transport your mattress or box spring? Scout Troop 36 can pick it up (for a small donation). Click here for details.

Saving the planet, one mattress at a time. (Photo/Pippa Bell Ader)

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MoCA Westport is gambling that Westporters will love its new fundraiser.

“Gallery of Games Night – Deal Yourself In to Support the Arts” (May 17, 7 to 11 p.m) includes gaming tables, live music by the very talented Staples High School graduate Michelle Pauker, silent auction prizes. and drinks from Sono 1420. Click here for tickets, and more information.

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Club 203 — Westport’s social group for adults with disabilities — continues its fun schedule a with a night at Nutmeg Bowling in Fairfield (May 14, 6:30 to 8 p.m.).

Shoes and pizza are provided. As always, MoCA Westport will supply an art table.

Parents and guardians are welcome to stay at Nutmeg. A cash bar is available.

For more information, click here. Club 203 is on Instagram: @club203_ct.

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Sure, it’s early May. But that means the Sunrise Rotary Club’s Great Duck Race is less than 2 months away.

This year’s event is June 29. As always, it’s family friendly, fun and free. Of course, you can’t win the $5,000 first prize (or any other) if you don’t have “race” tickets.

Proceeds help fund a variety of important projects, here and abroad.

They’re available from any Sunrise Rotarian, and online here.

So how do you know who’s a Rotarian? They’ll be wearing special shirts, all around town. Check out the models below:

Looking ducky (from left): Mark Mathias, Pete Wolgast, Katie Augustyn, Ron Holtz, Bruce Paul.

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Missed Startup Westport’s Innovator of the Year award last week?

Interesting in finding out what ESPN CEO Jimmy Pitaro and ESPN host Mike Greenberg had to say about their network, the future of sports and the media, innovation, and Westport (the town they live in and love)?

Click below for the full show.

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Congratulations to Westport’s newest Eagle Scouts!

Jackson Cregan and Dylan Kurpiel of Troop 36 were honored yesterday, with a Court of Honor at Saugatuck Congregational Church.

Guest speaker Michele Sorensen, president of Friends of Sherwood Island, spoke about the importance of volunteerism and protecting the environment — both of which the new Eagle Scouts embody every day.

Eagle Scouts Dylan Kurpiel and Jackson Cregan. (Photo/Dan Woog)

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In January, Dr. Clarence Jones inspired a packed Westport Library audience, with his tales of a lifetime spent fighting racism and antisemitism.

On Friday, Rev. Martin Luther King’s 93-year-old speechwriter was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, by President Biden.

As anyone who heard him speak here knows, the honor is richly deserved.

 Dr. Clarence B. Jones receives the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

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Congratulations too to Frank Murgalo. The Marine Corps veteran (aka Santa Claus for the “06880”/Westport Downtown Association Holiday Stroll) organized and hosted a very successful fundraiser Friday night, at Joseph J. Clinton VFW Post 399.

The dinner and comedy show, featuring Rodney Norman, Howie Mason and Andrew Alfredo, was completely sold out.

Frank continues to work tirelessly for veterans. That’s no laughing matter!

Frank Murgalo works the room at the VFW.

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Lou Weinberg offers today’s gorgeous “Westport … Naturally” image. He writes:

“This male house finch has Darwin written all over it. Look at that beak!”

 (Photo/Lou Weinberg)

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And finally … happy May 5th!

(Every day is a holiday at “06880” — or at least, a chance to celebrate our hyper-local blog. We rely on reader support, so please click here to donate. Thank you!)

Roundup: Firefighters’ Coat Drive, “Wiz” Revival, Jackson Cregan’s Project …

The Westporter Uniformed Firefighters Charitable Foundation thanks the community for their generous donation: nearly 1 ton of coats and other winter items.

Last week, firefighters packed and transported it all to the Bridgeport Rescue Mission.

Special thanks go to volunteer coordinator Anna Rycenga, Staples Service League of Boys, the Westport Public Schools, and many town employees who supported the project.

Firefighters and friends, ready to head to Bridgeport.

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Also very successful: the Hackett family’s gently used sports equipment drive.

They collected gear for Leveling the Playing Field — a non-profit organization that helps underprivileged youngsters.

Like the firefighters, the Hacketts thank the community for their outpouring of support.


Bill, Gina, Alex and Daisy Hackett, with donated sports equipment.

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“The Wiz” is being revived on Broadway.

Of course, there’s a Westport connection.

Actually, two.

The original script was by Bill Brown, a longtime resident.

And the revival is co-produced by Ari Edelson.

After he starred with Staples Players — including directing the groundbreaking production of “Falsettos” — the 1994 alum graduated from both Yale and the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama.

He’s gone on to fame as a producer and director in the US and Europe.

Performances begin March 29. Click here for more information. (Hat tips: David Roth, Kerry Long)

A few years ago, Ari Edelson was honored with a Westport Arts Center Horizon Award. (Photo/Emily Hamilton Laux)

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Staples High School senior Jackson Cregan has made history.

Already an Eagle Scout, he received the Boy Scouts of America’s highest conservation award. He is only the third Scout so honored in Connecticut, in 108 years.

Jackson got the  Distinguished Conservation Service Award for completing 2 projects, and earning 13 natural science and conservation merit badges.

For his first project, he restored and created new dunes at Sherwood Island State Park. Jackson planted over 6,000 square feet of beach grass to do so, to prevent erosion.

 

Most Westporters spent yesterday scurrying around. With only 2 days until Christmas, it was a hectic — not a holly, jolly — time.

 

But “most” is not all.

 

At Compo Beach, a group of friends had plenty of time for football:

 

Meanwhile, not far away — despite air temperature of 27 degrees — a couple lounged in the water.

(Photos/Deirdre O’Farrelly)

 

Their dog had a different idea.

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To honor actor Paxton Whitehead, who died earlier this year, Westport Country Playhouse re-released “A Merry Little Christmas Carol,” a radio drama from 2020.

Whitehead — who performed the role of Ebenezer Scrooge — had graced the Playhouse stage many times previously.

The re-release includes an introduction by incoming artistic director Mark Shanahan, highlighting Whitehead and his career in the performing arts.

Click below to see:

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The boats are all gone from Ned Dimes Marina.

All that’s left are the docks and the reeds — and this wintry “Westport … Naturally” scene.

(Photo/Dinkin Fotografix)

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And finally … in honor of the “Wiz” revival:

(Ease your fingers on down to this link. Please click here to support “06880.” Thank you — and Merry Christmas!)

Sherwood Island Dune Restoration Takes Root

Twenty years ago, officials at Sherwood Island bulldozed all their dunes away. They wanted state park visitors to have an unimpeded Long Island Sound view, from the parking lot and concession stand.

It was not a great idea. It affected the coastal wildlife habitat, and lessened the shoreline’s resiliency to rising seas.

Five years ago, Friends of Sherwood Island board member Michele Sorensen wondered how her group could improve the dune habitat. Ecologist Juliana Barrett met Michele and then-park supervisor Jim Beschle on April 5, 2017. She said that to build out the dunes, they had to plant dominant grass before April 15, or after November 15.

That afternoon Michele ordered 800 American Beach Grass culms. She corraled up a small team of volunteers — including 2 grandchildren — to spend 4 days during Easter, planting.

Michele Sorensen, at the start of the dune restoration project.

The project has continued ever since.

Every year during Fairfield County Giving Day, the “Friends Garden Team” fundraises to buy plants, tools, signs and supplies. Michele provides a matching grant of up to $1,000. Last February’s effort was the best yet.

Westporter Bill Yaffa — whose company sells erosion control cloth — suggested using it at the park. An experimental sand patch had a 97% success rate (far better than the usual 60-85%). This spring the group will expand the areas they plant in sixfold, using jute cloth.

The dune restoration project, last August.

Since 2019 — when Michele became a University of Connecticut advanced master gardener — she has been assisted by nearly a dozen other master gardener graduates and interns from around Fairfield County, and local helpers like Westporter Lavinia Larsson and Barbara Dahm, now in her 80s.

Barbara’s connection with Sherwood Island dates back to when her parents brought breakfast, lunch and dinner, spending all day at the beach.

Current Staples High School sophomore Jackson Cregan and his father Johannes were key members of last November and April’s plantings too.

Jackson Cregan, hard at work.

Birds, butterflies and many other creatures have taken advantage of the restored dune habitat.

And no one has complained that they can’t see the shore from the parking lot or concession stand.

Friends Garden Team members Heather Williams (Westport Shellfish Commission) and Westporter Barrie Holmes, with hundreds of plantings.

Roundup: Black Bear, Private Ryan, Chad Knight …

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A black bear has been making its way south, from northern Fairfield County. On Saturday, it roamed around the Cranbury area of Norwalk.

Yesterday, the medium-sized mammal lumbered into Westport. Stella Wong spotted it in her Old Hill back yard, around 9 a.m.

“It looked healthy and beautiful,” she reports. Then it headed downhill, toward Wilton Road.

(Photo/Stella Wong)

Later yesterday, the bear was spotted at the Westport Weston Family YMCA, near Mahackeno.

No word on whether it had a membership pass.

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Last night’s Remarkable Theater showing of “Saving Private Ryan” was rained out.

It’s rescheduled for tomorrow (Tuesday, June 1, 8 p.m.). So you can extend your Memorial Day weekend one day.

Click here for ticket information, and future shows.

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Staples High School students raise funds for many worthy projects. They thank their donors, work hard — but in their busy day-to-day worlds, never share the results of their efforts.

Jackson Cregan remembers.

The 9th grader loves Sherwood Island. After raising funds for Friends of Sherwood Island, he sent along this update:

“100%  of your donations were used to purchase seagrass and jute erosion control cloth, trees and shrubs.

“In early April, I helped restore dunes. We planted 2,400 seagrass stems with 18 volunteers. In late April, we planted 125 trees and shrubs with 20 volunteers.

Jackson volunteers there nearly every week. He is learning from Michele Sorensen and other master gardeners. He helps with dune restoration, removing invasive species, tree planting, creating pollinator pathways, and maintenance.

Great work, Jackson! And thanks for letting all of us know what’s going on at our great state park.

Jackson Cregan, with Michele Sorenson.

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Congratulations to Chad Knight!

Yesterday the former Staples High School and Little League World Series star’s current team — Duke University — won the ACC championship, 1-0 over NC State. It was the Blue Devils’ 4th ACC baseball title — but first in 60 years.  

Knight — a 2-time state champion at Staples — batted .272, with 2 home runs, this year.

Chad Knight

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Memorial Day weekend’s rains meant a washout for many local businesses.

News12 sent a crew to Joey’s by the Shore. As expected, sales were slow. The popular deli/market had stocked up on supplies, expecting big crowds. But neighbors were stopping in. And the cameraman got some great shots, of Joey’s and Old Mill Beach.

Click here for the report.

Screenshot from yesterday’s News12 report.

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The Sunrise Rotary Club has missed 2 years’ worth of Great Duck Race fundraising efforts. Which means we haven’t seen Sunny the Duck bobbing in the Saugatuck River for 2 years either.

But the club is marching in today’s Memorial Day parade. And they’re marching with “Little Ralphie,” Sunny’s smaller counterpart.

Club members inflated Ralphie yesterday. They had a blast.

From left: Sunrise Rotary president George Masumian; members Jake Labate, Mark Mathias and Mike Hibbard. Little Ralphie is behind them. (Drone photo/Mark Mathias)

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Today’s “Westport … Naturally” photo includes this mommy and her 10 babies. Can you find them all?

(Photo/Molly Alger)

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And finally … B.J. Thomas died yesterday at his home near Dallas, of complications from lung cancer. He was 78.

Though best known for “Raindrops Keep Fallin’ on My Head” — the song from “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid,” which connected him forever with Westport’s Paul Newman and Weston’s Robert Redford — he had many other successes. Fifteen singles reached the Top 10, and he earned 5 Grammys.

I never liked “Raindrops.” But I sure did appreciate much of the rest of B.J. Thomas’ music. What a voice! (Click here for a full obituary.)