Please support “06880” — thanks!
Click here to help support “06880” via credit card or PayPal. Any amount is welcome, appreciated — and tax-deductible! Reader contributions keep this blog going. (Alternate methods: Please send a check to “06880”: PO Box 744, Westport, CT 06881. Or use Venmo: @blog06880. Or Zelle: dwoog@optonline.net. Thanks!)
GET THE “06880” APP
The “06880” app (search for it on the Apple or Android store) is the easiest way to get “06880.” Choose notifications: whenever a new post is published, or once or twice a day. Click here for details.
SUBSCRIBE TO '06880' BY EMAIL -- IT'S FREE!
Join 12K other subscribersSEARCH THE “06880” ARCHIVES
“06880” WEATHER
Recent Comments
- Lou Weinberg on “Primary Trust”: Tender Script, Rich Characters, Unexpected Turns
- Janine Scotti on “Primary Trust”: Tender Script, Rich Characters, Unexpected Turns
- Joyce Hergenhan on “Primary Trust”: Tender Script, Rich Characters, Unexpected Turns
- Adrian Little on Roundup: Winslow Park Dogs, Canal Beach Trash, Y Healthy Kids …
- Jamie Walsh on Roundup: Winslow Park Dogs, Canal Beach Trash, Y Healthy Kids …
-
Recent Posts
- “Primary Trust”: Tender Script, Rich Characters, Unexpected Turns
- Roundup: Winslow Park Dogs, Canal Beach Trash, Y Healthy Kids …
- “Students Speak”: Teen Volunteers Change Lives — And Their Own
- Pic Of The Day #3290
- Roundup: AI & Local Businesses, Kevin Christie & Rotary, Fundraisers & Fun …
- Sustainable Westport Serves Up Town’s “Restaurant Champions”
- Pic Of The Day #3289
- “Savannah Sipping Society” Sparkles
- Staples Players Rewind: “Urinetown”
- Roundup: Pop-ups, Praise, Plaudits …
Bored? Wander through ‘06880’
Pages
Categories
- Arts
- Beach
- Categories
- Children
- Downtown
- Economy
- Education
- Entertainment
- Environment
- Friday Flashback
- History
- Library
- Local business
- Local politics
- Longshore
- Looking back
- Media
- Obituaries
- Organizations
- People
- Photo Challenge
- Pic of the Day
- Places
- Police
- Politics
- Question Box
- Real estate
- religion
- Restaurants
- Saugatuck
- Sports
- Staples HS
- Street Spotlight
- technology
- Teenagers
- Totally random
- Transportation
- Unsung Heroes
- Weather
- Weston
- Westport Country Playhouse
- Westport life
- YMCA
Linkages
- Celebrate Westport (town calendar)
- CTBites
- Dan Woog.com
- Finding Westport
- Inklings
- MoCA Westport
- Our Town Crier
- Photography in my Life (Katherine Hooper)
- Preserve Westport
- Prill Boyle’s Defying Gravity
- Westport Journal
- Westport Local Press
- Westport News
- Westport Weston Chamber of Commerce
- WestportNow.com
- Wheels2U – Westport Transit District
- Wordpress.com
Tag Archives: Patagonia
Westport Shows Her True Colors
Severe thunderstorms moved through Westport early this evening.
And then…

(Photo/Jessica Isaacs)
Finally, a bit later…
Shovel Brigade
After a midday lull, snow began falling again. This crew braved the elements, to shovel the sidewalk outside Patagonia:
The forecast falls for snow to taper off in late afternoon.
“We Rob Banks”
In 1968 — a few months after the movie “Bonnie and Clyde” swept the nation — a few Staples seniors and friends thought it would be cool to imitate the legendary outlaws.
The high school campus was open; students came and went as they pleased during free periods (and sometimes during not-so-frees). It was spring; giddiness filled the air. Hey, why not?!
Five guys dressed up like ’20s gangsters. They drove downtown, sauntered into Westport Bank & Trust — now Patagonia — and, with a “getaway car” idling outside, pulled out a fake .38 pistol and said, “Stick ’em up!”
Ha ha!
A few customers scrambled for cover. The tellers didn’t know what to think, but eventually realized it was just a prank. Cops were called, and hauled the Gang of 5 across the street to the police station.
The Westport Town Crier covered the “let’s pretend” robbery jovially. They described the teenagers’ suits and fedoras in detail.
Times sure have changed. Banks — not to mention the ATF, FBI and NSA — don’t look kindly on fake stick-ups.
If this stunt happened today, a full-scale investigation would be held. School administrators and the Board of Education can’t have kids dressed as bank robbers leaving school in the middle of the day, then pretending to rob a bank.
And the Westport Police would certainly not allow 5 teenagers, dressed in fedoras and holding cigarettes, to pose jauntily in the station lobby, looking like they’ve just pulled off the heist of the century.

The Town Crier photo of (from left) Thomas Skinner, Stephen Ambrose, Michael Simonds, Frank Rawlinson and Anthony Dohanos. Anthony posted the photo on Facebook. He now lives in Hawaiii — far from the scene of the “crime.”
Posted in Local business, Looking back, Media, Police, Staples HS, Teenagers
Tagged Anthony Dohanos, Bonnie and Clyde, Patagonia
Robert Lambdin’s Old Mural Gains New Life
Westport has a poor batting average for saving old homes.
But when it comes to preserving murals, it’s all grand slams.
Restored murals by John Steuart Curry and other noted artists hang in our public schools, fire station and Town Hall.
The Westport Art Rescue Committee — led by the late Mollie Donovan, her sister Eve Potts, Judy Gault Sterling and Ann Sheffer, among others — saved Robert Lambdin’s WPA-era “Pageant of Juvenile Literature” when Saugatuck Elementary School was converted to senior housing. It’s now on display at the Westport Library, admired by hundreds of people every day.
Lambdin also painted the grand “Saugatuck in the 19th Century” — actually 3 works. Two — dating to 1964-65 — were installed in the handsome main lobby of Westport Bank & Trust Company, which commissioned the work.
They remained there as the local bank was swallowed up in a series of takeovers by now-forgotten, bigger ones. The building — in the heart of downtown — is now Patagonia. The cool, functional clothing store has lovingly preserved Lambdin’s murals.
The other “Saugatuck in the 19th Century” painting was hung at Westport Bank & Trust’s Charles Street branch — in the heart of Saugatuck. It was painted around 1969, when the branch opened.
That large mural depicts a lively Saugatuck. It shows agriculture, stables, the railroad and river trade; businesses like Elonzo Wheeler’s button factory; the Bridge Street bridge, and the Saugatuck Bank (Westport Bank & Trust’s forerunner), whose founding partners included Horace Staples.
Though the view was composed with artistic license, Lambdin conducted painstaking research. Town residents modeled for him, including (at the center) Captain Serano Allen.
The Saugatuck mural was a point of pride in the neighborhood, even as the branch lost its local roots. Eventually it became a TD Bank.
When TD (whatever those initials stand for) closed the branch last November, the mural’s future was unknown.
The building is being sold. The mural is headed for storage.
But — thanks to town art curator Kathie Motes Bennewitz, and the Westport Arts Advisory Committee — “Saugatuck in the 19th Century” has a new life.
After touch-up work, it will hang in Town Hall. An exhibit is planned too.
The gift from TD Bank is valued at $25,000.
But you can’t put a price on preserving history.
Posted in Arts, Library, Local business, Looking back, Organizations, People, Saugatuck
Tagged Kathie Motes Bennewitz, Mollie Donovan, Patagonia, Robert Lambdin, Westport Bank & Trust
Brrrrring It On!
Temperatures struggled to reach the mid-teens this afternoon.
This shot of Patagonia — taken from the warmth of the Y — sums up the day:
Tomorrow will be 25. On Sunday and Monday, expect rain — with temperatures in the mid-40s.
Tuesday, it’s back down to 12 degrees. That’s the high.
Welcome to New England!
Broad Stripes And Bright Stars
For years, the flag flying over Patagonia has looked pretty ratty.
Not as tattered as the one Francis Scott Key saw over Fort McHenry — but close.
These days, a big, new and handsome flag stands proudly downtown.
Just in time for Memorial Day.
Comments Off on Broad Stripes And Bright Stars
Posted in Downtown, Local business
Tagged American flag, Patagonia
An Accident A Day?
Over the past few weeks, pedestrians have been hit crossing the Post Road near Shake Shack and in front of Playhouse Square.
A body was discovered on the I-95 Exit 18 entrance ramp.
And every day, it seems, there are automobile accidents everywhere in town.
This morning around 10:30, a westbound driver on the Post Road near Patagonia suddenly veered across the street, slamming into a car parked in front of Restoration Hardware.
In the words of Sgt. Phil Esterhaus: “Be careful out there.”
Posted in Downtown, Local business, Police
Tagged Patagonia, Post Road, Restoration Hardware












