Tag Archives: Philip Sullivan

Honoring Perrin Delorey: The Sequel

Yesterday, “06880” posted a powerful speech from Monday’s Staples Tuition Grants ceremony. Philip Sullivan remembered his cousin, Perrin Delorey.

The Greens Farms Elementary School 4th grader died in an automobile accident in 2018. He would have joined Philip in graduating from Staples High this month. Philip helped lead an effort to create a scholarship in his cousin’s name.

Perrin’s father, James Delorey, also spoke movingly about Perrin’s life and legacy. James said:

I am so grateful to be here with my wife Dr. Angela Ryan, our 2 beautiful daughters, Perrin’s little sisters, Mireille and Elodie, and our families. Thank you have having us.

To those of you who didn’t know our son, Perrin was a thoughtful young man with a great future ahead of him. Angela and I talk about him all the time, and Mireille and Elodie do too. He truly is present in our family of 5. On our way here, Mireille and Elodie were talking about looking into Perrin’s blue eyes!

Perrin Delorey’s sisters, with a photo of their brother. 

You’re all at a huge moment in your lives, and in ours too. We know Perrin should be graduating from Staples right now – or, at least, doing great things in his senior internship.

All of Perrin’s friends are at the end of their high school careers, and many of them are here today, making plans for career, public service, university.

It has both difficult and wonderful to see all of your accomplishments these last eight years – performing in school plays, excelling at athletics, becoming astonishingly good baseball players, hockey players, making the most beautiful music, volunteering in our community and making the life of this community even richer, climbing mountains, becoming Eagle Scouts, becoming adults.

You’re all doing such an amazing job at all of these, and we love to see it happening.

I’m here tonight because Perrin’s classmates, led by his “identical cousin” Philip, have created the Perrin Ryan Delorey Do Your Best Award, a Staples Tuition Grant that – because of the generosity of so many at the 3-on-3 basketball tournament, at the Skate for Perrin at Longshore, at the Perrin Delorey Memorial Cup hockey game, or responding to our outreach, or to our generous coverage in “06880” — the award will be given in perpetuity to help students pursue their dreams of higher education.

Perpetuity is a long time, and we are so grateful for every one at Staples Tuition Grants who made this possible: Joan Gillman, Aiko Nose, Kara and Philip Sullivan, everyone who donated.

James Delorey

I was kindly asked for my thoughts about criteria – what do we want this award to represent. I think Jeff Brill of Westport Little League really got it right with the Perrin Ryan Delorey Sportsmanship Award, presented not to the “best” player, but to the player who works the hardest to improve and help their teammates.

We are so inspired by all the recipients of this award. This occasion makes me think forward about the continued adventures of Perrin’s friends and peers as they enter adulthood.

What will you teach us? Where will you take us? What will you teach others? What kind of families will you build? How many people will you help? Who will you love? What kind of lives will you make?

We had all these questions and great expectations for Perrin. Now have them for his little sisters, and, honest, we have them for all of you!

Perrin Delorey, at Yale Bowl.

We love watching his cousins, classmates and friends grow up. We are so proud of you as you accomplish great things, and we exult in you becoming who you are. We can’t help but wonder what kind of person Perrin would be today, what would he be interested in, and what great new things he would be teaching us.

I have a poster here of our last photo of Perrin as a Cub Scout. It’s the most grown up he looks in any photo, and it’s the one that is easiest to imagine him looking like as a high school senior.

It’s a photo from our annual end-of-year pack picnic at Compo Beach, just a week before he died. Mireille is going to this same picnic in a few days.

The last event of the picnic – of the Scouting year – is the great tug of war. All the photos are amazing. Determined smiles on every Cub Scout. Pure joy on the faces of the parents cheering them on.

Perrin is so handsome in this photo. He just looks so strong and confident. I’ve seen the same looks on your faces as we have watched you grow up these last eight years.

In this Cub Scout tug of war photo, it’s clear, Perrin is playing the game right, doing his best, making a difference for his team, pulling as hard as he can. What a bright future that boy had.

What a bright future you all have.

I am so excited for all of you. Have fun at college, learn something from everyone you meet. Be kind and do your best to make their experience an excellent one, too. You have an amazing future, and you’re going to make a difference in other people’s lives.

So now, and as you go on your amazing adventures, we ask you to do this from time to time: Take a deep breath, say your friend Perrin’s name out loud — “Perrin” — and do your best to help someone else’s dreams come true.

I love you. We love you. Thank you.

(For more information on Staples Tuition Grants — including how to donate to the Perry Ryan Delorey Do Your Best Award, and others — click here.)

Honoring Perrin Delorey

Last night’s Staples Tuition Grants ceremony was a highlight of graduation season.

81 students received $420,000 in scholarships, at Staples Tuition Grants’ annual ceremony. The average award — $5,186 per recipient — is a record in STG’s 85-year history.

But the greatest highlights were speeches honoring Perrin Delorey. A 4th grader at Greens Farms Elementary School when he died in an automobile accident, he would have graduated this month with Staples’ Class of 2026.

Philip worked with his uncle and aunt, James and Angela Delorey, his mother Kara Sullivan, and his and Perrin’s classmates, to endow a new Perrin Delorey Do Your Best Award. Philip and James spoke lovingly of the legacy Perrin set, and of the importance of remembering and honoring him.

Their words brought tears to many in the Staples library. They deserve a wider audience too. Philip said:

Thank you all so much for taking time out of your busy schedules to be here tonight. I know this time of the year is pretty crazy.

Standing in front of you right now is an experience that is hard to put into words. I see a room filled with classmates, friends, families, and community members coming together to celebrate something so wonderful. I am so blessed that I was among the many that had a role in making it happen.

Philip Sullivan, at last night’s Staples Tuition Grants ceremony. (Photo/Dan Woog)

I think I speak for all of my graduating classmates when I say that high school is a journey with many challenges and self-discoveries. It is for this reason that graduation is so special to all of us.

Collectively and individually, we have completed tasks and achievements that in some cases were beyond our wildest dreams. And now, the universe of possibilities opens for us as we prepare to take steps toward college, career development, and an endless sea of choices for how we continue following our hopes and dreams. The mere idea of graduating from a school life that we have known since we were little kids, and entering the world as adults is sometimes more exciting than I can fathom.

As a 4th grader in Westport, my cousin Perrin was just like any of us at that age. He was playful, silly, quirky, had countless inside jokes and funny games that he shared with me and his friends — and like the rest of us, he was full of hopes and dreams.

He loved fancy cars and international travel. He played many sports, baseball and hockey being his favorites. Together we endured religion classes, shared holiday traditions and piano recitals and karaoke nights, and produced our own home movies. I am sure that many in the Class of 2026 see a bit of themselves in their memory of who Perrin was as a kid.

Philip Sullivan created these sports cards honoring his cousin, and passed them out to last night’s Tuition Grants recipients.

When Perrin’s life ended, my class faced a new reality that many of us had likely never considered — understanding our own vulnerability and wondering what would happen to our own dreams.

But almost as instantly as he was gone, a tremendous wave of community support swarmed in to aid the blow to our elementary school spirits.

Several good samaritans from Westport Little League organized a way for us to be together as a community. Friends, family, coworkers and acquaintances from near and far showed up. They let me and my family know that we weren’t alone in our grief. The communities of Westport, our schools, our clubs, our friends immediately saw solidarity in being together and there for each other at an otherwise very difficult time.

To my Aunt Angela and Uncle James, and to my grandparents also here tonight: your strength and love continues to inspire us all.

It’s this same spirit of widespread support and love, centralized in Westport and spanning beyond our town borders, that came together this fall and spring, to raise the more than necessary funds to establish the Perrin Ryan Delorey Do Your Best Award.

Perrin Delorey, with a Little League game ball he was awarded.

Just as Perrin represented the young kid in all of us as Westport 4th graders, the Staples graduates represent the best of Westport youth. The recipients of the Perrin Ryan Delorey Do Your Best Award receive not only the gift of a scholarship to help them achieve their dreams, but the reminder that they come from a community that loves and believes in them so much, that hundreds of donors made generous contributions of all sizes, to support them in their dreams, in honor of a life lost too early.

This year’s recipients are near and dear to me because they have been my friends and classmates since I was in kindergarten. Just like Perrin represented all of us when we were in 4th grade, these recipients represent the class of 2026.

They are hard working, kind, unique, strong, and filled with hopes and dreams. If there was ever a way to turn a tragedy into something joyful and hopeful, it is through the awarding of the Perrin Ryan Delorey Do Your Best Award to some of Staples High School’s brightest and most deserving students. I am filled with gratitude to have been able to help facilitate establishing this award.

I am eternally grateful to the community of people that helped us remember Perrin through the students of today and the future. And I especially want to thank my mom, Kara Sullivan, for all of the help and support she has given. This scholarship truly wouldn’t have been possible without you.

Thank you to my Westport community, friends, family members and all who support me and our class by remembering Perrin. And congratulations to Jordan and Dylan.

(For more information on Staples Tuition Grants — including how to donate to the Perry Ryan Delorey Do Your Best Award, and others — click here.)

Remembering Perrin Delorey: With Love And Hoops, For A Great Cause

On Friday evening, the Staples High School fieldhouse rocked. Over 120 Service League of Boys members and friends paid $25 each to join an energetic basketball fundraiser.

The beneficiary was a cause close to home: Staples Tuition Grants.

But the event was even more meaningful, for the many participants who remember Perrin Delorey: an elementary school baseball and hockey player, and Cub Scout. In his honor, Westport Little League presents a Perrin Ryan Delorey Sportsmanship Award each year, to players who model his sportsmanship and team spirit on the field. 

Perrin Delorey at the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, with Ted Williams. Perrin was a huge Boston Red Sox fan.

He would have been a Staples senior this year.

His friend Philip Sullivan writes:

This evening, I participated in my 4th and final SLOBS basketball fundraiser.

Next spring, the class of 2026 will graduate without our beloved classmate, Perrin Delorey. Tonight’s basketball fundraiser will benefit a scholarship named to honor Perrin’s memory.

Perrin was a 4th grade student at Greens Farms Elementary in 2018 when he died in a car accident shortly before summer break.

As a class, we were devastated. But for me the tragedy struck also at home. Perrin was my first cousin, and my best friend.

Perrin Delorey’s cousin Philip Sullivan (right), with Staples Service League of Boys fundraising chair Zach Gillman.

To preserve his memory, and to honor him by recognizing another member of our class with a Staples Tuition Grant, I am partnering with friends and family to create an endowed award in Perrin’s name.

The first award will be given to a member of the Staples class of 2026 this spring.

We have already raised more than $10,000 toward our goal of $25,000 to establish the award. Last night, the award was the very fortunate beneficiary of the basketball fundraiser.

A huge turnout for the Perrin Delorey Staples Tuition Grants fundraiser.

Many of Perrin’s friends were there, as was Perrin’s and my grandfather, Bill Ryan. He served as one of the referees.

To all who have participated and supported our efforts to grow this award, I extend my warmest thank you. If you would like to contribute directly to the Perrin Ryan Delorey “Do Your Best” Award, please click here.

Congratulations to SLOBs organizers: president Rei Seltzer, fundraising chair Zach Gillman, Philip Sullivan, and all the SLOBs who helped run the event. There are over SLOBs this year. Besides the STG fundraiser, they participate in a wide variety of volunteer projects, all year long.

Congrats too to the basketball champions: Evan Sealove’s team; to all 40 teams of participants, and to all the parent and student volunteers as referees, timers and more.

Thanks too to Pizza Lyfe: donors of 35 pizzas for the hungry crowd.

The winners were all freshmen! From left: Emanuel Linvald, Augie Francis, Brody Chlupsa, Evan Sealove.

Jordan Ginsberg, Sportsmanship Award winner.

 

Among the many participants: Perrin’s friends (from left) Michael Brennan, Jacob Marcucio and Charlie Curran.

Roundup: Public Works, Rescued Kittens, Staples Golf Record …

How busy has the Department of Public Works been this summer?

One very visible project: the new sidewalk and re-paved 0.6 miles of Hillspoint Road, from Greens Farms Road South to Old Mill. It’s getting raves for both its quality of construction, and the safety it provides.

The summer paving program resulted in upgrades and safety enhancements on 4 miles of roadways and Town properties, 1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker reports.

This includes Imperial Avenue and the Staples High School and Bedford Middle School parking lots and sidewalks.

Construction and improvements continue on and around Cross Highway. It includes:

  • Began reconstruction of the sidewalk from Compo Road North to Roseville (0.48 miles).
  • Made sightline and safety improvements at the North Avenue intersection.
  • Installed illuminated stop signage at the Bayberry Lane intersection.

The DPW managed and oversaw:

  • Completing sewer extensions projects at the Evergreen Avenue/ Tamarac Road and Whitney Street neighborhoods.
  • Sweeping 125 miles of roadway, 25 miles of sidewalk, and all municipal parking lots.
  • Installing and upgrading equipment for various pump stations, including installation of new generators, lining 3,500 linear feet of sewer pipe, and installing new elevators.
  • Installing a new cardboard compactor, and rehabilitating and reconstructing main waste compactor #1 at the town transfer station.

Tooker says: “Many thanks are due to our hard-working highway crews and public works employees who kept these projects on track, and on budget. And thank you to everyone who remained patient while the construction work was occurring. The upgrades to Westport’s infrastructure are worth it.”

Part of the sidewalk project, at Old Mill Grocery & Deli.

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Yesterday morning, the last of 5 kittens — trapped in a storm drain with their mother, underneath a grate on Post Road East — was rescued.

All 6 felines are now in foster care, with a Westport Animal Shelter Advocates volunteer.

They’ll be named soon (based on the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, courtesy of the foster family’s 5-year-old daughter).

They will soon be vetted, and available for adoption through Wilton-based Animals in Distress.

Additional information and photos will be posted on WASA’s Facebook,

WASA thanks Katherine Reid of Animals in Distress, the Westport Fire Department (particularly Engine Company No. 5 and Jennifer Petrosinelli), Bryan Thomas and Ralph Ramos of Westport’s Public Works Department, Schulhof Animal Hospital, the kind staff of Mattress Firm (adjacent to the storm drain; they allowed WASA to use their business to transfer the kittens and wash volunteers’ sardine-scented hands as a result of trap baiting), and special WASA helpers Sandy Young and Jess  Zullo, who spent countless hours setting and monitoring the trapping operation, despite family and work demands.

Rescued!

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Congratulations to the Staples High School boys golf team.

On Thursday at Longshore, they beat the team record — by 3 strokes.

And Philip Sullivan set a new school individual 9-hole match record. The junior shot a scintillating 30.

The top 4 scorers count for the team score. Besides Sullivan’s, they were George Targowski (34), Gus Palmer (36) and Tommy Riley (36). Chris Taylor came in 5th, with a 38 — but that still would have been good enough to secure Staples’ record.

The future for coach Pete Caligiure’s Wreckers is bright. All 5 golfers are juniors.

 

Philip Sullivan

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The American Parkinson Disease Association Connecticut Chapter’s 10th annual Optimism Walk is in Westport next month.

And a Westport volunteer will be honored there.

The event is set for Sherwood Island State Park on September 21 (10 a.m.). When it’s done, Holly Betts — assistant director of the Westport Senior Center — will receive the Tiedemann Award, for her support of the APDA.

Gladys Tiedemann volunteered for APDA CT for more than 30 years.

Holly schedules weekly Parkinson’s exercise classes, support groups for those diagnosed with the disease and their care partners, as well as wellness programs for the Senior Center and greater community.

For the past several years, Holly has led a fundraising team of Senior Center members called “Stand by Me,” at the annual Westport Optimism Walk. Click here to support her team.

The APDA Westport Optimism Walk is a family-friendly event. It includes a short walk of up to 1.5 miles, as well as educational opportunities, raffles, sponsor activities, music, kid’s crafts, fall risk assessments, Tai Chi, and camaraderie.

Holly Betts

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Big Y moved one step closer to opening this week.

Their shopping carts have arrived, at the Post Road East store.

(Photo/Dave Shea)

Enjoy the photo.

No matter how different the new supermarket may be from Stop & Shop, Trader Joe’s, Stew Leonard’s and any other store, the end result will be the same.

These carts will soon end up all over the lot.

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Here is our first X-rated “Westport … Naturally” photo ever:

(Photo/Jay Walshon)

In case you don’t know: It’s 2 moths mating.

Normally, we wouldn’t invade their privacy.

But they did it in public.

Or at least, on Jay Walshon’s back door screen.

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And finally … congratulations again to the record-setting Staples golf team! (Story above)

 (Happy Labor Day weekend! While you’re relaxing, “06880” keeps working to serve you. We love what we do — but we rely on your support. Please click here to help your hyper-local blog. Thanks!)