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The Rise of Lounsbury

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A hand-colored view of the south side of the Lounsbury house, now the Community Center, around 1920.

A hand-colored view of the south side of the Lounsbury house, now the Community Center, around 1920.

The Community Center on Main Street came out of a time more than 100 years ago when Ridgefield was a village that had achieved a particular status as a summer resort for rich and prominent New Yorkers.

One of Ridgefield’s native sons, Phineas Lounsbury, became a member of this elite by combining business acumen, political skills, an advantageous marriage, and charitable giving to achieve wealth and a level of power that culminated in the governorship of Connecticut.

In the winter, Ridgefield was just a village. The lights in the mansions remained dark. Citizens traveled on horse-drawn sleds and small boys tried to catch a lift by jumping on the runners.  Children went to one and two-room schools heated by wood stoves.

In the summer the grand houses lit up and bustled with servants. Coachmen drove elegant carriages to the Ridgefield station to fetch their masters and their piles of baggage. The summer residents made family outings by carriage to picnic by Lake Waccabuc. Ridgefield boys ran errands for them and did chores for a few cents a time. Irish immigrants came to work in the mansions and Italian immigrants came to build houses and stone walls. Many of them stayed.

Many shoemakers

Gov. Phineas Lounsbury was a generous, if ostentatious donor to causes in town.

Gov. Phineas Lounsbury was a generous, if ostentatious donor to causes in town.

The rise of Phineas Lounsbury and his older brother, George, began during the Civil War after Phineas had been discharged from the Army because of sickness. Ridgefield was a town with many shoemakers, including their father Nathan, who farmed and made shoes for the New York market, both successfully.

The brothers established what became a flourishing womens’ shoe factory. Phineas built ties with the New York banking society and sealed them by marrying Jenny Wright, daughter of Neziah Wright, a founder and treasurer of the American Bank Note Company. Phineas joined the board of the Merchants Exchange Bank in New York and became its president in 1885.

His political career had begun in the 1870s, kicked off perhaps by his fervent opposition to alcohol, which was not shared by his more tolerant brother, George. Under Connecticut’s local option law Ridgefield was dry.  Ridgefield held a town meeting in 1873 at which George proposed that Ridgefield should become wet. Phineas moved that a vote be taken by paper ballot — and that the ballot box be kept open for two hours, “presumably allowing him to run up and down the village to gather supporters.” When the ballots were counted, the “drys” won 111-104.

A year later Phineas was elected to represent Ridgefield in the state assembly, where his oratorical skills and financial know-how soon made him a Republican party leader. He won the nomination for governor unanimously in 1886. In the ensuing election he trailed the Democratic nominee, but since neither candidate won the necessary majority, Connecticut law put the decision in the hands of the Republican-controlled state legislature, which voted Lounsbury into the governorship on the first ballot.

Quiet term as governor

His one term in office, from 1887 to 1889, apparently was a quiet one, distinguished by the passage of “The Incorrigible Criminals Act.” Much like contemporary “three strikes” laws, his law mandated a 25-year sentence for those who committed for the third time a felony which carried a two-year sentence. Lounsbury made clear his harsh view of criminals by saying the prison would serve its purpose by “shutting up forever within its walls and behind its bolts and bars, the entire criminal class of the state.”

Along with his political power, Lounsbury had added steadily to his wealth. In addition to being president of the Merchants Exchange Bank, he served as a trustee to the American Bank Note Company, run by his rich father-in-law, Neziah Wright, whose death in 1879 added to the couple’s wealth. He served on other corporate boards and invested in the stock market.

Generosity

He was a generous, if somewhat ostentatious, donor to the Methodist Church. When the plate came around held up a $5 note so people could see how much he was giving (it was equivalent to more than $100 today).

In 1882 he gave land for the construction of a new two-room school, and then threw in $600 for a third room. After the Great Fire of 1895, which destroyed the center of town, Ridgefield created its first Fire District with Lounsbury as its chairman. He donated a $1,000 horse-drawn “fire apparatus” capable of “throwing a stream far above any house in the village.”

This is the Connecticut state building at the Columbian Exposition in Chicago in 1893 that inspired the design of Grovelawn, Gov. Phineas Lounsbury’s mansion that is now the Community Center.

This is the Connecticut state building at the Columbian Exposition in Chicago in 1893 that inspired the design of Grovelawn, Gov. Phineas Lounsbury’s mansion that is now the Community Center.

His biggest contribution to shaping the future of Ridgefield was to acquire land — lots of it — and build his mansion, Grovelawn, the future Community Center. Lynn-Marie Wieland, a Ridgefield archaeologist, has documented from town records how Phineas accumulated many acres in successive steps, beginning in 1876 and continuing on through to 1896.

After Phineas Lounsbury visited the hugely successful Columbian Exposition in Chicago in 1893, he came back determined to build a house just like the Connecticut state building, a grand but comfortable Neo-Classical Revival mansion characterized by four imposing fluted columns and a wide porch around three sides. This is the result.

After Phineas Lounsbury visited the hugely successful Columbian Exposition in Chicago in 1893, he came back determined to build a house just like the Connecticut state building, a grand but comfortable Neo-Classical Revival mansion characterized by four imposing fluted columns and a wide porch around three sides. This is the result, shown around 1915.

On the site of the present Lounsbury mansion, Phineas and Jenny lived at first in a dark Second Empire house, well covered in vines and, judging by old photos, on the gloomy side. But in 1893 Lounsbury visited the hugely successful Columbian Exposition in Chicago and came back determined to build a house just like the Connecticut state building, a grand but comfortable Neo-Classical Revival mansion characterized by four imposing fluted columns and a wide porch around three sides.

Lounsbury had his existing house hauled to its present site at 27 Governor Street where it stands today, much altered, as an office building. He commissioned Charles Northrop, who had built several of the grand mansions that distinguished Ridgefield, to build a replica of the Chicago house.

When Phineas and Jenny moved into the new Grovelawn it was the equal of any of the Ridgefield mansions built by the likes of E.P. Dutton, founder of the publishing house, and A. Newbold Morris, a descendant of a signer of the Declaration of Independence.

Phineas was now a full-fledged member of the Eastern elite, seen in a contemporary photo as a proud, benign-looking gentleman, with uplifted chin and a well-padded midriff that he habitually covered with a white waistcoat.

He lived in Grovelawn for nearly three decades.


This is the second in a series of occasional articles on Lounsbury and the Community Center.


Wreath Festival benefits Woodcock

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Woodcock Nature Center’s annual wreath decorating festival is scheduled for Dec. 3 through Dec. 14.

Participants can create wreaths at one of the weeknight “Ladies’ Nights” or Saturday “Family Day” open houses using an array of natural dried flowers, grasses, nuts, fruits, berries and cones. All materials are provided to create a unique balsam holiday wreath.

Proceeds benefit the Woodcock Nature Center’s Environmental Education Initiative.

More than 700 people have signed up so far, but a few spots still remain for “Ladies’ Nights” which run Tuesday through Friday, Dec. 3 through Dec. 13, at either 6:30 to 8:15 and 8:30 to 10:15. Participants may bring food and drink

Tickets at $50 are available online at www.woodcocknaturecenter.org.

Open house “Family Day” will be Saturday, Dec. 7 and Saturday, Dec. 14 from 12 to 4 p.m. (no pre-registration required). The fee is $40 with a $10 discount for any ladies who also signed up for “Ladies’ Night.”

Fire chief plans to take Florida post

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Fire Chief Heather Burford with Engine No. 1, the fire department’s all-purpose truck: “The engine has everything you need in the first few minutes of any type of call.” —Dick Aarons photo

Fire Chief Heather Burford has been chief here for seven years. When she was appointed, she was the only female chief of a paid department in Connecticut. —Dick Aarons photo

Fire Chief Heather Burford has accepted a conditional job offer as the new  chief of the City of Seminole (Fla.) Fire Rescue Department.

Chief Burford, who has served as Ridgefield’s chief for the last seven years, still has to pass a physical and a background check before officially taking the position.

“I’ve let everyone know that I will be stepping down as fire chief,” she said Monday morning. “I want to make sure it’s a done deal though before talking more about my new position and what the transition process will be like here.”

She added that assistant fire chief Kevin Tappe would be filling the open position, but couldn’t confirm when that would take place.

Chief Burford came to Ridgefield from Manchester Fire Department, where she worked as a firefighter-paramedic before being promoted to lieutenant and then to battalion chief during a 13-year career.

CORRECTION NOTE: An earlier version of this story said the post was chief of the Seminole County fire department instead of the city  department.

Computer classes in Continuing Ed

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Computer and technology training classes and tutorials are available through Ridgefield Continuing Education day, evening and weekend.

Computer classes starting in December include: Excel Intermediate (Dec. 5 and 12; 3 to 5:30 p.m.); Word Intermediate (Dec. 5 and 12; 9:45 a.m. to 12:15 p.m.); Microsoft Publisher (Dec. 2 and , 6 to 8:30 p.m.); Picasa Photo Editing (Dec. 4, 10 a.m. to noon); eBay (Dec. 4 and 11, 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.); Pinterest (Dec. 6, 12:30 to 2:30 p.m.); iPhone 1 (Dec. 2, 1 to 3 p.m.); iPhone 2 (Dec. 9, 1 to 3 p.m.); Skype (Dec. 11, 1 to 3 p.m.); Using Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter (Dec. 12, 1:30 to 3:30 p.m.); iPad, Photoshop Elements, Social Networks, Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Access, and Windows are scheduled for January.

Cost is $44 to $119. Ridgefield senior discount available. There is a $2 to $6 materials fee in some classes. Visit www.ridgefieldschools.org or phone Peggy Bruno at 203-431-2812 to register.

Children’s library sets winter events

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The Ridgefield Library’s winter children’s programs will begin the week of Jan. 6.

Preschool programs for ages 2 to 5 years include storytimes both by pre-registration and drop-in, concerts and short films. Mothers with infants through age 2 years are invited to Mother Goose, a music and movement program.

Programs for school-age children include book discussion groups for juniors and middle schoolers and Scrabble for grades four through eight. After-school and weekend choices that require registration include; Art Dabblers for children in grades kindergarten to two, the Robotics Club for grades five to eight, Bookworms for grades two and three and the Harry Potter Book Club.

A full calendar of children’s programs can be found on RidgefieldLibrary.org. Registration begins Monday, Dec. 2.

Special winter performances and programs include:

Holiday Craft Workshop for preschoolers (ages 3 to 5), drop in on Wednesday, Dec. 4, 10 to 11:30 or 1 to 2:30.

Holiday Craft Workshop for school age children (grades kindergarten through three). Drop in on Thursday, Dec. 5, 4 to 6.

Holiday Harmony with the Sunshine Road Band concert during Ridgefield’s Holiday Stroll for families with children ages 8 and younger on Friday, Dec. 6, 6:30 and 7:30. Co-sponsored by St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church and held in the church’s North Hall.

The Nutcracker performed at the Ridgefield Playhouse. Co-sponsored by the Ridgefield Library on Saturday, Dec. 14, 2 and 6 p.m. or Sunday, Dec. 15, 11 a.m. and 2 p.m.

Concert for Young Families with Evan Gottfried for ages 6 and under on Saturday, Jan. 11, 11 to 11:45 a.m. at the recreation center.

The Adventures of Tom Sawyer performed at the Ridgefield Playhouse. Co-sponsored by the Ridgefield Library on Saturday, Jan. 25 at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m.

Cartoon Workshop with Rick Stromoski for ages 5 and older on Saturday, Jan. 20, 11 a.m. to noon at the recreation center.

Concert for Young Families with Amy Rogel for ages 6 and under on Saturday, Feb. 8, 11 to 11:40 a.m. at the recreation center.

Pinocchio performed at the Ridgefield Playhouse. Co-sponsored by the Ridgefield Library on Saturday, Feb. 22, 11 a.m. and 2 p.m.

The Berenstain Bears Musical performed at the Ridgefield Playhouse. Co-sponsored by the Ridgefield Library on Saturday, March 8, 11 a.m. and 2 p.m.

Concert for Young Families with Les Julian for children ages 6 and younger on Saturday, March 22, 11 to 11:45 a.m. at the recreation center.

For information, call children’s services at 203-438-2282.

Urgent Care, toy collection, two jewelry shows, Santa

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Urgent Care plans expansion

Pulse Equity Partners and the PineBridge Structured Capital team of PineBridge Investments have competed a growth equity investment in Urgent Care of Connecticut, the largest network of urgent care centers in Connecticut.

Urgent Care has a medical facility at 10 South Street.

The capital and partnership will allow Urgent Care to expand throughout the Northeast. It now has seven clinics in Connecticut.

Weichert begins collecting toys

Nick Davis, branch manager of Weichert Realtors’ Ridgefield office, reports the  annual holiday toy drive has begun to benefit children and families associated with the Women’s Center of Greater Danbury.

“This is our way of giving back to the community that has given us so much,” said Mr. Davis. “The holidays mark a time of year when charitable organizations receive their greatest demand for assistance and the Women’s Center of Greater Danbury is no exception. It’s our hope that through this drive, we will be able to bring joy to some deserving families.”

Ridgefielder may donate new, unwrapped toys at the Weichert Office, 388 Main Street,  through Sunday, Dec. 15.

During the annual Ridgefield “Holiday Stroll” on Friday, Dec. 6, from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. where a balloon artist will  make special balloon creations for the kids. Additionally, the office will also be accepting donations of new, unwrapped toys at this time.

For more information, call 203-431-1400.

Jewelry trunk show at Audrey Road

KZK Jewelry will be having a trunk show Thursday, Dec. 5, at Audrey Road in Ridgefield.

From 4 to 6 p.m. there will be a soiree for moms and daughters. From 6 to 10 p.m., doors will open for all.

KZK Jewelry offers a line of sterling silver and gold filled chains with more than 150 interchangeable pendants including semi-precious stones, horn, pearls, crystals and more.

Knick plays golf to benefit museum

Roger Knick of the Golf Performance Center in Ridgefield was among the players in Swing Into It! a benefit golf tournament for Stepping Stones Museum for Children in Norwalk, which took place at The Stanwich Club in Greenwich on Oct. 3.

Proceeds from Swing Into It! benefit the museum’s Open Arms initiative, which makes it possible for every child, family and school to enjoy the museum’s exhibits, gallery activities and themed events regardless of financial, language or special needs barriers.

The tournament raised nearly $50,000.

Amy Kahn Russell plans sample sale

International jewelry designer Amy Kahn Russell will be selling her jewelry collection at the Community Center at 316 Main Street with special discounts for the holidays.

The sale will be Tuesday, Dec. 3, 9 to 7 p.m.; Wednesday, Dec. 4, 9 to 7 p.m.; Thursday, Dec. 5, 9 to 9 p.m.

Food and drink will be served. Admission is free and the public is invited.

Risbridger speaks in Stamford

Steven I. Risbridger, CPA, managing partner of the Reynolds & Rowella’s New Canaan office, participated in a panel discussion sponsored by the XPX Connecticut Exit Planning Exchange, focused on collaboration in exit planning for business owners, Nov. 15 at the Stamford Yacht Club.

Mr. Risbridger is a member of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants and the Connecticut Society of Certified Public Accountants.

Santa is coming to Quarry Ridge

Santa will be coming to Quarry Ridge Animal Hospital to have his picture taken with people’s pets Saturday, Dec. 7, from 2 to 4 p.m.

The $10 donation for a photo will benefit a local family. There will be a raffle, baked goods for sale, local shelters with animals available for donation and more.

 

Third hearing set for Padre Pio School plan

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An architect's rendering of the new school.

An architect’s rendering of the new school.

Padre Pio School, the traditional Catholic school that’s a part of the St. Pius X congregation on Tackora Trail, will get its third public hearing Tuesday, Dec. 3, after receiving an extension earlier this month.

The Planning and Zoning Commission heard from the project’s applicants at a second hearing on Nov. 6, but the meeting didn’t get off the table because of a lack of updated material.

“They told us they were still working on revising their original application and didn’t want to submit what they had until it was finished,” said town planner Betty Brosius after the second hearing.

Construction of the proposed 7,400-square-foot school building for up to 118 students didn’t receive much concern from the public at its first hearing Oct. 1.

However, zoners were concerned about increased traffic on Route 116, lack of a proposed sprinkler system, and runoff into Lake Mamanasco.

 

‘Hotel deal’ to hearing

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The outline of the Zemo plan. That's the sewage treatment plant at upper right and Treetops condominiums at lower left.

The outline of the Zemo plan. That’s the sewage treatment plant at upper right and Treetops condominiums at lower left.

The first of what could be a few transactions proposed by the selectmen to recover some of the $7 million taxpayers spent on the Schlumberger property — a proposed $1.25 million sale of five acres to Steve Zemo, whose plans include a hotel — will be up for questions and comments this week.

The five-acre site is on the north side of Old Quarry Road, next to The Treetops condominiums and across the street from the bulk of the Schlumberger property.

Mr. Zemo has accompanied his $1.25 million with a  plan to develop the five acres as “Old Quarry Commons,” a mixed-use complex — hotel, offices, apartments, self-storage facility — with an estimated $13-to-$17 million construction cost and generating an annual tax of between $231,000 and $302,000.

The hearing is scheduled for Wednesday, Dec. 4, at 7:30 p.m. in town hall’s lower level conference room.

A town meeting for voters to consider approving the deal is planned on Monday, Dec. 16, at 7:30 in town hall.

The town charter requires that any town land transaction be approved by voters, with at least 10 days between discussion at a public hearing and the vote at either a town meeting or referendum.

The selectman voted unanimously to bring the contract to both the hearing and town meeting last Wednesday, Nov. 20. after a fairly lengthy discussion.

“My feeling is: We’re selling him this property to build what he wants to build,” said Selectman Andrew Bodner.

But there were questions and concerns. Would the proposed deed restrictions to limit future development hold up in court? Could the town get a right of first refusal, in case Mr. Zemo decided to sell the property? Should there be a clause calling for “payment in lieu of taxes” in case he sold to a non-profit entity?

Some wondered if all the concerns were overkill.

“There has to be some good faith,” Selectwoman Barbara Manners.

“And,” Mr. Zemo added, “you’ve got your money.”

A citizen asked if townspeople would have any input.

“I’d suggest you definitely attend the public hearing,” First Selectman Rudy Marconi said.

In December 2011, voters approved spending $7 million on the 45-acre Schlumberger property — a $6 million for the purchase price, and $1 million for related costs.

In debate before that vote the selectmen urged townspeople to buy the property to gain “control” of the its future, and avoid over-development there. They also said the town might sell some  of the property — with deed restrictions to limit future building — and recover some of the $7 million cost.

The five acres the selectmen propose selling to Mr. Zemo is first such sale, with a couple of others still in the discussion stage.

At a Sept. 20 bid opening, Mr. Zemo’s offer was the lone response to a “request for proposals” on the five acres.

Next Friday, Dec. 6, the selectmen expect more responses to a similar “RFP” they put out for bids on another part of Schlumberger property — 10 acres off Sunset Lane that have been rezoned for multi-family use.

As with the five acres, they have asked that bid offers be backed by descriptions of development plans for the site.

There are also a roughly 12 acres — the “campus” area, including most of Schlumberger’s now empty research buildings — that the town may want to sell or lease.

The selectmen have been talking to a local art collector about this part of site, first discussing a sale but more recently a lease.

Environmental clean-up has begun in the area, as required by the state. The selectmen now worry that a contract to sell might transfer responsibility for clean-up costs from Schlumberger to the town.

The town asked bidders on the five acres to accompany their offering price with their plans to develop the parcel.

Mr. Zemo’s $1.25-million offer was supported by plans for a three-building complex with a hotel as its centerpiece. The proposed Old Quarry Commons would include:

• A 48-unit all-suite hotel with banquet facilities in a 40,000 square foot building facing Old Quarry Road;

• a three-story 50,000 square foot self-storage facility, serving as a “visual block” to the town’s sewage treatment plant nearby;

• a 20,000-square-foot building with offices on a lower level and 11 apartments above.

“The hotel will offer a business use that is not fully represented in Ridgefield’s central business district,” Mr. Zemo said in a narrative accompanying the site plan.

“In addition, the hotel will have a banquet room with a capacity for upwards of 250 people, creating another economic boost for the center of town, and an opportunity to keep more events in the Town of Ridgefield.”

Both Mr. Zemo and Mr. Marconi have said townspeople like the concept of a hotel in town with banquet facilities that could host large wedding receptions, high school reunions, and fund-raising dinners. Such events often go out of town because Ridgefield lacks large-capacity facilities.

But a comment from the public at last week’s selectmen’s meeting suggests a  hotel also raises concern.

“The West Lane Inn, Stonehenge,” said Mary Morrison. “You bring in a hotel like that, what will it do to these small establishments?”

The lack of facilities that the new hotel with banquet facilities might address had only gotten worse with the recent closing of the Elms Inn and Restaurant on Main Street, Mr. Marconi said.

“What do we do to keep people coming, shopping?” he said. “We felt a hotel would be an excellent way to support the local businesses.”

Mr. Zemo later told The Press that an “all suite hotel” is designed to accommodate not just brief visits, but people who might have reason to say in town a little longer. “Suites are larger than simple hotel rooms,” he said. “They would offer separate bedroom and a sitting area with kitchenette.”

The narrative accompanying Mr. Zemo’s plan explains the self-storage building.

“Firstly, the long rectangular massing serves as a visual block to the town’s waste water treatment both for this proposed project and for the adjacent townhouse development.

“Secondly, the lower level will be all individual garage bays that will provide a storage opportunity for small local contractors. This type of offering is becoming scarce at affordable rents.

“Thirdly, while there are self-storage facilities on Route 7, there are none in the center of town so this building would allow a more convenient location for many residents and businesses.”

A speaker from the selectmen’s meeting raised a question about the wastewater plant — although the concern wasn’t visual.

“Is there any environmental impact to taking down trees so close to the sewer plant,” said Catherine Guisio.

Odors from the facility carried through the neighborhood more easily since the big storms of last two years had reduced foliage in the area.

“There absolutely will be odor,” she said.

Mr. Zemo’s site pans calls for a 100-foot “green buffer” along the property’s northern boundary as well as 25-foot green buffers on the east and also the west, next to the Treetops condominiums.

If the deal is approved by voters,  Mr. Zemo estimates that design and getting needed approvals would take a year.


In Kenya, RHS grad seeks home for orphans

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Brian Ash, right, on a bunk bed with some of his adopted orphans in Kenya. Mr. Ash, a 2009 graduate of Ridgefield High School, has helped save 30 orphaned children ages 4 through 22 since beginning ARRIVE in Kenya. In September, ARRIVE partnered with Trekking for Kids and received 15 bunk beds, 30 mattresses, 30 pillows, and 30 backpacks for the children, who previously slept on the ground on a thin mat with no pillow.

Brian Ash, right, on a bunk bed with some of his adopted orphans in Kenya. Mr. Ash, a 2009 graduate of Ridgefield High School, has helped save 30 orphaned children ages 4 through 22 since beginning ARRIVE in Kenya. In September, ARRIVE partnered with Trekking for Kids and received 15 bunk beds, 30 mattresses, 30 pillows, and 30 backpacks for the children, who previously slept on the ground on a thin mat with no pillow.

From sleeping on the Earth’s soil to observing the moon and the stars in space, ARRIVE in Kenya has made galactic strides since officially becoming a nonprofit four months ago.

Brian Ash, a 2009 graduate of Ridgefield High School, co-founded with Pastor Robert Nyamwange in 2012 the organization that rescues drug-addicted orphans living on the streets.

The group adopts them to stay in its orphanage, the Keumbu Rehema Children’s Home, and educates them at its school, the Emmanuel Lights Academy.

However, Mr. Ash doesn’t want to rest on what’s been accomplished thus far — becoming the No. 1-ranked school out of 51 schools in west Kenya’s Nyanza District, securing 30 beds and pillows for all the orphans, and receiving a donated telescope to teach the kids about outer space. That’s why he’s working so tirelessly toward achieving his future goal of building a permanent structure to house all his kids.

“What we have now is nice compared to where the kids were living before this, but it’s not a permanent solution — it’s more like a shelter, not a real house,” he said.  “We want to be able to give them a permanent home with a study lounge, a library, multiple bedrooms, and a kitchen.”

ARRIVE’s expansion plans encompass more than just the vision of a new building; they include sustainability through increasing livestock and the planting of crops, the advancement of a child’s education to a secondary, high-school level, and the possibility of having a child from all 42 of Kenya’s native tribes in an effort to overcome the country’s violence.

So far, ARRIVE has helped children from seven tribes — more than 16% — and that’s what is motivating Mr. Ash to create a building with enough space for 50 or more kids.

He says several street kids have walked from the city of Kisii to ARRIVE’s home in the village of Nyaturubo to have a chance to live and learn, only to be turned away because there isn’t enough room for them.

“It’s heartbreaking to have to turn down a kid who just walked two days without eating, who’s battling drug addiction, and send him or her back to the streets they just came from,” he said. “I don’t want us to do that anymore.”

Some of ARRIVE in Kenya’s students celebrate the arrival of 30 new JanSport backpacks, which arrived  in September, thanks to a donation from the nonprofit organization Trekking for Kids.

Some of ARRIVE in Kenya’s students celebrate the arrival of 30 new JanSport backpacks, which arrived in September, thanks to a donation from the nonprofit organization Trekking for Kids.

It has happened often this fall, and all ARRIVE can do is give the child a meal, some new clothing and a ride back to Kisii — a place where Mr. Ash has made connections and studied to better understand the life of the kids he is saving.

Despite being warned against it, he decided to sleep on the street one night in October to experience firsthand what it was like to be a street boy.

“They say two things when you go into a Kenyan city — don’t go out at night and don’t talk to the homeless,” Mr. Ash said. “I didn’t really listen to that advice.

“There were no other white people anywhere around me, so I stood out — people were shocked, they couldn’t believe a white person was out there sleeping on the street.

“The street boys I’ve gotten to know there slept with me and made sure nothing happened to me — they usually all sleep together with no blankets and no pillows,” he said.

“It was a great experience, but I won’t be doing it again anytime soon.

“I can’t imagine doing that every night of my life and waking up the next morning and that still being my reality,” he said. “I learned more in that one night than I did in the four months prior.”

Sleeping on the hard ground without a pillow wasn’t a new custom for Mr. Ash.

He and his 30 kids — 22 former street boys and eight orphans who came to the school without living on the streets — slept in the dirt on thin mats until ARRIVE received bunk beds, mattresses and pillows from a nonprofit called Trekking for Kids, which takes people to iconic destinations around the world and uses those profits to benefit orphaned children living in those areas, in September.

“I made a vow I wouldn’t sleep on a bed until all the kids were sleeping in beds,” he said. “Trekking for Kids heard about what we do and wanted to partner, and now each kid sleeps on his or her own very bed.”

Trekking for Kids also donated 30 new JanSport backpacks to ARRIVE so the kids didn’t have to use plastic bags to carry their schoolbooks.

The kids are on their summer break until January, said Mr. Ash, who is home for the month.

He stresses that the children have made remarkable progress in school.

“There’s a lot of excitement around the school and what the future has in store for us,” he said. “The Emmanuel Lights Academy was ranked the No. 1 school out of 51 schools. This is remarkable because Emmauel Lights Academy is the only school in the area to offer free education and is the only school that has former street children attending.”

In particular, a former street girl named Meir, who has lived with Pastor Robert and his wife, Terry, for three years, recently finished her exams and was ranked the No. 1 eighth grade student in all of the 51 surrounding schools.

Her father died when she was very young and her mother was diagnosed with HIV a few years ago and has since died.

“Every morning Meir would pick through garbage and beg for money to buy food,” Mr. Ash said. “Meir and her very intelligent brain were almost wasted away living a horrific life on the streets.

“Now she is one step further to reaching her dream of becoming a doctor — it’s amazing she has that opportunity despite where she came from,” he said. “She just completed the Kenyan national tests called the KCPE exams and could be leaving us to live with another organization for kids going into high school, but we don’t know yet.”

Mr. Ash said he hasn’t taught as much over the last couple of months, leaving that duty to Pastor Robert and Terry and the 12 volunteers ARRIVE has hosted from such countries as Canada, South Korea, Norway, Ghana, and the United States.

However, he is as busy as ever cutting the grass, planting flowers, looking after livestock, cooking food in the kitchen, and teaching what he calls “life skills.”

That’s where his computer, and the telescope ARRIVE received from a donor in Colorado this fall, have made a huge difference in the kids’ lives.

“I let them play with my Mac laptop so they can develop computer skills,” he said. “It’s the only Mac within at least 100 miles.”

As cool as the computer may seem to orphans who had never seen one until arriving at the school, looking into outer space and seeing the moon through a telescope for the first time was a hundred times more mind-blowing.

“One of my favorite moments,” Mr. Ash recalled. “They had never seen the moon or the stars close up before — one night we even saw Jupiter, I think — their eyes went so wide.

“My mind has always been boggled by space and the existence of other life forms, and I took an astronomy class, so this was a perfect teaching opportunity for me to help them learn about our solar system,” he said. “They are obsessed with the telescope — every night they want to use it to look up into the sky — and always asking questions like, ‘Can you see God with the telescope?’ ‘Are there houses on the moon?’”

Somewhere in between teaching 30 kids about outer space and sleeping on the streets with dozens of homeless boys, Mr. Ash had the time to film and edit a six-minute video highlighting the nonprofit’s recent work and showing the harsh life of the street boys in Kisii.

“Most street children pick through the city’s garbage to resell plastics for a fraction of a cent,” the video’s introduction states.

To see the video, go to YouTube

To donate, visit arriveinkenya.com or make a check out to ARRIVE in Kenya and send it to 102 Stonecrest Road, Ridgefield CT 06877. For more information, call Vivian Epstein at 203-438-7634 or email her at vfepstein@gmail.com .

 

Saving health care is topic for film

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A network of private medical practices known as N1Health is renting out The Ridgefield Playhouse and inviting the community to see, free of charge, the film called Escape Fire on Thursday, Dec. 5, at 7 p.m.

After the screening of the film, there will be a discussion and Q&A with Dr. Thomas V. Cigno and Dr. Erin Martin who is featured in the film.

A reception starts at 5 to 6:45 p.m. in the lobby.

Escape Fire examines the powerful forces maintaining the status quo — a medical industry designed for quick fixes rather than prevention, for profit-driven care rather than patient-driven care.

For more information, visit ridgefieldplayhouse.org.

For reserved seats (free), call or visit the box office at 203-438-5795, or go to ridgefieldplayhouse.org.

Seeing the Europe you haven’t seen

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Travel concierge and writer Susan Farewell will discuss The Europe You Haven’t Seen, Wednesday, Dec. 11 at 7 p.m. at the Ridgefield Library.

A former travel editor at The Condé Nast Publications in New York City, Ms. Farewell has written travel stories for many publications, and is the author of several travel books.

For more information and to register visit www.ridgefieldlibrary.org or call 203-438-2282.

Pollution found inside cars

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Dear EarthTalk: Can you discuss pollutants in car interior materials, and also pollution inside cars originating from gasoline and diesel exhausts outside the car? —Mervyn Kline 

The interior of your car may seem like a safe haven from air pollution, but it may actually be quite the opposite. Chemicals emanating from the steering wheel, dashboard, armrests and seats mix with the airborne pollution being generated under the hood to form a witch’s brew of toxins for those riding inside.

“Research shows that vehicle interiors contain a unique cocktail of hundreds of toxic chemicals that off-gas in small, confined spaces,” says Jeff Gearhart of the Ecology Center, a Michigan-based non-profit. The extreme air temperatures inside cars on sunny days can increase the concentration of Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs) and break other chemicals down into more toxic constituents. Some of the worst offenders include airborne bromine, chlorine, lead and other heavy metals. “Since these chemicals are not regulated, consumers have no way of knowing the dangers they face,” adds Gearhart.

Exhaust fumes also find their way into the passenger cabins of many cars. The International Center for Technology Assessment (ICTA) found that concentrations of carbon monoxide (a noxious by-product of internal combustion known to cause headaches, dizziness, nausea and fatigue as well as being a major asthma trigger) may be 10 times higher inside any given car than outdoors along the roadside. ICTA added that in light of the fact that the average American spends an hour and a half driving around each day, in-car air pollution may pose “one of the greatest modern threats to human health.”

To help consumers minimize their exposure, the Ecology Center released the fourth version of its Consumer Guide to Toxic Chemicals in Cars in 2012, comparing more than 200 different cars across the 2010 and 2011 model years. Those scoring the most kudos in regard to interior air quality include the Honda Civic, Toyota Prius and Honda CR-Z. The Civic scored first by being free of bromine-based flame retardants (BFRs) in interior components, utilizing polyvinyl chloride (PVC)-free interior fabrics and trim, and having low levels of heavy metals.

Meanwhile, pulling up the rear were Mitsubishi’s Outlander Sport, the Chrysler 200 SC and the Kia Soul. The Outlander finished in last place due to its use of BFRS as well as antimony-based flame retardants in its interior, chromium treated leather components and excessive amounts of lead in seating materials.

“The good news is overall vehicle ratings are improving,” reports the Ecology Center, adding that the top performers have gotten rid of BFRs and PVC altogether in their interiors. “Today, 17% of new vehicles have PVC-free interiors and 60% are produced without BFRs.”

Consumers can check on their late model car by steering their web browser to the HealthyStuff.org website, the Ecology Center’s free online resource for consumer information. While environmental and public health groups are working to try to get automakers to clean up their interiors, individuals can reduce their exposure by parking in the shade, using interior sun reflectors to keep temperatures down inside the car and rolling down the windows to let the fresh air in.

Contacts: Ecology Center, www.ecocenter.org; ICTA, www.icta.org; Model Year 2011/2012 Guide to New Vehicles, www.healthystuff.org/documents/2012_Cars.pdf


EarthTalk is written and edited by Roddy Scheer and Doug Moss and is a registered trademark of E-The Environmental Magazine (www.emagazine.com). Send questions to: earthtalk@emagazine.com. Subscribe: www.emagazine.com/subscribe. Free Trial Issue: www.emagazine.com/trial

Charity League recognized for service to the community

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At the Ability Beyond Annual Autumn Breakfast is Stacey Schibli, who accepted the “Celine Karakker Memorial Award” on behalf of the Ridgefield Chapter of the National Charity League, and Kathleen Deschenes, director of Connecticut Transitional/Independent Living & Quality Management.

At the Ability Beyond Annual Autumn Breakfast is Stacey Schibli, who accepted the “Celine Karakker Memorial Award” on behalf of the Ridgefield Chapter of the National Charity League, and Kathleen Deschenes, director of Connecticut Transitional/Independent Living & Quality Management.

Ability Beyond, a service provider for people living with disabilities,  honored Ridgefield Chapter of the National Charity League at its recent Annual Autumn Breakfast at the Ethan Allen Hotel in Danbury.

The  league chapter was singled out for its volunteerism and support of the community and Ability Beyond. The Chapter received the organization’s “Celine Karraker Memorial Award,” presented annually for service to the community that has made a direct and positive impact.

Since 2000, the mothers and their daughters of the Ridgefield Chapter of the National Charity League have donated their services and time to putting on Ability Beyond’s holiday party and Annual Autumn Breakfast.

Thomas H. Fanning, president and chief executive officer of Ability Beyond, said, “Ability Beyond is proud to honor … the Ridgefield Chapter of the National Charity League for their outstanding service and commitment to bettering our communities.”

He said they make “a measurable difference in the lives of the thousands of Connecticut residents. Their extraordinary selflessness and generosity are an inspiration to us all.”

Mr. Fanning also thanked the Breakfast sponsors, which included PepsiCo, Reynolds & Rowella LLP, Ventura, Ribeiro & Smith, and Pitney Bowes.

Back to one middle school?

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Faced with enrollment plummeting over the next 10 years and excess capacity at both middle school buildings, town and school officials are starting to talk about returning to a one-middle-school model.

A comprehensive enrollment study presented to the Board of Education by the consulting firm Milone & MacBroom on Nov. 12 projected a 20% decline across the district over the next 10 years, with the middle school suffering a 27.5% projected decrease — the largest of any tier in the system.

Selectman Andy Bodner raised the issue at a recent tri-board meeting with the selectmen, school and finance boards.

“According to the projections for four to five years, we will have excess capacity at both middle schools, so the question I posed at the tri-board meeting was, ‘What do you do with all that space?’” Mr. Bodner said Tuesday, Nov. 26. “That’s as far as the conversation went.

“All the projections indicate, under all economic scenarios presented by the school board’s consultant, that enrollment is going to keep falling. And even though the elementary school enrollment isn’t falling as much, it’s still decreasing, and that will affect the middle schools four or five years from now,” he continued. “I don’t know what the solution is. It might be one school or it might be something else, but if they have a lot of buildings with excess capacity then they have to do their job as a board to ensure they are efficiently using that space.”

The school board voted a couple of years ago to close one of the six elementary buildings when the declining kindergarten to fifth grade population reaches 2,000, but so far the numbers haven’t gotten there and school officials are waiting.

Karen Dewing, the district’s director of personnel, presented her district enrollment and class size report to the Board of Education on Monday, Nov. 25. She reported that both middle schools had declined since last year in actual enrollment numbers — down 14 students to 1,259 from 1,273 last year — though this fall’s middle school enrollments are over what was projected.

The declining enrollments sparked debate among board members about the feasibility of keeping two middle schools in the district.

“It’s time we start talking about going back to one middle school,” said board member John Palermo. “If you look forward four or five years, you will see that middle school numbers are only going to shrink more.”

When asked by the board, East Ridge Principal Martin Fiedler said that his school had 1,314 students before the change to two middle schools.

“We had six lunch waves with kids starting to eat at 10 in the morning — it was a complete mess,” Mr. Fiedler recalled.

East Ridge, which had seen an increase in actual enrollment over the previous three years, dropped eight students, from 777 last year to 769 this year, while Scotts Ridge continued to decline, from 496 in 2012-13 to 490 this year.

Scotts Ridge has dropped 92 students over the last four years, while overall middle school enrollment has declined 82 total students — 1,341 to 1,259 — since 2008-09.

And enrollments are likely to fall more, according to the district’s enrollment consultant, Mike Zuba, who presented the comprehensive report two weeks ago.

Despite increased migration, an uptick in the housing market and a stabilized economy, Mr. Zuba predicts recent historically low birth rates “will lead to a continued decline in overall enrollment over the next 10 years” at the middle school and high school levels.

However, he told the board that demographic analysis suggested that the town may have reached “their cyclical low” in number of births per year — 171 on average from 2008 to 2012, compared to 263 on average from 2000 to 2007 — and should expect an increase in annual births. But that is “highly dependent on economic and market conditions.”

At the tri-board meeting on Nov. 19, Board of Education vice chairwoman Irene Burgess noted that in addition to the changing data on births, the overall decline in enrollment has not happened as quickly as a series of demographers have been predicting in annual reports to the board.

“The reality is, we have not declined in enrollment at a rate anything like what’s predicted by our demographers,” she said.

After losing 79 students from 2011-12 to 2012-13 and 247 students over the last five years, the school district has seen its enrollment decrease flatten, dropping only four students — 5,233 to 5,229 — from last year to this year.

Despite the information presented by Mr. Zuba at its Nov. 12 meeting, the board is treading lightly.

“The data gives us a very good baseline without getting overly complicated — and I thought it was a very thorough presentation,” said school board Chairman Austin Drukker on Nov. 13. “But there are a lot of intangibles out there that have to be considered, so we can’t let this report dictate our legislation.”

He noted that elementary enrollment is based not just on births but on move-ins as well.

“One area in particular that we can’t know for sure about is Ridgefield births versus the number of young families who move to town with kids already born — that fluctuates every year,” Mr. Drukker said.

Mr. Zuba had presented a demographic overview of the town. He said Ridgefield’s situation appeared very similar to that of Greenwich, where Milone & MacBroom conducted a similar study and noticed a historical decline in birth rates from 2000 to 2010, only to see the town rebound in 2012.

He projected that Ridgefield would see a “significant increase” in the birth through kindergarten population in 2013-14 — a rebound from the 35% drop in births since 2007 — that “bears watching.”

“If this instance turns into a trend, projections will need to be adjusted upward accordingly, and the trough and rebound may occur earlier than projected,” Mr. Zuba wrote in his report. “However, one year does not make a trend.”

Breaking down the town’s demographics, he said that Ridgefield added roughly 1,000 people (4.2% increase), including approximately 167 students, from 2000 to 2010.

He predicted “flat to modest growth over the next decade,” with the town population rising from 24,638 in 2010 to 25,993 in 2020.

However, lower birth rates should still be anticipated, with an expected 14.3% decrease in child-bearing females, listed as ages 18 to 44.

Ms. Dewing said the bulk of the 65-student increase over what was projected at the elementary level this year came in the kindergarten class, which was 57 students more than the projected number. However, the kindergarten total was actually down 16 students from last year.

She confirmed that the district had seen a decline of 173 students — 7.8% — at the elementary schools since the 2008-09 school year.

Meanwhile, the high school saw a rise: up 26 students — 1,759 last year to 1,785 this year — after a decrease 16 students the year before.

“The high school is the only school in the district with an actual increase over the last five years,” Ms. Dewing said.

RHS’s enrollment was 1,781 in 2008-09.

On the other hand, all the three levels — elementary, middle and high school — were over projection, resulting in 96 more students in the district than the 5,133 students that were anticipated.

Class size was almost a non-issue last Monday night.

Ms. Dewing’s report said 95% of elementary classes were operating below the maximum class size.

Six out of the district’s 110 elementary classes — four of which were first grade classes at Farmingville — were listed “at the maximum class size,” while zero were reported as above the maximum.

The other two classes — a third grade class at Veterans Park and a fourth grade class at Scotland, which had been the center of controversy earlier this year — had each received a paraprofessional.

Holiday Stroll starts a day early

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The Holiday Stroll, which fill the downtown area with festive caroling, elaborate ice sculpting and plenty of holiday shopping this weekend, is starting a day earlier this year.

Instead of the traditional Friday night kick-off, the celebration begins 10 a.m. Thursday with the first-ever stocking stuff preview event.

Organizers from Downtown Ridgefield are encouraging residents to visit participating merchants, who will be raffling off a stocking that is stuffed with merchandise from each individual store.

There will also be holiday cocktail offerings at local restaurants that begin later Thursday around 6 p.m.

“Because it’s a school night, we’re encouraging Thursday to be more of an adult date night — get dinner in town, shop local before the big crowds show up on Friday,” explained Kathy Graham, vice president of Fairfield County Bank, who organizes Downtown Ridgefield’s seasonal events. “We decided to have this opportunity for adults and to extend the stroll into a third day because it has gotten to be such a huge event for our town.”

The stroll’s events on Friday begin at 6 p.m. and run to 10 p.m.

Saturday’s schedule starts at 10 and runs until 4.

To find out more about this year’s stroll, check The Press on Thursday.


Ski, snowboard film in ski team benefit

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The Ridgefield High School Ski Team and Warren Miller Entertainment will show the 64th annual ski and snowboard film, Warren Miller’s Ticket to Ride, at the Ridgefield Playhouse on Monday, Dec. 9, at 7 p.m., with doors opening at 6:30 p.m.

Ticket to Ride will take filmgoers “on an action-packed journey with the world’s best skiers and snowboarders.”

This event is locally sponsored by Ski and Sport of Ridgefield, Catamount Ski Area, Danbury Ski Club, Fairfield County Bank, Gregory Brucato, MD, FACS, Kiley Painting, Kilometers, Orthopaedic Specialists of CT, Painter’s Supply, Pamby Motors, Piccolo Pizza, Pasta & Catering, Ridgefield Education & Learning Center, and Synergy Wellness Center.

Tickets are available at Ridgefield Ski & Sport at 197 Ethan Allen Highway, 203-438-3645 or from any Ridgefield High School Ski Team member for $10.

Door prizes include skis, bindings, ski tickets to Catamount, Stratton and Sugarbush Ski Areas.

All proceeds will benefit the Ridgefield High School Ski Team.

For more information, email rhswarrenmiller@yahoo.com.

 

Family gives theater organ to high school

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A $3,000 theater organ donated by the Keough family of Ridgefield has been accepted into the high school’s visual and performing arts department.

The Board of Education voted unanimously to approve the gift during a Nov. 12 meeting after a brief discussion about its use.

The organ, which was manufactured in 1978, is designed to create a true “theater sound” and can be used for both orchestras and plays.

The high school received the proposal for donation on Oct. 28.

Stroll, baby, stroll

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ED-PR-Cartoon-stroll-640Carolers are set to sing, bells ready to ring, toy soldiers have their marching orders, and the horse-drawn carriages are dolled up to roll out once again on Ridgefield’s Main Street, all a-sparkle with lights.

It’s time for the Holiday Stroll, time for Ridgefield’s village to bloom into boisterous, bustling life, full of families, shoppers, strollers, couples, kids, parents, grandparents, teens.

Now a well-established tradition, the Holiday Stroll is an event when Ridgefield’s merchants and shopkeepers make it a point to outdo themselves each year and bring to life the festive, joyful, magnanimous spirit that seems too often to sleep in people’s hearts from January to late November.

This year the Stroll is a three-day affair — Thursday, Friday, Saturday — so folks will have lots of opportunity to appreciate the different holiday faces the Downtown Ridgefield organizers have planned and plotted to put on.

The Holiday Stroll is, of course, a gift-shopping promotion by Ridgefield’s commercial village. Each year townspeople are urged to “shop Ridgefield” — at the Stroll, and in the days before and after. It’s a point worth making again. The town’s businesses are so much of what make Ridgefield the place people move to, show off to friends and relatives, a place people love to be.

The Holiday Stroll is one more emphatic declaration that Ridgefield is a town, not a corporate suburb. Ours is a community where business supports teams and charities, people look after their neighbors and everyone can come together to help out folks in need. Be loyal to that town.

This weekend, come to Ridgefield’s village and start the season with a generous helping of the spirit that can make a December’s visit to the shopping district not a chore but a celebration.

In this week’s Ridgefield Press

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Here are some of the stories and features in this week’s Press, out today in print and e-edition:

  • Many details are offered about the Holiday Stroll,  which starts today for three days in the center of town.
  • Officials are surprised at the popularity of accessory apartments, often used to house the elderly, but sometimes the young.
  • Work is progressing on two future bike trails in and near Ridgefield.
  • The town and Ability Beyond are teaming up to establish a group home here.
  • Construction has begun on the new traffic signal for Route 7 just north of Route 35.
  • The town has retained its Aaa bond status, according to two rating agencies.
  • There was no divine intervention in the Ridgefield-Newtown game Tuesday night, says Murph.
  • Incidentally, the state semifinal football game will be broadcast Saturday on Hersam Acorn Radio .
  • The schools are spending less than expected.
  • Marty Heiser’s column, apologizing to younger Americans, sparked a lot of response this week.
  • The Living Nativity is back Sunday at the Methodist Church. First Congregational has a musical in store while St. Stephen’s is doing Carols by Candlelight. And at the Lutheran church, a Ridgefield Chorale concert will help the food bank.
  • The RHS honor rolls are out.
  • Tom Belote remembers when the trees lit up and the crooks lit out.
  • School officials continue to discuss adding some assistant principals in the elementary schools.
  • Michael Keane is only 25 and already has two auto service shops.
  • Were Ridgefielders ever slave holders? Yes. Even a leading minister.
  • The Guild of Artists is going to the birds.
  • Farmingville students will be singing with the Ridgefield Symphony Saturday.
  • The 2014 Dodge Charger SE is the return of a muscle car that handles well and can get some pretty good gas mileage, says test driver Steven Macoy.
  • The Ridgefield Press is on Facebook — become one of more than 1,610 friends and get news updates. Facebook.com/RidgefieldPress.
  • 7,827 people have signed up for Ridgefield Press news bulletins via Twitter. You can, too, by stopping by twitter.com/RidgefieldPress.

For newsstands carrying The Press, click here.

Holiday Stroll begins today: A ‘huge event’ full of fun

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A scene on Main Street after the tree lighting last Friday evening. —Scott Mullin photo

A scene on Main Street after the tree lighting last Friday evening. —Scott Mullin photo

What tricks does Santa have up his red sleeves this year?

Townspeople will have to wait until Saturday around 1 p.m. on Bailey Avenue to find out, as organizers for this year’s holiday stroll are hush-hush on the holiday secret.

“We need people to be there for the big surprise event without knowing what it is,” said Kathy Graham vice president of Fairfield County Bank, who organizes Downtown Ridgefield’s seasonal events.

“It’s going to be entertainment like you’ve never seen before in Ridgefield.”

Other than the fact that Santa is involved and that the event “won’t last very long,” Ms. Graham doesn’t want to reveal too much else — it would ruin the surprise.

“We recommend people show up early,” she explained. “It will probably go from about 1:04 to 1:08 — it’s a very quick event.”

While silence is the word surrounding Saturday’s mystery event, holiday planners are happy to talk about this year’s stroll, which will include traditional favorites on Friday night such as horse-drawn carriage rides, live ice sculpting and a holiday boutique. All run from 6 to 10 p.m.

Added into the mix will be strolling toy soldiers, who will sing around town Friday from 6:30 to 9 p.m., and donations for the Holiday Stroll’s Gift for Kids, which will continue to be collected at town hall Friday night before the boxes are filled, packaged and distributed Saturday at 10 a.m.

“The toy soldiers are the new thing this year,” Ms. Graham said. “Every year we try to do something new to make sure the stroll doesn’t get stale or repetitive. We are excited to welcome these professional performers to our big event.”

Perhaps the biggest addition to the lineup this year is the stocking stuffer preview event that takes place 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. today, which helps extend the stroll into a three-day event.

Organizers from Downtown Ridgefield are encouraging residents to visit participating merchants, who will be raffling off a stocking that is stuffed with merchandise from each individual store.

There will also be holiday cocktail offerings at local restaurants that begin later around 5 p.m.

“Because it’s a school night, we’re encouraging Thursday to be more of an adult-date night — get dinner in town, shop local before the big crowds show up on Friday,” Ms. Graham explained. “We decided to have this opportunity for adults and to extend the stroll into a third day because it has gotten to be such a huge event for our town.”

After Thursday night’s kick off, all eyes will be on the Friday night’s ceremony, which will kick off with the ceremonial ringing of the bells from St. Stephen’s Church that will chime throughout the village.

At the tree lighting festivities Friday, seven-year-old Reese Kubick visited with Santa in the Town Hall. Santa will return this weekend for the Holiday Stroll. —Scott Mullin photo

At the tree lighting festivities Friday, seven-year-old Reese Kubick visited with Santa in the Town Hall. Santa will return this weekend for the Holiday Stroll. —Scott Mullin photo

A carriage carrying Santa and Mrs. Claus will prance  down Main Street.

Simultaneously, the Ridgefield Chorale will be strolling and singing in front of merchants’ stores throughout the village.

They will get an assist from three toy soldiers, who embark on their first-ever march.

“They are professional singers from New York City,” Ms. Graham added. “They look like Buckingham Palace guys, not like the Nutcracker outside town hall.”

The entertainment does not stop there.

World-class ice sculptor Bill Covitz, a former Ridgefield resident, will place his pre-carved work all around town, including the ice throne at town hall.

From there, he will set up shop on the lawn next to Toy Chest, where he will create a massive ice sculpture of elves and Santa from 7 to 9.

“He does the best work I’ve ever seen,” said Bill Craig, co-chairman of the stroll. “It’s really remarkable.”

Some of the stroll staples haven’t changed, including pizza and movie night that the Keystone Club will host from 6:30 to 9:30 at the Boys and Girls club for ages 5-11; Ridgefield Music and Arts Center (RMAC) will have its annual acoustic and acapella concert in front of the firehouse on Catoonah Street; and the Lions Club will promote letter writing to soldiers in the vacant Swizzles location.

Also, the Ridgefield Library will host a pair of programs, including the Holiday Harmony with the Sunshine Road, which will be presented for kids eight and under in St. Stephen’s North Hall from 6:30 to 7 and 7:30 to 8. Dramatic readings of seasonal short plays and stories will take place for adults at the library from 7 to 10.

Stroll planners hope everyone has enough energy for Saturday, when kids will have the opportunity to pose with Santa outside of town hall from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. before he makes his way over to the “big surprise event.”

There will be more caroling — provided by students of the Wooster School — and juggling from members of the barn that will help set the mood for shoppers.

The holiday boutique at the community center, which opens Friday, will run 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, while the Boys and Girls Club hosts its annual gingerbread house festival from noon to 4.

The Keeler Tavern Museum is offering free tours of the festively decorated museum on Saturday from 1 to 4.

The Rotary Club is hosting an Amber Alert registration in town hall from 10 to 1.

While all the entertainment will provide the holiday spark necessary to make the stroll a success, it wouldn’t be possible without the sponsorship of all Downtown Ridgefield businesses, who help put on the $25,000 event that welcomes thousands of people each year.

“Businesses will be welcoming people into their store and holding individual events for shoppers that will be catered,” Mr. Craig explained. “What’s beautiful to see is people walking the streets, looking in the windows, going into stores and just enjoying downtown — that’s what I love seeing.”

“All of this is paid for by Downtown Ridgefield merchants who are always the first in supporting local teams and charities throughout the year,” he continued. “In return, we’d like to see our residents choose these merchants as their first shopping destination for the big holiday shopping season — you’d be amazed at what the downtown has to offer.”

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