GRAPEVINE-2 - Nelson, New Hampshire
Transcription
GRAPEVINE-2 - Nelson, New Hampshire
GRAPEVINE-2 News for Nelson and Munsonville November 2014 Fall Issue THE TOWN HALL STANDS STRAIGHT AGAIN by Lisa Sieverts O ver the past seven months, we’ve watched the Town Hall rise up into the air and then descend. Here are some vignettes from the Town Hall building project with writing help from Mike DeMartelly and David Upton. The funds for the work come from the Warrant Article approved at the last Town Meeting. The Town had considered this work for each of the past four years. 2014 was the charm, as the Buildings Committee presented the new, scaled down plan at Town Meeting and the $350,000 plan passed with little objection. Private donations totaling more than $90,000 helped to convince taxpayers that the project was affordable. Some History The current Town Hall is the third structure that was built in Nelson to house town government. The first, built in 1773, was a small building that served early settlers of Packersfield, as Nelson was then called. As the population grew, a large two-story meetinghouse was built in 1787 on the hill south of the village center. In 1846, the present Town Hall was built “on the plain” where a small village was developing. The old meetinghouse was dismantled and some salvaged material was used in the new construction. As the Town Hall foundation was dismantled this year, we saw that the his- toric materials and workmanship were quite remarkable. In the old foundation there are mortise and tenon joints. Intricate, tongued, scarf joints can be seen along the sills. Many joists appear to be chestnut wood. Once this species of tree was quite common. It is a beautiful wood with dense, tight, grain that makes the beams very hard and durable. There are 6 load beams that span the entire width of the old Town Hall and are notched to receive the chestnut joists. These massive beams are notable also because they have a tight grain with few knots and appear to be hemlock. It is possible that these came from the 1787 meeting house. The logs distinguish themselves by being very different from the local hemlock which we see growing today. Hemlock now rarely grow this tall and the rings of today's trees indicate wide and more rapid growth which would never produce a "stick of lumber" as impressive and durable as these old beams. The Project Begins Nelson's own Russ Thomas, with many years of construction experience under his belt, agreed to serve as the Clerk of the Works. His attention to detail throughout the project helped the team navigate through the occasional unexpected discovery. The construction work began shortly after the March town meeting and as soon as the wet ground had dried somecontinued on page 6 Volume 31, No. 4 HOLIDAY FAIR “CELEBRATE NELSON” H ere’s a chance to do some holiday shopping and never leave town! The Town Hall and old library in Nelson will be bursting with local creativity on Saturday, Nov. 22, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Locally created art, paintings, crafts, needlework and hand-spun yarn, bread, puzzles, books, honey, maple syrup, music CDs, and much more—all by Nelson and Munsonville residents—will be displayed on tables and easels, for show and for sale. The 2015 Nelson History Calendar, hot off the press, will be unveiled at $6 per copy. This year’s calendar features stunning local vistas and landscapes photographed between 1865 and 1950. Live music, light refreshments, and general good spirits will add to the fun. Be sure to stop in and browse, buy, and catch up with your neighbors. That’s Saturday, Nov. 22, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Nelson Town Hall and old library. Extra parking is available behind the Olivia Rodham Library. Information: Susan Hansel, 847-9918 FROM MY ROCK A New-England Boy’s Song About Thanksgiving Day Leonard Frank Frazier March 18, 1930–Aug.13, 2014 by Lydia Maria Child. Published in Flowers for Children, Vol. 2 in 1844. (Last five verses) by Don Bennett L eonard was my senior by about four months and I have known him for most of the 55 years we have lived in beautiful downtown Munsonville. He was a rock in the community as well as in his family. We first met his dad, Harry Frazier, who did some work on the foundation of our 1830 vintage house to help slow the winter winds as they passed through. Harry was all business when he worked but did like, frequently and at some length, to share his stories of family and the neighborhood, which were fascinating, but in the interest of progress, we planned to be elsewhere occupied somewhere in the house when Harry was on the job. Over the river, and through the wood and straight through the barnyard gate. We seem to go extremely slowit is so hard to wait! Over the river, and through the woodOld Jowler hears our bells; He shakes his paw with a loud bow-wow, and thus the news he tells. So Harry introduced us, in considerable detail, to his large and mostly local, convoluted family. As the years went by we became acquainted with many of the family through local activities and school events. Some of the younger generations became friends with our children. Over the river, and through the woodwhen Grandmother sees us come, She will say, "O, dear, the children are here, bring pie for everyone." Leonard (Len) and I worked for the same company in Keene for about the same thirty three years. We worked in opposite ends of the building, in different departments and so seldom saw each other on the job. We also both served on the local fire department for about forty years. So we were thrown together frequently, shared common interests and enjoyed swapping stories about many of them. My wife Barbara and I began attending the local Methodist church where Len and Marion were long-time members. Besides regular services, there were social events and a Bible study group we enjoyed together. Both wives were active 4-H leaders which provided additional opportunities for sharing. Leonard’s keen, subtle, dry sense of humor was legendary. He would be relating a story and as you listened, suddenly realized it was beginning to sound more and more like fantasy. A quick glance at his face revealed the wry smile and mischievous twinkle in his eye that confirmed your suspicions. Leonard was a good friend, generous, willing to share whatever he had and lend a hand when needed. He was a beloved husband, father, grandfather and great grandfather as was made obvious by the loving testimony at his memorial service. Many will miss him. GRAPEVINE-2 Over the river, and through the wood, trot fast my dapple gray! Spring over the ground like a huntinghound! For 'tis Thanksgiving Day. NOVEMBER 2014 Over the river, and through the woodnow Grandmother’s cap I spy! Hurrah for the fun! Is the pudding done? Hurrah for the pumpkin pie! NH MOOSE PLATE PROGRAM W ork has begun on the Town Hall windows. Fred O'Connor, from Historic Harrisville, is restoring the windows thanks to a Moose Plate Grant awarded to the town for 2014. Fred is removing the windows one at a time, saving the original glass where he can. He will also restore the front door to the hall and do whatever repair is necessary on the small windows surrounding the door. The town is very grateful to the NH Moose Plate program that is dedicated to helping to restore historic town buildings across the state. –Susan Hansel PAGE 2 LIBRARY NEWS NELSON SCHOOL NEWS The Olivia Rodham Memorial Library received a gift of “Public Libraries Toolkit” of legal resources. by Kim Keating S tudents at Nelson School have been very busy with the world of academics and community and school events. Kindergarten students are focusing on two dimension geometric shapes, addition facts up to 5 and understanding and extending patterns. Letters and sounds, Fall Tree Visits with the Harris Center for Conservation, and learning about our community are important parts of the Kindergarten curriculum. Grades 1 & 2 continue working on spelling, reading, writing narratives, understanding time and money and regrouping numbers. T he Law Librarians of New England’s Service Committee chose the Olivia Rodham Memorial Library in Nelson for the mini-collection of legal books, “Public Libraries Toolkit” of legal resources. Here is a list of the books that will be available to take out of the library. These books will arrive on December 20th. Nolo’s Essential Guide to Divorce Grades 3 & 4 are totally engaged in multiplication, all parts of the water cycle, reading fluency, and parts of speech. Every Dog’s Legal Guide Grades 5 & 6 continue with reading fluency and comprehension, math word problems, creative problem solving and more. Plan Your Estate Halloween offered an opportunity for the costume parade and multi-age Halloween themed station activities. Grades 5 & 6 were joined by Linda Singer who instructed the students in the art of origami and the Nelson Fire Department and Mutual Aid joined all of us for a fire safety afternoon. We had fire trucks and experienced a home safety escape plan. Thank you to all the Nelson/ Sullivan community members for your wonderful support of our school. The Legal Answer Book for Families 101 Law Forms for Personal Use Black’s Law Dictionary The New Hampshire Divorce Handbook NH Practice and Procedure Handbook A Practical Guide to Divorce in NH New Hampshire Landlord and Tenant Law Annotated New Hampshire Special Education Law Manual The Bluebook Upcoming events include: A Keene High School presentation of “You’re A Good Man Charlie Brown,” 5 & 6 grade field trip to Lowell, MA Mills with Harrisville students, and our All School Feast on November 25th. OLIVIA RODHAM MEMORIAL LIBRARY BOOK DISCUSSION Monday, December 15th at 10:30 a.m. We will be discussing Shadow Divers by Robert Kurson Deep-wreck divers are used to operating with almost no headroom and in zero visibility, navigating by touch alone; it is a compliment to be told "When you die, no one will ever find your body." Despite the dangers, wreck divers are typically weekend warriors, men who leave families and jobs behind to test themselves at two hundred feet down. Kurson's exciting account centers on two divers, John Chatterton and Robert Kohler, who in 1991 found an unidentified U-boat embedded in the ocean floor off the coast of New Jersey. The task of identifying it leads them to Germany, Washington, D.C., and the darkest corners of the submarine itself. Some of the most haunting moments occur on land, as when the divers research the lives of the doomed German sailors whose bones they swim among. Once underwater, Kurson's adrenalized prose sweeps you along in a tale of average-guy adventure. Copyright © 2005 The New Yorker GRAPEVINE-2 NOVEMBER 2014 PAGE 3 She applied to the town for assistance. From the record of the 1813 town meeting: “Voted that the selectmen see to taking care of Mrs. Barrett and her children as they shall think best.” The selectmen may have felt she didn’t qualify for assistance as here is no record of the family receiving any support until Jonathan Hunting bid for her keep in 1816 at 46 cents per week. LUCY NICHOLS BARRETT T by Rick Church his is the story of Lucy Nichols Barrett, a women deserted by her husband at age 32 with her six children and thrown on the mercy of the town and her neighbors. The scanty records that exist document the desertion and the support of her husband’s family and their neighbors. It also illustrates the town’s treatment of its poor. The story may even have had a happy ending. An affidavit, found in the Nelson Archives, that deals with John Barrett’s desertion of his wife is unusual in Nelson Town Records. It documents a domestic matter that became a rare matter of public record and it offers an unusual glimpse of the circumstances of the town’s early poor. Early paupers leave few “tracks” in town records other than their cost; they did not own homes and they do not have markers in Nelson cemeteries, though the town paid their burial expenses. The affidavit is also unusual because John Barrett’s parents attested to their son’s desertion of his wife and family. The Barrett family had had an inauspicious beginning in Packersfield. (Nelson was called Packersfield from its incorporation in 1774 until 1814 when it was renamed Nelson by act of the legislature.) The family moved to the town’s northeast corner in 1779 joining other families from Amherst. Almost immediately Nelson’s constable served them with a warrant requiring that they leave. What follows is part of a charge from the selectmen to the town constable: “To Nathaniel Breed JR, constable: You are authorized and required to warn the following persons to depart out of the town of Packersfield Viz. Mr. Nathaniel Barrett and his wife and Nathaniel Barrett JR and Hannah Barrett and Abigail Barrett.” New Hampshire law required that towns support “settled” citizens unable to support themselves. “Settled” meant those born in Packersfield, those who owned land and paid their taxes for four years, those married to a settled person and town officials. Newcomers were routinely “warned out of town” lest they become “settled” and a town obligation. Constable Breed warned three other families out of town that same cold November day. Nathaniel’s wife, Mercy, was likely pregnant with John, born in Packersfield the following year. Like most families, the Barretts didn’t actually move, but they were on notice that the town considered them a risk and no public assistance would be available. Nathanial and Mercy raised their family on the farm marked by an old cellar hole on the north side of the Old Stoddard Road where Marcus Bailey lived much later. His son, also Nathaniel, built a home further down the road just over the line in Stoddard in 1802. John Barrett married Lucy Nichols of Stoddard in 1802. She bore him five children and was pregnant with their sixth when John abandoned his family and, perhaps with money settled on Lucy by her parents at her marriage, departed for places unknown. Pregnant and with children from ages one to nine, she was thrown on the mercy of the town for the support of herself and her children. She is an example of how people came to be in need of public assistance and the many ways her community supported her in her time of difficulty. The following affidavit was written by the Barretts’ long time neighbor and friend, John White, in support of Lucy’s case for public support. I John White do testify that I have lived near Neighbor to Nathaniel Barrett Father to John Barrett for the term of forty years have ever been acquainted with the said John Barrett until the said John Barrett left his family and went to parts unknown. That the said John Barrett (as I have understood and as I firmly believe) married to Lucy Nichols as much as eighteen or twenty years since and that he the said John Barrett did to my certain knowledge bring his said wife into the neighborhood in which I live. That his said wife was well furnished with household furniture by her parents and that sometime afterwards the said John did receive something like two hundred dollars as the portion of his said wife, and that the said John Barrett did ever behave in a very unkind manner toward his said wife and that something like eight or ten years since he the said John Barrett did leave his wife and family and went to parts unknown and has wholly forsook his family and has never done anything toward the support of or comfort of his said family, but they have been supported and taken care of by the town of Nelson. –John White Nathaniel Barrett and his wife, Mercy, added their testimony: I Nathaniel Barrett of lawful age do testify and say that my son John Barrett was (as I firmly believe) married to Lucy Nichols some time in the month of April 1802 and that they lived together as husband and wife until the year 1812. That the said John some time in the later part of said year of 1812 did leave his said wife and continued on page 7 GRAPEVINE-2 NOVEMBER 2014 PAGE 4 THANK YOU TO WEBMASTER GORDON PEERY by Kristine Finnegan S ince 2009 Gordon Peery has been the webmaster of Town of Nelson website. He created the website, including all of the diverse pages that describe our town. Gordon collected and skillfully connected many parts of our town with pictures, events calendars, minutes of town groups, history articles, nature articles and descriptions of many parts of the town. In 2012 the web page was honored with an award from NH Magazine as being the best municipal web page in New Hampshire. The note on the homepage is “ Welcome to the Center of the Universe”, and there we remain. The Olivia Rodham Memorial Library has sponsored this web page, working with Gordon on content and new ideas that have been smoothly integrated into the site. Gordon is moving out of the web business and is exploring new interests. The librarian will become the new webmaster with volunteer technical help from David Pyles for the www.townofnelson.com web page. This page will focus on cultural, historical and entertainment events in Nelson. There is a new web page that includes the official town of Nelson government pages, with town board meetings, official town board meeting minutes and official town government announcements. The site is www.townofnelson.org. In conclusion, a big thank you to Gordon for all of his years of creativity and work as the webmaster. GRAPEVINE-2 MONADNOCK FOLKLORE SOCIETY PRESENTS C eltic Roots of the Music of the American West , a concert program performed by Skip Gorman with Connie Dover at the Nelson Town Hall on Friday, November 21 at 8 pm. Admission is $15/$12(senior, youth, or in advance). Through his music, Skip Gorman brings back to life the workaday world of the cowboys of the American West. His music is not the music of the Hollywood cowboy, but rather the simple, yet beautifully poignant music that was performed around campfires by cowboys and westward settlers in the 19th century. Gorman brings to the music a scholar’s knowledge of the cowboy’s Celtic, Spanish and Afro-American roots as well as the personal experience gained by working as a cowboy on a ranch in Wyoming, along with an exquisite touch as a singer, guitarist, fiddler and mandolinist. Acclaimed by the Boston Globe as “the finest folk ballad singer America has produced since Joan Baez,” Connie Dover is a singer, poet and Emmy Award-winning producer and composer. Her soaring, crystal-clear voice and inspired arrangements of the music of Scotland, Ireland and early America display a depth and breadth of range that have established her as one of the world’s pre-eminent traditional singers. Nowell Sing We Clear in Concert Monadnock Folklore Society’s annual presentation of this seasonal favorite! Absolutely the best way to start your holiday season. Music, dance, a mummer’s play and delicious treats! Dublin Community Church Friday, December 5, 2014 8:00 pm Admission $15/$12 (Sr/Jr or in advance) First Saturday Contra Dance on December 6th, featuring Lisa Greenleaf calling with the band Pete’s Posse. The dancing begins at 8:00 p.m., with an optional introductory workshop beforehand. Admission is $10 or $7 for students and seniors. The dance takes place in the Town House in Peterborough, NH at 1 Grove Street. Contra Dances every Monday night 8 to 10:30 pm at the Nelson Town Hall, $3.00. Information: Lisa Sieverts 603-762-0235 NOVEMBER 2014 PAGE 5 what—first by raising the Town Hall high off her crumbling and tilted foundation with the help of hydraulics and steel beams with the skillful direction of Geddes Construction and Building Movers. During the time that the building was lifted above its foundation, the clapboards on the East end and those along the base of the building were removed exposing rotted sills, plates, studs, and wall sheathing. These have all been replaced with new materials. The source of the dampness on the interior of the East wall was found to be a leak around the window in the East gable. A properly flashed and sealed replacement window has been installed there. A New Foundation Much work went into preparing for the new footings and new walls for the foundation. The old rubble stone foundation was removed as well as many feet of silt and fine sediments not suitable for supporting concrete footings and walls. Drainage piping was installed both inside and outside of the walls and covered with a fabric to prevent silt from clogging it. Concrete footings for posts for supporting the floor were installed. Next crushed stone was brought in covering all the floor space to a depth of approximately 18 inches. Then the cribbing supporting the building was removed and the building lowered back to its original elevation. Hunter Foundations came in and formed up and poured the new concrete walls that are now re-enforced with half inch GRAPEVINE-2 rebar. A 4" poured slab over 12 mil plastic will seal off the moisture which nearly had been the cause of the old Town Hall's demise over the years. The old granite blocks that had been used as caps over the original, mostly rubble stone, bearings were replaced with great care by Wall Masonry of Claremont. De-Racking Once the building was securely back on a level foundation, the degree of racking of the walls could be measured and the “de-racking” process could begin. We had determined that the East end of the Town Hall was 5 to 6 inches out of square and plumb. This end of the building was leaning toward the South. Further measurements showed that the North and South walls of the building were tilted out of square in varying degrees along their total length. For most of the summer, the crew was comprised of young Ian Ingram, grandson of the company's founder, and Wayne Daniel, the firm’s oldest carpenter, having worked for Ingram for over 15 years. Wayne brought many years of expertise to the job and regarded the workmanship of the original builders with great respect. A series of chains and pneumatic power pullers were used to pull the walls back into square. This part of the rebuilding came after careful use of a frame straightener, The Waynerator, (invented by Wayne using an old auto body shop frame straightener) and heavy chains to NOVEMBER 2014 make the walls plumb again. Wayne puzzled over how to do this for quite a while, since neither the architect nor the engineer provided much direction as to how the task was to be completed. It's Means and Methods, Wayne explained; as is the case most often, the carpenters, themselves, are the ones (The Means) who have to figure out how to actually do (The Methods) the construction. Wayne was up to the task. The Roof Supports The trusses and vertical roof supports needed much more work than had been anticipated. Additional wood members were added to the roof trusses to increase the load bearing capacity of the roof and to make sure that the walls stay plumb and square. Supports for the roof trusses are also being strengthened with the addition of vertical members installed under them on the interior walls. The crew carefully inserted 35 feet long laminated beams (LVLs) to reinforce the heavy timbers that span the ceiling and more LVLs to sister up the rafters, as well as dimensional 2 bys to sister the old purlins. Portions of the roof had to be removed to complete this difficult task. Finishing Up The furnace was being moved to the Mechanical Room in the Library basement, with the result that it is much quieter and more efficient. A novel ambient air cooling component was installed which brings in an enormous amount of fresh air when needed. We should no longer find ourselves over-heated during July Library Forums. The finishing touches included resheathing the exterior, painting both the interior and exterior walls, and the final grading of the grounds. The last items will be completed this Fall by Fred O'Connor from Historic Harrisville. Fred will repair and restore the windows and front door to the Town Hall. This work is funded by a $10,000 Moose Plate Grant which the Town received last Spring. Thanks to a generous gift from the Monadnock Folklore Society, additional electrical outlets, and a new stage lighting and sound system were installed. The Folklore Society also repaired and refinished the floor. PAGE 6 Thank You! A project of this scale cannot be done without the help of a great many people. As a Town, we must thank all of the following groups and individuals. Everyone who has served on the Nelson Town Buildings Committee since 2010: Jack Bradshaw Warren Hammack Tom Buttrick Bud French Susan Hansel Eric Sandberg Rob Germeroth Dave Upton Russ Thomas Mike DeMartelly Sandy Mackenzie Bob Lenox Maury Collins Bert Wingerson Lisa Sieverts All of the Selectboard members who oversaw the various warrant articles since 2010: Warren Hammack Bud French Mike Blaudschun Margaret Schillemat Susan Hansel Dave Upton Maury Collins Big thank you to everyone who went door-to-door last February to inform the town’s citizens about the Town Hall and Library projects, and to all the donors. Finally, many experts worked on this We thank the architects who worked on different versions of the project: Tom Weller Rick Monahon Paul Hemmerich The Construction Crews who did the work this spring and summer: Geddes Construction and Building Hunter Foundations Wall Masonry Pinney Heating and Plumbing The Construction Management crew from Ingram Construction was outstanding and deserves special commendation. In addition to their high quality workmanship, they managed to complete the entire Town Hall Renovation project significantly under budget. The town should feel proud. Our historic Town Hall should stand straight and tall for at least another hundred years. GRAPEVINE-2 Lucy Nichols Barrett, continued from page 4 went to parts unknown and wholly forsaken his wife and family ever since. Nathaniel Barrett, his mark I Mercy Barrett mother to the above named John Barrett do testify and say the foregoing is the truth. Mercy Barrett, her mark The records of the years following the disappearance of John Barrett show that Lucy was “bid out” at town meeting. The process was a reverse auction in which citizens, deemed to be the town’s responsibility and unable to support themselves, were auctioned to the person who would take them in for the least cost to the town. The pauper was provided with room and board. Their host was paid the amount of their bid by the town and they were due any labor the pauper could reasonably provide. Judging from the low amounts hosts received to board Lucy, her labor was valued by her hosts. The record does not mention the care of her children; they may have resided in the custody of their fraternal grandparents. Jonathan Hunting bid 46 cents per week for the care of Lucy Barrett. He agreed to do her washing and laundering and mending. The town provided her clothing and doctoring. This was the standard form of the “bid off” arrangement and didn’t indicate that Lucy didn’t do her own laundry or needed medical services. Joel Sawyer, a young farmer and long time neighbor with a growing family of his own took Lucy the next year for 26 cents per week. She stayed on with the Sawyers for a number of years. NOVEMBER 2014 In 1826 the neighbors stepped in to help Lucy and her family again. Another neighbor, Nathaniel Davis, and his family sold her three acres off the Old Stoddard road between her fatherin-law and the Sawyer house. The location is marked by a cellar hole near the Hanchett’s driveway today. I assume that the purchase was secured with a mortgage for the whole amount. The purchase price of $150 would have been hard to meet for someone in her circumstances. This kindness and the growing usefulness of her children apparently allowed Lucy to become self-supporting; she was no longer bid out at town meeting. Or had John had returned? There is no concrete evidence that he did (Lucy is described as a “spinster” on her deed), but the purchase by a single woman of real property was unusual in that era. Could it be the neighbors wanted to support the reunited family, but did not trust John Barrett given his history? Lucy leaves the town’s welfare rolls at this point. Little is known of her life afterwards. It does seem probable that she and John reconciled. The US census records from Mason, NH in 1850 have a household comprised of John and Lucy N. Barrett. A John Barrett died in Mason in 1852 and the 1860 census lists Lucy Barrett, then aged 80 living with Luther Barrett, age 52, his wife and a number of children. A happy outcome at the end of a long and difficult life? PAGE 7 This 2014 Ford 4 wheel drive F-550 Rescue Truck was donated to the Town of Nelson by Jack Bradshaw in memory of his late wife Bess Bradshaw. The truck is designed to transport a crew of 7 rescue personnel, and has been custom designed and fit up with equipment needed by the Nelson Rescue Squad. Equipment includes an on-board generator, a 9000 pound winch, an awning for treating victims in inclement weather, internal and external lighting, it is an all around truck to support fire and rescue events. Easy access storage is designed for first aid and rescue equipment. This vehicle can act as a command center for a search and rescue mission. The Nelson Fire and Rescue Department is extremely grateful to Jack Bradshaw for this very generous photos courtesy Warrren Hammack and Pamela White donation. GRAPEVINE-2 NOVEMBER 2014 PAGE 8 CHURCH NEWS Nelson Congregational Church The Christmas Cantata called “All is Well” will be performed December 21. If you sang with us last year or had hoped to and would like to do it again this year, please contact Deanna Zilske or Dawn as soon as possible. Rehearsals will be from 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 on Nov. 16, 23 and Dec. 7, 14, and possibly a rehearsal during the week. The 2014 Stewardship Campaign is underway. The theme is “Abundant Blessings” and we are exploring all of our blessings and seeing just how abundant they really are in our lives. We are praying that through introspection of our great and abundant blessings we will be able share more of those blessings to help our church continue its missions and faith within as well as sustaining our outreach through the community and beyond. We hope each of you contemplate your abundant blessings. Wingerson 847-9945 or Priscilla Walter 847-3264 if you would like to meet for lunch. Annual Meeting was Sunday, November 2nd and we voted on new committee members and the 2015 budget. The Trustees were asking for more input and direction to help with the Equal Access project. New ideas have come forth and we are hoping to find a solution that can come to fruition in the near future. Thank you one and all for your continued support of this effort. We are trying to make our church more comfortably accessible in the most pleasing and aesthetically fitting way and to do it right the first time. There are two Adult Education groups this year. One meets in Keene on Tuesdays at 12:30 p.m. and the other on Wednesday evenings at 6:30 p.m. at the church. All are welcome. There is a new Middle School youth group. All middle school age young people are welcome to join the group. Speak with Gretchen Tillson 313-7217 or Dawn 847-3280. The Senior High youth group is also meeting and will be going to see “You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown” on Saturday, November 22. Speak with Dawn or Judi Lang, 520-5615, if you are planning to attend. Advent begins on November 30. Join us for the First Sunday of Advent for worship at 9:30 a.m. On Sunday, December 7 the youth groups will be baking cookies at 3:30 p.m. 1st Tuesday Tea has started back up and meets at 10 a.m. throughout the year hosted by varied families and individuals at their homes. This is a wonderful way to build community. All are welcome. The NELLs are back meeting for lunch at various restaurants at 12:30 p.m. in Keene on the second Wednesday of the month. The next lunch will be at the Thai restaurant on Main St. All are welcome to share in this gathering. Reservations are requested so please contact Bert GRAPEVINE-2 Also on December 7 we’ll have the annual Hanging of the Greens for all church and community friends starting at 6 p.m. We will be singing carols on the front steps and lighting the ChristNOVEMBER 2014 mas tree. We will then meet in the Melville Hall to enjoy cocoa and freshly made cookies. We hope you all will come and join us for this fun time. On December 21st we will perform the Christmas Cantata and the children will present their annual Christmas Pageant Tableaux. Christmas Eve Candlelight Service on December 24th will begin at 7:00 p.m. All are welcome. Special parking reminder to respect our neighbors. Please park on Log Cabin Road and the church driveway with your headlights facing the Nelson Road (both day time and evening parking). Log Cabin Road parking on the church side only. Church driveway parking only on the Log Cabin Road side of the driveway. This allows for enough room for emergency vehicles to get through. Thanks so much for your cooperation. Chapel-By-The-Lake Worship services are at 11:00 a.m. with Bible Study following the Worship service. Knitting club meets every other Thursday from 10 a.m. to noon. For more information and to confirm meeting dates, call 446-7857 or 8473231 During the winter months we meet in individual’s homes. The Apple Fest and Craft Fair this year was a huge success and a great time was had by one and all. Thanks to everyone who put so much effort into making it a fun time for everyone. Lots of cider, pies, donuts and beautiful crafts. There will be a Pancake Breakfast on November 22 from 8 to 10:30 a.m. Come and enjoy a hardy breakfast and enjoy quality social time. PAGE 9 Local Services & Classifieds ——————————— FOR SALE ————————————— Custom Wooden Jigsaw Puzzles – From your artwork, photos, prints, etc. Call David Beffa-Negrini at Fool's Gold®, 827- 9825 or email: [email protected] Granite Lake Maple Products – Pure NH Maple syrup by Nick Barrett, 66 Old Towne Road, Nelson, NH, 03457. 847-3457 or email: [email protected] Nelson grown yarn, fleece and roving from our flock of Romney sheep. Also available are knitting kits and finished products: scarves, hats, mittens, blankets, etc. Call Susan Weaver 847-9763. Hidden Birch Farm - Chevon (Goat Meat) raised on our farm, choice of cuts; meat chickens & Thanksgiving turkeys. Farm fresh eggs; livestock fence installation. 96 Nubanusit Rd - Tiger & Gigi Batchelder. 827-2950 or email www.hiddenbirchfarm.com ————————————— PERSONAL SERVICES ———————————Talented young woman will help you with your childcare needs, office needs, clerical needs, housecleaning needs, or other miscellaneous projects. Call Gwyneth Tolman 827-4194. ———————————————— OTHER ———————————————— Harrisville Children's Center - year-round programs for children 6 weeks to 6 years old. 827-3905 Writing Lessons -Will teach you, child or adult, to write better than you do now. Ph.D. Tufts, taught writing at Tufts and Harvard Extension. Elizabeth Chapman Hewitt. 847-3118 or 401-2666 For Rent – Granite Lake summer cottage. Call Mable Bergeron 363-8086. GRAPEVINE-2 For Rent – Seasonal Cottage on Granite Lake. Call 520- 5615 or 304-594-3539. Art Lessons - for children and adults. Watercolor, oil, composition, and drawing. Summer/Fall. Beginner thru advanced instruction. Marylise Reilly Fajal, 847-3382 or 355-7337. ——————————————— BUILDING, ETC. ———————————————Ethan Tolman - Excavating, bulldozer, truck, loader/tractor work. Field, driveways, building, moving. Years of experience. 827-3414 New homes, decks, kitchens, and baths - remodeling our specialty. Nubanusit Building and Remodeling. Ron Trudelle 827-3251 Excavation - Septic Systems, driveways, site work, and foundations, trucking, plowing and sanding. Phil Hamilton 847-3288 Additions, renovations, remodeling, barns. Steven Reilly 847-3382 or 355-7337 Residential Painters - Interior, exterior. Experienced, reasonable, reliable. Heidi Tompkins and Tal Gregory 847-0000 ———————————————- HOME SERVICES ———————————————Rubbish removal - Granite Lake Services. Ed Schillemat 847-3290 Gardening, pretty, manicured lawns, spring and fall clean-up, brush & chainsaw work. Owen Iselin 933-0680 SPComm Starpower - Home TV and Satellite Systems, High Speed Internet access, 2-way radio, sound reinforcement, home theatre. www.STARPOWER-satellite.tv or [email protected]. NOVEMBER 2014 Yard Work - Will do yard work for you. Call Marcus Bean, 847-3042. ———————————————– MUSIC ———————————————Music Lessons - Allison Aldrich & Hunt Smith - Voice, Fiddle, Guitar, Ukulele, 5 String Banjo, Mandolin, Recorder, Beginning Piano, Accordion, Concertina, Flute. A relaxed, friendly atmosphere where you can learn to sing or play the instrument you have always wanted to master. Call 209-3304 or email: [email protected] www.huntandallison.net Munsonville Audio Location & Studio Recording / Sound Reinforcement. Pro-grade mixing, high resolution digital recording, microphones & signal processing coupled to custom monitor mixes and an extremely powerful yet well mannered FOH sound system. High quality recordings expertly mixed, mastered & made ready for distribution. Demo recordings a specialty. 499-2904 Web: www.MunsonvilleAudio.Com Email: [email protected] Music Lessons - Banjo, Bass, Electric Guitar and Acoustic Guitar. Rock and Roll, Bluegrass, Country Western, Folk. All levels. Ages 12 to 112. Teaching music for 20+ years. Jonathan Smith 827-3036 Note: Grapevine ads are free to local residents. Please inform us if you need to change or delete an ad. ————————————————-- NOTE FROM THE EDITOR We are looking for people who would like to receive the link to the full color online version of the Grapevine instead of the paper copy in the mail. It will save on paper and cost. If you are willing to do this, please e-mail Dawn Garrett-Larson at [email protected]. Thank you for your support! PAGE 10 NELSON DIRECTORY ———————————— This newsletter is published by volunteers and is supported solely by donations from you, our readers. Our costs are paper, printing and postage. If you enjoy receiving the Grapevine, please help us keep this Nelson mainstay running. Use the enclosed envelope to send a contribution to: Grapevine-2 830 Nelson Road Nelson, NH 03457 Thank you in advance for your generosity! -The Grapevine Committee ——————————————— The Grapevine-2 is printed by Prospect Communications. ——————————————— The Grapevine-2 Committee and friends: Hope Lothrop, Kelly French, Susan Hansel, and Bert Wingerson ——————————————— Please visit our Town of Nelson website at: www.townofnelson.org GRAPEVINE-2 Emergency (Mutual Aid) . . . . . . . . . 911 All fire, illness, and accident calls Selectmen. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 847-0047 [email protected] Old Brick Schoolhouse; Alternating Wed., 3:00 p.m. David Upton, Maury Collins, Susan Hansel Town Clerk/Tax Collector. . . . 847-9043 [email protected] [email protected] Old Brick Schoolhouse, Tues., 9 a.m. - 12 noon & 4 p.m.- 7 p.m. Thurs., 9 a.m. - 12 noon Or by Appointment Julia Lennon, Town Clerk (Notary Public) Karen Castelli, Deputy Town Clerk Town Administrative Asst. . . . 847-0047 [email protected] Tues., 9 a.m. - noon & 4 p.m.- 7 p.m. Thurs., 9 a.m. - noon Or by Appointment Edie Drinkwater, Admin. Asst. Anita Treloar, Financial Clerk Planning Board [email protected] Old Brick Schoolhouse 2nd Thurs., 7 p.m. Eric Sandberg, Chair . . . . . . . 847-9156 Zoning Board-Adjustment [email protected] Old Brick Schoolhouse 1st Tues., 7 p.m. John Cucchi, Chair. . . . . . . . . 847-9001 Highway Department . . . . . . . . 847-9705 Town Barn Mike Tarr, at Town Barn Fire Chief Bud French . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . call 911 Police. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 355-2000 Richard C. Pratt, Jr. . . . . . . . . . . . Chief [email protected] Building Sexton Wayne Fulton. . . . . . . . . . . . . 847-0047 (Emergencies only, 209-4855) Cemetery Board Town Offices, 3rd Tues., 4:00 p.m. Patricia Jones, Chair. . . . . . . . 847-9681 State Representatives, District 3: Dan Eaton [email protected] State Senator, District 10: Molly Kelly [email protected] NOVEMBER 2014 Supervisors of the Checklist . . 847-3206 Betsey Church, Chair, Carol Newcombe Hope Lothrop Olivia Rodham Memorial Library . . . . . . . . . . 847-3214 Kris Finnegan, Librarian HOURS Monday 10:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. Tues., Wed., Thurs. 3:00 - 7:00 p.m. Saturday 10:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. Library Trustees Linda Cates, Chair Nelson School . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 847-3408 School Board - Nelson School 1st Wednesday, 4:30 p.m. Kelly French, Jessica Walter, Sara Marean Conservation Commission Kathy Schillemat, Chair. . . . 847-9995 Agricultural Commission Nelson Library 1st Wednesday, 7:00 p.m. David Voymas, Chair . . . . . 847-3137 Old Home Day Committee Nelson Library 2nd Monday, 6:30 p.m. Kathy Blaudschun, Chair. . . 847-9082 Youth Groups: Cub Scouts, Elaine Giacomo.847-9019 Boy Scouts, Rich Crowe . . . 827-3521 Civil Air Patrol, Marcus Bean . . . 847-3042 NCC Teen Youths. . . . . . . . 847-3280 ————————————– GRAPEVINE-2 ——————— Grapevine-2 is a quarterly newsletter serving the Nelson/Munsonville community and is sponsored by the Nelson Congregational Church. It is made possible mostly by voluntary donations from readers, with some supplementary assistance from the church. Should donations exceed costs, the surplus goes to the church. Contributions of articles, ideas, photos, or art are always welcome. To contact the Grapevine-2, call Mare-Anne Jarvela at 847-3244, or email [email protected], or send regular mail to: Grapevine-2 Mare-Anne Jarvela 26 Old Towne Rd. Munsonville, NH 03457 PAGE 11 WINTER CONCERT, DEC. 21 Join the Nelson Town Band in the Town Hall on Sunday, Dec. 21, for a free holiday concert, 4 to 6 p.m. Christmas and Hanukkah favorites, songs and carols old and new, and a few surprises are on the program. And cookies for the audience! Everyone is welcome. REGULARLY SCHEDULED LIBRARY EVENTS Weekly Story Time for children meets on Tuesdays at 3:15 p.m., October through May when school is in session. Weekly Knitting Group meets every Thursday from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. You may come for the whole time or part of the time. Weekly Coffee Hour meets every Saturday at 10 a.m. Monthly Book Group meets the third Monday of the month at 10:30 a.m. Books may be picked up at the library. Winter Game Time is at 11 a.m. on January 10th and February 14th. These programs are free and open to the public. For more information call the library at 847-3214 or email [email protected].