Past Issues of the Putnam Town Crier
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PUTNAM — The Board of Directors of the Citizens National Bancorp Inc. and The Citizens National Bank announce the election of a new chairman and vice chairman.
Elected chairman of both boards is Peter D. Deary. Deary became a director of the bank in September 2004 and recently served as its vice chairman. He is the president of Sunnyside Farms and Deary Bros., Inc. He is active in the community and is currently serving on the Quinebaug Valley Community College Foundation Board and the Board of Northeastern Connecticut Chamber of Commerce. He also chaired the Day Kimball Hospital Board from 2005 to 2008. Mr. Deary is the head deacon at the First Congregational Church of Pomfret. He and his wife, Kimberly, live in Abington.
Elected vice chairman of both boards is Kevin S. Shaw. Shaw has been a board member since 1999. He is the former owner of Shaw’s Office Center, in downtown Putnam for more than 50 years. Shaw is currently an active member of the Living Faith Methodist Church, director of The Putnam Cemetery Association, and director of the Putnam Baptist/Little Rivers Areas complex. A devoted grandfather, he and his wife, Linda, live in Woodstock.
Citizens National Bancorp Inc. is a one-bank holding company which owns The Citizens National Bank headquartered in Putnam, CT, with branch offices in Thompson, Woodstock, Killingly, and Brooklyn. The annual stockholders’ meeting for the holding company was held on April 23 at the Thompson Speedway in Thompson. The organizational meeting of the board was held immediately thereafter.
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Cafe has new owner
PUTNAM — The cafe at the corner of Providence and Marshall streets reopened recently with a new owner and a new name.
Quiet Corner Cafe, owned by Adam Dowd, purchased the former Penny’s.
Dowd was most recently the executive chef of the Colonial Club Restaurant in Webster. That restaurant closed recently after 65 years.
Dowd began cooking in his youth making jelly rolls for his teachers and functions at St. Mary School. He started working at 15 as a dishwasher at the former Vernon Stiles Inn, then worked at State Line Restaurant and the Pub 99. He is a graduate of Tourtellotte Memorial HIgh School and lives in Thompson.
He features homemade potato chips, handcut French fries, homemade clam chowder and cole slaw and fish, desserts and the soup of the day and more.
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PHS rehab
starts with
pursuit of
funding
By Linda Lemmon
Town Crier Editor
PUTNAM --- School officials hope to see a shovel in the ground for the renovation of Putnam High School by the end of the school year in 2014.
Voters recently approved the pursuit of funding for the "renovate as new" project on the more-than-50-year-old high school building. The total cost of the project would be $36.5 million; however after state reimbursements, the cost of the project would be around $16.5 million, according to school superintendent William Hull. That $16.5 million figure includes lots of contingency.
The project includes a full-sized gym, science lab upgrades, the whole building becoming ADA compliant, energy-efficiency projects that will save money, a brand new library media center, bringing the Putnam Alternative Learning School back into the high school, moving the Board of Education/school offices into the building, modernizing classrooms and adding a Medical Pathways course of study and more. The modernized classrooms will afford the high school the opportunity to "cluster classes" more to make for an efficient teaching environment. The Medical Pathways will be basically a "school within a school," he said. It will offer higher level math and science courses and will also offer internships and job shadowing. Hull said the program has connections with Day Kimball Hospital and other providers. It's an area looking to expand and grow, he added.
After years of study, the building committee determined that renovating the current high school as new made the most sense.
Hull said school officials know the state reimbursement rate for the project will be 73 percent. "We're not 100 percent sure of the rate next year," he said, so officials will be filing the reimbursement application before June 30, the end of the state fiscal year.
He hopes to file with the state at the beginning of June and thinks the town may hear back by the end of July. He added the town is also working with state legislators, including State Senator Donald E. Williams Jr., Senate president; and Daniel S. Rovero, state representative for the 51st district. "We're pursuing additional funding for the Medical Pathways program," he said. Other towns have added that program at their schools and have had success getting some funding for it.
Hull said the building committee has done yeoman's work and the committee and the Board of Education have exhibited a constant collaborative effort.
Following the state thumbs up, officials would like to hire an architect by fall. Plans would be created after that, following by a shovel in the ground at the end of school, 2014. Construction would take 18 to 24 months, he said and a process called "phasing" would be used. That involves closing wings of the school for demolition and renovation, with safety walls between students and staff and the construction work. People would move around the building and it's possible portable classrooms would be brought in. The building will be kept open in a safe manner, he said.
Hull said "We are grateful to Putnam residents for seeing the future and giving us a vote of confidence."
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Then
This is the silo at Troll Knoll farm on Joy Road in Woodstock in September 2011 before it was moved to the Woodstock Fairgrounds. Putnam Town Crier file photos.
& Now
After the move to the fairgrounds, in 2012.
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caption:
The Palmer Arboretum behind the Woodstock Historical Society building, off Rt. 169. Linda Lemmon photo.
By Linda Lemmon
Town Crier Editor
WOODSTOCK --- Once an impenetrable jungle, the Palmer Arboretum is turning into an emerald.
Bill Brower, chairman of the arboretum's board, will proudly lead two free tours at 10 a.m. and at 12:30 p.m. May 11. And he has much to show off.
When the arboretum was rediscovered in the 1970s, a machete was more likely the gardening tool of choice. The arboretum, founded by Minnie Palmer Dean in 1914, has come a long way.
The volunteer group has gotten a master plan from a UConn Landscape Design Department class and has implemented the first part of the design with an observation platform completed last fall by Eagle Scout Ben Gormley.
Clearing of the wild spring section, which is almost a quarter of the arboretum's area, was done by Matthew Sheldon, Brower said. Leaving nothing to waste, Sheldon also created seating at the arboretum from some of the tree trunks.
Arboretum officials also fixed a long-standing drainage problem with the installation of a state-of-the art rain garden, using a grant supervised by the Eastern Connecticut Conservation District. Jean Pillo of the district and David Faist of Faist Engineering designed the garden which draws rainwater and runoff from the parking lot and nearby hilly land into a larger drainage system. Judith Gries and Marian Hallowell picked the native plants for the garden. The project was implemented with hardscape and manpower from the Woodstock Town Highway Department under John Navarro, Brower said.
The arboretum has also benefitted by the volunteer work of three arborists who donate their time and expertise to prune, diagnose and treat the 100-year-old original plantings. Brower thanked Hart's Tree Service, Lindon's Tree Service and Dennis Panu Arborists and Sheldon's Tree Service.
But the arboretum isn't resting on its laurels. Brower said the group is working with Deborah Lee, the head of the Master Gardener program at UConn, to help implement additional parts of the master plan. That involves the expansion and design of the shade garden of native wildflowers and helping to choose a variety of groundcovers to eventually eliminate some weeding. The Woodstock Area Garden Club has also been generous, he said, with plants and memorial donations.
Brower said the arboretum is a town of Woodstock property and depends on the kindness of volunteers.
If you would like to lend a hand, call Brower at 860-974-2770. Donations may also be made to the Friends of the Arboretum c/o of the Woodstock Town Hall.
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