Showing posts with label pomerance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pomerance. Show all posts

Saturday, June 30, 2012

A Little Pomerance Park History...

From a 2007 article that I somehow missed:



BARBARA W. TUCHMAN used to hike up to a tiny wooden cabin, no larger than 100 square feet, on her Cos Cob estate, to sift through notecards of research and type the history books that would make her famous. She could look across the valley from there and watch the deer gathering on the opposite hill at dusk.



Ms. Tuchman twice won the Pulitzer Prize and is one of the best known historians of the 20th century. Her greatest legacy will always be those books, which have sat on the nightstands of presidents. But this land in Cos Cob, she felt, was another kind of legacy. Near the end of her life, she feared that her three daughters would sell it and she wrote them impassioned letters imploring them to keep it in the family.

It was not to be.

A few years after Ms. Tuchman's husband died, two of her daughters sued the third, attempting to divide the land and sell their portions. The dispute has lasted four years.

Earlier this month, a judge divided the 43.4 acres that remain of the estate. Cos Cob is part of Greenwich and the town plans to buy about two-thirds of the property, while Alma, 56, Ms. Tuchman's youngest daughter, will continue to own and live on the 12.52 acres left. She will likely appeal the ruling.




Barbara Tuchman's father, Maurice Wertheim, a wealthy banker, bought the approximately 120-acre estate in 1912, the same year she was born. She was raised in New York, but spent weekends and summers in Cos Cob riding horses, swimming in the pond and enjoying the natural beauty of the land. Greenwich residents sometimes got to enjoy the property, too. John B. Margenot Jr., a longtime Greenwich resident and former first selectman, said he remembers skating at the Tuchmans' pond with other children.


''They were good about things like that,'' he said.


Ms. Tuchman graduated from Radcliffe College in 1933 and married Dr. Lester Reginald Tuchman, a New York internist, in 1939. Around the end of World War II, the couple moved into a building that held a chicken coop and potting house on the Cos Cob property. The Tuchmans still lived in New York, but went to the house on weekends and during the summer. Their three children rode horses in a ring next to the house and rowed a canoe to an island in the middle of the seven-acre pond for picnics.



Meanwhile, Barbara Tuchman became famous. Her book ''Guns of August,'' about the beginning of World War I, won the Pulitzer Prize in 1962. She ''treated herself'' to the writer's cabin with its stone fireplace using the proceeds from one of her books, said Alma Tuchman. When she was deep into a book, she would climb the hill to the cabin at 7 a.m. and stay there for the next 12 hours, save for a trip back to the house for a sandwich, which she would carry back on a tray, Alma Tuchman recalled.



The telegram informing Ms. Tuchman that she had won her first Pulitzer Prize still hangs in her study in the house, next to a picture of former President Jimmy Carter with a note attached assuring Ms. Tuchman that the president was reading her book.



Though the world was lining up at the door, the family became less apt to open the property to members of the community as time went on: ''It wasn't any longer a small-town community,'' Alma Tuchman said.



Late in life, Lester and Barbara Tuchman moved to Cos Cob for good and Ms. Tuchman continued working on her books. She still had a book on the best-seller list when she died in 1989.



While she was still alive, Ms. Tuchman had deeded the property to her daughters to share evenly.



Alma Tuchman retired from her job as a journalist and moved to the property in the late 1980's, but her sisters lived in other parts of the country. Lucy Eisenberg, a retired lawyer, lives in Los Angeles. Another sister, Jessica Mathews, is the president of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington. Ms. Eisenberg said she did not want to comment about the property. Ms. Mathews did not return phone calls seeking comment.



Barbara Tuchman insisted nothing be done with the property for 10 years after her death, Alma Tuchman said. She wanted the land to remain in the family's hands because it had given her ''a basic happiness and comfort ever since our establishment here as a family,'' Barbara wrote in a ''letter to my family'' in 1988. In the letter, she specifically warned against selling it to the town to use ''as a park or so-called 'open space.'''



But after the 10 years passed, the dispute began, pitting the sisters against each other. Alma Tuchman wanted to remain living on the land and preserve the entire parcel for the family, but her sisters wanted to claim their own portions, eventually deciding to sell them to the town.



With the sisters unable to resolve differences, Ms. Eisenberg and Ms. Mathews sued Alma Tuchman in October 2000. The case dragged on: The file has five parts and is about six inches thick, its own epic history.



Ms. Eisenberg and her husband, David, have created a trust to control their piece of property. In June 2001, the town of Greenwich entered into an agreement with Ms. Mathews and the Eisenbergs to purchase their share of the property for $8.67 million. In May 2002, the town intervened in the lawsuit to protect its interest.



The decision came back Aug. 4. The judge, David R. Tobin, split the land into two pieces, giving about two-thirds to Ms. Eisenberg and her sister and one-third to Alma Tuchman. Her 12.52-acre portion, which will be maintained as a private estate, is worth $9,525,000, according to Judge Tobin's ruling.



The land given to the two other sisters is 30.74 acres and is worth $18,050,000, the judge said. All of this is subject to appeal. The Eisenbergs and Ms. Mathews have agreed to make a charitable donation to the town to make up the difference between the value of the land and the price they have already negotiated.



Alma Tuchman said she no longer speaks to her two sisters. Barbara Tuchman, she said, would be ''appalled and sickened'' by what happened.



The town has not yet decided what it will do with the land, though it has expressed interest in allowing it to remain undeveloped as open space. The town has already purchased the adjacent Pomerance property, part of Mr. Wertheim's original estate and deeded to another one of his daughters. The town allows the public to use it. The parcel owned by Ms. Mathews and the Eisenberg trust could be added to the Pomerance parcel to create one larger piece of open space.



Jim Lash, the first selectman of Greenwich, said the town planned to review the ruling once it is final and decide what to do. He said he foresees three options for the land: open space, playing fields, or low-income housing.



''There are a number of possibilities there,'' he said last week.



Alma Tuchman, a conservationist who talks about the threatened species on the property and the various kinds of weeds clinging to the trees, is concerned that even if the town decided to keep the land as open space, it won't spend money on maintenance. The Pomerance property has already been overtaken in spots by weeds, and last week garbage and a discarded beer can floated in the pond.



''Over all it's very admirable in concept for the town to spend so much money acquiring open space, but I think it's also irresponsible to acquire land that you cannot take care of, and I think it's clear that the town can't take care of what it already has acquired,'' she said. ''Open space becomes nobody's land and nobody's responsibility.''

----------------------------


 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
 

 
Wyndygoul's "manor" house, located at the top of a one-quarter mile uphill drive, was designed by Seton in a style that reflected his unique personal architectural ideals, later carried out in three other houses as well. It combined the styles of American western stucco and stone with British Tudor and was a three-story construction, with low, beamed ceilings, thick walls and wood cornices, a large bay window, and generally simple, somewhat boxy lines.

Circa 1908. "Wyndygoul, home of E.T. Seton." The writer-naturalist Ernest Thompson Seton, one of the founders of the Boy Scouts of America, at his Cos Cob, Connecticut, estate.

Saturday, June 23, 2012

9/11 Memorial Bench Update

Glad to report that the Joe Lenihan 9/11 memorial bench is already replaced as of a day or two ago, and it looks beautiful!

Solid cedar wood, and let's hope it stays that way for good.

I will get a picture up soon.

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

I Made It!

I made it both on News 12 last evening, and I was featured in the Greenwich Time's article as well!!


My mother made a bootleg video of the News 12 segment!







My mom's volume somehow was  screwy on her phone so you have to crank the volume up.

 
I was very excited about the Greenwich Time article, which quoted my blog numerous times and even included my mother calling the perp a "hideous beast"!  Our whole family was delighted that the article was able to be front page news and I just feel so grateful.

A big thank you to David Hennessey of the Greenwich Time, who wrote such an excellent article and thought nicely to mention the blog!  =]


Greenwich Time- An enduring symbol of a town resident who died in the 9/11 terrorist attacks, a Pomerance Park memorial bench now sits wrapped in yellow caution tape and missing some of its wooden slats, an apparent victim of vandalism.

The bench, which faces a small pond in the Cos Cob park off Orchard Street, features a plaque that reads, "In loving memory. Joe Lenihan. 9-11-01. He loved coming here with his family. Some people come into our lives, touch our hearts, and we are never, ever the same." Lenihan worked as an executive vice president for a financial services company on the 89th floor of the World Trade Center's south tower when terrorists attacked the buildings.
Lt. Kraig Gray, Greenwich Police spokesman, said Monday that the police department is aware of the damage and is considering it a vandalism. Part of the bench's backing was removed sometime over the last few weeks.
Police officers searched the area, but were unable to find the missing piece of bench, Gray said.

Lenihan's wife Ingrid Lenihan, whose family donated the bench to the town, said Monday the family did not know of the incident until they were alerted by Greenwich Time.

The town's Parks and Recreation Department is aware of the damage, she said.

"They already have a work order in to fix it, and it's going to be repaired," she said.
When the bench was being installed, town officials said public property can sometimes be subjected to vandalism, such as youths carving out their initials, she said.
"They kind of warned me," she said. "They said don't be alarmed if something like this happens. I kind of have to look at it that way, or it'll break my heart."
Calls left with the Parks and Recreation department were not returned Monday.
Cos Cob resident and blogger Krystle O'Connor said her mother and sister were walking in the park Thursday when they discovered that a chunk of the bench's backrest was gone, and yellow caution tape had been draped over it.


"We go there almost every day, so I'm sure it wasn't like that for long," O'Connor said, adding that she doesn't know who put the caution tape up.

"It was very precise looking," she said of the damage. "It was strange.

In the months prior to the incident, there had been a chip in the bench in the area that was damaged, she said.

"We were upset just with that," she said.
In her blog, O'Connor said her mother labeled the perpetrator a "hideous beast."
"It is so disgusting that someone would do such a thing," O'Connor wrote. "What a sick person."
O'Connor called on the person or persons who committed the act to come forward.
"It takes just one person to let the proper people know who's responsible for such a disgusting act, and it would clear his or her conscience," she wrote.

david.hennessey@scni.com; 203-625-4428



Monday, June 18, 2012

Yours Truly on News 12

I'm glad that my Memorial Bench blog post made a difference, because today as I was walking with Kaitlyn and her bike through Pomerance we ran into News 12 doing a story on the bench. 

My sending them my post on their facebook is what had tipped them off in the first place, and I ended up talking for a while in front of the camera. 

They got a few shots of Kaitlyn riding her bike (trying to anyways) and took my phone number and e-mail so that they can forward to me people interested in fundraising to fix the bench. 

What have I gotten myself into?! Lol.

And I hope they edit most of me out, I was probably all sweaty and nasty looking lol.



But seriously folks, anyone interested in donating to the cause can feel free to e-mail me at KAOConnor1985@yahoo.com and we will discuss details.


We need to fix this bench!

Thursday, June 14, 2012

Outrage in Cos Cob


Cos Cob, CT- A disgraceful act of vandalism left this 9/11 memorial bench looking like it was hit by a bomb. This bench is a dedication to Joseph Lenihan, a town resident who died in the September 11th, 2001 attacks.

The bench faces Cos Cob Pond in Pomerance Park, off of Orchard Street.  Pomerance borders Pinetum and the entrance is near Central Middle School.

My mother took my little sister for a walk today and stumbled upon this mess. My mom posted these pictures on her facebook and called the perputrator a hideous beast. I think she's right.
More police patroling needs to be done, as this is a public town park.  It is so disgusting that someone would do such a thing.  What a sick person.
Add caption

For a while, there was one small chip in the top beam of the bench, and that was enough to upset my family and friends when we walk through Pomerance, which is very often.

I hold out hope that they may be able to figure out who did such a thing, but it looks like it would be hard.



A family portait of Joe Lenihan an his family, courtesy of Connectict Post.


Before the vandalism:
Courtesy of 9/11 Living Memorials on Voices of September 11th website.


The plaque reads:
"In loving memory
JOE LENIHAN
9-11-01
He loved coming here with his family
'Some people come into our lives, touch our hearts, and we are never, ever the same' "


 According to the Living Memorial site, his family were the ones to donate this bench in the first place. God forbid his family sees this bench now.


I'm seriously considering starting a collection for a reward for information, or at least enough money to help rebuild this bench.




If anyone has any information, please contact the Greenwich Police Department. 

If it was a group of stupid teenagers who did this, and I think that is a strong possibility, then all it takes is just ONE person to come forward.  It takes just one person to let the proper people know who's responsible for such a disgusting act, and it would clear his or her conscience. 

Or just live with it.  But don't forget, karma's a b*tch.

Friday, December 18, 2009

Pomerance, Fall of 2009.


Instead of the silly slideshow, click here to view the actual album!
Gorgeous shots if I may say so myself..!

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Bruce Museum & Pomerance

So I took some pretty pictures taken while out biking today:


The first shot was actually an accident- I was tipping over on my bike! A man was walking two dogs, one of them barked and scared me while I was trying to take a shot of the pond, like the second picture.

And I visited a sculpture exhibit over at Bruce Museum:


Look familiar? It's Connecticut coast line =]

(I really wasn't supposed to be photographing the last two ;] )