Author Elizabeth Winthrop to lecture at Ventfort Hall

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Bestselling author Elizabeth Winthrop will tell the story behind her new novel, “Counting on Grace” (Random House, 2006) in a lecture at Ventfort Hall Mansion and Gilded Age Museum. The multi-award-winning writer of over 50 books, including the classic “The Castle in the Attic” and its sequel, “The Battle for the Castle”, Winthrop will speak on Saturday, May 12 at 4 p.m. and then join her audience for Victorian Tea in Ventfort Hall’s grand dining room. In this talk about her creative process, Winthrop will discuss her inspiration from the haunting Lewis Hine 1910 photograph of a twelve-year-old mill girl. Winthrop created the fictional Grace Forcier, a French-Canadian spinner, who is proud to work by her mother’s side as a doffer. But when Hine arrives at the mill to document the horrors of child labor, Grace becomes his secret ally, a decision that brings both devastating repercussions, as well as the possibility for a different life for this child. In a presentation with slides that runs like a historical detective thriller, Winthrop will introduce us to Grace, while at the same time showing us in scenes from the life of a small Vermont town, the riveting story of Winthrop’s painstaking and finally rewarding search for Addie, the real child in Hine’s photograph. Winthrop reconstructs Addie’s life piece-by piece, rescuing this little Vermont girl at last from the dustbin of history. “Counting on Grace”, a book that holds as much appeal for adults as for young readers, has been chosen as a Notable Book of the Year by the American Library Association, the National Council of Social Studies, the International Reading Association and the Children’s Book Council. It has been nominated for the Dorothy Canfield Fisher Award and is the Vermont Reads Selection for 2007, as well as the 2007 Massachusetts Honor Book in Children’s Literature. Winthrop has written more than 50 books for children of all ages. Her children’s novel, “The Castle in the Attic”, has been nominated for 23 state book awards and won the Dorothy Canfield Fisher Award in Vermont and the Young Readers Award in California. Winthrop’s fiction has been selected by Best American Short Stories, Children’s Choice Awards, Barnes and Noble’s Best Children’s Books of the Year, the “New York Times” Best Illustrated Books, the Bank Street College Best Books for Children and the School Library Journal’s Best of the Best List, among others. Her popular picture books include “Dumpy LaRue”, “Dancing Granny”, “Shoes”, “Maggie and the Monster”, “Squashed in the Middle“and, most recently, “The First Christmas Stocking” and “The Biggest Parade”. Two of her recent books for older children are: “Red-Hot Rattoons” and “Dear Mr. President, Letters from a Milltown Girl”. Winthrop is the daughter of the late Stewart Alsop, the political journalist. She graduated from Sarah Lawrence College, where she studied writing with Grace Paley and Jane Cooper. Admission for the lecture and tea is $15 per person ($12 members). For more information or reservations, please call 413-637-3206. Ventfort Hall is located at 104 Walker Street, Lenox and is online at www.gildedage.org An Official Project of Save America’s Treasures, Ventfort Hall Mansion and Gilded Age Museum offers tours of the historic mansion, as well as lectures, concerts, teas, theater and other programs. This elegant Berkshire “cottage,” listed on the National Register of Historic Places, is open to the public year-round and is available for private rental. Built in 1893 for George and Sarah Morgan (sister of the financier, J. P. Morgan), Ventfort Hall has undergone substantial restoration, which continues.
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Dalton Board Signs Off on Land Sale Over Residents' Objections

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff

Residents demanded the right to speak but the agenda did not include public comment. Amy Musante holds a sign saying the town now as '$20,000 less for a police station.'
DALTON, Mass. — The Select Board signed the sale on the last of what had been known as the Bardin property Monday even as a handful of residents demanded the right to speak against the action. 
 
The quitclaim deed transfers the nine acres to Thomas and Esther Balardini, who purchased the two other parcels in Dalton. They were the third-highest bidders at $31,500. Despite this, the board awarded them the land in an effort to keep the property intact.
 
"It's going to be an ongoing battle but one I think that has to be fought [because of] the disregard for the taxpayers," said Dicken Crane, the high bidder at $51,510.
 
"If it was personal I would let it go, but this affects everyone and backing down is not in my nature." 
 
Crane had appealed to the board to accept his bid during two previous meetings. He and others opposed to accepting the lower bid say it cost the town $20,000. After the meeting, Crane said he will be filing a lawsuit and has a citizen's petition for the next town meeting with over 100 signatures. 
 
Three members of the board — Chair Robert Bishop Jr., John Boyle, and Marc Strout — attended the 10-minute meeting. Members Anthony Pagliarulo and Daniel Esko previously expressed their disapproval of the sale to the Balardinis. 
 
Pagliarulo voted against the sale but did sign the purchase-and-sale agreement earlier this month. His reasoning was the explanation by the town attorney during an executive session that, unlike procurement, where the board is required to accept the lowest bid for services, it does have some discretion when it comes to accepting bids in this instance.
 
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