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The pieces were all delivered two weeks ago.
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The top panels will be decorated with either handpainted scenes from the Berkshires or a Norman Rockwell print.
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Lighting panels.
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This little 5-horsepower motor will power 34 horses.
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The horses have been handcarved and painted.
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Decking the horses will be attached to.
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Volunteers are now carving panels to decorate the carousel.
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Volunteers are restoring horses from other carousels in the country to help fund their project.
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A panel eyed for a handicapped-accessible chariot is ready for painting.

Berkshire Carousel Has All The Pieces To Start Spinning

By Andy McKeeveriBerkshires Staff
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The organization is painting family portraits directly onto the carousel panels.

DALTON, Mass. — All the pieces for the Berkshire Carousel to start spinning have been delivered.

Over the next two months, volunteers will be painting and assembling the 15,000-pound merry-go-round.

"All of the pieces for the carousel are here. All we have to do is paint it, decorate it and put it together," said volunteer Bruce Goguen on Tuesday, adding that everything is fully paid off.

A small 5-horsepower engine will power the handcrafted carousel, featuring more than 784 LED lights, as organizers look to start operations this summer in a tent outside of the former Crane mill on Flansburg Road.

From there, the organization will be continually raising the $1.6 million needed to construct a building to house it permanently.

"We really just got here. This is the beginning of the capital campaign," said Executive Director Maria Caccaviello.

The pieces were delivered two weeks ago to the current workshop. Now volunteers are painting the panels to include such aspects as family portraits of donors or placing Norman Rockwell prints on them. Thirty-four horses have been carved and painted and are now on display throughout Dalton.


Meanwhile, the organization has found yet another source of income: It has been contracted by both individuals and other carousels to rehab their horses.

"We've created a new form of sustainable income," Caccaviello said.

Caccaviello believes the carousel will be up and running in June, which should help jump-start the capital campaign for the building. She added that handicapped bathrooms have always been in the plans for the new building; the project had to add them to current location to comply with Americans With Disabilities laws.

"It is obvious that you have to have bathrooms and be ADA compliant," Goguen said. "We're not just prepared to finance them [right now]."

Caccaviello said they have an array of pledges and donations already but they are far from hitting the $1.6 million mark. The organization will be ramping up the campaign in the coming weeks and holding various fundraisers.

Those fundraisers includes an international food, wine and beer tasting at Ventfort Hall on Saturday, March 22, and "Painting with the Ponies," a painting class coupled with wine and chocolate tastings on Wednesday, March 26.


Tags: berkshire carousel,   fundraiser,   

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Pittsfield Resident Victim of Alleged Murder in Greenfield

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — A man found dismembered in a barrel in Greenfield on Monday has been identified as Pittsfield resident.
 
The Northwestern District Attorney's Office identified victim as Christopher Hairston, 35, and subsequently arrested a suspect, Taaniel Herberger-Brown, 42, at Albany (N.Y.) International Airport on Tuesday.
 
The Daily Hampshire Gazette reported that Herberger-Brown told investigators he planned on visiting his mother outside the country. 
 
Herberger-Brown was detained overnight, and the State Police obtained an arrest warrant on a single count of murder on Tuesday morning, the Greenfield Police Department said in a press release.
 
According to a report written by State Police Trooper Blakeley Pottinger, the body was discovered after Greenfield police received reports of a foul odor emitting from the apartment along with a black hatchet to the left of the barrel, the Greenfield Recorder reported. 
 
Investigators discovered Hairston's hand and part of a human torso at Herberger-Brown’s former apartment, located at 92 Chapman St, the news outlet said. 
 
According to the Daily Hampshire Gazette, Herberger-Brown originally told investigators that he had not been to the apartment in months because he had been in and out of hospitals. 
 
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