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Newberry Letters Taken to North Adams Museum

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
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Top, Joe Manning, left, and Charles 'Chuck' Cahoon with the metal letters. Above, Cahoon selects pieces inside the former Moulton's General Store. In the background is the art installation '800,000.'
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — A Main Street landmark nearly lost a half-decade ago will now hang prominently in the city's history museum.

The J.J. Newberry sign — really 12 cast-metal Serif letters and two periods, minus the long-lost "Co." — was donated to the North Adams Historical Society by writer and local historian Joe Manning on Tuesday morning.

"He wanted to make sure they were safe," said society President Charles "Chuck" Cahoon as he and Manning posed with some of the letters outside the former store.

The sign recalls a different era in the city when thousands of workers from the former Sprague Electric Co. and the textile mills would head downtown to eat at the 5 & 10's lunch counter, buy a shirt, and pick up sewing notions, toys and necessities at discount prices.

It closed in 1993 after 67 years of business. Its better-known competitor, Woolworth Co., closed its store in Adams not long after. (See some of Manning's photos of the sign in its original position.)

"Young people don't know what Newberry's was," said Manning. "Back in its day, it was as common as Walmart."

Newberry's and other proto-department stores were great equalizers, he said, because people of all types and social standing would rub elbows at the lunch counter. Those counters would become pivotal in the civil rights era in the South as black Americans demanded equality — and service — along with whites.

"It was a common point where everyone met. In some cases, it was the only store where you could buy the what you needed," said Manning. "This is part of everyday life, this is the people's history."

The society had voted in July to accept the sign; Manning only asked that the lease he had worked out with Moulton's General Store owner Mark Moulton be honored.

The Moultons had sort of adopted the sign that had been removed to make way for their own. Manning had rescued the letters from oblivion when no one had wanted them (for which he credits building owner David Carver). But his wife wanted them out the basement of their Florence home.

So he made a deal with the Moultons, leasing the sign to them for a $1 a year. The letters were installed high on the wall inside the former 5 & 10, rarely noticed by the customers in the general store.

The general store has relocated to Adams and the lease has run its course, clearing the way for the Historial Society to take possession of the letters. They will hang high on the wall inside the second floor of the Museum of Science and History in Western Gateway Heritage State Park against a vibrant red background.

Cahoon considered that the scuffed and paint-peeling letters might be restored to their original bright gold hue. But artist Jarvis Rockwell stopped to admire the blue-hued patina, caressing the weathered metal.

"That's a beautiful color. Don't restore them. Leave them just like they are," he said.
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Armed North Adams Man Arrested Following Domestic Standoff

Staff Reports

NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Matthew Parker, a 44-year-old North Adams man, is set to face multiple counts of attempted murder and weapons charges in Northern Berkshire District Court on Friday morning following an hours-long, armed standoff at a Houghton Street home.

The defendant is being arraigned for:

  • Domestic Assault and Battery
  • Assault with the Intent to Murder (3 counts)
  • Carrying a Firearm While Under the Influence of Alcohol (3 counts)
  • Possession of a hi-capacity firearm (4 counts)
  • Improper Storage of a hi-capacity firearm (2 counts)
  • Improper Storage of a firearm (6 counts)

According to a report, on June 10, at approximately 8:42 p.m., officers responded to 365 Houghton St. following a report of a domestic assault and battery. The caller said she and her husband had been involved in a physical altercation.

She said her husband was intoxicated, making suicidal statements about shooting himself, and had access to both a shotgun and a pistol.

Upon arrival, officers made contact with both the caller and Parker. During the encounter, Parker threatened to shoot officers before retreating into the home and refusing to exit.

Officers believed that Parker was armed.

To ensure public safety, police established a perimeter around the home and requested assistance from the Berkshire County Special Response Team (SRT) and North Adams Police crisis negotiators. The Brien Center was also contacted and promptly provided an emergency mental health clinician to assist with the incident.

Special Response Team personnel deployed drones to monitor the residence and provide aerial illumination. During the operation, officers saw Parker exit the house carrying a rifle. He pointed it at the drones, stated a report. Parker subsequently pointed the rifle toward several officers positioned behind their cruisers. After officers attempted to de-escalate the situation, Parker returned inside the residence.

Trained crisis negotiators maintained communication with Parker for several hours in an effort to peacefully resolve the situation. At approximately 2 a.m., Parker ceased communication with negotiators.

Drone operators later observed Parker unconscious in a recliner on the first floor of the residence, with a rifle and shotgun on the floor nearby.

Members of the Berkshire County SRT then executed a coordinated operation. Diversionary devices were deployed through a window while an entry team simultaneously entered the home, secured the firearms, and took the defendant into custody.

A search warrant was executed after Parker was in custody. North Adams Police seized four shotguns, six rifles, two handguns, and thousands or rounds of ammunition from the home.

During the operation, one SRT member sustained a minor injury related to a less-lethal bean bag deployment. Parker also sustained non-life threatening injuries during the arrest and was transported to Berkshire Medical Center for medical evaluation.

"We thank the community for its patience and cooperation throughout this incident, particularly residents in the affected area who complied with temporary shelter-in-place requests," Police Chief Mark Bailey said.  "The North Adams Police Department extends its sincere appreciation to the agencies that provided mutual aid and assisted by handling calls for service during this incident. We are especially grateful to the Berkshire County Special Response Team for its professional and decisive response, the Brien Center for the rapid deployment of a mental health clinician, and our crisis negotiators whose efforts helped maintain dialogue and contributed significantly to the safe resolution of this incident."

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