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The historic Fitch-Hoose House Museum on Gulf Road is open every Saturday afternoon this summer.

Fitch-Hoose House Museum Opens in Dalton

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
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DALTON, Mass. — The historic Fitch-Hoose House Museum, on 6 Gulf Road, is open for the season every Saturday from 1 until 3 p.m. through September. Admission is free. 
 
The house was built in 1846 and is the last remaining home of Dalton's early Black residential neighborhood. 
 
The 177-year-old two-story house is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It is believed to have been active on the Underground Railroad.
 
Items found during an archeological dig conducted by the University of Massachusetts are on display along with art made by George Hoose, who died in 1977 at age 80. Hoose also painted the "Indian Head" painting on Gulf Road. 
 
The commission hopes to offer an outside gallery of works by Hoose sometime in September. 
 
A wide range of information has been gathered surrounding the Hoose family that is also on display. 
 
Each of the tour guides is part of the Historical Commission and many of them have ancestors who shared stories with them about the Hoose family so are able to give accounts that can not be found in books. 
 
Historical Commission member Carolina Galliher had once told a tour of schoolchildren how when her mother was young, she would walk down the street with her father and listen to the Hoose family play their fiddles, said co-Chair Deborah Kovacs
 
Dalton residents with deep familial ties to the area donated items that they were given or bought from the Hoose family. 
 
The home was occupied by the Hooses until at least 1988; the town took possession of the once abandoned and rundown property in 2004 and it was facing demolition. 
 
The historical society came to the realization that not many people know about the part Dalton played in aiding the flight of enslaved people despite the Fugitive Slave Law. 
 
The Fitch Hoose-House speaks for fairness, equality, freedom and honors the Hoose family and others who came to the area looking for a safe haven, Kovacs said.
 
The reason the Historical Commission worked tirelessly to save the home is because most of the house is original. The architecture and items left behind show how people lived back then, and how people in poverty built homes, co-Chair Louisa Horth said. 
 
Kovacs agreed with this sentiment, adding that it was almost like a "miracle" that a Black family could buy a home before the Civil War. 
 
"The fact, too, that someone of color could buy a house in 1846, before the Civil War even happened, which was over slavery, it was amazing," she said.
 
Through research and collaboration with the community and organizations like Hancock Shaker Village and UMass the commission has brought to life a scattered history and reunited members of the Hoose family with their ancestry, Kovacs said. 
 
After being built by William Bogart, the house was immediately sold to an ex-slave, Henry Fitch, who died after only living in the house for a couple years. 
 
The home went through a variety of owners, including local papermaking magnate Zenas M. Crane until it was purchased in 1868 by Charles Hoose. 
 
It was occupied by the Hoose family, Charles and Ellen and most of their 13 children, for three generations.
 
One of its occupants, Edward Hoose, served in the Massachusetts 54th Volunteer Infantry in the Civil War.
 
A lingering memory of what was once a thriving African-American neighborhood dating from before the Civil War that included freed and escaped slaves, the house hides a deep history of family and freedom.
 
In 2014, the Historical Commission got a grant from the "Promoting Community Development and Tourism in Central and Western Massachusetts" program in the amount of $180,000 grant to restore the Fitch-Hoose House. 
 
The back addition, which had a kitchen and bedroom, was taken off several years ago because of its condition but was added back on during the restoration. 
 
Over the years the home has gone through a variety of changes, from the color to the now gone vinyl siding but the commission worked to make the exterior historically accurate. 
 
In 2019, the Fitch-Hoose House received the Massachusetts Historical Commission Preservation Award for the restoration of the historic home. 

Tags: historical building,   historical museum,   

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ADOPTED! Companion Corner: Cali and Kyzer at Berkshire Humane Society

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

Great news, Kyzer and Cali found a home for Christmas already! Still looking for a new friend for the holidays? There are plenty of dogs and cats and small animals at Berkshire Humane who would love to go home with you.

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — There's a bonded dog pair awaiting a new family at the Berkshire Humane Society.

Kyzer and Cali are both poodles. Kyzer is the male and is 7 years old, a quite a bit bigger than his sister Cali, who is a miniature of Kyzer and 8 years old.

Canine adoption counselor Rhonda Cyr introduced us to the two.

"They came from a household that couldn't hold on to them, and it sounds like they may have been abandoned by their previous owner with somebody else, and so they came to us looking for a new home," she said.

The two love to be around you and snuggle. But both are very happy dogs.

"Kyzer is 7 years old, and his personality is that he kind of wants to be in everything. He's very loving, very snuggly, as you can tell. And Callie here, she's 8 years old, and she is kind of like the life of the party," said Cyr. "She wants to tell you everything about her day, and she's a little bit of a little ham."

The two are considered seniors and really like soft treats as Cali just had a few teeth removed and Kyzer has a tooth procedure coming up.

"Currently, they really like soft treats, because they are both on the senior side of things. So they have had some dental work, so they are really in need of something softer. They are not big chewers at this age, really, their main focus right now is just really socializing and cuddling," Cyr said.

The two would love a quiet home with someone who wants to snuggle. They shouldn't go to a home with bigger dogs but if you have a dog, you can bring them in for a visitation with the poodles to see if they will get along. Cats will be fine and the preference is for older and more responsible children so that the pups don't get hurt, as they are senior citizens.

"The perfect home for them would be a quiet home that's not too active. Like I said, they're very social, so they could handle some visitors," she said. "They're very friendly, but I don't think that they would really enjoy any other dogs in the home."

Poodles need to be regularly groomed, and the prospective adopter will have to keep an eye on their health. Kyzer has a heart murmur that needs to be monitored. This doesn't mean he is in bad health, as he could live a perfectly normal life, but he will need to be checked by a veterinary specialist routinely.

"Ideally, he would go to a home that could provide further health care with a specialist in cardiac care. And you know, he could very well live out the rest of his life comfortably and happy," Cyr said. "We just don't have all that information at the moment, but I think that you know the way he's going right now. He's got a good spirit, and he seems to be pretty happy."

The shelter is hoping the to get them a home for the holidays.

"We would love to get them a home in time for the holidays. They've been here since the eighth of November, and they're really, really looking as much as the staff loves them here, we're really looking to get them into a home and somewhere nice and cozy so they can spend the rest of their life together," she said.

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