Becket's Hudson-Chester Granite Quarry Honored in Exhibit at Becket Arts Center

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BECKET, Mass. — Many residents of Becket and the surrounding hilltowns stopped by Becket Arts Center recently to learn about and honor their historic quarry as part of the "Earth Art" exhibit.

While local artists presented stoneware, ceramics and metals, the Becket Land Trust presented its work-in-progress on preserving the Hudson-Chester Quarry.

"This exhibit is about how we are creating an open-air museum at the Becket Land Trust's Historic Quarry and Forest," said Dorothy Napp Schindel, curator of the exhibit and coordinator of its historic interpretation.

Tucked between Becket's forests and hills, the old granite quarry sits like a sunken vessel, a living museum with rusted artifacts left behind when the Hudson-Chester Granite Co. suddenly folded in 1947.

"When it was abandoned it was as if the men just walked away for lunch and never came back," said Schindel. "And that's what makes it a wonderful museum," she added, as there are trucks, drills, and derricks (booms to hoist granite) throughout the site.

Apparently mismanagement and lack of money for necessary improvements led to the abandonment. Fifty-two years later, in 1999, the quarry resurfaced when Labrie Stone Products wanted to purchase the land to crush stone for pavement. Concerned residents approached Becket Land Trust, the local organization for environmental preservation.

"People were most concerned with the volume of truck traffic," said Ken Smith, president of the trust, "because the stone company was anticipated to haul 10 loaded trucks per hour."

About 300 people paid part of $250,000 to purchase the quarry and begin the large-scale project of a museum both with descriptive nature trails and indoor exhibits explaining the quarry methods and local history.

"So much of the development of Becket and the history of Becket is tied to the quarry," said Schindel. "Quarrying was a major industry here, and so many of the old families of Becket were quarry families."

The Hudson-Chester Quarry was the largest of several in the area beginning in 1860, extracting granite and shipping it by railroad for polishing to nearby Chester and also Hudson, N.Y. Gravestones and monuments were the main products.

Eve Cholmar heads the oral history section and has interviewed members of the community whose families are closely involved with the quarry.

"Esther Moulthrop and Iva Barstow are sisters and their father was a foreman at the Hudson-Chester quarry," she said about one family. "They gave us so much wonderful information, both about the quarry itself and about life in Becket at those times in the twenties, thirties."

Meanwhile the trust has outlined the trails through the site, employing the volunteer group AmeriCorps for one and beginning to carve out others. Recently some members started putting up signs of trails and explanations for a self-guided hike, learning about the tools dotting the trails.

Schindel, a trained museum curator, emphasized the research was only beginning with many unanswered questions. A majority of workers came from Finland, for instance, with lives that might be recorded, and more can be unearthed about the company. Local families have donated pictures, a favorite one showing hikers in Victorian dress in the 1890s. Shindel said the exhibit went over well with area families, sparking an interest in their town and preserving its stories.

"It's opened up a whole new world of interest in their own community," she said.

The exhibit closed last week; Schindel plans to take it on tour to libraries and other places while the research continues and people hike through spruced up trails.


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Lt. Governor Driscoll Visits Great Barrington Businesses

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll, Housing Secretary Ed Augustus and state Rep. Leigh Davis are ready to chop wood out back of Pleasant and Main. 

GREAT BARRINGTON, Mass. — Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll did some holiday shopping on Main Street last week after announcing millions of federal Community Development Block Grant funds

She was glad to see an array of small-business owners thriving, and the eclectic items that Great Barrington has to offer. 

"We know that the vibrancy of communities can often be defined by what's happening on Main Street," she said. 

"It's great to be here in Great Barrington and see so many independent entrepreneurs who are running really, not only fun, but businesses that are doing well, and we want to try and find ways to uplift and support that work moving forward." 

State Rep. Leigh Davis coordinated a business tour with Pleasant and Main Cafe and General Store, Robbie's Community Market, and Butternut Ski Mountain. While downtown, Driscoll also stopped at Coco's Candy and Rob's Records and Audio. 

Earlier that day, the Healey-Driscoll administration announced $33.5 million in federal CDBG funds at the Housatonic Community Center. Great Barrington, in conjunction with Egremont and Stockbridge, has been allocated $ 1.25 million to rehabilitate approximately 14 housing units.  A new Rural and Small Town Housing Choice Community designation for its Housing Choice Initiative was also launched. 

Davis emphasized the significance of the state announcing these dollars in the small village of Housatonic.  

Craig Bero, founder of Pleasant and Main, prepared desserts and hors d'oeuvres for the group at his cozy cafe across the street from the Housatonic Community Center. Bero opened more than a decade ago after migrating from New York City, and Pleasant and Main offers sustainable, organic meals for an affordable price while enjoying the museum of antiques that is the restaurant. 

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