Cindy Lamore takes a quick measurement to adjust the wristband of Dennis Gajda's watch at DiLego's Jewelry Store on Monday. The nearly 100-year-old family business will close this summer.
A 20 percent off Mother's Day sale will begin immediately, with increasing discounts leading up to the closing date on June 30.
Some of the store's tools and furnishings date back decades.
Jewelry stores have carried other gift items, such as these collectible Hummels.
DiLego's moved into its location in the 1960s after its building on south side of Main Street was torn down.
Sisters Pamela Costine, left, and Cynthia Lamore have been operating the store since their aunts retired in 1987. Both started working in the business as teens. Lamore's decided it's time to retire.
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — DiLego Jewelery Store, the family-owned business that has been a staple of North Adams for nearly a century, will be closing this summer.
The closure was announced on the store's Facebook page late Sunday night, where it immediately drew comments of remembrance and well-wishing.
Cindy Lamore, whose great uncle Frank DiLego opened the store on Main Street in the late 1930s, said the shop will cease operations following her retirement, slated for June 30. A 20 percent off Mother's Day sale will begin immediately, with increasing discounts leading up to the closing date.
It took Lamore "a couple of years" to reach the decision to close. Witnessing the passing of lifelong friends or their struggles with debilitating illness prompted her to reconsider her priorities, especially considering the extensive time devoted to running a small business.
"You really question what you're waiting for," she reflected.
While recognizing that changing consumer habits have led to a decrease in jewelry and watch sales in recent years, Lamore stressed that her decision to close was a personal one. She and her business partner and sister, Pamela Costine, wanted "to do it on our terms," she said.
Comments on Facebook praised the store's customer service, and friends, family, and customers alike reminisced about buying jewelry for special occasions, stopping in for watch repairs, and the perennial rite of childhood for many: getting ears pierced.
DiLego's Jewelers was one of four DiLego family businesses dotting North Adams before urban renewal, which included a diner, a liquor store on Bank Street, and an accounting firm, D&D Accounting. Costine Electric, which sat across the street from the diner, gets honorable mention as Pamela married into the Costine family.
Frank DiLego had trained as a watch repairman in Troy, N.Y., and was running a small shop there when he was called home to North Adams. "Back in the day, when your mother said, 'you come home,'" Lamore stressed, "he came home."
He worked for Hemenway Jewelry and took over that business when the owner died in 1932. The original DiLego's shared a doorway with the cigar store Indian Princess Lulu on the south side of Main Street starting in 1938 until the area was razed and moved to its current location at 16 Ashland St. in the 1960s, the last remaining tenant from the urban renewal era, according to Lamore.
DiLego's was one of seven jewelers in the city at the time. Still a thriving business when Frank decided to retire, Lamore's aunts, Pat and Diane Maero took over the business, "not even realizing the hard work that goes into it," she said.
After numerous courses and seminars in everything from quartz watch repair to gem identification, the Maeros soon became experts in their field, and a fixture of weddings, birthdays, confirmations, and all manner of special occasions for the city.
Lamore, who began working at the shop at age 11, began her training as a teenager, alongside her aunts. Costine began work there at a young age as well, eventually becoming the shop's master engraver.
Lamore recalled one of her first experiences of a Christmas rush as a teenager at the store, when the shop would be open until 8 p.m. for the three weeks leading up to the holiday.
"We'd go to my grandmother's house, and I just sat in a chair and kept nodding off," she remembered. "And I thought to myself, 'what's wrong with me?' … and I'm thinking, 'Oh! You just just worked straight through!" she laughed.
Pat and Diane retired in 1987, and Lamore and Costine, who were managing the store by that time, became the third generation of DiLegos to run the business. Lamore's daughter, Jessica Bugbee, began working at the shop as part of a work-study program in high school, and eventually became the fourth generation to work there full time.
While Lamore made some superficial cosmetic changes to the store, she and Costine kept the business running as before, always mindful to keep up with shifting trends and the changing realities of the business.
When Frank DiLego opened the shop in the 1930s it was common for jewelry stores to stock electric shavers, men's wallets, and flatware for bridal registries.
By the 1980s, the store had become a destination for ear-piercing clinics, which required a doctor on site until deregulation in the 1990s. "The line would go all the way down the street, up around the corner," Costine remembered.
"We joked that we would never have a customer from that generation," Lamore chuckled, "because the children would be terrified!" Costine said, finishing the thought.
The interaction is a representation of what DiLego's has been for many in the community: not only a place to pick up jewelry or have repairs done, but a space for social interaction and visiting with friends. According to Bugbee, most customers "probably spend 25 minutes to half an hour" in conversation at the shop.
Though the store was ostensibly closed during our interview, a stray customer managed to get in on a mission. Dennis Gajda, sent over by Cindy's husband, was looking to have his watch's wristband adjusted. In no time at all Lamore was carefully banging away with a specialized mallet and the watch was restored to a perfect fit.
When Gajda asked what he owed, Lamore refused to charge him. "Thank you for your service," she said.
If the outpouring of support already evident is any indication, Lamore, Costine, and Bugbee might soon be met by generations of loyal customers expressing the same sentiment.
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Why the Massachusetts Art Community Is Worth Continued Investment
By James BirgeGuest Column
How do we quantify the value of art on society and culture? Even eye-popping figures, like the $100 million estimate for the jewels stolen from the Louvre, or the record auction last fall that saw a piece by Gustav Klimt sell for more than $236 million can't fully account for the value of the history, stories, and emotions behind the creations themselves. But beyond that, there is a measurable financial, cultural and social benefit of the arts that is often taken for granted.
Despite the obvious impact, these figures are under threat. A recent survey by MassCreative compiled recent federal cuts to the National Endowment for the Arts, the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Institute of Museum and Library Services and identified 63 grants canceled and $4.2 million in grant funding rescinded across New England so far this year.
The dollars, of course, are important. But they also only scratch the surface on what they bring to the community. Today, we risk losing part of the culture and identity many now take for granted.
While others choose to look past these less tangible, but just as vital benefits, we're doing the opposite. Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts is all in to ensure the next generation retains their access to works of art, while also being empowered to create themselves.
Last fall, MCLA officially broke ground on the new Campagna Kleefeld Center for Creativity in the Arts, which will serve as a new hub for the campus and the local community for arts programming. When complete in fall of 2027, our students will benefit, but so will all of Berkshire County and artists in the surrounding area.
This exciting new facility is just one of the many forthcomings our region can enjoy in the coming years. Just a few miles away, anticipation builds for the Fall 2027 anticipated opening for the Williams College Museum of Art. Years in the making, the museum likewise grows from an enduring commitment to the arts, both in curriculum and in practice. Exciting times are also underway for the Clark Art Institute with the construction of a new facility to house a collection of 331 works of art, including paintings, sculptures, drawings and other works. Their wing is scheduled for completion in 2028. And listeners will no doubt enjoy the sounds and melodies from Mass MoCA Records, the latest endeavor to foster creativity and artistic pursuits through music launched in October as well. Of course, many are also awaiting the reopening of the Berkshire Museum anticipated this summer, after a tremendous renovation process to rejuvenate the experience for visitors.
So much time, energy, and yes, dollars, have already been invested in taking these facilities from ideas and sketches and making them reality. But they represent much more than new buildings. They represent new opportunities to cultivate and accelerate the thriving arts community in Massachusetts and the northern Berkshires.
Art, regardless of the medium, is a reflection of who we are, where we've been, and what we aspire to be. It can be inspired by hopes or fears and chronicle collective triumphs as well as tribulations. The goal of art is not only to document history, but to inspire those positioned to change it and to feel something new or even to provoke us to revisit our own assumptions or misconceptions.
As unfathomable of a number as $30 billion can seem, boiling down the impact to any number inherently discounts the unknowable downstream effects our graduates will bring to the community and the broader world after they leave our institutions. Likewise, rescinding $4.2 million now removes a huge chunk of that growth potential.
Justification for making these investments today when simply boiled down to dollars and cents still places us on solid ground strictly from a financial perspective that forgoes all of the intangible, but no less valuable, benefits as well.
The arts are still worth our support. And our community will be richer for it.
James Birge, PhD, is president of Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts in North Adams.
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