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Centuries Old Pittsfield Dam Eyed for Removal

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The state is looking into removing a West Pittsfield dam that dates back to the  early 1800s.

The Healey-Driscoll administration last week announced $400,000 from the Department of Fish and Game's Division of Ecological Restoration for preliminary design studies on dam removals.

Pittsfield was one of eight municipalities to receive funding, which will allocated near-evenly resulting in about $50,000 for the project. The privately owned Shaker Grist Mill Dam, located nearest to 321 Lebanon Ave., is the first dam on the Southwest Branch of the Housatonic River.

Its removal would reportedly benefit cold water species in a core aquatic habitat and improve flood resilience for the community.  

It is not included in the federal or state inventory, making the exact condition and hazard level currently unknown.

A website titled "The Mills of Pittsfield" states that the Shakers purchased the former mill site on the river in 1823 and built a grist mill for processing grain. The nearly 15-foot-tall remnants of the mill dam and foundation remain in the river.

"Although originally built for their own purposes, it was improved and enlarged in 1850 and 1867 and became open to the community and was one of the largest grist mills in all of Berkshire County," according to the website.

The mill was destroyed in 1915 by fire that was believed to have been set. It was rebuilt smaller and the business sold to the Coty brothers, who had been managing it. It was later operated for few years by Murphy & Mullen, mainly as a storehouse until torn down in 1925. By that time, the dam wasn't needed for power and the mill's location was too far from the railroad.
 
The stone dam remained but without maintenance began to crumble, and partially fell in after a flood in 1977.
 
The late Merton Todd, a retired GE engineer, tried to rebuild the dam in the 1980s to power his Lebanon Avenue home but was apparently unsuccessful.

There are more than 3,000 dams in the state and most don't serve their original purpose or are in disrepair. Many degrade water quality, block passage for fish and wildlife, increase flood risks, and pose public safety hazards.

Construction to remove the Bel Air Dam on Wahconah Street is slated to begin in the spring and conclude at the end of 2026. The 26.5-by-200-foot structure was built in 1832 and used to generate power for a woolen mill into the 1920s.

The city took it by eminent domain because the owner is deceased.

In 2023, $20 million in American Rescue Plan Act dollars was allocated to remove the deteriorating, potentially deadly dam on Wahconah Street. It has been an area of concern for more than a decade, with the city and DCR conducting inspections, maintenance, and repairs.  In 2020, it was identified as a high-priority project.



The dam is one of six included in the pilot abandoned dams program.

DER also awarded $35,000 to the Housatonic Valley Association's Berkshires Clean Cold Connected Partnership to help build local and regional capacity for restoration education and to plan and implement locally-driven priority restoration projects. 

The partnership supports a network of organizations, agencies, and communities working for healthy aquatic systems and building climate resilience in the Hoosic, Housatonic, and Farmington River watersheds.


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Pittsfield Council Says 'Yes' to Soccer at Crane Park

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

The pitch will have the logos of the city and the US. and Massachusetts soccer associations. 

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The city is gladly accepting a "mini-pitch" from the U.S. Soccer Foundation to bring games back to Crane Park. 

Fueling excitement around the World Cup, U.S. Soccer has been working with the Massachusetts Youth Soccer League to make these facilities available to 20 communities — one of which will be at the park at the intersection of Benedict Road and Springside Avenue. 

The City Council accepted the gift on Tuesday during its regular meeting. 

A mini pitch is a compact, modular field typically used for soccer, and it can also accommodate inline skates. It has a galvanized steel border with built-in goals and a rubber plastic surface that is clicked together; installed on the existing inline hockey court. 

Ward 2 Councilor Cameron Cunningham said he has gone door to door speaking with nearby residents, and they are "really excited" about the upgrade. He also sees it as a great addition. 

"They say that nobody really uses the court a ton now, and they are excited to see kids back on there playing," he said. 

Decades ago, the Crane Park facility was a wading pool. It closed in 1980, and before the turn of the century, it was filled in and marked for hockey. 

Parks, Open Space, and Natural Resources Manager James McGrath explained that the wooden border around the rink is showing its age, has been vandalized and tagged, and the facility is seeing a "real decline" in use. 

"This would seem to be an appropriate spot for us to remove the board system that's in place and install the mini pitch system through this grant," he said. 

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