New Williamstown Fire Chief Jeffrey Dias during Saturday's swearing in ceremony at the station.A large crowd was on hand in the Williamstown Fire Department's apparatus bay to watch the installation of its new chief.
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — East met west in the Williamstown Fire Station on Saturday afternoon.
A large contingent of firefighters and their supporters from the other end of the commonwealth were on hand to watch as the Williamstown Fire District officially installed its new chief.
And after Jeffrey Dias pledged his service to his new community, his thoughts turned to the people who shaped his career, the last two decades of which he spent with the South Shore community of Onset.
"There are some other people I have to mention, my sounding boards who kept me pointed in the right direction for years and years," Dias said. "Chief John Walcek, Wareham Police Department, retired. Chief John Kelley of the Wareham Fire Department and Chief Tim Clancy [Whitman]. It's been a ride.
"And to my new fire family, the Williamstown Fire Department, I couldn't ask for a warmer welcome, a more motivated bunch of people, just a really classy organization. And I'm so proud to be here."
In addition to the large contingent of well-wishers from Dias' former posting, the brief ceremony in the station's apparatus bay was attended by representatives of the Williamstown Police Department, Northern Berkshire EMS, other local fire services, Williams College and community members.
David Moresi, chair of the Prudential Committee that oversees the district, welcomed the large crowd and the successor to longtime Chief Craig Pedercini, who looked on.
"I want to express my sincerest thanks to Chief Dias and his wife, Jennifer, for choosing our community," Moresi said. "We know a man with Chief Dias' credentials could have gone to other departments. And we are lucky to have you.
"To the chief, thank you for taking the challenge to lead our department to the future. You undoubtedly have your work cut out for you. You are learning each day, but I can say with the utmost sincerity we are all excited for the good times ahead."
Deputy Chief Robert Briggs said the excitement is shared by the rank and file of the department.
"The guys love him, absolutely love him," Briggs said before the ceremony. "He's making some amazing changes, doing some great things. It's different, but … it's like you read about in the [trade] magazines."
Dias, who colleagues describe as a "fire nerd," talked about those who fostered that interest.
"As long as I've known that I want to be a firefighter, which goes back to my earliest recollection, probably 4 or 5 years old, my first role models in the fire service — and both of them are year today — my uncle, Scott Lynn, retired Whitman Fire, and Chief Tim Travis with the Whitman Fire Department, retired," Dias said. "They were like giants to me when I was a kid. They made a big impact on who I was and how I was raised.
"I really wish my best friend growing up, a guy who still is my idol, the person who fed my passion to become a firefighter, my grandfather Bill Condon, I wish he was here."
Dias closed his remarks by, as he put it, saving the best for last.
"My wife, she's my rock, she's my cheerleader, she's my whole world," he said. "Her sacrifices so I could get to where I am outweigh any sacrifices I've made."
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Clark Art Hosts Opening Lecture for Bernice Abbott's Modern Lens
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — On Saturday, July 12, at 11 am, the Clark Art Institute celebrates the opening of its newest exhibition Berenice Abbott's Modern Lens with a free lecture.
Grace Hanselman, exhibition curator and curatorial assistant for works on paper, introduces the work of Berenice Abbott, a pioneering documentary photographer known best for her portraits of the Parisian avant-garde and striking snapshots of twentieth-century New York.
The talk takes place in the Manton Research Center auditorium.
In the 1920s, American-born Abbott worked as an assistant to Man Ray in Paris before her career as a portraitist solidified in its own right. In a major artistic pivot, she returned to the United States in 1929 to undertake her most celebrated project: documenting New York City's rapid urban transformation. Lesser-known but equally accomplished is her body of work photographing other cities and towns in the American Northeast.
This exhibition showcases selections from a 2007 gift of over 400 Abbott photographs, some iconic and rarely if ever exhibited, highlighting her enduring impact on modern photography.
Free. Accessible seats available. Advance registration required at clarkart.edu/events or call 413 458 0524.
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