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Thursday, September 30, 2010

Anne Frank Home Replica Debuts at Westport Playhouse

Anne Frank Home Replica Debuts at Westport Playhouse
(Appeared in Westport News w/o 9/26)
By Mike Lauterborn
© 2010. All Rights Reserved.
9/28/10

Westport, CT – A girl’s experience in Nazi Germany during World War II and a stage production of “The Diary of Anne Frank” inspired a noted local sculptor to create a large replica of the Anne Frank home that debuted today in the lobby of the Westport Country Playhouse. The display, a creation of a team of students from Bridgeport-based Neighborhood Studios (NS) under the direction of artist Steffi Friedman, was timed with the opening night of the production there.

Measuring 80 inches tall and 72 inches wide and weighing an estimated 450 pounds, the sculpture was transported by Marino Brothers, specialists in moving artwork, from a studio at the non-profit’s 510 Barnum Avenue headquarters to the Playhouse and installed late Tuesday morning. The artwork will sit in the lobby area for the entire performance run, September 28 – October 30.

Friedman, 85, is a volunteer sculpture teacher who gives her time and donates materials to NS, and led 20 students, ages 14-20, in the development of the replica. She was a teen in Berlin, Germany during WWII and escaped to Amsterdam two weeks before Kristallnacht, when in a single night in November 1938, Nazis mass-murdered 91 Jews and deported to concentration camps over 25,000 more.

“I lived the same life as Anne Frank,” said Friedman. “I was just luckier.” Indeed,
“The Diary of Anne Frank” tells the dramatic story of two years in Frank’s life when she and her family hid from the Nazis in a small Amsterdam attic. From Amsterdam, Friedman went to Panama for two years, then eventually to the U.S. She has lived in Westport for the past 52 years.

“I learned about the show a year ago,” explained the sculptor, about how she was inspired to do this piece, “and thought it would be amazing to create a replica. I bought 20 copies of the Diary and insisted that my students read it, as well as watch the film.”

Friedman created initial sketches, which she took to a local Home Depot to render in 3-D. The store cut out the base foundation from plywood, onto which Friedman’s group rolled clay (terra cotta) an inch-and-a-half thick. This was then designed, dried and fired in Friedman’s kiln for three days at 2,200 degrees.

“Each student got a project to illustrate a different aspect of the story of Anne Frank,” said Friedman. “We did a lot of research and had photographs from which to work. I also had the advantage of visiting Amsterdam last year to see the related museum.”

Scenes in the home replica include a family listening to foreign radio, which was forbidden; Anne writing her diary; the lighting of Chanukah candles; and the Frank family being led away to a concentration camp by a Dutch Nazi officer. A patina effect is used to simulate bronze, granite and metallics, to provide an authentic appearance to the structure.

Elisabeth Saxe, the Director of Institutional Advancement at the Playhouse, who was present for the sculpture’s arrival, said, “It’s a remarkable expression and emotional response to the reading of the Diary. The Playhouse is deeply moved that our programming was able to give rise to the creation of this work… and that we’re able to partner with Neighborhood Studios to welcome their students to the Playhouse and make them part of our family.”

The students that worked on this and their mothers are invited on October 23rd to attend the play and several will participate in a talk-back afterwards about their experience, informed Remy Joseph, Marketing Director at NS. On October 5th, the jazz ensemble from NS will perform period music from the 1930s and 40s at the Playhouse prior to the evening’s play.

NS was founded in 1977 as Music & Arts Center for the Handicapped, by Patricia Hart, a musician diagnosed with macular degeneration. She sought music lessons but couldn’t find anyone to teach a blind person. She discovered a universal need for this interaction. The school has grown to include music, art, dance and sculpture and is funded by private donations and federal and local government.

“The development process of this sculpture was just as rich as putting on a play,” said Michael Ross, Managing Director of the Playhouse. “To see these students… they were so intense and focused and hardly looked up as they worked. They collaborated like actors to tell this story.” 


Tuesday, September 28, 2010

The “Perks” of Living in New Canaan

The “Perks” of Living in New Canaan
By Mike Lauterborn
© 2010. All Rights Reserved.
9/28/10

New Canaan, CT – Wednesday September 29th is National Coffee Day. For visitors to New Canaan’s many coffeehouses, every day is a celebration of coffee.

The town offers nearly 70 locations at which to obtain the brew, but there are a few local favorites. One of these is Zumbach’s at 77 Pine Street.

“When I come in, everyone smiles,” said local Muffy Lewis about the cozy, wonderfully aromatic coffee purveyor. “You’re in a good mood when you leave here. You know everyone, and they know you. It has a hometown feel. I’m addicted to my large latte whole milk. I have to have one… or two… every day.”

Over at Starbucks, at the corner of Park and Elm, Laura Barker, 42, had just made a pick-up. “I like my soy latte. I usually get the same thing every day. A lot of my friends like Starbucks. We meet here… it becomes a social event.”

Added John Clausen, 63, seated in the café’s neat, tree-shaded outdoor terrace, “I come here two or three times a week. I’ll read my paper and mail and have either a tall, grande or redeye coffee. I like their coffee better than most – it’s stronger and full-bodied.”

At Dunkin Donuts, down the block on Elm, Washington, DC resident Mary Shebchuk, had just bought an ice coffee and was visiting with her sister Carrie Luciano and niece Emily. She fiercely defended her coffeehouse choice. “Starbucks burns their beans. I don’t like the flavor. Dunkin is more consistent. It’s all about the flavor.” Interjected Luciano, “I don’t want to have to take an SAT course to order a coffee!”

Across the street, Le Palm Quotidien, offers a more tranquil, refined setting, dishing up proprietary Arabica Villa Rica organic coffee in bowl-style cups with chocolate croissants and tarts. The site is a blessing for Jennifer MacLear. “There was one around the corner on 84th and Madison where I used to live. I feel like I’m no longer a Suburbanite.”

Offering a wholly independent view, Kim Van Munching of Darien, claimed Rosie, at 27 Elm Street, was the best local coffeehouse. “It’s a complete package. The coffee’s very good and you can get a muffin to go with it, a key combination. It’s nice to have the bookstore (Elm Street) attached, too.”

Patrons of Connecticut Muffin, a small shop at 108 Main Street, beg to differ. “The coffee is always fresh here and it goes hand in hand with fresh pastry. I can stay and really enjoy it out of the hustle and bustle,” said Nancy Harte.

A stone’s throw away, Garelick & Herbs, pulled in other fans. “We like the back room here,” said Maureen Bloom of Darien, about her and the group of moms with whom she was sitting. “You can stay as long as you want and their coffee bar is unique. You can prepare whatever you like.”

Opinions may differ but on this local fans will agree: New Canaan offers a wide array of perky options to get you going. 



Sunday, September 26, 2010

Fall 2010 Music for Youth Concert Series Opens

Fall 2010 Music for Youth Concert Series Opens
By Mike Lauterborn
(Appeared in Fairfield-Citizen News 9/25)
© 2010. All Rights Reserved.
9/25/10

Southport, CT – The halls were alive with the sound of music as the Fall 2010 season of Music for Youth’s Young Persons’ Concert Series opened Saturday, September 25 at Southport’s Pequot Library.

The Jasper String Quartet, comprised of violinists J Freivogel and Sae Niwa, violist Sam Quintal and cellist Rachel Freivogel, was the featured performance group and some 200 people came to hear them in the library’s recital hall – a cool retreat from the day’s unseasonably warm temperatures.

Members of the Quartet, who originally hailed from such faraway places as Japan (Sae) and Alaska (Sam) but who now live within blocks of each other in New Haven, were pleased to open the season and with the enthusiasm of the concert attendees. “With any new space, you wonder what it’s going to be like,” said Quintal. “This is a great room… and a well-versed audience.”

Winners of numerous music competition awards and a quartet-in-residence at both the Yale School of Music and Caramoor, the Jaspers were introduced by Cynthia Cummiskey, Music for Youth’s spokesperson. An energetic blonde dressed in pink and white, she conducted a quick poll determining there was a broad representation of strings players in the audience, reminded attendees about manners – “we’re not going to yell or kick our brother” – and explained how one should react to the performance. “What do we do? Clap. And if we really like it, we say, ‘Bravo!’”

It was an introduction that Music for Youth President and Founder Marianne Liberatore, for whom Cummiskey was substituting as presenter, had scripted and given numerous times before. In fact, the series started in 1995 as an outreach program when Liberatore was president of South Shore Music. When new management took over six years later and didn’t have the staff to maintain the children’s program, Liberatore resigned, formed Music for Youth along with Cummiskey and Dorothy Straub, and carried on the program.

“It has just become more wonderful,” said Liberatore, now in her 80’s, who for many years prior was the supervisor for music for the entire town of Fairfield. “Our goal is to present a variety of classical music to children and their parents. We always offer a string quartet, piano soloist and violinist, sometimes a cellist, wind quartet or brass quintet, and usually a piano trio. We also try from time to time to offer music from distant cultures. This year it’s Indonesia. In the past, we’ve had performers from Japan, China, Ukraine and Latin America.”
Liberatore, who has lived in Westport and Weston over the past 30 years, has a lifelong passion for music. “My parents had given me a good music education and I always felt every child has the right to the same.”

The Eroica Trio was the first concert offered at Pequot Library under Liberatore’s direction, back in 1996. “We charged money for it and paid Pequot Library for rental. We were afraid no one would come, so billed it as a ‘Piano Concert and Pizzas.’ Pizzas were donated by John’s Best on the Post Road. Little girls in the audience who had just come from ballet classes were dancing in the aisles. Parents came up to me after and said, ‘Why don’t you do this all the time?’ Mary Freedman, former Director of Pequot Library, said, ‘If you do the booking, we’ll help you, but the concerts must always be free.’ And that’s how it started, and has continued thanks to the support of benefactors like today’s underwriter Howard Aibel.”

The Jaspers’ program included pieces from Hayden, Schubert, Mozart and Beethoven. The quartet played fluidly and their sweet, delicate melodies filled the hall, much to the delight of attendees like the Abbazia family. Southport resident Lisa Abbazia, 43, said, “I’ve been coming here for many years. It’s such a great treat. My children play the violin and can’t sit through a usual concert.”

Echoed Liberatore, “This is really a great gift to the community. Top-flight professionals and free to the public.”

For more information about upcoming performances, visit www.musicforyouth.net or contact Pequot Library at 203-259-0346.



Thursday, September 23, 2010

Bringing Some Good Humor to Fairfield

Bringing Some Good Humor to Fairfield
(Appeared 9/23 on front page of Fairfield-Sun newspaper) 
By Mike Lauterborn
© 2010. All Rights Reserved.
9/15/10

Fairfield, CT – “Hi Wright!” say all the moms as they approach or pass. “Can I have an ice cream?” say all the kids with them. The children are just getting out of school at Roger Sherman Elementary, their moms have come to meet them and all have made a detour to Wright’s Ice Cream truck, parked near the playground on Fern Street.

Wright Hugus Jr., 79, long known as Fairfield’s ice cream man, is a town fixture. But few know of his colorful, storied background. In a recent interview at his Cape-style, beach area home, surrounded by family photos, tennis trophies and his two Golden Retrievers Bromley and Sadie, Hugus served up a freezer full of facts.

Boy of Steel
Hugus was born in 1930 in an affluent section of Wheeling, West Virginia, which he described as “a steel town, or was when there was such a thing.” His grandfather, Thomas Jefferson Hugus, founded the former Wheeling Steel Corporation. Wright’s dad, Wright Hugus Sr., was a prominent attorney and politician – the head of the Republican Party in West Virginia. His mother, Martha Majesky Hugus, was a teacher, musician and early women’s charity organizer and volunteer.

Hugus attended a regular public elementary school – just like Roger Sherman – and was active in football, baseball and basketball. He also excelled in tennis, taught to play at age 3 or 4 by his father, a nationally ranked tennis player.

The sports-minded lad was “a book nut”, too, a passion that continues to this day. “I have a computer database of the books I’ve read in the past 10 years. There are over 470 in there. I read about one a week. Modern fiction, action and history.”

Cadet
His high school years were spent at Greenbrier Military School. “My father felt I needed the discipline – I was a pain in the ass, very independent. It was a way to make a man out of a boy. This was right after World War II, so that was the thinking.” Hugus was #1 in his class and won all the academic medals, graduating in 1948.

Choosing a college presented a dilemma. “My father had gone to Dartmouth and Harvard Law. My grandfather went to Harvard Law and West Virginia University. I thought I needed to break the mold and go to a modern top university. I visited Duke with a friend of my father’s, a tennis player, and I was very impressed. I started there in 1948 and graduated in 1952 with a B.A., majoring in English and History, which in that day was the thing.”

Hugus returned home and married local girl/fellow Duke student Betty Woods. “I like to say she chased me down there – she was two years younger.” The Korean War was on and the draft was in effect, so Hugus joined the Navy and went to Officers Candidate School in Newport, RI. He came out in 1953 as an Ensign.

Capitol Chap
“I initially wanted to serve on a submarine,” he said, “but there was no availability.” As such, he went off to Washington, DC, assigned to the Office of Naval Intelligence (ONI). “My role was to investigate cases of sabotage, espionage and counter intelligence. The whole Communist world was overcoming us at the time. And this was the McCarthy Era, too. Everyone was scared of Communism. You might say the Russian bear raised its ugly head, as the Russians backed North Korea.”

Hugus’ office was in the Naval Observatory, on a 100-acre parcel in northwest Washington, which is where the Vice President’s residence is as well. “It was a great place to work and I lived in Georgetown, so it was just up the street. I learned so much, including a little Russian. One task was to review and analyze a U.S.-based Communist paper called the Daily Worker. I was also a liaison to the FBI, CIA (then the OSS), Army Intelligence and the National Security Agency. One scary moment was being detained at the Yugoslavian Embassy!”

He related his amusing first day on the job: “The area commander assigned me to a civilian investigator. He said he’d show me the ropes. We went for coffee, a noon lunch, then to the movies. He said, ‘That’s Naval Intelligence!’”

While in the Navy, he and his wife had two children, Stephanie and Christin. Hugus was released from active duty in August 1956, after achieving the rank of full lieutenant. He then applied to and was accepted at the University of Virginia Law School. “I think my hero Thomas Jefferson (his grandfather’s namesake) had something to do with my decision, as he founded and designed the university. UVA provided a well-rounded national legal background.”

Racecar Driver & Law Man
Millbank Tweed, a top Wall Street law firm, agreed to hire Hugus, but just before graduation in 1959, his father passed away. Wright Sr. had headed up a local Wheeling law firm, which then tried to push the family out. The family sued and settled, taking Hugus Sr.’s name out of the firm’s title. “The experience taught me to be cautious and made me realize I wanted to practice law in a small town.”

Hugus stayed in Wheeling for three years, until 1962. With some money his dad had left him, he also bought a racecar – a 1959 Triumph TR3-A – and began racing it with the Sports Car Club of America. Over a five-year period, he owned four different racecars.

At that point, he wanted to find a more stable town environment, and considered law firms all over the country. He ended up in Greenwich, CT. Lowell Weicker, now an ex-senator, hired him.

Hugus enjoyed a 15-year run in Greenwich practicing general law and became a partner. He had a son, Wright III, too, in 1965. “The last five years I was there, I drifted into sports law, which influenced me to establish my own firm, Hugus Enterprises, in 1975. I was one of the first attorneys to specialize in sports law and sports management.”

Sports like tennis, golf and skiing were amateur sports then and the athletes didn’t make money. As these became professional sports, the athletes needed representation and services. Hugus also helped set up the organizations, like the U.S. Ski Team, which he represented for eight years. Notable first clients included first woman Indy racer Janet Guthrie and gold medal Olympic figure skater Dorothy Hamill.

Hugus ran his business until 1980 when he contracted double pneumonia. This led to chronic bronchial asthma, and ultimately to cancer of the larynx. He moved to Aspen, CO, was treated over a three-year period by the doctor for the U.S. Ski Team and, in 1984, moved back to Connecticut. There he started Barrister Enterprises, providing database services for professionals, and ultimately settled in Fairfield with new wife Elizabeth Thomas, a financial consultant.

Hugus operated Barrister until 1990, then set up and ran an internal database at a bankruptcy law firm in Bridgeport for another four years. It was after retiring in 1994 that he dipped into the world of Good Humor Ice Cream.

SIDEBAR

Ice Cream Dream
When Fairfield resident Wright Hugus Jr. retired from his last corporate position as a database manager, he was looking for things to do besides his charitable pursuits and involvement as a member of the First Church Congregational.

“I wanted to work and run my own little business. There was an ad in the Bridgeport newspaper for ice cream vendors. I went to a meeting hosted by Blue Sky Bar, a Good Humor distributor and truck owner. Coming back in the car, I was laughing, thinking, ‘Wright, you’ve done a lot, but you haven’t done this.’ It was also a way of putting down roots in a new community. That was 16 years ago.”

Says Hugus, reflecting on the pursuit, “You wouldn’t believe the pleasure I get when a kid comes up to the truck, looks at all the flavors and his eyes light up. And you see the kids grow up over time. There’s nothing to dislike about ice cream.”

His current vehicle is a 1972 GMC Good Humor truck. At the height of its business, Good Humor owned and operated around 3,000 trucks nationwide. They ultimately sold these and are now just in the wholesale ice cream business.

Hugus essentially works seven days a week, visiting schoolyards, neighborhoods, picnics, birthdays, business events, soccer games, summer camps and concerts on the Green.

Most popular selections? Cookie sandwiches, lemon/lime shots, fudge bars, ice cream sandwiches and all five of the original Good Humor flavors dating back to 1927: Vanilla Bar, Toasted Almond, Chocolate Éclair, Candy Center Crunch and Strawberry Shortcake.

“The truck is like a meeting place or a water fountain at a business. Everyone’s around it. It’s a familiar, warm and fuzzy event… and it makes me feel good about what I’m doing.”

 

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Block Pulls Out the Stops: Annual Smith Street Party A Hit

Block Pulls Out the Stops:
Annual Smith Street Party A Hit
(Appeared on front page of 9/24 Fairfield Citizen newspaper)
By Mike Lauterborn
© 2010. All Rights Reserved.
9/19/10

Fairfield, CT – The official start time was 4pm and eager residents of Smith Street had begun to gather for their annual block party. It was the 14th consecutive affair on this block and the highlight of the street’s fall period.

Eileen Weber, actually an Oldfield Road resident, was this year’s organizer, coordinating the September 18th scheduling, printing flyers, securing a permit and arranging for barricades.

Her daughter, Norah, was already into the Cheetoh’s, a bag of which was set on one of several draped folding tables in front of “Ground Zero”, number 48 Smith Street. “Your fingers are going to be all orange,” someone said to her. “I’ll just lick ‘em off!” she replied with a grin.

Overhead, on a cord tied between a telephone pole and basketball hoop, squares of cloth, on which peace signs had been painted, hung.

From his corner Victorian-style home, Mark Potter carried over a huge container of fruit punch. It drew children like moths to a flame. They gathered around the spigot, cups at the ready, as Potter set it down.

As the numbers of the junior set grew, Hula Hoops, basketballs, juice packs and chalk – the staples of youth – appeared. Among them, Peter Nikac’s mini golden doodle Charlie and Nancy Murphy’s Welsh terrier Gibby played.

In an adjacent pear tree, multi-colored round paper lanterns were hung above a metal ice tub piled high with seasonal beers, soda, sparkling water, wine and juice. Bubbles drifted past, launched by Suzanna Weber, 7, and Audrey Anderson, 3. Audrey’s elder sister, Grace, 5, stood nearby tooting a whistle. Whizzing past on a scooter went Spencer Dolzani, 5.

Trundling up the street, Audrey’s mom, Sara, carried a plate of toast squares topped with dip. She secured a cup of wine, glad to be “off duty” for a few moments.

Tearing down the block on his gleaming bike, Phillip Lauterborn, 10, dodged pedestrians. This included Sandy Murphy, John Weber and Brian Dolzani who were huddled sipping beer. Murphy had a Redhook Ale and remarked, “A fraternity brother is the brewmaster.” Said Weber, “A perfect time to reestablish the connection!”

The older children in the group hovered at one end of the gathering, lazing in the grass, tapping on iPhones and tuning in iPods. Others like Griffin Murphy, 13, and Casden Leahey, 14, tossed a football back and forth. At the opposite end of the street, John Reidy, 6, ran about with a hockey stick whacking a Wiffle ball into a net while his elder sister, Elizabeth, 11, tossed a ball back and forth with Charlie Miller, 12.

More adults arrived, coupled and caught up with current events. Attendance was not limited to local residents. Shawn and Jacqui Levin and son Braden rolled in from the Stratfield area. “This is our first time here. Braden’s having a blast! We don’t have this kind of interaction where we are. This is amazing, so many kids together.” As she spoke, jump roping erupted led by Kaya Cusick, 11, with sister Hailey, 8, and Corinne Wilklow, 11, hopping in.

Of course, what would a block party be without grills? Three were onsite and in full use by 7:30, cooking bratwurst, hamburgers, chicken legs and steak cubes. At this point, night had fallen inspiring Marlene Lauterborn and Linda Raymond to set out candles along the food tables. These had grown to 30 feet in length and were topped with contributed dishes like brownies & cookies, salads, chips & dips, pizza wedges, fruit, and cheese & crackers. It was a plentiful bounty and the setting was momentarily tranquil until dashed by the banshee cries of a fleet of pre-pubescents racing scooters past.

The smell and glow of a firebowl that had been set up and sparked in one driveway added to the scene, as did various tunes cranking from an iDock. It also inspired marshmallow roasting. “Do you want it burnt or golden?” asked Delia Murphy, 11, of a pal.

A clear three-quarter moon in a star-speckled sky shown down on all and affirmed their good time. It was another great event for the Smith Street history books. 


Friday, September 17, 2010

Man About Town: Back to School Rush

Man About Town: Back To School Rush
By Mike Lauterborn
(For Sept 17 issue Fairfield-Citizen News)
© 2010. All Rights Reserved.

Ten deep at each register. Baskets full of notebooks and colored pens. Flip flops and sweatshirts.

The scene was OfficeMax on Kings Highway and it was the Friday afternoon of the first week Fairfield public schools were back in session. I’d run out of printer paper and needed a new appointment book and figured I would just make a quick dash out, not immediately remembering what day it was.

“Mob scene”, sans pitchforks and fire torches, is one way to describe the environment I encountered. Mothers with children, teens with their friends, clusters of young adults… and of all makes and models.

These packs roamed the store like hungry coyotes, picking clean the shelves of ring binders and Post-Its and markers. They raided the ink cartridges, composition books and textbook jackets. They raked out coffee filters and creamer and other items that might be necessary for late night paper writing.

Parents pushing carts dutifully followed their younger spawn, collecting the educational hardware and mentally tabulating the financial toll. The college set brashly went solo, shiny new credit cards tucked in their back pockets ready to pay for their own salvaged treasure.

Of course, the best laid plans of mice and men oft go awry and, while the store had lain in enough supplies to meet demand, it had not counted on its register computers to act up. Something to do with the cloudy/rainy weather and satellite communication apparently. So, the digits of patrons wishing to pay with credit cards would have to be manually called in for purchase approvals. No problem, and, in fact, it gave those of us on line a chance to visit with each other.

Older schoolmates, all tan and relaxed-looking from summers spent at the Cape or Nantucket or other like vacation destination, recognized each other in line. And like they were encountering each other on campus on the first day of a new semester, they exchanged pleasantries and remarked on each other’s appearance.

Younger schoolmates spotted each other as well and, less patient about waiting, went running around product displays and the camera counter.

Moms that had been busy all summer with their families said hello to each other, too, recognizing that these types of store trips would be the norm over the next nine months. Runs for poster board, report jackets or other needs that commonly arise as related to special school projects.

A little girl standing next to me in line with her mother had placed on the counter a package of refrigerator magnets with smiley faces. “Those are cute!” I remarked. “Will those hold your artwork and go up on the refrigerator?” She thought about that for a second and the prominence her work would soon achieve, grinned and said simply, “Yup!”

Another mom in front of me had three children of varying sizes with her and each had their own basket full of supplies. “Triple the damage, eh?” I said. She nodded, definitely aware of the bottom line, particularly in light of this down economy.

The register person asked for her card, flipped through a manual, phoned in the woman’s transaction and had her sign the electronic keypad, then off she went with a wave. One line over, a commotion erupted as three female college friends spotted each other and embraced. It being a Friday, no doubt they’d soon be somewhere near the beach with red party cups in hand, starting not only their academic year but a new term of social networking!

Good luck kids, do well and make us proud!

Thursday, September 16, 2010

“Bud” Sambrook: A Fairfieldian Through and Through

“Bud” Sambrook: A Fairfieldian Through and Through
(Front page feature Sept. 16 Fairfield Sun newspaper)
By Mike Lauterborn
© 2010. All Rights Reserved.
8/25/10

Fairfield, CT –  He’s a true native son, no doubt about it. A lifelong resident of Fairfield, Joseph “Bud” Sambrook has seen this town change from a farm-oriented community to the thriving hive of activity and culture that it has become, and is a living record of local lore.

Nicknamed at birth by an uncle who thought he looked like a little bud, Sambrook, 74, recently interviewed at his Oldfield Road home, grew up in the area off Easton Turnpike near General Electric’s headquarters. His father, Joseph, was a tool and die maker at the Underwood Elliott Fisher Typewriter Co. Mom Eleanor was a stay-at-home mom then legal secretary when Sambrook and his elder sister, Joan, were grown.

Sambrook was educated at Stratfield and Lincoln Elementary schools and then Roger Ludlowe, which is now Tomlinson Middle School. “It was a rural community for sure back then,” he recalls. “If you missed the school bus, it was a long hike from home. I would pass five working farms just on my route.”

As a boy during World War II, he clearly remembers the phone ringing at the family home and a friend reporting, “The Japanese just bombed Pearl Harbor!” He confesses he didn’t know who the Japanese were or Pearl Harbor, but he knew it was bad. “I remember a little inset on the front page of the paper each day showing our troop positions. And we listened to Walter Winchell at 7p.m. every Sunday night to get the latest reports.”

He also recalls the local blackout and air raid warden. “He would come out with his whistle and helmet and tell you to pull down your shades. And car headlights were painted halfway down.” Among the most exciting moments for him during this period was to watch “the Corsairs and P-38s fly very low over the house. They built the Corsairs in Stratford and would test fly them from there.”

An early work experience was at Colonese’s Farm. “I picked vegetables and slopped hogs. I even learned to drive there… tractors at first, then a ’36 Chevy pickup truck.” Later, in high school, he worked at a market at Dolan’s Corner on Black Rock Turnpike. “I would stock shelves, fill orders and deliver groceries to people’s houses.”

He recalls that, near where Old Navy is located today, “there was a spring called Rock Pohaten and they used to bottle water there. This was before bottled water became all the rage!”

After high school, Sambrook went into the air force, “probably because I fell in love with all the airplanes going over the house!” He served a term of eight years – four active and four reserve – and was initially stationed in Amarillo, Texas. Discharged as a staff sergeant, Sambrook caught the very tail end of the Korean War and the beginning of the Vietnam War. His name is included in Fairfield’s honor roll for both conflicts. He was an instructor, teaching engine and aircraft mechanics. “Every so often, they would let us go on a ‘prisoner chase’ to break up the monotony, transporting prisoners from one facility to another,” he remarked.

The period after his discharge was tough as the nation was experiencing a recession. Needing a job, he reported to Poster Hardware, where he ended up working for a few years. Come 1964, though, he realized that he’d never really completed his education and didn’t have a trade. The health benefits and pay offered by the Fairfield Police Department were attractive. Little did he realize then that the force would be his employer for the next 42 ½ years!

“I went from patrolman to chief,” says Sambrook. “When I first joined, Fairfield was a sleepy little community. In the late 60s, we started experiencing the drug culture, and things seemed to take a turn for the worse. During my 14 years as chief of detectives, Fairfield had its share of bank robberies, assaults and even some homicides.”

He related a particularly notable case that occurred in the mid-80s during his tenure with the detective bureau. “A newborn baby was murdered. There was a lot of investigation and a realization that there was a Santeria (a religion of Caribbean origin) connection. We thought we knew who the perpetrator was, but we weren’t able to get him. The case created a nationwide – even international – buzz. It was tremendously involved.”

In his early days on the force, he met his now ex-wife, Shirley, a court stenographer. They were married in 1969 and had one daughter, Michelle, now a mother of four. Bud and Shirley bought a house on Shoreham Village Drive off the Post Road near the Fairfield Motor Inn. She retained the home after their divorce in 1980, and he soon happened upon his current residence – a unique bachelor pad indeed!

“I bought my present home from the man next door, who lived there as a kid,” says Sambrook. “It was originally 16’x20’ – a Sears and Roebuck catalog kit house, assembled on the lot in 1916. A single-story bungalow. It was affordable, I saw the potential and I liked that it was set back from the road 200 feet. It provided privacy, and had a marsh at the back, too.”

The first modification he made was to tear off the roof and add attic storage. His plans grew from there. “I wanted to create a contemporary saltbox and added sections and pieces over the years.” The home is now approximately 1,400 square feet and incorporates elements that Sambrook essentially scavenged from here and there. “All the windows came from a woman down near the beach who was having new ones put in. She asked me if I knew anyone who could haul the old ones away. I loaded them in my pickup and brought them here. Then I stripped umpteen layers of paint off them, customized them and naturally stained the wood. In fact, all the wood in the house is naturally stained.”

The wide-plank pine flooring in his 9’x15’ sitting room came from another source. “A friend in the demo biz was tearing down the original Fairfield Lumber Building. These planks were an overhang that I repurposed.” As to the exposed, hand-hewn ceiling beams, he says, “I drove up to Litchfield County where an old building was being torn down. These were full of nails, filthy dirty and covered with bird doo.” He refurbished and installed the beams himself.

His carpentry talents extend all throughout the house. The front door was initially 1 ¾” thick. He covered both the front and back with a layer of pine, installed a lock set from an old house in Easton and scored the exterior with a “quilting” pattern. He dug out the basement himself and installed I-beams for support. He built a 6’x5’ Rumford fireplace with a bake oven feature from specs in a book. “Rumford was a guy that corrected fireplaces to throw heat. The bricks are highly fired, very hard. The actual firebox is shallow; the ‘cheeks’ reflect the heat out. And the hearth is not raised like in most homes now, which is a plus.”

In 1997, Sambrook became chief of the Fairfield Police Department, a post he held until 2006. He hasn’t completely retired, however, and pilots a police boat in Essex, patrolling the Connecticut River from Saybrook to Deep River every weekend. He had run the police boat in Fairfield for many years prior and has had a number of boats of his own -- both power and sail – over time. About the weekend work, he says, “It’s a nice healthy diversion. I meet some nice people. And there’s a certain fulfillment of not feeling retired and put out to pasture.”

The post is not devoid of drama and excitement either. “There was an ugly situation two years ago, with a power boat hitting a sailboat and killing a woman, a professor. This summer, a boat called the Blue Guitar was moored mid-river. It was over 100 feet long, from London, and belonged to Eric Clapton. I didn’t see him – his crew would go for supplies.”

But his main diversion has been his antique cars. At present, he owns a ’36 Ford pickup, ’37 Chevy police car, ’37 Buick Century and ’41 Chevy coupe. These are housed in a garage adjacent to his house that he has expanded over the years and dubbed “Oldfield Horseless Carriage Co. 1916.” While still head of the detective bureau, he revamped a recovered stolen Camaro that had been donated, turning it into a DARE (Drug Abuse Resistance Education) car. “I’d drive it in the town’s annual Memorial Day parade. It had speakers on the outside and played ‘Bad Boys.’” Sambrook also refurbished the police car, obtaining “FPD” vanity plates and driving it in the parade as well. “There was a young local boy with leukemia that just loved police. We made him a uniform with sergeant stripes and dubbed him an Auxiliary Officer. He’d ride with me in the parade. Ultimately, he beat cancer and I still keep in touch with the family.”

Three cheers for Joe “Bud” Sambrook, Fairfield’s True Blue Town Treasure!


SIDEBAR:
Snippets of Fairfield History
Former Fairfield Chief of Police “Bud” Sambrook, in a recent sit-down, recalled historical highlights from the town’s past.

Police Call Boxes: “There used to be call boxes all over town before two-way radios were installed in police cars. If a cop saw a light on above a box, he would call in to learn about a local incident. The first radios were only one-way – you could get a message, but couldn’t call back.”

Heritage Square: “I was still new to the department and remember when Heritage Square burned down. The structure was an old lumber company converted into a 2-level retail complex. The night was very cold and the fire was difficult to put out. I saw a fireman’s helmet with water dripping off it and immediately freezing, turning to icicles.”

South Benson Marina: “There was just a channel there that ran out and created a riptide. Several people drowned. Wendy Clark would rent rowboats. My buddy and I would go out fishing and have difficulty getting back up the channel if the tide was going out.”

Before I-95: “When I was a kid, there was no I-95. Think of all the semis going down U.S. 1. Back then, in the center of town, there was diagonal parking with parking meters.”

Corner of Reef and Post Roads: “There was a police post there, manned by a cop 16 hours a day, in four-hour shifts. If you stepped away, that would be the moment the chief showed and would say, ‘Where’s the center man?’ And you’d better have a good excuse.”