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Mill River Greenway Initiative

A community-based steward for the Mill River

Community meetings

Two May Events

May 10, 2019 by JW Sinton

Welcome to Springtime, dear Mill River Lovers,

We hope you’re enjoying this amazing spring weather by the riverside as the marsh marigold flowers die back and the riparian woodlands come alive with spring flowers! Two more Mill River events are happening over the next two weeks, one on the Hidden Mill River and a final springtime event for Devil’s Den to Lickingwater.

First Event: Monday, the 13that the Forbes Library in the Coolidge Museum from 6:30-8:30 PM, Rediscovering the Hidden Mill River, hosted by Forbes Library, MRGI, and Historic Northampton.

6:30-7:00 Informal discussion focused on a plan for part of the Hidden Mill designed by Tasuku Kamei, MA, University of Massachusetts Dept. of Landscape Architecture and Regional Planning.

7:00-8:00 Presentations and Discussion by Laurie Sanders, Historic Northampton;  John Sinton, Mill River Greenway Initiative;   Wayne Feiden, Northampton Office of Planning and Sustainability; Dylan Gaffney, Forbes Library

8:00-8:30  Two short films on the 1936 Flood

More details will be at https://forbeslibrary.libcal.com/event/5394570

Second Event: Tuesday, May 21 at Jones Library in Amherst, 43 Amity St. from 6:30-7:30 PM(co-sponsored by the Jones Library and Levellers Press) John Sinton will present “The Mill River: History, Transformation, and Why it Matters,” an illustrated talk based on Devil’s Den to Lickingwaterthat will focus on the history of the Mill River after the English occupied the Pioneer Valley. Sinton will present an overview of the social and industrial history of the Mill River and its region, an explanation of the environmental transformations that changed the face of the landscape, and the reasons why the Mill River matters. https://www.joneslibrary.org/Calendar.aspx?EID=7854

See you on the river!

John, Gaby, and Neal

Filed Under: Community meetings

Autumn 2018 Newsletter

December 19, 2018 by JW Sinton

Hello Autumn! Hello Mill River Community!

Hoping this finds you refreshed by the crisp weather and busily battening down the hatches for the winter ahead.  We three humble co-conspirators at the MRGI continue our diligent efforts to celebrate and elevate our river. To wit…

Mill River, the Book

We were delighted and humbled to see so many of you at the launch party for John’s gorgeous new book, Devil’s Den to Lickingwater: The Mill River Through Landscape & History, published by Levellers Press. Deeply researched and lavishly illustrated, the book is a must-have for Mill River lovers (holiday gift time is not so far off!).

John will be presenting different sections of the book at upcoming events at Historic Northampton at 4:00 Saturday, December 1; at the Leeds School on Wednesday evening at 7:00 January 9 (snow date January 10); on Feb. 21st at 7:00 a re-run of the Historic Northampton talk at Northampton Community Arts Trust at 33 Hawley St. (Historic Northampton is undergoing renovations); at Meekins Library in Williamsburg on March 13th at 6:30; and at Audubon’s Arcadia Sanctuary on October 8th. Additional events are in the planning stages for Smith College, Forbes Library, University of Massachusetts, and the Hitchcock Center. John would be happy to entertain invitations for other venues as well.

 You can pick up a copy at Collective Copies in Florence or Amherst or at Broadside Books in Northampton. You can also order it from Amazon.

Williamsburg Rolls Along

Team Williamsburg has been able to accelerate its progress this fall with an additional $100,000 in funds from the Massachusetts DCR Recreational Trails Grant program. Design and engineering work continues under the town’s contract with the great folks at VHB Engineering. The Phase II Pre-Construction Design Development Study has been expanded to include survey and field research toward the development of the new Skinnerville park parcel approved for purchase at Town Meeting in June.

VHB is also helping the Williamsburg Mill River Greenway Committee move forward on two fronts:

1. Improvements to the safety and accessibility of the Fort Hill Road-South Main Street intersection in Haydenville;

2. a study to qualify South Main Street for the MA DOT Complete Streets program, which funds improvements that benefit cars, bikes, and walkers as they traverse South Main Street between the Rail Trail and the Greenway (which will begin at the Library Bridge in Haydenville).

3. Surfacing of the rail trail from Leeds to Haydenville was completed this fall under an elegant partnership between Williamsburg and Northampton. Because the project spanned the town line, the two communities made an agreement to have Northampton supply materials, and Williamsburg Highway Department perform the work.  The 1/2 mile or so of pavement formally linked Haydenville into the Mass Central Rail Trail system, which will someday connect all the way to Boston. The Burgy Greenway committee hopes to create a wayside parklet at the switchback, with benches and interpretive signage to mark the terminus of the MCRT.

Smith Design Clinic Rides Again!

We’re blessed once again this year to have the extraordinary help of Smith College’s Design Clinic under the masterful guidance of Engineering Professor Susannah Howe. Our four Smithie seniors (Jess McKnight, Bea Dalton, Kelsey Hammond, and Serena Cattau) will be providing us with designs for the final grade and a new pedestrian bike bridge at the terminus of the Mass Central Rail Trail in Haydenville, the gateway to the Burgy Mill River Greenway. Everyone will have the chance to check out their work and provide feedback at a community forum in April 2019.

MRGI 2023

Your humble co-conspirators are opening a discussion on a strategic plan for the next five years of MRGI initiatives. We expect that the Haydenville to Williamsburg Center project will break ground five years from now in 2023 (fingers crossed!) by which time will need to:

1. Consider a more robust organization with its own 501(c)(3) non-profit status that can serve as a “Friends of the Mill River Greenway” advocacy group;

2. Establish the next steps in the development of a physical greenway connecting Goshen to Northampton via trail, scientific study areas, and virtual trails along reaches that need to remain off limits to active recreation.

See You in Spring, We’re Wintering on the Website

We will organize a MRGI meeting for our community next spring, but for now, we open the floor to your ideas. We have already received several suggestions about the website, which we will spend some time this winter updating. If you have any thoughts about the river or MRGI, please let us know.  Are there river reaches you’d like us to focus on for whatever reason, whether recreation, scientific or cultural study, or exploration?  After all, the river runs through all of us.

We hope to see you a book event in the coming months and to hearing from you about any Mill River thought on your mind.

May the river always flow through us!

Gaby, Neal, and John

Filed Under: Community meetings, History, Mill River Greenway

Leap Day MRGI Community Meeting!

February 22, 2016 by JW Sinton

CONTRIBUTE YOUR IDEAS AT OUR SECOND MEETING WITH THE CONWAY SCHOOL

Monday, Feb. 29, 7:00-9:00 PM at the Florence Civic Center

Dear Mill River Lovers,

Once again we’re asking you to contribute ideas on how to advance our goals for a greenway along the Mill River. Margot Halpin and Armi Macaballug, grad students at the Conway School, will be on hand to present the results of our Feb. 2nd meeting and report on how they’ve integrated your comments into their preliminary suggestions for priority projects. They’ll discuss opportunities for a variety of projects from multi-use paths to woodland trails to ecological and research sites to scenic overviews and historic sites.

Agenda For The Meeting:

  1. Review input from last community meeting.
  2. Present recent Conway School work including methods, maps, and analysis.
  3. Review regional map from Arcadia to Goshen to see relationships among opportunity areas, current green spaces, parks, public lands, bike routes, pedestrian routes, and paths. Request comments from the community.
  4. Discuss a selection of focus areas with maps and solicit input from the community.
  5. Discuss next steps.

Once again we stress that your contributions are vital: You know specific information about the river itself, but especially about your preferences concerning what you would or would not like to happen to different sections of the river. Here’s your chance to make a difference in the long run because your voices are needed to carry out our collective vision of a beautiful and vibrant river corridor.

See you at the Florence Civic Center on February 29th. If you can’t make it, please send your ideas to Armi and Margot at millriver2016@csld.edu.

Many thanks for making this all possible,

The MRGI co-conspirators

“The River Runs Through Us”

 

Filed Under: Community meetings, Mill River Greenway

Two April Opportunities

April 16, 2015 by JW Sinton

Here are two imminent April events!

April 18 Bay State Sustainability Fair 1:00-4:00 with a pair of riverwalks on Mill River historic sites. BSVA_SustainabilityFairFlyerPE

April 27th at 7:30 P.M.: A UMass Amherst project for an outdoor exhibit in Florence at the Northamtpon Community Farm/Florence Recreation Fields site.  Check it out:  UMass Outdoor Exhibit

 

 

 

Filed Under: Bay State, Community meetings, History, Mill River Greenway, Northampton, River walks

Rail Trail Extension Community Meeting March 25

March 11, 2014 by JW Sinton

Tuesday, March 25th, 7:00-9:00 PM at Leeds School Cafeteria

Come gain more information and offer your input on the extension of the Bike Path/Rail Trail from Grove Ave. in Leeds to South Main St. in Haydenville coming this spring and summer.  Wayne Feiden, Northampton Director of Planning and Sustainability, will share plans for the extension and request your input.  Please come and share your ideas.  For more info call Alisa Klein at 586-9123 (email aklein@northamptonma.gov) or LeedsCivicAssoc@gmail.com.

 

Filed Under: Community meetings, Northampton, Williamsburg

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