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Big News in Burgy: and a chance to participate!

Devil’s Den to Lickingwater Book Launch

September 13, 2018 by JW Sinton

 

Devil’s Den to Lickingwater: The Mill River Through Landscape and History tells the multifaceted tale of the Mill River in Western Massachusetts, from its emergence after the glaciers 20,000 years ago to the present. This is in fact the story of New England, and much of America, as told by environmental historian John Sinton (co-author of Water, Earth and Fire: The New Jersey Pine Barrensand The Connecticut River Boating Guide). Little escapes Sinton’s voracious historical appetite – the creation of the landscape, the disappearance and reappearance of native fish and animals, the Mill River as a Native American crossroads, the contrast between English and Native ways of managing the land, the transformations wrought by war, floods and industrial disasters, the extraordinary role of the Mill River in the Industrial Revolution, and exceptional personalities from Sachem Umpanchala to Calvin Coolidge: all this is told through the arc of the Mill River’s history—beloved, abused, diverted, and ultimately reclaimed as an integral part of the landscape.

Devil’s Den to Lickingwater, while describing a specific landscape, contains that element of universality that links readers to their own stories. It connects us with our past, and evokes a sense of what it was like to live along the river long ago.

Beautifully written and lavishly illustrated with maps, drawings and other images, Devil’s Den to Lickingwater will serve as an exemplar for readers and authors of local and public history, proving that local history is a reflection of the larger world. Sinton’s unique book is a delight for the eye, the intellect, and the heart.

Copies of  Devil’s Den to Lickingwater may be purchased at the following addresses: For mail order copies, contact: Steve Strimer, Levellers Press,  Phone: 413-992-7408  Email: levellerspress1@gmail.com
Collective Copies Stores:
In Florence: 93 Main St., 01062
In Amherst: 71 S. Pleasant St. 01002
Or at the following bookstores: Broadside in Northampton, Odyssey in S. Hadley and Amherst Books in Amherst
Or via Amazon

John Sinton is a retired environmental studies professor who lives with his wife in Florence, Massachusetts

About John W. Sinton

Born in San Francisco in 1939, I spent my first thirteen winters there and my summers on the Truckee River outside Tahoe City, California. I spent the next four years at school in New England, then returned to the West Coast for college, after which I left the Bay Area to spend my graduate school years in Indiana and Paris. After receiving a doctorate in Russian and Early Modern European history, I taught history for two years and then changed my life’s trajectory. I went to the University of Massachusetts, Amherst as a post-doctoral scholar in environmental planning where I taught natural resource conservation from 1967-1972.

After a 4-year stint as principal in an environmental planning firm from 1969-1972 in Amherst, I went to the newly-opened Stockton State College in southern New Jersey to help establish an environmental studies department. I spent twenty-seven years there as an environmental planner while teaching environmental planning, history, and geography. I became active in the creation and management of the New Jersey Pinelands National Reserve, co-authored a book on it, and then studied and published articles on rivers both in the US and Europe.

I retired in 1999 and moved to the village of Florence, Massachusetts in the City of Northampton, living some two hundred yards from the banks of the Mill River. I became an environmental activist and an integral part of the resurgent Connecticut River Conservancy for whom I co-authored The Boating Guide to the Connecticut River: Source to Sea. I remain an honorary board member of the CRC and an adjunct professor in the Department of Landscape Architecture and Regional Planning at the Univ. of Massachusetts, Amherst. I am a founding member and current co-moderator of the Mill River Greenway Initiative based in Williamsburg and Northampton.

I have been married to Wendy Sinton since 1970. We have five sons, three grandsons, and eight granddaughters.

Praise for Devil’s Den to Lickingwater

Christine DeLucia, Assoc. Professor of History at Williams College, author of Memorylands
The Mill River that flows through western Massachusetts forms the
centerpiece of John Sinton’s fine-grained study of water, land, people,
and their complex interactions over extended spans of time… Moving fluently between birds-eye vantages and the perspectives
of paddlers, and written in accessible prose, the book is well illustrated
with images and maps from local historical collections that
illuminate diverse facets of the river’s transformations. It blends commitment to critical localism with attentiveness to regional, national, and global developments, offering a compelling lens into the past, present, and future of a dynamic watershed.

Christopher Clark, Head of the Department of History, Univ. of Connecticut, Storrs. Author of Rural Roots of Capitalismand The Communitarian Moment.
An important book, Devil’s Den to Lickingwater is a fine environmental and industrial history of the Mill River in Williamsburg and Northampton. Its lively text, accompanied by beautiful maps and illustrations, tells a dramatic story of the river’s many transformations through community enterprise and development, ecological challenges, disaster, decline, and rejuvenation. Both as an account of how the Mill River came to be as it is, and as an inspiration for ensuring its healthy future in the life of the region, this book will have lasting influence.

Neal Salisbury, Richmond 1940 Professor Emeritus in History, Smith College. Author of Manitou and Providence: Indians, Europeans, and the Making of New England.
John Sinton has given us a masterpiece that is at once environmental history, local history, and a microcosm of New England, American, and global history. It interweaves the latest findings on all manner of scholarly topics with countless anecdotes of human beings, both inventive and foolish. Especially notable for incorporating Native Americans’ presence and perspectives. Beautifully written and illustrated.

Elizabeth M. Sharpe, co-director of Historic Northampton. Author of In the Shadow of the Dam: The Aftermath of the Mill River Flood of 1874.
This is a must read for anyone interested in New England cultural and environmental history. John Sinton is a companionable and knowledgeable guide as he brings to life the cultural and landscape history of Northampton and Williamsburg through the story of the region’s lifeblood, the Mill River. Aided by many newly crafted maps and illustrations, Sinton describes in great clarity the river’s geologic history, its use and meaning to indigenous people, its industrial phase, and its revived place in the landscape today.  A cogent discussion of the environmental impacts of deforestation, pollution, and invasive species places the Mill River in a national context. This highly readable volume should be on every New Englander’s bookshelf.    

Bruce Laurie, Professor Emeritus of History, Univ. of Massachusetts, Amherst. Author of Artisans into Workers(1989), Beyond Garrison(2005) and Rebels in Paradise: Sketches of Northampton Abolitionists(2015).
 This gem of a book offers an elegant yes to the question “Does nature have a history?”—along with us humans—through a detailed chronicle of the Mill River. This current trickle of water once had a heroic past, a sacred place to the early Native Americans and an invaluable resource to the first Anglo American settlers and later generations that harnessed its power to the region’s first mills and factories. John Sinton, the longtime environmental historian cum environmental activist, captures the history of the Mill in loving detail, exposing the changing shape of its flora, fauna, and aquatic life and larger impact on our landscape. It is beautifully written, richly detailed with maps and other illustrations, and informative throughout–a must and compelling read for everyone fromenvironmentalists to local historians and general readers wishing to learn why we reside in such a special place.

David Glassberg, Professor of History, Univ. of Massachusetts, Amherst. Author of American Historical Pageantryand Sense of History: The Place of Past in American Life.
Sinton’s engaging history of the land and people along the Mill River is essential reading for anyone in Western Massachusetts seeking a better understanding of where they live.  It combines the attention to detail of the best local histories with a sophisticated analysis placing those details in a broader social, economic, and ecological context.  

Helen Horowitz, Parsons Professor Emerita of History and American Studies, Smith College. Author of Rereading Sex(2002) and Traces of J.B. Jackson(coming 2019).
With rich knowledge and clear, evocative language, John Sinton interweaves the natural and engineered history of the Mill River in Western Massachusetts with the complex stories of settlements along its course. Sinton deftly traces the interactions of the river and its flooding waters with the forces that built farms, villages, towns, and cities alongside its banks—forest clearing, agriculture, industrialization, dams, transportation, and politics. Abundant maps and images enhance understanding and help bring this past world to life. Today, inspired by environmental awareness, interest in recreation, and tourism, a growing number of river walks allow new appreciation of the Mill River’s beauty. Sinton offers a compelling story and an important contribution to the growing literature of the interplay between nature and human action.

Ted Steinberg, Distinguished Professor of History and Professor of Law at Case Western Reserve Univ. Author of Gotham Unbound, Down to Earth, and Acts of God.
A beautifully written microhistory that will make you care deeply for this winding little New England tributary in ways you never dreamed. A remarkable book and lavishly illustrated to boot. 

Larry Hott, Award-winning filmmaker at Hott Productions and Florentine Films. He lives in Florence, Massachusetts.
Take a dollop of geography, a tablespoon of industrial history, and a pinch of city planning, blend them together into a compelling tale of a New England river and you’ve got a recipe for John Sinton’s fascinating book.  I’ve lived along the Mill River for decades but I never knew just how many hundreds of mills dotted its banks, or the details of the utopian and abolitionist movements that sprung up nearby, or the impact of the many devastating floods that affected the layout of Northampton.  Sinton is a master storyteller who knows that a river’s history is far more entertaining when its central players are people who not only changed the course of the river but the character of the region as well. 

Richard Smardon, PhD SUNY Distinguished Service Professor, SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry, Syracuse NY. Author of Revitalizing Urban Waterway Communities and Sustaining the World’s Wetlands.
John Sinton takes us on a full-immersion journey in environmental history with his book Devil’s Den to Linkingwater: The Mill River through Landscape and History. He utilizes intensive historical research, a la Paul Krugman and William Cronon, to give ‘voice to the river’ in what he terms an awikhigan – the Abenaki word for representing the world in different ways. He covers the Mill River’s history from early geologic times, through Native American eras and the period of early European settlers all the way up to the present. Major hydrologic events like floods and river diversions are covered, as well as their interactions with riverine communities. This book will be of interest to those whose appetites include; natural and cultural landscape history, environmental interpretation, cultural ecology, and river-related planning and management. 

 

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Mill River Greenway

Early Summer Newsletter

June 20, 2018 by JW Sinton

The happiest of early summertimes to you, dear Mill River friends!

We are experiencing such a surge of interest and support for Mill River work that we’re beginning to burst with pride at the seams of our all-too-small workforce garment (namely Gaby, John, and Neal). Let’s get to the news:

  1. A new park is born!! Voters at Williamsburg Town Meeting voted overwhelmingly to approve the acquisition of a new four-acre park located across the Mill River from Local Burgy, Village Green, and Family Veterinary Center in the historic “Skinnerville” village between Haydenville and Williamsburg. A THOUSAND THANKS to dear friends and supporters who contributed over $8,000 in just two weeks to secure the purchase! And thanks to our supportive partners in the Eversource Energy real estate management office for helping us put together the deal.
  2. The Williamsburg Mill River Greenway Committee has finally secured a whopping $30,000 in State Transportation Bond funds, originally appropriated through the efforts of then-Senator Ben Downing in 2014. Much gratitude is owed to Representative Steve Kulik, and State Senator Adam Hinds, along with their local staff Paul Dunphy and Jon Gould, for their dogged efforts to bring those funds home to Burgy!
  3. Smith Design Clinic does it again! Our four intrepid Smith Engineering seniors gave a brilliant public presentation and submitted a 178-page report examining the Mill River’s mischievous behavior and possible solutions at the infamous “pinch” where Route 9 is dangerously narrow heading west past the Brassworks out of Haydenville. The impressive and extremely professional report will be shared with VHB Engineers, under contract with Williamsburg for survey and design development of the Burgy-Haydenville Greenway. You can view the report here (link to Burgy committee docs page on burgy.org: https://www.burgy.org/mill-river-greenway-committee/pages/greenway-reports-maps-etc
  4. Working closely with the Williamsburg Woodland Trails Committee (WWTC) and Smith College, we have just produced the 4thin our line of self-guided tours, this one by car or bicycle. It follows the path of the 1874 Williamsburg Flood from the site of the dam on the Mill’s East Branch to the final resting place of its victims at Florence Meadows/Grow Food Northampton Community Farm. It’s available for $2 from MRGI, the Williamsburg Historical Society, Historic Northampton, or the Northampton Chamber of Commerce.
  5. …speaking of which, the WWTC has just established one of the Valley’s most outstanding historical trails, this one from a parking spot on Ashfield Road, 2.8 miles from Williamsburg Center. With a Mass Humanities grant, the WWTC has installed a kiosk and series of wayside signs that lead from the trailhead to the dam site. Eric Weber and Elizabeth Sharpe provided the text and images. Eric’s drawings and engineering analyses are eye-opening. Be sure to check it out! It’s about a mile out and a mile back. Great hiking and great history in one fell swoop.
  6. We will be celebrating the Mill River at the amazing Golden Spike gathering of cyclists and trail enthusiasts throughout Massachusetts on the 27-28 of July. Our rail trail is part of two of the longest, most historic rail trails in New England. We urge you to check it out at https://www.gs2018.org. Gaby will present a short talk on our Williamsburg project, Neal will be at the table to work the crowd, and John will be leading Hidden Mill River tours on Friday and Saturday.
  7. On June 1st, the Hospital Hill and Smith College sections of Mill River became the focus for a natural history “biothon” to raise funds for the Hitchcock Center in memory of Elizabeth J. Farnsworth, whose untimely passing last November saddened us deeply. Through the amazing efforts of Laurie Sanders, Charley Eiseman, and Julia Blyth, we now have some updated baseline information on the biota of that section of the Mill River. Chief among our discoveries were the first known occurrences of a licorice-smelling goldenrod (Solidago odora) and a wood turtle (Glyptemys insculpta). Now, if we could just find someone to lead a MRGI initiative to list all the species in our Mill River watershed…if only! Any volunteers out there?
  8. And if ecological sleuthing isn’t your specialty, we would love some help sussing out the questions and process of whether your humble servants at the MRGI should undertake the creation of a 501c(3). If this is more your expertise than identifying salamanders and wildflowers, please let us know!

Attached is a photo of the Community Gardens at the Grow Food Northampton Community Farm, on the Mill River in Florence, courtesy of MRGI champion Reid Bertone-Johnson of Smith College and his kite-mounted camera!

Florence Meadows: Community Farm and Grow Food Northampton, kite-aided photo by Reid Bertone-Johnson

Filed Under: Florence, Newsletters, Williamsburg

Wild & Scenic FilmFest April 14

April 2, 2018 by JW Sinton

13 Dynamic Short Films from 2:30 to 5:30 at Smith College, Wright Hall, Weinstein Auditorium

MRGI is thrilled to partner with a great group of environmental organizations for an Earth Day film festival organized by the Westfield Watershed and Wild & Scenic River folks, hosted by the Center for the Environment, Ecological Design and Sustainability at Smith.

Here is the poster with all the details: Wild & Scenic River Fest

Filed Under: Mill River Greenway

Winter Newsletter

January 21, 2018 by JW Sinton

Dear Mill River Rats,

The happiest of New Years to you and to our amazing river! Once again, Williamsburg and the upper watershed leads the way in accomplishments and will continue to be our chief focus over the next year. But first, some quick updates:

  • We’re thrilled to co-sponsor with Grow Food Northampton an eco-riverwalk with Hitchcock Center’s fabulous naturalist Ted Watt. The event is January 28th, 1pm-3pm. Register here! Meet up at the GFN Community Garden, 140 Meadow Street, Florence. Further details can be found on the GFN website here.
  • Heidi Stevens and the Leeds Mill River Greenway Committee now have a great set of historic signs in the center of Leeds that follow the MRGI brochure’s riverwalk. Pick up a brochure at Historic Northampton or the Northampton Chamber of Commerce (or contact us at info@millrivergreenway.org).
  • We’re still looking at an April date for publication of John Sinton’s book on the Mill River to be published by Steve Strimer’s Levellers Press. Working title? How about Devil’s Den to Licking Water: The Mill River in Landscape and History. If you’ve a better title, let us know! The book will have lots of cool maps and images for your delectation.
  • And now on to Williamsburg! Preparations for the 1874 Williamsburg Dam Disaster signage and brochure are on track for a springtime kickoff. Paul Jahnige and his Burgy Woodlands Trail Committee are leading the way on interpretive signs along the trail. John is coordinating contributions from Burgy Historical Society’s Eric Weber and Ralmon Black, Historic Northampton historian Betty Sharpe, and Smith student Amaya Ramsay-Malone to assemble a brochure to tell the story of the flood from Williamsburg to Florence. Heidi Stevens of the Leeds MRGC will provide graphic design.
  • The Williamsburg Mill River Greenway Committee is thrilled to be working for the second time with Smith College’s formidable Design Clinic. Four Engineering majors (shout out to Marcia Rojas, Laura Rosenbauer, Maya Sleiman, and Fereshta Noori!) are studying the hydrology of the Mill River at the “pinch” in Route 9 just west of the Brassworks and will contribute to the ultimate design of a retaining wall to widen the roadbed and make room for the Greenway as it follows Route 9 from Haydenville to Williamsburg. The students work is ably supported by a crack team of experts – Brett Towler of US Fish & Wildlife; Carl Gustafson of USDA NRCS (retd); Jim Hyslip of HyGround Engineering; and our champion Susannah Howe, Smith College Engineering Prof and director of the Design Clinic.
  • With elegant timing, the Design Clinic students are able to coordinate with and learn from the professional engineers of VHB, Inc., who were selected by the Town of Williamsburg to execute the Master Route 9 Corridor Survey for which funds were approved at Williamsburg’s 2017 Town Meeting. Surveyors can already be seen on and around Route 9 determining right of ways, flagging wetlands, establishing parcel boundaries, and laying down the baseline upon which the Williamsburg Mill River Greenway will be designed in the years ahead. Mark your calendars for a 2025 groundbreaking!
  • The Burgy Greenway received a big boost from Healthy Hampshire to the tune of a $9,999 grant awarded in November. Williamsburg will use the grant to design the future Mill River Greenway to maximize its safety and walkability, design the rest areas, viewpoints, river access points, safe crosswalks at road intersections and driveways, safety and accessibility accommodations, and to work with local partners to ensure that the final design is fully responsive to the needs of all users, with particular emphasis on the elderly, school children, and the disabled.  Healthy Hampshire is focused on improving people’s health in Hampshire County and the Hilltowns by collaborating with municipal leaders, elected officials, public health departments, planners, businesses, community organizations, and residents. It is part of the Mass in Motionstatewide initiative through the Department of Public Health, and administered by the City of Northampton. Thank you, friends!
  • More good Burgy news – the Greenway Committee received its second grant from the Recreational Trails Grant program of the Dept of Conservation and Recreation last October. Almost $50,000 will go directly to improvements to the South Main Connector, which someday will bring users of the Mass Central Rail Trail from the Haydenville dismount at the foot of South Main Street, to the beginning of the Burgy Greenway at the Haydenville Library. Grant funds will support:
    • The completion of trail surfacing between Leeds and Haydenville;
    • Conservation plantings along the trail dismount;
    • Establishment of a parklet at the dismount switchback;
    • Restoration of a retaining wall on South Main Street that will allow for further extension of the South Main sidewalk.

Once again, best wishes to all of you for the New Year, and three extra cheers for the good folks from Williamsburg!!

John, Gaby, and Neal

 

 

 

Filed Under: Florence, Leeds, Mill River Greenway, Williamsburg

Big News in Burgy: and a chance to participate!

April 27, 2017 by JW Sinton

Walking Along the River. Photo credit: Helen Symons

The Williamsburg Mill River Greenway Committee invites you to a public Community Forum next Sunday, April 30, from 2-4pm at the Haydenville Town Offices.

Last week, the Burgy Greenway project — a shared use path along the river connecting the villages of Haydenville and Williamsburg — was awarded a MA DOT Project Number and declared eligible for state and federal transportation funding. The Mill River Greenway is really happening in Williamsburg! Please join the forum for updates, maps and sketches, answers to your questions and an opportunity to provide your feedback.

The Williamsburg Greenway Initiative will also be seeking donations, in specific support of this project, through Valley Gives Day on May 2. Please visit https://valley-gives.org/designee/mill-river-greenway-initiative to show your support for this transformative project for our community!

Hope to see you at the forum! Please share and forward this email far and wide!

For more information, contact: Gaby Immerman, Williamsburg MRGC chair and MRGI co-moderator
gimmerma@smith.edu

Filed Under: Mill River Greenway

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