After 48 Years Driving a School Bus in Old Lyme, Caroline Doughty Hangs Up Her Keys

Caroline Doughty at the wheel of her bus on her last day driving for Lyme-Old Lyme Schools after 48 years service. Photos courtesy of Lyme-Old Lyme Schools.

OLD LYME — Can you imagine getting up every morning and driving a school bus in Old Lyme?

Well, that’s the first thing to think about … but now try this. Can you imagine getting up (very early) every morning and driving a school bus in Old Lyme for 48 years?

Well, that’s what Caroline Doughty did … and she just retired on Oct. 30!

Doughty started her career in August/September 1972 and has driven for six different companies, as each was contracted in turn by Lyme-Old Lyme Public Schools.

She became a household name on the bus routes she drove, always respected for her firm but fair way of dealing with the students she transported.

Caroline Doughty says farewell to a Lyme-Old Lyme school bus after an amazing 48 years, of being a bus driver.

Apart from driving students to each of the Lyme-Old Lyme Schools on a daily basis, Doughty’s work has included taking athletic teams to their games, and providing transportation for field trips.

At one time, she drove residents out of the South Lyme (Point O’ Woods Beach) area when it was flooded.

Doughty also drove for the Special Olympics Games in 1995 when High Hopes Therapeutic Riding hosted the equestrian events for the contest.

She notes that one of her most rewarding experiences has been driving the children of former students that she used to transport.

Doughty was showered with cards and gifts from students and parents on her retirement.

The catalyst for her retirement was her 72nd birthday, which was Nov. 2. She says with a smile that she’s looking forward to not always having to wake up so early in the morning!

Her retirement plans include enjoying more of her hobbies such as gardening, sewing, knitting, and spending time with her family. She and her husband, Vincent, have been married for 47 years and are lifelong residents of Old Lyme. They have two married children and five grandchildren, ages 5 to 21.

We join the Lyme-Old Lyme community in wishing you a well-deserved and very happy retirement (and we’ll use the name we knew you by when you picked up our children every day on Hawthorne Rd.), “Mrs. Doughty”!

Ledge Light Aligns COVID-19 Metrics with DPH; Cases in Old Lyme Rise to 46, Lyme to 12

Photo by CDC on Unsplash

LYME/OLD LYME — Ledge Light Health District (LLHD) sent out their usual weekly COVID-19 summary in a different format this week.

Stephen Mansfield, LLHD Director of Health, said in the introduction to the report emailed Friday, “With the assistance of the Connecticut Department of Public Health, Ledge Light Health District has modified our weekly COVID data presentation to more closely align with the reporting period, metrics and format of the DPH statewide data release.”

The report showed an increase in cases reported by LLHD in Old Lyme from last week’s number of 34 (which included two fatalities) to 46, and in Lyme from last week’s number of 11 to 12 with an additional probable case.

It should be noted however that CT DPH reported 41 cases in Old Lyme last week on the CT Open Data website. It is unclear why there has been this ongoing discrepancy between LLHD and CT DPH figures, but it now appears to have been resolved by LLHD adopting CT DPF’s numbers.

As soon as we received Friday’s report, we requested a full listing from LLHD of all the COVID cases in both towns.

Mansfield responded Friday evening, “We are no longer tracking and reporting case numbers independent of the state report. We will only be publishing what DPH reports to us each Friday … Simply put, due to the workload associated with the increase in cases, we do not have the resources to duplicate the efforts of DPH, nor provide a more detailed analysis of the cases in our communities.”

Old Lyme First Selectman Timothy Griswold told LymeLine.com Thursday evening that he had been informed of two additional cases this week. These were an 18-year-old male and a 17-year-old female.

We asked Lyme-Old Lyme Schools Superintendent Ian Neviaser if he could confirm whether there were any confirmed COVID-19 cases in Lyme-Old Lyme Schools. He referred us to a letter he had sent out to all parents Thursday (Nov. 5 in which he reminded them of the, “[Lyme-Old Lyme Schools] COVID-19 protocols that have been in place since we first reopened school on September 1, 2020.”

Neviaser stated in his letter, “Should we have a confirmed positive case, our first step is to work with our local health department, Ledgelight Health District, to follow their contact tracing protocol and determine who might be considered a ‘close contact.’ (Close contact is defined by CDC as someone who was within 6 feet of an infected person for at least 15 minutes starting from 2 days before illness onset (or, for asymptomatic clients, 2 days prior to positive specimen collection) until the time the patient is isolated.)”

He continued, “Once those determinations have been made, families of those students (or staff members if applicable) are immediately notified by phone and asked to follow the Ledgelight quarantine protocol found here.”

Neviaser noted in his letter, “In most cases, in order to balance transparency and the need to protect personally identifiable information, only those students and staff members who have been determined to be ‘close contacts’ are notified as those that have not had ‘close contact’ are not considered to be at high risk for transmission of COVID-19.”

Mansfield noted in his introduction to Friday evening’s report, which covers all the towns in the LLHD and includes Lyme and Old Lyme,  “Our contact tracers continue to report that they have observed many instances of family and social gathering connections. We are also seeing a significant number of cases associated with sporting events.”

He states, “Cases associated with institutions (schools, long-term care facilities, etc.) remain relatively low.”

The total number of cases in Old Lyme, of which we have details, is now 36 including two fatalities. The number of surviving cases in Old Lyme now comprises 18 males and 16 females ranging in age from 17- to 82-years-old. The two fatalities were a 61-year-old female and an 82-year-old male.

The total number of cases in Lyme, of which we have details, remains at 11 comprising five females and six males ranging in age from one- to 68-years-old. There have been no fatalities in Lyme.

Ledge Light Health District states their data may conflict with the data DPH reports on their website, as there is often a delay in posting data at the state level. The data LLHD reports is current as of noon on the Friday on which it is issued.

In our COVID-19 report last week, when we noted that the CT DPH was reporting 41 confirmed cases in Old Lyme (on the CT Open Data website) in contrast to the 34 cases reported by LLHD, we shared that we had asked Mansfield to explain the possible reasons for  this discrepancy.

He responded Saturday, Oct. 31, “I don’t have an explanation as to why the state numbers are different than the numbers that are reported to us. I have reached out to the state epidemiologist how to determine if they have an explanation for the discrepancy.”

We also asked about the question of contact tracing if the numbers were different, and Mansfield explained, “Contact tracing is done through a partnership between local health districts and DPH.”

Gender and age details of the confirmed cases in Lyme to date are:

  1. Male, age 34
  2. Female, age 61
  3. Female, age 34
  4. Male, age 1
  5. Male, age 34
  6. Male, age 20
  7. Male, aged 68
  8. Female, age 21
  9. Female, age 62
  10. Male, age unknown
  11. Female, age 51

To demonstrate the growth in confirmed COVID-19 cases in Old Lyme, the table below is a summary of the cases that LymeLine.com has reported since March 31 when the first case was announced and also includes both fatalities.

[table id=3 /]

Details of all Old Lyme’s confirmed surviving cases to date are as follows:

  1. Female, age 64
  2. Female, age 21
  3. Male, age 27
  4. Female, age 53
  5. Female, age 61
  6. Female, age 29
  7. Male, age 40
  8. Male, age 53
  9. Female, age 60
  10. Male, age 45
  11. Female, age 20
  12. Female, age 43
  13. Female, age 48
  14. Male, age 70
  15. Male, age 67
  16. Female, age 68
  17. Male, age 50
  18. Male, age 21
  19. Female, age 48
  20. Female, age 34
  21. Male, age 20
  22. Male, age 28
  23. Male, age 74
  24. Male, age 61
  25. Female, age 19
  26. Male, age 31
  27. Female, age 25
  28. Male, age 61
  29. Male, age 35
  30. Female, age 38
  31. Male, age 56
  32. Male, age 20
  33. Male, age 18
  34. Female, age 17

Griswold has previously noted that the 21-year-old female with a confirmed case (#2 in the list immediately above) was tested in Florida, but used an Old Lyme address although she does not live here. Because she gave the Old Lyme address, Griswold said that LLHD must report her as an Old Lyme resident.

Residents and businesses are urged to access up-to-date information regarding the pandemic from reputable sources including the Ledge Light Health District website (www.llhd.org), Facebook (@LedgeLightHD), Twitter (@LedgeLightHD), and Instagram (@LedgeLightHD).

Editor’s Note: Ledge Light Health District (LLHD) serves as the local health department in southeast Connecticut for the towns of Lyme and Old Lyme as well as East Lyme, Groton, Ledyard, New London, North Stonington,  Stonington and Waterford. As a health district, formed under Connecticut General Statutes Section 19a-241, LLHD is a special unit of government, allowing member municipalities to provide comprehensive public health services to residents in a more efficient manner by consolidating the services within one organization.

Florence Griswold Museum Hosts Virtual Samuel Thorne Memorial Lecture This Evening

Cree artist Kent Monkman’s mistikôsiwak (The Wooden Boat People) 2019, which will be the topic of discussion in the Annual Samuel Thorne Memorial Lecture this Saturday, Nov. 7.

OLD LYME — This Saturday, Nov. 7, from 5 to 6 p.m., the Florence Griswold Museum hosts the Annual Samuel Thorne Memorial Lecture. This lecture has been rescheduled from April and is now a virtual event. This free event is limited to 500 spaces.

Randall Griffey, Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art at The Metropolitan Museum of Art discusses Kent Monkman’s Great Hall Commission for The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Griffey discusses Cree artist Kent Monkman’s mistikôsiwak (The Wooden Boat People) 2019. These two monumental canvases on view in The Met’s Great Hall explore themes of colonization, immigration, loss, and resilience through the lens of Indigenous people.

For the commission, the Toronto-based Monkman mined European and American art in The Met’s collection, re-examining conventional representations of Indigenous peoples in the Western art canon. Griffey will describe how The Met’s work with contemporary artists like Monkman can offer challenging and diverse perspectives on the Euro-US shared history.

If you are interested in this program, register at this link. You will then be sent a link to watch the program.

This event is co-sponsored by the Connecticut League of History Organizations.

Musical Masterworks Goes Virtual This Season, Tickets on Sale for Concert Videos

Musical Masterworks’ October performers James Ehnes and Andrew Armstrong. Photo by Benjamin Ealovega.

OLD LYME — Musical Masterworks has launched its 30th Anniversary Season by offering a new way for chamber music aficionados to enjoy its concerts in the form of professionally-produced video.  Concert-goers can watch from the comfort of their homes on the screens of their choice. 

The season’s first concerts will be filmed at the end of October and the link to the virtual concert will be made available to ticket buyers Nov. 7.  The video can be enjoyed for three weeks and watched as many times as one wishes. 

Artistic Director Edward Arron explains, “We have adjusted our season in order to bring our five concert programs to our devoted concertgoers virtually, through recordings made by an award-winning team of videographers and audio technicians. While restrictions remain in place for in-person gatherings, we are thrilled that our performances can be filmed in our usual concert space.”

Musical Masterworks will begin the 2020-21 season with two all-Beethoven programs.

October will see pianist Andrew Armstrong join renowned violinist James Ehnes to perform three sonatas by Beethoven. 

In December, the month of Beethoven’s actual 250th birthday, James Ehnes, Amy Schwartz Moretti, Che-Yen Chen and Edward Arron will perform three Beethoven String Quartets.

The spring Musical Masterworks concert will welcome back a number of favorite artists, including Rieko Aizawa, Todd Palmer, Jeewon Park, Randall Scarlata, Gilles Vonsattel, and Tessa Lark, featuring musical treasures from Bach to Corigliano.

Ticket-holders will be able to experience Musical Masterworks as never before: the audio-video production team will create an intimate concert experience, providing a virtual seat on the stage.

Arron shared his thoughts about this unusual season, saying, “The experience of living through this unsettling period has reinforced my belief that the arts and live performance are essential to humanity and are an indispensable part of a healthy society.”

He adds, “It gives me great pride that our organization has committed to presenting a full season of concert programs as we celebrate the 30th season of Musical Masterworks.”

Musical Masterworks’ season runs October 2020 through May 2021.  To purchase a video ticket subscription ($150 each), a video mini-subscription ($100 each), individual video tickets ($40 each), or student tickets ($5 each), visit Musical Masterworks at Musical Masterworks at www.musicalmasterworks.org or call 860.434.2252

Death of Frederick S. Osborne Announced, Former President of Lyme Academy

The death of Lyme Academy President Emeritus Frederick S. Osborne, who served as the Academy’s second president  from 2002 through 2007, has been announced.

Mr. Osborne was responsible for ushering the Academy through to a fully accredited, independent fine arts college. He was devoted to the mission of the Academy and understood the contribution of illustration carrying the torch of realism at a time when arts institutions were dismissing observational skills in drawing, painting and sculpture. Mr. Osborne added the Illustration major to the degree-granting Lyme Academy College of Fine Arts.

Visit this link to read Lyme Academy’s tribute to President Emeritus Osborne.

Visit this link to read Mr. Osborne’s obituary published Nov. 8, in The Times, Trenton.