Death Announced of Donald Southworth Brodeur Sr.; Formerly of Old Lyme, ‘He Believed in a Life Dedicated to Service’

March 9, 1931 – August 2, 2021 Donald Southworth Brodeur Sr. of Old Saybrook was granted eternal rest on August 2, 2021 …

He attended Old Lyme Elementary and High Schools and graduated from the University of Connecticut in 1957 with a Bachelor of Science degree in Accounting.  Don met the one and only love of his life, Elizabeth “Nancy” Hartung when each of their families was watching a parade in Hartford; Don was 6 years old and Nancy 5 …

Fate would eventually bring them together again when both of their families relocated to Old Lyme …

In his retirement, Don was a fixture at the Black Hall Golf Club … He believed in a life dedicated to service.

He served on both the Board of Education and Board of Finance as Chairmans of the Town of Old Lyme …

He was a dedicated member of Christ the King Church in Old Lyme …

Visitation will be held Friday, August 6th from 4-7 PM at Robinson, Wright & Weymer Funeral Home, 34 Main Street, Centerbrook, CT. A Funeral Mass will be held Saturday, August 7th at 11 AM at Christ the King Church, 1 McCurdy Road, Old Lyme followed by burial with military honors in the Duck River Cemetery, Old Lyme …

Visit this link to read the full obituary published Aug. 4 in the ‘Hartford Courant.’

 

Saturday’s Centennial Celebrations at Lyme Art Association Include Traditional ‘Tea Day’ … But What’s Its History?

‘Tea Day 1930’ by Edward Volkerts paints a beautiful picture of the teas held on the lawn in front of the Lyme Art Association in yesteryear. A ‘Tea Day’ forms part of the LAA’s Centennial celebrations this Saturday. Image published courtesy of the Volkerts family.

OLD LYME — On Saturday, Aug. 7, the Lyme Art Association (LAA) is celebrating the 100th anniversary of the opening of its gallery.  Several special events are planned, one of which is a tea party on the LAA lawn.  

Though the gallery itself opened in August of 1921, the history of the LAA goes even further back and is interwoven with our town library and the Florence Griswold Museum. 

To start at the very beginning—in 1899, Henry Ward Ranger, already an established painter, arrived in Old Lyme and bunked down at the boardinghouse of Florence Griswold. So smitten was Ranger with the beauty of the area and the quality of the light that he began to envision the village as an American art colony.

He wrote to his agent in New York that Lyme was a landscape waiting to be painted and told Miss Florence he would be back the next summer and bring more painters with him.  And so the artists came. 

The Phoebe Griffin Noyes Library was the original home of the Lyme Art Colony’s summer exhibition from 1902 through 1920 before the Lyme Art Association had a building of its own.

And in 1902, the artists began a summertime tradition when they held an exhibition in the Phoebe Griffin Noyes Library.  An article in the Hartford Courant explained that “the library and the artists have formed a sort of close corporation.” The library (which opened in 1898, the year before Ranger arrived) needed funds to buy books; the artists needed an exhibition space.

“One scheme after another was tried until it occurred to someone to ask the artists who spend their summers in town to exhibit some of their paintings” the Courant reporter wrote. Admission to the show was 50 cents and proceeds were for the benefit of the library.  Additionally, the library received a percentage of all paintings sold.  

It was the beginning of a beautiful friendship and the shows were a success from the start.  As the fame of the Lyme Art Colony grew, the artists started making plans to build their own gallery. Many of them settled permanently in town and, in 1914, incorporated as the Lyme Art Association. But the shows continued at the library until 1920.

It took years both to raise money and decide on the best location for the new building.  One of the options was a parcel of Miss Florence’s property which fronted on Lyme Street.  World War I also intervened — not to mention what American Art News described as a “merry war” among the artists about the design of the gallery.  

Finally, on Aug. 6, 1921, the LAA gallery was ready for its close-up and opened its doors at 90 Lyme Street next door to Miss Florence’s boardinghouse.  In its review of the opening, the New York Times praised the gallery “as an embodiment of art in harmony with its natural surroundings.” 

Miss Florence became the first gallery manager and remained so until her death in 1937.

Tea on the lawn of the LAA.

During the years of the early exhibitions at the library, the Ladies’ Library Association served tea on the lawn.  And the artists continued this tea time tradition at the new gallery.  Tea was served en plein air at the LAA on Wednesday and Saturday afternoons.  The Edward Volkert painting above, which is on the poster for the centennial show, depicts one such “Tea Day.” 

A 1928 article in American Motorist also gives a vivid description—“For every July when Lyme Art Association opens the doors to its annual exhibition, the whole village and surrounding countryside awakes to a regular orgy of art and delightful social festivities.  The yellow pennants streaming from tall flagpoles at either end of the terrace, dainty tea tables gay with attractive china and lovely flowers, to say nothing of the pretty girls who serve tea and punch to visitors on Wednesday and Saturday afternoons . . . ” 

Several women, who as teenagers helped serve tea at LAA, were interviewed for an article published in The Pictorial Gazette in 1988.  They remembered the lace tablecloths and that the ladies wore “long, filmy dresses that were every pastel color imaginable.” They also recalled big, floppy hats; white gloves; and ginger and cream cheese sandwiches.

All was not perfect in this pastel paradise, however.  One of the women noted that as a 12-year-old, she was shocked at her first sight of a lady smoking which was “unheard of in this town.” 

And this coming Saturday afternoon, on the 100th anniversary of the gallery opening, the LAA will once again host a tea party.  There will be refreshments and family-friendly activities on the front lawn from 1 to 4 p.m.

Inside the gallery, the current exhibition is “A Century of Inspiration,” for which today’s artists have created works painted at many of the sites that the Old Lyme “old masters” immortalized a century ago.  And throughout the day, you can observe LAA artists up close and personal as they paint in various locations along Lyme Street.  

So much has changed in the world in the last century and we no longer live in a genteel era of outdoor tea parties. Right now, we are even living in the midst of a global pandemic. 

But some things have not changed. 

Old Lyme is still the beautiful village that Ranger first saw in 1899.  Each May and June, the mountain laurel still blooms. And 100 years after the LAA first opened, painters continue to find inspiration in the natural beauty of our town and to exhibit fine art in the gallery.

Editor’s Note: Visit this link for full details of all the events planned for the LAA’s Centennial Day.

Obituary for Milton James Walters Published

LYME — Milton James Walters passed away July 15, 2021, after a brief illness. Born May 21, 1942, “Milt” was the middle son of Frances and James Walters …

Milt loved his causes- Hamilton College, The Lyme Land Conservation Trust and served on boards of Hamilton, Friends Academy, Sun Health Care, Fredericks of Hollywood, Sabra Health Care REIT, and Lyme Land Trust …

A memorial celebrating Milt’s life will be held at a time to be announced.

In lieu of flowers donations in Milt’s memory can be made to the Lyme Land Conservation Trust Endowment Fund.

Visit this link to read the full obituary published July 28 in ‘The Day.’

Visit this link to read a tribute to Mr. Walters from the Lyme Land Trust.

Death Announced of John J. “Jay” Speirs III of Old Lyme; Husband of Anita, Brother of Peter, Both of Old Lyme

OLD LYME — John J. “Jay” Speirs III, 67, of Old Lyme, passed away unexpectedly at his home July 11, 2021. Jay Speirs was born May 30, 1954, in Middletown, to the late John J. Jr. and June (Briggs) Speirs. He was the beloved husband of Anita (Fatone) Speirs, who survives him …

Jay will be missed by many, but we know he is having a blast up there riding the waves and whistling along. Jay Speirs is also survived by his daughters, Samantha Speirs of Old Lyme and Tara Wyatt of Niantic; chosen niece Arla Muller of Maine; sister Pamela McDonald and husband Mac of Illinois; brother Peter Speirs and wife Michellee of Old Lyme; …

Visit this link to read the full obituary published July 25 in ‘The Day.’

Aug. 2 COVID-19 Update: Three New Cases in Old Lyme Take Cumulative Total to 354, Lyme Holds at 112

Photo by CDC on Unsplash,

LYME/OLD LYME —The Daily Data Report for Connecticut issued Monday, Aug. 2, by the Connecticut Department of Public Health  (CT-DPH) for data as at 8:30 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 1, shows that Old Lyme has reported three new, confirmed COVID-19 cases.

There are no new cases in Lyme.

This takes Old Lyme’s cumulative total of confirmed cases to 354, while Lyme’s holds at 112.

Positivity Rates

Yesterday, Monday, Aug. 2, Governor Lamont announced that the state’s COVID-19 positivity rate broke the notional 3 percent line for the first time in months, rising to 3.18. He noted that 355,580 COVID-19 cases had been reported since the beginning of the pandemic, which is up 1,245 since Friday and out of 39,189 tests administered, 1,245 came back positive.

On July 2, precisely one month ago and in stark contrast to yesterday’s numbers, Gov. Lamont announced that the state’s positivity rate was 0.59 percent.

Hugh McQuaid states in his article titled, Lamont Advises ‘Common Sense’ on Indoor Masking as Infection Rate Rises to 3%, which was published Aug. 2 on CTNewsJunkie, that, “virus transmission rates [are] high enough in most of Connecticut to meet the Centers for Disease Control recommendation that vaccinated people wear masks indoors in public.”

Despite this news, Gov. Lamont, “… continued to back voluntary public masking guidelines over renewed state mandates and asked for more time to decide whether masks would be required in schools.”

Fatalities Due to COVID-19 in Lyme, Old Lyme

There is no change in the number of fatalities reported in either Lyme (0) or Old Lyme (3).

The first two fatalities from Old Lyme, which were reported in 2020, were a 61-year-old female and an 82-year-old male. Details of the third, which was reported in 2021, have not been made available.

Visit this link for our July 29 update, which includes statewide data.