Death Announced of Renni Ridgeway-Korsmeyer, 69 of Old Lyme; Wife of Richard, Mother of Hannah and Lea

OLD LYME — UPDATED May 7 with full obituary: Renni was born in Akron, Ohio to Chester Wendell Ridgeway and Edna Pearl Ridgeway (née Stokes) in 1953. She graduated from Green High School in 1971 and went on to earn her bachelor’s and master’s degrees in education from the University of Akron. She later earned a MSSA from Case Western Reserve University and became a Licensed Clinical Social Worker. She married Richard Korsmeyer in 1985. She was a special education teacher, psychiatric social worker, loving mother, and award-winning artist. She discovered her passion for painting in the Old Lyme art community and was an elected artist in the Madison Art Society, Guilford Art League, and Essex Art Association, and an associate artist in the Lyme Art Association, the Clinton Art Society and the Mystic Art Association.

She is survived by her husband, Richard Korsmeyer, daughters Hannah Korsmeyer (m. Robert Powell) and Lea Korsmeyer, and her brother, Philip Ridgeway (m. Susan Ridgeway).

Renni’s family wishes to extend their sincere thanks to all the friends, caregivers, and medical professionals who provided such loving support to her. In lieu of flowers, a donation can be made in Renni’s honor to St. Jude’s Children’s Research Hospital or to the National Alliance to End Homelessness.

Calling hours will be held at Fulton-Theroux Funeral Service, 13 Beckwith Ln, Old Lyme, CT from 4:00 to 6:00 pm on Wednesday, May 10, 2023.

Lyme Art Association Hosts Two New Exhibitions Through June 15

“Lyme Light” in oil by Jaqueline Jones is one of the signature paintings of the102nd Elected Artist Exhibition on view at Lyme Art Association.

OLD LYME: The Lyme Art Association (LAA) presents two exciting exhibitions this month, which continue through June 15. The first is the102nd Elected Artist Exhibition and the second, Ship to Shore: A Marine Show.

Showcasing a range of representational art, the102nd Elected Artist Exhibition features work from the accomplished artists elected to the LAA.

The exhibition is juried by Rosemary Swimm, president of the Laguna Plein Air Painters Association. Though steeped in the past, this show is relevant and connected to a community of working artists, who continue the legacy of art-making in the 21st century. 

“Fishing with Friends” in oil by Linda DeStefanis is featured in Ship to Shore: A Marine Show on view at the LAA.

Running concurrently is Ship to Shore: A Marine Show. This exhibition explores the multifaceted aspects of water and sea life and how water shapes the lives of those who live along the shoreline.  

Renowned painter Viktor Butko juried this exhibition, which features a range of styles explored by LAA member artists, who strive to capture the power and beauty of the sea. 

Both shows are generously sponsored by Chelsea Groton Bank.

The LAA is a welcoming and thriving fine arts community founded in 1914 by the American Impressionists of Old Lyme.

Located in an historic, skylit 1921 building with a world-class gallery and art education studio, LAA exhibits over 2,000 paintings and sculptures each year in up to fifteen themed, juried shows.

The LAA offers art instruction, enrichment programs, and other public programs to the community, supporting artists at every level of their journey and cultivating a love of fine art.

Admission is free with contributions appreciated. Gallery hours are Wednesday through Sunday, 10 – 5pm, or by appointment.

For more information on exhibits, purchase of art, art classes, or becoming a member, visit our website www.lymeartassociation.org or call (860) 434-7802.

Lyme-Old Lyme High, Middle Schools Announce Q3 Honor Rolls

Lyme-Old Lyme High School Quarter 3 Honor Roll 2022-23 

HIGH HONORS

Grade 12:

William Barry, Callie Bass, Livie Bass, Jillian Beebe, Jordan Beebe, Cooper Bowman, Jamie Bucior, Sarah  Burnham, Hayley Cann, Liam Celic, Luke Celic, Alexander Chrysoulakis, Grace Colwell, William Danes, Anna Davis, Kylie  Dishaw, John Eichholz, Zachary Eichholz, Willa Hoerauf, Arber Hoxha, Charlotte Judge, Aidan Kerrigan, Theodore  Lampos, Jair Lata Yanza, Marielle Mather, Kennedy McCormick, Madalyn McCulloch, Joseph Montazella, Madeleine  Morgado, Leyonce Munoz, Alexander Olsen, Allott Patterson, Olivia Powers, Kelsey Pryor, Jacob Rand, Izzadora  Reynolds, Santiago Rodriguez, Benjamin Roth, Eli Ryan, Anders Silberberg, Riley Smith, Alyssa Spooner, Mary Surprenant,  Tova Toriello, Gesami Vazquez, Kaitlyn Ward, Harry Whitten, Lea Wilson 

Grade 11:

Alexis Antonellis, Beatrice Barnett, Emma Bayor, Drew Brackley, Sophia Cheung, Emma Cook, Ava Cummins,  Ella Curtiss-Reardon, Eric Dagher, Sydney Doboe, Marcia Geronimo, Ryder Goss, Sydney Goulding, Alexis Grasdock,  Douglas Griswold, Abby Hale, Ella Halsey, Sedona Holland, John Holzworth, Agatha Hunt, Beatrice Hunt, Sabina Jungkeit,  Grady Lacourciere, Griffin McGlinchey, Delaney Nelson, Isabelle O’Connor, Grace Phaneuf, Jack Porter, Haley Shaw,  Owen Snurkowski, Hannah Thomas, Kalea VanPelt, Louisa Warlitz, Mason Wells, Tyler Wells, Summer Wollack, Duohui  Yan, Grace Zembruski 

Grade 10:

Quinn Arico, Micah Bass, Molly Boardman, Mark Burnham, Mason Bussmann, Chase Calderon, Andrew  Clougherty, Tabitha Colwell, Caeli Edmed, Anna Eichholz, Grace Ferman, Benedict Frazier, Manu Geronimo, Kaela Hoss,  Shyla Jones, Simon Karpinski, Olivia Kelly, Skylar Kobelia, Ada LaConti, Elise Leonardo, Lana Lopes, Elizabeth Lopez,  Colette Marchant, Abigail O’Brien, Kanon Oharu, Drea Simler, Madeline Supersano, Charlotte Tinniswood, Nicholas  Turtoro, Kathleen Walsh, Gabriella Ziegler 

Grade 9:

Zoe Brunza, Alec Butzer, Trevor Buydos, Makayla Calderon, Tyler Cann, Maya Cook, Annabelle Coppola, Colman  Curtiss-Reardon, Christopher Dagher, James Dahlke, Rose Dimmock, Gabrielle Field, Chase Gilbert, Alexander Glaras,  Benjamin Goulding, Christopher Kachur, Thomas Kelly, Serena Mazzi, Bridget McAdams, Carter McGlinchey, Ryan Miller,  Eiley Montanaro, Madeline Murphy, Sybil Neary, Ryan Olsen, Marleigh Piacenza, Isabella Presti, Jacob Prokopets, Sophia  Shaposhnikova, Charlotte Spiegel, Carson St. Louis, Andrew Taylor, Margaret Thuma, Madeleine Trepanier, Elisabeth  Viera, Oliver Wyman, Stella Young 

HONORS

Grade 12:

Whitney Barbour, Gillian Bradley, Kathryn Brandenburg, Ava Brinkerhoff, John Buckley, Gretchen Burgess,  Jacob Derynioski, Archer Evans, Alexis Fenton, Madison Krol, Karleigh Landers, Jonah Lathrop, Monique Lavoie, Jacob  Lopez-Bravo, Ford Macadam, Amy Magalhaes, Yosr Manai, Jack Morgan, Cooper Munson, Rhyleigh Russell, Stefan Ryer,  Jenna Schauder, Samantha Tan, Andrew Zelek 

Grade 11:

Peighton Andrews, Jedidiah Arico, Elliot Bjornberg, Natalie Buckley, Jackson Bullock, Lucas DaSilva, Eva  D’Onofrio, Amelia Gage, Justin Green, Katherine Gryk, Mohamad Hamou, Parker Holland, Emmerson Kaye, Konrad  Kissling, Dakota Kotzan, Mila Lopes, Lucas McMillan, Matthew Miller, Elaina Morosky, Katherine Mullaney, Ronald Olin,  Luisa Raby, Ava Roth, Cailin Ruhling, Charles Sahadi, Jhayra Salazar Cajamarca, Noah Sanford, Kylie-Jean Sevigny,  Madeleine Soriano, Gabriel Tooker 

Grade 10:

Dominic Clark, Andrea DeBernardo, Zoe Eastman-Grossel, Samantha Fiske, Salvatore Gencarella, Christopher  Gibbons, Janna Graves, Kyle Ingersoll-Bonsack, Hannah Johnston, Aven Kellert, Ella Kiem, Peter Kuhn, James Lahot  Straub, Brenden Landry, Andrew Liu, Ysabel Rodriguez, Andrew Sprankle, Erika Teixeira, Ava Wood-Muller 

Grade 9:

Sophia D’Angelo, Michael DeFiore, Jonathan Farrell, Elizaveta Gregoire, Teagan Iglesias, Katherine King, Emily  Looney, Ian Maeby, Rowen Meisner, Ryan Ortoleva, Lance Sanford, Luca Signora, Emma Singleton, Sydney St. Pierre,  Lucian Tracano, John Turick, Connor Vautrain, Edith Williams, Carl Zapatka

Lyme-Old Lyme Middle School Q3 Honor Roll 2022-23 

HIGH HONORS

Grade 8:

Islam Al-Rahyyl, Lucia Arico, Addison Arndt, Phineas Barrett, Zachary Belval, Ceciley Buckley,  Morgan Buerger, Brooke Burgess, Anna Bussmann, Brennan Butzer, Lillian Calabrese, Chase Catalano,  Isaac Chartier, Johanna Coker, Sophia D’Amico, Elliot Dunn-Sims, Samson Edmed, Edward Fiske, Lauren  Fulara, Angeline Gencarella, Gavin Goulis, Skylar Graybill, Tessa Grethel, Owen Holth, Josephine Kiem,  Matilda Miller, Emelia Munster, Sean Olsen, Cameron Russell, Allegra Schaedler, Owen Shapiro, Nicholas  Sokolowski, Madeline Stiles, Kaylyn Vernon 

Grade 7:

Kaitlyn Ackerman, Lillian Acosta, Lauren Belval, Scarlett Blatter, Vivian Boller, Lana Brunza,  Naomi Cameron, Gabrielle Clark, Colin Discordia, Ashlynn Edwards, Albert Enman, Katharine Ferman,  Jonah Filardi, Avery Goiangos, Frederick Goss, Elaina Graves, Sawyer Graybill, Aiden Guidi, Alistair  Hampton-Dowson, Colleen Harrington, Morgan Harris, Reese Holland, Fiona Judge, Jillian Kleefeld,  Kaedyn Koproski, Treyton LaConti, Holden Leonardo, Sadie Lukasiewski, Graham Macadam, Rowan  McCormick, Charles McEwen, Caitlyn McHugh, William McKeever, Clarissa Mock, Addyson Morosky,  Grace Morrissette, Marielle Munster, Gwenevere Osborne, Mila Pacelli, Remi Patz, Jonah Scheckwitz,  Audrey Sheehan, Avery Spooner, Charlotte Thuma, Delilah Tooker, Jonathan Toriello, Renee Viera, Avery  Wesch, Charles Zapatka, Avery Zbierski, Ella Ziolkovski 

Grade 6:

Ahmad Al-Rahyyl, Matilda Arico, Angelina Bari, Anna Block, Emily Bonatti, Cassidy Buckley,  Ewan Cabell, Trent Cameron, Emily Campbell, Reagan Christopher, Emerson Coker, Benjamin Conrad,  Miles Coppola, Nadia Daily, Alessandra D’Amico, Colin Farrell, Parker Fedorich, Jackson Fiske, Jared  Fulara, Samantha Fulara, Ava Fuller, Olivia Gerardo, Victoria Glaras, Cayden Graybill, Kylie Grethel, Toby  Griffis, Olivia Griffith, Cole Haslam, Charles Holth, Quinn Hoss, Griffin Karpinski, Collin Langley, Zoey  Langley, Ellison Lodge, Isabel Martel, Maxwell Mooney, Sofia Noti, Thomas O’Connor, Kanato Oharu,  Giovanni Orlando, John Osborne, Jack Parker, Adrian Raby, Nikolas Reid, Benson Reis, Lillian Reynolds,  Beatrix Rubino, Addison Sapia, Juliette Small, Mia Stokes, Olive Vautrain, Teya Vernon, Benson Wang,  Reagan Weinstein, Samuel Zelek, Lily Zerkowski 

HONORS

Grade 8:

Zak Avelange, William Burgess, Evan Coffee, Amirah D’Lizarraga, Harrison Goulis, William Kabel,  Maddux Murphy, Grace Osborne, Milo Stiles, Magdalena Tooker 

Grade 7:

John Comstock, Sabrina Fusscas, Gavin Gray, Alistair Grenier, Ryan Hill, Henrik Hummervoll,  Henry Kyle, Jaxon Marsden, Benjamin Mattox, David McAdams, Liam McCormick, Theodore Neary, Ava  Novak, Caiden Pelletier, Nicholas Porto, Merci Shaw-Savage, Grayson Standish 

Grade 6:

Josie Arndt, Maya Desai, Joshua Evans, Cooper Thomas

Death Announced of Gordon I Ulmer III, 61, of Lyme; Husband of Audrey, Father of Kiera

LYME — Gordon I Ulmer III, age 61, of Baker Lane, Lyme CT passed away on Monday, May 1, 2023 at Lawrence and Memorial Hospital.

Gordon was born on January 13,1962 in Hartford, Connecticut, the son of Sandra and the late Gordon Ulmer Jr.

… He married his wife Audrey on October 11, 1997 …

… Gordon is survived by Audrey, his wife and soul mate of twenty six years, his daughter Kiera who was his pride and joy and he loved with all of his heart, his mother Sandra, …

A Memorial Service will be held on Thursday, May 11, 2023 at 11:00am in Fulton-Theroux Funeral Home, 13 Lieutenant River Lane, Old Lyme, Connecticut followed by a celebration of life at the country wellness center event space, 391 Norwich Westerly Rd. Unit 4, North Stonington, CT 06359 …

Please visit www.fultontherouxoldlyme.com for tributes and directions.

Visit this link to read the full obituary published by Hartford Courant on May 9, 2023.

A View From My Porch: Just Another Day at the Beach — A Treatise on Connecticut Beach Access

Tom Gotowka

I will introduce this topic by acknowledging the courage of Ms. Kathleen Tracy and her co-plaintiffs, who have seen the most recent beach access case against the Miami Beach Association (MBA) through to its conclusion. That specific lawsuit, which really began with a fence in 2016, ultimately required more than six years of effort and anguish; and certainly, some considerable expense. 

There has been substantial media coverage of this and the earlier, nearly identical cases, so I thought it would be worthwhile to devote this “View” to an impartial chronicle of Old Lyme’s beach access skirmishes, based on that coverage — a post mortem, if you will. 

My objectives are to provide a basic understanding of how Connecticut has ensured the public’s access to its beaches, and to review 70 years of the Sound View / MBA experience. 

Prologue:

It has been more than a century and a quarter since H. J. Hilliard deeded the property then referred to as “Long Island Avenue”, and now comprising the whole of Sound View Beach and the adjacent Miami Beach, to the “unorganized general public for its perpetual use”. Despite that, members of the MBA have erected fences over the years to impede entry from Sound View, only to be repeatedly ordered to take them down. 

I begin this essay with a review of what I believe are the key events that played a role in assuring the public’s access to beaches in Connecticut and then turn to an Old Lyme “play-by-play”.          

Public Access to Connecticut Beaches:

One cannot review this topic without considering the endeavors of Connecticut activist, Ned Coll, who founded an anti-poverty and social justice agency in Hartford, the Revitalization Corps, in memory of assassinated President John F. Kennedy. Ned presented himself in every conflict as the “everyman”.

He was shocked by both the poverty and racism that he felt had kept impoverished minority residents isolated in Hartford; and the apparent indifference shown by those living in the suburbs. He wanted to confront the reality of that city vs. suburb divide, and determined that the best place to demonstrate it was probably at the private beaches in the more affluent shoreline communities, that in the late -1960s, were nearly all in private hands or limited to town residents.

A master showman, who had the willing support of the media, Coll began gathering busloads of children from Hartford’s North End in the early 1970s; and then proceeded to Long Island Sound for a day at the beach. He challenged local officials to keep the kids off the sand and out of the water. To publicize his efforts, he walked the shoreline from Old Lyme to Greenwich, even landing on a few beaches in a rubber raft. He became the face and catalyst of the contentious issue of blocking public access to Long Island Sound. 

He continued his beach trips for several years; and managed to keep the state focused on his cause. Nonetheless, the individual who got the beaches opened to the public was a Rutgers law student, Brenden Leydon, who was stopped by security while jogging on the Greenwich Point Park beach. Leydon sued the town and won. Ned Coll provided expert testimony.

In 2001, in “Leydon vs. Greenwich”, the Connecticut Supreme Court overturned the Greenwich ordinance that banned non-residents from entering the park and its beach. The court found that the beach constituted a public forum and non-residents’ access to it was protected under the First Amendment, which guarantees a citizen’s rights to free speech and association; and informed the towns on the Connecticut shoreline that they could not prohibit access to the beachfront.

Later, in 2019, the Department of Energy and Environmental Protection ordered the Shenecossett Beach Club in Groton to remove a portion of the fence it had placed along a stone jetty and a sign that said “Members only.” The legal basis for this order was that the Beach Club was violating the Public Trust Doctrine (PTD), which holds that private ownership ends at the mean high-water-line and the general public can use the area of the beach that is waterward of that line, i.e., coastal states hold the submerged lands and waters waterward of the mean high-water-line in trust for the public.

The doctrine, which is found primarily in state Common Law, is one of the main underpinnings of environmental law in the United States and requires states to manage certain natural resources for the benefit of the general public. Public Trust Doctrine provides assurance that they may freely use these lands and waters, whether they are beach, rocky shore, or open water. The PTD has been re-confirmed by the CT Supreme Court in a line of cases that date back nearly 100 years. 

The Sound View Beach Border Chronicles:

File photo of the now infamous fence (right in photo heading towards Long Island Sound) installed by the Miami Beach Association Sound View (public) Beach is to the left of the now-removed fence.

The MBA, a private beach community, was founded in 1949. They installed their first beach boundary fence in 1952 to mark the end of the Sound View public beach and the beginning of “private” Miami Beach. 

Then, in early 1953, the New London District Superior Court, in a decision on Rose Vitello et al, v. Nunzio Corsino and Miami Beach Association”, issued an injunction that prohibited the fence, proclaiming that the entire length of Sound View and Miami Beaches must remain open to the public, as spelled out by H. J. Hilliard. 

The “New London Day” reported that the MBA put up another fence in the late-1980s, only to be “promptly” removed by the Town. However, then First Selectwoman Bonnie Reemsnyder stated, “the town has concerns about the fence, but its attorneys have advised against taking legal action”; and so, “it would now be up to members of the public to challenge the fence, just as they did in the early 1950s.” 

In 2016, near the end of the beach season, the MBA put up a chain-link fence and levied a “clean beach fee” that would be charged at an entry point. Sound View resident Kathleen Tracy challenged the legality of the fence and fee in 2018 in “Kathleen Tracey et al v. Miami BeachAssociation”.

In July, 2019, Superior Court Judge Kimberly A. Knox heard testimony and ruled that, “Nothing but the recent imposition of a fee has changed since1953, when an injunction was issued; making the entire length of Sound View and Miami Beaches open to the public.” The fence must come down and the fee be abolished, although the fence was allowed to remain while an appeal was pending.

A few weeks ago, in mid-April; and after the Connecticut Supreme Court refused to review the Superior Court’s decision (above), the fence was again removed. In full, Knox ruled that the Association is prohibited, “now and hereinafter,” from maintaining or establishing any other fence or boundary, and from charging fees and issuing permits for the use of the beach.

Leave Nothing Behind but your Footprints:

I believe that the fundamental issue that prompted the MBA’s construction of fences and the 2016 “clean beach” fee was the regrettably bad behavior that some of the “unorganized general public” exhibited while visiting the beach. 

The MBA described a mess that went well beyond the little bit of litter and trash left behind, using the word, “Filthy!”and describing rude and disrespectful behavior; and inappropriate interpersonal behaviors that are better indulged in private.

Sound View Beach apparently witnessed the same, but also noted a significant increase in calls for police service.The MBA reported that they spend about $40,000 to $45,000 per year on beach security, and $13,000 on cleaning the beach, while the town covers only about $20,000.

A Meeting of the Minds:

The leaders of the two beach communities met with Old Lyme’s Board of Selectmen in July, 2021 and presented data describing the problems at the two beaches from an informal “task force”; and suggested some possible solutions, which included making it more expensive for out-of-towners to park at the beach by increasing rates in town-owned parking, and raising permit fees for private parking lots.

First Selectman Timothy Griswold requested that the two leaders put some action steps in writing with quantifying data to be presented at a future meeting. Then-Selectwoman Mary Jo Nosal said the informal “task force” should be an official group that represents the residents of Old Lyme. I am not certain whether either of those requests went any further.

Author’s Thoughts:

Conflicts regarding beach access are not unique to Old Lyme. Public access advocates are worried about a new attack on the right of way to the beaches of the 1.5-mile-long Napatree Point in Watch Hill. Officials of the Watch Hill Fire District, which owns a portion lot of the Point, have recently put the Town on notice that they do not accept the validity of a 2008 town resolution enshrining into law “a right of way for access by the public to pass and re-pass to and from Napatree Point in perpetuity”.

Watch Hill runs the risk of being only known as the home of Taylor Swift, who, I am told, sings songs.

In closing, a few words on sportsmanship. Some of my life has involved ice hockey programs for boys and girls from the newest skaters through high school and college. The games are intense and emotions can run high. At the games end, and regardless of the outcome, both teams will skate the length of the rink in parallel lines, bumping gloves, with a “good game!”

In contrast, “The Day” reported that when the fence came down for the last time, Ms. Tracy extended her hand to the President of MBA’s Board of Governors and said, “Let’s just move on; can we do that?”

He ignored the gesture.

In the NFL, if a player is flagged for unsportsmanlike conduct, the penalty is 15 yards, and an automatic first down, when committed by the defense.

Robert Frost claimed that “good fences make good neighbors”. Well, maybe in New Hampshire, but in Old Lyme?

Well, let’s see …

Sources:

  •  Burian,H. “Old Lyme woman takes legal action to rid Miami Beach of Fence”. NBC-CT. 08/23/2017.
  • Collins,D. “War over public access to Napatree Point heats up in Westerly”. New London Day. 04/19/ 2023
  • Condon, T. “Edward T. “Ned” Coll dies; Hartford activist fought racism, poverty, and closed beaches”. CT Mirror. 12/19/2022
  • Crawford, A. “Racism Kept Connecticut’s beaches white Up through the 1970s”. Smithsonian Magazine. July,2018
  • Drelich, K. “DEEP: portion of Shenecossett Beach Club fence must be removed”. New London Day. 10/26/2019
  • Hewett, C. “Fence to come down at Sound View Beach after court ruling”. The CT Examiner. 04/12/2023.
  • Howard, L. “Miami Beach fence comes down after court ruling”. New London Day. 04/13/2023
  • Kahrl, A. W. “Free the beaches: the story of Ned Coll and the battle for America’s most exclusive shoreline.” Yale University Press. 2018
  • Regan, E. “Old Lyme beach officials recommend higher parking fees to discourage out-of-towners”. New London Day. 07/07/2021
  • Regan, E. “Closing time at issue in Sound View parking lot”. New London Day. 07/20/2021
  • Florin, K. “Debate over beach rights heats up in Old Lyme.” New London Day. 07/03/2017.
  • Florin, K. “Sound View resident takes legal step to fight Miami Beach fence in Old Lyme.” New London Day. August 21, 2017.
  • Florin, K. “Judge: Old Lyme beach fence must come down.” New London Day. 01/14/ 2020.

Editor’s Note: This is the opinion of Thomas D. Gotowka.

About the author: Tom Gotowka is a resident of Old Lyme, whose entire adult career has been in healthcare. He will sit on the Navy side at the Army/Navy football game. He always sit on the crimson side at any Harvard/Yale contest. He enjoys reading historic speeches and considers himself a scholar of the period from FDR through JFK. A child of AM Radio, he probably knows the lyrics of every rock and roll or folk song published since 1960. He hopes these experiences give readers a sense of what he believes “qualify” him to write this column.