Lyme Property Transactions … are Back!

Editor’s Note: We are delighted to bring back publication of Lyme property transactions. We know that readers enjoyed these in the past and are confident they will spark the same interest today. We will publishing them every two weeks going forward.

Publication Date: 8/14/25

7/30: 150 Brush Hill Road, Stephen R. Flanagan of Old Lyme to Samuel Granger and Rachel Granger, $975,000. 

7/29: 24 Old Hamburg Road, Patricia Foley and Kaitlyn Czap of Old Lyme to Clipper Properties LLC of Saratoga, WY, $536,000. 

7/15: 105 Cove Road, Carl Asman III and Amanda Asman of Key Largo, FL, to Eileen Doolin, $1,675,000.

7/9: 85 Beaver Brook Road, Allen Petri of Lyme to Nicholas R. Todaro, $300,000. 

6/27: 31-4 Baker Lane, the Estate of Seth A. Weinstein to John A. Bysko and Jane L. Bysko, $1,000,000. 

6/27: 66 Beaver Brook Road, Joan E. Lindeen and Charles A. Lindeen of Dayville to Andrew Nam Chul Osborne, $790,000. 

6/27: 193 Grassy Hill Road, Michael R. Haley of Alexandria, VA, to Jodi L. Lott, $450,000. 

6/24: 43 Cove Road, George Lynn of Palm Beach, FL, to James Shea of Lyme, $1,500,000. 

6/20: 19 Birch Mill Road, David Shluger and Jacque Shluger of Niantic to Mark D. Jamieson and Stephanie B. Jamieson, $905,000. 

6/12: 40 & 44 Ferry Road, James P. Schwartz and Sarah Graves Schwartz of Lyme to Edward A. Lent, $2,695,000. 

6/11: 53-2 Brockway Ferry Road, James A. Behrendt of Uncasville to Whale Rock LLC of Lyme, $2,275,000. 

6/9: 36-1 Sterling City Road, Terrence Maclaren and Lissa Maclaren of Essex to Mary Ann Loria, $750,000. 

6/2: 19 Town St., Parker H. Lord and Diana R. Lord to Raymond S. Fusco Jr. and Maureen E. Raymo, $790,000. 

5/29: 14 Clark Road, Joshua D. Karsten and Sorada Malawaijan to Jennifer Greiner, $730,000. 

5/22: 67-3 Norwich Salem Road, Douglas Hampton-Dowson and Dianna Marie Hampton-Dowson of Clinton to Jessica Moreno-Palacios, $649,000. 

5/20: 6 Ledge Trail, 6 Ledge LLC of New Haven to Rand Derek, $391,500. 

4/30: 10 Hickory St., JL Team Properties LLC of Guilford to Monica Lee Giaconia, $540,000. 

4/1: 103 Town Woods Road, Elizabeth F. Wadge and Geoffrey J. Wadge of Lyme to Erin E. Hackett of Old Lyme, $240,000. 

3/28: 94 Brush Hill Road, Hunter Humble of Colchester to Roderick H. Clingman, $385,000. 

2/19: 64 Elys Ferry Road, Paul William Boughton and Janet Grant Boughton to Jesse Dylan Falzone, $827,000. 

2/19: 372 Grassy Hill Road, Scott Winslow Keel to George James Stathakis Jr., $725,000. 

2/10: 23 Meadowlark Road, Brian M. Coffee and Brittany Leigh Coffee to Aaron Torrison, $1,210,000. 

2/6: 62 Hamburg Road, David P. Lucey and Jeanne B. Lucey of Old Lyme to Nicole T. Carbone and Eric Anderson, $613,000. 

1/24: 56 Mount Archer Road, Adam F. Stewart to Thomas McKinney and Jessica McKinney, $1,000,000. 

Wood Island Life Saving Station in Maine Launches Essay Contest to Win Overnight Stay at Location, See the ‘Mervin F. Roberts’ Boat at Work

A photo of Wood Island Life Saving Station in Kittery, Maine from 2021. The ‘Mervin F. Roberts’ boat now lives inside the building and travels down the now completed marine railway into the sea.

OLD LYME—Readers may recall the wonderful story we covered about the acquisition from this area of an old coast guard rescue boat named the Mervin F. Roberts by the non-profit Wood Island Life Saving Station Association (WILSSA) of Kittery, Maine. The original connection between the WILSSA and the boat was made through an article published by LymeLine about our beloved late resident Mervin Roberts.

Former First Selectman Timothy Griswold spearheaded a successful effort to raise funds to transport the boat from Essex, Conn. to Kittery, Maine.

Ben Clarkson at the helm of the ‘Mervin E. Roberts’ in 1997.

After major renovations, the boat was re-launched at Kittery Point amid quite a fanfare and a group from Old Lyme, including Griswold, attended the event.

Former local resident Catherine Frank visited the Wood Island Life Saving Station recently. She discovered the organization is running an essay contest and the winner will earn the opportunity to spend a night on Wood Island (which in her words, “looked quite cozy; has amazing history and views and a chance to visit with Merv’s boat!”) She kindly shared the information with us and, again in her words, thinks, “Someone from Old Lyme needs to enter and win this contest.”

And we agree!

Full details of the contest are at this link. The word limit for the essay is 500 words and the entry deadline has been extended to September 1.

The Wood Island Life Saving Station, a beacon of hope and heroism since the 1900s, has witnessed countless rescues and maritime events.

We’re offering a unique opportunity to win an overnight stay at this historic landmark.

To enter, share with us why you are drawn to Wood Island and what staying in this historic life saving station would mean to you.

Submission Deadline: originally July 1, 2025, now extended to September 1, 2025

Stay Dates: To be scheduled between July and September 2026.

So all you writers out there, start your essays right away—time is of the essence—and maybe win this unique prize!

Old Lyme Property Transactions, 8/12/25

Editor’s Note: Read the first installment of our newly revived Property Transactions section published July 29 at this link.

8/6: 65 Boston Post Road, Danielle Lord of Belchertown, MA, to Timothy Howes and Tiffany Howes, $375,000. 

8/4: 5 Hartford Ave., Sebastian Blaize Woolnough of Clinton to Timothy Kudelchuk and Taylor Squeglia, $582,500. 

7/31: 80-1 Lyme St., Gilbert V. Boro of Brooklyn, NY, to the Henry Ward Ranger Development Organization LLC of Old Lyme, $1,800,000. 

7/30: 6-10 Vista Drive, Eastport LLC to Cove Realty Trust, $3,197,152. 

7/30: 1 Enterprise Drive, EPW-1 LLC to Cove Realty Trust, $2,395,947. 

7/28: 69 Brookside Ave., Frank A. Tomaro of Wethersfield to TMAR LLC of Old Lyme, $55,000. 

7/28: 72 Gorton Ave., Anthony A. Tomaro Trust of Wethersfield to Samson LLC of Old Lyme, $400,000. 

7/28: 18 Hartung Place, Anthony A. Tomaro Trust of Wethersfield to Pinsker LLC of Old Lyme. 

7/25: 318 Billow Road and 319 Brightwater Road, First Capital Realty LLC of Darien to John Bourgoin and Theresa Marie Bourgoin of Berlin, $465,000. 

7/25: 23 Hefflon Farm Road, Estate of Rino Vitali to Dale M. Chick, $965,000.

7/24: 15 Hawks Nest Road, Estate of Christine Grem to Emily K. Dimmock of Old Lyme, $642,000. 

7/23: 435 Shore Road, Roger Zito of Old Lyme and Wendy A. Zito of New London to Daniel J. Schildt, $1,000,000. 

7/17: 30 Smith Neck Road, Dinah Martin Lefkowitz of New York, NY, to Cliff Kye and Jesse MacDonald, $2,090,000.

7/1: 10 Glover Ave., Gregory A. Schrafft of Niantic and Frank L. Schrafft of Old Lyme to Sweetwater Building and Management LLC of Old Lyme, $75,000.

Talking Transportation: Experiencing Woodstock While Working on the Tappan Zee

Jim Cameron

Continuing our summer reprise of some older columns, here’s an update on memories of years past …

This week marks the 56th anniversary of the grand-daddy of all rock festivals … Woodstock. I was in my teens the summer of 1969, but couldn’t get off from my job to join the swarms of rock fans. But I did see most of them.

That summer I was as a “temp seasonal” toll collector on the Tappan Zee Bridge, joining Westchester and Rockland counties across the mighty Hudson River.

Most days life as a toll collector on the Tappan Zee was a delight, as I was usually assigned to the far outside lane, also known as “the country club” because of its green vistas and views of the mighty Hudson River.

There were two things I learned in that job: how to roll quarters and how to listen to the radio. The tiny toll booths lacked air conditioning, but I could bring a fan or a radio. My portable FM entertained me eight hours a day as I listened to both the music and the FM DJs … a job I eventually earned at Long Island’s WLIR after college graduation.

New York’s FM stations were buzzing about Woodstock for weeks, and that Friday and much of Saturday, it seemed that every kid in the tri-state area was heading for Yasgur’s Farm. Most weekends were pretty crazy in my toll collecting job, because in those days tolls were collected in both directions … 50 cents north-bound and 50 cents coming home. (Today the toll is $6.75 roundtrip, if you have an E-ZPass).

Busy as it was on summer weekends on that bridge, nobody expected a half-million people would show up heading to Woodstock, especially not the folks at the NY Thruway Authority. But after the rock fest was well underway, the Thruway brass realized the mobs would eventually be heading home, clogging the bridge. Because the music was expected to end late on Sunday, many of us temp-collectors worked overtime into the wee hours of Monday morning.

Late into the night we had five toll lanes open southbound, most of us enjoying some handsome overtime. However, traffic was so light, they sent us home by about 1 am. But I was due back in the booth five hours later.

Of course, the music didn’t end until early that Monday morning, meaning that the usual morning rush hour carried as many burned-out hippies as it did regular business commuters. I remember one station wagon that pulled in to my toll lane, caked in mud up to the windows and stuffed with a dozen zonked-out kids.

“Hey man,” said the driver with bloodshot eyes that struggled to focus. “We don’t have any money (to pay the 50 cent toll). How about these instead?” That day, his Tappan Zee toll was an orange and a warm Coke.

Later that summer, after being reassigned to the New Rochelle toll barrier on the New England Thruway, I learned about the “exact change” lanes. As folks threw their change into the basket, the coins went into a machine with rotating discs and holes the size of nickels, dimes and quarters. As the coins fell though the holes, their value was totaled and the driver could pull away.

What I didn’t know was the people threw more than coins into those baskets.

One day, while inside the booth removing change buckets, I heard a car stop in the lane outside followed by an ominous thump. Not the clinking of change, but a thump.

Imagine my horror as I watched an entire orange work its way down the change chute, hitting the rotating discs like a food processor, spewing orange juice and peel everywhere over the machinery, the buckets of coins and me.

Oh, for those days back in “the country club lane” back on the Tappan Zee!

Editor’s Notes: i) Jim Cameron is the founder of the Commuter Action Group and advocates for Connecticut rail riders. He writes a weekly column called ‘Talking Transportation,’ which is published by a number of publications in the state.
ii) ”Talking Transportation” recently won first place in the general column/commentary category in the Connecticut Society of Professional Journalists Excellence in Journalism Contest.

Old Lyme Historical Society Hosts Vintage Postcard Presentation by Jim Lampos, Aug. 18; All Welcome

Historic postcards like these will be featured in Jim Lampos’s talk on Monday at the Old Lyme Historical Society.

OLD LYME — UPDATED 8/17 with details of where to see a preview of the postcards: On Monday, Aug. 18, at 7 p.m., the Old Lyme Historical Society Incorporated (OLHSI) hosts an historic postcard presentation by Jim Lampos titled, “Having a Swell Time.”

The presentation will be followed by a Vintage Postcard Sale when a selection of ‘extras’ from a recently-purchased collection will be available for sale. The postcards variously offer views of Old Lyme streets, landmarks, and beaches circa 1902-1970.

Visit Old Lyme Memorial Town Hall to enjoy a preview of much of the postcard collection. A selection of the postcards is on display in the front foyer and behind first floor staircase.

The event will take place at the Society’s building at 55 Lyme St. in Old Lyme. All are welcome and admission is free.

This is another in a series of speaker events sponsored by the OLHSI.

There is no charge for admission but donations are welcome to the Carol Noyes Winters Scholarship Fund.