Friday, August 30, 2013

Windsor County Court August 13


Jack Robinson, Dob 6/3/63, pled not guilty to charges of being lewd and lascivious with a child, in Woodstock on April 3



Joshua Rondeau, DOB 9/13/80, pled not guilty to his third DUI in Hartford on August 3



Jon Fagans, DOB 5/20/57, pled not guilty to a charge of disorderly conduct noise in Springfield on June 7.



Bridget Ritchie DOB 8/21/74 pled not guilty to a charge of disorderly conduct/noise in Springfield on June 7



Sean Hylind, DOB 12/20/86 pled not guilty to charges of operating a motor vehicle with a suspended license and leaving the scene of an accident, in Ludlow on June 30



Kyle Davis, DOB 1/24/92 pled guilty to a charge of careless or negligent operation of a motor vehicle on August 8 in Hartford.



Isaiah Johnson, DOB 10/3/89, pled guilty to a charge of careless or negligent operation of a motor vehicle in Hartford on May 6



Eugene Meyette, DOB 1/6/86, pled guilty to a charge of retail theft in Springfield on May 6



Samuel Limeburger, DOB 1/24/92 pled not guilty to a charge of possession of two ounces or more of marijuana.



Van Mongeur, DOB 3/7/64 pled not guilty to a charge of careless or negligent operation of a motor vehicle in Rochester on June 2



Alexey Mamaev, DOB 11/23/87, pled not guilty to charges of his third DUI, operating a motor vehicle with a suspended license, giving false information to a police officer, and violating 3 condition of release: operating a motor vehicle, consuming alcohol, and refusing to be tested, in Hartford on August 12. In a separate case, he pled not guilty to his third DUI, operating a motor vehicle with a suspended license, and resisting arrest on July 3 in Hartford.



Amber White, DOB 8/22/92, pled not guilty to a charge of violating her conditions of release by not abiding by a curfew order and having contact with a prohibited person in Springfield on August 12.

White had prior charges as well, including three charges of sale of heroin, and another charge of violating conditions of release by not abiding by a curfew order in Springfield on June 20.



Roy Shaw, DOB 3/9/78, pled not guilty to a charge of simple assault in Windsor on July 4.



Jorge Burgos, DOB 2/18/80, pled guilty to charges of operating a motor vehicle with a suspended license, giving an officer false information and resisting arrest in Hartford on August 11. He was sentenced to service on a work crew for 29 days. He was also sentenced to work crew service for a charge of operating a motor vehicle with a suspended license on June 13 in Weathersfield.




Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Windsor County Court July 30

Timothy Farwell, DOB 5/17/66. pled not guilty to a charge of negligent operation of a motor vehicle on May 16 in Woodstock.  Farwell was driving a car that hit and killed a pedestrian on Rte 4.

Joseph Giconte, DOB 3/28/95, pled not guilty to a charge of possession of less than 2 ounces of marijuana, in Hartford on June 12

Philip Babcock, DOB 1/16/83, pled guilty to a charge of disorderly conduct in Springfield on June 6

Emma Harley, DOB 1/13/93, pled not guilty to 3 charges of forgery in Woodstock on April 18th

Nichole Clark, DOB 10/28/83, was charged with two counts of false pretenses in November of 2012.  She went door to door selling orders of Lindt chocolate, telling people she was trying to pay for her cancer treatment, which was not true.  She was referred to diversion but did not complete her diversion.  She also pled not guilty to a charge of theft of services in Windsor on April 16, when she incurred a towing bill that she knew she couldn't pay.

April Manning, DOB 3/11/92, was charged with possession of cocaine in Cavendish on June 10

Dana Courchesne, DOB 7/11/66 pled not guilty to 3 charges of forgery in Springfield on March 22

Larry Knight, DOB 5/11/58, pled guilty to a charge of reckless or negligent operation of a motor vehicle in Royalton on July 21.

Jesi Wilkins, DOB 6/25/70 pled not guilty to a charge of driving a vehicle while under the influence of alcohol or drugs, in Springfield on June 6

Scott Hunter, DOB 8/31/63 pled not guilty to a charge of driving with a suspended license in Hartland on June 27

Jessica Fish, DOB 11/10/83, pled not guilty to a charge of driving with a suspended license in Hartland on June 27

Victoria Sykie, DOB 8/10/83, pled not guilty to a charge of disorderly conduct/noise in Springfield on June 10

Cellar Holes, Stone Walls and Apple Trees


After 23 years of living where we live now, we found an amazing cellar hole on the top of our mountain, and we didn't know it was there, before now. I tried to take pictures of it, but since pictures don't show depth, you really can't see much from the pictures. The foundation is still almost all intact, the front steps are still there, although they are covered with moss and have trees growing through them, and the middle is filled with rocks.

My cousin and his brother-in-law came up and metal detected the front steps, and found four buttons and part of a woman's hair comb – not the kind of comb you comb your hair with but the kind of comb you put in your hair as a piece of jewelry. The consensus seems to be that the rocks are there from the collapse of the center chimney.
 
 
This is a scan of the items they found when they metal detected
the cellar hole.  The plainer buttons are apparently cuff buttons
and the fancier ones are from a coat. You can see where there
was a jewel or some ornament attached to the top of the comb.
Some of the thread that originally attached the cuff button can
still be seen in the shaft of the button.


 

 

I've always been interested in cellar holes, ever since my mother showed my sister and I cellar holes when we went hiking as kids. The Upper Valley is full of cellar holes. It's fun to find them and envision who lived there and what their lives were like. I'm not so interested in metal detecting. When my cousin and his brother-in-law found the buttons it was exciting, but I don't know that I would invest that much time, energy and money into finding four buttons and part of a comb. There is a tombstone on a woman's grave out in the middle of nowhere in Strafford that I have always been obsessed with – I researched the woman on Ancestry.com and found out that she died just after the Civil War, she was born in Royalton but her father was born in my hometown. That is more of a treasure to me than relics found by a metal detector.

For those who don't know, a cellar hole is a place where a house once stood, but the house is gone and all that is left is the hole. Sometimes a cellar hole is just a small indentation in the ground, with a few stones scattered around it in a way that makes you pretty sure they were put there deliberately by people, rather than being part of the landscape. Other times cellar holes are fully intact foundations, with four well defined corners and four complete walls, with a clear entrance and maybe even steps. Ours has a clear entrance, and there are steps up to what was the house, as well. I've seen another one that still has the steps that lead from the ground level into the cellar, what we would think of as the bulkhead but back in the day you would walk from the ground level down a set of steps into a door that would take you into the cellar from the outside. This is where people would keep their root vegetables through the winter and spring.

Cellar holes are most often found on old roads that have been “given up” by the town. In most states, if a road isn't used for a certain amount of time, it ceases to exist as a town road, but in Vermont, a road has to be formally given up at town meeting, otherwise, it continues to be a town road. These roads are called “phantom roads” and can be a huge problem. If you buy land that contains a “phantom road” and there is suddenly renewed interest in that road, even if the road has been forgotten for a hundred years, you may find yourself in the unenviable situation of having a road running through your back yard. Read more about this here:http://www.yankeemagazine.com/article/travel /sleeping-roads-vermont , here: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/11/us/11roads.html, and here: http://www.vjel.org/journal/VJEL10020.html.

When you are hiking or riding your ATV on a path through the woods, how do you recognize an old road, as opposed to a new trail that has been made recently? First of all, look for a wide swath of land that has different vegetation than the land around it. New trails are more narrow and have obviously been hacked out of the surrounding landscape. Old roads are wider and will have newer tree and shrub growth in the middle than on either side. Stone walls often run parallel to an old road, sometimes on both sides. If the trail you are on cuts through stone walls on the perpendicular, it is probably not an old road. This is how I found the cellar hole on our property. An internet company put a tower on our mountain so that our neighborhood could – finally – have high speed internet. My husband took me up there to see the tower and told me the internet people had found a new logging road – a new path across the top of the mountain. As we were hiking down this newfound logging road, I noticed that it had smaller, new growth down the center, and older growth trees along the edges. Then I noticed the stone walls right at the boundaries of the new growth and old growth, on both sides, and I knew we were on an old road.
This is not an abandoned road.  But, visualize this
road full of grass, young trees and shrubs. The trees
along the edge would be much bigger and obviously
would be older growth. In this picture, it looks like
this road intersects a stone wall at a perpendicular,
which is another indication that it is not an old road.
An old road would have stone walls running parallel
to either side.
 

If you think you are on an old road, look along the stone walls for openings that look like a driveway. Walk through these openings and look for depressions in the forest floor, or remnants of old foundations. Keep a couple of things in mind. Often loggers create openings in stone walls when they pull logs out, so every opening in a stone wall is not going to lead to a cellar hole. Stone walls were used for pasture fences as well as for front yard fences, so not every stone wall leads to a cellar hole. Stone walls at either side of an old road are likely going to yield at least a couple of cellar holes. Often foundations were made of nice fieldstone, and over time, people have taken the fieldstones from the foundations to use themselves. The reason our cellar hole is still so intact is that no one knew it was there, so no one took the front steps or the stones from the foundation. Although the wood from an abandoned house rots and eventually goes away, the foundations do not. They are removed by people who have a use for them.

You may be hiking or trail riding and see random old apple trees in the forest. Apple trees aren't random and are another good indication that people lived near there at one time. Crabapples are the only type of apple that is native to North America. There are however, “wild” apple trees, in the sense that animals or birds have eaten apples from trees that were planted by European settlers, then excreted or dropped seeds that then germinated and new apple trees have grown. As you are hiking in the woods, though, and see an old apple tree, you can assume that it was planted by someone who lived there or lived near there.

I have heard people say, when discussing cellar holes, and the first settlers of Vermont, that “they did everything for a reason” and planting apple trees was no exception. They didn't just sit at the supper table and say, “Wouldn't it be cool to get some apple trees”. They went to a lot of trouble and expense to obtain or grow apple seedlings to provide a future food supply. Apples were a source of nutrition, and they kept well in cold storage (think cellar) over the winter.

In early New England, people had a much different relationship with food than we do today. They needed food to stay alive, and most of their waking hours were spent making sure they had enough food to eat. They didn't eat apples as a snack, or make them into pies or apple crisp. As delicious as apple pies and apple crisp are, and I am famous for making the best of both, early New England settlers used apples as a food staple. In late winter, and early spring, if they had a good apple crop that preceding autumn, they still had dried or wintered over apples they could eat until they could harvest their first spring vegetables.

Nowadays, in some ways, we work to stay alive or at least stay alive longer, by avoiding food. I consider what the early settlers ate and then what we eat in 2013, and think that if the early settlers could have time traveled to the present day, they wouldn't even recognize most of what we eat as food. I like Doritos as much as anyone else, but they aren't real food. In the early and mid 1800's, when farmers were picking apples off of these trees that you find growing “wild” in the woods, they put them up in the root cellars or dried them and put them up in an attic or loft, and those apples kept them fed all winter long.

As summer draws to an end and we start thinking about fall, a lot of people do a lot of hiking in the fall. When you are out on a hike, look for some of these signs of early settlement, and see if you can find a cellar hole or an old apple tree.

Monday, August 5, 2013

Windsor Couty Court July 16


Evan Knowlton, DOB 6/28/89 pled not guilty to his first DUI charge in Hartford on June 28



Joshua Porter, DOB 12/14/95, pled not guilty to charges of unlawful trespass on land, and giving false information to a police officer in South Royalton on April 12



Joshua Fleming, DOB 8/25/81 pled guilty to a charge of unlawful trespass on land, on railroad property in White River Junction on June 13



Austin Brooks, DOB 6/1/94, pled not guilty to his first DUI charge, in Bethel on July 8



Derk Beardmore, DOB 7/13/91 pled not guilty to his first DUI charge, in Ludlow on July 6



Anthony Marks, DOB 12/24/80, pled not guilty to a charge of simple assault, in Hartford on June 8



Don Bigwood, DOB 8/21/71, pled not guilty to charges of test refusal, and his 2nd DUI, in Windsor on July 4



Jessica Hunsdon, DOB 7/23/82 pled not guilty to a charge of driving with a suspended license in Weathersfield on May 27.



Adela Piralic, DOB 12/5/84, pled guilty to a charge of disorderly conduct/obstruct on May 29 in Sharon



Curtis Ficklin, DOB 1/8/94, pled guilty to careless or negligent operation of a motor vehicle, in Windsor on May 15



Zachary Carpenter, DOB 10/11/91, pled guilty to driving suspended in Windsor on May 18



Andrew Snide, DOB 5/24/80, pled guilty to a charge of possession of marijuana in Hartford on May 18.



Matthew Aldrich, DOB ½/68, pled not guilty to a charge of giving false information to a police officer about a crime that did not occur, in Windsor on April 8



Russell Mercer, DOB 9/2/61, pled not guilty to a charge of petit larceny in Chester on April 28














Rewinding the Past Year


I am on vacation for the next three weeks and I am going to spend lots of time doing research for this blog. I've got a lot of topics in mind for the upcoming weeks and months and once I start the new school year, I won't have as much time. I've ordered some books from Amazon.com and plan to spend some time in Barnard at the town hall, the Woodstock Library and the state historical library in Montpelier.

It's been a year since I started writing Upper Valley Anonymous, and I'm still amazed at the amount of hits I've had. I get more and more every week. The blogger website lets me know what people are googling before they choose my site, and which posts are most popular. The general store post has had more hits than any other poste by a wide margin, and much of my research over the coming weeks, as well as the book I ordered from Amazon, will be on general stores in New England, so that I can write a “General Stores Part II” article.

Again, I want to say that I would welcome any and all help, a guest writer or a regular writer who would like to contribute to “Upper Valley Anonymous”. It wouldn't have to be history related or court related, anything Upper Valley related at all would be great, including even recipes, household tips, book, reviews of movies, books or restaurants, hiking or camping articles, interviews of local celebrities or business people, or anything else you can think of. I would love to have a pastor of an Upper Valley church write some posts. I have a couple of ideas about how I would like to expand the scope of this blog, but I can't do it without help, especially during the school year.

I've been thinking about the families and places that I've discovered and written about over the past year. I knew quite a bit about Fort Number 4, and I chose to start the story there because I knew that place pretty well, having visited it quite often with school groups over the years. I didn't know the story of the Farnsworths, though, and found their family fascinating. The Farnsworth story presented one of the first questions I have that will never be answered: After the autumn when the English settlers abandoned the fort, after David and Stephen were captured by Indians, why did Stephen and Eunice return to the Fort at Number 4? Did Eunice want to go back? I get that they were heroes, they didn't give up easily, they were tough, they weren't weaklings, etc, but there must be more to the story than that. David was never healthy after his ordeal with the Indians and died soon after that, and Eunice lived for almost a year without Stephen, and had to go from Charlestown back to Massachusetts, without her husband, and with her infant son. It had to have been unbelievably difficult to return and start again. Then I followed Oliver Farnsworth from Charlestown to the founding of Woodstock, Vermont.

I randomly discovered Simeon Ide, and then coincidentally, he had apprenticed with Oliver Farnsworth when he was young. We know more about Simeon than we do about Oliver Farnsworth because Simeon's autobiography and biography are available to read online, but still, there are nagging questions in his story as well. How did he become so prosperous due to his hard work and then end his life nearly penniless? I get that it was a combination of bad business decisions and too much trust in his relatives, but still, it's hard to understand.

Then I googled the 1830's and the Upper Valley and found Noyes Academy, which I had never heard of, and just found that story fascinating. The nagging question associated with Noyes Academy was how anyone ever trusted George Kimball, and why in the world would Nathaniel Currier give him money – a significant amount of money – to start somewhere else after he had pretty much screwed everything up in Canaan. Of all the people I have “met” from the history of the Upper Valley so far, George Kimball remains my least favorite and is the closest to a villain that I have found. I can even sympathize with the Indians who captured the Farnsworth brothers, because they have a side to the story too, but I do not have much sympathy for the problems of George Kimball.

With the 150th Anniversary of the Civil War, and all the events and media surrounding Vermont in the Civil War, I thought I should do a post on the Upper Valley in the Civil War. It was very random that I found Charles Aikens, and of course, there is a nagging question surrounding him as well. After he had left for nine months, and after he had been in the Battle of Gettysburg, why did he leave his wife and go back to war? Again, I get that the soldiers were heroes, doing their duty, bravery in the line of fire, but in terms of real life, to leave your wife and go back – it seems hard to understand.

I feel like I've written more about Vermont than New Hampshire, and I hope to rectify that in the coming year. To be honest, there is more information available in one place about Vermont. The Vermont Historical Library has all of the newspapers ever published in Vermont. The New Hampshire Historical Library's collection of publication isn't nearly as extensive, but I'm going to try to do a better job on the New Hampshire side in the coming year.

It's harder to find information on more recent families and events. I actually read one town history that said that nothing worth writing about happened after the Civil War. I'm finding plenty of interesting stuff, but certainly not as much information, so I'm looking forward to spending some time in Montpelier and various Upper Valley town halls during this vacation.