Luella Butler with three of her sons taken in 2013 |
Luella has lived more than a century of Cavendish history. Working at Gay Brothers and a life time member of the Grange, she witnessed some of the most astonishing advances in many fields. At the time of her birth in 1909, the average life expectancy was around 42. Thanks to vaccinations and the eradication of many childhood diseases, by the end of the century, the average life expectancy was closer to 76 years of age and by 2014 it's closer to 80.
Even though horse drawn carriages would have been part of Luella's childhood, she could have seen Lindbergh fly across town in 1927, the same year as the flood. Less than forty years later, astronauts and space exploration was underway. The telephone came to Cavendish when she was a child. Today, people are discontinuing their landlines in favor of the Internet and cell phones.
Below is a Cavendish Historical timeline of what Luella has witnessed starting with her birth up until today.
1909:
Electric light poles started being installed in Cavendish and Whitesville. Electric
lights were installed in the Town Hall in 1910, but it took until the 1940’s
and some stretches even later, for electricity to be available town wide.
1910:
Cavendish population 1,208
• The telephone comes to Vermont. There is
evidence that Ludlow Telephone was in operation by 1913. Because of the costs,
telephone service was slow to come to the rural areas. Most places had phone
service by the mid 1940’s. Ludlow Telephone Company was eventually sold to TDS
Telecom in the 1990’s.
1914:
Proctor Piper State Forest, with the donation of 424 acres, established. A
second gift from Leon S. Gay in the mid 1930’s added 300 acres and additional
purchases of property added another 700 acres.
1917-1919 (WWI): 57 men and one woman
from Cavendish joined the military. The flu epidemic of 1918 took the lives of
three of the four Cavendish servicemen that were to die during the war. Food
and coal rationing were required. The latter was not an issue for local
farmers, who burned wood, but it was difficult for those in the villages. Daylight
Saving Time was started on April 1, 1918.
The mills were operating at full tilt for the
war effort. Business was in a boom period through 1920. Most of the Cavendish
servicemen returned home.
1920:
Cavendish population 1,319
1923:
WWI Memorial dedicated in Proctorsville. Redfield Proctor, Jr donated the
monument.
1927:
The largest flood on record in Vermont caused heavy damage in the Black River
Valley, particularly Cavendish. A quarter mile long channel avulsion bypassing
the Cavendish Gorge eroded approximately 2 million tons of sediment down to
bedrock leaving a channel 150 feed deep and 600 feet wide. Seven houses were
washed away and the Duttonsville School ended up protruding over the edge of a
high sandbank. Redfield Proctor, former Vermont governor, offered $10,000 to
restore the schoolhouse. Olin Gay, Chairman of the School Board, proposed using
this gift to move the school to a new location. He also proposed that the town
raise an additional $5,000 by taxes to put in an auditorium basement, modernize
the heating system and install toilets. The school building was moved on big
rollers by oxen and horses 400 feet back to a safer location. It had much
better facilities than before the flood. A Vermont Standard School until 1928,
thanks to the renovations after the flood, Duttonsville was upgraded to a
“Superior School,” a status it retained until closing in 1971.
• President Calvin Coolidge telegraphs his
cousin, Park Pollard, after the flood, wanting to know what he can do for
Cavendish. He sent Herbert Hoover, his Secretary of Commerce, to visit the
region and to make recommendations. Two Army engineers came to give technical
help about relocating the state road
• Charles Lindbergh flies over Cavendish
• Radio Station WLAK begins in Bellows Falls.
Cavendish has radio service. Many farmers make their own “crystal” radios. They
would use their car batteries to power them.
• Murdock’s Mill now becomes Proctor Mill
1928:
In September, almost ten months after the flood, President Coolidge comes to Cavendish
to view the damage. He looked at the washed out areas, but characteristically,
did not say much.
1929:
Stock market crash. This did not have an immediate impact on Cavendish. Few
people had investments to lose, and for the Gay Brothers Woolen Mill, 1929 was
the best year, financially, in the history of their business. It took several
years before the depression was felt. Cash was scarce, but for many farmers,
that had always been the case. Frugality was part of the depression, but it
wasn’t caused by it.
1930:
Cavendish Population 1,418
1932:
Black Bear Woolen Mill replaces Proctor Mill and operates until 1937. Even
though the mill functions was thought to be productive, it closes in 1937
possibility because of union strikes the year before. The building is sold to
Proctorsville and is never used for textiles again. It was eventually used by
Proctor Reels to make reels and furniture.
1933:
A Civilian Conservation Corps camp was established in the Proctor-Piper Forest
in Proctorsville. One hundred twenty five unmarried men, between the ages of
18-25, came from New York to join local men in clearing trails for horse back
riding and hiking and to create a recreational area.
1940:
Cavendish Population 1,398
1941-1945
WWII Era: One hundred and sixty-eight men and one woman
served in the war. Imogene Baxendale served as an Army nurse. Six men were
killed in action and several were wounded. They served in every branch of the
armed services and in nearly every area where American soldiers, sailors and
flyers were sent.
• Gay Brothers Mill was described as “the chief
war industry of the town where 300 people worked producing 30,000 yards of
woolen blankets, Navy uniform cloth and Khaki flannels each week for the United
States Government. 37% of the workers served in the military. In need of
workers, women worked in the mills, many men had second jobs there and all high
school students over 16 were asked to work at the mill whenever possible.
• Due to its proximity to Precision Valley, as
well as the mills in the Villages, Cavendish was viewed as being at risk for
enemy bombing. Three spotter towers were erected and were staffed by volunteers
(women, high school students, and men not in the service) 24 hours a day, seven
days a week. The towers were located above the Duttonsville School, across from
Moonlite Meadows Farm, on East Road, and at the end of Blood Terrace off of
Maple Street in Proctorsville.
1946:
Allen Wilcox becomes the first town manager hired. Each year the town would
vote whether they wanted a paid town manager. Some years they had one and
many years they didn’t. In 1960, Donald
Ellison became town manager and held the post for quite some time.
1950:
Cavendish population 1,374
Dutton House moved from the Cavendish Green to
the Shelburne Museum.
1950-1953:
Korean War. Fifty four men from Cavendish served in this war. All returned home
safely.
1951:
Gay Brothers Mill closes. The mill is sold to F. C. Hyuck and Sons and becomes
known as Kenwood Mills.
1953: Rutland Railroad stops passenger
service, ending passenger service in Proctorsville and Cavendish. Depots in
both towns are dismantled.
1954:
First Television set comes to Cavendish. Vermont’s first television station,
was established in 1954 when WCAX-TV began broadcasting from Burlington. Joseph
Warren on Twenty Mile Stream owned the first TV set in Cavendish.
1955:
Cavendish Historical Society established. Atherton Bemis is the first
president.
• Cavendish Town Office built in its current
location on High Street in Cavendish.
1956-1957:
Physician serving the Cavendish/Proctorsville area dies. Two fatal car
accidents occurred and Cavendish found they could not rely on Ludlow for
medical coverage. Community leaders meet with the University of Vermont Medical
School about the situation. They were
advised to equip a medical office and then solicit a physician. Kenwood Mills,
who purchased Gay Brothers Mills and its holdings in 1951, donates the stone building
to help form the new Black River Health Center. Members of the community
donated their time to renovate the building. Workers at Kenwood Mills had $1 a
week withheld from their pay to help establish the Health Center. Dr. Eugene
Bont and Dr. Lawrence Bixby set up practice.
1957:
Kenwood Mills, formerly Gay Brothers Woolen Mill, once the leading employer for
the town is sold and closed by the new owners.
• Passenger and
freight train service no longer available in Cavendish.
• Art Briggs is elected Fire Chief for Fire
District #2 (Cavendish). With his experience fighting fires in WWII, he creates
a well organized group and legally incorporates the Fire Department. An active
Auxiliary is formed. Prior to Briggs arrival, Cavendish stored fire fighting
equipment at various locations in town and depended heavily on Fire District #1
and the Gay Brothers Mill for putting out fires.
• Hawks Mountain Fire, which started on the
Cavendish side and spread to Perkinsville. The National Guard had to be called
for help. The fire started on May 7 and wasn’t fully extinguished until May 11.
1960:
The new Proctorsville Elementary School building opens. Duttonsville School is
still open, but will close in 1971. As the Cavendish village students enter the
school in Proctorsville, the school becomes known as the Cavendish Town
Elementary School.
• Cavendish Population 1,223, the lowest since
1910.
• New Route 103 extension added, no longer
requiring traffic to go down Proctorsville’s Depot Street to a stop light,
where drivers turned left for Ludlow or right for Cavendish. Depot Street
becomes a town road and no longer a state highway.
1961:
The town celebrates its 200th anniversary.
1962:
Mack Molding opens in the Gay’s Brother Mill complex.
1963-1973:
Vietnam War Era. Sixty four men and three women (Harriet Dockum, Linda Tyrell
and Rachel Strong) served in this conflict.
1967:
On December 12, the voters of the Cavendish Town School District approved, by a
margin of 122 to 73, the formation of a union high school district, grades
7-12, with the town School Districts of Andover and Chester and the
Duttonsville Independent School District.
1970:
Cavendish population 1,264
The Cavendish Historical Society leases the old
town hall building for its Museum. Shortly thereafter, the Old Stone Church
(Universalist Church) is leased to the Historical Society for
preservation.
• Vermont
passes Act 250, known as the Land Use and Development Act, as a result of the increasing
development of resort and second home housing. This expansion was putting a
heavy burden on small towns, particularly in the southern part of the state,
who would need to significantly expand infrastructures to meet the expansion.
One of the first projects was the Black River Estates off of Pratt Hill in
Proctorsville. In subsequent years, this law is used to stop development
thought to be inappropriate for Cavendish.
1973:
Major flood, which washed out many roads and bridges.
1976: Solzhenitsyn, Nobel Prize winner and Soviet dissident, settles in Cavendish with his wife, children and mother-in-law. His home becomes a place of refuge for other Soviet dissidents.
• Green
Mountain Union High School opens in Chester.
1977: Cavendish and Weathersfield residents
learn that Springfield is planning to build a hydroelectric plant on the Black
River from the media. Concerned Citizens of the Black River Valley (CCBRV) is
formed to keep Springfield from building the generating project. Six units were
proposed, the largest of which was Hawks Mountain Dam located on the Cavendish/Weathersfield
town line. This dam would have been of earth fill construction, 165 feet in
height and 900 feet in length at the crest and would have flooded five miles in
Cavendish. CCBRV included citizens of the Towns of Cavendish, Weathersfield,
and Springfield. Their slogan was “Save the Valley.”
• Stepping Stones Preschool opens in Ludlow to serve area
children. The school will eventually move to a building on the border of
Cavendish and Ludlow and today primarily serves Cavendish.
1978: Singleton’s general store opens on
Main Street in Proctorsville. This marks the beginning of the Proctorsville
revitalization effort.
1980:
Cavendish population 1,355
1981: Lisa Ballantine becomes the first female
fire fighter for the Cavendish Fire Department (District #2).
• The Southern Windsor/Windham Counties Solid Waste Management
District is formed in order to provide solid waste management authority,
services, and planning to its member towns, one of which is Cavendish.
1982: The Mueller’s purchase the Okemo
Ski area in Ludlow and begin to turn it into a resort. This will have a
significant impact on Cavendish in subsequent years. The 1980s saw a new
potential economy-tourism-as Okemo Mountain became a prominent ski area.
Increasingly, people looked to Cavendish for vacation and seasonal housing.
Today, non-residents own 60% of the town’s property.
• Acousti-Phase,
the old mill building on what is now the Proctorsville Green, burns down.
1986: Proctorsville ceases to be an
incorporated village and, with Vermont State Legislative approval, the
governmental entity is merged into the Town of Cavendish.
1987: Proctorsville’s water system has to
be abandoned due to contamination from road salt. Combined with the Cavendish
Municipal Water system.
1988:
Dr. Bont and his wife Phyllis Bont, a nurse practitioner, leave Black River
Health Center to work at Albany Medical Center. In the coming years, various
medical groups try to establish a health center but are short lived. The
longest standing occupant since the Bonts left has been Opportunities in
Learning (OIL) a school for students who do not function well in a regular
classroom. In 2010, several mental health counselors set up their practices in
the building. Many people receive care via the Springfield Medical Care
Systems, which includes federally qualified health care system at the Ludlow
Health Center and various offices in Springfield.
• Richard Svec becomes town manager, a position
that he continues to hold. He has now served longer than any other town manager
in Cavendish history.
1989-1990: Twenty eight Cavendish residents
served in the Lebanon and Granada conflicts. This included five women-Amy and
Donna Blanchard, Valerie Scales, Norma Westcott and Nicola Woodell.
1990: Cavendish population 1,323
1991: Bi-Centennial of Vermont Statehood.
Cavendish celebrates with a parade. Solzhenitsyn is one of the speakers.
1994: Solzhenitsyn returns to Russia with
his wife. Solzhenitsyn addresses Town Meeting and national media once again
come to town to capture this event. Mike Wallace, of “Sixty Minutes” is not
allowed to use the Cavendish Post Office bathroom, because it is a Federal
building.
1996-1998: Proctorsville revitalizing projects
undertaken. With matching funds and in-kind matches provided by the Town and
the private sector, the Town was able to change the vacant Proctorsville mill
site into a handsome, well-designed village green with recreational space.
Affordable housing is strategically placed adjacent to the green with the move
of the historic Freeman House from next to the Cavendish Pointe Hotel to the
Green in 1997.
1996: Act 60, also known as the Equal Educational
Opportunity Act, is signed into law. The Legislature drafted the law in
response to a Vermont Supreme Court decision that said Vermont's existing
educational funding system was unconstitutional. The court, in Brigham v. State
of Vermont, concluded that the state must provide "substantially equal
access" to education for all Vermont students, regardless of where they
reside. Initially Cavendish is not impacted by the bill but in subsequent
years, particularly with the growing resort second home owner community
associated with the mountain, residents started to be “taxed” out.
2000: Cavendish population 1,470
• In
response to 9/11-the destruction of the World Trade Center towers in New York
City and damage to the Pentagon, Cavendish churches hold an ecumenical service.
Many knew people that were hurt, and in at least one case, killed.
2002: McLean Quarry proposes to build a
quarry at the end of Tierney Road, which would extend onto route 103 (Main
Street) between the two villages. Residents, whose property who would be
directly impacted by the proposed quarry, form Concerned Cavendish Citizens
(CCC). Leaders of this group included Robin Timko, April Hensel, Will Hunter
and Suzanne Meaney. When the quarry was finally defeated in 2006, CCC became
CCCA (Cavendish Community and Conservation Association). CCCA, in addition to
its conservation efforts, started the Cavendish Community Fund, which provides
small grants to Cavendish organizations and individuals.
As
part of keeping people informed about Quarry matters, Margo Caulfield started
an electronic newsletter called “Quarry Update.” As there was limited local
news coverage for Cavendish, this e-mail newsletter evolved into the “Cavendish
Update,” which provides not only weekly news but also is used in times of
emergency.
2003: A Class I tornado, a ferocious
storm with heavy rain, lightning and very severe winds, left a path of damage
from the Black River all the way to Brook Road in Cavendish. One mobile home
was destroyed. Acres of trees were felled, leaving town roads closed until
clean up could take place.
• Act
68 is passed amending Act 60, to relieve some of the burden placed on local
school districts.
• Village
Center Designation is awarded to the villages of Cavendish and Proctorsville.
This designation offers a variety of benefits including tax credits for historic
buildings and commercial properties renovating to code and priority consideration
for certain types of state grants.
2006: Outdoor classroom constructed at
the Cavendish Town Elementary School.
2007: Ancient Roads Committee Formed.
• Old Home Day tradition begun by the Cavendish
Historical Society.
2008: The Cavendish Update becomes a blog
at www.cavendishvt.blogspot.com
• Partnering with the
Rockingham Area Land Trust (RALT), Cavendish develops a variety of affordable
housing-townhouses, apartments and senior housing-around the Proctorsville
Green.
• Alexander
Solzhenitsyn dies in Russia and once again the town is inundated with reporters
and television crews. A private town service is held to remember Solzhenitsyn.
2009: New sidewalks and curbs are
installed in Proctorsville. The project took nine years from grant application
to project completion.
• Water
filtration project completed. A bond was passed in 2002, which began the town’s
efforts to improve water quality, due to high levels of iron and manganese, as
well as replace asbestos pipes and the Proctorsville water tower.
2010: Cavendish population 1,367, a
decline of 7% from 2000.
2011: Tropical Storm Irene causes considerable
damage, including the loss of several homes and millions of dollars worth of damage
to the town’s infrastructure (water, sewer, electricity and power) as well as
roads. The flooding waters creates a “canyon” similar to the one in 1927. A
shelter is open for 10 days at the Cavendish Town Elementary School. One of its
functions is to house the National Guard brought in to help rebuild the roads.
In spite of the devastation, Cavendish holds a four day 250th
anniversary celebration in October. While the parade route had to be modified
and shortened considerably, many lined Depot Street, an area that sustained
heavy damage, and cheered.
• Cavendish
VT Facebook page is started initially because of the events surrounding the
town’s 250th anniversary. It takes on a new way for the town to
communicate during Irene.
2012: At the end of the
year, the Universalist Church agrees to transfer the deed of the Stone Church
to the town. The actual transfer will take place on May 11, 2013. The building
will be the future home of the permanent Solzhenitsyn Exhibit and will also
serve as a small venue space for concerts, lectures, films, plays etc.
• The Rutland Windsor Supervisory Union (Ludlow,
Mt. Holly and Plymouth) merges with the Windsor Southwest Supervisory Union
(Chester,/Andover, Cavendish and Londonderry) to create the Two Rivers Supervisory
Union.
• Extensive rebuilding of the town’s infrastructure
following Irene. Includes mountains of paperwork for the town offices as they
comply with FEMA and other agencies relating to the funding of the recovery.
• Jim Ballentine, very active in town
politics for many years, dies while serving as chair of the Cavendish
Selectboard.
2013: In March, voters
agree to accept the donation of the Cavendish Universalist Church, also known
as the “Stone Church.” It’s purpose is to be for permanent home of the
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn exhibit as well as small venue space for talks, theater,
films, concerts . The Universalist Church Convention is held in at the
Cavendish Stone Church in May. While a voice vote is agreement to transfer the
deed of the church to the town, nothing is finalized by the end of the year.
• The entrance of Chubb Hill off of route
131 is moved so that it bisects Donnie Davis’s field.
• To reduce Cavendish’s carbon footprint, Zero
sort recycling begins at the Cavendish Transfer Station and enters into an
agreement with Soveren Solar of Putney to establish a 150 solar array on town
property-south facing slope just below the Cavendish Waster Water facility.
2014: A snowy and cold winter contributes to numerous fires, including the destruction of two historic homes on Main Street, one in each of the villages.
My paternal grandfather, Thomas E. Bardsley, was Boss Weaver at the Gay Brothers Mills. He was at the Mill from just before the 1927 Flood until his retirement in 1948. My grandfather was also Organist at one of the local churches, and my father or my Uncle Bob would have to go and pump the bellows on the organ to keep it playing. Does anyone know what church that might have been? Elizabeth Ann Bardsley Cordoza, PO Box 849, Soulsbyville, CA 95372
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