Tuesday, August 14, 2018

CHS Newsletter Summer 2018




BLUEBERRY PICKING

As Cavendish Historical Society (CHS) board member Bruce McEnaney notes, “the best blueberries are the ones you pick yourself.”  He should know as for the last four summers, Bruce and his wife Betty have opened up their blueberry patch to the public in order to help raise funds for the Carmine Guica Young Historians program at the Cavendish Town Elementary School (CTES). These funds have helped to pay for the sixth graders to go to Sturbridge Village and more.

While the season lasts, pick organic berries ($3 a pound) at the McEnaneys blueberry patch is located at 354 Miner Rd. just over the Cavendish line in Chester. It's  off Smokeshire, which is off route 103. Thank you Bruce and Betty for your ongoing generosity

UPCOMING EVENTS

September 9 (Sunday): Annual Phineas Gage Walk and Talk, 2-4 pm. The “talk” begins at 2 pm at the Museum and will be followed by the walk to the scene of the accident, with stops at the site of the boarding house where Gage stayed as well as the surgery of Dr. Harlow.

October 14 (Sunday): Last day the Museum is open for the season. Program to be announced.

WILMA & THE TIMBER RATTLER

We were recently invited to the home of Janet Pipkin, who  has since moved to Maine, to see if there were some items we’d like for the Museum. While we found some real treasures for our upcoming Life in Cavendish: Boomer Generation, more to follow on this, board member Bruce McEnaney discovered a copy of “The Word for the Week,” July 9-15, 1974. In it was a story featuring Dr. Eugene Bont, who practiced medicine at the Cavendish Health Center for 30 years-1957-1988. 

Being bitten by a full fledged poisonous timber rattlesnake is no bowl of blueberries, as Wilma Laitinen of Ludlow will tell you, so understandably she was somewhat miffed recently when she read a story in another publication which casts some doubt on the seriousness of her encounter with the realer of if in fact the snake was a rattler at all!

It all began on a summers day in 1961, “up behind Benson’s on West Hill” in Ludlow where Mrs. Laitinen her daughter Diane, Mrs. James Milnes and her sons, Jeff and Jim were blueberrying. Just before crossing a stone wall, the berry pickers noticed a coiled snake sunning itself but paid little heed since there was a lot of snakes on West Hill. Leading the way Wilma had just started over the wall when the snake lashed out sinking a fang into her leg just above the ankle. Now Mrs. Laitnen isn’t prone to be afraid of much of anything so instead of becoming panicky she yelled at lot at the varmint for its audacity and then took her time about finishing up the berrying and getting home. In fact, it was almost six hours before she decided she was feeling too darned peculiar to be well and decided it might be a good idea to go down and see Dr. Bont in Cavendish. Wilma didn’t know it at the time but she had already been mighty lucky and was to even get luckier during the next few hours. Dr. Bont treated her and then called Burlington where a poisonous snake specialist from Texas named Dr. Parish happened to be at the time. She was immediately taken to the Springfield Hospital and shortly afterward Dr. Parish flew in from Burlington with anti venom serum. By all account’s Wilma had no right to be alive by this time, say nothing of being alert enough to wisecrack with the doctors, but the specialist from Texas had an explanation. It was his opinion the snake had recently eaten and therefore had released some of the venom into its food, which is normal. However, there was no doubt that Mrs. Laitnen had indeed been bitten by a timber rattler for Dr. Parish had allowed himself to be bitten by a critter of the same heritage only a few weeks before and his reactions to the bite were identical to those of our heroine.

Wilma’s advice to berry pickers and others who roam Vermont’s fields and forests,” Feed a snake today today-sometimes it’s hard to tell the good guys from the bad guys.”

As a follow up to this story, we contacted the Bonts, who remembered Wilma with fondness, recalling how she was so helpful to the older members of the community.  To learn more about this incident, we contacted the Agency of Natural Resources. Jim Andrews of the Agency of Natural Resources who provided the following information:

We have that bite record in our database. It looks like it was a venomous snake bite and Dr. Bont corresponded with us directly about it (see below). The date according to the Rutland Herald (August 22, 1959, Vol 106, No 201) was 1959. The bite victim was Mrs. John Laitinen. According to the paper, they were picking blueberries on West Hill. Dr. Bont remembers it as Okemo Mountain.

It was the only venomous snake bite that he or any of his colleagues in that area had ever heard about. They assumed rattlesnake only because that was the only known venomous snake in the state.

Since we have no other reports of this species anywhere in that area, we don’t consider this a current population and we wonder if it was even an historic population. Any reports over 25 years old are considered historic. Snakes occasionally get moved around in hay, old cars, pieces
of equipment, etc. The other likely venomous snake is Copperhead, but that snake would have had to have been brought in from further south. Even garter snakes can occasionally generate a reaction in sensitive people, but the bite pattern should have ruled them out. Racers rattle and we have one other historic report from that area, but they should not generate a reaction. Milk snakes rattle frequently, would have been there, but again, they should not have generated a reaction.

Rattlesnake antivenin would not help with the bite of other snakes. According to the reports in the paper they seemed unaware that rattlesnakes can control the amount of venom released. Between 25% and 40% of bites are dry bites that contain no venom at all. Dr. Bont did not see any hemolysis, which he should have seen if venom was injected, but he did mention other symptoms that suggest envenomation.

At the remaining two locations where we know we currently have Timber Rattlesnakes we get multiple reports and photos of sightings every year.

So, the snake could have been among the last surviving rattlesnakes in that area, it could have been accidentally transported, or it could have been another transported species (Copperhead).

Here is Dr. Bont’s letter.

Elizabeth Cillo (working for us) contacted Dr. Gene Bont, and he wrote her back on November 6, 2000. His letter read as follows:

Dear Ms. Cillo:
Sorry for the delay in answering your letter, but it took some time to recall the details of the snakebite involving Mrs. Laitinen.

To my best memory, she was hiking on Okemo Mountain and some of her party came across a snake. She tried to get the snake to move with a long stick, but he attacked her and bit her in the leg. She was concerned because she was quite sure it was a rattlesnake and shortly afterwards felt lightheaded and a feeling of not being well. She was brought down to my office where on examination there were the four marks typical of a rattlesnake bite. There was mild redness and swelling. Because of the nature of the bite, she was hospitalized fearing neurological and hematological consequences. I called the state health department as I had been in practice for many years and had never had a snakebite incident and no one else in the hospital recalled such an incident either. As it happened there was a public health person from Florida whose specialty was venomous snake bites. Within a few hours he drove down with someone from the health department to Springfield Hospital and examined her. By this time we had done blood tests and there was no evidence of hemolysis going on and after careful examination, it was his conclusion that it was indeed a venomous snakebite. From her description of the snake and knowing that a timber rattler was the only venomous snake in the area, his conclusion was that the snake must have eaten and pretty much emptied its venom before she was struck. She had some paresthesias of numbness and tingling in the extremity, but no serious effects were noted. She was kept for observation for 48 hours and was released. This is the only such episode I have ever been involved in.

I’ll give you a call to let you know this letter is coming as I read about Dr. Andrews research in the newspaper and was really curious about it so this adds a good deal of interest on my part.

Thanks for your letter and again my apology for late return.

MEDITATIONS ON MY 105TH BIRTHDAY FEB. 7, 1964

James E. Gay was originally a school teacher and didn’t move to Cavendish until 1890, though his family had started the Gay Brothers Mill in 1886. In 1902 his brother Stearns Gay, who was president of the mill, died leaving James the guardian of his three children, Leon, Olin and Vernice as their mother Alice had died in 1895. Besides being treasurer at the Gay Brothers Mill, he was also Secretary, Treasurer and General Manager of Cavendish Electric Light Company. The president was Olin D. Gay and Vice President was Mertie A. Gay. Power was purchased from the Claremont Power Company.

James retired from the Mill in 1922 and died in 1965 at the age of 106. Below is a poem he wrote in honor of his 105th birthday.

Thank you to his great great niece, Sue Beyer, who sent his poem to CHS.

1. This is the day I long have sought
And mourned because I almost thought
I would not pass the crucial test
And be left alone at last to rest.

2. My grit has stayed by like it should
I’d walk again now if I could,
But I am told to use my chair
To save my head—if not my hair!

3. Now the day has come and gone,
My friends returned each to his home;
While I sit quietly by my typewriter
To show the world I’m still a fighter.

4. I sit and think to improve my mind,
Don’t bother my housekeeper all the time.
I still enjoy all kinds of wishes
But long since gave up wiping dishes.

5. I think of some Alumni to write
To see if any of them “Got Tight.”
On This, to me, EVENTFU DAY
When they met with me, they said, JAMES GAY.
6. You See I never drink or smoke,
The taste of either would “Get my Goat.”
I’ve had so many bids to drink,
But refused and said, “You Stop and Think.”

7. In college I never entered sport,
But spent my spare time just at work
To earn enough, my way to see
Through NEW HAMPSHIRE UNIVERSITY.

8. In passing by the Bakers’ shops,
I’d often stop and lick my chops;
Wishing I could take one cake,
To ease my constant “Hunger” ache.

9. That’s my story at ONE HUNDRED AND FIVE;
I’m a lucky man to be alive!


BECOME A MEMBER, RENEW YOUR MEMBERSHIP, DONATE

If you have not joined the Cavendish Historical Society, need to renew your membership, and/or would like to be a volunteer, please complete the form below and sending a check, payable to CHS, to CHS, PO Box 472, Cavendish, VT 05142. All contributions are tax deductible.

Name: _______________________________________

Address: _______________________________________________


Phone Number: _____________________    E-Mail: ____________________________
Membership Level
__ Individual Member $10  ___ Senior Member 65+ $5  ___ Sustaining Member $500
__ Household Member $15  ___ Contributing Member $250                            

Volunteer
___ I would be interested in serving, as a volunteer .I would be interested in serving on the following committee(s):__ Program Planning          __ Fundraising    __ Building (Museum)
__Archives                       _ Budget           ­­–– Cemetery    __ Carmine Guica Young Historians

Donations are always welcome and can be designated as follows:
__ For general purposes                   __ Young Historians                  __Publications
__ Archeological Activities                _ Museum & Archival             __ Special Events
__ Rankin Fund                             __  Williams Fund                             __ Solzhenitsyn Project
__ Other (please specify)                   __ Cemetery Restoration           __ Preservation Projects
    
 

Wednesday, August 1, 2018

CHS Briefs August 1, 2018


This is going to be a short brief since we’ll be publishing the quarterly newsletter in a few weeks, however, we are thrilled to let you know that the McEnaney’s amazing blueberries are once again ripe and ready for picking. As CHS board member Bruce will tell you, “they are the best ever as you pick them yourself.” Proceeds from the picking goes towards the CTES 6th graders trip to Sturbridge Village and the Carmine Guica Young Historians program.

The McEnaneys blueberry patch is located at 354 Miner Rd. just over the Cavendish line in Chester. It's  off Smokeshire, which is off route 103. Berries are $3 a pound . Thank you Bruce and Betty for your ongoing generosity. The kids love this trip. 

WHAT WE’RE DOING
Bob Naess & Dave Stern with "the doors"
Museum: The doors have posed more than one challenge this summer to Dave Stern and Bob Naess but they are making progress and with any luck they’ll be installed this month.

Carmine Guica Young Historians: CHS is now working with the After School Program (ASP) to offer a Roots camp for two weeks in August. The first week will focus on how first peoples lived off the land while the second week will provide “hands on history” for life in Cavendish for European settlers.

The state has changed the curriculum requirements so CHS has begun working with the teachers in addressing programing ideas for the up coming school year.

Solzhenitsyn: We’re entertaining people from around the world as they visit Cavendish during the 100th anniversary of Solzhenitsyn’s birth. CHS has a number of speaking engagements leading up to the anniversary on Dec. 11. An evolving calendar for the months ahead includes:
• September 7-8: Reading Solzhenitsyn: An International Conference Margo Caulfield will be speaking on Sept 7 as part of the program for teachers. Her talk will be “The Stories behind the Quotes: Using Solzhenitsyn's Writings for 21st Century Students.”

• October 15: Publication of “Between Two Millstones, Book 1.”  Fast-paced, absorbing, and as compelling as the earlier installments of his memoir The Oak and the Calf (1975), Between Two Millstones begins on February 12, 1974, when Solzhenitsyn found himself forcibly expelled to Frankfurt, West Germany, as a result of the publication in the West of The Gulag Archipelago. Solzhenitsyn moved to Zurich, Switzerland, for a time and was considered the most famous man in the world, hounded by journalists and reporters. During this period, he found himself untethered and unable to work while he tried to acclimate to his new surroundings. There are passages on Solzhenitsyn’s family and their property in Cavendish, Vermont, whose forested hillsides and harsh winters evoked his Russian homeland, and where he could finally work undisturbed on his ten-volume history of the Russian Revolution, The Red Wheel.

• November 15: Vermont Historical Society at the Marsh room, Billings Building at University of Vermont.  Presentation by Margo Caulfield “I Wrote and Waited": Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s Life in Cavendish, VT

• Margo will also be doing a presentation for the Oshler Center for Life Long Learning at Dartmouth. Date to be announced.

• The Solzhenitsyn exhibit continues at the Vermont Historical Society Museum in Montpelier until October.

SAVE THE DATE
Sept: 9 (Sunday): Annual Phineas Gage Talk & Walk-Met at the Museum at 2 pm. Wear comfortable walking shoes. The accident site is a little over ¾ of a mile from the Museum

HOW YOU CAN HELP
If you can help with any of the following, please contact CHS margocaulfield@icloud.com; 802-226-7807 or PO Box 472, Cavendish, VT 05142

• Baby Boomers: Recently CHS acquired a fan from the 1950s and it has sparked a conversation that we have far more examples of life in 1800s Cavendish then we do from more recent times. If you have items you would like to donate, CHS is working on a “Life in Cavendish-Baby Boomer Style.”

• CHS is looking for new board members as well as volunteers who can help with various activities.

Monday, July 2, 2018

CHS Briefs July, 2018

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Please also check the Cavendish VT Facebook page for photo albums of various CHS activities.

Craig Rankin's Plant List
Vermont is now experiencing its all to brief 2nd season-the 4th of July (the other season is winter). With temps in the 90s and a high heat index, we adjusted the Annual Plant Sale to an expanded “early bird,” from 5-7 pm Friday and from 8-noon the day of the sale. While we’ve had a special “left overs” sale on Sunday, it’s too hot for the plants and the customers.

When the 4th is mid week, its hard to predict which weekend people consider the “4th of July weekend,” so sales are generally down as fewer people are here. It spite of that it was great to see so many friends and former customers. A very special thank you to our plant team-Svetlana and Kem Phillips, Pang Ting, Pieter van Schaik and all those who donated plants for the sale-Angela Assermely, Barbara Dickey, Wendy Regier, Lou Choiniere, Anna Shapiro and Jen Leak. Special thanks to Ron Bates for providing us with lemonade and Town Manager Brendan McNamara and Randy Shimp, municipal water operator, who worked with us trying to resolve our water issue.

There was considerable discussion about changing the sale to Memorial Day and offering a variety of new options. If you have any suggestions, please e-mail or call the numbers below.

So if you are wondering if we’re setting a record with our current heat wave, board member Bruce McEnaney provided the following information, “Vermont's highest recorded temperature occurred on July 4th, 1911. It was 105 degrees f. It was in Vernon, south of Brattleboro. They survived. We will too!”

Coming soon is the fabulous and wonderful blueberry picking at the McEnaney Farm. Bruce and Betty do an amazing job with the best blueberries-Bruce will assure you it’s because you pick them yourself. As soon as we have a date, we’ll let you know.


WHAT WE’VE BEEN DOING
Carmine Guica Young Historians: Though the school year has ended, we fit a lot into the last two months, which you can see from the Cavendish Facebook Albums.
-       May Day at CTES


These activities would not be possible without our incredible volunteers: Pang Ting, Bruce McEnaney, Timothy McEnaney, Denise Hughes, Trevor Barlow, Em Benoit, and Doris Eddy. Thank you!

We are now working with the after school program (ASP) and will be collaborating with them on a “Roots” Camp. The first week will feature the skills of the first peoples who lived in Vermont while the second week focuses on the first European settlers. The camp runs Aug 13 through Aug 24.

CTES has a new principal Debra Beaupre, who we are looking forward to working with. As we wish George Thomson the best on his retirement, he has already agreed to help chaperone some of our trips.

While it maybe 90 + in the shade, we’re already experimenting with woven paper heart designs as this year’s holiday theme will be Scandinavia.

Solzhenitsyn: It’s wonderful to be visiting with people from all over the world who are interested in learning more about Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s time in Cavendish. In addition to Cavendish’s exhibit, the Vermont Historical Society’s Museum exhibit Solzhenitsyn in Vermont in Montpelier is open until Oct. 2018 in the Jackie Calder Gallery. Below are recent interviews involving CHS.

Museum & Stone Church: Wish we could say the doors to the Museum have been installed, and probably no one wishes that more than Dave Stern and Bob Naess, who set aside time each week to work on this project. However, we can take one item off the “to do list,” as Carl Liener installed his beautifully painted sign for the Museum. The original was destroyed in the fall when someone drove into it. Carl is currently recovering from a motorcycle accident so we wish him a speedy recovery.

Svetlana Phillips, with the assistance of her husband Kem, continues to work her magic with the planter in front of the Museum. We enjoy how it continually changes.

WHAT’S COMING UP
Museum: The Museum is open every Sunday from 2-4 pm. You can arrange to visit at another time by e-mailing margocaulfield@icloud.com or calling 802-226-7807

Annual Phineas Gage Walk and Talk: Sept. 9, (Sunday) 2-4 pm at the Museum

HOW YOU CAN HELP
If you can help with any of the following, please contact CHS margocaulfield@icloud.com; 802-226-7807 or PO Box 472, Cavendish, VT 05142

• Painters, scrappers and repairers: We need volunteers willing to do some basic carpentry to repair the banisters of the Museum. We will also need painters for the steps and banister.

• CHS is looking for new board members as well as volunteers who can help with various activities.

Monday, May 28, 2018

CHS Spring 2018 Newslette


UPCOMING EVENTS


May 27 (Sunday): The CHS Museum opens for the season. Hours are Sundays, 2-4 from Memorial Day weekend to Columbus Day Weekend (Oct. 7). Other times can be arranged by contacting CHS at the numbers above.

May 30 (Wednesday): Memorial Day celebrated in Cavendish

June 30 (Saturday): Annual Plant Sale. If you have items you would like to donate to the sale, please contact CHS at the numbers above.

July 28 (Saturday): Cavendish Town Wide Tag Sale. CHS will be on the Proctorsville Green

September 9 (Sunday): Annual Phineas Gage Walk and Talk, 2-4 pm. The “talk” begins at 2 pm at the Museum and will be followed by the walk to the scene of the accident, with stops at the site of the boarding house where Gage stayed as well as the surgery of Dr. Harlow.

ANNUAL PLANT SALE

CHS’s annual plant sale takes place on June 30 (Saturday), from 9-1, in front of the CHS Museum in Cavendish. Our Carmine Guica Young Historians, from Cavendish Town Elementary School’s 5th grade have been planting a wide variety of herbs- sweet basil, oregano, thyme, parsley, English lavender, cilantro, sage, and rosemary for the sale. There will also be lots of hosta and a variety of other perennials, as well as container tomato plants. If you have plants you would like to donate to the sale, you can drop them off at the Museum the day of the sale, or contact us at the numbers above and we can help with transplanting

RESILIENT LIVES: SOLZHENITSYN & GAGE

With 2018 marking the 100th birthday of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn and the 170th anniversary of Phineas Gage’s accident, Cavendish is celebrating two of its most historical figures.

On September 13, 1848, Phineas Gage, a foreman, was working with his crew excavating rocks in preparing the bed for the Rutland and Burlington Railroad in Cavendish. An accidental explosion of a charge Gage had set blew his tamping iron through his head. Not only did he survive the accident, but he lived for 12 more years and became the first documented case of traumatic brain injury (TBI), ushering in a new understanding of the brain.

Born on Dec. 11, 1918, Alexander Solzhenitsyn was a soldier in the Red Army fighting on the front lines of WWII when he was arrested for writing “disrespectful” comments about Stalin to a friend. Sentenced to eight years in the labor camps and then permanent exile, his experience was the basis for “One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich,” “Gulag Archipelago,” “Cancer Ward,” “In the First Circle,” and many other books, poems, plays and essays. While his writing won him the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1970, it also resulted in his being exiled from his Russian homeland. He and his family spent almost 18 of their 20 years in exile living in Cavendish.

Other than their Cavendish connections, and sharing a significant anniversary in 2018, what else could these two men have in common?
• They both lived for extended periods of time in countries other than where they were born-Gage in Chile and Solzhenitsyn in the United States.
• Both nearly died, Gage from his injury and subsequent infections and Solzhenitsyn from metastatic cancer, and an assassination attempt by the KGB. 
• Both played a role in changing history-Gage’s injury and recovery was the gateway to the modern understanding of the brain and the field of neurology. Solzhenitsyn’s writings contributed to the end of the Soviet Union.

One of their most significant commonalities maybe their resiliency-that ability to adapt over time to life-changing situations and stressful conditions.

The American Psychological Association has identified five factors that contribute to people becoming resilient.

1.     Having caring and supportive relationships within and outside the family: Research indicates that having good relationships with close family, friends, neighbors or others is possibly the most important factor for developing resilience.  Accepting help and support as well as assisting others in their time of need is of great benefit.
2.     Capacity to make realistic plans and take steps to carry them out. Recognizing that change is part of life, stressful events happen and understanding that crisis isn’t necessarily insurmountable is key. Accepting circumstances-e.g. having a brain injury, being imprisoned or exiled-can help to focus on circumstance that can be altered by taking decisive actions.
3.     Positive View of yourself and confidence in strengths and abilities: People often learn from adversity, recognizing their own growth as a result of loss.
4.     Skills in communication and problem solving
5.     Capacity to manage strong feelings and impulses

Below is a brief overview of how Solzhenitsyn and Gage met this criteria. Note that while we have Solzhenitsyn’s writings, his family, as well as various biographies, articles and essays to drawn from, unfortunately, much less is known about Gage.

Gage: Within hours of his injury, his family immediately gathered in Cavendish. Throughout  his life, Gage’s family was an important touchstone for him. The Gages traveled by boat from Boston to San Francisco, with Phineas disembarking in Santiago, Chili, where he worked as a coachmen. When he became ill-most likely the development of epilepsy from his brain injury-Gage returned to his family in San Francisco, where he ultimately died.

Once he returned home after his accident, Gage knew he had to make a living. He recognized that he was a curiosity so he spent several years “exhibiting” himself. The daguerreotype shows him as well dressed and self confidant, though he was blind in one eye. He carried his tamping rod with him everywhere he went and even had it engraved- This is the bar that was shot through the head of Mr. Phinehas P. Gage.” The engraver misspelled the name.

Again and again Gage would show himself as resourceful. Whether he was exhibiting himself as a curiosity,  working as a stage coach driver, or finding work after he joined his family in San Francisco, Gage was rarely without work even though by today’s standards he would have been considered compromised.

Poor impulse control and being quick to anger are certainly characteristic of the type of TBI Gage sustained, yet to drive a coach for as long as he did, first at what is now the Hanover Inn in Hanover, NH and then in Santiago would have required that he learn to master these behaviors.

Gage drove a Concord coach in Santiago for seven years, which required excellent cognitive and motor skills. An 1860 advertisement says the 13 hour, 110 mile journey from Valparaiso to Santiago started at 4am.  Passengers paid $10.00 for the journey and were allowed 50 pounds of luggage.  Before arriving at the starting station at 4 a.m. Phineas would have had to check (if not actually perform) the feeding, grooming and harnessing of the horses.  Once there he would have had to load the luggage, collect the fares, give change, make the passengers comfortable, and keep them so for the next 13 hours.  He would have driven back to Valparaiso 24 hours after arrival in Santiago. Psychosocial Adaptation http://www.uakron.edu/gage/adaptation.dot

Dr. Henry Trevitt, of Valparasio knew Gage well and reported he was engaged in stage driving; and that he was in the enjoyment of good health, with no impairment whatever of his mental faculties. Not only did Gage have to learn the complexities of his job, but he would have also had to adapt to a completely new way of life Chile. It is possible that his highly structured occupation as coach driver helped to “rewire his brain,” much as current rehabilitation programs, based on “neuroplasticity,” provide today’s TBI patients.

An interesting side note, it would be a cousin of Gage’s, Fred “Rusty” Gage, that would pioneer the field of neuroplasticity-the human brain is capable of generating nerve cells throughout life. Until then it was believed that humans are born with all their brain cells and lose them as they age. Rusty Gage’s research is paving the way for not only new treatments for those with TBI, but also stroke and Alzheimer’s Disease. When asked about tips for a successful research career, Rusty Gage stated, “Don’t plan too far in advance; be open to new opportunities and ways of looking at the world.” And when asked what did he think his biggest accomplishments outside of the lab would be, he noted, “Having a family that apparently still loves me.”  It would seem that the Gage family understands the basics of resiliency.

Solzhenitsyn: Even though his father died in a hunting accident before he was born, he was much loved by his mother and her family. In fact, his mother never remarried as she didn’t want a step father that would be too hard on him.

While living in Cavendish, Solzhenitsyn was surrounded with strong support by his wife, Natalia, her mother and their sons. Everyone was involved in the “family business” as Solzhenitsyn spent his time writing “The Red Wheel.” The children would type, his wife would edit, and his mother-in-law had the precise task of carefully turning every letter into Cyrillic script, since the IBM Selectric typewriters did not have a Russian alphabet.

Solzhenitsyn returned Cavendish’s gift of privacy and sanctuary by offering safety to other’s in exile, including the Soviet dissident Aleksandr Ginsburg. In addition, the royalties in the West from “Gulag Archipelago,” were used to establish an aid program, the Solzhenitsyn Fund, to help Soviet political prisoners and their families.  

His experience in “external conditions of unfreedom” (being in the forced labor camps) helped him formulate the idea that true freedom is possible even in the most restrictive human situations. He wrote in From Under the Rubble, “We are creatures born with inner freedom of will, freedom of choice-the most part of freedom is a gift to us at birth. External, or social freedom is very desirable for the sake of undistorted growth, but it is no more than a condition, a medium, and to regard it as the object of our existence is nonsense. We can firmly assert our freedom even in external conditions of unfreedom.”

Solzhenitsyn expressed his inner freedom and individuality by continuing to write while in prison. When he could not write prose, he memorized verse. His role as writer and truth teller was so central to who he was that when he was told that his cancer had returned and only had a few weeks to live, he proceeded to hide his writings in bottles, burying them in the hopes they would be found.

Through his writings, Solzhenitsyn provides clues to how he and others endured life in the camps. In various novels, his characters engage in various forms of “mindfulness” -focusing on the present moment in a non judgmental way. Research is now showing that mindfulness breeds resilience. “Satiety depends not at all on how much we eat, but on how we eat. It's the same with happiness, the very same...happiness doesn't depend on how many external blessings we have snatched from life. It depends only on our attitude toward them. There's a saying about it in the Taoist ethic: 'Whoever is capable of contentment will always be satisfied.”  In the First Circle

In  “One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich” at the close of day, the “zek,” (prisoner) engages in what is now encouraged by positive psychologists-acknowledging the good that is in your daily life. Shukhov felt pleased with life as he went to sleep.  A lot of good things had happened that day.  He hadn't been thrown in the hole.  The gang hadn't been dragged off to Sotsgorodok.  He'd swiped the extra gruel at dinnertime.  The foreman had got a good rate for the job.  He'd enjoyed working on the wall.  He hadn't been caught with the blade at the search point.  He'd earned a bit from Tsezar that evening.  And he'd bought his tobacco.

BECOME A MEMBER, RENEW YOUR MEMBERSHIP, DONATE

If you have not joined the Cavendish Historical Society, need to renew your membership, and/or would like to be a volunteer, please complete the form below and sending a check, payable to CHS, to CHS, PO Box 472, Cavendish, VT 05142. All contributions are tax deductible.

Name: _______________________________________

Address: _______________________________________________


Phone Number: _____________________    E-Mail: ____________________________
Membership Level
__ Individual Member $10  ___ Senior Member 65+ $5  ___ Sustaining Member $500
__ Household Member $15  ___ Contributing Member $250                            

Volunteer
___ I would be interested in serving, as a volunteer .I would be interested in serving on the following committee(s):__ Program Planning  __ Fundraising    __ Building (Museum)
__Archives                       _ Budget           ­­–– Cemetery    __ Carmine Guica Young Historians

Donations are always welcome and can be designated as follows:
__ For general purposes                   __ Young Historians                  __Publications
__ Archeological Activities                _ Museum & Archival             __ Special Events
__ Rankin Fund                             __  Williams Fund                             __ Solzhenitsyn Project
__ Other (please specify)                   __ Cemetery Restoration           __ Preservation Projects