Date: Fri 19-Dec-1997
Date: Fri 19-Dec-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: DOTTIE
Quick Words:
history-Newtown-Cruson
Full Text:
Rural Newtown Remembered In Photographic Anthology
(with cuts, book pages)
BY DOROTHY EVANS
Old wood to burn,
Old wine to drink,
Old books to read,
Old friends to keep.
-- Ancient Cornish prayer
And, we might add, old photographs to study.
Actually, some of the best fireside reading this holiday might not be the new
P.D. James mystery or the latest Elizabeth George thriller -- though we hope
you'll find those under your tree as well.
This year, wish for history not mystery and maybe Santa will give you a copy
of Town Historian Dan Cruson's new book, titled Newtown, Images of America .
Published by Arcadia of Dover, N.H., in early December, the 128-page anthology
was compiled by Mr Cruson to provide as complete a photographic record as
possible of Newtown during the historical period between the Civil War and
World War II.
"There are a few benchmark photos that most everyone has seen... and some new
ones that they haven't. It's all here in one place organized so you can thumb
through it," Mr Cruson said with obvious satisfaction.
The 30-year town resident and past Historical Society president said that
after spending so many years researching and writing about Newtown's past and
poring over old photographs with magnifying glass at hand, he was especially
pleased to finally see those images from the past gathered together in book
form.
"Believe it or not, we've actually got a picture record of all four
flagpoles," he said, and one rare photograph taken in 1870 of two Trinity
churches standing side by side -- the 1792 white clapboard version and its
stone successor that was erected nearly a century later.
The more than 200 black-and-white photographs were taken from several sources,
Mr Cruson said, including the files of the Newtown Historical Society, the
group that commissioned him to undertake the project last summer.
The photographs are arranged and explained in a narrative sequence that serves
Mr Cruson's purpose well of portraying the gradual process of growth and
change as it affected residents of Newtown, Sandy Hook and other outlying
communities like Botsford and Hawleyville.
"When I look at some of the old dirt roads and views of the open countryside,
I get a real feeling of another time and another way of life," Mr Cruson said.
Scenes which he found particularly intriguing were the summer cottage
communities of Riverside, harvesting ice on Foundry Pond, the 1912 war
maneuvers and the 1928 equivalent of highway snow removal showing a work crew
with shovels clearing Sugar Street by hand.
Copies of Newtown, Images of America , may be purchased for $16.99 each at The
Book Review in Sand Hill Plaza, at Barnes & Noble on Backus Avenue in Danbury,
and by calling the Newtown Historical Society at 426-5937.
