Thursday, October 29, 2015

Veterans Day Commemoration Glocester

Posted by Wayne G. Barber

Please join us for a celebration to honor America’s Veterans for their patriotism, love of country and willingness to serve and sacrifice for the common good. Hosted by Jean M. Fecteau, Town Clerk, and Glocester Town Council -- Walter M. O. Steere, III, President; Steven A. Sette; William Reichert, Vice-President; George O. (Buster) Steere; and Edward C. Burlingame
  • Wednesday, November 11, 201511:00am
    Glocester Senior Center, 1210 Putnam Pike, Chepachet, RI

Tuesday, October 27, 2015

Foster Town Council Meeting


Thomas Cobb's latest novel based on 1993 Foster shooting

By Andy Smith
Journal Arts Writer


Frank and Charles Sherman were my cousins, Wayne G.Barber

Thomas Cobb's latest novel based on 1993 Foster shooting.
The former RIC professor, author of "Crazy Heart," based his story on the murder of three teenagers by suspended police officer Robert G. Sabetta Jr.
For Rhode Islanders with good memories, there should be something familiar about the plot of Thomas Cobb's latest novel, "Darkness the Color of Snow 
The novel, published in August, begins with a traffic stop gone bad and a young cop facing disgrace. Something within the cop snaps, and he walks into a garage where some of the young men from the traffic stop are working. He starts shooting.
If that sounds like a 1993 case in Foster, when suspended police officer Robert G. Sabetta Jr. shot and killed three teenagers — Frank Sherman, 16, his brother Charles, 17, and Jeremy Bullock, 19 — at Wilson's Garage on Route 6, that's because Cobb based his novel on the Sabetta case.
"I live in Foster, so I've been thinking about this for a long time," Cobb said. "I didn't know any of the people directly involved in the crime, but when you live in Foster, there's not much more than one degree of separation. I couldn't help but see the damage that was done."
Cobb, 68, a native of the Southwest, retired from teaching at Rhode Island College in 2010. His 1987 novel "Crazy Heart" was adapted into a film in 2009 starring Jeff Bridges, who won the Oscar for best actor for the role.
Cobb said he is in the middle of a trilogy of novels set in his native Arizona. But his literary agent urged him to try something different, and Cobb decided to write a novel loosely based on the Sabetta case.
He tried a first draft of the novel set in Foster. That didn't work.
"When I read it, something was way off. I realized I was not moving on my own, I was letting the [real] story push me," Cobb said.
Cobb said he's never written about the place where he lives, with the exception of a short story set at Triggs Memorial Golf Course in Providence for the anthology "Providence Noir." 
"When I lived in Tucson, I never wrote about Tucson," he said. "I didn't start until after I left."
So to find the setting for "Darkness the Color of Snow," he and his wife, Randy, drove north and west, and ended up in a small town in upstate New York, near the Vermont border. They spent a day or two there to soak up some atmosphere, and Cobb created the fictional town of Lydell, N.Y., for the book.
Cobb said he read a few articles online about Sabetta to refresh his memory. And Cobb stayed true to the basic outline of the Sabetta case: it opens with a traffic stop, and climaxes in a triple murder.
In between, however, Cobb crafted his own story: "I'm not a non-fiction writer. I'm a novelist," he said.
There's a key difference near the beginning of the book. In real life, Sabetta had been accused of hitting Frank Sherman in the face with a flashlight, knocking out two front teeth.
In Cobb's novel, police officer Ronald Forbert tries to arrest Matt Laferiere during a traffic stop. The two struggle and Laferiere stumbles into the road, where he is struck and killed by an oncoming car. 

Saturday, October 24, 2015

History ?

Posted by Wayne G. Barber

After attending a presentation on the village of Bridgeton, Rhode Island in the 1800's this week I listened to a statement of a three year old Knife manufacture that was in business and later burned to the ground without a trace of their wares. After doing some research I just wonder if this successful cutlery company moved  to nearby Massachusetts and started over ?
Cutlery Company

The Harrington Cutlery Company was established in 1818, in Southbridge, Massachusetts by Henry Harrington, a New England craftsman and inventor. The Harrington Cutlery company was the first cutlery manufacturing company established in the United States. Harrington manufactured surgical equipment, shoe knives and firearms. Some of his firearms are on display at the Old Sturbridge Village Museum in Sturbridge, MA. In 1884, Harrington introduced the Dexter trade name. Named after one of his sons, Dexter Harrington, the Dexter line of kitchen and table cutlery became known for its high quality in American homes and restaurants.[1]

John Russell Cutlery Company

The John Russell Cutlery Company was established in 1834, in Greenfield, MA by John Russell. Russell built his water powered factory on the banks of the Green River. He first produced chisels and axe heads, but as the company grew, he began to produce large quantities of high quality hunting knives to supply the needs of the American frontier.[2]

Russell Harrington Cutlery Company[edit]

In 1933, the Harrington Cutlery Company and the John Russell Cutlery Company merged to form the Russell Harrington Cutlery Company. The newly formed company was relocated to its present location in Southbridge, Massachusetts.[3]

Dexter-Russell, Inc.

In 2001, the company changed its name to Dexter-Russell, Inc. to reflect its history.[1]

Rhode Island's Only Covered Bridge

Posted by Wayne G. Barber

Rhode Island's only covered bridge is in Foster. Although it is one of the nation's newest and smallest (36 feet long) covered bridges, it has a dramatic history. In the late fall of 1992, Swamp Meadow Covered Bridge, a latticed-truss, one-lane bridge, was built over Hemlock Brook, much to the delight of locals who took seriously the fact that Rhode Island was the only New England state without a covered bridge. On a September night one year later, teenage vandals doused the bridge with gasoline and, with the flick of a lighter, destroyed it. The townspeople were so distraught that they weren't sure they wanted to rebuild, however, calls, money, and offers of support came from all over Rhode Island. A few months later, volunteers began the process that ultimately led to rebuilding. Dedicated in November 1994, the new bridge resembles an authentic 19th-century covered bridge. To visit: From Route 6, go south on Route 94; turn right on Central Pike.

Thursday, October 22, 2015

STILLWATER PLAYGROUND PARK

Posted by Wayne G. Barber
 YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO A CEREMONIAL GRAND OPENING OF
THE NEW STILLWATER MILL PLAYGROUND
BEGINNING PROMPTLY AT
10:00 A.M. ON SATURDAY, HALLOWEEN, OCTOBER 31ST.
AT THE
BURRILLVILLE FARMER’S MARKET PAVILION


INCLEMEMNT WEATHER LOCATION WILL BE AT
THE JESSE M SMITH LIBRARY MEETING ROOM