Thank you!
Your support is sustaining the future of local news in our communities.

Marking this Moment in Local History

Marking this Moment in Local History
Historical societies and arts organizations are asking people to document this odd time in world history, when the coronavirus has shut down towns and cities. This photo of Millerton taken a month ago shows an eerily empty village center. 
Photo by Kaitlin Lyle

Area history and arts organizations are beginning to record the ways the coronavirus is changing our world. 

Edward Downey, president of the North East Historical Society and the town of North East’s historian (the town of North East, N.Y., includes the village of Millerton), sent out an email blast recently  asking people in town “to write down or orally record their thoughts and experiences as our community makes its way through this challenge. Take photos that document this period. And when you do, please send a copy to the North East Historical Society, P.O. Box 727, Millerton, NY 12546 or email me  eddowney12@gmail.com.”

The Dutchess County and New York state historians are also collecting data, as of course is the Connecticut Historical Society (CHS), which posted at its website (www.chs.org) a request for: writings, signage, photos that document the world around you as well as drawings, paintings “and other forms of art you’re creating and documenting and short videos.” Find instructions on how to  make submissions at www.chs.org/covidinct/. 

In New York, for the state and county sites go to www.dutchessny.gov/Departments/History/Documenting-COVID-19-in-Dutchess-... and www.aphnys.org/historians-start-documenting-covid-19.

If you are an artist and want to create work while in quarantine, check the ongoing shows online at Standard Space gallery in Sharon, Conn. (www.standardspace.net) and Millerton’s Re Institute (www.thereinstitute.com).

The Northwest Connecticut Arts Council is also curating an online show of work created during quarantine, called “Resiliency.” Work should be sent with the subject line “VIRTUAL GALLERY SUBMISSION” to info@artsnwct.org. For more information on what type of work to send, go to www.artsnwct.org.

Latest News

Sharon Farm Market owner says store will remain open amid closure rumors

Fernando Nottebohn says he appreciates Sharon Farm Market as part of a weekly circuit he does from his home in Lithgow, New York, that also includes Paley’s Farm Market

Photo by Alec linden
"We're going to fix the store."
— Chris Choe, co-owner of Sharon Farm Market

SHARON – Despite months of speculation fueled by half-empty shelves, inventory shortages and the planned departures of two longtime businesses, Sharon Farm Market is not closing, according to owner Chris Choe.

“We’re not shutting down,” Choe said, adding that he and his wife, Kim, are planning a series of upgrades they hope will transform the market over the coming months. Choe said they expect to receive a new 20-year lease from the property’s landlords and are moving forward with plans to revitalize the business.

Keep ReadingShow less

Smithfield pops

Smithfield pops

Celebrating the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence, the 14-member Smithfield Chamber Orchestra presented “Our American Composers,”a Spring Pops Concert at the Smithfield Church on Saturday, May 30. Part of the Bang Family Concert Series, the sixth annual pops concert played to a full house under the direction of Michelle Demko, serving her first year as Music Director.

Amenia affordable housing subdivision moves closer to environmental approval
Amenia Town Hall on Route 22.
Photo by Nathan Miller

AMENIA — The Planning Board moved closer to completing the environmental review of the proposed Cascade Creek subdivision during its regular meeting on Wednesday, May 27, agreeing to consider a formal environmental determination at its June meeting.

The discussion centered on completion of the Environmental Assessment Form, a key component of the project’s review under New York’s State Environmental Quality Review Act.

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

Yerger Johnstone

Yerger Johnstone

SHARON — Yerger Johnstone, former managing director in the mergers and acquisitions department at Morgan Stanley and a decorated veteran of the Vietnam War, died on April 19, 2026, in Chelmsford, England. He was 86.

Born in Mobile, Alabama, on March 7, 1940, Mr. Johnstone was the son of architect Henry Inge Johnstone, architect, and Kathleen Yerger Johnstone, the noted nature writer and civic leader after whom Alabama’s state seashell, Johnstone’s Junonia, is named. He graduated from Murphy High School in Mobile in 1958, received his bachelor’s degree from the University of the South at Sewanee in 1962, and earned his M.B.A. from the University of Chicago Booth School of Business in 1964.

Keep ReadingShow less

Richard R. Stover

Richard R. Stover

WEST CORNWALL — Richard R. Stover, 82, of West Cornwall, died peacefully at Noble Horizons on May 26, 2026.

Son of the late Robert and Leona (Heinbockel) Stover, Rick was born Feb. 6, 1944 in Edina, Minnesota. He attended the University of Pennsylvania where he majored in Economics and was a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity.

Keep ReadingShow less

Floyd Irving Isham

Floyd Irving Isham

SHARON — Floyd Irving Isham Jr., 87, a longtime area resident, died Tuesday, May 26, 2026, at Sharon Health Care Center in Sharon. Mr. Isham worked for the Tri-Wall Container Corp. in Wassaic, New York, for fifteen years and also worked as a self-employed private caretaker for over twenty-five years, caring for local estates in Shekomeko, Pine Plains and Ancramdale, New York, prior to his retirement.

Born Aug. 25, 1938, in St. George, Vermont, he was the son of the late Floyd Irving and Hazel (Thompson) Isham, Sr. Following his high school years, he enlisted in the United States Navy and served from 1958 until his honorable discharge in 1961. Mr. Isham also served in the Vermont National Guard. On Aug. 11, 1990, in Dover Plains, New York, he married Nancy L. Cross. Mrs. Isham died on July 8, 2005.

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.