‘We’re just getting started!’
HVRHS Class of 2021

FALLS VILLAGE — The Class of 2021 at Housatonic Valley Regional High School’s (HVRHS) graduation ceremony was as traditional as could be managed, given the restrictions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.
The graduation was held under a large tent on the grass in front of the high school on Thursday evening, June 17.
HVRHS Principal Ian Strever noted that the seniors specifically asked for the most traditional event, and contrasted this year’s graduation with last year’s, a drive-in event held at Lime Rock Park.
Strever praised the seniors for their adaptability and willingness to work with the administrators during the pandemic.
“Everything has been different,” he said. “And they’ve adjusted to every challenge.”
Strever said valuable lessons can be taken from the pandemic experience.
“We learned something about control. We have a lot less of it than we think.”
Salutatorian Mia Tittmann said her success in high school was not a solo endeavor.
“I did not do it without the help of many people,” she said. “Our collective efforts will make change. Please keep working together to make this world — our world — a little brighter.”
Region One School District Superintendent Lisa Carter started by saying how nice it was to see everybody “in 3D.”
“Kudos to all of you for your perseverance and patience over the last 16 months,” she said.
And she reminded the seniors that their peers have all been through the same disruptions.
“You will be poised to rebound from this experience with confidence.”
Former class president Aidan McCarthy said that looking back, her school career “feels like a sprint.”
“We’ve had great triumphs and failures,” she continued. “And we maintained a sense of community.”
Class president Sara Upson said during the pandemic the seniors missed out on things like the prom and field trips.
But “this day isn’t about what the pandemic took from us. It’s about what we took from it.”
She said there was only one way to meet the challenges of the pandemic — or anything else: “Head on.”
Essayist Emerson Rinehart had the crowd laughing as he issued a “confession,” admitting to damaging a ceiling tile in the auditorium, promoting a rumor that a teacher was actually a “Lizard Man,” and using a bench as a toboggan, among other misdemeanors.
Commencement speaker Kianjai Huggan (HVRHS Class of 2017) told the graduates to “open yourselves up” as they move through the next phase of their lives.
She said when she first came to HVRHS from Georgia, she resisted joining the FFA.
But she did join, and counts her participation as a valuable experience.
She urged the seniors to remember that “there is so much we don’t know.”
Realizing this will “allow you to see the variability in people’s lives.”
“I am confident each of you will be an advocate for positive change.”
Valedictorian Charlotte Clulow said she struggled to find the “golden words” for her remarks, only to “realize I have yet to find answers.”
She praised her classmates for their hard work and accomplishments in and out of school.
“Are we there yet? No, we’re not. We’re just getting started.”
Class of 2021 Awards:
Good Sportsmanship Medal: Micah Matsudaira, Marguerite Bickford
Good Citizenship Medal: Justine Allyn and Brandon Sorrell
Chamberlain Arts Achievement Award: Cassidy Knutson and Aidan McCarthy
Community Award of Merit: The faculty, staff and administration of HVRHS (accepted by Social Studies teacher Peter Vermilyea).
HVRHS Class of 2021 essayist Emerson Rinehart, left, with class salutatorian Mia Tittmann, center, and valedictorian Charlotte Clulow. Photo by Alexander Wilburn
Senior Jacob Ellington of Sharon accepted his diploma from his father (and Housatonic Valley Regional High School Network Administrator) Mike Ellington. Photo by Alexander Wilburn
Built in 1820, 1168 Bangall Amenia Road sold for $875,000 on July 31 with the transfer recorded in August. It has a Millbrook post office and is located in the Webutuck school district.
STANFORD — The Town of Stanford with nine transfers in two months reached a median price in August of $573,000 for single family homes, still below Stanford’s all-time median high in August 2024 of $640,000.
At the beginning of October there is a large inventory of single-family homes listed for sale with only six of the 18 homes listed for below the median price of $573,000 and seven above $1 million.
July transfers
79 Ernest Road — 4 bedroom/2.5 bath home on 6.87 acres in 2 parcels sold to Matthew C. Marinetti for $1,225,000.
29 Drake Road — 3 bedroom/3.5 bath home on 2 acres sold to Harper Montgomery for $850,000.
6042 Route 82 — 4 bedroom/2 bath home on 1.09 acres sold to Spencer Thompson for $795,000.
125 Tick Tock Way — 3 bedroom/2.5 bath ranch on 1.9 acres sold to Fleur Touchard for $475,000.
August transfers
102 Prospect Hill Road — 3 bedroom/2 bath home on 6.35 acres sold to Karl Creighton Pfister for $565,000.
252 Ernest Road — 2 bedroom/1 bath cottage on .85 acres sold to Meg Bumie for $465,000.
1196 Bangall Amenia Road — 4 bedroom/2.5 bath home on 2.16 acres sold to Roderick Alleyne for $875,000.
Hunns Lake Road (#759929) — 59.1 acres of residential land sold to Argos Farm LLC for $3,325,000.
* Town of Stanford recorded real estate transfers from July 1 to August 31 provided by Dutchess County Real Property Office monthly transfer reports. Details on each property from Dutchess Parcel Access - properties with an # indicate location on Dutchess Parcel Access. Market data from One Key MLS and Infosparks .Compiled by Christine Bates, Real Estate Advisor with William Pitt Sotheby’s International Realty, Licensed in Connecticut and New York.
Hunt club members and friends gathered near Pugsley Hill at the historic Wethersfield Estate and Gardens in Amenia for the opening meet of the 2025-2026 Millbrook Hunt Club season on Saturday, Oct. 4. Foxhunters took off from Wethersfield’s hilltop gardens just after 8 a.m. for a hunting jaunt around Amenia’s countryside.
Joining in the fun at the dedication of the new pollinator pathway garden at The Millbrook Library on Saturday, Oct. 4, local expert gardener Maryanne Snow Pitts provides information about a planting to Lorraine Mirabella of Poughkeepsie.
MILLBROOK — Participating in a patchwork of libraries that have planted pollinator pathway gardens to attract insects and birds to their native plantings was one of the accomplishments being celebrated at the dedication of a new pollinator garden at the Millbrook Library on Saturday, Oct. 4.
“A lot of work went into it,” said Emma Sweeney, past President of the Millbrook Garden Club, who started the local library’s initiative two years ago.
The Pollinator Pathway program is a national effort to plant native plants that native insects depend upon for sustenance and preferred plants for their own seasonal reproduction.
Jana Hogan of Ridgefield, Connecticut, Executive Director of the Pollinator Pathway program, was on hand to present a plaque to the library for its successful participation.
“A garden is not just a garden,” said garden designer Andy Durbridge of Wassaic, designer of the library’s garden. “It may serve as a model for other gardens along the line.”
Speaking to the 50 visitors at the dedication, Durbridge said that the library’s garden has a mission, that it is a working garden, planned to serve insects and birds over their seasons. The earliest plants support pollinators, while the full range of plants continues to serve the needs of those they attract, offering habitat, shelter and food.
A pollinator garden is akin to a prairie, rather than a formalized European garden, Durbridge noted.
The garden project was supported by the library’s Friends group using funds raised during the Holiday Silent Auction and ongoing book sale. A grant from the Millbrook Garden Club also provided support.
Amenia Town Hall on Route 22.
AMENIA — After gathering comments from the Planning Board and the Zoning Board of Appeals, as it considers adding alternate members to those boards, the Town Board discussed possible changes to local laws governing those boards at its meeting on Friday, Oct. 3. The meeting date, usually on a Thursday, had been changed to accommodate a holiday.
In recent weeks Town Board attorney Ian Lindars has been compiling comments from the affected boards along with comments from the Town Board. The new laws may bring the appointment of two alternate members to each board. Alternate members are likely to be required to attend all meetings and be prepared to be seated if needed and be familiar with the applications being discussed. They would also need to take training required of all board members.
Lindars will prepare a draft of the new local laws to be reviewed by the Town Board and the affected boards.
As the Town Board begins work on the town’s annual budget negotiation process and anticipating an increase in some budget lines to accommodate major projects, the board unanimously approved three resolutions. The first will override the tax levy limit imposed on municipalities by the state of New York, a limit generally tied to the rate of inflation.
A public hearing on the proposal to override the levy limit was set for Thursday, November 6, beginning at 7 p.m. at the Town Hall.