25 years: It’s been an honor to serve our communities

If readers take note of a small item in last week’s column by Norma Bosworth, Turning Back The Pages, they will notice that I am celebrating the beginning of my tenure (this time around) at The Lakeville Journal. “This time around” refers to the fact that I spent a few years on the production side of the newspaper when it was being printed in Lakeville, in the early 1990s. Norma’s column notes my hiring as associate publisher in the 25-years-ago space.

Let’s consider those 25 years and the way in which the industry of newspapering has dramatically changed in that time frame. The odds were definitely against the survival of an independent and independently owned local news group during those years, when so many in the region were bought up by large conglomerates and underfunded or closed, even before the desperate financial challenges of more recent years. Yet here, miraculously, The Lakeville Journal and Millerton News still are. 

The Winsted Journal, which was begun by this company in 1996, was unfortunately shut down in 2017, after our trying to find every way we could to make it work financially. We still believe that Winsted is a community that should have its own newspaper, and wish Ralph Nader and Andy Thibault the best as they begin a new venture there. Here’s hoping the time is now right.

Some are thanking me for saving the two newspapers that remain for their communities, yet of course the truth is more complicated. Talk about a team effort. Every year the company had to be reevaluated to pull it along into the next year, acknowledging the extremely challenging finances and finding new ways to save money yet still pay our amazing staff enough to make it by in these expensive communities. It was kind of like a startup every year. So it took some creative thinking and action.

Luckily, our owners from 1995 to 2021, The Lakeville Journal Company LLC board of directors, were flexible and supportive of community journalism in a way that made our continuation possible. They believed in what we were doing, and we owe them the utmost gratitude for sticking with a losing, but vital, resource for the region. I will mention especially William E. Little, Jr., of Lakeville for keeping us afloat throughout that time, along with the late Whitney Ellsworth of Salisbury and the late Robert Estabrook of Lakeville. Such accomplished people, these and all on our board, who were so willing to give of themselves financially, intellectually and emotionally in order to help us maintain the service we provide for our readers.

Then, in 2019, when there was an urgent need to find another path for survival, our readers stepped up to support us going into 2020, a year that would become one of the most challenging of our long tenure due to the pandemic. If not for that support, these publications would not have made it. Then, receiving more and more votes of confidence and financial support from the community, we strove to achieve nonprofit status. Once this was done, our current Lakeville Journal Foundation board of directors energetically stepped forward to support us in the next phase of life for local journalism in the region.

I feel the utmost gratitude for all that support, and for the hard work of our stellar staff over the years. Now, looking forward to the next stage for The Lakeville Journal publications, I wish incoming CEO and Publisher Susan Hassler (see front page story) and all the new and ongoing staff the best, and continuing success in covering our vital towns in Connecticut and New York. It has been a lot of fun, as well as moving and enlightening, to take part in this local journalism project for 25 years. Here is wishing for all those with the company to enjoy learning about and writing about this unique part of the world.

— Janet Manko, publisher and editor in chief

Latest News

Remembering George and Anne Phillips’ Edgewood restaurant in Amenia

The Edgewood Restaurant, a beloved Amenia roadside restaurant run by George and Anne Phillips, pictured during its peak years in the 1950s and ’60s.

Provided

With the recent death of George Phillips at 100, locals are remembering the Edgewood Restaurant, the Amenia supper club he and his wife, Anne Phillips, owned and operated together for more than two decades.

At the Edgewood, there were Delmonico steaks George carved in the basement, lobster tails from an infrared cooker, local trout from the stream outside the door, and a folded paper cup of butter, with heaping bowls of family-style potatoes and vegetables, plus a shot glass of crème de menthe to calm the stomach when the modest check arrived after dessert.

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

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

Artist Alissa DeGregorio brings her work to Roxbury and New Milford

Alissa DeGregorio, a New Milford -based artist and designer, has pieces on display at Mine Hill Distillery.

Agnes Fohn
When I’m designing a book, I’m also the bridge between artist and author, the final step that pulls everything together.
— Alissa DeGregorio

A visit to Alissa DeGregorio Art, the website of the artist and designer, reveals the multiple talents she possesses.

Tabs for design, commissions, print club, and classes still reveal only part of her work.On the design page are examples of graphic and book design, including book covers illustrated by DeGregorio, along with samples of licensed products such as coloring pages and lunch boxes, and examples of prop design she has done for film.

Keep ReadingShow less

Agnes Martin at Dia:Beacon

Agnes Martin at Dia:Beacon

Minimalist works by Agnes Martin on display at Dia:Beacon.

D.H. Callahan

At Dia:Beacon, simplicity commands attention.

On Saturday, April 4, the venerated modern art museum — located at 3 Beekman St. in Beacon, NY — opened an exhibition of works by the middle- to late-20th-century minimalist artist Agnes Martin.

Keep ReadingShow less
Falls Village exhibit honors life and work of Priscilla Belcher

Hunt Library in Falls Village will present a commemorative show of paintings and etchings by the late Priscilla Belcher of Falls Village.

Lydia Downs

Priscilla Belcher, a Canaan resident who was known for her community involvement and willingness to speak out, will be featured in a posthumous exhibition at the ArtWall at the Hunt Library from April 25 through May 15.

An opening reception will be held from 5 to 7 p.m. on April 25. The show will commemorate her life and work and will include watercolors and etchings. Belcher died in November 2025 at the age of 95.

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.