Local Matters - October 2025
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Leila Hawken
Children were encouraged to design their ideal town parks using Legos during a municipal planning event that brought residents together on Saturday, March 14, for a consultant-guided chance to engage in planning current and future recreation programs and park improvements. Recreation leader Cassidy Howard, left, oversaw the Lego work of Natalie Ahearn, 10, while Jennifer Nitzky of Nexus Creative Design had found just the right Lego piece to be added.
AMENIA — Residents offered a wide range of ideas for parks, recreation programs and community events during an Engaging Amenia session at Town Hall on Saturday, March 14, as town officials continued work on a Parks and Recreation Master Plan.
The plan is intended to guide future improvements to parks, recreational spaces and programming across the town. The March 14 outreach session built on feedback gathered in June 2025 during the town’s Comprehensive Plan update process.
Consultant Jaclyn Tyler, co-founder of Westchester County-based Nexus Creative Design, led the session with her team. Tyler said the goal is to develop a recreation plan shaped by community input, with a focus on improving existing parks, expanding accessibility, strengthening programming and setting priorities for the future.
“We want to learn from you,” she said.
Tyler said the consulting team has identified 15 recreational properties in Amenia and is seeking public feedback on each, including parks, trails, the Town Hall grounds and the basketball court. Participants were asked how they currently use town spaces, what they would like to see added and what needs improvement.
“How do you play?” was a question posed to both adults and children. “What do you want to see in town? What works? What needs improvement?”
The discussion also touched on how the town can attract greater participation in local recreation. Tyler said effective communication will be key to building successful programs and encouraging residents to take part.
Planning Board member Ken Topolsky agreed, emphasizing that engagement must start within the community itself.

“Engagement begins from the inside out,” Topolsky said.
During the discussion, residents offered a variety of suggestions — some new and others that they said could be revived. Ideas included organizing trips to shows or sporting events, hosting community dinners and restaurant events, and introducing dog-related activities such as dog shows, training classes or a dog park. Flea markets and swap meets were also mentioned as potential gatherings.
Participants also explored interactive displays of potential park layouts, rearranging features such as tennis and pickleball courts, parking areas, baseball diamonds and fishing spots to visualize how future recreational spaces might be designed.
Town Clerk Dawn Marie Klingner said future programming should take residents’ work schedules into account and include options outside traditional working hours.
She also noted that younger families — a key demographic for recreation programs — were largely absent from the engagement session, raising concerns about participation.
Tyler said additional outreach sessions will be held as the planning process continues. Feedback from the meetings will be compiled into a summary report expected in the coming weeks.
For more information about recreation planning and to offer comments, go to www.engagingamenia.com.
Millerton News
Seventh-grader Fiona Crow displays her project, “The PlaceBlue Effect” at Webutuck’s STEAM Fair on March 8, 2025. Fiona’s submission focused on perceptions of taste based on the color of food.
AMENIA — Webutuck’s annual STEAM Fair is set for Saturday, March 21.
The event, now in its 12th year, provides Webutuck students from kindergarten to 12th grade an opportunity to showcase their skills in science, technology, engineering, art and mathematics by displaying science experiments, collections or discoveries.
Students in fifth grade and up can join in a juried competition at the STEAM fair, with winners receiving a chance to compete in the Dutchess County Science Fair later this spring.
The STEAM Fair is set for 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. in the Eugene Brooks Intermediate School cafeteria on Saturday, March 21. More than 70 students are registered to participate.
Nathan Miller
A dilapidated old house sits with a caved-in roof along Route 22 in the Village of Millerton across from Four Brothers. The building is currently owned by the wife of famed Nigerian drummer Olatunji. The house is believed to be the site of civic meetings where the name of the village was decided.
MILLERTON — From the outside, the old yellow house across from Four Brothers looks like nothing more than a ruin waiting to finish collapsing. But local historians say the peeling paint and caving roof conceal a history that stretches from the Revolutionary War to the naming of Millerton itself — and to a world-renowned musician of the 20th century.
The building, known as the Wakeman house due to its association with Walter Wakeman and his descendants, dates back to before the 1770s, making it a contender for the oldest house in Millerton. The building was at once a stately colonial farm house that housed some of Millerton’s founding community members and eventually famed Nigerian drummer Olatunji, but has fallen into disrepair in recent decades, prompting calls to have the building demolished.
Historical reports by local historian Chet Eisenhuth dating to the 1970s assert Wakeman hosted the earliest civic meetings in the community, crediting him for suggesting Millerton’s name shortly after the arrival of the railroad and for providing a critical piece of land to the construction effort.
But the house was already nearly 40 years old when Wakeman arrived in Millerton, local genealogical researcher Betsy Strauss said, referencing other historical reports from Eisenhuth. Evidence suggests the house predates the Revolutionary War, making it one of the oldest buildings in the Village of Millerton and the Town of North East, though local researchers have struggled to pin down exact details.

Strauss said it’s unclear from surviving documents who built the house, but it came under the possession of the prominent Winchell family soon after they moved to the area from Hartford in the late 1700s.
Philo Winchell moved his family to what is now called Winchell Mountain from Hartford, Connecticut, before the Revolutionary War, Strauss said. Philo, his brother Martin, and his sons spent the following decades raising livestock and speculating on land around the regions of Irondale and what would later become the Village of Millerton.
The family quickly rose to prominence in local society, Strauss said.
She described the Winchells as a large family — Philo had more than five children — that led the local Baptist community despite no apparent ties to the church before their move to Millerton.
The center of their property encompassed Winchell Mountain, with other branches of the family spreading throughout the Millerton area to build additional farms as the generations continued to prosper in the area. One branch of the family constructed and operated a grist mill, while others held prominent positions in the local Baptist church.
The Winchell farms provided opportunity to local laborers, including Walter Wakeman after he arrived in Millerton in 1810.
The North East Historical Society possesses copies of handwritten notes attributed to Orrin Wakeman, Walter’s son, that describe many of the local families. Orrin wrote much less about his own father than he did others, but he did record some information about his history.
According to the document, Walter Wakeman traveled “on foot” to Millerton from Sherman, Connecticut, in 1810.

Shortly after arriving in the area, Walter began working for the Winchells as a laborer on their farms. Walter worked closely with the family, and later married Almira Winchell in 1817.
Orrin’s account states Walter and Almira had nine children — of which only Orrin, the oldest, and his sister, the youngest of the nine, survived to adulthood. Almira died in 1847, leaving Walter to live as a widower until his death in 1868.
It’s unclear how or why Walter came to possess the house that now sits along Route 22, but Strauss believes his working relationship with the Winchells and his relationship with Almira played a part.
Walter earned a living as a farmer, living and raising his family in the house that’s now falling in on itself on Route 22.
In 1851, Wakeman’s house was located on a large tract of land that contained a crucial strip for the New York and Harlem railroad’s proposed expansion north toward Chatham, New York. The half-mile long strip was 66 feet wide across its length, and provided the land that would host Millerton’s first train stations, one of which still stands today.
Eisenhuth theorized in his writings that Wakeman’s house — likely due to its location nearby the new center of activity and Walter’s own prominence in the community — served as an early civic meeting place. Strauss echoed that sentiment, citing research that indicates Wakeman hosted the meeting where the village was named.

Records show that Walter, his relatives in the Winchell family, and a small number of other local landowners had acquired much of the land through Millerton and North East that would be needed for the railroad. Strauss and North East Historical Society President Ed Downey each said this indicates the group was involved in land speculation, and likely purchased much of that land in the years or months immediately leading up to the railroad’s arrival, but records dating back to the time are difficult to locate and verify.
In 1850, the Village of Millerton was nothing more than just a few houses near Webatuck Creek in a low-lying area. Millerton is located in what’s known as the “Oblong,” Strauss said, a tract of land along New York State’s modern-day eastern border with Connecticut that was the subject of a dispute between the two colonies prior to the revolution. The Oblong is a series of valleys with generally poor conditions for growing crops, but livestock herders enjoyed the rolling hills and abundant fresh water from the area’s creeks, rivers and wetlands.
The Wakeman house eventually came to be owned by famed Nigerian drummer Olatunji in 1965. Olatunji’s wife still owns the home today, more than 20 years after the death of her husband in 2003. Although the home has been condemned and left vacant for years, village officials said there’s no clear timeline for the building’s demolition, leaving the future of Millerton’s oldest home uncertain.

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Christine Bates
The home at 49 Ernest Road was one of only two single family homes sold for less than $300,000 in Stanford in the last year.
STANFORD — The town’s median price for a single-family home remained at an all-time high at the end of January as the real estate market continues an upward march.
The 12-month trailing median price for a single-family home, excluding condos, in the Town of Stanford reached$662,500 for the period ending Jan. 31, 2026, the same as December.
The figure marks a 14% increase from the $581,000 median recorded for the 12 months ending Jan. 31, 2025, and 37% from $425,000 for the comparable period ending Jan. 31, 2024.
Unit sales of single-family homes in Stanford are highly variable on a 12-month rolling basis, perhaps due to limited inventory. A total of 30 single-family homes were sold in the 12 months ending Jan. 31, 2026, compared with 47 sales in the period ending Jan. 31, 2025, and 29 sales for the 12 months a year prior.
The busiest year in recent times was in 2020 at the height of COVID-19. For the 12 months ending January 2021, 80 single famile homes were sold.
Inventory of single family remains limited. As of mid-March, there were six single-family homes on the market and three multi-family buildings. Three were listed above $1 million with five residential properties including multi-family listed below the current $662,500 median price. Two parcels of land are listed on the MLS for $295,000 and $300,000.
January transfers
5654 Route 82 — 2 bedroom/2.5 bath home in Clinton Corners on 8.16 acres sold to Jonathan Blass for $675,000.
49 Ernest Road — 4 bedroom/2 bath house built in 1992 on 2.2 acres sold to Patrick Shanley for $250,000.
30 Meadowview Way — 19.01 acres with a view sold to Gary Herman for $350,000.
* Town of Stanford real estate transfers recorded between Jan. 1, 2026 and Jan. 31, 2026, provided by Dutchess County Office of Real Property. Transfers without consideration are not included. Current market listings from First Key MLS and market statistics from Infosparks. Note that recorded transfers frequently lag sales by a number of days and include properties sold privately. Compiled by Christine Bates, Real Estate Salesperson with William Pitt Sotheby’s International Realty, Licensed in Connecticut and New York.
Leila Hawken
Judy Westfall performs a selection of songs made popular by John Denver on on Wednesday, Nov. 19, at Amenia Town Hall during the inaugural open mic night.
AMENIA — For those seeking exposure and an enthusiastic audience for their talents, the final Town Hall Open Mic Night is coming up on Wednesday, April 1, beginning at 6 p.m. This year’s successful series has been a program of the Recreation Department.
To participate, sign up upon arrival to share your talent with a live audience. Bring friends along to enjoy your own performance and applaud the talents of others. All types are welcome, whether music, song, poetry, storytelling or any other.
Refreshments will be provided.
Millerton News
Dutchess County Sheriff’s Office Harlem Valley area activity report March 5 to March 12
March 7 — Deputies responded to 160 Holsapple Road in Dover to investigate a reported disturbance. Incident determined to be a domestic dispute. Matter resolved without further police intervention.
March 10 — Deputies responded to the area of 44 Route 22 in the Town of Pawling to assist the Pawling Fire Department with a fire involving the car carrier portion of a tractor trailer. Investigation revealed that 5 out of 8 vehicles being carried were a complete loss due to the fire.
March 11 — Deputies responded to John Street in the Village of Millerton to investigate a reported disturbance. Incident determined to be a domestic dispute. Matter resolved without further police intervention.
PLEASE NOTE:All subjects arrested and charged are alleged to have committed the crime and are presumed innocent until proven guilty and are to appear in local courts later.
If you have any information relative to the aforementioned criminal cases, or any other suspected criminal activity please contact the Dutchess County Sheriff’s Office tip line at 845-605-CLUE (2583) or email dcsotips@gmail.com. All information will be kept confidential.

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