Millerton Lions Club disbands

MILLERTON —  After 72 years of bringing service and good cheer to the community, the Millerton Lions Club gave its final roar at its Friday, June 25, meeting as members voted to officially disband as of the end of the month, according to its last president, Maryann Belarge, and Treasurer Ed Downey.

Belarge said the group, part of the Lions Club International, focused on global concerns: vision, diabetes, childhood cancer, the environment and world hunger. It was the unique manner, however, that club members found to address those issues, that made it such a special part of the community.

Downey, the son of Augustine Downey, one of the 1948 original 37 founding businessmen, professionals and community members, spoke of some of the club’s long history.

“In 1990, Nancy TenBroeck, owner of Millerton Computing, became the first woman to become a member, drawing on a new pool of talent, which extended the Club’s reach and ultimately its life.”

Lauding  “the extraordinary generosity of our community — for which we are very grateful — and the efforts of its members for seven decades,” Downey noted those efforts, “enabled individuals with sight and hearing challenges to get the optical and audio care they needed [and] has been especially satisfying.”  

He said the group’s 50-year support of Millerton’s Little League Youth baseball program and the improvements made at Eddy Collins Field began with an auction of one frequent local visitor’s bowling equipment: the legendary baseball player Babe Ruth, who reportedly was a regular at the Millerton Gun Club.

Both Belarge and Downey cited with pride the Lions’ scholarship program that provided aid to seniors after it began in 1974 at the urging of Leon Silvernale.

The personal impact the group made on the community is memorable. Belarge recalled the circus and carnivals that used to come to the village years ago, brought to Millerton thanks to Tom O’Malle and Todd Clinton respectively.

“[I remember] a little boy with chipmunk cheeks and a big grin who just merrily strutted around the carnival — without holding his dad’s hand, probably for the first time, thinking he was finally a big man.”

She commented, that each year the Lions would also clean up the main drag near town.

“Our club cleaned up a 2-mile stretch along Route 22,” she said. “There we were with our orange bags and oranges vests, commanding the attention of everyone who drove by and honked their appreciation.”

That recognition came at other times as well, such as when someone donated muffins to one of their many bake sales “to thank us for the work” being done, said Belarge with appreciation.

The reaction was not always positive, though. During a “Stuff the Bus” food project, a local resident pooh-poohed it, saying it would never work. But thanks to the donation of a bus by local schools and space at the former Grand Union grocery store, local Lions, aided by enthusiastic teenagers, filled the trunks of every car with much-needed nourishment sent by area food pantries.

Both Downey and the nearly five-term President Belarge rued but understood the reasons for Millerton closing its Lions Club. 

“Times change,” she said. “It used to be people seemed to have had more time to do this sort of thing, but now, especially with so many of them commuting and working so hard, they just don’t have those hours before or after work to devote to this.” 

Giving kudos

Additional members handling particular Lions projects included: Melanie Mayville, who wrote the “Lions Tales” column for The Millerton News; Downey took care of Scholarships Program; John Eboli, who took care of the Sight and Hearing Program; Brad Rebillard, Mayville and Belarge, who took care of the Calendar Program; Glynda Buffalo, who took care of the Halloween Party; Mary Cooper, who took care of Lions See; Stacey Moore, who took care of the Golf Tournaments; and Mike Jordan, who took care of The Eleven Month Club and 200 Club.

Additional efforts also included: the Lions chicken barbecues; silent auctions; flea markets; 50/50 raffles; maple syrup, gum ball and bake sales; annual mail appeals; recycled eye wear donation boxes at Saperstein’s, the post office and library; eye wear purchase assistance; and the Halloween party at the Millerton firehouse.

Despite the club’s closing, some projects will go on such as the Community Birthday Calendar, begun in the mid-1950s by the Lions’ first president, Cliff Andrews, father of Millerton’s Helen Valentine and now being produced by the NorthEast-Millerton Library.

The Sons of the American Legion will continue the Main Street displays of American flags on certain holidays, begun by veteran Dick Deneen after the 1979 Iranian hostage crisis and then maintained by American Legion Post 178 and the Millerton Fire Department under Jim Campbell.

In addition to Campbell, Cooper, Downey and Vice President Eboli, the final roster of this, the second oldest Lions Club in Dutchess County, included: Mary and Todd Clinton,  Michael Jordan, Lewis Saperstein (son of charter member Irving Saperstein), Secretary Thomas Tighe and Robert Trotta.  

To all of the above as well as to the other Lions who helped contribute to making Millerton such a wonderful and community-minded place to live, a final Roar of Appreciation from all.  Well done, Lions!

Holding a needlework seal of the organization, Millerton Lions Club’s last president, Maryann Belarge, who served nearly five full terms, recounted some of the club’s best moments. Photo by Rhiannon Leo-Jameson​

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