Next of Kin Napkins

Next of Kin Napkins
The views expressed here are not necessarily those of The Millerton News and The News does not support or oppose candidates for public office.

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A wedding, school bus flips, Najdek wins

The following excerpts from The Millerton News were compiled by Kathleen Spahn and Rhiannon Leo-Jameson of the North East-Millerton Library.

March 21, 1934

Ethel S. Kimball To Become Bride

Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Kimball of Millerton have announced the engagement of their daughter, Ethel S. Kimball, to H. Scott Lind, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Lind, also of Millerton. Miss Kimball was graduated from Millerton High School with the class of 1930 and attended Albany Business College. She is employed at the Millerton National Bank. Mr. Lind, also a graduate of Millerton High School, is employed at the local Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company store. No date has been set for the wedding.

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We were once ugly Americans

We were once ugly Americans

In the '60s and '70s all across Europe, American largesse and bravado, borne of the success of WWII, coupled with a deserved prosperity but sometimes paraded ostentatiously, gave us a derisive nickname; Ugly American. What many saw as showing off with our ability to have jet travel to tour Europe, camera dangling from neck straps, dollars and travelers’ checks aplenty, incapability to speak foreign languages yet raising our voices while issuing loud requests to bemused foreigners… it was perhaps a time of innocence and, yes definitely, a cultural mistake. It is, however, a time Europe now misses. Gone are trustworthy but awkward Americans, replaced by untrustworthy partners, out-of-control ultra-right-wing politics, and frightening prospects for world peace.

All across Europe and NATO as well as much of Asia and Africa, our previous staunch allies and friends are looking at a future where America and Americans may no longer be relied on, where American capability and morality that once supported values in common have vanished. Under this Administration such commonality has been destroyed. Not dented, not frayed, as many in the media would desperately wish to think, but destroyed. Ursula von der Leyen, EU Chief, has urgently claimed that Europe must now hold fast to a “rules-based order” to countermine America’s new deviation from international law, “…for a world that has gone and will not return.”

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Recreation front and center at community engagement session

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.

Photo by Leila Hawken

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.

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Webutuck STEAM Fair set to return March 21 for 12th year

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.

Photo provided

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.

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A decaying landmark’s storied past

A decaying landmark’s storied past

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.

Photo by Nathan Miller

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.

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Stanford home prices remain at record highs in early new year

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.

Photo by Christine Bates

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.

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