Richard Charles Paddock


TACONIC — Richard Charles Paddock, 78, passed away Friday, Jan. 2, 2026, at Charlotte Hungerford Hospital.
He was born in Hartford on April 12, 1947 to the late Elizabeth M. Paddock (Trust) and the late Charles D. Paddock. He grew up in East Hartford but maintained a strong connection to the Taconic part of Salisbury where his paternal grandfather, Charlie Paddock, worked for Herbert and Orleana Scoville. The whole family enjoyed summers and weekends on a plot of land in Taconic gifted to Charlie by the Scovilles for his many years of service as a chauffeur.
Dick graduated from East Hartford High School in June of 1965 and went on to join the Class of 1969 at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He graduated from MIT with a degree in Electrical Engineering and followed in his father’s footsteps by accepting a job with IBM in 1969. His career at IBM spanned 31 years and involved everything from supercomputers to single chip microcomputers.
He formally retired from IBM in 2000 but stayed on at IBM as a contract employee for the IBM Executive Briefing Center in Poughkeepsie, New York. His work at the briefing center ended in July 2002 and he finally had time to pursue other interests. Those interests included the iron industry of the Northwest Corner and the Central New England Railroad which passed through Taconic from 1871 until 1965.
Dick joined the Friends of Beckley Furnace in 2003 where he helped develop educational programs with the late Ed Kirby and designed and produced interpretive signs to explain the site to visitors, spending most summer Saturdays as a docent at the site. He also joined the Historical Society branch of the Salisbury Association where he assisted in the preparation of numerous books, the oral history and interpretive signs for the Salisbury area. He also served several terms as a Trustee for the Association. Other activities included teaching courses for the Taconic Learning Center and The Bard Lifetime Learning Center and being a frequent speaker in the area on various topics such as the railroads, the iron industry and the industrial heritage of the area.
He leaves behind his wife and best friend, Frances Paddock of Taconic, two stepchildren; David Rosell of Greenville, New York, his son, Sterling of Tivoli, New York; Alicia Rosell of Dalton, Georgia, her daughters, Mary Rosell and Paula Gordon, also of Dalton, and his very large family of in-laws and many friends.
There will be no funeral services at this time. Ryan Funeral Home, 255 Main St., Lakeville, is in care of arrangements.
If you would like to remember Dick, please contribute to Friends of Beckley Furnace, P.O. Box 383, East Canaan, CT 06024, or the Salisbury Association (https://salisburyassociation.org/ways-to-support/donate/)
To offer an online condolence, please visit ryanfhct.com
A Cape Cod style house built in 1962, 979 Duell Road was listed at $540,000 and sold for $553,000.
STANFORD — Median prices of single-family homes on a 12-month trailing basis in Stanford hit $675,000 in November — a record high for the town, 25% higher than November 2024 and 61% greater than five years ago in November 2020 during Covid. Mid-January inventory remains largely unchanged in Stanford with only four homes for sale, two pieces of land and four rentals.
Transfers
18 Anderson Road — 1 bedroom/1 bath sold to Jennifer Storm for $359,900.
552 Willow Brook Road — 2 bedroom/2 bath Cape Cod house sold to Lorraine Little for $273,000.
21 Pine Knoll Lane — 3 bedroom/2 bath house built in 1987 sold to Yael Sherman Trustee for $795,000.
2 Redmond Way — 3 bedroom/2 bath home on 5.08 acres sold to Roger Hauer for $550,000.
5646 Route 82 — 3 bedroom/1.5 bath ranch on 4.03 acres sold to Christopher Hlywa for $457,500.
5692 Route 82 — 3 bedroom/3 bath raised ranch on 8.41 acres sold to Craig T. Rose for $679,000.
106 Tick Tock Way — 3 bedroom/2 bath Cape Cod house sold to Robert Goers for $480,000.
979 Duell Road — 2 bedroom/2 bath Cape Cod house sold to Patricia Farman-Farmaian for $553,000.
68 Bangall Amenia Road — 3 bedroom/2 bath updated ranch on 3.27 acres sold to John C Unitas III for $623,000.
2-36 Olympia Way — Two houses on 26.65 acres of agricultural land sold to Eric Frank for $2,200,000.
*Town of Stanford recorded real estate transfers from Nov. 1 to Nov. 30, 2025, provided by Dutchess County Real Property Office monthly transfer reports. Only transactions with consideration are included. Note that median prices are calculated based on closing date and not the date recorded which lags closings. Details on each property from 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.
Dutchess County Sheriff’s Office Harlem Valley area activity report Jan. 15 to Jan. 21.
Jan. 16 — Deputies arrested one Christopher J. Principato, 49, for operating a motor vehicle without a license and operating a vehicle out of ignition interlock restriction subsequent to a traffic stop in the area of 5291 Route 44 in the Town of Amenia. Subject to appear in the Town of Amenia Court at a later date.
Jan. 17 — Deputies responded to Taro’s Pizza in Millerton for a snow clearing dispute occurring with a neighboring business owner. Matter mediated by patrol.
Jan. 21 — Deputies conducted a traffic stop in the area of 1531 Route 22 in Dover for an observed speeding violation. Investigation conducted during the course of the traffic stop revealed the operator of the vehicle, later identified as Joseph Gelbman, 38, to be in possession of a controlled substance. Gelbman was charged with criminal possession of a controlled substance and the original traffic violation. Subject to appear in the Town of Dover Court at a later date.
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.
There’s an old adage that asks, “How do you get to Carnegie Hall?” The answer is usually “practice, practice, practice.” But for 27 Hotchkiss students, the answer will be boarding a chartered bus from Lakeville to New York City for the Young Artists Concert on Jan. 31.
The concert will be presented by Fabio Witkowski, the Joanne Eastman Sohrweide Chair and director of music at Hotchkiss, alongside Gisele Witkowski, instructor in piano and director of the Hotchkiss Piano Portals summer program. Together, they will showcase a wide range of student performances, highlighting the depth of musical study and artistic excellence cultivated at the school.
“Hotchkiss has a great reputation for strong academics and athletics, but not as many people know about our wonderful music and arts programs,” Witkowski said. “The generosity of Barbara and Amos Hostetter made so much possible here,” he added, referring to a major three-part gift from the couple in 2018 that significantly strengthened Hotchkiss’s music and arts programs.
“One thing that makes me so proud about this type of philanthropy is that people usually spend every dime on the bricks,” Witkowski said. “But we used about half for the building and then half for programming. Now we really operate like a mini conservatory here.” Students who study in the music program have access to two lessons a week, orchestra, music history and theory. “And we have an amazing music series here,” he said. “We’ve had the Guarneri String Quartet, Emerson, Lang Lang and Midori. And the concerts are all free because they’re part of the endowment. That makes me very proud.”

To be chosen to perform at Carnegie Hall, students went through a competition process in December. About 20 students will have the opportunity to perform solo pieces, but to accommodate all the students, Witkowski arranged two pieces for small ensembles. “That way, everyone gets to play,” he said.
Annabelle Chu, from Hong Kong, is studying percussion at Hotchkiss and will be playing “Brazilian Landscape” by Ney Rosauro for solo vibraphone. “Usually, I do a sport. So, during the spring and fall, I do track and cross-country, respectively. Last year I did swimming in the winter, but I switched to music, which was great. Now I’m getting a lot more practice time — like two hours every day, and then on weekends, I get like three or four.”
Chu has only ever been outside Carnegie Hall. “When I was just wandering around the city,” she said. Asked how she will feel when she walks out on stage, she said, “I think I’ll be very nervous, but at the end, hopefully I’ll be very proud of myself.”
Senior Emma Liu is a pianist and is in the process of applying to conservatories that have joint programs. She has been to Carnegie Hall many times during her tenure at Hotchkiss and will be performing “Sonata No. 4” by Scriabin this year. Asked how much she has been practicing, she said, “Probably not as much as I should be, but I try to get in at least two hours a day.” Even though this will not be her first time at Carnegie Hall, when she walks out on the stage, Liu said, “Every time feels like the first time. I love being there with Hotchkiss students because it’s an incredible opportunity. I don’t think there’s any other place like Hotchkiss that does this kind of thing. So, yeah, we’re very, very lucky.”
Figure by Eli Sher, grade 6.
After a November 2025 meeting with Falls Village artist Vincent Incognilios, whose show “Face Time” was on exhibition at the David M. Hunt library, students at Lee H. Kellogg, under the eye of art teacher Madeleine Stern, got busy with their responses.
The results are now on display at the library.
“Lee H. Kellogg Emerging Artists Exhibition 2026” will be on display through Friday, Feb.6, with 71 art works from Kellogg students in grades K through 8.
