Saturday, September 2, 2023
Wednesday, August 23, 2023
Meet Oscar
Meet
Oscar — He worked all his life in a Waterbury factory until the factory
was closed, abandoned, forgotten, and finally demolished this year.
Tuesday, August 22, 2023
Wednesday, August 9, 2023
Tuesday, August 1, 2023
Rock-a-bye Robins in the Fuschia are Gone
At 1:30 today, as I returned from my hike, I again passed behind the nest on my way to the front door. Only one of the fledglings remained, and it was perched at the edge of the nest. It permitting me to take only two images and is now gone. So too are the many robins that have been "chirping" at the end of the day.
Saturday, July 29, 2023
New Arrivals
I first noticed the nest in the hanging fuchsia basket and the two tiny blue eggs inside it a few days ago, shortly after ignorantly watering all. The fuschia has suffered since, and today the nest had two tiny birds inside. The mother or father watches keenly from trees when I am out and about in the yard. I will let nature take its course, but they will have to get use to our passage or we are their prisoners.
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Thursday, July 13, 2023
Tuesday, July 11, 2023
Stairway to Heaven — Strling Opera House, Derby, CT
Thursday, June 29, 2023
Wednesday, June 28, 2023
Greening Bay, June 10, 2023 — Morning Fog
June 10, 2023 — Early morning. a river of fog moving up the coast hangs on the mountains as it crosses the mouth of Somes Sound.
Tuesday, June 27, 2023
Lobster Docks in Mid-June, Bernard, ME
Monday, June 26, 2023
Across Greening Bay toward Flying Mt. & Somes Sound
A short walk along the rocky shore from the house we recently stayed in is a point of land dividing Greening Bay from Southwest Harbor. Seated on a rock above the point I can look left across Greening Bay to the deep cleft where Acadian mountains divide, and water flows into the glacial loch that is Somes Sound. We climbed the mountains along the left edge of the opening and hiked along the ridge above Somes Sound. Looking right from my seat at the point the view is across the mouth Southwest Harbor and between islands to the open sea. It is still June and there is little traffic in or out of the harbor. The docks are loaded with lobster traps soon to be set.
Thursday, June 1, 2023
Fleur-de-lis Swamp

Saturday, May 20, 2023
Tuesday, May 16, 2023
Saturday, May 13, 2023
Friday, May 12, 2023
Thursday, May 11, 2023
Tuesday, May 9, 2023
Sunday, May 7, 2023
Thursday, May 4, 2023
Tuesday, May 2, 2023
Farrel Machine Tool — Face of the Sand Elevator
Farrel Machine Tool's Sand Elevator in Ansonia, CT, has always seemed to me like a giant face. For many years I wondered what was inside but never dared to climb the rusting stairs dangling from its chin. It is one of the most distinctive monuments I know to Connecticut's industrial past.
Tuesday, April 11, 2023
Saturday, April 1, 2023
Moments after the northbound train leaves Ansonia Station it passes beneath the red Farrel bridge through a ring of worksheds. Here, before the Civil War — even before the railroad laid the first track up the valley, Farrel Machine Company were casting iron and steel parts. The powerhouse at the back of the yard powered the operation and remained intact until 2021.
Wednesday, March 15, 2023
Thursday, March 9, 2023
Tuesday, March 7, 2023
Farrel Foundry RIP
The historic Farrel Foundry, built in 1890 and the largest facility of its kind in New England, was demolished Friday. The first picture below was taken June 17, 2011 on my first visit there when the Foundry was filled with used industrial electronics from dismantled factories. The building had been recently sold, and the prior owner was beginning to empty it.
The second photo was taken Sunday, Mar. 5, 2023 after crews had demolished the building. The second photo was taken from a position well to the right of the first photo but looking the same way. The large girder in both photos is the same member.
Sunday, February 19, 2023
Tuesday, December 27, 2022
Sunday, December 18, 2022
Education in Naugatuck (#4)
When the time came in 1901 for the town to replace Naugatuck's aging high school, the design was again given to the architectural firm of McKim, Mead & White, and an appropriately lofty site was chosen further up the hill and with a more commanding view over the Green below. It would open in 1905. By then MM&W had designed many of the buildings that give the Green its character. They were the preferred architects of railroad president and industrialist John Howard Whittemore who, advocating “City Beautiful,” had, over many years, paid to make Naugatuck a showplace of the movement.
The high school MM&W designed on the hillside site is nothing, if not disciplined — a granite, marble and brick, Ionic, 3-story Classical temple, restrained from any hint of wayward Beaux Arts eclecticism. It is a buff-colored temple fit for Athena and for the education of Naugatuck’s next generation. Carved above the marble of the entablature is a cartouche quoting Charles William Eliot, “The fruit of liberal education is not learning but the capacity and desire to learn — not knowledge but power.” It’s probably safe to assume Whittemore had considerable say in that choice.
Charles William Eliot was president of Harvard through the transformational years 1869 to 1909 and was a leader bringing profound reforms to American education at all levels. He raised public school graduation standards and broadened high school curricula to include teaching of the sciences and of foreign languages. Eliot served as president of the National Education Association and on a ten member national commission whose 1893 report influenced schools and school boards everywhere, beginning reforms leading to the creation of the first “junior high schools.”
“…not knowledge but power.” I’m still wondering exactly how to understand that.
Friday, December 16, 2022
Salem School, by William Rutherford Mead (#3)
Wednesday, December 14, 2022
Planning the City Beautiful with McKim, Mead & White (2)
Monday, December 12, 2022
Naugatuck City Beautiful 1 — Henry Bacon's Train Station
Naugatuck is the next town south of Waterbury along the Naugatuck River’s path to the Housatonic. It’s small size and history as the corporate center of the American rubber industry made Naugatuck a showplace for architecture and small town planning that resulted from the City Beautiful Movement. By 1910, for travelers who got off the train there, the town's gateway was a new train station designed by, architect, Henry Bacon who was then also at work on the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, DC.
Henry Bacon had worked earlier for McKim, Mead & White, was mentored closely by Charles McKim and was his personal representative at the 1889, Paris Exposition and the, architecturally transformative, 1893, Columbian Exposition in Chicago. The Naugatuck Station's style has been described as “Spanish Colonial” and “Italian Villa,” though my own sense is that it is eclectic and original.
(Note: The entry projection on the front is a recent addition)
Friday, December 9, 2022
Ghostly Letters on the Power House Wall
When Charles Benedict looked out from his “cottage," high on the hill north of Waterbury Green, he might often have looked to this spot below him where the Naugatuck River flows between the brass factories of Holmes, Booth & Haydens on this side of the river and the factories of Benedict & Burnham, across the bridge. Not so much competitors as conspirators, the two brass companies had divvied up the market and brought wealth to Waterbury. After WW1 they would all be part of a combined operation known as American Brass Company, and the entity once known as Benedict & Burnham ceased to exist. However, on the side of the old Benedict & Burnham power house, until the day this past summer, 2022, when the power house was demolished, you could still read the forgotten name, "Benedict & Burnham,” painted large in ghostly letters on the power house wall, though the company that went by that name hadn’t existed for more than 100 years.
Thursday, December 8, 2022
Carrie Welton's Revenge
They say Carrie Welton, daughter of brass company partner, Joseph Welton, rebelled against a succession of private schools to which she was sent, but was known for her love of animals. She would have been 21 in 1863 when the family moved into Rose Hill, where she kept cats, dogs, rabbits and a black stallion named Knight of the Woods. She and Knight became known for galloping through town and frightening Waterbury pedestrians. When Carrie died she left the much of her estate to the ASPCA and the rest for the creation of a fountain, "for people and horses," and with a bronze statue of Knight at the head of the Waterbury Green.
Wednesday, December 7, 2022
Rose Hill Overlook
An earlier post discussed Wm. H. Scovill of Scovill Brass who once owned this house (http://rothphotos.blogspot.com/2022/11/union-station-from-cast-iron-gate-to.htm), once the finest in Waterbury. Style is the outer form of spirit and it has always seemed to me that Rose Hill might well have emerged out of the pages of a Hawthorn short story. Perhaps part of that comes from its apparent stubborn indifference to the changes happening all around it and to the untended hillside hump on which it sits and from which it overlooks the city. Carrie Welton’s time in the house adds a plot line: https://coloradoencyclopedia.org/article/carrie-welton.
Tuesday, November 29, 2022
Charles Benedict's Prospects
The architects of Charles Benedict’s hilltop fantasy cottage were Palliser & Palliser, champions of Queen Anne or “Stick Style” architecture. The house sits proudly atop an expansive lawn positioned to ensure that nothing encroaches on its commanding prospect over Waterbury.
Benedict-Miller was designed to be a showpiece for its owners, so it was also a showpiece for promoting Stick Style and shaping American Stick Style dreams and fantasies as can be seen among houses on the grid of streets below and and in prosperous neighborhoods beyond. Queen Anne Stick Style as its accumulation of names reveals sought to look at once casual, rustic and graciously aristocratic.
In addition to designing mansions for the wealthy, Palliser & Palliser sought to bring Queen Anne Style to democratic America by publishing "pattern books” so those who owned no brass mills might have a peak and a tower, properly spread with timbers and a smorgasbord of brick and shingle patterns and rooms glittering with jeweled light through transoms of leaded glass.
Sunday, November 27, 2022
Union Station Tower from Timbered Brass
From the porches and through the windows of Benedict-Miller Cottage Charles Benedict might have watched Benedict & Burnham thrive and Waterbury transform from farm town to industrial hub, a major junction in the busy railroad system that moved valuable goods and busy people.
However, Charles Benedict died young, only occupying his new “cottage” for a very short time. In 1889 it was purchased from his daughter by Charles Miller, part owner of "Miller & Peck,” prosperous, Waterbury, dry goods merchants from 1860 to 1978.