With funds raise from membership fees and Riverways grants, the FWR became involved in several projects:
It made grants to college students. It worked with Mr. ??? Schmidt and Don Roeder of Simons Rock College. Mary Lynn Sidari, a student there, did a study and prepared a thesis on trichoptera (caddis flies) in the Williams River. Her monitoring stations were in West Stockbridge, Housatonic, and Richmond. Her thesis was submitted to the Natural Sciences Facility in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Bachelor of Arts degree. The Board soon made Mary Lynn an honorary member of the FWR
(Interestingly, Taconic TU had an esteemed member and very knowledgeable fly fisherman, the late Ernest Long of Pittsfield, who analyzed the results of Marilyn’s study and determined the main tricoptera detected was the Irrocqenea caddisfly. He did extensive research and found a fly pattern that best imitated the aquatic insect.
Michelle Kirchener, also a Simons Rock student, received a grant to do water samples of phosphorous and fecal coliform after the new sewage treatment plant came online.
During the late 1980’s and early 1990’s TU members John Stengle, of Richmond, Bill Hanford and Ed Desaulniers collected quarterly water samples of the river for UMASS for its Acid Rain Monitoring program. They tested for pH and alkalinity.
Maria Vandeusen, Joan Kimball and Russ Cohen from Mass Riverways in Boston frequently came to the FWR meetings to consult with it, illustrate overlay maps, etc.
The FWR became involved with the Mass Turnpike degradation of Card Pond and attempted to hold them accountable.
Try as it might, it could not establish a walking trail on the old train track property which extended from Gt. Barrington to Canaan, NY. It worked feverishly with Mass Electric, (owners of the old rail line property) to let it establish a rail trail. (This was years before the establishment of the Ashuwillticook Rail Trail in Pittsfield/Cheshire). It met resistance from some landowners with lands abutting the abandoned rail line. After many years of disuse, they extended their boundaries to include the portions of it which crossed their properties. Then there was the issue with the local sportsmen who did not want a hiking trail going through areas where they hunted.
During that period, John Masiero led periodic hikes along the river trying to drum up more interest in it as well as to encourage membership in the FWR. He got the FWR participating in the West Stockbridge’s Zuccini Festival and ran a rubber duck parade on the River.
The community supported the FWR and obtaining annual membership fees was never a problem. The FWR was doing just fine but it couldn’t attract new, younger members to serve on its Board and to ensure continuity of the organization. Some board members got to the age where they could no longer attend the meetings. That, coupled with the lack of our ability to recruit new younger members to the FWR, foretold difficult times ahead.
In 19?? John Masiero was elected president and newsletter editor. In that year he and Peter Tucker, with a winch, removed such items from the river as a stove, refrigerator, etc. on Earth Day. A rusted 1979-1980 Volkswagen Rabbit automobile was retrieved from the Williams River Gorge below the Rock Dale dam. Ed Desaulniers, Chairman of the ConCom and FWR Board member enlisted the FWR to underwrite the use of a log skidder with a 30-ton winch to remove the wreck.
From the late 1990’s through the early 2000’s the FWR started to lose board members, Jervis Gennari passed in 1995, Sissy Paddock in 1999, Bill Hanford and Ted Giddings in 2005. When Ed Desaulniers went into a nursing home the Board had to seriously consider terminating the FWR and it had to do something with the deeded Shaw and Gennari properties. The deeds were sitting in my safe deposit box. John and I had to take charge of the treasury.
The remaining active board members (John, Dave, George and I) decided to sell those parcels, which abutted the Maple Hill lands to the DFW for about $8,000. With the monies derived, we paid up any State taxes owed. (John took on the task of filing all of the necessary State forms). We then made a $500.00 donation to the BNRC and the rest was donated to a new organization called the Massachusetts Outdoor Heritage Foundation with the stipulation that the funds be spent in the Williams River Watershed. Then we terminated the FWR.
We chose to donate the remaining treasury to the Outdoor Heritage Foundation because it works to create cooperative partnerships to find and fund the best wild lands and wildlife projects directly and provide pivotal collaboration by assisting without duplicating any efforts of other environmental organizations and the Division of Fisheries and Wildlife (MassWildlife).
We were confident that our gift to benefit wildlife and rare and endangered species would not be diverted to other unrelated or contradictory purposes in time of fiscal crisis in the Commonwealth.
We also knew, given the foundation’s close working relationship with MassWildlife, that the projects and research it sponsors or contributes toward are based on rock-solid science, rigorously applied. At the same time, its independent status allows the Massachusetts Outdoor Heritage Foundation to be more nimble than MassWildlife, acting faster and at a finer scale than is always practical or possible for a large state agency.
Three former Board members had passed away since the dissolution of the FWR (Ed Desaulniers in 2009, Dave Oclair in 2014 and George Naventi in 2016) leaving only Board members John Masiero and me to tell its story.
In the short timespan that the FWR existed, it mattered. Following the initial land acquisitions previously mentioned, MassWildlife continued to acquire abutting lands in the Williams River watershed to the point that they now protect over 1,000 acres including the 165-acre Fairfield Brook WMA in Richmond. Much of the lands containing rare and endangered species.
In 1992, DFW purchased 120 acres from Al Sabatino family and converted it into a Wildlife Management Area. In 1996, DFW purchased 142 acres of nearby/abutting land from the Shisko family. In 2008 the previously mentioned 24+ acres that Shaw/Genari donated were purchased from the FWR. In 2010, 10 acres of land which were owned by John Masiero, Sr. were purchased and then 25 acres of land owned by the West Stockbridge Sportsmen’s Club which became the Williams River WMA. In 2011, 242 acres of land were purchased in the Flat Brook area. In 2011 and 2013, 17 and 190 acres respectively were purchased from Symphony Lakes. In 2018, 4 acres of land were purchased from George Soule and 15 acres were gifted from Patches family. In 2019, 48 acres of land were purchased from the George Naventi estate and 25 acres was purchased from John Masiero, Jr. In 2021, 31+acres were purchased from Al Sabatino family and nearly 13 acres was purchased from Gene Delea.
DFW Western District Land Agent Peter Milanesi handled all of those transactions. No state-owned land existed in West Stockbridge prior to the establishment of the FWR.
Incidentally, the third adopter of the FWR, the Housatonic River Watershed Association, suffered the same fate as the FWR and opted to merge with the Housatonic River Association (HVA) in the middle 1990’s. As its Treasurer, I transferred its treasury over to them. Tom Stokes was its local supervisor while it operated out of the Lenox Train depot.
John and I feel that the FWR played a key initial role in getting the land acquisitions started. It really started something. Sissy Paddock would be very pleased about all that has transpired since her initial phone call back in 1985. I know that John and I are.
Many thanks to John Masiero and Peter Melanesi for their assistance in preparing this story.