Category Archives: Tales of Norwich

Norwich Church History

Today’s blog is about something I came across in the September 5, 1907 Norwich Bulletin. As always I have not re-written the words used to make the original article politically correct according to 2021 standards. I think it’s important that the time and the language not just match but can be used to demonstrate how the community of Norwich, CT was leading, following or responding to the rest of the country and the world.

It’s also important that those of us interested in the history of Norwich, CT acknowledge that more than one building may have stood on a site since Norwich was founded. More than one business or residence may have stood on a site. History is only lost when its not remembered or discussed. History is not necessarily lost because it does not have a building or a plaque.

“Removing the Foundation of First Colored Church. Building Stood On Property of Norwich Nickel and Brass Company – Not Used For Church Purposes Lately.

On the property recently acquired by the Norwich Nickel and Brass company, on Chestnut street, stood a portion of the first colored church in the City of Norwich. It was erected many years ago, but since the A. M.E. Zion church on McKinley avenue was erected , has not been used. The removal of the building recalls many interesting services held there. Elder James Smith having been one of the prominent preachers there. The approach to the church was from Franklin street. It has not been used for church services for many years and only the older residents knew it was a church.”

So now the question arises if this information was included in any of the historic tours of downtown Norwich, CT.

Thank you for reading and sharing my history and Norwich Community blog freely with your family or friends or anyone you think might be interested or in a position to take on some of the suggested projects. Don't hesitate to contact me for further information. I am happy to pass along anything I can. Together we can make a difference. Email comments on this blog to berylfishbone@yahoo.com View my past columns at http://www.norwichbulletin.com/section/blogs

Accidents of 1863

The newspapers of 1863 were not always filled with bright and happy news. Often they were filled with heartbreaking details. The following are two articles placed closely together in the Norwich Bulletin of March 9, 1863.

“William Tipton, aged ten years, whose parents reside in Hope Street, on Thursday last, during their absence from home, took a cushion from a chair and putting it upon the stove hearth, laid his head upon it to get it warm, it is supposed. As a natural consequence the cushion took fire and he was so badly burned that death came to his relief in about two hours after he was found. The boy was an idiot.” Not a lot of sympathy expressed.

Fatal Accident – Thomas Mickie, who formerly ran a paper mill in Greeneville, and subsequently the mills of the Rockland Co., in Montville, was scalded so severely on the morning of the 24th, that death resulted on the fourth day. He was at the time of the accident engaged in running a paper mill in Coatsville, Chester County, Pennsylvania. He had occasion to get a pail of hot water to thaw out the “first felt,” and went into the boiling room for that purpose. While dipping up the water from a tub filled with boiling straw, the top of which was level with the floor, he slipped in and sunk to his hips in the contents. He attempted to extricate himself, but fell back onto his left arm, scalding it to the shoulder. A bleacher in the room hearing his cries went to his assistance and succeeded in rescuing him. No sooner was he on the floor than he ran to the river in spite of the man, and in order to relieve himself from the excruciating pain, boke the ice and laid down in the water. He was followed and again rescued and taken home, where he suffered in intense pain until he died. He was fifty-seven years of age.

Thank you for reading and sharing my history and Norwich Community blog freely with your family or friends or anyone you think might be interested or in a position to take on some of the suggested projects. Don't hesitate to contact me for further information. I am happy to pass along anything I can. Together we can make a difference. Email comments on this blog to berylfishbone@yahoo.com View my past columns at http://www.norwichbulletin.com/section/blogs

1905 deaths

Today is a topic I have studiously avoided. When I go thru the back issues of the Norwich Bulletin one of the most striking themes is the number of drownings that occurs in a city with three active rivers. It is not important that each resident of Norwich be an accomplished swimmer, but I cannot stress enough, how important it is that every resident, know the basics of how to swim to save their own life or that of another.

The early newspapers were much more direct and descriptive in their articles than the sensitive treatment the media give a similar incident today. I know it often does not seem like it but, in all honesty there have been detailed news articles I had to stop reading because the descriptions were too vivid. The images the articles raised in my mind were too disturbing.

In the July 8, 1905 Norwich Bulletin was a detailed article about the number of deaths in New London County. I won’t reprint the entire article but I would like to note that it reported “This quarter there were an unusual number of drowning cases, mostly accidental, although there were three newly born infants found drowned. There were the usual number of deaths from injuries on the railroad and from heart disease.

The sudden deaths in the different towns of the county are as follows:

Norwich.

March 19 – John Gontier, aged 13, accidental drowning.

April 6 – Albert Klink, aged 50, accidental drowning.

April 22 – Martin V. Allender, aged 53, accidental drowning.

May 13 – John Keating, aged ??, suicidal drowning.

May 23 – Hermina Fountain, aged 47, phithisis [possibly referring to Tuberculosis?]

May 24 – Charles E. Gough, aged 5, fell from team.

May 25 – Unknown infant, infanticide.

June 2 – Veronica F. Bedard, aged 5 weeks, accidental suffocation.

June 10 – Thomas H. Grant, aged 10, accidental drowning.

June 10 – William J. A Banfield, aged 14, accidental drowning.

June 15 – Harry Johnson, aged 60, accidental drowning.

June 18 – Eleazer Huling, aged 35, injuries received by fall.

June 27 – Samuel S. Hopkins, aged 74, heart disease,

These were the deaths for Norwich alone. I wanted their names to be recognized just in case someone doing a family search was looking for them. From some of the other towns were the deaths by arsenic poisoning, acute bronchitis, aged 19, natural causes, acute nephritis, acute peritonitis. Asphynxe neonatorum, starvation due to premature birth, hit by train, convulsions, senility, cerebral hemorrhage, and yes there were more. May all their souls rest in peace.

Thank you for reading and sharing my history and Norwich Community blog freely with your family or friends or anyone you think might be interested or in a position to take on some of the suggested projects. Don't hesitate to contact me for further information. I am happy to pass along anything I can. Together we can make a difference. Email comments on this blog to berylfishbone@yahoo.com View my past columns at http://www.norwichbulletin.com/section/blogs

New Golf Course 1898

The March 10, 1898 Norwich Bulletin carried some long awaited and very exciting news. There would be a new course for the Norwich Golf Club. The new course would begin at the Norwich Club House and would stretch 2,800 yards and have a new road built just for it.

According to the article, “The Norwich Golf Club has completed arrangements for an entirely new course, which is to be ready for use the coming season. The course will begin in the rear of the Norwich clubhouse, and, running northeasterly, follow the new Rockwell road in the rear of the Free Academy. From the terminus of this highway a new road is to be built to what is called the Reynolds lot, and from thence the course will cross the land of the Rev. Dr. L. W. Bacon a short distance.

The course will have a stretch of about 2,800 yards and will have nine holes, the distance between them ranging from 160 to 200 yards. The first hole will be at the clubhouse and the ninth hole will be very near it, so that a person making the course will come back to his starting place. Work on the new road is to be begun at once, and t is expected that the course will be ready for play on April 1.

The new course presents a greater diversity of natural conditions than the present course opposite the hospital grounds. On the old links were two short courses, known as the long and the short course, but the new course will have but one. The club has made arrangements with the Norwich Club whereby the clubhouse is to be used as headquarters for the necessary equipment for the players.

The coming golf season, which opens April 1, promises to be a very prosperous one for the Norwich Club, as more than the usual interest is manifested in the game, and the members all express a desire to take an active part this year and play frequently.”

I wonder what the players would make of the 18 hole Norwich Golf Course and Club at 685 New London Turnpike, Norwich, CT 06360? The Norwich Golf Course was designed by Tull & Tull and opened in 1926. The current course is 6,228 yards according to its website.

Thank you for reading and sharing my history and Norwich Community blog freely with your family or friends or anyone you think might be interested or in a position to take on some of the suggested projects. Don't hesitate to contact me for further information. I am happy to pass along anything I can. Together we can make a difference. Email comments on this blog to berylfishbone@yahoo.com View my past columns at http://www.norwichbulletin.com/section/blogs

Mummy’s in the House

It is almost that time of the year when the senior residents of Norwich, CT begin talking about the age of the City of Norwich and how grand the old celebrations were because they have a collection of the post cards or have gone to the Otis Library website and used the link to old and mostly unidentified and blurry scanned photographs.

How I wish they just dug a little bit more into the history of the events and read some of the available descriptions of the events. Truth is often stranger than the fantasies that can be dreamed up.

With thanks to the internet which can be given enormous credit for spreading of tales but also fresh new insights through a wider lens than we are accustomed to looking through. For example, this article, written by Wayne L Youngblood, philatelist, editor, storyteller, and appraiser of Prairie du Sac WI, was sent to me by a friend because it mentioned Norwich, CT.

Just a thought but the Leffingwell House Museum, in Norwich, CT, has an extensive collection of paper, newspapers and communications from the 1840’s – 1860’s that would make a fabulous, unusual and unique collection display that could draw in new visitors.

Some of this information appears in the Norwich Bulletin bi-annually, but I don’t recall in as much detail.

Mummies Among Us (Philatelic feature) Wayne L. Youngblood

It’s possible there are mummies lurking in your collection – or at least parts of them.

We frequently don’t give much thought to the paper our stamps and covers are produced on, but papermaking has a long, colorful and somewhat sordid history involving various crimes, body snatching and – now – confirmed evidence of perhaps widespread use of mummy wrappings for pulp.

For many years the idea of mummy paper has been debated and was thought by many in the world of papermaking to be little more than urban legend. Mummy paper includes any number of products created using (at least in part) the linen wrappings of mummies imported from Egypt. As it turns out, from a relatively recent discovery, a number of our philatelic artifacts may contain traces of mummies.

Due to many reasons, including a rapidly growing literacy rate and the rapid expansion of the newspaper industry, the demand for paper spiked during the mid-19th century. At the time, most paper was made with a high percentage of rag content, and demand for rags far outstripped the available supply. By the mid 1850s, papermaking in America was approaching a crisis, with no significant new source of rags in sight. In Britain, it was not uncommon for criminals to dig up the recently deceased, sell the bodies for medical dissection and peddle the clothing as rags for papermaking. In the United States, however, another scenario began playing out.

Isaiah Deck, an archaeologist, geologist, explorer and physician, gave thought to mummy paper after having visited Egypt in 1847 searching for Cleopatra’s lost emerald mines. While there, he noted the huge number of mummies and parts (human and animal) that were frequently exposed in “Mummy pits” after sandstorms. By Deck’s calculations in 1855, there were enough easily accessed mummies providing linen of the “finest texture” to sate the papermaking needs of America for about 14 years (at the average consumption of 15lbs per person per year). (1.) Besides, the bones of animals (and, he presumed, humans) were already being extensively used for creating charcoal for Egyptian sugar refineries. Linens for paper, he reasoned, should be obtainable for “a trifling cost.”

Even earlier, in its Dec. 17, 1847, issue, the Cold Water Fountain, a temperance newspaper in Gardiner, Maine, ran an article regarding the potential use of mummies for paper: “The latest idea of the Pacha of Egypt for a new source of revenue is the conversion of the cloth which covers the bodies of the dead into paper, to be sold to add to the treasury,” according to the article. (2) The paper went on to describe the fine quality of the linen and its superior suitability for papermaking.

One of the earliest reports of mummies as paper pulp comes from 1858, when a visitor to the Great Falls Mill in Gardiner, Maine, complained about the smell of rags, noting “…but the most singular and the cleanest division of the whole filthy mess … were the plundered wrappings of men, bulls, crocodiles and cats, torn from the respectable defunct members of the same … [to be mingled] with the vulgar unmentionables of the shave-pated herd of modern Egyptians…” (3)  An example of a locally produced folded letter mailed from Gardiner in 1860 is shown in Figure 1. It bears an example of Scott No. 25.

Dard Hunter, in his Papermaking: The History and Technique of an Ancient Craft, documented a paper mill in Gardiner, Maine (likely Great Falls), that – in 1863 – used mummy wrappings due to a shortage of rags during the Civil War.

A History of the S.D. Warren Co., produced in 1954 to celebrate the centennial of the papermaker, discussed the shortage in a chapter detailing the transition to wood pulp. For rags, “one of the most unusual sources was Egypt, where many yards of cloth wrapped around thousands of mummies were stripped and shipped to paper-hungry countries.”3

Unfortunately oft-repeated legend that mummy linens caused multiple outbreaks of cholera in part led to the general acceptance that mummy paper was only a myth and not a reality.

However, it is well documented that in Europe mummies were being ground up for a snuff-like “medicine” and for use as a paint pigment (named “mummy”). It certainly is not only conceivable, but probable, that linens were used for papermaking in multiple U.S. locations. However, likely due to prevailing religious sensibilities regarding corpses, the use of these imports was not widely publicized.

The prime piece of physical evidence is the existence of a broadside discovered by mummy researcher S.J. Wolfe in the Brown University archives, reinforced by the Figure 2 example I located several years ago – the only one known in private hands. The item was created for the Norwich, Conn., Bicentennial Celebration in 1859 and features an ad for the Chelsea Manufacturing Co. of Greeneville, Conn., at the bottom, “the largest paper manufactory in the world.”

The text, enlarged in Figure 3, reads (in part): “The material of which it is made, was brought from Egypt. It was taken from the ancient tombs where it had been used in embalming mummies…”

Footnotes:

1.      Deck, Isaiah, “On a Supply of Paper Material from the Mummy Pits of Egypt,” Transactions of the American Institute of the City of New York, for the year 1854 (Albany 1855, pp83-93).

2.      A Cold Water Fountain, Gardiner, Maine, Dec. 17, 1847.

3.      Northern Home Journal, Gardiner, Maine, Aug. 12, 1858.

4.      A History of the S.D. Warren Co., 1854-1954, Westbrook, Maine, 1954 (page 33).

It’s entirely possible that a good number of U.S. envelopes manufactured during the 1850s and ’60s from multiple factories (if not stamps themselves and stamped envelopes) may very well contain traces of mummy. What’s in your collection?

Thank you for reading and sharing my history and Norwich Community blog freely with your family or friends or anyone you think might be interested or in a position to take on some of the suggested projects. Don’t hesitate to contact me for further information. I am happy to pass along anything I can. Together we can make a difference. Email comments on this blog to berylfishbone@yahoo.com View my past columns at http://www.norwichbulletin.com/section/blogs .

Benny 1857

“Twas the Night before Christmas” is a poem recited often before Christmas, but perhaps we can begin a movement to recite this poem Titled “Benny” Author Unknown from the Norwich Evening Courier of January 31, 1857.

I had told him Christmas morning,
As he sat upon my knee
Holding fast his little stockings,
Stuffed as full as full could be,
And attentive listening to me,
With a face demure and mild,
That old Santa Claus, who filled them,
Did not love a naughty child.

“But we’ll be good, won’t we moder?”
And from off my lap he slid,
Digging deep among the goodies
In his crimson stockings hid;
While I turned me to my table,
Where a tempting goblet stood,
Brimming high with dainty egg-nog,
Sent me by a neighbor good.

But the kitten, there before me,
With his white paw, nothing loth,
Sat, by way of entertainment,
Slapping off the shining froth;
And in not the gentlest humor
At the loss of such a treat,
I confess, I rather rudely
Thrust him out into the street.

Then, how Benny’s blue eyes kindled!
Gathering up the precious store
He had busily been pouring
In his tiny pinafore.
With a generous look that shamed me,
Sprang he from the carpet bright,
Showing, by his mien indignant
All a baby’s sense of right.

“Come back, Harney!” called he, loudly,
As he held his apron white –
“You shall have my candy wabbit!”
But the door was fastened tight;
So he stood, abashed and silent,
In the center of the floor,
With defeated look alternate
Bent on me and on the door.

Then, as by some sudden impulse,
Quickly ran he to the fire,
And while eagerly his bright eyes
Watched the flames go high and higher,
In a bright clear key he shouted,
Like some lordly little elf,
“Sant Kaus, come down the chimney,
Make my moder have herself!”

“I’ll be a good girl, Benny,”
Said I, feeling the reproof;
And straight away called poor Harney,
Mewing on the gallery roof.
Soon the anger was forgotten,
Laughter chased away the frown,
And they gamboled ‘neath the live oaks
Till the dusty night came down.

In my dim, fire-lighted chamber,
Harney purred beneath my chair,
And my play worn boy beside me,
Knelt to say his evening prayer:
“God bless Fader – God bless Moder,
God bless Sister – then a pause,
And the sweet young lips devoutly
Murmured, “God bless Santa Kaus!”

He is sleeping – brown and silken
Lie the lashes, long and meek,
Like caressing, clinging shadows
On his plump and peachy cheek;
And I bend above him, weeping
Thankful tears – Oh, undefiled
For a woman’s crown of glory,
For the blessing of a child.

Blessings of the holidays to all!

Thank you for reading and sharing my history and Norwich Community blog freely with your family or friends or anyone you think might be interested or in a position to take on some of the suggested projects. Don’t hesitate to contact me for further information. I am happy to pass along anything I can. Together we can make a difference. Email me at berylfishbone@yahoo.com View my past columns at http://www.norwichbulletin.com/section/blogs

Norwich Innovation Posters

I have yapped and made suggestions before on making innovation posters for Norwich before but no one has chosen to look at the list of endless possibilities listed on either the United States Patent Office site or a search on Google Patent.

So I chose six to tell you about today with the suggestion that  posters be printed, sold and hung throughout the city to advertise that innovative thinking is not new to Norwich and we have room for more.

In 1866, Henry W. Holly of Norwich, CT improved upon the pencil in US patent #58102. I bet you thought it only was invented once and never improved on.

In 1866, Reuben B. Fuller of Norwich, CT developed an improved vase for cultivating strawberries in US patent #55482 A that was used as a pot for growing plants under water culture in 1952. It kept the roots contained, water directed and transferred the warmth of the sun to  the roots for better growth.

In 1867,  Albert M. Force of Norwich, CT invented a new and improved meat slicer in US patent #63236 that has been referenced by other inventors for a paring and slicing knife (USP 2858610) in November 1958, a trachelotome  (USP 3013553)  in December 1961 and an adjustable bow knife (USP 5802723) in September 1998.

In 1871, Webster Park of Norwich, Ct invented a new and improved method for measuring water flow in US patent  #111,143. I wonder if the billing office of NPU has a party on January 24th to celebrate the anniversary of the water meter?

In 1886, John Coit and John McNamara of Norwich, CT developed a new and improved beer drawing apparatus. Yes, a beer tap that could control the head on the mug as it was poured.

In 1928, Zaida Webb created the “Garden Doll” US patent # 323,915. A doll so sweet looking any child today would be proud to possess.

There are plenty more that would create some very interesting posters and could carry a theme if you like but what do you think of these to get us started?  Imagine the sketch of all of these  on one poster with a short individual blurb explaining them and a blank space that says your invention belongs here contact the Office of the Mayor of Norwich, CT for more information.

Thank you for reading and sharing my history and Norwich Community blog freely with your family or friends or anyone you think might be interested or in a position to take on some of the suggested projects. Don’t hesitate to contact me for further information. I am happy to pass along anything I can. Together we can make a difference. Email comments on this blog to berylfishbone@yahoo.com View my past columns at http://www.norwichbulletin.com/section/blogs.

Norwich Golf

I hope this is one of the stories told on at least one of the historic Walktober Norwichtown trots.

The best place to start a project is at the beginning and so I read what is posted on line as the history of the Norwich Golf Course but I need your help in verifying what it claims. Much of what follows is directly from that history posting as I know nothing about golf and wanted to present what  I found in hopes of more details being brought forward.

The posted history says that the location of the first golf course in Norwich was on the home lot of Benedict Arnold. The owner was a rector at one of the Episcopal Churches in Norwich and a young golf enthusiast. He(unnamed) and a friend (also unnamed)  laid out a six-hole golf course in the  back yard  and recruited friends to play (including women). This first course had an area of ledge on a fairway. The article claimed the ledge was used in Indian times as a place where Indians ground their corn and the mortar holes were visible in the ledge.

The first tournament was held in November, 1896 proven by a small silver cup with the names of the winners, the date and their score engraved. (I have asked about this cup but no one knows what I am talking about.)

Then supposedly there were two more courses between the city and the Norwich Town Green but the locations are a bit hazy.

The Golf Course history goes on to mention a score card kept in the archives from the 2707 yard third course with no mention what par was in use at the time.  The bogey system was the criterion of excellence. The back of the card is filled with local rules and penalties for lifting. A note at the bottom announces that hole number one has no local rule.

The fourth course is the current one laid out on 80 acres just south of the city. On March 12, 1924 additional land was purchased and Tull & Tull was hired to design a new course and on April 19, 1924 the plans were changed and more land acquired and the course was opened on July 4th, 1925.

In 1978 the golf course was purchased by the City of Norwich and opened to the public.

Thank you for reading and sharing my history and Norwich Community blog freely with your family or friends or anyone you think might be interested or in a position to take on some of the suggested projects. Don’t hesitate to contact me for further information. I am happy to pass along anything I can. Together we can make a difference. Email comments on this blog to berylfishbone@yahoo.com View my past columns at http://www.norwichbulletin.com/section/blogs.

Abel Buel in Norwich Jail

The next time you take a guided walk on the historic Norwichtown Green  ask the Guide to tell you about some of the tales of the courthouse and the prison. Do not let them get away with pointing to a location and saying there once stood the county jail and leave it at that.

I am partial to the tale of Abel Buell. (The spelling of his name changes with the document and source being used). Abel was born in Clinton, CT in 1742 to and was apprenticed in his early teens to Ebenezer Chittenden a well-known silversmith. He had it all to be a great success. He was a handsome smooth talker with imagination and industry. He married Chittenden’s daughter Mary by the time he was 19. She was the first of his four wives. A nosy neighbor peeked in an upstairs window and saw him changing a 5 shillings note into a larger 5 pounds note and reported him to authorities.

He was found guilty at the Superior Court in Norwich in April 1764, of passing an altered note to Zephaniah Clark and sentenced to prison, to have one ear cropped, branded on the forehead, and his property sold.

Given his young age and otherwise good character, the branding was done high on his forehead where it was later concealed by his hair. The tip of his ear was cut off and placed on his tongue to keep it warm and quickly replaced so later there was little disfigurement.

Abel never returned to Norwich. But he lived a life of adventure made for a movie screen. He made money again, but legally this time by inventing the copper penny and the press to make them. He learned the art of chart and map making and in 1784 published and printed the first map of the new United States; the first of the country to be copyrighted in the United States; and the first map published in the new country to show the Stars and Stripes.

He died March 23, 1822, New Haven’s Columbian Register reported a death “At the Alms House in this town, on the 10th, Mr. Abel Buel, aged 81 years, an ingenious mechanic….”

Learn more about the adventures of inventor and engraver Abel Buel of Connecticut.

Thank you for reading and sharing my history and Norwich Community blog freely with your family or friends or anyone you think might be interested or in a position to take on some of the suggested projects. Don’t hesitate to contact me for further information. I am happy to pass along anything I can. Together we can make a difference. Email comments on this blog to berylfishbone@yahoo.com View my past columns at http://www.norwichbulletin.com/section/blogs.

Women Voters of Norwich

Women’s suffrage is the right of women to vote and stand for elected office. I like to put this blog forward every fall around election time to remind everyone how important it is to exercise the privilege of voting. I hope I will be seeing you there.

In 1756 Lydia Taft voted in Uxbridge in the British colony of Massachusetts. In 1869 women in the Wyoming territory voted. In 1902 21 women are listed as eligible voters of the City of Norwich Connecticut.

The voting districts were different back then. Jennie Swan of 71 Maple Street and Grace Willey of 52 Asylum Street were from the 2nd district. Both women were married Jennie to Amos an electrician with  Eaton, Chase & Co and Grace to Herbert a cigar manufacturer.

The other 19 women were from the 6th district. Eliza Avery, 8 Hamilton Ave; Jennie Briggs, 15 Penobscot; Addie Billings, 1 Hamilton Ave; Mary Billings, 1 Hamilton Ave; Rachel Buell, Mulberry; Nettie Bushnell, 64 Main; Minnie Campbell, 5 Elm; Jennie Davis, Corning Road; Mary Green, 21 Penobscot; Elfie Harris, Mulberry;  Harriet Harris, Mulberry; Ida Mathieu, 68 Main; Nellie Rathbun, 18 Williams Ave; Nellie Service, 9 Hamilton Ave; Sarah Spaulding, 20 Main; Annie Storms, Palmer; Amelia Vetter, 1 Hamilton Ave; Ellen Williamson, 62 Main; and Elizabeth Young, Palmer

What were the issues that brought them to the polls? Were they registered despite their husbands or fathers or with their encouragement and support? On  a shelf, in a trunk or a box or a chest in the attic or cellar is there a diary, a book or a record that can give us some insight into the lives and reasons that they registered and voted? What were their emotions? How did it feel to cast those ballots? If you are a relation of any of these women were you ever told a story about how they became a voter? A family tale or legend? Now would be a good time to share those tales with us.

Thank you for reading and sharing my history and Norwich Community blog freely with your family or friends or anyone you think might be interested or in a position to take on some of the suggested projects. Don’t hesitate to contact me for further information. I am happy to pass along anything I can. Together we can make a difference. Email comments on this blog to berylfishbone@yahoo.com View my past columns at http://www.norwichbulletin.com/section/blogs.