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The Waterford Connection

This town - and people from it - turns up in some very unexpected places.

Living in St. Louis, I frequently heard about the unusual number of people who can be linked to the city. The phrase “the St. Louis connection” comes up in conversations and newspaper articles and is even printed on a T-shirt. As an outsider, I quickly found myself connecting far-flung people and places to St. Louis too: once you pay attention, you begin to notice a surprising number of references to the city, sometimes from the oddest of sources. They stand out, I think, because St. Louis is just small enough for it to evoke surprise when it turns up, but not so small that this never happens.

Waterford never struck me as the “connection” kind of place. But I’m almost starting to think of it that way, because although it doesn’t reach St. Louis levels, I’m discovering that where you would never think to look for Waterford, there it is.

Try Ohio - Warren, OH, to be exact. The town was named after former Waterford resident Moses Warren, who went West with the surveying team of the Connecticut Land Company in 1796. The Company had bought the land, a portion of  the Connecticut Western Reserve, from the State of Connecticut, which had claimed it since John Winthrop, Jr.’s 1662 Charter granted the new Colony the land “from the Said Norrogancett Bay on the East to the South Sea [i.e., the Pacific Ocean] on the West parte.”  (The leader of the surveying party, General Moses Cleaveland, was originally from Canterbury. The Ohio city named for him eventually lost its extraneous “a.”)

Or, if that’s not strange enough, try the Bering Sea at the tail end of the Civil War. No one tells you in school (or ever, really) that the last engagement of America’s deadliest war took place in Alaska. But it did, and a Waterford whaleboat captain was part of it. Samuel Greene, born in Quaker Hill, was commanding one of several New England whaling vessels that were captured near Little Diomede by the Confederate raider Shenandoah. In one year, the tenacious captain of the Shenandoah, James Waddell, sank or captured 38 U.S. ships and took 1,000 prisoners. Greene and his crew were taken in June of 1865, months after Lee’s surrender. Waddell refused to stop fighting until his British allies confirmed the War was indeed over.

Another Waterford-native-unexpectedly-meets-Civil War story involves not boats, but trains. Thomas Rogers grew up in Quaker Hill and worked on the railroad in New Jersey before forming the company that built the locomotive known as the General. This locomotive gained fame after its involvement in the dramatic 1862 Georgia raid known as the “Great Locomotive Chase.” A group of Union soldiers and civilians, attempting to capture Chattanooga,  hijacked the General and drove it towards Tennessee, destroying tracks and telegraph wires while being pursued by the train conductor on foot, in a hand-car, and in other locomotives. They made it from modern Kennesaw almost to Chattanooga before they were caught. Some were executed, some managed to escape, and others were exchanged as prisoners of war. If this sounds like a movie, it was two: a 1956 Disney film, and a 1926 silent comedy starring Buster Keaton.

Sometimes, it’s not that Waterford residents go elsewhere and get mixed up in unusual happenings, but that unexpected things take place right here. In 1887, two farmers, Christopher Brown and Charles W. Payne, leased some of their Quaker Hill land (what is it with Quaker Hill?) to James A. Boss for the purpose of drilling for oil. But usually, locals in search of the earth’s buried treasures leave Waterford first. John Isham Chappell, John Keeney, David Austin, and Griswold Avery, for instance, got caught up in the frenzy of the Gold Rush and set out for California. They took a shortcut through the isthmus of Panama, walking through the jungle for 28 days.

There’s another Waterford to California via Panama Gold Rush story that’s far more exciting. It centers around a ship that...well, it’s too full of twists and turns to get into at this point. But tune in again next week.

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Ivy's Simply Homemade
nascarblue May 17, 2013 at 08:05 am
happy happy anniversary, i love your food, you can tell when a business takes pride in what they do.Read More wishing you many many more years, i will definatly be back, along with my friends, we love your food.
Naty Bush May 18, 2013 at 11:44 am
Where will the meeting take place? I might be able to go to say why it shouldn't be demolished.
Kate May 15, 2013 at 06:36 pm
There are two state agencies that are involved. Both of them are historical preservation societies,Read More and this is what they do, help communities find viable purposes for historic buildings. While the building has been treated as more or less an inconvenience for the town, it is important to remember it is an historic site. It matters. Every town, every city, must look carefully at it's historic buildings and sites with an eye toward preservation, or, you end up with a community full of houses and walmarts. Cohanzie is a unique building for it's architectural style, for it's historic quarry site, and it's importance as a community hub, not to mention the thousands of citizens that passed through. An old building like Cohanzie is built to last. We won't ever see buildings built like that again. We can always build another Walmart. You raise a good question. Maybe once we hear about what could be done with the building, we need a town referendum to find out how the people of Waterford want to proceed. Many historic buildings are saved at the last minute by people who decide history matters. Will Waterford do the same. I don't know the answer.
Maggie L. May 15, 2013 at 01:56 pm
Do you have any proposals for the use of the building? If the town were to keep the building it mostRead More likely will have to be staffed. Do you believe that most town residents would be willing to see an increase in the town budget to allow for additional staff? I'm just tossing out questions because I haven't heard any concrete proposals for the use of the building
Liz May 12, 2013 at 09:06 pm
Mr. Steiner wants to build 72 three story homes on 32 acres in addition to the 60 condos in the twoRead More large buildings. That is more than two individual units per acre or if you include the 60 condos - that is MORE than 4 units per acre! The area around the property for new building is zoned 3 acres per unit. The average of currently built housing abutting the property is about one acre per unit. That is not in keeping with the neighborhood character.
Daniella Ruiz May 12, 2013 at 05:36 pm
Mr Steiner may be the last hope for this decrepit place. The neighbors need to move along, or buyRead More the place themselves. Change might help the stonewalling attitude that has become evident in nearly the entire town, revolving around exclusive entitled old farts with nothing better to do than remember their glory days of Seaside. Its gone, & it's not going to revert back to a pasture either. (too many complaints about that cow smell and so forth). My advice is to listen carefully and try to work something out, get over your own selfish grandious dreams of Pelham Manor style estates and do SOMETHING before it simply falls apart like Norwich Hospital, the countless thread/manufacturing mills, and every other historic building that has been left to rot.
Daniella Ruiz May 14, 2013 at 08:53 am
mary m>> common sense? heee hee. in this day and age? lawyers have made every attempt toRead More eradicate that concept from our every life activity. write it into some law, that can be thence used as future gurantee of use of, by and for their own existence? it's like job security for that entire group, keep the general public at a disadvantage, unable to apply common sense (whats left of it they havent entombed in laws) and uneasy about acting on their own. John Y has the right attitude, heave the cra.pp on the peoples lawn, and hope it doesn't lay there for days as well!
John Yannacci, Sr. May 13, 2013 at 10:09 am
Mary May, I don't know the legality of posting signs on telephone poles. But, take a ride aroundRead More Waterford on Saturday mornings and you'll see signs on anything that is verticle. Take a ride around the same neighborhoods on Wednesday and half the signs will still be there. I wonder if the folks who have had the same yard sale sign at the corner of Great Neck and Rope Ferry Rds. for two and a half weeks wonder why cars are still stopping at their house every Saturday morning.
Mary May May 13, 2013 at 09:53 am
Um I believe it is ILLEGAl to post ANY sign on a telephone pole ANYWAY but free standing signsRead More should be removed after sale is over ! Really a state law just COMMON SENSE we have lost along the way !