Business group focuses on Saperstein’s

MILLERTON — In its first meeting of 2018, the Millerton Business Group, also known as the Millerton Merchants’ Association, came together to discuss future business options for the  Saperstein’s building. 

Located at 41 Main Street in Millerton, the iconic clothing store, Saperstein’s, has been an active business in the village community for the past 70 years. Owned first by his father, Irving Saperstein, current store owner Lewis Saperstein announced his decision to close the business last summer. He placed the building on the market with Elyse Harney Real Estate.

The Millerton Business Group held its meeting at Montage on Main Street on Thursday, Jan. 11. Group leader Dick Hermans mentioned that fellow members Jennifer Dowley, Greg Osofsky and Carol Sadlon had collaborated to discuss options to fill the hole the departure of Saperstein’s will leave.

Dowley explained the two-pronged scheme: to find a buyer for the building and then lease the building to a business person on favorable terms. The idea is to invest in the community rather than only make financial gain.

A sporting goods store was suggested as a good option. Dowley said the group talked with Berkshire Bike & Board in Great Barrington, Mass., to see if it’s interested in branching out to Millerton. It isn’t. The group talked with several other sporting goods stores around the region to gauge interest.

“We’ve been just having a small working group generating ideas,” Osofsky said. “The missing element isn’t so much the ideas … it’s about having a business owner. Ideas by themselves are worthless — it takes someone to steward them.”

From Osofsky’s perspective, the Saperstein’s building is a marquee location, welcoming visitors. He said it would be great to appeal to a younger crowd and inspire a youthful energy in the village. 

The group wants to avoid having a dollar store, if possible.

“We’re looking for a business that appeals and services the needs of the community and the full range of the community,” Dowley said.

She added the group thought about the Harlem Valley Rail Trail and the upcoming plans to extend north. She said Saperstein’s and its bicycle racks could be an asset and valuable resource.

The business group liked the idea of a sporting goods store moving in, especially with a focus on bicycling.

“My perception is that biking is a four months out of the year business,” said Jenny Hansell. “For someone who needs to make a living from a business, that might not work out.”

Hansell encouraged the group to think about families with young children and what might work in the summer as well as in the winter.

Another issue discussed at the meeting was the size of Saperstein’s, totaling 9,888 square feet. The Montage building posed a similar problem and was eventually divided into smaller spaces. 

Sadlon asked how the group could bridge the generation gap seen throughout village businesses.

“Another way of thinking of it is as a central location capable of bringing people together,” Osofsky said; he suggested a public service space. 

The Saperstein’s building is for sale for $600,000; purchasing the building and business comes to a total of $900,000. For possible buyers, Sapterstein has offered his assistance in getting the business going.

Latest News

Robin Wall Kimmerer urges gratitude, reciprocity in talk at Cary Institute

Robin Wall Kimmerer inspired the audience with her grassroots initiative “Plant, Baby, Plant,” encouraging restoration, native planting and care for ecosystems.

Aly Morrissey

Robin Wall Kimmerer, the bestselling author of “Braiding Sweetgrass” and a member of the Citizen Potawatomi Nation, urged a sold-out audience at the Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies on Friday, March 13, to rethink humanity’s relationship with the natural world through gratitude, reciprocity and responsibility.

Introduced by Cary Institute President Joshua Ginsberg, Kimmerer opened the evening by greeting the audience in Potawatomi, the native language of her ancestors, and grounding the talk in a practice of gratitude.

Keep ReadingShow less

Melissa Gamwell’s handmade touch

Melissa Gamwell’s handmade touch
Melissa Gamwell, hand lettering with precision and care.
Kevin Greenberg
"There is no better feeling than working through something with your own brain and your own hands." —Melissa Gamwell

In an age of automation, Melissa Gamwell is keeping the human hand alive.

The Cornwall, Connecticut-based calligrapher is practicing an art form that’s been under attack by machines for nearly 400 years, and people are noticing. For proof, look no further than the line leading to her candle-lit table at the Stissing House Craft Feast each winter. In her first year there, she scribed around 1,200 gift tags, cards, and hand drawn ornaments.

Keep ReadingShow less
Regional 7 students bring ‘The Addams Family’ to the stage

The cast of “The Addams Family” from Northwest Regional School District No. 7 with Principal Kelly Carroll from Ann Antolini Elementary School in New Hartford.

Monique Jaramillo

Nearly 50 students from across the region are helping bring the delightfully macabre world of “The Addams Family” to life in Northwestern Regional School District No. 7’s upcoming production. The student cast and crew, representing the towns of Barkhamsted, Colebrook, New Hartford and Norfolk, will stage the musical March 27 and 28 at 7 p.m., with a 2 p.m. matinee on March 29 in the school’s auditorium in Winsted.

Based on the iconic characters created by Charles Addams, the musical follows Wednesday Addams, who shocks her famously eccentric family by falling in love with a perfectly “normal” young man. When his parents come to dinner at the Addams’ mansion, two very different families collide, leading to an evening of secrets, surprises and unexpected revelations about love and belonging.

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

‘Quilts of Many Colors’ opens at Hunt Library

Garth Kobel, Art Wall Chair, Mary Randolph, Frank Halden, Ruth Giumarro, Project Chair, Maria Bulson, Barbara Lobdell, Sherry Newman, Elizabeth Frey-Thomas, Donna Heinz around “The Green Man.”

Robin Roraback

In honor of National Quilt Day, a tradition established in 1991, Hunt Library’s second annual quilt show, “Quilts of Many Colors,” will open Saturday, March 21, with a reception from 5 to 7 p.m. The quilts, made by members of the Hunt Library Quilters, will be displayed through April 17. All quilts will be for sale, and a portion of each sale goes to the library.

At the center of the exhibit is a quilt the Hunt Library Quilters collaborated on called the “Quilt of Many Colors,” inspired by Dolly Parton’s song”Coat of Many Colors.” Each member of the Hunt Library Quilters made two to four 10-inch squares for the twin-size quilt, with Gail Allyn embroidering “The Green Man” for the center square. The Green Man, a symbol of rebirth, is also a symbol of the library, seen carved in stone at the library’s entrance. One hundred percent of the sale of this quilt benefits the library.

Keep ReadingShow less

New in at Kenise Barnes Fine Art

New in at Kenise Barnes Fine Art

New works on display at Kenise Barnes Fine Art in Kent

D.H. Callahan

Since 2018, Kenise Barnes Fine Art in Kent has been displaying an impressive rotation of works across a range of artists and mediums. On Saturday, March 14, art enthusiasts arrived to see a new exhibition at the gallery featuring a wide variety of new pieces.

Large-scale paintings by David Collins and Melanie Parke alongside small 3-by-3 inch oil-on-panel works by Sally Maca.

Keep ReadingShow less
Trailblazing divorce attorney Harriet Newman Cohen to speak at Norfolk Library

Harriet Newman Cohen

Provided

Harriet Newman Cohen weathered many storms in her five-decade-long journey to become one of the nation’s most celebrated divorce attorneys. Voted one of the top 100 attorneys in New York for many years, Cohen served as president of the New York Women’s Bar Association and has been a champion of divorce reform. She and her co-author, journalist David Feinberg, will give a book talk about her memoir, “Passion and Power: A Life in Three Worlds,” at the Norfolk Library on Sunday, March 22 at 2 p.m.

What began as a personal record of her life, intended for her family, grew into a memoir that journalist Carl Bernstein describes in his endorsement as “wise and riveting.” Born in 1932 in Providence, Rhode Island, to parents who immigrated in 1920 from Ukraine and Poland, Cohen traces the arc of her life and the challenges she faced entering a legal profession that was overwhelmingly male at the time, leading to her success as a maverick divorce attorney fighting for women’s rights and equity in the law. She received her Juris Doctor, cum laude, from Brooklyn Law School in 1974, one year after Roe v. Wade was decided. She is a founding partner of Cohen Stine Kapoor LLP in New York City, a family and matrimonial law firm she formed in 2021, at age 88, with her daughter Martha Cohen Stine and Ankit Kapoor.

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.