George Closson's always in the zone

WINSTED — In recent months most residents have come to associate George Closson’s name with the Winchester Planning and Zoning Commission, but Closson’s expertise on land and in the air brings this local businessman to great heights.

Closson was born and raised in Berlin, Conn., but spent a good deal of time at his parents’ summer cottage on Highland Lake. Those summers led him to his wife, Susan, whom he married in 1969, becoming a full-time Winsted resident in 1971.

Closson attended Suffield Academy and the University of Hartford, where he earned his bachelor’s degree in economics and finance. While in school he worked with his father as a real estate agent, working primarily on commercial transactions. They also became involved with commercial construction.

In 1969, after graduating from college, Closson applied for a pilot training program with the Air Force.

“Vietnam was going on. If you got drafted, you went into the Army. I preferred to fly for the Air Force. Fortunately, I got accepted into the program,� said Closson, who began as a National Guardsman, based out of Bradley. “I had a military responsibility so I felt I’d try to go and do something that would be most exciting and challenging.�

In 1971 Closson was accepted into Advanced Fighter Training School, which he attended in Tuscon, Ariz., and became an active member of the Air Force. He and his wife, Susan, later bought a house in Winsted, where they raised their daughter, Stacy.

Closson said his work in the Air Force was hard, but he was passionate about flying. His more than 20 years in the Air Force brought him all over the world, flying missions in places like Hawaii, England, Turkey and Germany, but with all his training, he never saw combat.

“The whole time I was in we didn’t have a major conflict. We were training to go to war,� said Closson, who often flew two missions a day engaging in dog fights and training exercises. “We had a responsiblity that within so many hours we had to be upward anywhere in the world we were needed.�

In 1990 Closson retired from the Air Force as  a lieutenant colonel. While he did continue to fly private airplanes after he left the military, maintaining a commercial pilots license, Closson said the experience was just not the same as flying an F-100 at supersonic speeds and his flying days are mostly behind him now.

“I had a lot of fun doing some of it,â€� said Closson.  “We’ve lost some of our flying companions from accidents, too. That’s the tough part of it.â€�

Back in Winsted, Closson dove deep into his real estate and building business, beginning SOC Construction, a commercial/industrial construction company. It’s a family business; Closson works day to day with his wife and daughter. He also continues to sell commercial real estate property.

Closson also became involved with local boards and commissions.

“I’m passionate about the community,� said Closson. “I felt I had something to bring to the table.�

Over the last 30 years, Closson has been involved with several boards, including the YMCA Building Committee for its new pool in the 1980s; Planning and Zoning, which he joined in 1997, and chaired from 2005; and the first School Building Committee. More recently, Closson has become involved with the Plan of Conservation and Development subcommittee and is on the Board of Directors for the Friends of Main Street, both of which are actively engaged in the economic development of Winsted.

It’s hard to imagine he has any free time. However, Closson does admit that he occasionally finds time to sit down and read a good book or stay at his house in the Adirondacks. He also enjoys helping his wife work in the yard on a nice day.  

“Susan’s an avid gardener. So I’m her helper. That’s relaxation,� said Closson.

 

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