A lively cemetery walk in Sharon

SHARON — The dead returned gloriously to life on Friday afternoon,  rising up from their graves at Hillside Cemetery and telling tales about the town’s past.

Actually, it was Sharon residents and members of the town’s Historical Society, all of them playing key figures from Sharon’s history during the seventh annual cemetery walk held on Friday afternoon.

Society member and volunteer tour guide Beth Rybczyk said the event is a way to help residents connect with the town’s history.

“The tour gives people a chance to see the folks who developed the community,� Rybczyk said. “Dead people may be buried, but history is not.�

Mark Sweeney played the gatekeeper to the cemetery for the event, giving visitors a history of the cemetery, which dates back to 1739.

“Local history, in fact all history, is important,� Sweeney said. “This year we’re showcasing different people who are not really as famous as the people we showcased at previous walks.�

Residents from the past who “came back from the dead� included Dr. William Worthington Herrick, played by Fred Baumgarten (Herrick was a doctor and president of the New York Academy of Medicine); Reed Gillette, played by Marc Minahan (Gillette operated a pharmacy in town), and Cora Clum, played by Sarah Paley Coon.

“Anyone here see that TV show,  ‘House?’â€� Baumgarten, in character as Dr. Herrick said to visitors to his gravesite. “I could have shown that whippersnapper a thing or two!â€�

Coon is one of Clum’s 56 great-grandchildren; she played her great-grandmother, dressed in turn-of-the-century clothes, and talked about her family.

“In the 1950s, our grandchildren saved up some money to buy me and [husband] Ed a color television set,� Coon said, in character. “Imagine that? A color TV! So much has changed in my lifetime.�

Historical Society Director Liz Shapiro said the annual event, “gives residents a sense of pride about their town.�

It’s also an excellent introduction to the Halloween season (trick-or-treaters get a special thrill at the Historical Society on the Green, which Shapiro and a cadre of ghoulish helpers turn into a haunted historical house).

And, one hopes, it might also serve as a reminder to youngsters in town to be careful of the cemetery’s ancient stones if they run through it on Oct. 31.

Latest News

Living art takes center stage in the Berkshires

Contemporary chamber musicians, HUB, performing at The Clark.

D.H. Callahan

Northwestern Massachusetts may sometimes feel remote, but last weekend it felt like the center of the contemporary art world.

Within 15 miles of each other, MASS MoCA in North Adams and the Clark Art Institute in Williamstown showcased not only their renowned historic collections, but an impressive range of living artists pushing boundaries in technology, identity and sound.

Keep ReadingShow less
Persistently amplifying women’s voices

Francesca Donner, founder and editor of The Persistent. Subscribe at thepersistent.com.

Aly Morrissey

Francesca Donner pours a cup of tea in the cozy library of Troutbeck’s Manor House in Amenia, likely a habit she picked up during her formative years in the United Kingdom. Flanked by old books and a roaring fire, Donner feels at home in the quiet room, where she spends much of her time working as founder, editor and CEO of The Persistent, a journalism platform created to amplify women’s voices.

Although her parents are American and she spent her earliest years in New York City and Litchfield County — even attending Washington Montessori School as a preschooler — Donner moved to England at around five years old and completed most of her education there. Her accent still bears the imprint of what she describes as a traditional English schooling.

Keep ReadingShow less
Jarrett Porter on the enduring power of Schubert’s ‘Winterreise’
Baritone Jarrett Porter to perform Schubert’s “Winterreise”
Tim Gersten

On March 7, Berkshire Opera Festival will bring “Winterreise” to Studio E at Tanglewood’s Linde Center for Music and Learning, with baritone Jarrett Porter and BOF Artistic Director and pianist Brian Garman performing Franz Schubert’s haunting 24-song setting of poems by Wilhelm Müller.

A rejected lover. A frozen landscape. A mind unraveling in real time. Nearly 200 years after its premiere, “Winterreise” remains unnervingly current in its psychological portrait of isolation, heartbreak and existential drift.

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

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

A grand finale for Crescendo’s 22nd season

Christine Gevert, artistic director, brings together international and local musicians for a season of rare works.

Stephen Potter

Crescendo, the Lakeville-based nonprofit specializing in early and rarely performed classical music, will close its 22nd season with a slate of spring concerts featuring international performers, local musicians and works by pioneering composers from the Baroque era to the 20th century.

Christine Gevert, the organization’s artistic director, has gathered international vocal and instrumental talent, blending it with local voices to provide Berkshire audiences with rare musical treats.

Keep ReadingShow less

Leopold Week honors land and legacy

Leopold Week honors land and legacy

Aldo Leopold in 1942, seated at his desk examining a gray partridge specimen.

Robert C. Oetking

In his 1949 seminal work, “A Sand County Almanac,” Aldo Leopold, regarded by many conservationists as the father of wildlife ecology and modern conservation, wrote, “There are some who can live without wild things and some who cannot.” Leopold was a forester, philosopher, conservationist, educator, writer and outdoor enthusiast.

Originally published by Oxford University Press, “A Sand County Almanac” has sold 2 million copies and been translated into 15 languages. On Sunday, March 8, from 3 to 5 p.m. in the Great Hall of the Norfolk Library, the public is invited to a community reading of selections from the book followed by a moderated discussion with Steve Dunsky, director of “Green Fire,” an Emmy Award-winning documentary film exploring the origins of Leopold’s “land ethic.” Similar reading events take place each year across the country during “Leopold Week” in early March. Planning for this Litchfield County reading began when the Norfolk Library received a grant from the Aldo Leopold Foundation, which provided copies of “A Sand County Almanac” to distribute during the event.

Keep ReadingShow less

Erica Child Prud’homme

Erica Child Prud’homme

WEST CORNWALL — Erica Child Prud’homme died peacefully in her sleep on Jan. 9, 2026, at home in West Cornwall, Connecticut, at 93.

Erica was born on April 27, 1932, in Doylestown, Pennsylvania, the eldest of three children of Charles and Fredericka Child. With her siblings Rachel and Jonathan, Erica was raised in Lumberville, a town in the creative enclave of Bucks County where she began to sketch and paint as a child.

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.