Not bragging, but Alice Lewis is 104 years old and counting

SHARON — Alice (Bonhotel) Lewis, like many other people who grew up in Sharon, attended school on Hilltop Road. Like other students, she remembers teachers helping her with her worst subject, arithmetic, until she was good at it. She also remembers walking a sick classmate home at the end of the day one time.

Unlike most other people who remember growing up in Sharon, she did not attend Sharon Center School. Lewis attended one of the 19 public grade schools in Sharon (according to an 1870s map at the Sharon Historical Society) that existed until the districts merged and Sharon Center School opened. 

At 104, Lewis is one of the oldest living people to have grown up in Sharon.  She lived in Sharon until she was in seventh grade, when she and two of her younger sisters moved to Winsted, where they attended The Gilbert School. 

At that time, Gilbert was located where Northwestern Connecticut Community College is located today. 

“So if people ask I just tell them I went to college,” Lewis joked. 

Lewis and her sisters moved to Winsted after their mother died. In addition to her father, Lewis left behind in Sharon an older brother and an infant sister, Betty, who was adopted by another Sharon family. 

After graduating from high school in Winsted, Lewis returned to Sharon to work for a woman who owned and lived at the local golf course. After one year, she returned to Winsted. 

“My brother was the only one left in Sharon, and Winsted seemed to be my home,” she said. 

Lewis lived and worked in Winsted for more than 40 years. For most of her time there, she ran a Linotype machine for the Winsted Evening Citizen; her job was to set each piece of type used to be printed in the paper. 

“When computers came, some of the linotype operators were let go,” Lewis said. As a result, “I ended up learning how to do a lot more.” 

At 72, when the Winsted and Torrington newspapers merged and became the Register Citizen, Lewis retired. 

“I wasn’t ready to go though,” she said. 

Today, Lewis lives next door to her son in Torrington. She reads the paper every day, and she travels to Burlington, Conn., every Monday for Bingo. She also keeps up with her favorite sports team, the Boston Red Sox. Lewis is a dedicated fan; in addition to her Red Sox coasters and calendar with pictures of the players (this month it’s Mookie Betts), she never misses a game. 

“I stay up to watch the game even if it goes until 12 or 1 a.m,” she said. “But don’t make it sound like I’m bragging.”

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Travel league baseball came to Torrington Thursday, June 26, when the Berkshire Bears Select Team played the Connecticut Moose 18U squad. The Moose won 6-4 in a back-and-forth game. Two players on the Bears play varsity ball at Housatonic Valley Regional High School: shortstop Anthony Foley and first baseman Wes Allyn. Foley went 1-for-3 at bat with an RBI in the game at Fuessenich Park.

 

  Anthony Foley, rising senior at Housatonic Valley Regional High School, went 1-for-3 at bat for the Bears June 26.Photo by Riley Klein 

 
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