Hector Peart Prud’homme

Hector Peart Prud’homme

WEST CORNWALL — Hector Peart Prud’homme, of West Cornwall  died Sept. 22, 2021, of congestive heart failure at age 90. As he passed away at home, he held the hand of his wife of 63 years, Erica (Child) Prud’homme.

Hector was born on July 7, 1931, at the American Hospital in Paris, France, the eldest of three sons of the late Anne Carolyn (Bissell) and Hector C. Prud’homme. Hector C. moved his family to the U.S. and raised his family in Farmington and Canton, Conn. For junior high school, Hector P. attended the Brooks School in Massachusetts, and in high school he graduated from the International School of Geneva, Switzerland. In 1954 he graduated from Yale University with a B.A. in history and was a member of the Elihu society. 

On May 31, 1958, he married Erica Child, an artist, and they raised their three children in New York City and Cornwall.

Fluent in French, Hector served as a U.S. Army intelligence officer at a NATO base in St-Jean d’Angely, France, from 1954-1956. Upon returning to the U.S. in 1956, he joined the private bank Brown Brothers & Harriman in New York City, as a trainee. Developing a specialty in commercial banking, he focused on foreign currency and foreign bank relations, and spent his entire career at the firm. In the late 1970s, he established the bank’s first business relations with China, and later ran Brown Brothers Foreign Exchange Advisory Service, a currency consulting business with Fortune 500 companies as clients. As a general partner at Brown Brothers for over a decade, Hector traveled extensively in Europe and Asia. 

Upon his retirement from banking in 1984, Hector embarked on a second, fulfilling career in the nonprofit world. An active volunteer and generous philanthropist, he was a trustee or board member of the New Amsterdam Singers and the Citizens Budget Commission, and carried out projects for the National Executive Service Corps, in New York. 

Inspired by the health and environmental problems he had witnessed in developing countries, he served Planned Parenthood of Greater New York as treasurer, president and honorary director over the course of 37 years.

At his home in Connecticut, Hector was devoted to the Cornwall Conservation Trust, where he served as president for nine years and was on the board for 33 years. During his tenure, the CCT conserved over a thousand acres of forest, farmland and watershed, and Hector was a trusted mentor and advisor to dozens of people. Acknowledging his careful, quiet work to build consensus on sometimes difficult questions, the town of Cornwall granted him its Citizen of the Year Award in 2017, an honor he was especially proud of. 

Though he spent much of his life in Manhattan, Hector thought of himself as a “country gent” at heart. He found great solace in gardening, birdwatching, walking and —perhaps most of all — mowing and snowplowing with his blue Ford tractor. 

Hector is survived by his wife, Erica; a son, Alex; two daughters, Merida and Olivia; and six grandchildren, Rosetta, Asa, Hector C., Sophia, Jules and Didi. Hector was predeceased by brothers Anthony and Richard.

In lieu of gifts or flowers, memorial contributions can be made to Planned Parenthood of Greater New York (www.plannedparenthood.org/planned-parenthood-greater-new-york) and the Cornwall Conservation Trust (www.cornwallconservationtrust.org). 

Latest News

State awards $2M to expand affordable housing in Sharon

Local officials join Richard Baumann, far left, president of the Sharon Housing Trust, as they break ground in October at 99 North Main St., the former community center that will be converted into four new affordable rental units.

Ruth Epstein

SHARON — The Sharon Housing Trust announced Dec. 4 that the Connecticut Department of Housing closed on a $2 million grant for the improvement and expansion of affordable rental housing in town.

About half of the funding will reimburse costs associated with renovating the Trust’s three properties at 91, 93 and 95 North Main St., which together contain six occupied affordable units, most of them two-bedroom apartments. Planned upgrades include new roofs, siding and windows, along with a series of interior and exterior refurbishments.

Keep ReadingShow less
Bumpy handoff in North Canaan after razor-thin election

Jesse Bunce, right, and outgoing First Selectman Brian Ohler, left, exchange a handshake following the Nov. 10 recount of the North Canaan first selectman race. Bunce won the election, defeating Ohler by two votes, beginning a transition marked by challenges.

Photo by Riley Klein

NORTH CANAAN — The transition from outgoing First Selectman Brian Ohler to newly elected First Selectman Jesse Bunce has been far from seamless, with a series of communication lapses, technology snags and operational delays emerging in the weeks after an unusually close election.

The Nov. 5 race for first selectman went to a recount, with Bunce winning 572 votes to Ohler’s 570. When the final results were announced, Ohler publicly wished his successor well.

Keep ReadingShow less
Norfolk breaks ground on new firehouse

Officials, firefighters and community members break ground on the Norfolk Volunteer Fire Department’s new firehouse on Dec. 6.

By Jennifer Almquist

NORFOLK — Residents gathered under bright Saturday sunshine on Dec. 6 to celebrate a milestone more than a decade in the making: the groundbreaking for the Norfolk Volunteer Fire Department’s new firehouse.

U.S. Congresswoman Jahana Hayes (D-5) and State Rep. Maria Horn (D-64) joined NVFD leadership, town officials, members of the building committee and Norfolk Hub, and 46 volunteer firefighters for the groundbreaking ceremony.

Keep ReadingShow less
Kent moves closer to reopening Emery Park swimming pond

It may look dormant now, but the Emery Park pond is expected to return to life in 2026

By Alec Linden

KENT — Despite sub-zero wind chills, Kent’s Parks and Recreation Commission is focused on summer.

At its Tuesday, Dec. 2, meeting, the Commission voted in favor of a bid to rehabilitate Emery Park’s swimming pond, bringing the town one step closer to regaining its municipal swimming facility. The Commission reviewed two RFP bids for the reconstruction of the defunct swimming pond, a stream-fed, man-made basin that has been out of use for six years. The plans call to stabilize and level the concrete deck and re-line the interior of the pool alongside other structural upgrades, as well as add aesthetic touches such as boulders along the pond’s edge.

Keep ReadingShow less