Odd ends

Edwin Garver Woodward (1890-1944) of Salisbury was bullish on beef. In 1940, as this newspaper reported in its Christmas issue, three of his Guernsey cows establish new official records for milk production, gaining them entry in the Advanced Register of the American Guernsey Cattle Club.

The cows were Elm Tree Nerissa, who produced 12,647.3 pounds of milk and 628.7 pounds of butterfat, and Arethusa Dinah and Emerson Farm Valentine, with slightly lower but nonetheless impressive numbers.

A Missourian by birth, Woodward was a professor of dairy husbandry at the University of Nebraska in the early 1900s. He was Connecticut dairy products and food commissioner before he became dean at the College of Agriculture at the University of Connecticut in 1940. 

Woodward and his wife, Lucille, deeds indicate, had a farm that was once part of the Scoville estate, near the Sheffield line in Taconic.

As interesting as his work in animal husbandry, I didn’t have to dig too deeply into Woodward’s story to find he came to an odd and tragic end.

One July day in 1944, the Woodwards took their grandson and several neighbors to Hartford to see the circus.

Yes, it was that circus. None of the group survived the ferocious big top fire.

•  •  •

An equally curious but serene end came to Swan B. Brewster (1851-1926), who also had considerable knowledge of milk pails and hayforks. Brewster grew up on the family farm in Falls Village and “became an expert agriculturalist,” according to the Bridgeport Telegram for Dec. 16, 1926. 

Brewster studied art in school, and wanted to pursue a different vocational path. He opened an art supply store in Bridgeport, did well and retired after 25 years. But he didn’t really retire. He built the Post Office Arcade and Arcade Hotel in Bridgeport, the former, I believe, still in use, though I haven’t gone to Bridgeport to verify it.

Brewster and his wife, Sara, and family lived in Stratford until he retired again, after World War I, and moved back to the family homestead in Falls Village.

It was here that he died “in the very room where he was born three-quarters of a century ago, the end coming peacefully. ...”

The expectation of either of these endings defies the odds. 

The writer drank Guernsey milk as a boy and buttered his bread with Guernsey butter.

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