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Violent Temper: Fowler’s Fatal Surrender

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  ⚠️ Content Warning: This story includes horrific themes of violence and loss.  Reader discretion is advised.   — A Southwick Time Machine Original | True Crime Lewis D. Fowler Jr. of Southwick, Massachusetts, was known to those around him as a man of a violent temper, one he seemed unable to control, especially toward his wife, Elizabeth (Mallory). Before mid-September 1862, her concerned friends had him arrested, and bail was arranged on his behalf. The bond was secured by two men: his brother-in-law, Ogden D. Griswold Jr., of the Hartford firm Hastings & Griswold, and Dr. Byington of Southwick. As a condition of his bond, Fowler was required to stay away from his wife and could only visit their home, located approximately half a mile from Southwick Center, at specified times.  An authentic Civil War–era envelope addressed to Ogden Griswold. At the time, Griswold himself was enduring profound personal loss. His wife, Mary A. (Mallory) Griswold, had died only...

In Bloom: “When We Were Young, We Died”

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— A Southwick Time Machine Archival Reconstruction On Saturday, July 15, 1809, four young girls from Southwick, Massachusetts, went to Southwick Ponds on what should have been a simple summer outing. Three of the girls were between fifteen and sixteen years old; the youngest was only eleven. Their original plan was to pick cherries along the shore. When few could be found, the girls decided instead to gather pond-lilies, for which the lakes were well known. To do so, they climbed into a small boat resting at the edge of South Pond and pushed off from shore using a setting pole. Shortly after leaving the shoreline, the girl holding the pole realized the water beneath them had grown too deep when the pole failed to reach the bottom. As she leaned over the side in an attempt to regain contact, she lost her balance and fell into the pond. The remaining girls rushed toward her, and the sudden shift of weight to one side caused the boat to overturn, throwing all three into the water. Clark C...

Interrupted: A Breakfast Gone Cold

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  — A Southwick Time Machine   Original True Crime Reconstruction   Westfield, Massachusetts  — Winter 1857   For more than a week, the house on School Street stood silent. It was a modest tenement dwelling, just six rods from the village green—close enough to the center of Westfield that its stillness should have drawn notice sooner. No smoke rose from the family's chimney. No light flickered in their windows. The last confirmed activity in the household had occurred on the morning of Tuesday, December 15, 1857. At first, neighbors thought little of it. Winter was a season of illness and travel. Families went visiting. Absences were easily explained away. But as the days passed, the quiet grew harder to dismiss. An Uneasy Silence Albert J. Stoub, his young wife Mary, and their two small children occupied the basement and first floor on the west side of the tenement house owned by Stephen Spelman. The building was shared with other tenants. In the other ha...

A Future Interrupted: A Tolland Prodigy’s Unfinished Music

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— A Southwick Time Machine Original Biographical Account Richard W. Hardy was born in East Montpelier, Vermont, in 1936, but it was in the quiet hilltown of Tolland, Massachusetts, that his identity truly took shape. By his teens, music had already become the defining force of his life, not as a hobby, but as a vocation. Those who heard him play or studied his compositions recognized something uncommon: a depth of talent that seemed far beyond his years. From a young age, Hardy displayed extraordinary musical ability. Though he never attended a formal conservatory for advanced training, his skill was unmistakable. He became proficient in both piano and organ, composing original classical works and providing piano instruction, sharing his gift even as his own career was still in its formative stages. Music was not simply something he practiced; it was something he lived. Hardy spent approximately fourteen years in Tolland, living at his family’s Skyline Farm , where he worked steadily ...

Captain Chapman's Curious Household

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 — A Southwick Time Machine Original   Jonathan Fassett Chapman was born in Champlain, New York, on Christmas Day in 1848. In his earlier years, he became captain of the "Whitehall," a steamer on Lake Champlain. In 1877, Captain Jonathan “John” Chapman came to Southwick, Massachusetts. That year, he purchased fifty acres of land at Congamond Lake from Henry H. Saunders. He also bought land from Saunders on Sheep Pasture Road, near where Our Lady of the Lake church stands today. At Congamond, where the North and Middle Ponds meet, he built a small shanty and boat house along the banks of the old canal. The bridge connecting the two ponds became known locally as Chapman’s Bridge. Captain Chapman rented flat-bottomed boats for pleasure by the hour or by the day. From his shanty, he sold soda and ice cream. In April 1889, he purchased two steamers, the "Josephine" and the stylish side-wheel "Ida Lee," which he operated on Middle Pond. An illustrative image of ...