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Robtoy to Hess: A Journey of Joy and Tragedy

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  — A Southwick Time Machine Original | Tribute Felix H. Robtoy married Eileen M. Baker in the bride’s hometown of St. Albans, Vermont, on April 26, 1941. The ceremony was a joyful spring occasion. The bride carried Easter lilies and wore a princess-style white satin gown with a long tulle veil. Following the wedding, the newlyweds traveled to New York City, Boston, and Springfield, Massachusetts, for their honeymoon before moving to 2994 Main Street in Springfield to begin their married life. On November 19, 1942, they welcomed their first child, Donna Ann. Donna’s proud parents took her on a trip to Vermont for a few days on May 4, 1943, to meet her paternal grandparents. In 1946, a second daughter, Doreen Jean, was born. Not long afterward, the young family relocated to 19 Prospect Street in Westfield, Massachusetts, where they would put down deeper roots. Several years later, on November 4, 1951, a son, Wayne J. Robtoy, completed the Robtoy family. They later moved nearby to 4 ...

Troubled Inheritance: The Life of Jason Lewis Stiles

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 ðŸ“œ UNEARTHED — This story has been reconstructed from scattered reports and archival fragments. — A Southwick Time Machine Original This story continues the account of the Stiles family of Southwick, Massachusetts, following the life of Jason Elbridge Stiles’s son, whose name briefly appears in Criminal Intimacy: The Southwick Scandal of 1888 .   Troubled Inheritance The Life of Jason Lewis Stiles Jason Lewis Stiles, the son of Jason Elbridge Stiles and Hattie (Stevens) Ladd Stiles, was born on October 5, 1893, in Southwick, Massachusetts. Like his father, he became a carpenter and was connected with the Berkshire Ice Company. His adult life, however, was repeatedly marked by legal trouble and violence. On November 30, 1912, Miss Lillian M. Elsey of Southwick brought a statutory action against Stiles. A Westfield District Court judge ordered him held for the superior court. When his father died in 1915, Jason L. Stiles - still a young man - was given his father’s horse. ...

Before the Lake House: Legate’s Central Grove

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 —  A Southwick Time Machine Original | Revisited   Frederick W. Legate of Southwick, Massachusetts, was a farmer and butcher who specialized in quality cuts of beef and veal at reasonable prices. During the mid-to-late 1870s, he suffered a series of setbacks. At about 10:30 p.m. on August 15, 1876, it was discovered that one of Legate’s tobacco barns was on fire, possibly caused by a spark from a passing train. The barn and its contents were destroyed, at an estimated loss of $2,000. A little over a year later, on September 27, 1877, disaster struck again when two more of his barns burned, taking with them roughly fifteen tons of hay as well as several wagons and sleighs, an additional loss of about $1,000. All three barns were only partially insured. Around this same period, activity at Southwick Ponds (today’s Congamond Lake), already a popular summer destination that attracted thousands of tourists arriving by rail, was growing. By the late summer of 1878, that n...

Work-Related Tragedies in New England: Volume II (1800–1899)

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— A Southwick Time Machine Original | Special Series   Hard work built the early towns of the Pioneer Valley and the Berkshires—but it also claimed many lives.   Behind the quiet beauty of hilltowns, valleys, and historic tobacco farms lies a record of sudden, shocking deaths that remind us just how perilous labor once was.   The following accounts from Southwick and surrounding New England towns reveal just how dangerous ordinary work could be—and how quickly tragedy could strike.   Each story stands as a grim reminder of the risks faced by those who built our barns, railroads, mills, and wells—men whose labor powered progress, yet often came at a deadly cost.    🕯️ Author’s Note: This is Volume II (1800–1899) of a special Southwick Time Machine series documenting work-related tragedies in New England. Additional cases may be added to this volume over time as further historical records are uncovered. Accidents already recounted in other Southwick Time M...