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Drug Possession Guilty Plea

Written By The Mountain Eagle on 4/25/25 | 4/25/25

DELHI – Erin Hubbell, 28, of Margaretville, New York appeared in Delaware County Court on April 15, 2025, before the Honorable John L. Hubbard, and pled guilty to one count of Criminal Possession of a Controlled Substance in the Fifth Degree, a Class D Felony.

As part of her guilty plea, Hubbell admitted to possessing over 500 milligrams of cocaine on January 8th of 2025 in the Town of Roxbury. Judge Hubbard accepted her guilty plea and ordered a pre-sentence investigation to be conducted by the Delaware County Department of Probation.

The defendant faces up to 2 and ½ years in state prison as a result of her conviction. Sentencing is set for June 17, 2025, at 1:00 p.m. 

Indictments and Criminal Complaints are allegations.  All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty. 


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MUSINGS OF A LOCAL By Iris Mead - THE EARLY DAYS OF SPRING

Spring is here, supposedly. The calendar told us the first day of Spring was March 20 and here in the Catskills we had our fingers crossed that it would prove true.  Well, not yet really.  We’ve been teased a few times with a day above the freezing mark and that gets us all excited.  We start thinking about raking our lawn of winter’s debris, when the tulips and daffodils will pop up, and even dare to think about putting in annuals.  But, NO, spring has kept us cold and guessing when it truly will arrive. It actually happened this past week on April 19 when it surprised us and reached 80 degrees+ in most of the area.  This was 10 days after we reached a low of 28 degrees.  These ups and downs in temperature are making us crazy and keeping our heating bills high.  That is another column!

Through all these crazy days of temperature ups and downs, we still hold onto our hope for a string of warm days when our houses will absorb the sun’s rays and start to shed the coldness that it has been holding.    We want to wake up to a morning sun, shedding the heavy winter clothes we’ve been wearing for what seems like months, warm floors, open a window or door for fresh air, and wear a smile while making the coffee.  Even our animals will be happy with sunlight pouring in highlighting a spot for them to sunbathe in.

April, from the word Aphrodite, Goddess of Love, believe it or not, or the French word Aperire’, meaning to open, is the month of transition from the L-O-N-G winters we tend to have in the Catskills to the hope of warm weather and new growth.  As Aperire’ suggests, we look for the first signs of spring in the opening of perennials (snowdrops, tulips, daffodils) and, in our area, the star magnolia trees that bloom early, sometimes too early when their buds get frozen from a late frost.  Lilac bushes are now eagerly awaited; they are budded and ready to open in May.  We, as people, also open as spring progresses.  Closed up in our homes, offices, and cars for many months, we come alive as we watch the season change and bring us beauty. 

Spring’s season is actually March 20 through June 20, which is the Summer Solstice, this year. Let’s hope that by June 20 we’ve had a lot of sun in our daily lives and our gardens are starting to show this year’s blossoms and blooms.  Be thankful and enjoy each day you are given and continue to move forward.  

 

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A Conversation about ...tick, tick, ticking

By Jean Thomas

I know... you are sick and tired of hearing (or reading) the tick talk. Sadly, there is a reason for that. Historically, people don't like to think about bad stuff. Also historically, for hundreds of years, ticks were mostly something people removed from their dogs. So what's the harm in pretending there's no problem and the scientists are just panicking?

Unfortunately, there's a problem. Ticks have developed a taste for human blood, and now they are transporting a whole bunch of really awful diseases. And there are two huge co-conspirators in transmitting these awful diseases. Climate change has resulted in our environment becoming more hospitable to ticks, with a migration of ever-more-dangerous types into the formerly “safe” areas of upstate New York. Deer are an ideal transporter of ticks.  They're kind of like a mass transit , because ticks hang around doing the arachnid version of hitchhiking (science nerds call this behavior “questing”). They hop a passing deer and are on their way to wherever you are in contact with nature. By the way, those pretty little deer mice are part of the chain, and bring ticks even closer to the house! So fending off the deer and the mice can help reduce the risk. Less challenging ways to help keep the invaders at bay are simple “housekeeping” things like keeping leaf litter and too-high grass under control.

For those of you who don't remember the awful arrival of Lyme disease, here it is in a nutshell. I am removing any conspiracy theories for brevity's sake. Here goes: in 1975, Lyme disease was officially recognized as a disease. It's been around forever in harmless amounts, but became a monster in Connecticut when it hit epidemic levels among children. For the language purists among us: it is named after the town in Connecticut, not the citrus fruit. Also, it is not “Lymes” disease. So what's a person to do? It's pretty straightforward, actually. Spray yourself and the family with one of the many products available over the counter for insect (and tick) repellents. These are also helpful against mosquitoes and blackflies. There is also a product called Permethrin to spray your outdoor clothing, that lasts over several washings. Long pants with socks pulled up over them helps block access to your skin, and some of us resort to wrapping our ankle area with duct tape to trap and count the little fiends. Once you go back inside for the day, check for passengers. Personally, I hop right into the shower and toss the clothes into the dryer.

I frequently wander into the gardens and forget to spray first and always pay a price and acquire a pest. If I'm lucky it is still strolling around and hasn't latched on. If it's attached, I freak out. If there's somebody nearby, I ask for help. If not, I'm probably a candidate for a viral you-tube scene as I contort myself to remove the wee beastie. If I have to remove one, I call my GP or go to the neighborhood “doc-in-a-box” facility. Usually they automatically administer or prescribe a dose of antibiotic. This covers most tick borne diseases, but to be sure, the corpse of the little girl (yup) tick should be brought to a Cooperative Extension Office for identification. Different ticks carry different problems, and some are viral. When in doubt ask for a blood test. There's an episode of “Nature Calls” about this:  

http://ccecolumbiagreene.org/gardening/nature-calls-conversations-from-the-hudson-valley/episode-59-all-about-ticks 

Be careful out there. Next week we'll go back to more pleasant topics, I promise.

 

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THE CATSKILL GEOLOGISTS BY PROFESSORS ROBERT AND JOHANNA TITUS - Glacial Lake Albany

We have visited a lot of long-gone glacial lakes throughout the Catskills during our years of writing for the Mountain Eagle. Most of the Schoharie Creek Valley was once, for example, lake bottom.  But there is something much bigger that we would like to spend some time on. That’s a bit of geology that you really should know about. It’s Glacial Lake Albany. Did you know that at the very end of the Ice Age much of the lower Hudson Valley was flooded with the waters of a substantial lake? Take a look at our first illustration, courtesy of the New York State Museum. That’s Lake Albany in blue. It extended from well north of Albany, south almost to New York City. That’s a large lake. It wasn’t all that deep, but it was big. Have you ever visited Lake Champlain? That’s another post glacial lake, a virtual twin of Lake Albany but it’s one that has not yet drained away. Lake Albany formed while the Hudson Valley glacier was melting and retreating to the north. The enormous weight of the ice had depressed the crust by several hundred feet. That depression left space for the lake waters.  As the ice melted back to the north all that weight was removed and the crust rebounded, and then those waters drained away. See the arrows on our second illustration. The down arrows reflect the weight of the ice; the up arrows show the rebound.


                                                                                            A map of the glacier lake

AI-generated content may be incorrect.          A diagram of a lake

AI-generated content may be incorrect.


So, in a way, you can think of Lake Albany as following in the footsteps of a melting glacier. During that retreat, the lake bottom filled in with sediments, mostly dark silt and clay. Again, see our second illustration. The blue on that map view is, essentially, a map of those sediments. Lake bottoms tend to be flat, and so too are the sediments of Lake Albany. The two of us have trained our eyes to look for flat landscapes at the bottom of the Hudson Valley. The next time you are headed south on the Thruway we would like it is you watched for these flat areas, left and right of the highway. They are common features up and down the valley. But there are only limited numbers of them in our region. The shores of the Hudson River in eastern Greene County show several good locations. And starting next week we will go see one very good example.

Contact the authors at randjtitus@prodigy.net. Join their facebook page “The Catskill Geologist.” Read their blogs at “thecatskillgeologist.”

 

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The Baseball Ultimate Trivia Book by Vincent Spada Released

Put your baseball expertise to the test with over 600 trivia questions, accompanied by entertaining illustrations  capturing your favorite baseball moments throughout history. 

Quiz yourself or compete with your friends! With challenging questions from baseball  history, The Baseball Ultimate Trivia Book is the perfect way to show off your  knowledge and prove your superfan status. Arranged by MLB team, with additional  quizzes at the end covering baseball history, stats, and more, this delightful book  allows you to relive your favorite baseball moments whenever the mood strikes. Mountain Eagle author Vincent Spada released the book, also available on Amazon.

Covering legendary players like Babe Ruth, Mickey Mantle, Willie Mays, and more,  

The Baseball Ultimate Trivia Book brings the field to your home with copious facts on  your favorite games, players, their lives on and off the field, and so much more.  Perfect for your coffee table or as a gift, to enjoy solo or in a group, this beautifully  

designed book includes: 

Famous firsts for almost every aspect of baseball history 

Rookie sensations and first-year wonders 

Celebrated pitchers and their remarkable accomplishments on the mound 

Notable players and teams who left their mark in the record books 

Baseball’s all-time greats enshrined in Cooperstown 

Whether you’re just getting into baseball, or you’ve been a baseball fanatic for years, The Baseball Ultimate Trivia  Book will uplift and amuse you with its quizzes, interesting facts, captivating illustrations, and exclusive content.  So test your baseball knowledge and become the ultimate superfan! 

About the author 

Vincent Spada is an author and poet from New England, credited with the children’s titles Said the Kitty to the Cat and Mercy Methuen. He has written for various newspapers in both Massachusetts and New York, and also  published a book of poems, One Under the Sun, with a UK press. An avid sports fan, he has created trivia for  various publications, both in print and online. Although from New England, he is a devoted lifelong fan of both the  New York Yankees and New York Giants and hopes his hometown readers don’t hold that against him! 

 

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Whittling Away with Dick Brooks - Thrift Store

I hadn’t been for a visit to my favorite thrift store lately so in a lull in the usual rush of senior activity and since it was nearby and I was out and about anyway, I decided to pop in for a few minutes.  I put the groceries I had just purchased in the back of Casper, The Friendly Kia and motored to my destination. I entered the thrift shop and was greeted by the smiley behind the counter.  I like stores where they know you.  I headed for the men’s section and started perusing the shirt rack.  I love the clothes I get here, they aren’t stiff.  They have had a life before and are now soft and comfortable and have the advantage of being a couple of dollars apiece and the money goes to a good cause, how can you beat it? I thumbed quickly through the T shirt section .    It’s not really T shirt weather and my drawers are full of them, some dating back decades.  Got plenty of flannels and sweat shirts too, so I flipped through them rapidly and got to the dress shirt section.  I started through them, got lots of blue ones, yellow and white—got them.  Who wears bright pink?  Barbie maybe.  Then what to my wandering eyes should appear but a beautiful dress shirt, the same one that I had admired a few days before in one of the myriad catalogues that appear with great regularity in our mail box.  The catalogue shirt was $45 so I had reluctantly flipped the page but here it was before me for $2 and it looked like it would fit.  I took it off the rack and checked the label.  It was an 18 with 32 inch sleeves.  I couldn’t remember if I was an 18 with 32 inch sleeves or a 32 with 18 inch sleeves.

There is no changing room in the thrift store so I left it there.  At home later, the shirt came up when I was looking for a topic for my morning ponder.  Life would be much easier if we could standardize things.  I have no problem with getting my T shirts to fit.  I know that I’m an XL.  Most people know if they’re S-M-L-XL or WL (wide load).  So why don’t manufactures mark all clothing with one of the above.  If I were a woman I’d never be able to get dressed, they have different sizes for almost everything they own.  Why don’t they standardize a whole bunch of things like ink cartridges so any one would fit any printer or make chargers that fit any brand of phone or why don’t we switch to the Metric system like the rest of the world so I could use the Irish cookbook I bought this summer at a yard sale.  There are advantages, if women had clothes marked like T shirts then their husbands could shop for them and life as we know it would be a simpler thing.  

Thought for the week—The latest survey shows that three out of four people make up seventy five percent of the population.

Until next week, may you and yours be happy and well.

Whitte12124@yahoo.com

 

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BETTER THAN HEARSAY - Closer Maybe

By Michael Ryan

ASHLAND - Contract negotiations remain in limbo regarding ambulance service provided by the town of Ashland to the town of Prattsville.

Four months have passed since a new pact was due with no end in sight although something will eventually have to happen, even as a very interesting item has become part of the back-and-forth offers.

Ashland, over the past few years, has had a deal with Prattsville and the town of Lexington for emergency medical response and transport.

Scheduled renewals with Prattsville have been rocky the past two years, a scenario that apparently boils down to communications about money and what Ashland does with dollars leftover from one budget to the next.

This column wandered into those fiscal weeds a month or so ago, coming out worse than if the hapless writer - not Br’er Rabbit - had been the one tossed into the briar patch, so we tread there again delicately.

One pretty consistent number has emerged throughout the talks, that being Ashland asking Prattsville to pay $310,100 and 88 cents in 2025, showing up in Item 7 of the proposed contract.

That number, according to figures provided by Ashland town supervisor Richard Tompkins, would then be reduced to $240,100 and 88 cents, subtracting $70,000 in estimated revenue.

Prattsville town supervisor Greg Cross is arriving at a different bottom line, stating in an April 15 email to Ashland, “Item 7 it should be $70,000 plus $45,000 for a total of $115,000 credit towards 2025.”

Cross, in the email, stated that would leave, “a total due of $195,100.88,” and in a subsequent phone interview said, “that’s important to say, so  everybody knows, those are numbers Ashland already provided us.”

There have been a series of meetings between the parties, some including other town council members, and it is at one of those sessions where Cross says he verbally agreed to the numbers he is using.

“We want to get an agreement,” Cross said. “We obviously understand we have to pay [for ambulance service] but we didn’t just dream up these numbers. They are based on information provided by Ashland.

“It’s simple math to me,” Cross said, also stating in his email to Ashland, “if you can make these corrections, I will call a special meeting to approve, sign and get you a payment.”

Cross’s choice of the word “corrections” is also apparently connected with Item 16 within the most recent contract proposal from Ashland.

Item 16, states, “at the time the county ambulance service commences operation, Ashland shall pay to Prattsville the sum of $40,000 representing Prattsville's portion of the fund balance for the fiscal year 2024 and $28,000 representing the fund balance for fiscal year 2025."

Cross, in his email states, “Item 16 should read $40,000 from 2023 and $28,000 from 2024,” correcting the timelines on monies reportedly set aside by Tompkins for equipment purchases, etc. 

But at the risk of being hurled into the pricker bushes, there is no certainty the commencement of a county ambulance service will be a reality.

Since last fall, the Greene County Legislature has been hosting discussions linked to the possible creation of a ground-breaking, countywide system, eliminating the current municipal-based network.

While the six mountaintop towns embrace the plan, including Ashland and Prattsville, it is a year away, at the soonest, and not a definite.

The legislature’s special meetings take place monthly. Their next session is in mid-May when they are supposed to produce more than ballpark numbers on how much the county system would cost.

Early projections indicated it will be at least $3.4 million more than what the towns and county are now paying out for ambulance service, combined, bearing in mind every dime ultimately departs from taxpayer pockets.

And by the look of it, on top of the $3.4 million, some towns will likely be paying appreciably more than now, such as Prattsville, Lexington and Jewett, which contracts with the town of Windham.

Windham already has an Advanced Life Support system, providing two crews with on-board paramedics and transport to a hospital.

Jewett residents can make emergency calls and pay a single bill once a year, spared the headache of hiring workers, haggling with insurance companies and multiple daily sources of heartburn.

The same is true for Lexington, Prattsville and other towns similarly under contract in the valley. They all may, in the future, remember these as the halcyon days in terms of how much they will later be paying.

And meanwhile, it is the six mountaintop towns who stirred the bee’s nest warning lawmakers, eighteen months ago, that the system is headed toward a cliff with no way to shift into reverse.

The whole idea is to consolidate services and vastly improve worker wages and benefits, creating a sustainable and highly efficient county agency.

Meanwhile back in Ashland, Tompkins is saying he might turn over to other council members any ensuing talks with Prattsville, hopeful a resolution is close, maybe as soon as this week.

“Maybe if there is a change in personalities we can put this thing to bed. Maybe new eyes will see something I’m not seeing,” Tompkins says, sticking to his numbers as the ones Ashland has put on the table.

 

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Veterans Monument Dedication Scheduled for May 17

By Michael Ryan

JEWETT - Some bigwigs are invited, but the emphasis will properly be on those people whose names are honorably inscribed on it, when formal dedication of the new Veterans Monument in Jewett takes place.

Town residents and government officials from the local, county and State levels are being welcomed to attend the ceremony, slated for Saturday, May 17, at 10 a.m., along Route 23C, across from the town hall.

An unofficial unveiling took place, last Veterans Day, on a warmly overcast morning. Similarly friendly weather is currently the wish.

“We wanted everyone in the community to know the memorial is here,” town supervisor Greg Kroyer said of the November, 2024, gathering.

“It’s beautiful,” said town justice Stephen Canfield, one of the attendees. Judge Canfield initially suggested the veterans tribute be created, a concept supported by former town historian Susan Neugebauer.

The earlier ceremony and upcoming uncovering will culminate a successful and surprisingly swift fundraising effort that paved the way for securing the stoney monument and establishing a mini-park at the site.

“This respectful gesture is done on behalf of everyone in Jewett,” said town councilman John Giordano, who carried through on the idea spawned by Canfield and Neugebauer, spearheading fundraising efforts.

The new monument rests next to the town’s 9/11 Memorial. A new flag pole has been erected with lighting. It is hoped a crosswalk will be added in the future as well as prettifying landscaping.

Town officials agreed to erect the monument early in 2024, although at that time, no one knew where the money would come from to get it done.

Collecting what turned out to be 328 names, researching as far back as the Revolutionary War, a price tag of $20,000 was given by Henderson Monuments, based in Catskill.

Town officials had further agreed no local taxpayer dollars should be spent, relying on donations, anticipating the required fundraising would take a year or longer until serendipity sweetly struck.

Within a few short month, while working with VFW Post #1545 in Windham to forward the cause, two grants totaling $35,000 arrived, as if fated, from the Greene County Legislature.

The county funding came through American Rescue Plan Act grant dollars, earmarked especially for veterans and youth projects.

As the scheduled Armed Forces Day dedication nears, Jewett town supervisor Greg Kroyer reports there is work yet to be done.

It came as undesired, albeit not exactly surprising news, that a handful of names not engraved on the stone have been discovered.

“We feel bad but we did everything we could,” Kroyer said, getting the word out prior to giving Henderson Monuments the go-ahead.

“The good part is the monument will be there forever,” Kroyer said, noting the missing names, connected to World War !!, can and will be added.

In other matters:

—Supervisor Kroyer reported the long-awaited construction of a new septic system at the municipal building commenced the day after Easter and could be concluded by the end of this week.

The facility includes town offices, the highway department and the meeting place for the Meals on Wheels program, providing warm food for elderly and homebound residents across the mountaintop.

It was learned, during routine pumping of the system, that replacement was necessary. It had never backed up but it was definitely old,” Kroyer says.

Not particularly enamored with the notion of paying for the improvement, even though there was no option, the town sought financial assistance.

Town taxpayers are again being spared any expense, receiving help from the Catskill Watershed Corporation, administrators of funding provided through the Department of Environmental Protection.

“The Catskill Watershed Corporation will pay for the whole thing,” Kroyer said, noting the savings could be between $70,000 and six figures.

“They have a replacement program [for entities and individuals within the watershed]. We decided it would be crazy not to go for it and we got it,” Kroyer said, expressing economic ebullience.

The current septic tank and leach field are located behind the three-building municipal complex, not far from the Townhouse Brook.

Kroyer noted the contractor, Maggio & Sons, based in Cairo, will time the job so as to not interfere with the Meals on Wheels program.

“We won’t have to shut down the senior center. They will disconnect the old system after the dishes are done so there is no disruption,” Kroyer said. “We are very appreciative of them and the CWC.

Below ground work will be completed by week’s end, weather permitting of course, with site restoration subsequently unfolding.

 

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LEGISLATURE STUFF - Promulgating

By Michael Ryan

CATSKILL - They are what they are all year-round, even as Greene County Legislature members proclaimed May to be “Older Americans’ Month.” during their recent regular monthly meeting.

A special Proclamation was also issued, commemorating the 250th Anniversary of the startup of the Revolutionary War.

Pausing in their normal duties, lawmakers joined the nationwide tribute to senior citizens with Sherry True, chairwoman of the legislative County Services Committee, leading the local way.

True presented the official Proclamation to county Human Services (Aging & Youth) deputy director Tami Bone, stating, “the older residents of Greene County represent a wealth of knowledge and experience and are one of the county’s most valuable resources.

“The Greene County legislature is committed to supporting its senior citizens by means of a vast array of programs and services.

“Over one-fifth of the county’s total population is comprised of citizens 65 years of age or older,” the proclamation states.

“A growing number of baby boomers are rapidly becoming older citizens, and the number of individuals providing care to family members and friends is expanding significantly.

“Greene County benefits greatly from the dedication and community awareness of the senior residents,” the proclamation states.

“The national theme of 2025 is “Flip the Script on Aging,” and focuses on transforming how society perceives, talks about and approaches aging.”

Flipping the script encourages “individuals and communities to challenge stereotypes and aging in place by combating isolation, loneliness and other issues,” the proclamation states.

“With great pleasure, we honor our senior citizens and how we all benefit when older adults remain engaged, independent and included in their communities, and encourage them to continue to play a vital role in the Greene County community.”

Turning the focus to formation of the country, lawmakers put hand-to-heart in remembrance of the initial military incursion toward independence.

“On April 19, 1775, the first battle of the American Revolutionary War took place at Lexington and Concord, Massachusetts,” the proclamation states. 

“Colonial militia faced British troops in a decisive and symbolic clash marking the beginning of a struggle that would lead to the birth of the United States of America.

“It was at Lexington where the “Shot Heard ‘Round the World” was fired, a single act that signaled the beginning of the fight for liberty and independence,” the proclamation states.

Lexington and Concord forever altered the course of history and ignited the “flames of freedom in the hearts of the American people.

“The courage and resolve of these early patriots set the stage for the formation of a new nation founded on the principles of freedom and justice,” the proclamation states.

“From the towns that would eventually become Greene County, New York, hundreds of men enlisted to fight in the Revolutionary War, joining the cause of independence with valor and determination, demonstrating the spirit of patriotism that has come to define our nation.

“The freedoms we enjoy as Americans have been purchased and maintained at a high price throughout our history,” the proclamation states.

“The sacrifices of those who have served in our military have preserved our unique form of government, a government that is dedicated to human rights and respect for the individual.

“The service of these early patriots, along with countless others, helped to secure the liberty we cherish and laid the foundation for the birth of a nation,” the proclamation states.

“In honor of these dedicated men and women, we pledge our continued defense of our nation so that their sacrifice will stand before the entire world as a tribute to the spirit and determination of a people dedicated to the principles of freedom and democracy.

“We call upon all citizens to…remember the sacrifices of those who came before us, express our gratitude to those who serve today and stand united in support of our nation’s military personnel, ensuring that their legacies continue to inspire future generations,” the proclamation states.

In a related action, legislature chairman Patrick Linger appointed members to the Greene County 250th American Revolution Commission.

The group will spearhead celebratory efforts of the conceptual founding of America, on July 4, 1776, with the signing of the Declaration of Independence, leading to the 1783 Treaty of Paris.

Linger made the selections following a presentation by county historian Jonathan Palmer, spring-boarding a multi-year celebration of freedom. 

Commission members include Linger, Palmer, county administrator Shaun Groden, Tyler Lynch (county Veterans Services director), Patty Austin (county tourism director);

Matthew Luvera (legislator and primary school history teacher), Catherine Benson (county Libraries Association president), Beth Stewart (county Chamber of Commerce president/executive director);

Heather Palmer (Thomas Cole National Historic Site director of visitor engagement) and Carolyn Bennett (Zadock Pratt Museum director).

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