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The Life From The Roots blog topics have changed several times since I began this blog in 2009. I initially wrote only about the family history I had been working on for 20 years. Years later, I was into visiting gardens, historical homes, churches, libraries that had genealogical collections, historical societies, war memorials, and travel/tourism places. I also enjoy posting autographs and photos of famous people I've met or have seen.

Along with my New England roots, other areas include New York, New Jersey, Michigan, Illinois, Wisconsin, and the Eastern Townships of Quebec, Canada.

Please check out the labels on the right side for topics (please note, they need work). Below the labels and pageviews is a listing of my top nine posts, according to Google. Four of them pertain to Lowell, MA. These posts change often because they are based on what people are reading.

Friday, April 16, 2021

"The Ultimate Volunteer" -- My Mother's Newspaper Obit. 31 years ago, She Died This Day

Thursday, April 26, 1990 (My mother died April 16, 1990)
The Beacon (Acton, MA)

"'The Ultimate Volunteer' leaves behind smiles, warm memories

Acton -- 
Jane Poole was not the type of person to sit home and knit sweaters after she retired. She was always moving -- athletic, giving, involved in her community. It was not unusual to spot Poole out on her bike, tooling around town doing errands, going to aerobics classes, organizing social events.

She died April 16 of a heart attack, at the age of 70, doing what she loved, leading a group of bicyclists on an annual Patriot's Day bike ride in Lincoln [sic] (should be Lexington).

Poole, a retired Westford kindergarten teacher, was an active member of the Nashoba Valley Pedalers, a group of bicyclists who go on monthly trips all over the state. She also contributed her boundless energies to the American Association for Retired People, the Concord Piecemakers (a quilting group) and the First Parish Unitarian Church in Chelmsford, among other organizations.

A mother of three, Poole will be missed by the many diverse groups who knew her. 'She was the ultimate volunteer,' said Jean James, a fellow pedaler and friend of Poole's for over 10 years. 'She wasn't willing to become inactive. She definitely wanted to stay active for as long as she could.' Poole did nothing halfway, putting 100 percent of herself into any project. When she decided to start biking during the gas crisis of 1973, she didn't stop at a few miles a day. She averaged 350 miles a month at one point in her bicycling career, logging several 100-mile day trips with her fellow bikers.

She even went overseas, making several European biking trips including one 2 years ago to the Soviet Union.

While Jane Poole was always an outdoor person, her daughters said they don't remember her as an avid athlete while they were growing up They do remember the tireless giving of her time to such things as girl scouts, the church, and making crafts for charity fairs.

She taught kindergarten at the Robinson School in Westford for 15 years, and later was a substitute teacher for the Acton school systems in her semi-retirement. 'She was a friendly, giving person. She was the type of person that if her students didn't have bags to carry their books in, she would have them make book bags.'

Poole grew up in New York City and went to Skidmore College for a degree in textiles. She received her master's in education from Northeastern.

She also devoted time to her alma mater, helping Skidmore alumni club organize a reunion of the class of 1942. 'She was always a great planner, always looking ahead.'

Donations in Poole's memory can be made to the Rails-to-Trails Conservancy, suite 300, 1400 Sixteenth St., NW, Washington, D.C. 20036.

Poole worked hard in her life to turn the railroad tracks which start in Lowell and go through Chelmsford, Westford, Carlisle, Acton, Concord, and Sudbury, into a bike path. Her daughters said they will be working with a lawyer to ensure any donations made in Poole's memory will go to the Lowell-Sudbury bike path."

Note: She was planning a bike trip in France just 6 weeks before her death. She also biked in China, the Netherlands, Scandinavia, England and many states in the United States. 

The above-mentioned Bruce Freeman bike trail opened almost two years ago. More than 19 years after death! Had she still been alive, she probably would have ridden on it at age 90.

Personally, I know she was a Girl Scout leader and for several years the Sunday School volunteer administrator.

Her revised will dated 1 March 1990, was just 6 weeks prior to her death and a few months before a scheduled trip to France, replaced her original one prepared in ca. 1955. She thought so much about her love of the Church, Rails to Trails, New England Quilt Museum, Friends of the Acton Council on Aging, Northfield Mt. Hermon School (where she attended a private high school), and Skidmore College that she left each of them 1/6 of 1/4 of her estate. She volunteered for all of them, and probably right to the end. (Note: she wasn't into genealogy, but sent me her DAR membership certificate, my great-grandmother's, and gg grandmothers' certificates. She was thrilled that I was working in the DAR.) From below I highlighted, "In her retirement, she often rode over 5000 miles a year."

I wrote about her in my Fearless Females Blog  --  Tragic or Unexpected Deaths last year in March.

I just found this online on April 14, 2021 (written 29 years after her death).

"Bruce Freeman Rail Trail, NVP and Jane Poole update

posted Jun 17, 2018, 3:21 PM by Lindy King   [updated Mar 16, 2019, 11:02 AM by Howard Davidson]

For some of us long-time members of the NVP, the Groundbreaking for Phase 2A of the Bruce Freeman Rail Trail has a special significance in addition to the opportunities provided by having another place to ride that's free of motorized vehicles. Back in the 1980s one of our most popular and enthusiastic members was a retired schoolteacher called Jane Poole. At various times, she was a board member, ride leader, club President, organizer of the Century and a great ambassador for the club that recruited many members. 

In her retirement, she often rode over 5000 miles a year. Many of them were on club business; she would use her bicycle to deliver copies of Pedalings to all members in Acton where she lived. The Pedaler used to be called Pedalings in those days, of course it was all on paper then and mostly delivered by USPS.

 Before retirement, Jane taught first grade in Westford. I bet that some club members remember her from their earliest days, even if they do not remember her from the club. I first met her in 1987 at NEAR (New England Area Rally). This was the year that the event was at UNH in Durham 

Jane was one of our most energetic ride leaders. The wallpaper on the hallway to Jane’s kitchen was a set of USGS maps of our area and she would use them to show her routes to you. My wife Betsy Taylor-Kennedy lived in an apartment in Bolton in the late 1980s and she remembers how Jane explained the best way for Betsy to commute to work in Acton by running her fingers along the lines on this wall.

Jane rode a red Georgena Terry with straight handlebars. The bike had the trademark Terry small front wheel and was built when Georgena’s bikes were still handmade in upstate New York. It must have been one of the first Terrys to be sold in Massachusetts and definitely one of the first Terrys I had ever seen. When Jane was not using her bike for transport she did not use a gas-guzzler. She drove a small Geo.

All of this brings me to the Bruce Freeman Rail Trail because Jane was also an early supporter of efforts to convert what was then called “the Sudbury to Lowell Railway line” to non-motorized transport. This was at a time when there were still occasional freight trains making deliveries to the lumber yards on Route 27 in Acton. Jane led a number of hikes along the railway bed in about 8-mile increments. Of course, she did this at times when there were no trains! I can remember one hike in particular that took us by what has been one of the most contentious sections of the planned trail; the section adjacent to White's Pond in Concord.

Jane died of a heart attack while leading her annual Patriots’ Day ride in April 1990. She was about 70 years old. She knew that she was weak and was waiting for heart surgery at the time. I wasn’t on that ride, but it's possible that some of our current members were there. Jane had been a general inspiration to us all.

A large contingent from the NVP attended her memorial service in Chelmsford. Afterwards the club raised money and paid for a memorial to her in the form a stone bench and small garden in the Acton Arboretum, but a condition of installation of the seat was that when the railway bed was converted through Acton it would be moved to a suitable place next to the trail. Some of the money was raised at the Jane Poole Metric Century in the spring following Jane’s death. The start point was near her home in Nagog Woods and her daughters were there to see us off.

I am pleased to tell you that the Town of Acton has committed to move it in to place when Phase 2A is completed.

Gordon Taylor"

The Otis House, Boston, Massachusetts

  
Otis House (Built 1796)
141 Cambridge Street,
Boston, Massachusetts 02114
617-227-3956

To read more about the house and the owners, see the information from the Historic New England website. I called the office and found out that the houses will open on June 4th to members and non-members. Visitors will need tickets ahead of time and information will be on their website soon, updated frequently.

On the right side, you'll see the labels list, scroll down to Historic New England and click to see a listing of 15 houses I've written about. (There are two more to come) My husband and I were members for over two years, and I just joined again.

I visited this Historic New England home (the opening photo shows a picture of this house) on April 11, 2019. No other visitors were there at this time, I had the house to myself. Since my visit was two years ago, I've forgotten some of what I was told. There is plenty of information on the link above.
Front entrance. Sometimes a long staircase can be a challenge to photo.
 The Dining Room.
The first room we entered was absolutely beautiful. The yellow color is the same as in my dining room.

 View from the Dining room looking at the front property and busy Cambridge Street. Spring is just about here, and with fewer tree buds you get a better view.


Office space was used by the couple. The open door above the fireplace is the safe. This back corner room is the coldest in the house. I thought the wallpaper was very modern in design.

  Parlor.

 The beautiful red couch has two pull-out drawers under the armrest. I believe the space was used by women who would store their knitting or needlework pieces. This was a new feature to me.

 Looking down at the small hallway. I learned that it wasn't heated, like most houses in that time frame. Rooms to the left and right did have fireplaces and doors.
Bedchamber for Sally Otis. Yes, more yellow. Apparently, Mrs. Otis loved yellow.

   I thought this rug was beautiful.
 


 Withdrawing Room. This is a corner room with plenty of light. A card table and musical instruments are shown, along with a sample of lovely wallpaper.


 





A small view of Boston and I think a glimpse of the Custom House.
The Old West Church is bricks away from the Otis House.
From the Old West Church website, a bit of history. "The West Church was founded in 1737. For the next 150 years, it was one of the most socially active congregations in Boston. William Hooper became the first minister of the West Church, a post that he held for nine years.
Jonathan Mayhew

Jonathan Mayhew

In March 1747, Jonathan Mayhew became the minister. Mayhew was a revolutionary, in theology and in politics, and was acknowledged as a great orator in New England and in Britain. His close associates included John and Samuel Adams, John Hancock, and Robert Paine. He was to them The Herald of Revolution, the Assertor of Civil and Religious Liberty, and the last of the great colonial preachers. Mayhew was succeeded by Simeon Howard. Howard preached civil and religious freedom guided by a strong sense of personal holiness.

The building was occupied during the Revolution as one of the highest spots in the city. The British destroyed the tower to prevent patriots from using it to signal the harbor. That church’s custodian hung the lanterns used to signal Paul Revere."

Otis House picture taken from the Church property (both photos).
First signs of spring in Boston.