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The Eastwick Press Newspaper

Eastern Rensselaer County's Community Newspaper

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Burt Swersey

April 9, 2015 By eastwickpress

Stephentown – Burt Swersey, who made life better – and more inspiring – for students at RPI for more than two decades, died unexpectedly March 9 at age 78 near his home in Stephentown, N.Y. True to his ethos, he passed away while delivering soup to a homebound neighbor.

“Don’t do nonsense!” Those words resounded, again and again, in the ears of students in Burt Swersey’s Inventor’s Studio course. Swersey was known to repeat himself, if that’s what it took to redirect the young linear thinkers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute into becoming engineers of change.

“Make change happen that will have significant benefits for a billion people,” he implored last year while accepting the Sustainable Practice Impact Award from the National Collegiate Inventors and Innovators Alliance. “What did you do in your life? Well, I made life better for a billion people!”

Swersey was a native of New York City who grew up in the shadow of Yankee Stadium. He attended Bronx High School of Science and then Cornell University. It was during his senior year in Ithaca that he met the love of his life, Alice. They were married in 1959.

Swersey was an innovative, unconventional thinker with a drive to do good in the world long before joining a college faculty. After serving in the Army and then working at Polaroid and Sylvania, he founded four medical technology companies, securing 15 patents along the way. In 1978, he and his wife bought a farm in Stephentown and founded Shadowbrook Nursery, selling premium azaleas, rhododendrons, hydrangea and other plants for more than 20 years. The Swerseys, who moved from Westchester County to Stephentown full-time in 1988, were original members of  The Chatham Synagogue Netivot Torah.

Though he loved working on his farm, it was a chance encounter with a customer, a teacher at RPI, that dramatically changed his life. Swersey mentioned his engineering and entrepreneurial experience and was invited to give a guest lecture, which led to teaching full-time.

For the next 23 years he encouraged, mentored and called on his students to dig deep inside themselves and develop world-changing ideas. He established a new curriculum centered around innovation and creativity and a number of his students went on to start successful companies.

In addition to his wife of 55 years, Swersey is survived by his son, William, and two daughters, Sarah and Rachel, his brother, Arthur, and six grandchildren. He was interred at Chatham Rural Cemetery.

Filed Under: Obituaries

Mother Spring Dies

April 9, 2015 By eastwickpress

Monday, January 20, 1835: Today Mother Spring continues to be more dangerous and Simeon Wylie rode my horse to Pittsfield after brother F. Jay Wylie, and he said Jay and his wife came only time for his mother to know him for she failed so fast and tonight she had lost all sense and lay all night speechless in the agonies of death. [private] I and my wife together with her two sons and their wives and some neighbors remained there watching every moment to be the last.

Tuesday: On this morning at 7 o’clock Mother Spring died, she died with out any hard struggle. She breathed out her breath gradually shorter and shorter until the last.

Wednesday: I tended the funeral of my wife’s mother that is Deborah Spring, the widow of Nathaniel Spring deceased and formerly the widow of Capt. John Wylie, deceased.  Her age was seventy nine.  My wife and two eldest daughters attended the funeral. Elder Mather Jones tended prayers at the house before the deceased was removed, and then the funeral procession removed to Saturday Meeting house and a sermon by Elder Jones. On this evening I took my cutter and carried my wife and sister Eleanor over to see brother Isaac Newton for his health remains very poor.

Friday January 3: I returned a list of the scholars that draw States money to our Town Clerk, who is Doc Elijah Graves, signed by myself and Platt Wylie, we as trustees for our district. We had 24 scholars to draw money for, within our district.

Saturday: Today I went over to Goodrich Hollow to the widow Surdam’s to bargain with her daughter Laura to work for us this season, but we did not come to no bargain, but she agreed to come to my house the forepart of next week and give us answer if she could work. This afternoon I took my wife to Lebanon to the milliners Mrs MacArthur’s and left a mourning hat to be made over. We called to Edwin E. Griggs store and got trusted for eight yards of gingham at 37 cts per, and linings and silk for to put into my wife’s mourning hat. The said gingham was for my wife a mourning dress.

Sunday: Today I went over to see brother Newton, for he remains quite feeble and bloated with the dropsey.

Monday: I chopped wood to the door. Tonight watched with brother Newton. I sat up until 2 o’clock and then Frederick Russel sat up the rest of the night. Said Newton rested but little, he sat in his chair all night.[/private]

Filed Under: George Holcomb

Grafton Special Meeting Reaches No Agreement

April 3, 2015 By eastwickpress

by Alex Brooks

The Grafton Town Board held a special meeting to discuss renewal of the lease on the Senior Center. The current agreement with the County expires on April 30. County Attorney Stephen Pechenik was onhand, and Carol Rosbozom, the Commissioner for Unified Family Services, which includes the Dept. for Aging, and some other County officials. GraftonTown Attorney Sal Ferlazzo was also present. [Read more…] about Grafton Special Meeting Reaches No Agreement

Filed Under: Front Page, Grafton

Petersburgh Revising Its 1985 Mobile Home Law

April 3, 2015 By eastwickpress

by Alex Brooks

The Petersburgh Town Board and Planning Board met in a joint session on Monday, March 30 to discuss updating Petersburgh’s law governing manufactured housing. The meeting began with an on-screen presentation by Planning Board Chairman Frank Sheldon. [Read more…] about Petersburgh Revising Its 1985 Mobile Home Law

Filed Under: Front Page, Petersburgh

Beard-Off Raises $1,000 For Isabel McGuire Scholarship

April 3, 2015 By eastwickpress

by Bea Peterson

Last year it began as a whim for HFCS teachers Damien Bundrick, Bill Clairmont and  Rob Viera. They and other teachers and students grew beards for No-Shave November to promote cancer awareness. From there it grew into the Beard Off when the three kept their beards through March. For two lunchtimes they sold $1 tickets for a drawing when a student could shave off their beards in any fashion. They raised $400 and they decided to donate it to the scholarship fund for their friend and mentor Isabel McGuire who passed away that month. Perhaps a hundred students watched the after school event. And the three courageous teachers sported their odd looking shaves the following day at school.

[Read more…] about Beard-Off Raises $1,000 For Isabel McGuire Scholarship

Filed Under: Front Page, Hoosick, Hoosick Falls, Hoosick School Dist.

The Community Gathers To Remember Bruce Baldwin

April 3, 2015 By eastwickpress

by Thaddeus Flint

A snowy spring morning did not keep the family, friends and colleagues of New Lebanon Councilman Bruce Baldwin from filling the High School cafeteria Saturday, March 28, as they gathered to remember and honor him in his passing. [Read more…] about The Community Gathers To Remember Bruce Baldwin

Filed Under: Front Page, New Lebanon

Ziggie And The SS United States

April 3, 2015 By eastwickpress

by Mary Lou Walters

While on vacation recently Petersburgh Supervisor Siegfried Krahforst encountered a display of memorabilia about the ship SS United States, which brought back a lot of memories for him.

Krahforst, traveling third class and with $5 in his pocket, immigrated to the United States on the SS United States in 1953. [Read more…] about Ziggie And The SS United States

Filed Under: Front Page, Petersburgh

Gun Shop Will Stay Put

April 3, 2015 By eastwickpress

by Alex Brooks

Karen and Charlie Davis, proprietors of Karen & Charlie’s Guns in Berlin. Came before the Petersburgh Planning Board on Monday March 30 for informal discussion about putting up a pole barn next to their house and moving the business into it. [Read more…] about Gun Shop Will Stay Put

Filed Under: Berlin, Front Page, Petersburgh

Berlin Students Inducted Into National Honor Society

April 3, 2015 By eastwickpress

On Monday, March 23, twenty Berlin High School students were formally inducted in the Taconic Valley Chapter of the National Honor Society. Ten Berlin Middle School students were inducted into the National Junior Honor Society. [Read more…] about Berlin Students Inducted Into National Honor Society

Filed Under: Berlin School Dist., Front Page

Erie Canal History At Stephentown Heritage Center

April 2, 2015 By eastwickpress

Tom Ragosta, Watervliet City Historian, will give an illustrated talk on the Erie Canal on Monday, April 6 at 7:30 pm at the Stephentown Historical Society’s Heritage Center, Garfield Road (County Route 26),  Stephentown.  The building is handicapped accessible.   [Read more…] about Erie Canal History At Stephentown Heritage Center

Filed Under: Berlin, Front Page, New Lebanon, Rensselaer County, Stephentown

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Local News

February 3, 2023 Edition

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38th Annual Ice Fishing Contest Rescheduled

Submitted by GLSP Due to warmer than usual temperatures, the 38th annual ice fishing contest at Grafton Lakes State Park has been rescheduled for Saturday, Feb. 11, from 5:30 am to 2 pm. Join in on the fun as several-hundred anglers brave the cold temperatures for their chance to make a winning catch on several […]

Celebrating Retiring Board President Deborah Tudor

On Tuesday, January 25, Cheney Library honored Ms. Deborah Tudor for her 12 years of service on the Cheney Library Board of Trustees. During her tenure as a trustee, Ms. Tudor made immense contributions to physical improvements of the library’s property. Some of these projects include the installation of a propane fireplace, creation of the […]

School News

February 3, 2023 Edition

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Powers Claims Runner-Up

At Inaugural NYSPHSAA Girls Wrestling Invitational Submitted by BNL Varsity Wrestling Coach Wade Prather Tallulah Powers was runner-up at 165 pounds in the inaugural NYSPHSAA Girls Wrestling Invitational held at Onondaga Community College. She was one of only three finalists from Section 2, and the only Runner Up. The meeting of 204 of the State’s top female […]

November 25, 2022 Edition

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