Category Archives: “You could leave life right now. Let that determine what you do and say and think.” – Marcus Aurelius

On Horseback Or Reading Venture Smith; Pandemonium in Deep River

“Those who say it can't be done are usually interrupted by others doing it.” James Baldwin

June. Wild roses, green everything. Gardens and ideas growing. Time.

One step, one day at a life. Sometimes hold on for a minute and just be.

Venture Smith found a way to freedom and his story is but one in the region. Maps and artifacts, trails and tributes. Business finds a way to provide leadership and unite when there is but shrill loudness and no substance in the top public servant.

“If only Venture Smith could write.” — Introduction, first line in “Making Freedom: The Extraordinary Life of Venture Smith” by Chandler B. Saint & George A. Krimsky (Wesleyan University Press 2009).

Storms of life — pandemic and economic, accidents and health challenges — test the mettle of humans beings.

Real life is more amazing than fiction. Though he could not write, Venture Smith found a way to get his incredible life story told, published, ferried into the future. And faced more obstacles in his life than most of us ever will along the way.

Page 19 from the IAIS Museum booklet Venture Smith Homestead online as a PDF, linked to this image.

From a rich resource PDF booklet by Institute for American Indian Studies (IAIS) Venture Smith Homestead:

“Venture dictated his autobiography to a white schoolteacher and the story was published in New London, Connecticut in 1798. Entitled A Narrative of the Life & Adventures of Venture, a Native of Africa, but Resident above Sixty Years in the United States of America, related by himself, it is one of the few slave narratives that discusses in some detail life in Africa as well as the life of an African captive in Colonial New England. Town histories in Connecticut and Rhode Island relate stories of his unusual physical strength and courage. He has been referred to as a ‘black Paul Bunyan.' He was six feet two inches tall, weighed over 300 pounds, and measured six feet about the waist.

“He could lift a tierce of molasses, or carry seven bushels of salt. … once, between sunrise and sunset, he threw the trees and cut and laid up 16 cords of wood (Rev. Frederic Denison 1878:119).”

Juneteenth is the oldest nationally celebrated commemoration of the ending of slavery in the United States. Dating back to 1865, it was on June 19th that the Union soldiers, led by Major General Gordon Granger, landed at Galveston, Texas with news that the war had ended and that the enslaved were now free. Note that this was two and a half years after President Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation – which had become official January 1, 1863. The Emancipation Proclamation had little impact on the Texans due to the minimal number of Union troops to enforce the new Executive Order. However, with the surrender of General Lee in April of 1865, and the arrival of General Granger’s regiment, the forces were finally strong enough to influence and overcome the resistance.” — Juneteenth.com

Juneteenth is celebrated at Hempstead Houses in New London as part of the community's stories and heritage.

Before 2020, many were unaware of the history and culture behind this event.

Follow smart people, not the loudest ones.

All progress depends on the unreasonable [hu]man. George Bernard Shaw

Haley Farm walk. A cove is to the left, out of sight in this image; Long Island Sound is to the south. Miles to walk, a Connecticut state park.

Haley Farm wall and gate with dog.

For those who may missed a story from Saybrook Point:

Cornfield Point tile.

Before there was a Cornfield Point in Old Saybrook, there was a field of corn. The goal was to feed a small group of people determined to stake a claim to a river bluff in the wilderness centuries ago.

And on we go, still to come is the transformation of a site in Deep River and what it is becoming.

Historic Narrative:

“Built by Pratt Brothers Co. in 1856 for the manufacture of ivory combs, it became a facility of Pratt Read and Co., the merger formed by Julius Pratt and Co., George Read and Co., and Pratt Brothers Co. in 1863. After the construction of the 1881 factory on Main Street in Deep River, this location was identified as the ‘West’ factory/mill of Pratt Read and Co., where ivory was cut and bleached for combs, keys, collar buttons and various notions. After Pratt Read and Co. merged with Comstock Cheney and Co. in 1936, Leonard Young moved his Electric Soldering Iron Co. to this location. Young had started the firm in New York in 1928 to produce soldering irons, tips and pots, and held several patents. Young also invented the ‘Health Ray’ lamp, a tanning device, establishing the Health Ray Manufacturing Co. c.1930 in New York; he moved production to the Deep River plant in 1937. The lamp, whose rays were purportedly four times stronger than mid-day summer sun, was sold by mail order only; users were cautioned against lengthy exposure. Between the two companies Young employed 35 people in 1937. From 1962 to 1987, the Electric Soldering Iron Co. was owned and operated by William A. Purtell Jr (1922-2004), son of Senator William A. Purtell, and in 1987, under new ownership it was renamed ESICO. Production of soldering equipment for use in the aerospace, automotive, branding, electrical, electronics, HVAC, hobbyist, marine, plumbing and roofing industries continued under ESICO-Triton International Inc.”

Architectural Description:

The 1856 wood frame factory building is one and a half stories with gable roof. One to two bleach houses, with southwestern facing glass elevations, were located to the north of the factory until c.1925. An ivory vault was located to the west on the other side of the head race until c.1936. The eastern engine shop and boiler house were built in 1911. According to town historian Rich Kalapos, as of 2016 the turn of the century turbine, rope-pulled elevator, and some machinery remain in place.

Connecticut Mills

And to the present, reborn as Pandemonium Thrift and Rescue Project Sanctuary. (Note: Their Twitter page is not as active as walking into the shop and looking around, then touring out back where the animals and birds and rescues will be housed and cared for. Round up with every purchase to help feed and care for all. It is an incredible place with worthy goals. Nevermind the history of the site which is tremendous. Then linking all in a trail with a vault museum to tell the stories here? Wow.)

“The FW Beers County Atlas of Middlesex, Connecticut, inset of the West Factory. This is one of the best visual indications of how much Route 9 changed the area. The bridge on the right side of the mill is where we have cleared down to, near the fire pit.” — Ian Basilone, PRP manager and historian, who shared his knowledge and this image, one of many in his collection for an upcoming feature story about both the building and connections to Africa, elephants, trade, slavery; but also about the vision of what the acreage and building are becoming for housing rescues and providing animal care, home to a community connecting to all with a big heart.



Editor's note: This story has been updated. Portions moved forward from stories written during before and during the pandemic.