Dalton Historical Navigates Needs for 2nd Historic District

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
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DALTON, Mass. — The Historical Commission is navigating through "confusing" technical details and documentation requirements to establish the proposed second historic district. 
 
The proposed district starts at Park Avenue, where Main Street Cemetery is, and goes down to Depot Street. It then goes up High and North Streets.
 
Commissioners have been working to gather material for the state Historical Commission but have encountered uncertainty about the documentation needed and the format to send it in. 
 
In a recent email exchange, a representative from the state Historical Commission stated that the commission needs a datasheet for the entire proposed district, said co-Chair Deborah Kovacs. 
 
This should include existing  Massachusetts Cultural Resource Information System maps, addresses and a list of all buildings in the district by street in alphabetical order. 
 
In addition, the state needs the commission to create a "master map of the whole area" showing the location of the district's subsections. 
 
The district separated its proposed second historic district into five subsections. 
 
The photo captions have to be in a datasheet format, including the photo number, street address, historic name, and date. He cautioned against using 1900 as a default date, the email said. 
 
The representative offered to help if they had technical issues with the required documentation.
 
It was also found that some of the town's information, including the dates of the historical structures and location, conflicts with the information in MACRIS. 
 
Co-Chair Louisa Horth said one factor contributing to their confusion is that the MACRIS addresses do not match the pictures. 
 
Kovacs said Town Manager Thomas Hutcheson emphasized that the commission needs to spend the $5,000 from the American Rescue Plan Act grant by the Dec. 31 deadline, even if it is just a written and signed contract. 
 
According to Hutcheson, the funds must be used to establish the district and can not be used on other historical commission initiatives, Kovacs said. 
 
The commission requested the grant to hire a preservation specialist. However, it was later found that this could not be done until the state confirmed there is enough historical significance in the area to justify exploring establishing the proposed district.
 
Due to the obstacles they have faced during this process, the commissioners were unsure if they could meet that deadline. 
 
If the town does not spend the funds by the deadline, they go back to the federal government. This will be discussed further at the Sept. 23 Select Board meeting, Executive Assistant Alyssa Maschino said. 
 
After establishing the town's first historic district, the previous commission started the process of establishing the proposed second one but was unable to complete it because of budget and time constraints, Kocas said. 
 
A majority of the commissioners involved in the Craneville District designation are no longer part of the Historical Commission.
 
Commissioner Mary Walsh, who was involved in the process of establishing the Craneville District, said the town hired preservation specialist Norene Roberts for guidance. 
 
She had compiled information for the first district and part of the second district. Roberts passed away in 2022.
 
When the commission resumed its efforts to establish its proposed second historic district, they believed they could continue where they left off but soon realized that was not the case because there had been too many changes in the area. 
 

Tags: historic district,   historical commission,   

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Garceau's National Title Highlights Winter Season for Local Collegians

iBerkshires.com Sports
Wahconah graduate and UMass-Boston junior Aryianna Garceau was crowned the school's 21st National Champion at the 2025 NCAA Division III Indoor Track and Field National Championships in Rochester, N.Y., posting an historic time of 8.35 seconds in the women's 60-meter hurdles.
 
Her championship-winning performance is an NCAA DIII Championship meet record and places her among the top two hurdlers of all time in NCAA DIII, capping off an unforgettable season.
 
Garceau finished with an astonishing, record-breaking 8.35 seconds finish to conclude the season undefeated against NCAA DIII competition. She now holds a new NCAA DIII Championship Meet Record, surpassing Birgen Nelson's (Gustavus Adolphus) 8.39 seconds record set in 2023, and places her just 0.02 seconds behind Nelson's all-time DIII lead of 8.33 seconds. She also sits 0.01 seconds behind the New England leader Fabiola Belibi of Harvard, who leads all NCAA hurdlers in the region with a time of 8.34.
 
Garceau finishes the 2024-25 indoor season with a cabinet of achievements. She is a three-time All-Little East Conference First-Team honoree, the 2024-25 LEC Runner of the Year, a seven-time school record breaker, the facility record holder at the Golisano Training Center, and, in her first Indoor National Championship appearance, a gold medalist. Her achievements this indoor season are among the most captivating and successful in UMass Boston's recent track and field history.
 
In UMass-Boston coach Ozzie Brown's first season with the Beacons' track and field team, Brown developed Garceau, who was coming off an outdoor All-American performance, and gave her the tools necessary to achieve her goal of a national championship. Brown saw the vision and spoke it into existence while assisting Garceau in bringing the objective to fruition. 
 
"I knew she was capable of running sub-8.4, but to actually see it in person is something special," Brown said in a news release from the college. "When I first got the job and sat down with her and planned out the entire year, on paper, it seemed simple. Execute from week to week. There were a few hiccups along the way, but she's such a warrior and can overcome anything. This championship could not have gone to a more deserving and hardworking young woman, and as I told her, 'this is just the beginning.' "
 
Last weekend, Garceau opened her outdoor season with strong performances at the Black and Gold Invitational in Orlando, Fla.
 
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