Library president Alvin W. Hall Jr. announced someone had made an
anonymous gift of $1 million toward the cost of a major expansion of
The Ridgefield Library public, the March 17, 1983 Press reported.
Mr. Hall said it was probably the largest single gift to a public
organization in the town’s history. It was just 80 years earlier that
James W. Morris gave the library building as a memorial to his wife,
Elizabeth W. Morris.
There were two conditions attached to the gift. The library had to
put up $500,000 of its endowment for the building project and the town
had to agree to increase substantially its annual support from taxation
of the library’s operating budget.
Four years before this newest library addition proposal, voters rejected a $2.4 library expansion bond issue.
• • •
With Ridgefield changing in the fall from its traditional
three-member Board of Selectmen to a new five-member board, First
Selectman Elizabeth Leonard and her fellow Republican selectman, Paul
Rosa, said they did not want to make an announcement yet and Democrat
Lillian Moorhead advised that she hadn’t made a decision on whether she
would run again.
Sue Manning, who had previously been defeated by Mrs. Leonard for
the Republican nomination as first selectman, however, was emphatic
about her decision to run for a slot on the board. “Yes, I’m going to.”
Norman Craig, the well-known Main Street jeweler who had narrowly
missed election as state representative said he wasn’t a candidate.
• • •
Although they were in favor of the plan the Board of Selectmen
delayed action on a proposed $950,000 renovation and expansion of the
athletic fields. The hold-up stemmed from a proposed agreement over
maintenance of the fields once they were restored. First Selectman
Leonard moved that the Board of Education and the Parks and Recreation
Commission sit down with representatives of the athletic groups to work
on a maintenance agreement.
At the time the work was being shared by the Board of Education and
Parks and Recreation, with the board caring for the high school fields
and the parks department maintaining the rest. Selectman Paul Rosa
questioned the board’s “technical expertise” in being able to maintain
athletic fields and representatives from some of the town’s athletic
groups, including Dave Campbell and Roger Fingado of the Ridgefield
Soccer Club, suggested that Parks and Recreation take over all
responsibility for maintenance.
Alfred S. Kelley, a retired pressman who worked at the Ridgefield
Press after moving to town in 1936, died at 79. He was married to
Esther H. Nash of Ridgefield who survived him and the couple’s two
daughters, Joy Allison Johnson and Marcia Jane Eppoliti.
Rose Frulla of North Street died at 94. She was Ridgefield’s last
Gold Star Mother of World War II. Born in Monterado, Ancona, Italy, she
moved to Ridgefield in 1910 and was the wife of Allesandro Frulla. A
son, Alex, and five daughters, Mrs. Augusta Brusca, Mrs. Pauline
Moylan, Mrs. Mary Montesi, Mrs. Quinta Montesi and Mrs. Elda Ruopp,
survived her.