Organizations
Christmas in Suffield
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Cynthia Thomas and her daughter were at the Fire Department Auxiliary sale in the main fire station.
The Suffield Observer (https://thesuffieldobserver.com/category/organizations/page/111/)
Cynthia Thomas and her daughter were at the Fire Department Auxiliary sale in the main fire station.
The Suffield Garden Club will hold a monthly meeting on Monday, December 2 at 11:45 a.m. at the Second Baptist Church, Fellowship Hall. Coffee, tea, a light luncheon and a short business meeting are followed by a guest speaker at 1 p.m.
Alice Dahms welcomes her witchy friend Bobbie Kling to the Observer office to help rid the November issue of typos and other misdemeanors.
A downloader takes incoming email submissions, makes copies for the editors and puts the article into the computer system.
Christmas in Suffield & Suffield Partners in a Caring Community Resource Brochure for Substance Use Treatment Services
The Rotary Motto is “Service above Self”. Rotarians are involved in many projects in our community, and the world.
Although it may not be obvious, Hilltop Farm is now much closer to achieving our goal of being able to host events in our historic Big White Barn!
You better watch out, you better not cry, you better not pout, I’m telling you why – Santa Claus is coming to Suffield!
With the holiday season right around the corner, the next three meetings of the Polish Heritage Society (PHS) will highlight Christmas and New Year traditions. The gatherings are open to anyone interested in learning about, preserving, and perpetuating the culture that was passed on from our Polish ancestors. They are held at the Suffield Ambulance Center at 10 a.m.
The session will be on Thursday, November 7, instead of the standard first Wednesday. It will be conducted by Marek Czarnecki, an artist, restorer and community scholar for Connecticut’s Polish American Community. He will be talking about the art of “szopka,” that is nativity scenes.
Remember that sand pit story about citizens’ action out by South Pond? Troubled residents got together in 2014 to stop a dormant sand pit operation on Lake Road from reopening. They organized the Congamond Lakes Environmental Protection Organization (CLEPO), raised money to fight their battle in court, and won. But their satisfaction evaporated when their cooperating abutter, a requirement to contest a zoning decision, suddenly withdrew his objection and the win became a loss. The partners who had requested the zoning variance for reopening then bought the sand pit property and sold it to a sand-mining company, for a considerable profit.