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Centennial book cover revealed
WEST HAVEN, July 29, 2021 — (Pictured): Mayor Nancy R. Rossi and author Dan Shine reveal the cover of West Haven’s forthcoming centennial book, “City of West Haven: Village to Town,” at City Hall on Wednesday.
The new book, due in August, will chronicle the stories and photos that shaped West Haven’s past 100 years.
The content was sourced from the “Historian’s Corner” series written by Shine, one of the foremost authorities on West Haven history. The cover was photographed by James Holt and designed by Toni Perry.
Rossi, the honorary chairwoman of the City of West Haven Centennial Celebration Committee, said the book was commissioned by the committee to commemorate West Haven’s 1921 birth and its incorporation by the General Assembly as Connecticut’s youngest town.
The committee will announce more details soon.
(City Photo/Michael P. Walsh)
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Carrano sworn in as West Haven police commissioner
WEST HAVEN, July 29, 2021 — (Pictured): Mayor Nancy R. Rossi swears in John M. Carrano to the Board of Police Commissioners at City Hall on Wednesday.
Attending the ceremony were Carrano’s wife, Lori Carrano; his mother, Elissa Carrano; his son, John Carrano; and his daughter, Jeana Carrano. They were joined by Police Chief Joseph S. Perno.
Carrano, who lives in West Shore, succeeds Commissioner Keith M. Sweeney, a former West Haven police officer and detective who retired in 1990 after an 11-year career.
Carrano, the son of the late city police Officer Matthew Carrano, served on the Charter Revision Commission in 2018-19. He was on the Board of Education from 2001 to 2005, including a stint as chairman in 2003-05.
During the ceremony, Rossi also administered the oath of office to police commission Vice Chairman Paul E. Butler Jr. for a new term.
Butler, a resident of West Shore who has served on the commission since 2011, was accompanied by his fiancee, Ruth Figueroa; his parents, Paul E. Butler Sr. and Sandra Butler; his son Christopher Butler, a Hartford police officer; and Perno.
(City Photo/Michael P. Walsh)
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 Rossi administers the oath of office to Vice Chairman Paul E. Butler Jr. of the Board of Police Commissioners for a new term. (City Photo/Michael P. Walsh)
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 Police Chief Joseph S. Perno, Carrano, Butler and Rossi. (City Photo/Michael P. Walsh)
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Painting of old Town Hall donated
WEST HAVEN, July 29, 2021 — (Pictured): City native Nick Carlino, center, presents his oil painting of the old West Haven Town Hall to Mayor Nancy R. Rossi and her executive assistant, Louis P. Esposito Jr., at City Hall on Wednesday.
Carlino, now of Northford, donated the framed painting to West Haven for display on the wood-paneled wall on the first floor of City Hall.
The Victorian-era Town Hall, formerly at Main Street and Campbell Avenue, was erected in 1892 and dedicated in 1893, then the Orange borough of West Haven.
The Richardsonian Romanesque building, a style of Romanesque Revival architecture used for major civic buildings nationwide, was demolished in 1968 to build the current City Hall, which was constructed there in 1969 and dedicated in 1970.
(City Photo/Michael P. Walsh)
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 Local party rock band Mean Carlene will headline the Centennial Savin Rock Festival in West Haven’s Old Grove Park at 8 p.m. Friday. (Publicity Photo)
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Centennial Savin Rock Festival kicks off at 5 p.m. Friday
WEST HAVEN, July 29, 2021 — Local party rock bands Mean Carlene and Shameless will headline the Centennial Savin Rock Festival in Old Grove Park on Friday and Saturday, respectively.
The two-day festival, presented by the City of West Haven Centennial Celebration Committee, is part of a six-month series of free events commemorating the community’s 100th anniversary and its incorporation by the General Assembly as Connecticut’s youngest municipality.
Mayor Nancy R. Rossi, the committee’s honorary chairwoman, said the Centennial Savin Rock Festival will showcase West Haven’s past 100 years and the “sights, sounds, smells and tastes” that made the 20th-century Savin Rock Park “the playground of New England.”
The festival, which pays homage to the legacy of “the Rock,” is set for 5-10 p.m. Friday and noon-10 p.m. Saturday.
Along with live music, it will feature a midway of games and rides — and, of course, boatloads of seafood and other mouthwatering dishes.
Marenna Amusements will offer wristbands for unlimited rides for $25.
A number of nonprofit organizations will set up informational booths in the 151-year-old Grove, and a fleet of food trucks on nearby Palace Street will serve up burgers, hot dogs, cheesesteak, fried dough, gyros, kebabs, and sausage and peppers. Dessert trucks will offer cannoli, cupcakes and ice cream.
Resident-only parking for vehicles displaying a valid, affixed beach sticker will be available in the lots on Oak Street and Altschuler Boulevard. Free overflow parking for residents and nonresidents will be available in the grass lot on Oak Street, across from the Surfside public housing complex.
The festival will open at 5 p.m. Friday with welcoming remarks by Rossi and the national anthem sung by Grace Kelly Nowak.
Brian Smith, a former co-host of WPLR’s “Smith and Barber the Morning Show,” will serve as the “ringmaster” of ceremonies for a fourth time.
The Hooch, a Top 40 duo that “combines elements of hip-hop, pop, soul and smooth vocals,” will perform at 6:30 p.m., followed by hometown favorite Mean Carlene at 8 p.m.
Mean Carlene is Rob Hames on bass guitar and vocals, Joe LaDore on acoustic guitar and vocals, Bobby Moran on electric guitar and vocals, and Rich Weber on drums and vocals.
“When West Haven asked Mean Carlene to help celebrate the city, our only question was what time and what portable stage,” the band said in a statement. “The Savin Rock Festival returns this year, and MC will be helping to wish a happy 100th birthday to all things Westie by getting the band back together. Again.
“Come join us under the stars for some fun, a few laughs, and to rekindle what made the ‘last Friday of every month’ so special for so long.”
On Saturday, festival organizers will hold a craft fair from noon-7 p.m.
At 3 p.m., members of the West Haven Fire Department will demonstrate the Jaws of Life tool during an extrication by prying open parts of a vehicle to free those trapped inside. Members of the West Shore Fire Department will demonstrate their amphibious rescue boat.
Rubber City, powered by a horn section in the vein of Chicago and Tower of Power, will perform at 4 p.m., followed by local party funk band Covergirl at 6 p.m. and Shameless at 8 p.m.
“Shameless is excited and honored to be closing out this year’s Savin Rock Festival,” the band said in a statement. “The festival has always been a highlight of summer in southern Connecticut. We are thrilled to see it return for the West Haven Centennial Celebration and just as excited to join in on the fun.
“The boys in the band can’t wait to get a little Shameless with West Haven on July 31!”
Watch the Shameless promotional video on YouTube.
If it rains, all bands will play in the West Haven High auditorium, 1 Circle St.
The Centennial Savin Rock Festival will join other events observing West Haven’s secession from Orange a century ago. The rural and residential sections of Orange separated in 1921 when the residential part, West Haven, became the state’s youngest town.
The committee’s hospitality table will sell centennial coins, lapel pins and lawn signs at the hospitality table.
Each person who buys a $10 lawn sign will get entered into a raffle for a chance to push a “start button” to help launch this year’s fireworks. The winner and up to three guests will also dine on burgers and hot dogs under the Savin Rock Fireworks Committee’s hospitality tent before and during the display.
The 2021 fireworks, billed as “They Will Be Heard on the 3rd,” will launch off Bradley Point Park at 8 p.m. Sept. 3, with a rain date of Sept. 4.
All merchandise proceeds generated by the centennial committee will offset expenses and support the $50,000 centennial budget approved by the City Council, said committee Chairwoman Beth A. Sabo, the city’s commissioner of human resources.
Local vendor JOD Designs, a veteran-owned screen printing company, will sell centennial T-shirts.
West Haven’s flagship festival was established in 1982 by the Chamber of Commerce — initially under the direction of Brian M. Stone, David Gesler and Michael Shiner and thereafter by John L. Perrone and his wife, Mary Perrone — to bring organizations, clubs, businesses and families together for a summer festival that celebrates life in one of America’s oldest coastal communities.
From the dawn of the Savin Rock House hotel in 1838, the Rock had long been a resort hub until it was officially incorporated as an amusement park by the Savin Rock Park Co. on Memorial Day 1925, when it opened to 300,000 visitors and 66,000 automobiles in one spectacular day.
For the next four decades, the popular seaside park captured the hearts and imaginations of “Rock rats” of all ages. “The Coney Island of Connecticut” shuttered Sept. 21, 1966, to pave the way for the Savin Rock Urban Renewal Project.
For a complete list of centennial events, see the Schedule. For centennial merchandise, visit the official Online Store.
The store, hosted by West Haven vendor West Shore Associates, sells such centennial-branded merchandise as long- and short-sleeved T-shirts, hooded sweatshirts, stainless steel tumblers, stemless wine glasses, insulated beverage bottles, ceramic mugs, retro sunglasses, canvas and cotton tote bags, eco-performance face masks, and pigment-dyed twill and mesh trucker caps.
A portion of the vendors’ merchandise proceeds will support the centennial account, Sabo said.
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 Local party rock band Shameless will headline the Centennial Savin Rock Festival in West Haven’s Old Grove Park at 8 p.m. Saturday. (Publicity Photo)
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 The Hooch, a Top 40 duo that “combines elements of hip-hop, pop, soul and smooth vocals,” will play the Centennial Savin Rock Festival at 6:30 p.m. Friday. (Publicity Photo)
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 Rubber City, powered by a horn section in the vein of Chicago and Tower of Power, will play the Centennial Savin Rock Festival at 4 p.m. Saturday. (Publicity Photo)
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 Local party funk band Covergirl will play the Centennial Savin Rock Festival at 6 p.m. Saturday. (Publicity Photo)
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UI’s tree care program resumes
WEST HAVEN, July 29, 2021 — United Illuminating has begun the latest phase of its tree care program to reduce the amount of vegetation that UI says threatens power lines during storms.
Over the next three months, UI’s tree service contractor will increase the distance between vegetation and power lines by targeting trees and limbs on Kelsey and Richmond avenues, Park Terrace, Painter Drive, and Church, Blohm, William and Bassett streets, said city Tree Warden Leo Kelly, who reviewed and approved the project.
Kelly said the contractor, Lewis Tree Service, will focus work on UI’s “Utility Protection Zone,” which extends 15 feet above, 8 feet below and 10 feet to the side of power lines.
According to UI, the Orange-based utility will designate trees for pruning or removal if they pose a threat to power lines or risk falling into or encroaching on the Utility Protection Zone, causing damage to the electrical system or outages due to their height and growth pattern.
People can direct questions to Kelly at lkelly@westhaven-ct.gov.
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Simply Swing jazzes up Old Grove Park
WEST HAVEN, July 29, 2021 — (Pictured): A pair of saxophonists from Simply Swing, a 10-piece orchestra featuring “swinging horns, a dynamic rhythm section and wonderful vocals,” performs a two-hour show in Old Grove Park on Friday as part of the West Haven Centennial Concert Series.
The series will continue at 7 p.m. Aug. 13 in the Grove with Chicago blues played by The Cobalt Rhythm Kings. The rain date is Aug. 16.
(City Photo/Alycia Sandella)
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 Simply Swing singer Vivian LaRosa. (City Photo/Alycia Sandella)
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 The sun beams through the oaks in the 151-year-old Grove. (City Photo/Alycia Sandella)
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Concert by Cobalt Rhythm Kings slated for 7 p.m. Aug. 13 in Grove
WEST HAVEN, July 29, 2021 — The West Haven Centennial Concert Series will continue Aug. 13 with Chicago blues played by The Cobalt Rhythm Kings.
The two-hour concert is set for 7 p.m. in Old Grove Park. The rain date is Aug. 16.
The concert series will follow in the Grove with the R&B of Shaded Soul Band at 7 p.m. Aug. 27. The rain date is Aug. 30.
On Sept. 5, the series will culminate in the Grove at 7 p.m. with a two-hour concert by What a Fool Believes, “a Doobie Brothers experience” celebrating the Doobies’ 50th anniversary. The rain date is Sept. 9.
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Centennial includes fireworks, Savin Rock Festival
WEST HAVEN, June 10, 2021 — The City of West Haven Centennial Celebration Committee will toast the community’s 100th anniversary with a six-month series of free concerts, historical exhibits and fireworks — headlined by the long-awaited return of the Savin Rock Festival, Mayor Nancy R. Rossi announced.
The festival, last held in 2017 because of a $50,000 budget deficit under the previous administration, is coming home to the 151-year-old grounds of Old Grove Park on July 30-31.
According to Rossi, the committee’s honorary chairwoman, the Centennial Savin Rock Festival will showcase West Haven’s past 100 years and the “sights, sounds, smells and tastes” that made the 20th-century Savin Rock Park “the playground of New England.” More details are forthcoming.
Rossi said the committee is pulling out all the stops for the West Haven Centennial Celebration by throwing a birthday bash to remember — 100 years in the making.
The committee has hung decorative blue-and-white centennial banners around the community in observance of West Haven’s 1921 birth.
To mark the milestone, the committee has opened the centennial’s official Online Store.
The store, hosted by West Haven vendor West Shore Associates, sells such centennial-branded merchandise as long- and short-sleeved T-shirts, hooded sweatshirts, stainless steel tumblers, stemless wine glasses, insulated beverage bottles, ceramic mugs, retro sunglasses, canvas and cotton tote bags, eco-performance face masks, and pigment-dyed twill and mesh trucker caps.
Another local vendor, JOD Designs, a veteran-owned screen printing company, will sell centennial T-shirts at events.
A portion of the vendors’ merchandise proceeds will offset expenses and support the $50,000 centennial budget approved by the City Council, Rossi said.
In addition, the committee will sell a centennial coin, lapel pin and book, said Chairwoman Beth A. Sabo, the city’s commissioner of human resources.
According to Sabo, most of the book’s content was generously provided by Dan Shine, one of the foremost authorities on West Haven history.
The committee will also sell centennial lawn signs for $10, said Sabo, adding that each person who buys a sign will get entered into a raffle for a chance to push a “start button” to help launch this year’s fireworks. The winner and up to three guests will also dine on burgers and hot dogs under the Savin Rock Fireworks Committee’s hospitality tent before and during the display, she said.
All merchandise proceeds generated by the committee will support the centennial account, Sabo said.
Did we mention fireworks?
The 2021 fireworks, billed as “They Will Be Heard on the 3rd,” will launch off Bradley Point Park at 8 p.m. Sept. 3, with a rain date of Sept. 4.
The display, moved from July 3 to Labor Day weekend to safely accommodate the many throngs expected, is presented by the centennial committee and the fireworks committee.
Before the fireworks, people of all ages can shake, rattle and roll to funk and rock music performed by the Kathy Thompson Band on a portable stage in front of Savin Rock from 6-8 p.m.
“We don’t celebrate many historic events in West Haven, and I’m excited to mark our 100th anniversary with several concerts, events for children, the Centennial Savin Rock Festival and the September fireworks,” Rossi said. “And that’s just the summertime events. There will be more ways to celebrate West Haven’s past and its people through the end of the year.”
On June 12-13, the centennial festivities will commence with a West Haven Historical Society open house exhibit, “From Village to Town,” from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the society’s Poli House headquarters, 686 Savin Ave.
The exhibit will include maps chronicling the growth and development of West Haven, formerly known as West Farms, from a Colonial settlement in 1648 to its evolution as a separate town in 1921, society President Jon E. Purmont said.
“We are delighted to share with the public many artifacts, photographs and archival material that explain why West Haven became a separate town,” Purmont said.
Also on June 12, the Centennial Boat Parade will set sail across the West Haven seaboard at 1 p.m. The procession of more than 100 boats will pay homage to the community’s nautical heritage and 3 miles of publicly accessible beaches on Long Island Sound — the crown jewels of West Haven, Rossi said.
The parade will follow the city’s coastline from the jetty off Sandy Point in New Haven Harbor, known as the West Haven jetty, to the Oyster River in Baybrook, according to West Haven Harbor Master Robert Pimer, who has charted the course for the committee and will help steer the procession.
Rossi is encouraging city residents to descend on the beaches along Beach Street, Captain Thomas Boulevard and Ocean Avenue for a front-row view of the boating spectacle.
“I cannot wait for our residents to witness this one-of-a-kind boat parade along our very shore,” said Rossi, who will join Pimer at the helm aboard his harbor master boat. “This event is a tribute to the enduring history and legacy of West Haven as a true maritime community.”
Committee member John Biancur said he expects over 100 boats of varying sizes to participate in the free parade, including motorboats, personal watercraft, and sailboats from the Prospect Beach Fish & Game Club and the City Point, Pequonnock, Waucoma and West Haven yacht clubs. It will also include rescue boats from the West Haven, West Shore and City of West Haven Allingtown fire departments.
Biancur said the parade is open to all watercraft operators, provided they meet at the West Haven jetty at 1 p.m. and follow the Police Department’s patrol boat throughout the route. The rain date is June 13 at 2 p.m.
A Juneteenth event, “West Haven Celebrates Juneteenth,” will take place in Brent Watt Park on Tile Street in Allingtown from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. June 19 — the traditional commemoration date of the emancipation of enslaved people in the United States.
President Abraham Lincoln first issued the Emancipation Proclamation declaring all slaves free in Confederate territory on Sept. 22, 1862, but the news took time to travel. June 19, 1865, is the date when word of the proclamation reached African Americans in Texas.
West Haven’s Juneteenth activities, held rain or shine, will focus on performances by talented young people from the area, including cheerleaders, a poet, dancers, a saxophonist and singers, said Councilwoman Robbin Watt Hamilton, D-5, a committee member.
The community event will include remarks by dignitaries, a rendition of the Black national anthem, “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” and a reading of the Emancipation Proclamation, Watt Hamilton said.
It will also include a drum call by Rhythm From the Heart, a performance by the Village Drill Team and a concert by The Nu Groove Band, which specializes in R&B and classic rock.
Local artists and authors will show their works, and vendors will sell novelties and wares, including T-shirts, jewelry and soaps. The Cool Runnings food truck will serve the taste of Jamaica.
Watt Hamilton said the Health Department will offer the COVID-19 vaccine to those 18 and older.
The centennial kickoff ceremony is scheduled for Old Grove Park on June 24 — 100 years to the day of West Haven’s incorporation by the General Assembly as Connecticut’s youngest municipality.
The 7 p.m. event will include opening remarks by dignitaries and the recognition of West Haven centenarians, followed by a two-hour show by The Pop Rocks, “Connecticut’s ultimate ’80s experience,” as part of the West Haven Centennial Concert Series. The rain date is June 29.
To coincide with the June 24 kickoff, the West Haven Child Development Center and the West Haven Community House will start distributing centennial diaper bags to the first 100 West Haven babies born on or after June 24 through the city clerk’s office at City Hall, 355 Main St. Call the office for details at 203-937-3535.
The concert series will continue with Rubber City, “one of Connecticut’s premier concert, party and club bands,” in the Grove at 7 p.m. July 9. The rain date is July 12.
On July 10, the West Haven PTA Council will present “Chalk the Walk” from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on the boardwalk behind the Savin Rock Conference Center, 6 Rock St., followed by its Sand Sculpture Contest from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. July 17 at Oak Street Beach. The rain dates are July 11 for the chalk event and July 18 for the contest.
The concert series will resume with Airborne, a contemporary jazz group, on the Allingtown Green at 7 p.m. July 17 and Simply Swing, a 10-piece orchestra featuring “swinging horns, a dynamic rhythm section and wonderful vocals,” in the Grove at 7 p.m. July 23. The rain dates are July 26 for Simply Swing and July 28 for Airborne.
On July 31, the Centennial Coed Beach Volleyball Tournament is set for 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Sea Bluff Beach courts. The rain date is Aug. 1.
The concert series will follow with the Chicago blues of The Cobalt Rhythm Kings at 7 p.m. Aug. 13 and the R&B of Shaded Soul Band at 7 p.m. Aug. 27, both in the Grove. The rain dates are Aug. 16 for Cobalt Rhythm Kings and Aug. 30 for Shaded Soul.
On Sept. 5, the series will culminate in the Grove at 7 p.m. with a two-hour concert by What a Fool Believes, “a Doobie Brothers experience” celebrating the Doobies’ 50th anniversary. The rain date is Sept. 9.
WestFest, a festival sponsored by the University of New Haven Mayor’s Advisory Commission, is slated for the downtown Green from noon-8 p.m. Sept. 18. The rain date is Sept. 19.
On Sept. 25, a “Hubbard Farms” exhibit, presented by Hubbard family member Steven Johnstone, will take place from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Hubbard Farms Park, a wooded 7.6-acre park with walking trails in West Shore’s Hubbard Road neighborhood. The rain date is Sept. 26.
The West Haven Veterans Museum, 30 Hood Terrace, will hold an exhibit, “A Salute to Veterans of the Last 100 Years,” at 10 a.m. Nov. 9.
Other commemorative events will include walking tours of Allingtown and a fire muster in front of Savin Rock with members of West Haven’s three fire departments and the Orange Volunteer Fire Department.
Also planned is a reenactment of a spirited town meeting discussing West Haven’s separation from Orange in 1921 and starring leaders from both communities.
More details on those events are forthcoming.
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Every Friday is #FunFactFriday on W. Haven centennial Facebook page
WEST HAVEN, June 2, 2021 — The City of West Haven Centennial Celebration Committee has launched a new series called #FunFactFriday to promote the community’s 100th anniversary this year.
Every Friday, the committee will post tidbits celebrating historical events, people and places in West Haven from the past 100 years on its official Facebook page, City of West Haven Centennial Celebration - 1921-2021.
The page is administered by the city and edited by Dan Shine, one of the foremost authorities on West Haven history. Like the page on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/CityofWestHavenCentennialCelebrationCommittee.
The historical facts are compiled from various West Haven Library references by staff members Taylor Cordova and Kiana Arevalo under the supervision of Executive Director Colleen Bailie.
The committee is planning a number of commemorative events, starting this month, to observe the 1921 birth of Connecticut’s youngest town.
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