When you’ve worked a beat for nearly a half-century as I have, and enjoy deep roots therein, upturned stones of investigation can trigger vivid memories.
This is such a circumstance.
It started with word of a supposed archaeological site in South Deerfield, about to be disturbed by the construction of a new dog shelter. When I caught wind of it, I immediately dug deeper because I didn’t recognize the address in my original hometown founded by ancestors. When I finally located East Plain Road, I initially decided to back off from it as a column topic – the site was a little out of range, in my opinion, for a small weekly newspaper serving greater Montague.
That changed, however, when I discovered a solid Montague link. The proposed facility is intended to replace the Franklin County Sheriff’s Office regional dog shelter located on Sandy Lane in Turners Falls, just a hop, skip, and a jump across Turnpike Road from the old Park Villa outdoor movie theater.
Though I was learning of the shelter for the first time, I was familiar with the sandy plain on which it lies. I got to know it from my brief days of employment (1978-79) as a laborer and truck driver for the Montague DPW.
I would not have known the sheriff’s shelter site had I not often visited the adjacent old town landfill during my dump-truck-driving days for road boss Charlie Richotte, back when Joe Janikus and Denny Choleva ran the office. A matter of convenience, my address was then just down the road. I was living in a two-bedroom apartment in the sprawling residence of widowed Irene Martineau on the end of South High Street in Montague City.
I took the temporary job while approaching marriage after a swashbuckling, here-today, gone-tomorrow life on the road. I had closed my last fundraising deal and moved in with my working wife-to-be. During this brief period of unemployed freedom, I was wearing out a path to Powertown barroom poolhalls.
When this malingering lifestyle lingered, my fiancée tired of the destructive routine and, as only a social worker could do, suggested I “find an effing job.” Soon I was a member of the Montague road crew.
My first job was extracting heavy, broken cement guardrail posts on Turners Falls Road and replacing them with heavier new posts. I enjoyed the strenuous labor, and it quickly whipped me into shape after four years of unhealthy living and sedentary office work. Let’s just stay that those smoky offices, motel lounges, and restaurants are no formula for staying fit and trim.
But we won’t go there… back to the proposed South Deerfield shelter site and, especially, to the old Montague landfill.
First, the reason for my interest in the supposed archaeological site – overgrown tillage and peasant cover I often hunted before the construction of the South Deerfield Emergency Veterinary Clinic. I wondered if maybe, just maybe, the supposed Native artifacts surface-collected there during a fairly recent walkover may have been gathered from the place called “Indian Plain” on a few 19th-century deeds I had read from the general neighborhood. Ever since stumbling across that forgotten place-name in a town I know well, I have tried unsuccessfully to pinpoint it, and this clue seemed like good evidence to chase.
I searched out the man holding the artifact assemblage. His home lot abuts the proposed shelter site on the opposite side of the dead-end East Plain Road. I remembered his home being built by town pharmacist Billy Rotkiewicz in the 1980s.
My source happened to be a vocal opponent – not unusual among neighbors of such development projects. We spoke on the phone and, with deadline looming and time running thin, I was unable to connect enough dots for that week’s column. Instead, I teased it as an outtake before ultimately deciding the story wasn’t for me.
Enter Reporter editor Mike Jackson, with whom I discussed the tease and from whom I learned that the shelter being replaced has a Turners Falls address. Its location immediately brought me back nearly a half-century to the adjacent, old Montague landfill, and to a fair-weather day I spent trucking sandy fill from its eastern perimeter to a construction site.
If memory serves me, to get there I’d travel a dirt road within view of Judd Wire, following a slim border of tall pines a few hundred yards before dropping down into a sandpit. There a bucket-loader awaited me. I’d swing the truck’s nose right and back into a spot against a steep 15- or 20-foot escarpment to accept bucket loads of fill.
On my second or third refill, I watched the loader blade tap into a vein of what appeared to be the morbid, dried-up remains of many buried dog carcasses. Boney body parts and chunks of furry pelts dangled out of the bucket as others tumbled down from the fresh cuts in the sandbank.
Not a pretty or expected sight – nor one that would be soon forgotten by anyone who, like me, had grown up with pets.
I never really made much of it, or put an honest effort into determining exactly what we had tapped into, but I never forgot it, either. So, now that nearly 50 years have passed, why not troll a bit? The statute of limitations passed long ago, and anyone directly involved has likely expired.
The problem is I that don’t know the whole story, only what I saw. The bucket-loader operator shared my cluelessness as to the reason why the carcasses were there, and so did everyone else I queried. Then I just let it slip away, until this recent reminder.
Remember, that scene unfolded before I was a reporter. I was young, untamed, and hadn’t yet figured out who I was. My job priority was facilitating the fastest track back to the office for 4 p.m. punch-out time.
Who knows? Perhaps our mass-grave discovery that day was an old veterinary burial pit for euthanized pets; maybe a hidden roadkill dump on an out-of-the-way, town-owned, sandy outwash plain. I don’t believe the sheriff’s dog shelter was there yet, but isn’t it interesting that it ended up there?
Now that I’ve finally shed light on the incident, maybe a reader or two has insight. If so, don’t hesitate to contact me at the email address below. Maybe community memory will finally provide answers.
I guess by now it’s now old enough to qualify as history, no?