Focus On The Scharfstein Family:  Radical Acceptance of What Is

The Scharfstein family (from left to right) Lee, Arielle, Kaya and Brooke (with Ryder the dog) live close to town, north of the Post Road. Originally from New York, they have lived in Westport for eight years. 

Mom Brooke is a Marketing Consultant and Business Coach who’s says “The kids being home all day while working from home is an adjustment. However, it’s been nice to be together and sleep in.” She feels the town leadership’s handling of the Corona Virus Crisis has been encouraging and says the community at large has been supportive.  

Our family always lives by the motto “Do Good Have Fun” and that’s what we want for everyone. This is an opportunity for humanity to come together and do things differently. Love more judge less. We are praying for everyone’s future and savoring right now with radical acceptance of what is.

To read more of the museums long lens oral histories please visit the Westport In Focus page.

The New Millennium, 2000-2020

The turn of the century and the millennium was a time of frenetic energy. People worldwide wondered what the new era would bring—even as they worried about how the intricate web of technology that drove business would cope with the Y2K switch over. 

While technological systems made the transition without a hitch, the world still hurtled toward unexpected change. Less than two full years into the millennium, terrorists used commercial jet liners to attack the World Trade Center in Manhattan. Many victims of the attack came from bedroom communities in the Metro area like Westport where commuter cars could be seen abandoned at local train stations. 

After 9/11, many New Yorkers fled the city for what felt like the relative safety of the suburbs including prominent artists who felt the lure of the artists’ haven the town once was. Among them was famed illustrator and writer Victoria Kann, whose Pinkalicious children’s books are internationally beloved. 

“Change” rapidly became a theme of the 2000s as Americans began to take stock of life as they knew it. In Westport, a town committee was formed in 2003, specifically to address diversity and inclusion. Called Together Effectively Achieving Multiculturalism or TEAM Westport the group continues to work toward these objectives today—finding renewed purpose in the civil rights protests of 2020. 

Throughout the first decades of the 2000s local institutions grappled with evolving to meet the needs of a changing community and rising to the challenges of the technologically-enabled world. The Westport Public Library changed its name to The Westport Library in 2013 and in 2019 opened its doors after a major renovation that focused on tech-enabled interactions. Westport Historical Society became Westport Museum for History & Culture to reflect mission-based work in inclusive history and The Westport Arts Center became the Museum of Contemporary Arts in a nod to its wider reach. The Westport Country Playhouse, began to focus on artistic programming that included more diverse stories portrayed by diverse actors. 

In 2020, Westport became an early hotspot for the novel Corona Virus and the disease it caused: COVID-19. Strict social distancing measures enabled the town to flatten the curve, becoming a model for other towns nationwide. Echoing the movements of the early millennium when 9/11 pushed New Yorkers from the city, Westport and towns like it have become attractive to city-dwellers seeking safer environs from the virus. The national civil rights protests following the murder of an unarmed black father, George Floyd, reached Westport as well with multiple demonstrations taking place in the downtown area. 

Dive in and learn more about the history of Westport, the quintessential New England town

Endings & Beginnings, 1980-1999

The last two decades of the 20th century heralded the close of certain chapters in Westport life. Iconic buildings that spoke to Westport’s past—like the elegant Kemper House that once stood at the rear of Playhouse Square, the commodious General Putnam Inn on Jesup Green and the beloved Rippe cider mill and farm stand on the Post Road where Harvest Commons Condominiums now stand, all made way for modern development. Dorr Oliver Laboratories formed around 1915 as a supplier of processing equipment for minerals, metals, fertilizers, pulp and paper chemicals closed in 1985. 

In 1985, another long-standing Westport institution was threatened when the Westport Country Playhouse was on the auction block for use as a shopping center or condo complex.  The Playhouse Limited Partnership was formed to purchase the property for $1.2 million. By 1990 the Playhouse was listed on the Connecticut State Register of Historic Places. 

The Playhouse was not the only local nonprofit to get a new lease on life in the 1980s.  In July 1984, the Westport Historical Society [Westport Museum for History & Culture] successfully purchased the Bradley-Wheeler House for its museum headquarters after several years of fundraising efforts. Then-new Westporters like caterer Martha Stewart, enthusiastically joined long-time residents like Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward in creating exhibits, programs and fundraising for the organization. 

Newman’s philanthropy extended to many aspects of local and national life—including supporting the newly-saved Playhouse. In 1982 he and partner A.E. Hotchner formed Newman’s Own a private nonprofit, located in Westport, that donates 100% of all post-operation profits to support educational and charitable organizations worldwide. In 1988 Newman also founded the Hole In The Wall Gang Camp. This camp was founded to provide opportunities for children with serious illnesses to experience the transformational spirit and friendships that go hand-in-hand with camp. The camp’s facilities in Ashford, CT are still active and providing unique experiences to children with little opportunity to share the camp experience. 

Dive in and learn more about the history of Westport, the quintessential New England town

Protests & Patriotism, 1960-1979

The 1960s and 70s were a time of great social change nationwide when citizens took to the streets to make their voices heard about the critical issues of the day.  

Westporters learned first-hand about the civil rights movement  when the Reverend Dr. Martin Luter King Jr., visited Temple Israel on the fifth anniversary of its founding in May, 1964. Speaking to the congregation at the invitation of Rabbi B.T. Rubinstein, Dr. King shared the difficulties freedom fighters faced in their daily battle to desegregate the South, ensure voting rights, and secure the blessings of liberty for African Americans. Dr. King went on to win the Nobel Peace Prize in November of that year.  

Following Dr. King’s assassination in 1968, the InterCommunity Camp was founded to host children from under-resourced areas for Westport summer fun. Local celebrities, including Leonard Bernstein, offered their private pools for the children’s use and Westport teenagers served as counselors. That same year, Saugatuck Congregational Church founded its nursery school, based on Dr. King’s vision of racial peace, seeking to serve under-resourced working families in nearby Bridgeport and Norwalk. 

The road to equity wasn’t always easy. In 1970, Westport chose to participate in Project Concern, a national school integration plan which brought children of color from under-resourced areas into Westport schools. The proposal created community upheaval and many protested the move. In heated schoolboard meetings, bias-rhetoric often took center stage.  School board chair Joan Schine was nearly recalled for casting the deciding vote in favor of the program. Eventually Project Concern continued, evolving into programs like Open Choice and A Better Chance.  

The environment was also an important issues of the day and, in 1970, a group of Westporters successfully fought The United Illuminating Company’s plan for a nuclear power plant on Westport’s Cockenoe Island. But even while some landmarks were being saved, others met their end. In 1973, the once-grand Compo House on the former estate of Richard Henry Winslow met the wrecking ball in what is today Winslow Park. 

The patriotic spirit that encouraged Westporters to exercise their constitutional rights to protest and effect change, carried the town into hearty celebrations of the American Bicentennial in 1976. At Westport Historical Society, a group of volunteers—including Martha Stewart – worked to create a Quilt commemorating the historic year. The quilt later hung in Town Hall. 

The 1970s ended with Westport’s Town Hall moving from its iconic cobblestone building on the Post Road to the former Bedford Elementary School on Myrtle Avenue. 

Project Concern, c. 1975 
Video 
Team Westport YouTube Channel

Dive in and learn more about the history of Westport, the quintessential New England town

Peace, Prosperity & Cold War, 1946-1959

Following the end of World War II, Americans sought a return to normalcy. Many pursued an idealized life in suburbs that were rapidly springing up around overcrowded and war-weary cities. In Westport, artists like Stevan Dohanos portrayed this idyllic world on the covers he produced for the Saturday Evening Post and other magazines, using Westport scenes for inspiration. In 1948 Dohanos and similar illustrators joined Norman Rockwell and Albert Dorne, to found The Famous Artist School in Westport. The school was a correspondence arts course comprising 24 lessons for $200 that was payable in installments and could even be covered by the GI Bill.  

While returning GI’s found opportunities for education and newly built housing awaiting them, so too was the psychological fall out of serving in the war. This phenomenon was portrayed in the film, The Man in the Grey Flannel Suit starring Gregory Peck as a Westport ad-exec who struggles to balance career, family and home while suffering from post-traumatic shock from his war service.  

Even as Americans struggled to get their post-War lives back on track,  the specter of the Cold War reared its head, becoming a social, political and artistic obsession. Here in Westport, the Nike anti-aircraft missile site was built by soldiers in 1956 on the grounds of what is today Bedford Middle School. The event was depicted in the book Rally Round the Flag, Boys! by Max Shulman which was later adapted into film starring Westporters Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward.   

Fear of Soviet nuclear attack was so tangible in daily life that school children regularly conducted nuclear missile safety drills, some suburban residents built underground bunkers and radiation sickness tabs were distributed to help allay absorption of radioactive iodine in the event of an attack. 

Dive in and learn more about the history of Westport, the quintessential New England town