Pembroke Community Media Center’s is the only public access media provider in and for Pembroke, Massachusetts. Pembroke Community Media Center was created by Pembroke residents, and is run by volunteers with support from local businesses and people like you.
The Town of Pembroke was supposed to notify each and every landowner along 2.06 miles of Route 36 that a Commonwealth of Massachusetts highway project hearing was scheduled October 23, 2013, the same evening as baseball's World Series opening game featuring the region's own Red Sox team.
224 residents should have been told about the undertaking and the Town's intention to take land by eminent domain if property is not voluntarily surrendered.
Of the 11 people who came to the meeting, three were politicians: Lew Stone, Dan Trabucco, and Josh Cutler.
Only 67-yr-old Roger Rehs of 432 Center Street spoke, saying that the project would make his already steep driveway impassable.
Commonwealth engineers showed a map of 27 proposed permanent easements, a proposed 60 or more temporary construction easements, and other proposed changes to land on both sides of the street.
The entire event took less than 30 minutes.
Chief engineer Patricia Leavenworth will accept comments from landowners and others for ten days only, and the clock started ticking at the October 23rd presentation.
Concerns and comments sent after November 2, 2013 will be banned from the official hearing transcript.
Pembroke Community Media's series about WW II continues
with episode 5 in which Robert Kopper interviews tail and waist gunner Sgt
George Franklin Bent, Jr., originally from Milton, Massachusetts.
Episodes one through four of this series have been airing
weekly on television to over 3 ½ million viewers in PA, WI, IN, CA, ME, NH, and
MA, and are playing in 30 Massachusetts
towns, including Marshfield, Hanover, East Bridgewater, Halifax, Danvers and
Plympton. It is not playing in Pembroke.
A commercial for episode 5 shot September 18th by
Pembroke Media volunteers with James Whooley making his acting debut, was shown
as a promotional around the country prior to this video's release.
"You won't believe the original WW II documents you
see," Jim says in the 55-second spot. "You have to watch this
show."
If the Bent name sounds familiar, it's because the G H
Bent company has been making crackers in Milton since 1801. Locals call it "Bent's Cookie
Factory."
Here's some information about George Franklin Bent, Jr.'s
grandparents on his mother's side:
His maternal grandparents were US citizens. They formed the Wiseman family of four.
Harrison S. Wiseman and wife Mary were born in NewYork in
1868 and 1873 respectively. In 1910 they lived in Pontiac, Michigan with
13-yr-old daughter Ruth Julia Wiseman (that's George Bent's mom-to-be) and eleven-year-old son James Harrison
Wiseman. Both children were born in
Michigan. Another child had since passed away.
24-year-old William Herzog from New York lived with them
as a roomer, and worked as factory foreman in an automobile plant.
Mom Mary was a homemaker, and Dad Harrison fashioned
leather for the auto industry. On the paternal side, males named Shepherd, Joseph,
Junior, and Josiah Bent all lived in Milton in the year 1800 according to the
Census. Josiah was 29 at the time, having been born in 1771 to John Bent and
Hannah Coller.
Josiah is the
relative who started the George Bent Cookie Factory in Milton, Massachusetts,
famous for flour-and-water hard tack that became known as the first
"cracker." The staple required
no refrigeration and was part of nearly every soldier's wartime diet.
It wasn't until 1873 that births were recorded in a
family bible purchased by George and Edna who by then had babies Frances and
Annie. These parents must have know their household would be expanding, since
the illustrated and leather-bound book was a heavy thing with many empty pages
for entries.
The children of George Henry Bent and "first
wife" Edna Louise Hayden Bent as recorded in their bible:
Frances Ashton Bent was welcomed into the family on
February 29, 1872. Sister Annie Mabel Bent(Bradlee) was born July 5, 1873;
followed by Arthur Preston Bent on July 20-something in 1876; Gertrude Milton
Bent(Read) on August 2, 1880; Emiline Hersey Bent on July 15, 1882; Jesse Pierce Bent on December 2, 1883; Harvey Bent on June 20, 1885; George Franklin Bent on May 7, 1886; and Roy
Bent on August 17, 1891.
That's nine children from "first wife" Edna who
died December 17, 1895 at the age of 44.
A subsequent marriage to "second wife" Minerva
Clarable Eddy Bent (and later "Higgins") added Helen Margaret Bent,
July 3, 1907; William Eddy Bent July 2, 1909; and Charles Preston Bent
September 4, 1910. There were now a
family of 14.
George Henry Bent, the father of these 12 children, and
grandfather to our George Franklin Bent in Pembroke, Massachusetts, died April
13, 1915 from pneumonia. The story goes
that he hiked a lot with his dog Water Cracker Bill, caught a chill, and died.
That brings us to our George's father who was the 8th
child in the family of 12 siblings from Milton, Massachusetts. He was George Franklin Bent, Sr who married
Ruth Wiseman from Michigan.
George F. Senior served in WW I.
His and Ruth's children were Mary Catherine, Jean Marie,
our George Franklin Jr., and then Sylvia three years later in 1928.
Today 88-year-old Sgt George Franklin Bent lives in
Pembroke, Massachusetts with third wife Peggy.
This 5th episode of Robert Kopper's WW II series was recorded
Saturday afternoon, August 24th, 2013 in the living room of Bent's Pleasant
Street home.
On set, George was "grip," carrying all heavy
filming equipment in and out of vehicles and through doorways.
Pembroke Media is an alliance of volunteers interested in
recording local events and keeping history alive. Funding comes 100% from local
businesses and people like you. All support is fully tax-deductible under IRS
501(c)(3) regulations and Commonwealth of Massachusetts non-profit guidelines.
Go the www.pembrokecommunitymedia.com
or call 781-910-8899. You can sponsor a show, get a DVD, or just have fun
viewing.