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The Adams Suffrage Centennial Celebration Committee has turned over funds for the maintenance of the Susan B. Anthony monument.

Centennial Committee Gives Adams $85K for Anthony Monument Care

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
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ADAMS, Mass. — The Adams Suffrage Centennial Celebration Committee has turned over nearly $85,000 toward preservation of the Susan B. Anthony monument and related activities. 
 
Chair John Duval last week said the check for $84,667.62 was sent to the town treasurer from Edmund St. John III. 
 
"The community really did come out and support this Susan B. Anthony celebration and the sculpture was completed," said Duval. "Then COVID hit to where the events weren't held and everything pretty much came to a stop."
 
The centennial committee had big plans to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Susan B. Anthony Amendment, giving women the right to vote.
 
Adams' native daughter would not live to see the passage of the 19th Amendment but her efforts and others were critical to its passage in 1920. It also would have been Anthony's 200th birthday. 
 
The celebration was to include a parade, fireworks and other events culminating the unveiling of Anthony's bronze monument on the Town Common. All of that was cut short by the pandemic although the work by sculptor Brian Hanlon was celebrated in June the following year with Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito.
 
The committee raised more than $300,000 toward the effort but the $85,000 was leftover and needed to go somewhere.  
 
Duval said St. John, the town's former counsel, conferred with current Town Counsel Jeffrey Blake of KP Law on possible uses for the money. 
 
"In my opinion, maintenance of the Susan B. Anthony statue, as well as funding events and educational programming focused on women's issues, may be consistent with the donors intent of the gifted funds as it is directly aligned to the purpose of the ASCCC," Duval read from Blake's response. "This seems especially so given that the ASCCC received comments from the donors suggesting these future uses."
 
The funds might also be directed to William McKinley's statue on Park Street.
 
"I am less familiar with the President McKinley's connection to Susan B. Anthony, he hosted her at the White House," Duval read. "And if a connection can be made to the donors intent for the funds, in my opinion, there is likely no issue with using these funds to maintain the William McKinley statue, again, as this was suggested use from the donors, it weighs in favor of using funds in that way."
 
The chair noted the attorneys had provided more information and recommended the board consider a policy on the use of the funds. 
 
Duval said the McKinley statue could use some maintenance as the town has not provided funding for its care. That monument was erected in 1903, two years after McKinley's assassination, and paid for largely by the Plunkett family, who had been friends of the president. It had undergone some restoration in the mid-1990s with private donations. 
 
Selectwoman Christine Hoyt motioned to accept the funds and place them in a separate account and to request town counsel to write up a recommended policy for discussion. Both motions passed; Selectman Joseph Nowak recused himself from the room as he had been very involved with the centennial committee. 
 
"We'll definitely try to honor that request the best we can," said Selectman Jay Meczywor.

Tags: monument,   Susan B. Anthony,   

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Adams Man Sentenced to State, Federal Prison for Child Rape

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — An Adams man pleaded guilty on Friday in Berkshire Superior Court to multiple counts of aggravated rape of a child and aggravated indecent assault and battery on a child under 14. 
 
Brian Warner, 39, was sentenced by Judge Michael K. Callan to 25 to 28 years in state prison. 
 
The defendant pleaded guilty to the following:
  • Two counts of rape of a child with force
  • One count of aggravated rape of a child
  • Two counts of rape of a child, aggravated, five-year age difference
  • Four counts of indecent assault and battery on a child under 14
  • Fourteen counts of aggravated indecent assault and battery on a child under 14
  • Nine counts of posing a child in the nude
  • Two counts of possession of child sexual abuse material
Callan attributed the lengthy sentencing to the egregious nature of the defendant's crime. In his sentencing memo, the judge wrote, "In fashioning this sentence I have also considered the Sentencing Guidelines, which were established by a Sentencing Commission created by our Legislature and consisting of prosecutors, defense counsel, public safety and correctional officials, and victim-witness advocates. 
 
"While not mandatory, these guidelines were designed, among other goals, to promote consistency in the sentencing process in our judicial system. The guidelines utterly fail in some circumstances and this is one of them."
 
Warner produced child sexual abuse material, otherwise known as child pornography. In doing this, the defendant raped and assaulted a child over a period of two years. Law enforcement uncovered hundreds of images produced by Warner.
 
"Justice was served today, but Warner's crimes are deeply disturbing. When a child in our community is harmed, it naturally causes us to reflect on how we can do more to protect our children. To the survivor and their [singular] family, this outcome cannot undo the trauma you endured; however, I hope it offers some comfort in knowing that your abuser has been held accountable under the law," stated District Attorney Timothy Shugrue. 
 
Chief of the Child Abuse Unit Andrew Giarolo, an assistant district attorney, represented the commonwealth and Ian Benoit the victim witness advocate on behalf of the DA's Office. The Adams Police Department led the investigation with support from the Berkshire State Police Detective Unit's digital evidence lab.  
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