Jan, Mom and I turned in our old homes and moved here twenty
five years ago for the sole reason that Jan and I wanted to move our weaving
business to the next level and needed a studio.
We moved to the Township of Boston, a big square in
Northeastern Ohio, exactly the size Northwest Ordinance of 1786 decreed, with a
couple of chunks now gone due to the succession of Boston Heights a hundred
years ago, and some annexation by the greedy city to the south. The Village of Peninsula runs along part of the
ragged edges of the Township.
The charming little village is locked into its canal days
appearance by an historic designation obtained by some previous visionary in
the village. The old houses have unchanged facades, failing septic systems and
cisterns serviced weekly by the water truck.
It is so quaint it attracts tourists.
Peninsula is as art centric as they come.
The man who locked up most of the village as an historic
district had a vision without a plan, leaving behind a village that tourists love
to visit, but tend to spend little money in.
It is hard to be comfortable lingering in shops when the nearest public
restroom is in the next city.
Way back in the nineties, shortly after we moved here, a
young whippersnapper with a vision to promote his hometown moved back and
opened a gallery. Then another. He took over another. A group of merchants coalesced around
him. We called ourselves the Peninsula Merchants
Co-Op. Another member and I opened the
Co-Op’s first checking account, and I settled into being Treasurer for Life.
With our young visionary leading, the Co-Op promoted the
town, organized events, took advantage of events already in place such as the
national Boston Mills Art Festival, held
in the township. We started the village web site. Funding came from grants
written by young Turks with local businesses to promote.
Jan’s and my business is up the hill from Peninsula and
around the corner, off in the township. I resisted the urging of friends in
town to move shop to the village. Our
overhead was too darn comfortable and our art show business model wasn’t
compatible with moving our work to a place in town. But I liked my associates, and was learning a
lot. Treasurer for Life was OK, until
they got the first five thousand dollar grant and were working on another. The checking account had my social security
number on it!
Thus, I am responsible for the existence of the Peninsula
Area Chamber of Commerce. I got the
federal ID number, filled out the reams of paperwork, chased down other
officers for life to get signatures and filed in time to open a Chamber
checking account with its own ID for the money on hand and the grants zooming
down the pipeline.
Ten years into Treasurer for Life our own business had grown
to twelve employees, our own accountant was retiring and a new business came to
town. A young public accountant set up
business in her kitchen.
She dropped in to visit us and see what weavers do. I engaged her on the spot and also asked her
to be Treasurer for Life of the Chamber. She agreed. As I recall, she showed up at the next
meeting with the records and said “Hi, I’m your new Treasurer for Life.” She’s been at it for the last thirteen years.
Some post scripts: my
friend, the young whippersnapper, eventually filed for bankruptcy, a not
unexpected turn for a visionary in a town with no facilities. He is now an international designer.
Mr. Bob, our accountant of many years, was in his eighties
when he retired. Every single year,
because of the amount of cash he knew I could have on leaving a show, he asked
me if I carried a gun. Every year I said
“No, Bob. I carry a phone.”
My accountant for life outgrew her kitchen and now has an
office in the township hall, down the hall from mine. Her cat is so pleased.
At least the township and town history you tell here does not include the criminal activity that hit the small town of Dixon Il. You probably heard of the case. Crooked comptroller was convicted of stealing over $53 million.
ReplyDeleteNot enough residents to generate that kind of money. May be a good thing.
DeleteAh, the importance of sanitary installations....
ReplyDeleteAs someone who takes note of where every single public convenience is located.....yikes!!
ReplyDeleteSo you live in Ohio? I have never been there. My uncle and his wife live in Twinsburg, Ohio, which is ironic, because my uncle is a twin. His brother lives here in Hawaii and he has twin daughters.
ReplyDeleteAccount For Life seems way too long Jo.
ReplyDeleteThose Ohio towns can be confusing... New Boston? ... clear down near Portsmouth... Boston?.. between Cleveland and Akron. Does the Erie Canal bike path run close to you? That Treasurer for Life position sounds interesting... guess that's what I am for me and Bill ;-)
ReplyDeleteRight through my township.
DeleteThe only job for life I know of is being a parent. The pay is low, but the fringe benefits have been great most of the time.
ReplyDeleteThose postscripts! I love them!
ReplyDeleteYeah, treasurer for life is not a coveted position, in my experience :)
I do love your posts - they show me something new, and often magical, each time. Treasurer for Life? I am very glad that it wasn't a life sentence for you.
ReplyDeleteAnd I too NEED to know where the nearest facilities are. The next town is toooo far away.
Someday I must swing through your town and enjoy the ambiance. It sounds like my kind of place.
ReplyDeleteTaking on a position for life is a formidable commitment!
ReplyDeleteThat's how things go in small towns. Someone does a job until they burn out or die, and it's passed along to the next volunteer.
DeleteMaybe one of those grants should have been turned into a public convenience! I'd still love to visit! I'll be sure to stop somewhere else before I hit your town . . .
ReplyDelete