By
DAVID SMITH/ecoRI News contributor
Dave Cox, left, Cliff Fantel, middle, and Ray Sweet check out a balky nail gun at the shop. (David Smith/ecoRI News photos) |
SOUTH
KINGSTOWN — The “Tuesday Group” that meets each week at the Trustom Pond
National Wildlife Refuge’s maintenance building has built a growing legacy. To
say the group has saved taxpayers thousands of dollars is not an overstatement.
The group’s members are among 185 people who in the past year have combined to
volunteer some 16,000 hours at Rhode Island’s five national wildlife refuges.
They may labor in anonymity, but their good work can be seen across the state.
Perhaps
it’s the camaraderie that makes this self-dubbed Tuesday Group work well
together. Some of the retirees have known each other for years.
Before
its weekly sessions, the group lounges in an office and drinks coffee as
everyone straggles in. Stories are told and they reminisce about days gone by.
Conversation one week will center around catching stripers at Middlebridge in
Narragansett; another week it’s about trips to Vermont or the West Coast. They
ask each other about friends and family, to make sure everyone is doing OK.
The
hard work done by this core group of six men can be found at nearly every
refuge across the state. It’s just that you might not know that it came from a
shop at Trustom off Matunuck Schoolhouse Road.
If
you ask how long the group plans to continue, Cox speaks for them all when he
says, “Till we die.”
The
group formed at the South County Museum around 1996, where members did a lot of
work such as mowing lawns, building farm gates, repairing buildings and
building a chicken coop. At one of the old structures, the group renovated the
top floor to create offices, which meant stripping the building to its studs,
moving walls and putting it back together.
Fantel
and Jack Swann, were the first two members. Fantel recalled that day at church
when Jack’s wife, Jean, asked him to go down to the museum and keep Swann
company, because he was working alone and she was concerned about his safety.
“She
asked me to go down and sit and watch him, but I couldn’t just sit,” Fantel
recalled. “There was never any money (at the museum.) Somebody once had him
straightening nails to reuse.”
Back
then, at its peak, the group numbered about 15 and included a plumber, who flew
into France on a glider on D-Day, and an electrician. But the group soon
thereafter changed its allegiance and took its skills to Trustom.
“We
got recruited (by the U.S.Fish & Wildlife Service),” Cox said. “We are
still the Tuesday Group. We weren’t going to meet any other day. We can be
stubborn.”
“It
is just a day we picked,” Sweet said. “It was convenient for everyone. Perhaps
we needed Monday to recuperate from the weekend.”
Ray Sweet adjusts the table saw, while fellow volunteer Al Steadman stands ready to assist. |
Some
of the group’s projects have included building an observation deck on Otter
Point at Trustom and at Osprey Point. The 12-by-12-foot deck at Otter Point
took the group about three months to build and was one of its first projects.
“Each
of us left about three quarts of sweat behind on that one,” Sweet said.
The
group also built a deck at the Sachuest Point National Wildlife Refuge in
Middletown. Also at Sachuest, the group updated the observation towers,
bringing the structure up to code with such work as installing new balusters.
It also built a 12-by-12-foot photography blind at the refuge.
The structure
took four or five months to complete and featured a variety of doors and
windows that allow photographers to photograph birds and animals. It also
provided members with a few rashes from poison ivy, and they are proud to note
that the structure survived Hurricane Sandy.
The
Tuesday Group has built kiosks for nearly every refuge in Rhode Island. It
built a portable stage for the Providence Parks Department as part of the Urban
Wildlife Refuge Partnership. The city is one of eight in the country to benefit
from the funding. The funding paid for the material, but not the construction.
Enter the Tuesday Group.
One
of its latest projects was building five kiosks for the Blackstone Parks
Conservancy.
“It’s
enjoyable,” said Fantel, who was the fire chief for a department in Bedford
Hills, N.Y., after serving in the Pacific during World War II aboard a Navy LCT
838. The designation of his landing craft rolls off his tongue without
hesitation. “I’ll never forget that number. The same can be said about the
serial number on my dog tags.”
Fantel
still wears his dog tags, only now they function to hold his emergency response
button. He needed a chain and figured why not use it.
Since
Fantel already owned a home in Rhode Island, he moved here permanently in 1988
when he retired. He and his wife and their three kids started coming to Rhode
Island in 1949, when a summer rental was less than $25 a week.
Fantel
said there are other things he could be doing but explained that the group gets
all the materials that it needs and “being with the guys ... they are a good
bunch.”
Recently,
the guys arrived on a Tuesday to finish building kiosks. Laid out on the table
saw were additional dust masks and eye protection. The group was surprised, but
thrilled, and quickly stowed them in a cabinet. The next week a cordless drill
was dropped off.
DePersia
said he appreciates the camaraderie. “It’s just the good feeling you get from
volunteering and doing things,” he said.
It’s
a sentiment echoed by all of the volunteers.
“I
feel good when I am volunteering,” Steadman said. “This country has been very
good to me. It’s nice to give something back. And they are a good bunch of
guys.”
“Everybody?”
DePersia asked, with a smile.
When
asked his age, DePersia, a retired general contractor, replied, “Eighty years
old. Almost as old as Cliff, but he looks it!”
“If
he’s lucky, he will catch up,” replied Fantel, with a grin.
DePersia
makes intricate scale drawings for all the projects the group builds, so plans
are ready if a request comes in for a similar project.
Members of the Tuesday Group, from left, Cliff Fantel, Dave Cox, Al DePersia, Al Steadman and Ray Sweet pose with a completed kiosk. |
The
skill was self-taught. “Instead of explaining something to somebody, I would
draw a picture,” DePersia said. He said he has some drafting tools, including a
scale rule. The pencil drawings are easily readable and done on graph paper and
kept in a manila file.
Steadman
keeps himself busy with work for “half-a-dozen outfits,” including the American
Legion Post, and helps with Snug Harbor Fire Station 5’s annual May breakfast.
He was a member of the military police and served at Camp Gordon in Georgia.
He
worked later with the U.S. Department of Agriculture and then 18 years with the
South Kingstown School Department as a custodian. Steadman is one of the new
guys and marks one year of service this month.
“I’m
a type A personality,” he said. “I gotta do something.”
Cox
said it’s nice to volunteer. He was a member of the Navy Seabees and retired
from the New York State Electric and Gas Corporation.
“The
wildlife people here are the greatest people to work for and that has a lot to
do with it,” he said. “Plus, we need something to do on Tuesday. They buy all
the stuff and let us play.”
Sweet
also served in the military, “the Army’s 39th Engineer group,” he said with
pride. “It’s like the Seabees, but only a little better.”
Cox
didn’t respond to the playful taunt.
Sweet,
who retired from Bostich, said his Army group helped build the Alaskan Highway.
So why does he volunteer? Sweet said it’s a matter of “social responsibility.
You have to give back a little.”
Holding
this volunteer group together is Sarah Griffith, the national wildlife refuge
volunteer coordinator for Rhode Island.
“They
do such good work,” she said. “We have 12 full-time staff members for all five
refuges in Rhode Island. We wouldn’t be able to do half the work we do without
them.”
Besides
kiosks and observation decks, the group has built brochure boxes, wood duck
boxes and birdhouse kits that are sold by the Friends of the National Wildlife
Refuges. The group also built non-lethal box traps for a New England cottontail
study.
The
head of maintenance, John Laauwe, is a steady presence at the shop at Trustom.
He gets along easily with the group. One morning he said he heard that an order
was coming in for a bench, to which Sweet replied, “We have two more projects
after this. Some libraries to build. Put it on the list.”
And
so it goes.