Thanks to one time tourist Mary McCarthy of Buffalo, New York
Mayor Jeff Cantwell, left,
and cultural planner Jeremy Banks admire the mural photo after it arrived at
town hall.
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Mary McCarthy, who is 91, and her husband visited the
Annapolis Valley during Wolfville’s centenary back in 1993. Mary was quite taken
with a bright, large, new mural located near the post office.
She asked her obliging husband to snap a photo of the wide
historic mural. When Mary got home she had the image blown up large and got it framed.
Moving ahead to 2018, she started fretting about six
months ago that her children wouldn’t want the photo in the years to come.
Somehow she located the daughter of the man who organized Wolfville’s civic
anniversary: me.
My dad Robbins Elliott, who’d been director of planning for
Canada’s Centennial, had arranged for Matt Cupido, a talented artist from
Canning, paint the west wall of Joe Rafih’s retail building that borders the
post office front lawn.
What’s left of what was a
75 foot long mural by Canning artist Matt Cupido.
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Matt included a number of Wolfville’s Main Street heritage
buildings. Today you can still pick out Randall House, but a fire obliterated
most of the rest of the once colourful original artwork.
Matt has been a prolific painter in both large and small
size. Among his work is an indoor mural at the entrance to the Acadia Divinity
School and two large historical scenes in downtown Liverpool.
But back to Mary’s kind gesture, she called me six months
ago asking if the town had any interest in the 25-year-old photo. I assured her
we do because so little of the original remains and we were in the midst of
Wolfville 125.
She promised to put it in the mail, then nothing. Turns
out Mary had to deal with some health problems. Once she perked up, she picked
up the phone again and indicated it would be coming.
A few days later, approaching New Year’s, she called for
the third or fourth time. The photo was in the hands of an international
shipping firm, Mary said, but unfortunately the photograph had stuck to the
glass inside the frame, so the shippers had to package up the whole darn thing,
frame, glass and all.
Instead of a photo that she had valued at $30, Mary found
herself coughing up $138 to convey the lost mural image to Wolfville. It
arrived, well wrapped, and now a framed reminder of the town’s centennial sits on
the wall of town council chambers.
Mary, like me, was gobsmacked at the cost of moving art
around the continent. Would you pass the hat, she asked. I told her some kindly
Wolfville folks might well want to contribute to the cause. Anyone with a
toonie or loonie to send to this kindly New York state senior citizen can drop
it off at town hall anytime during working hours. We’ll send Mary a nice thank
you card too.
Thanks for loving a little of our lost heritage Mary –
there’s less of it to be seen every year.
Published by The
Grapevine, February 2019
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