Top News

Letters: Memorial Day events on the Island and more
State bill aims to decrease hazing, drinking and drug use at colleges
Island voters overwhelmingly approve school budget, give newcomer to board most votes
Joe Theinert and Jordon Haerter named to state's Veterans Hall of Fame
Island splits from the North Fork under new county redistricting plan
POLL: How did you vote on the school budget?
School vote on Tuesday: budget, three board seats to be decided
This week in Shelter Island History: from the Reporter's files
Scholars study slavery through Sylvester Manor archives at NYU
Tall Ships: Made from old U-boats, Unicorn runs with all-female crew

Sports

Gym chairs still out of reach, Colligan halfway to fundraising goal

May 12, 2012

Shelter Island JV baseball team is 5-1; coach hopeful for winning season and varsity status next year

April 28, 2012

Island's Olympic sailor finishes second in Hyeres, France World Cup regatta

April 27, 2012

Education

State bill aims to decrease hazing, drinking and drug use at colleges

May 16, 2012

Island voters overwhelmingly approve school budget, give newcomer to board most votes

May 15, 2012

Q&A: Big city girl on exchange from China

May 12, 2012

Business

Eklunds will reopen Chequit this season as sale remains in the works

May 11, 2012

Hospital picks Mills firm's men as honorees for its 2012 golf classic

April 27, 2012

'Bigfoot' baler now assisting farm and marina recycling efforts

April 14, 2012

Community

Perlman alumni concerts are announced

May 13, 2012

Garden Column: Growing your own — starting seeds from scratch

May 13, 2012

Don Young is saving energy in his green dream car

May 13, 2012

Obituaries

Obituary: E.Y. Clark

April 26, 2012

Obituary: Elizabeth Yvonne (E.Y.) Clark

April 23, 2012

Obituary: Harold Olson

April 18, 2012

Real Estate

Town grants Tarlow permit for house larger than code limit

April 10, 2012

Native plants will keep birds and bees in your backyard

March 27, 2012

Dougherty calls for help opposing bid to halt county open space programs

February 10, 2012

Opinion

Letters: Memorial Day events on the Island and more

May 17, 2012

Column: Not as easy as it looked on television

May 12, 2012

Suffolk Closeup: Media scourge on Rupert Murdoch

May 11, 2012

Where did the idea of the Sylvester Manor Educational Farm come from, anyway?

BEVERLEA WALZ PHOTO | Bennett Konesni with guitar at a Sylvester Manor barn dance held at the Historical Society last year.

The heir of Sylvester Manor, Eben Ostby, turned to his nephew Bennett Konesni when it came time to figure out what to do with the 17th-century family holding last occupied by Mr. Ostby’s uncle’s wife, Alice Fiske. Preservation of its remaining 243 acres and 18th=century manor house was their goal — but how accomplish it in a way that was financially self-sustaining, a way that would keep the manor safe from development for generations to come?

Why Bennett? And who is Bennett, anyway?

The Reporter found out in an interview with the 29-year-old guiding light behind the community farm that has blossomed at the manor over the last four years. A full story is slated for the issue of Feb. 16, just before the President’s Day Weekend. Audio clips will be posted on this site.

But meanwhile, here is an abridged transcript of what Bennett, a Maine native, said about his first experience at the manor, when he was a Middlebury College student:

When I was freshman in college, the U Mass dig had just started here. There was buzz in family … Middlebury gave credit for summer field school. I was an anthropology—environmental studies-music major. Seemed like amazing opportunity to come down and learn about my family, work an actual archeological dig and really get to meet Alice. who is sort of the link. Because I never knew Andy.

We came down handful of times when I was a little kid. I was 10 when he died.  What I remember is the smell of the gardens. We used to run through gardens and boxwood. Allie would serve Pringles on a platter. We were not allowed to eat Pringles at home. Just amazing. I love Pringles …

[Later, as a college student ....] It was 2001 and I thought that would be a neat thing to go participate in.

Alice said you can stay three days, three weeks or three months when I called her up . Stay as long as you’d like. Which was really amazing because she was … she more a public figure than Andy I think but still that welcome was kind of a big deal …

We got along really well. Backgammon in afternoons after dig, she’d introduce me to people. I had jobs on local farms. In June I was part of dig. O weekends I would go to Quail Hill Farm [in Amagansett] and Green Thumb [another organic farm, in Water Mill]. I started by volunteering and convinced them to hire me.

When the dig was done, I had these jobs … I asked Allie was it all right if I staid through the summer. I was really enjoying myself,. And so I suddenly was the expert on Sylvester Manor in the family, and the one who really loved it here. Nobody else had spent any time here really to speak of.