2008 October 01 | The Resident - Part 3

Archive for October 1st, 2008


Wednesday, October 1st, 2008

by Maren Schober

Her name is Rose Venditto but she is known to many in New London as “Rose from Kresge’s”.  And for good reason.  Rose warmed many a tummy and heart with her good home Italian cooking when S.S. Kresge’s department store was on State Street, New London.

“At first they wanted me only to cook what they gave me, and I did,” Rose smiles as she tells me.  “But the customers did not return because they did not like the food.  So I went to my boss and asked him if I could change some things with the food.  He agreed, and I started making my homemade meatloaf with gravy, glazed hams and homemade spaghetti with sauce.   The customers loved it and soon I began making a lot of money for the company through the food bar.”

Rose worked at Kresge’s until she was 74 years old! “When I finally retired, they sent me and my daughter to Kresge’s main headquarters in Michigan where they treated me like a Queen and gave me a diamond ring to thank me.”

Rose comes from a strong, loving Italian family and family means everything to her. Born in New York City on September 25, 1913 to Vincent and Carmela Mingoia, Rose enjoyed growing up with her five brothers and three sisters.

“My father was a foreman stone mason, and we all moved to a house in Norwich when he found work he liked in that area.  He helped to build ConnCollege and also worked at the Submarine Base.

“My mother taught me to cook, and I helped her cook for our large family.  Can you imagine what is like to cook for nine people every day?

“I went to St. Patrick’s School in Norwich until I graduated from the eighth grade.  I loved school and the nuns who taught me.  The subjects were interesting, and the nuns were very kind.”

After the eighth grade, Rose went to work. “I was only 15 years old, but I worked in the Majestic Pants Factory in Norwich from seven o’clock to five o’clock sewing the seams of men’s pants on the machine.  When the inspectors came, my boss told us to run and hide in the building so they would not know workers were as young as fifteen.  I hid in the restroom.” Rose worked there for 10 years.

“Friday nights my girlfriends and me went to clubs on Bank Street in New London to dance and meet  boys.  There I met my future husband, James Venditto. We got married at St. Patrick’s Church in Norwich 7:00 a.m. September 24, 1938… right in the middle of the Hurricane.  We didn’t want to wait any longer.

“Everything was flooded and there were no lights.  No one was able to come to the wedding but the priest and two family members.

“The house where I am living now was moved from Williams Street, New London to Belvidere Street.  It was pulled by horses as it rested on top of a bed of rolling logs!  It took six months to move the house that way.  My three children were born here, Mary Jo, James, Jr. and Carmela.

“I wish everyone would have a happy family like mine and have no enemies.”  Good advice for all of us.

Posted on October 1st, 2008  | category: Wisdom


Wednesday, October 1st, 2008

The Chamber of Commerce of Eastern CT is please to announce Mary Ellen Jukoski, president of Mitchell College, as the 2008 recipient of the William Crawford Distinguished Service Award. The Crawford Award is an honor given by the Chamber of Commerce of Eastern CT recognizing an outstanding member of the community who contributes not only to the quality of life in the region but also to his or her fellow neighbors.

Dr. Mary Ellen Jukoski is the sixth president of Mitchell College. She served as dean of Mitchell College from 1990 to 1995 and was appointed acting president on July 1, 1994.  Under her leadership, the College’s charter with the state and regional accreditation by New England Association of Schools and Colleges expanded to offer bachelor’s degrees.

Outside the college community, she created collaborative partnerships with the community of SECT. Most recently, she was integral in the development of a partnership with the College’s science faculty and New London Public Schools, particularly the collaboration with the Science and Technology Magnet High School.  In June 2000, she was instrumental in founding the SECT Consortium of Higher Education, involving ten other public and private institutions.

During Dr. Jukoski’s notable career, she was awarded many prestigious honors, including a distinction as one of 100 women leaders by the Women’s Center of SECT in October 2004. In 2006, she was recognized as one of 25 Uncommon Women in CT by the Eugene O’Neill Theater Center.

Posted on October 1st, 2008  | category: Featured Articles


Wednesday, October 1st, 2008

story & photo
by Jessica Warzeniak

(l-r) First Selectman Ed Haberek Jr., Stonington, Donna Simpson, Executive Director, Eastern Regional Tourism District, Representative Diana Urban, State of CT, John Schultzel, Vice President of Sales & Marketing, Olympia Hotel Management, Melissa Schlauder, General Manager, Hampton Inn & Suites Mystic, Tony Sheridan, President, Chamber of Commerce of Eastern CT, Senator Andrew Maynard, State of CT, and Tricia Cunningham, President, Greater Mystic Chamber of Commerce, celebrate the Hampton Inn & Suites Mystic’s ribbon cutting on September 18th. The new hotel, which opened to guests in August, is located at 6 Hendel Drive, Mystic.

Posted on October 1st, 2008  | category: Featured Articles


Wednesday, October 1st, 2008

Posted on October 1st, 2008  | category: Resident On The Street


Wednesday, October 1st, 2008

Posted on October 1st, 2008  | category: Resident On The Street

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