
Oral histories advance in Unionville
UNIONVILLE — The Unionville Historic District and Properties Commission moved briskly through its December 4, 2025 meeting, approving three months of minutes, electing officers for the coming year, and refining the next steps for its oral histories project during a session that wrapped before anyone’s evening plans were threatened.
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Chair Lisa Johnson opened the meeting at 7 p.m., noting the rare luxury of a quorum that allowed the commission to approve minutes for September 4, October, and November 2025 in a single vote. Members reviewed the documents in advance, enabling a unanimous “aye” without amendments.
The commission then moved to its annual election of officers. With no objections to continuing the existing leadership structure, Johnson agreed to remain Chair, Barbara Marsh to continue as Secretary, and Matt volunteered—cautiously but decisively—to assume the open position of Vice Chair. Members voted unanimously to approve the slate.
The meeting’s central discussion focused on the ongoing oral histories initiative, an effort to document Unionville’s built environment and the experiences tied to it. Johnson reminded members that they now have full access to the TheirStory platform and should explore available tutorials. She acknowledged that she and Kelly still need to refine the draft question set, which the commission previously agreed should focus more tightly on the built environment rather than general reminiscences.
Several members raised practical matters:
- Anne expressed concern after learning that the Farmington Historical Society had contacted the same residents with overlapping questions. Johnson clarified that revisions would narrow the commission’s scope to architectural and environmental context.
- Members confirmed they may photograph historical images during interviews and upload them either to TheirStory or the commission’s SharePoint cloud folder.
- Anne shared vivid memories of the Unionville fire and noted her bus driver was later arrested along with two juveniles in connection with the blaze. Johnson encouraged her to be a future interview subject.
- Anne also suggested Loretta Fiora, whose family once owned the Hotel Worthy, as a potential interviewee.
The commission welcomed Christine, attending her first meeting as a newly appointed member. With the holiday season approaching—and a grandchild’s concert on the Chair’s horizon—the commission closed with a unanimous motion to adjourn.
The meeting ended shortly after it began, securing its place as one of the shortest in recent Unionville HDC history. 🎄
About the Author
Jack Beckett drinks too much coffee, writes too many meeting notes, and still can’t believe people voluntarily approve minutes in under 60 seconds. At The Farmington Mercury, he covers civic life across Farmington with a commitment to clarity, accuracy, and the occasional emoji-fueled sigh of existential amusement.
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This article, “Unionville Historic District Commission Advances Oral Histories Project, Elects Officers,” by Jack Beckett, is licensed under CC BY-ND 4.0. “Unionville Historic District Commission Advances Oral Histories Project, Elects Officers” by Jack Beckett, The Farmington Mercury (CC BY-ND 4.0)
