Twinning Celebration Between Two Danvilles a Successful Reconnection

Bus tour on July 3, 2010 to Danville, Que­bec, fond­ly remembered
Danville Dig­ni­taries: l to r Toby Balivet, Jane Kitchel,  Denise Brig­gs (hid­den, but wav­ing), Alice Hafn­er, Dorothy Larrabee, and Paul Chouinard, got a rous­ing cheer from the Ver­mon­ters, who enjoyed watch­ing some of our own in the parade. 
By Sharon Lakey, Direc­tor of the Danville His­tor­i­cal Society
It was a somber morn­ing as the tour bus to Danville, Que­bec, loaded in the ear­ly morn­ing of July 3, 2010. If one didn’t know already, it was whis­pered that Mary Pri­or, past Pres­i­dent of the Danville His­tor­i­cal Soci­ety, had passed the evening before. She had been a part of the plan­ning stages of the trip before Town Meet­ing, bring­ing out the archival pho­tographs of the 1960 Twin­ning of the Towns event and talk­ing it up excit­ed­ly. We rolled smooth­ly out of her beloved Danville right on time with pass­ports, enhanced driver’s license or birth cer­tifi­cates tucked away, ready for the bor­der cross­ing into Cana­da. What would we find in Danville, Que­bec, our twin town that was now cel­e­brat­ing its 150th birthday?
With sun­shine and green hills, more flat-look­ing than around here, Danville, QC, pre­sent­ed itself nice­ly to us as our bus rolled through the out­skirts, then through the cen­ter of town. Peo­ple sit­ting in an out­door cafe over cof­fee must have won­dered what a tour bus was doing in town. They looked at us quizzi­cal­ly. We were ear­li­er that expected.
The dri­ver, equipped with GPS, knew to take us to the fair­grounds. A large, white tent was set up there and small food booths cir­cled a com­mon area. The fair­grounds were adja­cent to the Eng­lish-speak­ing high school to which the dri­ver parked us near the doors. There, a vig­or­ous-look­ing old­er gen­tle­man, nice­ly dressed, was stand­ing to greet us. Paul Chouinard, new Pres­i­dent of the Danville His­tor­i­cal Soci­ety was our tour guide, and he stepped off the bus to meet him. 
When the gen­tle­man stepped onto the bus, he announced in French-accent­ed Eng­lish that he was Her­tel Bois­ert, 84-years-old, that had made the trip to Danville, VT, in 1960. He was the one, who with his wife and two chil­dren, had dri­ven the wag­on and team of hors­es from Danville, VT, to Danville, QC, in hon­or of the orig­i­nal set­tlers who had tak­en that same trip in 1806. He told us he would be our guide until the Town Hall opened, locat­ed at a love­ly lake and nature pre­serve near the high school. So began our day of fun in Danville, QC.
The lake, which is named Bur­bank Pond, is large. Mr. Boisvert explained that it was orig­i­nal­ly a mill pond that has been turned into a nature pre­serve. It didn’t take long for some of our tour par­tic­i­pants to find some nature trails and take the oppor­tu­ni­ty to stretch their legs. Mr. Boisvert brought his book of mem­o­ries with him and shared some of his Danville sto­ries and pho­tographs with us. He told us that his wife, who kept a dai­ly jour­nal of their adven­tures in 1960, had passed, but her jour­nal was now being made into a book. A baby racoon, part of a res­cue pro­gram, enter­tained us as well, by run­ning after its handler.
Soon, oth­er dig­ni­taries arrived, one in a tuxe­do and bowler, and the town offices were opened. We were ush­ered into the coun­cil cham­bers where a woman in a long gown smiled and hand­ed out small glass­es of apple cham­pagne while anoth­er dig­ni­tary gave us lapel pins with the Town’s insignia. A guest book on the table was pre­sent­ed for all to sign. Two of our group had been at the pre­vi­ous 1960 cel­e­bra­tion: Alice McDon­ald Hafn­er and Dianne Smith Lang­maid (six-years-old at the time). Toby Balivet, as a boy, had also attend­ed some events with his father, Hank, who was instru­men­tal in the plan­ning of the 1960 tour. The rest of us were first-time celebrants.
The man in the tuxe­do was the may­or of Danville, QC. We were to see more than one tuxe­do dur­ing the day. For the cel­e­bra­tion, the town offi­cials wore tra­di­tion­al garb, mak­ing them easy to spot. The may­or was French-speak­ing (fran­coph­o­ne), so his speech of greet­ing was trans­lat­ed for us by an Eng­lish-speak­ing per­son (anglo­phone). In this case, Mr. Boisvert served the role. (We were to find sim­ple kind­ness­es through­out the day, where com­mu­ni­ca­tion was a col­lab­o­ra­tive effort between inter­est­ed par­ties.) It was here that an exchange of flags took place: Danville, QC, gave us one of their town flags and Paul pre­sent­ed a Ver­mont flag to them.
After the exchange, we were back on the bus with an anglo­phone his­to­ri­an, who gave us run­ning com­men­tary about the town as we drove to the cen­ter “green” to a farmer’s mar­ket. It was a small mar­ket, much dif­fer­ent than ours. The green is dif­fer­ent, too, as it is more like a busi­ness cen­ter than our green. The ven­dors were inside a large brick, coop­er­a­tive­ly owned, cafe. Some in our group sat for cof­fee and French pas­try, while oth­ers looked over pam­phlets and oth­er things that were offered there for sale. Paul met a man here, a local his­to­ri­an, who offered to take him to the ceme­tery to see the grave of Sime­on Flint, a set­tler who arrived in 1806 from Ver­mont and was the first Gov­er­nor of the new Danville, QC.
Back at the school, the tour mem­bers went their own ways to view an his­tor­i­cal exhib­it, check out an ances­try com­put­er tool if they had Cana­di­an roots, and peruse the food offer­ings in the fair­ground area. Lunch was on our own and most par­took of the fair food offered. Sev­er­al tried pou­tine, a French fry item cov­ered with gravy. “Very fill­ing,” was the most com­mon response for those who partook.
At 1:30, the parade was to begin. We lined our chairs along the route and our own “dig­ni­taries” were whisked away to ride on one of the floats. It was a sun­ny route and we thor­ough­ly it–cheering loud­ly as our Ver­mont flag passed, and lat­er, as our Ver­mont dig­ni­taries rolled by: Toby Balivet, Town Attor­ney: Denise Brig­gs, Town Select­man; Jane Kitchel, Ver­mont State Sen­a­tor; Alice Hafn­er, 1960 cel­e­brant; Dorothy Larrabee, stand­ing in for Kate Beat­tie, 1960 cel­e­brant; and Paul Chouinard, Pres­i­dent of the Danville His­tor­i­cal Soci­ety. Ken Lins­ley, Pres­i­dent of the Danville Cham­ber of Com­merce, took pho­tos through­out the day.
At 4:30, the group gath­ered for the final event of the day in the big tent on the fair­grounds. Here the cel­e­bra­tion was brought to an end, with exchanges between the two Danvilles and good wish­es giv­en all around. Alice and Dorothy were pre­sent­ed gifts, Paul pre­sent­ed a large pho­to of George Cahoon’s win­ter pic­ture of Danville, VT, tak­en from behind the McDonald/Beattie farm, and Sen­a­tor Jane Kitchel thanked the town of Danville, QC, for their kind­ness dur­ing the day and received a gift of the his­to­ry of Quebec.
Back on the bus, Stephen McDougall, a jour­nal­ist, thanked us pro­fuse­ly for attend­ing. As the bus pulled out of the lot, Toby Balivet came to the front with an open sack. “I’m tak­ing dona­tions,” he said, “for the new tuxe­dos for our Select­men.” We laughed, which was the intent, but couldn’t help but remem­ber the May­or fond­ly in his tra­di­tion­al garb. A won­der­ful din­ner in Der­by at the Cow Palace com­plet­ed the day, and, as we drove back through the night to our own Danville, the sky was light­ed in places with fire­works shoot­ing into the sky over dark­ened hills.

To see Ken Lins­ley’s pho­to album of the trip, click here.

This arti­cle was first pub­lished in the August issue of the North Star Month­ly.


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