Sunday, March 22, 2026

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THEN & NOW: The Egremont trolley

In 1910, the Berkshire Street Railway trolley line was extended from Great Barrington to the Congregational Church in South Egremont.

In 1910, the Berkshire Street Railway trolley line was extended from Great Barrington to the Congregational Church in South Egremont. Six months later, as the line was extended further west, workers encountered marble bedrock close to the surface, as shown in the foreground of the above photograph. The present-day Old Mill Restaurant is shown in the background. Originally a grist mill, the building was later home to Bliss Manufacturing Company, a blacksmith shop which made patented horse-hoof cutters, performed machine work, and even repaired early automobiles.

The first trolley car arrived in South Egremont in late December 1910. Photo courtesy Gary Leveille
The South Egremont trolley car shown here is ready to head east, bound for Belcher Square in Great Barrington as shown on the trolley sign. An unusual trolley stand remains at Belcher Square, but is in serious need of repair. Photo courtesy Gary Leveille
The trolley line ended at the Dalzell Axle Factory office. That building, shown on the right, is now the South Egremont Spirit Shoppe and Devine Cannabis Dispensary. The small structure on the left was a trolley stand which stood at the intersection of Main Street and Baldwin Hill Road. Photo courtesy Gary Leveille
The same view today offers no hint of the old trolley line, which was permanently shut down in 1919. Photo: Gary Leveille
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THEN & NOW: The former South Lee school

According to the Lee Historical Society, the South Lee school originally provided education for all grades, but by the 1920s, only elementary grades were taught here.

BITS & BYTES: Arcis Saxophone Quartet at the Linde Center; Onnis Luque at Art Omi; ‘Prairie Project’ at The Triplex; Alicia Svigals and Donald...

The Arcis Saxophone Quartet, named after Munich's iconic Arcis Street, has emerged as one of the world's most vibrant and active classical ensembles.

BITS & BYTES: Amanda Pascali at Indigo Room; Yaya Bey at MASS MoCA; Berkshire Bach Society at the Linde; Valley Classical Concerts presents A...

Born to a mother from Cairo who grew up in France and an Italian father raised in Romania, Amanda Pascali is a mixed-race, bilingual Gen Z troubadour perpetually caught between worlds.

The Edge Is Free To Read.

But Not To Produce.