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Hidden
Valley Camp History
Prior
to its 50+ years as a camp, HVC was a farm surrounded by many
similar farms in the town of Montville, Maine. We are still
in Montville (which is so small that it has no post office,
so we use neighboring Freedom's.) Old folks in the area recall
walking from their family homesteads deep in the woods, past
the Tasker Farm (now Hidden Valley,) and then another 3 miles
up the camp road toward Center Montville and its one-room
schoolhouse.
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Dean and Hal Tiffany |
In 1948,
Hidden Valley started out as a work and farm camp for twelve
teenaged campers. This small group and their directors (and
the founders of Hidden Valley,) Hal and Dean Tiffany, converted
a manure filled dairy barn into the beginnings of what later
became a our dining hall and which now houses a library, game
area, etc. These camper groups constructed various buildings
around camp to provide living space. These buildings
with names like the Loons, Tasker Hall, and the Buckhorn
now host camper programs such as dance and batik.
At its
height, this incarnation of Hidden Valley hosted 75 campers.
In 1964, the Tiffany's decided to retire the responsibilities
of caring for such a "large" camp having caught
up with them and put the camp up for sale. They began
to spend summers in a cottage which has since become the camp
office.
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In 1969, Jay Stager purchased the camp. In those days,
the camp hosted 70 campers, among them Peter's brothers
Philip and Jeremy. Peter at that time was a camper and
counselor at nearby Med-O-Lark. The 70's and 80's brought
many changes to HVC. Over time, campers moved out of
the barn and into new cabins which now house over 200
children. Jay opened up the property on the east side
of the camp road, making room for expanded llama and
horse areas and for human campers as well.
To
set the stage for the next phase of Hidden Valley history,
we need to go back in time. Though most of the Tasker
farm had been sold to the Tiffany's, a "small"
(80 acre) piece remained with the Taskers until 1956
when they sold it to then HVC parents Jerome and Irene
Cossman. The Cossmans converted this piece into their
summer estate, building additional buildings, riding
areas, and a swimming pool. When they retired in the
late 80's they moved to "Deer Meadows," as
they called it, full time.
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Jay Stager Strikes a Silly Pose
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Meanwhile,
Peter had met Meg teaching lifesaving at Med-O-Lark. From
1979 to '86, they directed M-O-L. Married in 1985, Meg and
Peter took over at Hidden Valley when Jay and his wife Karen
chose to retire. Recently, when their neighbors the Cossmans
decided to move closer to the Maine coast, the Kassens purchased
the last of the Tasker farm, reuniting it with the rest of
HVC and converting the Cossman's Deer Meadows estate for camper
use.
Jay and
Karen Stager have repurchased Med-O-Lark and direct camp programs
there. The Cossmans live nearby, managing two antique stores
on the coast. And the Tiffanys' ashes are scattered at the
top of Tipi Hill near three evergreen trees.
RECOLLECTIONS
OF A 50'S ERA CAMPER
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Ledge Pond Circa 1958
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"There
were fifty campers and 10 on staff. All of the girls lived
in the Barn and the boys lived in three cabins: Carriage House,
Crows Nest, and the Buckhorn...
"Every
Sunday morning, there was an all camp softball game and everyone
played. Thirty people out in the field. Thirty in the batting
order... The field by the Carriage House almost all the way
to the top was corn, and as it ripened we had to sleep in
the corn field to be sure that the porcupines would not get
the corn...
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Carriage House, 1950's |
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