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IssuesSeptember/October 2009Home and Garden

House For Sale: Brockway Island, CT

Island for sale in the Connecticut River

owners
Ned Libby and Dave Hyde, friends since childhood and current owners of Brockway Island in Essex, Connecticut.
house
The house on the island today replaced the original in 1994. With furnishings in place (even dishes), it's ready for occupancy.
livingroom
From the living room with its woodstove, you can walk out onto either of two large decks overlooking the river.
ernest
The late Ernest F. Fetske, the original Brockway Island owner, as he appeared in Chesterfield cigarette ads.

It was the summer of 1953. Ernest F. Fetske, a prominent naval architect from New York, and his wife, Bettina, were taking a load of bricks in their boat out to their vacation home on five-acre Brockway Island in Essex, Connecticut.

They'd been spending weekends there since purchasing it in the early 1940s. Folks around Essex knew Ernest had helped design the U.S. Army's amphibious DUKW ("duck") vehicle, first used in World War II, and occasionally appeared in national ads for Chesterfield cigarettes. But not a lot more. Up to that point, the Fetskes had kept pretty much to themselves.

Well, Ernest Fetske had put too many bricks in his boat that day--so many that the boat partially capsized, dumping the load into the river. Now, it so happens that a bunch of Essex boys were swimming off the nearby town docks. After Ernest and Bettina managed to bail out their now-empty boat and get it over there, Ernest spoke to one of the older boys, a 12-year-old named Ned Libby: "I'll give you a penny for every brick you and your friends can bring up--and I'll even buy you a mask and fins to help you do it."

Deal. Ned's younger friend, 8-year-old Dave Hyde, would help. Some of the other boys, too. A few days later, they'd retrieved almost all the bricks. Ernest was so pleased he invited the boys out to the island for a picnic. The next weekend, too, and in fact, from then on practically every weekend. The Fetskes, childless themselves, discovered that they loved having children around. Even in the winter, they often hosted skating parties out there, and one summer Ernest designed and built a hydroplane speedboat for the boys.

But as the years went by, the boys grew up and the Fetskes grew old. Bettina passed away first, and then, in 1994, Ernest. By this time, Dave Hyde, married and with a child, was running the Essex hardware store. Ned Libby, also married with children, was a tugboat captain on the Connecticut. But, of course, with Ernest gone, everyone wondered what would become of Brockway Island, now a very valuable piece of property. They didn't wonder long. They soon learned that Ernest had willed his beloved island to Ned and Dave.

So the story didn't end. Over the next dozen years, Ned and Dave, now with their families, continued to spend summer weekends out there. Since the original house had fallen into disrepair, they replaced it in 1994 using the same footings.

The house on the island today has a living room with woodstove, a dining area, a modern kitchen with gas appliances, two bedrooms, a modern bathroom with shower and bath, a loft area for additional beds, and large decks on two sides from which one can watch ospreys, eagles, and deer. Yes, a small family of deer enjoys summers on the island, too. Water is pumped via a solar-powered 12-volt battery system, much the same as on an RV or boat. Also, there are lots of things like lawn furniture, linens, dishes, a grill, a 7.5-kilowatt John Deere generator, and even a TV.

Of course nothing lasts forever. As older age became a reality and their grown children began doing other things on summer weekends, Ned and Dave and their wives, Carol and Maureen, decided that maybe it was finally time to pass their beloved island along to someone else. Which is where we came into the story ...

"How much do you want for your Brockway Island?" we asked within minutes of settling down in the living room of Ned and Carol's mainland house, in the town of Deep River (a few miles upriver from Essex).

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