January 19, 2026


Members AND Sponsors, please send your news, updates and photos to newsletter.tsc.news@gmail.com so we can share with the Tri-State community.

Facebook  Instagram  


RENEW or BECOME a Member:


Please do so HERE.



Thank you to our amazing SPONSORS!


Assured Partners Northeast, LLC

Ed Herrington, Inc.

Fairview Hospital

Housatonic Heritage

Lakeville Journal Co

Lime Rock Park

Lindell's Hardware

National Iron Bank

NBT Bank

Northwest Community Bank

Sharon Lawn and Landscape, LLC

Sharon Hospital

Sharon Playhouse

WHDD Robin Hood Radio


To become a SPONSOR please contact Lisa Duntz at treasurer@tristatechamber.com


From Where I sit.....


Spill the beans: If it’s happening in your business, we want to help spread the word. Send your news and events to newsletter.tsc.news@gmail.com


Keep yourself informed: Join Joanne Borduas, CEO of Community Health & Wellness Center at a Town Hall meeting. Taking place tomorrow, Jan. 20th at 6:30 pm at the Colonial Theater.


Please RSVP to Ali Separy: asepary@chwctorr.org or 860-489-0931 Ext. 1020


Heard around town: Lake Wononscopomuc "Ice In" on January 2nd! An early ice for sure. Makes sense with the winter we have had so far.


Want to enjoy dinner out: You can support both your local businesses and get a chance to win a free ticket to the SWSA ski jumps! Visit the SWSA website for details.


Coming soon: Chamber Chats! We’re connecting with members to share insights, ideas, and perspectives. Interested in participating or have a topic in mind? Email treasurer@tristatechamber.com


Feel like jamming: Every Thursday from 6:30 - 10 pm, its an open jam for musicians at the Music Jam on Main Street in North Canaan.


New Year’s Resolutions: How is your New Year’s resolution faring so far? Curious whether yours made the list of the most popular resolutions for 2026? Click here to find out!



Here's to what's next,

Lisa Duntz-Nypert

President

Tri-State Chamber of Commerce

REMINDER! We are 10 days away from our first Business After Hours of the New Year - Make sure you register!

Pure ARCA spirit in motion: Sandy Leith and the “Scrambling Egg” Bugatti T37 Special.

Dear Historic Festival Competitors, Collectors, and Friends of Lime Rock Park,


As we look ahead to Historic Festival 44, we are proud to extend a special invitation—one Skip Barber has been eager to make—to owners and caretakers of Automobile Racing Club of America (ARCA) cars.


Our featured marque for HF44 is Alfa Romeo, and it is fitting that this story begins there. The final ARCA race, run in 1940, was won by Frank Griswold driving an Alfa Romeo Grand Prix car. Eight years later, as American road racing re-emerged after World War II, it was Griswold once again—this time winning the inaugural SCCA-sanctioned Watkins Glen Grand Prix in 1948 in a different pre-war Alfa Romeo, an 8C 2900. Few moments illustrate the continuity of American sports car racing more clearly.


That continuity exists because ARCA came first.


The original Automobile Racing Club of America (1933–1941) was pure patrician mischief. Wealthy young enthusiasts—the Collier brothers, Briggs Cunningham, George Rand, Dick Wharton, and Hastings Foote, and their circle—turned public roads into temporary race circuits and built wildly inventive American “specials,” combining engines, chassis, and bodywork with zero regard for factory purity. The cars’ whimsical names—Ardent Alligator, Bu-Merc, Leonidis, Old Grey Mare, Scrambling Egg—perfectly captured the playful, almost absurd spirit of the era: racing for the sheer joy of it, long before the sport became corporate or polished.


Between 1933 and 1941, ARCA organized “round-the-houses” races throughout the Northeast and beyond—from Sleepy Hollow and Briarcliff Manor to Cape Cod, Montauk, Alexandria Bay, Memphis, the Flushing Meadows World’s Fair, and even the Mount Washington Auto Road. Many drivers who would later shape American road racing in the 1950s first learned their craft at ARCA events.


As World War II drew to a close, that same ARCA circle—including the Collier brothers, Briggs Cunningham, George Rand, Dick Wharton, and Hastings Foote — incorporated a successor organization in 1944: the Sports Car Club of America. Their goal was deliberate and familiar—to continue European-style road racing on public roads, built directly on the ARCA model. When the SCCA staged its first major event at Watkins Glen in 1948, modern American road racing officially began, firmly rooted in ARCA.


Remarkably, many ARCA cars survive today, exquisitely preserved largely thanks to the Collier family’s lifelong commitment to safeguarding this history. Several now reside at The REVS Institute in Naples, Florida—the modern evolution of the original Collier Collection—and we are honored that REVS will be bringing three ARCA cars to Historic Festival 44.


Our vision for the weekend includes:

  • Exhibition track time for ARCA cars on Friday, Saturday, and Monday
  • A dedicated tented ARCA display in the paddock
  • A featured ARCA display within the Sunday in the Park Concours d’Elegance
  • Eligibility for properly prepared cars to compete in the War Era racing class


We are also pleased to share that Miles Collier will join us for a Saturday evening dinner and discussion celebrating our featured marque, Alfa Romeo. The evening will include brief reflections on ARCA cars and their place within the broader context of the era.


You are receiving this note because we strongly suspect that you may have an ARCA car that has been resting quietly in a garage for years. This is our invitation to dust it off, bring it back to Lime Rock Park, and let it be seen, heard, and appreciated once again. Even if your ARCA car is a roller, this is where it belongs—its story shared alongside others that helped define American road racing.


We also ask for your help in spreading the word. If you know of other ARCA cars tucked away—owned by friends, former competitors, or collectors—please encourage them to reach out. The more complete the gathering, the more meaningful this celebration will be for our fans.


If you’re interested in participating or simply want to start a conversation, please contact us at historics@limerock.com. We would be honored to welcome these cars—and the people who have preserved them—back to Lime Rock Park.


Tell us about your ARCA Car Here

Looking for a creative and engaging way to spend Martin Luther King Jr. Day?


Sharon Playhouse is excited to offer a special one-day theater camp designed for young performers who love to move, sing, act, and play.


Monday, January 19

9:30 AM–3:30 PM


Led by Sharon Playhouse educators Sarah Cuoco and Alec Sisco, this action-packed day will be filled with theater games, vocal training, heart-pumping choreography, and dynamic acting exercises. Students will explore new skills, build confidence, and collaborate with fellow young artists in a fun and supportive environment.


The day wraps up with a special end-of-day sharing, where campers can showcase what they have learned for family and friends.


SHARON PLAYHOUSE 1-DAY CAMP: $140


Spend your day off creating, connecting, and experiencing the joy of theater at Sharon Playhouse. Space is limited, so early registration is encouraged.


Click here to learn more.


Snowflake Design Workshop


Wednesday, January 21st

1:00-3:00 PM


Join us on Salisbury Central School's next half day.


In this workshop presented by local artist Shepherd Myers, Learn to create some intricate paper snowflakes and take them home and use them as winter decorations. Registration is appreciated! 


Suited for children in grades Kindergarten - 5


A passion for building gripped William Eggers early in life. 


Eggers, who cheerfully claims to be a craftsman in 10 trades, uses most of those trades when he painstakingly creates replicas of vehicles with signature roles in the evolution of transportation.


Click here to Read More




Always Leave 'em Laughing

Get SOCIAL with your fellow TSC members
ONLINE!
Facebook  Instagram  
MEMBERS, TO SUBMIT TO THE NEWSLETTER, PLEASE EMAIL newsletter.tsc.news@gmail.com
by NOON ON MONDAY. Graphics in jpeg form, 150px/in resolution,
approx 4" x 5" work best.

TO SUBSCRIBE TO THIS AWESOME NEWSLETTER, PLEASE VISIT:
Thank you everyone!
Serving CT, MA and NY since 2004
P.O. Box 386 Lakeville CT 06039