Iconic 'Plantation Man' statue to be restored in East Longmeadow for Fourth of July
When and where fireworks are taking place in western Mass.
The statue, affectionately known as 'Plantation Man,' is being restored and will be unveiled in time for the town's annual Fourth of July Parade and Summer Carnival.
Originally installed as the Uncle Sam figure at Mutual Ford in Springfield during the 1970s, the statue later stood for years at the former Plantation Inn in Chicopee. After the inn closed, the statue was salvaged in 2013 by Charlie Arment Jr. of Charlie Arment Trucking, who preserved the figure from further decay.
Now, through a joint effort involving the Arment family of Charlie Arment Trucking and Deer Park Recycling, the Sullivan family of East Village Tavern, Allied Flooring & Paint, and York Street Industries, the statue will be restored and returned to public view. Allied Flooring & Paint is supplying materials for the restoration, which will give the statue a fresh patriotic look.
The restored figure will be permanently installed in the parking lot shared by East Village Tavern and Allied Flooring & Paint, a property owned by the Burack family. Organizers hope the statue's return will provide East Longmeadow families and visitors with a symbol of shared history and civic pride.
'Keeping town traditions alive is something we deeply care about, especially when they bring our community together around shared history and pride,' said East Village Tavern owner John Sullivan. 'Restoring the 'Plantation Man' is about more than just nostalgia; it's a tribute to patriotism, local legacy, and the spirit of East Longmeadow.'
Sullivan credited the Arment family for their inspiration and community leadership, adding, 'We all have young families, and it's an honor to help preserve these traditions so our kids can grow up with the same small-town pride and values that shaped us.'
He also thanked Jose Morgado, the Burack family, Hampden County Sheriff Nick Cocchi, and members of the Hampden County Sheriff's Department for their contributions to the project.
The statue's unveiling will coincide with the town's Independence Day festivities, offering a timely celebration of heritage, unity, and local pride.
WWLP-22News, an NBC affiliate, began broadcasting in March 1953 to provide local news, network, syndicated, and local programming to western Massachusetts. Watch the 22News Digital Edition weekdays at 4 p.m. on WWLP.com.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


San Francisco Chronicle
8 hours ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
The latest venture from French Laundry chef Thomas Keller? Burgers
Chef Thomas Keller's Wine Country empire is expanding — at least temporarily. On Saturday, Keller will open a nostalgia-themed popup restaurant in Napa Valley called Burgers & Half Bottles, serving classic Americana dishes like Wagyu burgers, Maine lobster rolls, fried chicken sandwiches and crinkle-cut fries. Located in Keller's former Mexican spot La Calenda (6518 Washington St., Yountville), which closed last November, the popup will run through October, according to a press release. Burgers & Half Bottles isn't a new concept. Keller, who is most known for his three-Michelin-starred restaurant the French Laundry, launched the popup in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic; the six-week endeavor operated inside Ad Hoc during the three nights the restaurant was closed. At the time, Keller wrote in an Instagram post that it was intended to 'bring more of our staff back to work during this pandemic and offer the community a fun midweek value.' Open Wednesday through Sunday, Burgers & Half Bottles also offers dessert, including milkshakes and an ice cream sandwich made with Bouchon Bakery's TKO cookie, Keller's interpretation of an Oreo. For drinks, a vintage 1965 Volkswagen 'Brew Bus' will pour beers, like Russian River Brewing's Pliny the Elder, according to the press release. The restaurant will also offer a selection of half and full bottles of wine from local producers, and Lost Coast Brewery Root Beer as a non-alcoholic option.
Yahoo
11 hours ago
- Yahoo
Hayley Williams Unveils 17 New Solo Tracks
In lieu of a more traditional album release, Paramore frontwoman Hayley Williams has dropped 17 individual new tracks on DSPs through her Post Atlantic imprint, which is distributed by Secretly Distribution. They were produced by Daniel James and also include contributions from Brian Robert Jones, Joey Howard and Jim-E Stack. Williams debuted the shoegaze-steeped 'Mirtazapine' last weekend with Bleachers at the Newport Folk Festival after first playing it on the air at Nashville public radio station WNXP. Other highlights include the vocal trickery-laden 'Glum,' the Americana-tinged 'Whim' and 'Ice in My OJ,' the chorus of which dates back to the song 'Jumping Inside' from Williams' pre-Paramore stint singing on the Mammoth City Messengers soundtrack. More from Spin: Deep Cut Friday: 'I'm a Man You Don't Meet Every Day' by the Pogues 5 Albums I Can't Live Without: Sam Carter of Architects Jörgen Releases First Single on SPIN Records Although not labeled as an album, the batch of fresh material follows Williams' two pandemic-era solo releases, 2020's Petals For Armor and 2021's Flowers for Vases. Paramore returned in 2023 after a five-year hiatus with This Is Why, which won two Grammys. With Paramore off the road for now, Williams recently turned up on Turnstile's latest album and made a surprise appearance during the group's record release show at Under the K Bridge Park in Brooklyn, N.Y. The activity comes alongside the recent release of Paramore member Zac Farro's first solo album under his own name, Operator, and the 20th anniversary of Paramore's debut album, All We Know Is Falling. The milestone was celebrated last week with the first digital release of The Summer Tic EP, a 2006 collection previously only available on CD. To see our running list of the top 100 greatest rock stars of all time, click here. Solve the daily Crossword


USA Today
2 days ago
- USA Today
Ted Cruz defends Sydney Sweeney amid American Eagle ad backlash
After an ad starring Sydney Sweeney outraged viewers, Sen. Ted Cruz is coming to her defense. The Texas Republican took to X July 29 to blast the "crazy left" for criticizing Sweeney's American Eagle denim jeans campaign as a dog whistle for eugenics and the glorification of whiteness. Responding to a New York Post article, which detailed the controversy, Cruz wrote: "Wow. Now the crazy Left has come out against beautiful women. I'm sure that will poll well…." Sydney Sweeney, an American Eagle ad campaign and why it sparked backlash Part of a larger partnership between the "Euphoria" actress and the popular clothier, the ad campaign used wordplay to describe Sweeney as having "good genes," with the latter word doing double duty, meaning not just her DNA but also the denim on her body (which was American Eagle made). Soon after the campaign dropped, people began to sound the alarm on what they saw as a dangerous message about the beauty ideal, race and "good" versus "bad" genes. Cruz joined a parade of notables adding their two cents, including "Bachelor" star Gabby Windey and even Doja Cat, who mocked the ad in a TikTok video. In one of several videos for the advertising blitz, Sweeney, clad in a denim-on-denim outfit, says: "Genes are passed down from parents to offspring, often determining traits like hair color, personality and even eye color." "My jeans are blue," she says as the camera pans across her blue denim and her blue eyes. Sydney Sweeney critics compare jeans campaign to Brooke Shields' Calvin Klein ad Consumers were quick to point out what they saw as the regressive nature of the material. A blonde shown sensually, catering to the male gaze, they argued, was a stereotypical symbol of a bygone era. "How far back do you plan on going? Do you still wanna vote?" one commenter asked, while another chided: "You accept these jobs that objectify your body. Fight the patriarchy, don't join it." Even more concerning, critics argued, was the use of Sweeney as the archetype of "good genes." Defined generally as the use of selective breeding to "improve" the human race through emphasis on desirable traits, the pseudoscience of eugenics has a dark backstory, used in the past as a vehicle for racial violence and sterilization. Lifting Sweeney's genes up as "good," critics said, notches into a painful and dangerous history. That the controversy stems from a denim ad, and one from a company with "American" in the name, further complicates the reception. Americana and denim go hand in hand, the stiff fabric harkening back to cowboy culture, workmen's uniforms and other mythologized aspects of the national identity.