Centreton Hall is about more than just a good time
By Cecilia Nasmith
Retired educator Mary Catherine O'Neill recalls something she heard at a library conference – bad libraries build collections, good libraries build services, great libraries build communities.
She and Centreton Community Centre Committee co-chair Heather Brereton agree that the third criterion applies to community centres and, over the past five years, they have seen that vision take shape in Centreton.
This committee of Alnwick-Haldimand Township Council set about in 2015 to revitalize this underutilized facility on County Road 23 north of Grafton, the former Methodist Episcopal church constructed in 1864, with the library addition that was a 1967 Centennial project and modernizing renovations completed in 2011.
With the support of council, they set a mission statement to ensure that Castleton-area residents of all ages could have access to fitness, social and learning activities.
In fact, they have found that these residents are getting so much more.
Centreton committee co-chairs Mary Catherine O'Neill (L) and Heather Brereton (R) with tai chi instructor Deb Lablond and the morning tea tray
A recent Tuesday-morning visit to Deb Leblond's tai chi class offers just one example.
Leblond sets up for each class by bringing a tea tray in from the kitchen. She might welcome as many as 20 or more ladies at the drop-in class, though men are also welcome.
Instead of a registration fee, participants drop donations into a coffee can to support the centre, with a $2 minimum suggested. These days, they are earmarked for a dishwasher for the kitchen. The group is proud of what they have done for the centre to date with their donations, including a water cooler (which they keep stocked), picture frames for some of the historic shots in the hall and a new coffee urn.
Brereton said the group has become quite the little social club. On the tea tray, a beautiful hand-made card (with a Lindt chocolate attached) awaits the arrival of one lady who is celebrating a birthday.
O'Neill is aware of at least two class members who were shut-ins before.
Leblond agreed, citing the case of one who doesn't drive. Since dropping in and joining the group, she has made friends who take her around – and has even joined the Helping Hands group.
She calls what she does sharing tai chi as opposed as instructing, and each session is also a coffee morning. They even take field trips to explore their community (such as a trek to the Grafton Village Inn), and she's hoping to bring in more speakers after a recent much-enjoyed presentation by Hamilton Township author Linda Hutsell-Manning on her new book Fearless and Determined: Two Years Teaching in a One-Room School.
Leblond taught tai chi as part of an autism program in York Region before moving to the community two years ago.
“When I came here and I saw the hall, everyone was so welcoming,” she recalled.
; Alnwick-Haldimand library CEO Elaine Skinner demonstrates the Mango program