In the middle of this century, the Swift River towns in western
Massachusetts were drowned - purchased by the government and flooded in
order to form the Quabbin Reservoir. "Letting Swift River Go" tells of
this dramatic event through the eyes of a young girl, Sally Jane, as she
watches her thriving hometown transformed into a wilderness and then
submerged. Sally Jane's story vividly recalls life and changing times in
rural America: playing by the Old Stone Mill and later watching it be
torn down; harvesting maple sap and seeing those same trees uprooted;
walking to school along a winding balcktop road and returning many years
later to float above the same road in a rowboat on the new reservoir.