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A Visual Journey: Retiring Justice's Boar Head Gets A Parade In Montpelier

A woman carries an umbrella and wheels a cart with a mounted boar's head on it.
Elodie Reed
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VPR
Retiring Vermont Supreme Court Justice Marilyn Skoglund parades her mounted boar's head, Emmett, to his new home with her former law clerk and Montpelier attorney, Michael Donofrio, on Wednesday.

Emmett is a mounted boar head. For 22 years, Emmett has hung on the wall in Vermont Supreme Court Justice Marilyn Skoglund's Montpelier office, where he went to live after Skoglund received him as a gift from an ex.

"He's not one of those ugly ferocious looking wild boars," Skoglund said. "He's pleasant."

A mounted boar head carries a small American flag in its mouth.
Credit Elodie Reed / VPR
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VPR

This past spring, however, Skoglund announced she would retire in September. This meant that Emmett, her beloved "amanuensis" (her secretary), needed a new home.

"He's going to go live in a nice new place: the law offices of Michael Donofrio," Skoglund said. Donofrio, a Montpelier attorney, used to clerk for Skoglund. 

And so on Wednesday, July 3, 2019, at 2 p.m. on the dot, Skoglund made her way down the courthouse's stone steps and brought Emmett, new caretaker Donofrio, a gaggle of former and current interns and clerks, plus a few media members, along on a parade. 

"I'm wearing dark glasses in case I cry," Skoglund said. 

A man helps a woman lift a mounted boar head down stairs outside a stone courthouse.
Credit Elodie Reed / VPR
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VPR

There were kazoos. 

A woman blows a kazoo.
Credit Elodie Reed / VPR
/
VPR

There was a procession down State Street in downtown Montpelier. 

"Is someone blowing bubbles back there?" Skoglund asked. 

A group of people push a boar head down a main street sidewalk.
Credit Elodie Reed / VPR
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VPR

There were pinwheels... 

A man and a woman hold pinwheels.
Credit Elodie Reed / VPR
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VPR

...and there were sparklers. 

Two women hold sparklers.
Credit Elodie Reed / VPR
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VPR

The procession ended at Donofrio's office on Elm Street.

"Oh, Emmett," Skoglund said. "I got a little teary the other day. I was sitting in my TV room at home and was thinking, maybe he could go on the wall next to my collection of dog portraits. But then I said no."

A woman looks on, sad, as a man holds up a mounted boar head.
Credit Elodie Reed / VPR
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VPR

"He's going to be happy here," Skoglund said. "I know it." 

She thanked Donofrio one last time. 

"I gotta tell you, it's not my natural inclination to mount a boar's head on the wall of any space I occupy," Donofrio said. "The things we do for love, right?"

A man holds a boar head with a little American flag in its mouth.
Credit Elodie Reed / VPR
/
VPR

Elodie is a reporter and producer for Vermont Public. She previously worked as a multimedia journalist at the Concord Monitor, the St. Albans Messenger and the Monadnock Ledger-Transcript, and she's freelanced for The Atlantic, the Christian Science Monitor, the Berkshire Eagle and the Bennington Banner. In 2019, she earned her MFA in creative nonfiction writing from Southern New Hampshire University.
Anna worked for Vermont Public from 2019 through 2023 as a reporter and co-host of the daily news podcast, The Frequency.
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