The Magnolia Community Farmers Market coming soon.

My View of Life on the Dock
The Magnolia Community Farmers Market coming soon.




Join Bob and Sue McDermott of the McDermott MacCarthy Team, along with myself Brandon Pratt from CrossCountry Mortgage-Gloucester, Sunday 12-2pm in Wenham at 2 Charles Davis Drive.
This quintessential family home, with it’s four bedrooms and five full baths, was also designed for entertaining. As their children grew, they enjoyed hosting team celebrations, philanthropic gatherings and intimate dinners. Upon entering, guest’s eyes drifted up the double winding staircases, leading to the fire-placed master suite and three ensuite bedrooms. Gleaming hardwood floors, a chef’s kitchen and abundant pantry, four fireplaces, and walls of windows to drink in the outdoors complimented their sophisticated tastes. The heated, in-ground pool brought the wonder outdoors as the fire pit teased star gazing, conversation and laughter well into the night. This house so many amazing features, it must be seen to be believed.
Please contact Bob or Sue McDermott for showing options or stop by Sunday…
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SELLOUT WARNING! There are only a few tickets left for this concert. Please note that this concert is FRIDAY night. Some of our fliers mistakenly said Saturday. Runa comes to Old Sloop Coffeehouse this Friday, February 28 at 7:30PM. Celebrating its tenth anniversary as a band, Celtic-American roots music “super group” RUNA pushes the boundaries of Irish folk music into the Americana and roots music formats. Interweaving the haunting melodies and exuberant tunes of Ireland and Scotland with the lush harmonies and intoxicating rhythms of jazz, bluegrass, flamenco and blues, they offer a thrilling and redefining take on traditional music. Visit https://oldsloopcoffeehouse.org for tickets and more information.
#rockportma #livemusic #folkmusic #irishmusic #celticmusic
Here is a music video of RUNA performing the Delta Rae song Dance in the Graveyards: https://youtu.be/QW22OENmX40.

GloucesterCast 386 w/ Chris McCarthy, Ron Gilson, Pat and Jimmy Dalpiaz, Scottie Mac and Joey Ciaramitaro Taped 2/28/20
Press play to listen-
When you subscribe you need to verify your email address so they know we’re not sending you spam and that you want to receive the podcast or GMG in your email. So once you subscribe check your email for that verification. If you don’t see it, check your spam folder in your email acct so you can verify that you’d like to get them via email subscription.
Medal Design Event: Congratulations Beth Swan!
Special shout out to Gloucester High wrestler Liam Donahue for bringing home the first state wrestling title! Great news for such a young program.
Rotary is sponsoring a Night at the Races March 20 at Cruiseport. Tickets available at Bank Gloucester, Carroll Steele Insurance Agency or Weathervane. Funds support Rotary activities.
Today, Friday, is the last day for early voting for the presidential primary at City Hall 8:30-12:30 for Gloucester residents
Ron Gilson- The Key To A Healthy Long Life
Auto Brewery Syndrome
COMPLETELY RIDICULOUS KILLJOY BANANAHEAD OF THE DAY AWARD GOES TO…
Salem State Professor Demands MIAA Take Action Against Billerica Students Doing Tomahawk Chop At Game Vs Somerville
Ole Salty Jazz Band
The History Of The City of Gloucester with Ron Gilson
Ernie Boch Jr Controls Vagina Candle Market
Frenchman’s Pier at Little River Landing in West Gloucester looking pretty spectacular.



Join us by the fire and engage in lively discussion with local authors, historians, speakers and more!
February 3 – Captain Raymond Bates, Jr.
February 10 – Traci Thayne Corbett
March 2 – Joy Hennessey
March 9 – Captain Paul “Sasquatch” Cohan
March 23 – Lisa Lutoff-Perlo
March 30 – Stefan Edick
This event is free and open to the public. Seating is limited. Please visit the Eventbrite link to register and reserve your seat. For additional questions, please e-mail concierge@beauporthotel.com.
Eventbrite:
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/fireside-chat-series-tickets-92424017725
The Gloucester Meetinghouse Foundation celebrates the music of Johann Sebastian Bach with an orchestral concert on Saturday, March 21st at 7:30pm, the 335th anniversary of the composer’s birth. The Bach Birthday Concert is performed by the Appleton Consort, led by Mark Dupere, and played on period instruments. Highlights of the performance include Bach’s Orchestral Suite No. 3, the Violin Concerto in A minor, and the Harpsichord Concerto No. 5. The evening concludes with a performance of Bach’s ever popular Brandenburg Concerto No. 1 in F major. The ensemble, as Bach originally scored it, includes two hunting horns, three oboes, bassoon, violin piccolo, strings, and continuo. Don’t miss this spectacular evening of music by the beloved composer in the Gloucester Meetinghouse, one of the region’s finest concert venues. Tickets available in advance online at gloucestermeetinghouse.org and at the door.

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Check it- https://t.co/gAagS1kC9r?amp=1
I love this handy chart that features a number of common butterflies we see in New England, and thought you would, too.
Nectar plants are wonderful to attract butterflies to your garden, but if you want butterflies to colonize your garden, you need to plant their caterpillar host (food) plants. We all know Common Milkweed and Marsh Milkweed are the best host plants for Monarchs, and here are a few more suggestions. When you plant, they will come! And you will have the wonderful added benefit of watching their life cycle unfold.
Monarchs are dependent upon milkweeds during every stage of their life cycle. Milkweeds are not only their caterpillar food, it provides nectar to myriad species of pollinators.
Well done Gorton’s marketing team, enjoying this new Gorton’s Gloucester proud video!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PuxaJichNQw

Talked to an engineer the other day with regard to the crane on Shore Road to build the Magnolia Pier. The workers have been very polite and considerate of the neighbors and walkers. He informed me that the crane can reach over 200 feet. He also stated that most likely it will take about two more weeks with the crane.

Busy Friday night schedule is now confirmed. MIAA D2 North Quarterfinals:
Boys 🏀 at #2 Latin Academy(205 Townsend St) 5pm. $5 Students/Seniors & $7 Adults
Boys 🏒vs #2 Lincoln-Sudbury at OBrien Arena in Woburn 8pm. $6 Students/Seniors & $8 Adults

Final days to catch Once Upon a Contest at beautiful Rockport Public Library, and the delightful installations by Betty Allenbrook Wiberg, CAR Invited Artist, Rockport. Please spread the word!
The library is open until 8pm today, Thursday, February 27, 2020.
The library is closed Fridays!
The library is open 10-5 on Saturday RECEPTION 11AM (some nice surprises )
(The library is open Sunday 1-5)
https://video214.com/play/NpH3oe6MuPEWhZJ5h6lymw/s/dark
video by Meghan Gocke


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Anna Hyatt Huntington (1876–1973), Diana of the Chase, 1922. Bronze. 96 inches high.
The James Collection. Promised Gift of Janet & William Ellery James to the Cape Ann Museum.
The Cape Ann Museum is pleased to pay special tribute to renowned local women artists in its new exhibition, Odds Were Against Me, featuring works by Anna Vaughn Hyatt Huntington (1876–1973) and Katharine Lane Weems (1899–1989).
Opening March 3, the exhibition has been organized to recognize the 100th anniversary of American women winning the right to vote with the passage of the 19thAmendment. Other featured artists include Cecilia Beaux, Theresa Bernstein and Emma Fordyce MacRae. The exhibition will run through Jan. 3, 2021.
“This yearlong showcase of works by Weems and Huntington is integral the Museum’s commitment to featuring the inspiring work of women artists both past and present through special and rotating gallery installations,” said the Museum’s Director Oliver Barker. “Weems and Huntington are part of a long line of Cape Ann artists whose work is fundamental to the compelling story of Cape Ann’s evolving artistic and cultural history which resonates with visitors young and old, from the local community and beyond.”
Huntington’s larger than life-size bronze sculpture, Diana of the Chase, anchors the exhibition, with selections of Weems’ vivid animal sculptures from the Museum’s collection offering a contrast in subject and scale. A full-length oil portrait by Marion Boyd Allen (1876-1973) of Huntington at work in her studio is paired with an intimate painting of Weems done in the 1920s by Boston and Manchester artist Charles Hopkinson (1899-1989).
Weems was one of this country’s most accomplished sculptors of the 20th century and a major figure on Boston’s North Shore for many years. She is best known for her larger-than-life size animal pieces, many of which can be found in and around Boston, including the bronze Dolphins of the Sea (1979) at the New England Aquarium.
Weems studied with Charles Gafly at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and with Anna Hyatt Huntington, George Demetrios and Brenda Putnam. In 1928, she was awarded the Philadelphia Academy of the Fine Arts’ prestigious George E. Widener Memorial Gold Medal for her work Narcisse Noir (1926). She maintained a home and studio in Manchester (known as The Chimneys) and was life-long friends with fellow sculptor Walker Hancock. The name of the exhibition is based on Weems’ memoir, Odds Were Against Me, which provided insights into the challenges that she and other women or her generation faced as they struggled to gain footholds in the arts.
Huntington was born in Cambridge, MA, a daughter of Alpheus Hyatt, a zoologist and paleontologist, and Audella Beebe Hyatt, a watercolorist. The Hyatts purchased a summer house in the Annisquam section of Gloucester in 1878 where Alpheus ran a biological laboratory and school. For many years, Huntington maintained a summer sculpture studio on the property. While she would study for a time under Henry H. Kitson in Boston, and later with Hermon A. MacNeil at the Art Students’ League in New York, Huntington thought of herself as a self-taught artist, inspired by her older sister Harriet who was also a sculptor.
In 1902, Huntington moved to New York City to pursue her career, traveling from there to France in 1907. By the 1910s, she had established herself as one of this country’s most respected sculptors, attracting commissions for such works as her well-known depiction of Joan of Arc (1915-1918), versions of which are installed in Blois, France;Québec City; San Francisco; New York City; and Gloucester. In 1923, she married Archer Huntington and worked on what is now known as Brookgreen Gardens in South Carolina. She is best known as a figurative sculptor, having created animals, equestrian monuments, fountains and other works for gardens.
“The Cape Ann Museum is fortunate to have a strong collection of artwork and artifacts in its holdings related to women, now and in the past,” said Museum Curator Martha Oaks. “While many of these items are typically on display throughout the Museum, this year as people across the country recognize the 100th anniversary of women’s suffrage, we’re enjoying calling them out to our visitors and exploring the myriad of stories they can tell us about women’s abilities and achievements. Anna Vaughn Hyatt Huntington and Katharine Lane Weems were two extraordinary artists who excelled at a time that wasn’t always welcoming of women. We’re very proud to be showcasing their work and sharing it with Museum visitors.”
Cape Ann has long been recognized as one of this country’s oldest and most important art colonies and the collection of the Cape Ann Museum contains examples of works by many of the artists who came to Cape Ann, including Marsden Hartley, Cecilia Beaux, Nell Blaine, Edward Hopper and John Sloan. At the heart of the Museum’s holdings is the single largest collection of works by early 19th century artist Fitz Henry Lane (1804-1865). A native of Gloucester, Lane worked as a lithographer and a painter and his works on display at the Cape Ann Museum capture the town’s busy seaport in its heyday. The Cape Ann Museum is dedicated to illuminating the diversity of life on Cape Ann by collecting, preserving and presenting the interconnected stories of art and industry during the past 400 years.
HERE IS A LINK TO IMAGES FOR ODDS WERE AGAINST ME:
https://www.dropbox.com/sh/wmc2p5z8qqyzd0b/AAD3J_i85LOdjSaBs74f5Rnqa?dl=0
For more information about the exhibition and related programming, please visit the Museum’s website www.capeannmuseum.org.
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Dave Sag’s Blues Party Tonight!
Thursday!
It’s John Keegan of Madhouse
w/Mike DiBari on guitar
Benny Benson drums
Mark Earley on the tenor sax.
@
The Rhumb Line
8:30 to 11:30
2.27.2020
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40 Railroad Avenue
Gloucester, MA 01930
(978) 283-9732