What are you gonna wait and then have to battle the crowds? Or are you the type that’s going to blow it off til the last minute and get something really shitty after everything your dad has done for you? Your answer is here. Guaranteed he’ll love it and you’ll have the peace of mind that you didn’t wait til last minute all stressed out.
Dad love Gloucester? We have Gloucester Apparel.
Dad love to fish? We have Gloucester 50 SPF Fishing Hoodies.
Dad like to grill? We have Gloucester BBQ Delegation Caps.
Dad love the blog? We have GMG old School Caps.
Dad think that the Plovers should not be artificially inseminated to make our beaches bird sanctuaries? We have Eat more Plover Towels and a couple of XL quarter zips.
UPF 50 Long Sleeve Crew Neck Sun Shirt New Gloucester Fishing Crew Necks With the American Flag On The Sleeve (because we’re proud Americans) Gloucester Map With The Annisquam and Gloucester Fishing On The Back with a Stout Anchor!
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Morning (10-Noon): Cove Hill 1720 – Joyce & Walter McGrath will share with you the family history of the early settlers of northern Gloucester as well as the local history of Lanesville.
Afternoon (1pm): Families of Lanesville – Melissa & Russell Hobbs will share with you the local history of those families that lived in Lanesville in the 1800s.
July 8
Morning: Tragedy During the Victorian Era
Afternoon: A Travel Through Time
Aug 12
Morning: Families of West Parish
Afternoon: Their Hearts Belonged to the Sea
Sep 16: Drama in the Cemetery
Oct 14: Bad Choices & Bad Luck
Oct 21: Oak Grove
See the link below for information about these tours and other upcoming events
A group of the 80 attendees at the Sawyer Library Foundation Women’s Luncheon to benefit the Sawyer Free 2025 capital campaign gathers for a photo. (l to r) Clare Quinn, Cindy Thorburn, Ann Gilson, Beth Gordon, Sallie Strand, Kate Stavis, Lois Budrose, Carolyn Plourde, Rebecca Bornstein, Tatiana Whitten, AnneLise Morss, Katherine McKnight and Mimi Tambone.
Leading into the holiday weekend, a sellout gathering of 80 attended a Sawyer Library Foundation Women’s Luncheon at Oak to Ember restaurant to benefit the Sawyer Free 2025 capital campaign to renovate and expand Cape Ann’s oldest public library. The fully philanthropic sawyerfree2025.org campaign further elevated the daytime fundraiser’s profile by formally announcing the latest gifted naming opportunities available for the new library building, which will celebrate its groundbreaking this fall.
“We’re almost 400 days into the public phase of this campaign and the overwhelming response to this event on the eve of the holiday weekend was humbling and offers a great deal of hope,” said Sarah Oaks, the Foundation’s campaign manager. “We’ve got more work to do and more ground to cover in order for this project to become a reality, but it’s becoming clear how passionately people believe that Cape Ann deserves this library.”
Community philanthropist Kate Stavis was part of the luncheon’s five-member host committee, which billed this past week’s event as an unofficial kickoff to the Cape Ann summer season. Liza Featherstone, a Manhattan-based columnist for the Jacobin and The New Republic, delivered the keynote address. She discussed the ideal of an inclusive library in a democratic society, reflecting on the novelist Virginia Woolf’s account of her humiliating experience of being excluded from Oxford University’s library, and learning that women could only enter with permission from a man.
Featherstone, who has close family ties to Cape Ann and has been a lifelong visitor to Sawyer Free Library, recalled that her own mother had a similar experience at Gloucester’s Sawyer Free Library as recently as the early 1970s—when a librarian there told her she needed her husband’s permission to apply for a library card. There was an audible gasp from the luncheon’s audience.
Featherstone, whose mother, Helen, was a writer prior to her death in 2021 while living on Eastern Point, noted that while today’s libraries are open to all, their inclusiveness “has made them a target (of book-bannings and other restrictions).” Today’s ‘gatekeepers,’ she said, know they can’t go back to the days when women weren’t allowed to use the library, so instead “they seek to abolish the library itself … But we won’t let them win.”
During the course of the event, many of those gathered exchanged stories about the role public libraries played in their personal and professional growth, and the crucial contributions of modern public libraries in support of women and girls. Gloucester attorney Meredith Fine addressed the assembly and described the life-altering role her local library played as a new home away from home after her family relocated during her middle school years. She characterized the Sawyer Free 2025 capital campaign as “the most important” fundraising effort currently underway on Cape Ann.
A LASTING LEGACY
In conjunction with the fundraising luncheon, the release of the Sawyer Free 2025 campaign’s new list of naming opportunities confirmed that nearly half of currently available donor-recognition opportunities have been reserved. That leaves 13 which remain available, including the Main Floor Reading Room, the Main Floor Atrium, the Teen Room, the Dale Avenue portico and the Fountain Plaza, among others.
Prior major gifts by donors have secured naming rights for the Children’s Room (the Institution for Savings), the Children’s Program Room (Bank Gloucester), the Teen Creation Space (Sudbay Automotive Group), the Digital Makerspace (Cape Ann Savings Bank) and the Library History Center (Gorton’s), along with several others still to be announced.
The Women’s Luncheon host committee’s members featured Stavis, Frederica Doeringer, the Vice Chair of the Sawyer Free 2025 campaign, Stephanie Cuff, Sally Bradley-Golding and Oaks. Five silent auction items were snapped up, including combinations of restaurant gift certificates, a gift certificate for Beth Williams jewelry items, Gloucester Stage Company tickets, lunch at a private club, and car service to dinner driven by mystery chauffeur in an elegant, luxury vehicle.
The event raised about $10,000 toward the construction of the new library. For more information about the new library or to get involved, visit sawyerfree2025.org.
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We were excited to learn that Salt Water Grille on Washington Street is back in the game! We recently visited and were very happy with our experience. Rosanne was our helpful server and we were additionally greeted by Mike, a friendly face behind the bar. We had potato skins as an app and Jim ordered the Salt Water Burger. I ordered the Vodka Penne, which was yummy with the generous portion of grilled chicken. The bar area was at capacity and it seemed to be everyone greeting someone they knew (lots of hugs!). I tried the Prickly Pear Margarita for the first official Margarita Monday of the season. Delightful experience and we’ll be back soon! Check it out!
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