Nantucket Cobblestones Come From Gloucester? Read here for more:

Thanks Caitlin Silverstein for the link

Diane Pramas submits #boatdog “Riley” Submit your Boat dog photo- owner and dog’s name to be featured in Our GMG “boatdogseries

Riley – a 14 yr old Westie

The G400+ Cemetery Tour Series Concludes:

“Notable Mariners, Historians, Philanthropists & Artists”

Oak Grove Cemetery

177 Washington Street, Gloucester

Saturday, October 14th, 3:30 to 5PM

Rain date: Sunday, Oct 22nd, 3:30PM.

Meet at the main entrance of the cemetery near the Bradford Memorial Chapel.

Parking is on Washington Street since there is no parking in the cemetery.

For registration and details please go to the Eventbrite link below:

Notable Mariners, Historians, Philanthropists & Artists

In 1854, Gloucester was enjoying a prosperous period. Six local businessmen purchased an oak grove near downtown Gloucester to be the site of a modern cemetery. This private cemetery was to be designed so that both the living and dead could enjoy an open, public space of beauty.

Cleveland and Copeland, a noted Massachusetts landscape architecture firm, was hired to design Oak Grove Cemetery. Their focus was to be sensitive to the natural landscape with the addition of open spaces, interconnecting byways, and ornamental plantings. The original design consisted of 280 gravesites in 6 sections and over time the cemetery expanded to more than 5500 burials. This cemetery is on the National Registry of Historic Places.

Oak Grove Cemetery is located at 177 Washington StreetGloucesterMA 01930. A cemetery tour led by knowledgeable guides, Courtney Richardson, a former Oak Grove Cemetery board member and Katy Marques will provide you with stories of a number of notable individuals and families who called Gloucester their home such as Ben PineJames PringleSamuel Sawyer, the Davis sisters, and Fitz Henry Lane.

The Saturday tour (Oct. 21) will meet at the main entrance to the cemetery at 177 Washington St., near the Bradford Memorial Chapel at 3:30PM. The 0.5 mile walking tour will meander through the cemetery stopping to pay homage at select gravesites as well as giving you the opportunity to appreciate the lovely landscape and the variety of unique gravestones in Oak Grove. Please wear comfortable walking shoes. The cemetery is wheelchair accessible by using the paved and packed dirt byways.

Street parking is on Washington Street since there is no parking in the cemetery. The cemetery is a 0.3 mile walk from the MBTA commuter rail station in downtown Gloucester.

Don’t miss this unique opportunity to connect with history and immerse yourself in Gloucester’s rich heritage. Rain date is Sunday, October 22, 3:30PM.

Supported by the 400+ Steering Committee and Oak Grove Cemetery Board of Trustees with bottled water supplied by Kaylynn Favaloro and Blue Marble Group.

A message from our wonderful Magnolia Community Farmers Market

THANK YOU TO THIS COMMITTEE

Dear Friends and Neighbors,

 

With Columbus/Indigenous People’s Day come and gone, the unofficial, (official) unofficial delayed closing bell of the “extended New England summer” has gonged. I hope you are all rested and recovered from a long and often wet farmers market season on Lexington Ave. Mother Nature sure had an alternative agenda for our weekend weather this year, and I feel like it was an uphill climb since June.

 

Many thanks for all the familiar faces who came to support Magtoberfest last weekend, a collaboration between the Farmers Market and the Magnolia Library. The shape of this event has evolved quite a bit since its inception as a fall festival, but now this beer, bubbly, music and food truck extravaganza has become one of the most well-attended fundraising events in town! The entirely volunteer-run Magnolia Library & Community Center is such an important entity in our village and we are proud to help keep their doors open year after year by partnering for this event. Thank you all for attending, supporting and donating to the cause!

 

Each year, the drop in temperatures and the turning of the leaves brings a change in gears for our MCFM board. No more Sunday morning alarm clocks, foot traffic counts, vendor schedules, or road closures. Time for fiscal evaluations and financial assessments. Moments of reflection and consideration as we calculate our next moves as a board, as a team, as a farmers market.

 

This summer of 2023, our fifth season on Lexington Ave, was admittedly a struggle to get off the ground. After scouring hundreds of websites, sending cold-call style emails, canvassing other local markets, snail-mailing applications, pouring time into originally crafted marketing material, attending locally sourced food conventions, and pleading and poking over several platforms of social media we finally procured the required farms and foodies to make a go of it, with up to 12 tents popped on Lex on our busiest day.  The shopping community seemingly loves our Sunday morning family; from day-1, it has felt like Magnolians appreciate our efforts, and we sincerely hope it has been worth it for our vendors, as well.

 

But man, is it exhausting. We are a small but mighty team, and we have always been driven by a passion for our community, a dedication to bringing fresh foods and produce to our quiet neck of the woods, where local “food shopping” is really only cafes and a convenience store for anyone with transportation challenges. Our team has been so much fun to work with, and our collective enthusiasm year after year is inspiring. But we all have growing families, aspiring careers, and personal obligations that we can no longer shelf.

 

It is not without much contemplation, that the planning board for Magnolia Community Farmers Market has decided to table this project and we will not be putting on the Market in 2024. The commitment of time and resources is no longer something any of us is able to shoulder, without sacrificing self care, paid opportunities and personal needs. We have loved working with and for each of you, and have benefited immensely from our years of service to Magnolia. Your passion for farms, food, fun and family is unmatched and all of Magnolia and greater Cape Ann is lucky to have received a bit of your magic through this market.

 

The time and effort that goes into planning, advising, permitting, insuring, and financially managing a project like a farmers market is certainly not for everyone. I’m so blessed to have had some amazing people come together to make the work feel fun, to make the engine run smoothly, to get the cogs spinning in sync every year. Our OG team, Rebecca Doyon, Nying Gallo and Caitlyn Shatford are among the most intelligent, powerful and downright amazing women I have ever been fortunate enough to know. Your passion, your knowledge, your ingenuity are unmatched. Thank you for your commitment to my crazy ideas and for giving me your time and your love. The phenomenal additions of Greg Farrenkopf’s web designing and marketing brilliance, Dylan Belong Gallo’s zany ideas that always worked, and David Kelley’s logistical and engineering wizardry rounded out an incomparable board which I am forever grateful to call family. I can only hope that if anyone chooses to take these reigns, they are fortunate enough to find a collection of outstanding individuals like you. You all have my heart and I’d follow you anywhere.

 

I’m confident in my decision to step away, but it’s not without a bit of happy sadness. Magnolia has my heart and I’ve loved every Sunday you’ve shared with me. I may be stepping away from the market but not from my passion for this community, my commitment to the library, my pride for our pier and my admiration for the special magic this place holds.  Thank you for being a part of this adventure. Now it’s time for the next…

#meetmeinmagnolia

 

Alana

Magnolia Community Farmers Market

President

 

 

Surfside Subs: Check out our NEW Wicked Wednesday Special! 10/18

💥New Special Lobster Roll Price $13.95 🦞🦞
💥Half Off Large Cheese & One Topping Pizzas!
excluding slices & gluten free crusts

978-281-1700

Utopia Farms Delightful Roadside Farm Market

I came upon Utopia Farms market on Atwater Ave in Manchester last week. What a delight! It’s small and tucked in with a generous parking area and inviting outside displays. I picked up some cider and Virgilios bread but there is much much more. They offer fresh fruits and vegetables, pumpkins, apples, bread, frozen treats and cold drinks to name a few. It won’t be my last visit and I look forward to what is offered in other seasons as well. You can get updated information through Facebook Utopia Farms.

Sawyer Free Library to host Local Author Karin Gertsch on October 19th

 ~ SAWYER FREE LIBRARY