🚓🚒🚁 Community Safety Day 2025 🚨🐴

Join the us on Saturday, September 27, from 10 AM – 2 PM at Harbor Loop for a fun, family-friendly day celebrating safety and community!

✅ Tour the US Coast Guard boats and base
✅ See police vehicles, fire trucks, ambulances & motorcycles
✅ Enjoy music, food vendors, and kids’ games
✅ Watch exciting demos — including a Coast Guard helicopter rescue and the State Police bomb squad with the Boston Dynamics “Spot” robot dog!

📅 Rain Date: September 28
🎟 Free Admission — Don’t miss it!

Lone White Sail

Walking Shore Road on these beautiful fall days, the ocean and sky are so blue.  There was a small sailboat going by, all lone.

Don’t miss the dazzling opening concert for Cape Ann Symphony on Sunday!

REMINDER from Heidi Dallin!

Tickets are still available for Sunday’s concert opening CAS’s 74th season, The Virtuoso Concert! Sunday’s program looks incredible and don’t forget the chorus, too! Read all about it:

“The program for Cape Ann Symphony’s  The Virtuoso Orchestra Concert! highlights the power and majesty of the orchestra led by Music Director and Conductor Maestro Yoichi Udagawa.   The concert opens with  Gustav Holst’s awe-inspiring The Planets, Op. 32. The Treble Chorus under the direction of Brittany Betts and  featuring members of the Cape Ann Symphony Chorus and singers from the community join the orchestra for Holst’s piece. The concert closes with Modest Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition, orchestrated by French composer, pianist and conductor Maurice Ravel.

“The opening concert in September will be an incredible demonstration of the virtuosity of the musicians of the Cape Ann Symphony”, says Maestro Udagawa, “The program will be two of the most monumental and brilliant works ever written for orchestra and definitely audience favorites. Holst’s Planets requires huge forces that Holst uses brilliantly to create musical portraits of 7 planets – Mars, Venus, Mercury, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune. The composer Modest Mussorgsky’s musical interpretations written for solo piano combined with Maurice Ravel’s brilliant arrangement for orchestra of that music continues to be a favorite of audiences the world over. We are all very excited about this concert!” 


Gustav Holst had hoped to become a pianist, but was prevented by neuritis in his right arm so he pursued a career as a composer. Unable to support himself and his family by his compositions, he became a teacher at Morley College, where he served as musical director from 1907 until 1924, and at St. Paul’s Girls’ School pioneering music education for young women, where he taught from 1905 until his death in 1934. Holst’s orchestral suite The Planets was written between 1914 and 1916. Holst was inspired by astrology, with each movement intended to convey the personality and astrological character of a different planet.   Holst described The Planets as “a series of mood pictures” acting as “foils to one another” with “very little contrast in any one of them.” Although astrology was Holst’s starting point, he arranged the planets to suit his composition. He ignored some astrological factors, attributed certain non-astrological qualities to each planet and did not arrange the order of movements in the same order as that of the planets’ orbits around the sun. The suite was first performed privately in 1918 and given its first complete public performance in 1920. After its debut Gustav Holst  became an international phenomenon achieving rock star status worldwide. The suite is widely considered one of Britain’s most famous classical compositions.

Rockport’s Brittany Betts, Director of the Cape Ann Symphony Chorus, along with accompanist Priscilla Walter  is leading the 20 member Treble Chorus to perform in Holst’s The Planets. The Treble Chorus features voices from throughout the North Shore: Gloucester: Shelly Moran, Marit von Tetzchner, and Deirdre Weed; Rockport: Wendy Betts, Barbara Cornell, Betsy Eck, Barbara Ellis, Carolyn Howard, and Gail Zeman: Essex: Kate Bilsbury and Katzi Rueda; Manchester-by-the-Sea: Janet Boynton, Maureen Gedney, and Marion Hall; Beverly: Jacqueline Gravell, Karen Kepler, Sue Lupo, and Jeanie Murray; South Hamilton: Elena Lazaridu and Middleton: Stacy Smith.

Russian composer Modest Mussorgsky, wrote Pictures at an Exhibition  in 1874  as a piano suite in ten movements. A tribute to Mussorgsky’s close friend  the painter Viktor Hartmann  the work  musically depicts a tour of an exhibition of ten works at the Imperial Academy of Arts in Saint Petersburg in honor of Hartmann after his sudden death the previous year. There are ten movements in Pictures in addition to  the Promenade which is heard between the movements. Each movement of the suite is based on an individual painting.

Mussorgsky’s piano suite was orchestrated by Maurice Ravel in 1922. The collaboration was commissioned by conductor Serge Koussevitzky, who led the American premiere of Ravel’s arrangement in 1924 with the Boston Symphony Orchestra. French composer, pianist and conductor Maurice Ravel was intrigued by the piano suite’s unique style.  His arrangement re-imagined the work for a full orchestra adding French colors and textures as well as  elements of his own post-Impressionist style.

Founded in Gloucester in 1952, the Cape Ann Symphony is a professional orchestra of over 70 players from throughout the New England area. They perform a subscription season of four concerts per year plus several Pops and youth concerts. The Symphony Board of Directors named Yoichi Udagawa the Music Director and Conductor of the Cape Ann Symphony in the summer of 2000 after a yearlong search. In addition to his leadership of Cape Ann Symphony, he is Music Director and Conductor of the Melrose Symphony Orchestra, and the Quincy Symphony Orchestra and a cover conductor at the Boston Pops Orchestra.  Frequently invited to guest conduct, Maestro Udagawa has worked with many different orchestras including the Boston Pops Esplanade Orchestra, Nobeoka Philharmonic Orchestra, the Pro Arte Chamber Orchestra of Boston, the University of Texas Symphony Orchestra, the Indian Hill Symphony, the Garden State Philharmonic, the Brown University Orchestra, the Syracuse Society for New Music, the Boston Conservatory Orchestra, the Midcoast Symphony Orchestra, the Newton Symphony, the Austin Civic Orchestra, and the Mid-Texas Symphony. Maestro Udagawa is at home in popular and contemporary music as well as the standard symphonic repertoire. He is known for his relaxed manner and ability to speak from the podium which has helped new audiences as well as enthusiasts gain a greater appreciation for symphonic music. His programs often include premieres of new works – some specially commissioned for the orchestra — as well as great orchestral works across the symphonic repertoire and lively Pops programs. He is also an integral part of the Cape Ann Symphony Youth Initiative.

Yoichi Udagawa, the son of a nuclear physicist father and singer/artist mother, was born in Tokyo, Japan in 1964. His family immigrated to the United States soon thereafter. He began playing the violin at age four and made his conducting debut at age fifteen. After receiving a music degree from the University of Texas at Austin, he continued advanced studies in conducting with Gunther Schuller, Seiji Ozawa, Morihiro Okabe, and Henry Charles Smith. A fan of many different styles of music, Mr. Udagawa also enjoys performing gospel music in addition to his conducting activities. He is also an accomplished violinist and an avid fan of exercise and yoga.

-Cape Ann Symphony news

The Cape Ann Symphony Season 74 Opening Concert, The Virtuoso Orchestra! is Sunday, September 28, 2025 at 2:00 pm at the Manchester-Essex Regional High School Auditorium on 36 Lincoln Street, Manchester-by-the-Sea, MA. Manchester-Essex High School Auditorium is handicapped accessible. Ticket prices are $55 for adults, $50 for senior citizens, $20 for Students of any age with a valid student ID, $5 for Youth (12 years old and under). For information, call 978-281-0543 or visit www.capeannsymphony.org

New art show opening Oct. 4

@Jane Deering Gallery

Postcards- 7 artists affiliated with the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Opening October 4, 2025

What’s a toastie? Sugar Magnolias tasty sandwiches and french toast of the day are yummy #GloucesterMA

Sugar Magnolia’s toasties are scrumptious specialty sandwich options grilled “toasty” in a flour wrap ready to grab hold and go (with pickles and chips). This one is chicken salad with sliced apple and red grapes. The french toast of the day was cozy fall spice pumpkin with infused fluffy whip cream. Both are ample enough to share. Can’t choose? Bring a friend and split a sweet and salty order for two!

Gloucester Police Department Announces Detective Kelly Gossom as Dedicated Domestic Violence Detective

Gloucester Police Department Announces Detective Kelly Gossom as Dedicated Domestic Violence Detective
Gloucester PD Gossom
Detective Kelly Gossom has been appointed the Gloucester Police Department’s dedicated Domestic Violence Detective. In this vital role, Detective Gossom will investigate incidents of domestic violence and sexual assault, and serve as a key member of the Investigative Unit, responding on-call to serious crimes throughout the city. (Photo Courtesy Gloucester Police Department)
GLOUCESTER — The Gloucester Police Department is proud to announce the appointment of Detective Kelly Gossom as the department’s dedicated Domestic Violence Detective, succeeding longtime Domestic Violence Detective Ron Piscitello, who recently retired after years of distinguished service to the community. In this vital role, Detective Gossom will investigate incidents of domestic violence and sexual assault, and serve as a key member of the Investigative Unit, responding on-call to serious crimes throughout the city. Detective Gossom works closely with community-based organizations that provide critical support to victims of domestic violence and sexual assault, including Healing Abuse Working for Change (HAWC) and the Coalition for the Prevention of Domestic Abuse, (CPDA) network. Her collaborative approach ensures that victims and their families receive the resources and advocacy they need during difficult times. Demonstrating her initiative and innovation, Detective Gossom is developing a new QR code program that will be placed in both public and private locations across Gloucester. This tool connects individuals in need with immediate access to information and support services for domestic violence and sexual assault. A lifelong Gloucester resident, Detective Gossom holds a B.A. in Criminal Justice and Psychology from the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth and a Master’s degree in Criminology from Salem State University. She continues to live in Gloucester with her family and remains deeply committed to serving her community. “Detective Gossom’s appointment underscores the Gloucester Police Department’s commitment to protecting vulnerable members of our community and holding offenders accountable,” said Chief Edward Conley. “She follows in the footsteps of Detective Ron Piscitello, whose dedication set the foundation for our domestic violence response. We are confident that Detective Gossom’s expertise, compassion, and innovative approach will carry this work forward in meaningful ways.” For more information about services and resources available to victims of domestic violence or sexual assault, please contact the Gloucester Police Department at (978) 283-1212 or visit www.gloucester-ma.gov.

Gloucester Meetinghouse Foundation

Thank you, Ashley, from The Gloucester Meetinghouse Foundation.

The Gloucester Meetinghouse Foundation is honored to be presenting Trio Gaia, the graduate piano trio-in-residence at the New England Conservatory of Music in Boston, in concert at 7:30 p.m., Friday, October 10, at the Gloucester Unitarian Universalist Church in Gloucester, MA.

This is the trio’s debut in the Foundation’s 10 years of programming in the 1806 Meetinghouse, a historic landmark on the Gloucester skyline and cited in the National Register of Historic Places.
The award-winning trio’s program, titled “Convergence,” will include works by Nico Muhly, Leoš Janáček and Béla Bartok, concluding with Franz Schubert’s Piano Trio No. 2 in E Flat Major. It explores a theme of our times—conflict, both internal and external—and its resolution through music. Grant Houston, Trio Gaia’s violinist and spokesman, said, “This program offers a reflective parallel to today’s world, where divisions and struggles for resolution continue to shape our collective experience, and the search for unity persists despite discord.”

Cellist Yi-Mei Templeton and guest-artist pianist Alexa Stier will be joining Houston. The trio is the Conservatory’s most recent graduate piano trio-in-residence, performing nationally and abroad since 2018, including in Panama and Japan. Trio Gaia won first prize at the WDAV Young Chamber Musicians Competition in North Carolina and honors at other competitions.

Tickets are available at http://www.gloucestermeetinghouse.org or at the door. The Meetinghouse is at Middle and Church Streets in Gloucester, The location is most easily found via GPS using the address, 50 Middle Street. Limited parking is available on the Green in front of the church, entered from Middle Street. Access for persons with disabilities is at 10 Church Street.

The Gloucester Unitarian Universalist Church traces its history to the 1779 founding of the first Universalist church in America, a rebellious congregation that played a timely role in development of the First Amendment to the United States Constitution. The Meetinghouse Foundation is dedicated to the building’s preservation and use for and by the community.

From back-to-school germs and packed calendars to holiday travel and cold & flu season, this time of year can take a toll on your immune system

 At Prime IV Danvers The Immunity Shield Package combines our best-selling Immunity Armor IV Drip with a Vitamin D Injection to help prevent, shorten, and reduce the severity of seasonal illness so you can stay energized, focused, and well all season long! While your body gets what it needs, you’ll enjoy our 1 Hour Vacation experience — relaxing in our VIP lounge and zero-gravity massage chairs for total mind-and-body renewal.

Call or text us to book today 978-480-8142

Surfside Subs and Pizza Wednesday 9/24🍕🍔

𝓣𝓸𝓭𝓪𝔂’𝓼 𝓢𝓹𝓮𝓬𝓲𝓪𝓵𝓼
🍕Buy any 18” Pizza get an 18” Cheese for $5
🍕Buy any 16” Pizza get a 16” Cheese for $5

🎉Additional Specials for today!
🦞$15.99 Lobster Rolls
🍔 $4.99 cheeseburgers w/ Chips & Pickles
In addition to Monday and Tuesday , starting tomm Thursday will be added to the Lobster Day Deal of $13.99!!! So that means every MON TUES & THURS until we close come and get a lobster roll for just $13.99!!!

ALSO FOR LONG BEACH DAIRY 🍦

🚨🚨🚨Half Off Special for 9/24🚨🚨🚨
Vermont Maple Cremee
Sprinkled with Maple Sugar
and
Pumpkin Soft Serve
🍁🍦🎃🍦

Half off only on these two flavors for soft serve, special subject to change

✨ Women’s Fall Golf League At Harbor 9🏌️‍♀️

  • 9-hole scramble format
  • Wine flights + friendly competition
  • Cash & prizes
  • 2-player teams

Oct. 15 – Dec. 3 (Wednesdays, 6:30-8:30pm)

💲 $275 per player

📌 Sign up by Oct. 1: ana@harbor9golf.com

All skill levels welcome! Grab your girls & let’s play!

Time To Reflect

Time to Reflect. I asked a friend to take some photos of my boys down at the Marine Railways the other day and I fooled around taking some of my own shots while there. This reflection in the puddle caught my eye.

New Notecards At Pat D’s Photos!

I recently picked up my newest notecards from Cape Ann Giclee (recently moved operations to 127 Eastern Ave Suite A in the Cape Ann Marketplace) and I am thrilled to share them with you. I always trust my paper printing to James at Cape Ann Giclee! If you’ve gone to the drugstore to buy your cards recently, you know Pat D’s Photos notecards offer a great value at $3.50 each or $3 each for 4 or more. I’ll plan to be back in the shop Sunday Sept 28 from 11-3 and will be excited to share my photography trip stories with you.

Preserving Cape Ann’s Ethnic Cultural Heritage | Branded: Gloucester’s Hidden History of Enemy Aliens

 ~ Sawyer Free Library

The Sawyer Free Library is proud to host Branded: Gloucester’s Hidden History of Enemy Aliens on Saturday, September 27 from 2:00 to 4:00 p.m. The event will take place in the Library’s (brand new!) Community Room located on the ground floor level.

Join Gloucester native and writer Maria Millefoglie as she uncovers a little-known chapter of local history in her presentation Italian Immigrant: A Story of Allegiance, Loss, and Belonging in World War II.

Drawing on archives, historic newspapers, and community stories, Millefoglie reveals how World War II reshaped Gloucester’s Sicilian and Italian immigrant families. While hundreds of young men proudly enlisted in the Army, Navy, and Coast Guard, others in their households were labeled “enemy aliens,” banned from the waterfront, and stripped of their livelihoods. During this time, the U.S. Navy requisitioned some of Gloucester’s finest fishing vessels for minesweeping and patrol duty, even as German U-boats prowled the Atlantic.

Through storytelling, timelines, and photographs, Millefoglie brings to life the sacrifices of fishermen pressed into naval service, the struggles of families torn between loyalty to their new country and ties to their homeland, and the resilience of women who held households together amid fear and loss.

This presentation not only pays tribute to the past but also offers timely reflections on how history echoes in today’s debates about immigration and belonging.

This event is the first project under Preserving Cape Ann’s Ethnic Cultural Heritage, part of the broader Down the Fort: A Documentary and Archive Project, which works to capture and honor the immigrant and ethnic experiences that have long shaped Cape Ann’s cultural fabric.

Register for the presentation on Library’s calendar at sawyerfreelibrary.org.

The Sawyer Free Library is located at 2 Dale Avenue in Gloucester. For details on all the Library’s services and upcoming programming visit: sawyerfreelibrary.org.