ELSIE crew, 1921

Al Bezanson submits-

from verso:  "Elsie's crew, 1921 International Fishermen's Races."  photo: Cox Bros., Halifax N.S.
Gardner Lamson Collection

From the collections of the CAPE ANN MUSEUM, Gloucester, Massachusetts

Elsie’s crew, 1921 International Fishermen’s Races (photo:  Cox Bros., Halifax, Nova Scotia)  Capt. Marty Welch.

Fred Buck has pitched in to help the Schooner Festival committee recruit entries and increase public awareness of the original International Fishermen’s Races.  This is one of several photographs of ELSIE the Cape Ann Museum is sharing for our use.

From A Race for Real Sailors   The first ELSIE – BLUENOSE race.

______ The combination of wind and too much sail proved to be more than the ELSIE could bear.  First to go was her jib topsail halyard.  As a crewman scampered out onto her bowsprit to re-reeve the halyard, the bow plunged deeply into the sea, burying the bowsprit to the third hank of her jib.  Moments later, the foremast snapped off at the cap and both jib topsail and staysail came down in a mess of wire stays and rigging.  Without missing a beat, the crew set about clearing up the wreckage.  The mate and a couple of fishermen headed out on the bowsprit to cut away the jib topsail that was now dragging under the forefoot.  “Down into the jumping sea went the bowsprit and the three sailors were plunged under five feet of water.  They cut away the sail and brought it in with the crew behind them hauling it inboard through the green-white smother.”  Those aloft worked frantically to secure the topmast, assorted wires, blocks and halyards.

Within six minutes the ELSIE, under forcefully shortened sail, appeared to be making better time than before.  Angus Walters reacted in the spirit of sportsmanship by immediately dousing his own jib topsail and clewing up his main topsail.  _______                               

Al Bezanson

Community Stuff 5/22/13

Cape Ann Farmers’ Market

May 2013

Only 1 More Month!

It’s almost time! Summer Market begins on Thursday, June 20.

Big News! Winter Market Coming Soon! Starting this fall CAFM will have an off-season market. The Winter Market will take place the 3rd Saturday of the month and run March thru December.


Save the Date: August 22
Community Picnic, 6 p.m.

Live Music and food vendors
(after the market & Seafood Throwdown)


Register for

"The 9th Annual Reid’s Ride 28-Mile Bike-a-thon"

http://www.reidsride.org

Altering the course for Adolescents and Young Adult Cancers!
See you on Sunday July 21, 2013!

Ride with friends and/or family in MEMORY of those we lost and in HONOR of those now in the battle.

"Reid’s Ride "is a bicycling event to raise funds to fight adolescents and young adults (AYA) cancers.  Reid’s Ride 28 mile bike-a-thon is on Sunday July 21, 2013. The Ride starts at Lynnfield High School. Registration is at 6:30 am and we start riding at 7:30am. We ride through Middleton, Danvers, Beverly, Manchester and end at Stage Fort Park in Gloucester.  The route is well-marked and is supported by technical and safety chase teams from Lyons Ambulance, Cape Ann Amateur Radio, Landry’s Bicycles and volunteer motorcycle escorts.  The ride finished Stage Fort Park with festivities, music, prizes, MIX104 .1 ice cream truck, music provided by B-Yond Music and a barbeque featuring specialty burgers courtesy of Fuddruckers . Pizza from Papa Gino’s  and refreshments including cold beverages courtesy of Dunkin Donuts Lead Event Sponsor!

A unique aspect of this Ride is that it is organized by and for young adults. Together with your support they will bring a brighter day for the futures of those adolescents and young adults diagnosed with cancer. Please visit our website http://www.reidsride.org[reidsride.org] OR http://www.cancersinyoungadults.org/[cancersinyoungadults.org] They are full with information about our Ride and foundation.

"Reid’s Ride" is a do-able, healthy, fun and affordable way to participate in the battle against young adult cancers. It is the primary fund-raising event for the Reid Sacco AYA Cancer  Fund. That Fund supports clinical and scientific research targeted at finding better treatments-and someday a cure-for the cancers that predominantly strike young adults. The Reid Sacco AYA Cancer Alliance is an organization of volunteers committed to raising funds and awareness for AYA cancer patients.  The Ride is tirelessly organized and run by Alliance volunteers, with the support of local community organizations and of both large and small businesses.

"Reid’s Ride Volunteers" If you are unable to ride, perhaps you would like to volunteer in this year’s Ride? If interested , please email me and I or Meaghan get back to you! 

Jim Dowd and The Why Gloucester Is Hipster (and that’s not a bad thing) Rant

Jim Dowd submits-

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I want to talk about an ugly word in the English language that’s come back into common usage. It’s a word that ends in “er” and is thrown around as a blanket descriptor to disparage a specific population of people. Usually it’s spat out of a passing car window or muttered under the breath as it becomes noticeable this group has taken over a favorite café or bar.

You hear it out for a beer with your once-cool uncle, the guy who dropped out of college in the seventies to follow The Grateful Dead. You assume he’s a tolerant dude, but as it turns out, oh no. He leans over to you and snarls through his Sam Adams, “Can you believe all the fukin’ hipsters in this place?”

Yes, I’m taking on the pejorative overuse of the word “hipster” which many of us knew before it got popular. For years it was a way to explain places like Brooklyn, Seattle, even our own Davis Square in Somerville. It described cities with large numbers of young people; places with organic art and music scenes and certain cultural touchstones like independent theatres, small coffee shops and used book and record stores. Those are the things that make a place “hipsterish” or as I call it “worth bothering to live in.”

But increasingly of late I hear more and more people hating on the actual members of this rather large and ill-defined sub-group, the hipsters themselves. They bash the hipsters’ choice of jeans (skinny) hipster’s facial hair (moustaches or beards) and the hipsters’ preferred form of transportation (fixed-gear bikes or “fixies”). It’s kind of relentless and a little bit lame considering many of us participated in the fashion apocalypses of the 70s and 80s. Hypocrisy aside, I’m not suggesting we avoid clowning hipsters because of some dumbass PC thing. The reason we can’t bash hipsters is, as the hipsters say, “Because Gloucester”.

Seriously gang, we are in no position to down hipsters seeing as Gloucester very simply is the most hipster town that’s ever existed on the face of the Earth. We make Portland Oregon look like frigging Wenham. Gloucester is so hipster we should have a giant fedora lowered onto the City Hall tower. So hipster that someone here driving a K-car wearing a silkscreened wolf sweatshirt with giant 80’s glasses ISN’T TRYING TO BE HISPTER. Let’s examine further, shall we?

Dive bars? Check. Thriving arts community? Check. Music scene that’s more than just a bunch of old dudes with ponytails playing three chord cover songs in lame bars? Check. Vintage vinyl outlet, bike shop, Thai food, sushi, indie bookstore, organic grocery, farmers’ market, coffee shops and other key elements of hiprfrastructure ? All check. Unapologetically gritty? Big fat checkity-check-check.

But most importantly the things that hipsters celebrate, the retro-style cultural items of the 70s and 80s never actually went away in Gloucester. Moustaches, for instance. We still got ‘em, unironically huge ones proudly sported by awesome Italian guys. Beat-up old cars and trucks from that era are still “in vogue” here; if “vogue” were translated to mean “I am keeping this POS running one more year, but only as an on-island.” Beyond appearances, for 400 years we’ve been a kind of “anything goes” culture. Everyone has permission to be a little nuts and oddballs of all stripes suffer no consequences. Far from it, being a whack job can be a badge of honor in “America’s Oddest Seaport”

Scroll up and down. A solid chunk of the stuff that gets celebrated on GMG is crazy-totes hipster. Photography, art, food, film, poetry and literature all = hipster. And I shouldn’t even need to point out that adults playing dodgeball in the winter is only slightly less hipster than donning a vest and joining Mumford and Sons as a back-up banjoist. You couldn’t invent a more hipster place if you tried, from historical art colony to ethnic identity to the fact that our key export is fishsticks, unarguably the most ironic food item ever produced.

“But what about the annoying skinny pants and the fixed-gear bikes?” In response to that complaint all I can ask is: Yell at clouds much? Because being vexed at other people’s fashion choices in no way makes you seem like the kind of person who would shout gibberish at the sky while shaking a cane, really.

The next criticism leveled at hipsters stems from the hallmark hipster “sarcastic and ironic attitude”. Look, every conference I go to for work is chock full of top strategists and analysts from business, science and the military. On the first slide of the presentations they give, we attendees are always informed that none of the old rules apply in the 21st century. They tell us that we simply don’t know what the new rules are yet. I won’t go off on a rail here, but young people already know this. They can tell that we, the responsible people who are supposedly running things, in fact have no fucking clue how to solve our problems when we even admit we have them. Irony and sarcasm then would therefore be what are called “emergent” properties.

I would further argue that the distinctly ironic bent to the hipster worldview is an entirely logical response to knowing they are being fed consistently incorrect and skewed information from the culture-at-large. Take a cold, hard look at the outdated assumptions we ask people to accept about everything from government to religion, from finances to the supposed benefits of consumer culture. Then look at the outcomes we’re experiencing. Sort of makes you want to drink cheap beer and listen to Death Cab, right?

But sarcastic or not, Gloucester fans and especially GMG readers should pray for a never-ending supply of Yo La Tengo-listening, four-barrel-espresso drinking tat-sleeved hipsters of the first order. If you love this town and what it represents you should get your ass down to Coolidge Corner and lay a trail of PBR tall boys and packs of American Sprit back here like a secret hobo trail. You know why? Because hipsters actually buy art. They spend seven bucks on coffee. The frequent both microbreweries and dive bars. They’re foodies but at the same time eat from taco trucks. Hipsters rent bikes, go to poetry readings and don’t get all pissy about a bunch of rotting fishing gear piled up on the waterfront. They instead post Instagrams of this gear with the caption “Spending a day at the seaside”.  

For every groovy restaurant that cannot survive on locals alone the answer is some flavor of visiting hipster. Locals can only buy so many objects d’art, can support only so many coffeehouses and will attend only a set number of photo exhibitions. If we want to move toward a creative economy we have no choice but importing cultural consumers. Look at what hipsters have done for the emerging scenes in Salem and Beverly. Both are getting hipper, you can see previously broken down neighborhoods sporting new cafes and shops because instead of going to malls hipsters seek authentic local culture. We can argue about the cod population off the coast, but a land-based resource Gloucester still maintains in huge stocks is persons of authentic indigenous “color”, just read the police notes. We need to start capitalizing on it.

“Isn’t this gentrification?” No. It’s not gentrification. Gentrification is townhouses, Starbucks, lame chain restaurants like “Not Your Average Joe’s” (correction: It is) and dudes in khakis that list the primary attribute they look for in a city as “abundant parking.” Hipsters don’t mind the rough edges and Gloucester has plenty. If you harbor an unreasonable hate for bikes, art-school-dropout-glasses and anachronistic hairstyles, tolerating them will be a small price to pay for visitors who’ll come downtown and spend eighty bucks on coffee, pie and locally made/vintage consumer goods. That money stays in town.

In closing, I’ll relate a discussion I had with my Irish cousin Chris about the then thriving city of Dublin. I was complimenting him about what an amazing job they had done keeping a heavy Victorian feel while so many other European cities were modernist dullscapes of concrete and glass, completely lacking in character of any kind (I used to go to Frankfurt a lot). He looked at me like I was some kind of moron and said, “Well it wasn’t some kind of preservationist council at work, James. We were fekin’ poor.”

Gloucester is not poor, nor rich nor is it anything easily definable. But like Dublin one way or another we held onto our undeniably authentic selves while so many other places became emblanded. Therefore we should heartily embrace those who put the most value on us as we are today, not as how we would be if we…(insert pet project).

So though it’s not a mainstream thing to do, as a start I’m asking you that the next time someone with tattoos from out of town is taking pictures with an instamatic camera of the same kind you threw out of your mother’s attic twenty years ago, don’t sneer and pretend you’re some kind of “normal” person who isn’t “weird”. Instead go up and say, “Thank you”. You probably have more in common with them than you realize.

Because, to somebody, you my friend are a fukin’ hipster.

Hands Across the Sand 2013 Photos

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Archie Kasnet submits-

Joey,

Many thanks for the shout out!!

Here are some photos from the day, it was a beaute!!

click for photos-

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ONLY A COUPLE WEEKS LEFT- 2013 SEASON WATER SHUTTLE PASSES AT A HUGE DISCOUNT LIMITED TIME

“WATER SHUTTLE PASSES” for the 2013 season now available. $ 50.00 before June 15th. After June 15th $ 75.00
send check or money order to:  Harbor Tours, Inc. 1 Daniel Roy Road, Gloucester, MA. 01930
email:   harbortours@gmail.com

Passes will be mailed upon receipt of funds.
Harbor Tours, Inc.
Gloucester, MA., America’s Oldest Seaport

click the pictures below for videos

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CHAMBER ANNOUNCES 2013 CAPE ANN SMALL BUSINESS WEEK WINNERS

CHAMBER ANNOUNCES 2013 CAPE ANN SMALL BUSINESS WEEK WINNERS!!!

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The Cape Ann Chamber of Commerce is pleased to announce the 2013 Small Business Award Winners who will be saluted during Cape Ann Small Business Week, June 3-7. This year’s recipients, Daisy Nell and Stan Collinson, former owners of Gaybrook Garage in Essex, Jan Bordinaro, owner of the Atlantis Oceanfront Inn in Gloucester, John Donovan, owner of Manchester Athletic Club in Manchester and Kathy Milbury and Barbara Stavropoulos, owners of My Place by the Sea in Rockport, will be honored at the Chamber’s 33rd Annual Small Business Week Luncheon on Friday, June 7, beginning at 11:30 am at the Castle Manor Inn, 141 Essex Avenue, Gloucester. 

The 2013 Cape Ann Chamber Small Business Week Luncheon will feature a keynote address by Robert Nelson, Director of the Small Business Administration’s Massachusetts District Office, on the importance of small business in leading the economic recovery.

The program is designed to recognize the extraordinary contributions of Cape Ann’s small business community for exemplary entrepreneurial achievement as well as notable civic and community involvement. This year’s Small Business Award winners will also be the guests of honor at complimentary receptions in their respective communities during Cape Ann Small Business Week. Please visit www.capeannchamber.com for a complete schedule of these receptions.

Friends, family members, and colleagues of all small business honorees are invited and encouraged to attend the receptions and the luncheon. Tickets for the luncheon are available to members for $35 in advance or $40 week/day of and $50 for future members.

For more information or to RSVP for this event, please contact Emily Harris, emily@capeannchamber.com or call the Chamber at 978-283-1601.

If Someone Handed You a Sandwich That Clearly Had Been Opened And A Bite Taken Out Of It

and never mentioned it had been previously eaten…

Would you eat it?

2013-05-21 14.46.31 - Copy

 

This is how the wrapper looked like after it came out of the bag-

2013-05-21 14.46.16

Roseway’s Fun for Good

Al submits-

http://www.worldoceanschool.org/get-onboard/special-events/fun-for-good

Roseway has just returned from the Virgin Islands and here is an opportunity to view this historic Essex-built schooner up close.  If you go, be sure to let them know that Gloucester is excited to have them back in the Mayor’s Race this year.  Here she is in the 2008 Gloucester Schooner Race.  (Al Bezanson photo)

Roseway at GSF 06-2

Tornado Videos From Yesterday

I’ll never understand storm chasers.

At 2 minutes into this video I’m outtie like a MOFO!

If this doesn’t bring a tear to your eye you’re a monster and I don’t want to know you-

Okla. tornado survivor finds dog buried alive under rubble

Barbara Garcia, a survivor of the massive tornado that struck an Oklahoma City suburb, found her dog buried alive under the rubble during her interview with CBS News’ Anna Werner.

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Launch Ceremonial Poem and Press Release From Tony Gross

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The City of Gloucester is proud to announce the start-up of a launch service in its beautiful harbor.  The launch is a first-class, 26-foot, 24-passenger, solid fiberglass “Duffy” built by Atlantic Boat Company.  “This launch service will provide boaters a convenient gateway to Gloucester’s shops, museums, the Rocky Neck and the Gloucester Harbortown Cultural Districts, restaurants and shore-side amenities,” said Mayor Carolyn A Kirk.    

Gloucester Welcomes Cruising Boaters

The launch will provide cruising boaters with a safe option for bringing bulky loads to and from shore – e.g., laundry to the laundromat, groceries, or a mechanical part that was repaired in one of Gloucester’s marine repair shops.  As a cruiser’s port-of-call, Gloucester also has showers available for $2 at the YMCA for those who really want more than a sailor’s shower.  We offer pump-out service to your vessel.  Ice and water can be purchased at the local icehouse.  Gloucester has always been the best port on the North Shore for servicing all types of vessels, and now with the launch service, cruising boaters have a safe, dry and convenient option for getting ashore.

Day Boaters Can Enjoy Gloucester

Day boaters will now be able to come to Gloucester and have access to downtown using the launch.  Boaters will be able to pick up available City guest moorings or drop anchor in the large Federal anchorage conveniently located in the center of the inner harbor, under the watchful eye of the Harbormaster’s staff.  From these locations, boaters will be able to hail the launch on VHF channel 72 or call 978-942-0660 for a lift to one of Gloucester Harbor’s three public floats or the Historic Art Colony at Rocky Neck.

From these landing points boaters can enjoy:

  • A meal in one of our many excellent restaurants

  • A relaxing cup of coffee or tea in the coffee and tea houses

  • Shopping in the many fine shops

  • A visit to the museums

  • A visit to one of our salons and spas

  • A stroll along the historic and picturesque Harbor Walk

City Mooring Holders

The launch service will also be provided for Gloucester’s mooring holders that are within its service area. The ability to get to and from your vessel conveniently will enhance the enjoyment of the day.

Contact: Jim Caulkett, Harbormaster

978-282-3012

jcaukett@gloucester-ma.gov

Ceremonial Poem read By Tony Gross At Launch

TO THE SEA…TO THE SAILORS BEFORE US…TO the Gloucesterman

For thousands of years, we have gone to sea. We have crafted vessels to carry us and we have called them by name. This boat will nurture and care for us through perilous seas, and so we affectionately call her “she.” To them we ask to celebrate the Gloucesterman.

TO THE SEA…TO THE SAILORS BEFORE US…TO the Gloucesterman

The moods of the sea are many, from tranquil to violent. We ask that this boat be given the strength to carry on. The keel is strong and she keeps out the pressures of the sea.

TO THE SEA…TO THE SAILORS BEFORE US…TO the Gloucesterman

Today we come to name this lady and send her to sea to be cared for, and to care for the Suffern Crew. We ask the sailors of old and the mood of God that is the sea to accept this name, to help her through her passages, and allow her to return with her crew safely.

TO THE SEA…TO THE SAILORS BEFORE US…TO the Gloucesterman

We now pour champagne over the bow to appease King Neptune, and lay a branch of green leaves on the deck to ensure safe returns.

TO THE SEA…TO THE SAILORS BEFORE US…TO the Gloucesterman

Getting Ready for Memorial Day!

Melissa Cox Submits-

Spanish American War Memorial & Austin Connors Memorial Garden

Clean up and planting by Bruce Tobey, William Cox and Melissa Cox.

Plants are from Russell’s Florists and Goose Cove Nursery. 

Community Stuff 5/21/13

Hi Joey,

Per our chat on Friday, I have attached a poster for the Sawyer Free Library book sale which will take place on May 31 and June 1, 2013. On behalf of the Friends of the Sawyer Free Library, I’d like to thank-you for running our previous ad soliciting books. Well it was successful and now we are swamped in books (a good thing). Now we just need to attract buyers as we have some wonderful books and the price is right.  We would appreciate it if you could run our ad once or twice over the next two weeks. All proceeds are used to supplement library programs and services.

As I mentioned, we do have an early purchase program for Friends of the Sawyer Free Library on Thursday, May 30th from 4-7. You can sign-up to be a Friend at the book sale and the membership would run to September, 2014.

We hope to see you at the book sale. Again many thanks for assisting us to raise funds for the library.  Also thank-you for this email address as the other failed to deliver.

Kecia German

Friends of the Sawyer Free Library

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ROCKY NECK GALLERY LAUNCHES AN ARTFILLED SEASON

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Rocky Neck Gallery opens for the 2013 season, Friday, May 24th, with a bold look, fresh art and new artist members along with lots of art events in the weeks ahead!  Rocky Neck Gallery (RNG) is a juried artists’ cooperative featuring original and distinctive contemporary art by members of the Rocky Neck Art Colony.  We feature 30 artists offering original works in painting, jewelry, photography, sculpture, pottery, mosaic and printmaking.  This year the gallery welcomes new artists: Kathleen Gerdon Archer for photography; Pam Stratton for mosaics; Skip Montello for photography; and Roland Cornelis for sculpture. 
On Saturday, May 25th, from 6-8 PM the gallery will host its opening reception.  The public is invited to attend.  Along with exciting new displays of members’ artwork the gallery launches the Summer Artist Series (SAS) featuring popular New England artists.  The SAS has seven three week shows for the 2013 season.
Opening the SAS lineup is wire sculpture artist Brian Murphy of Boston showing his steel wire figures.  Brian’s work has been described, “as lighthearted line drawings in the medium of steel wire.”  The show, “Totally Wired at the Beach,” opens Friday, May 24 to June 11. 
Please join us Saturday night, May 25th for our opening reception from 6-8 PM, meet Brian Murphy and all the artists of Rocky Neck Gallery.  RNG is located on 53 Rocky Neck Avenue, Gloucester.  The hours are: Sunday – Wednesday: 11 AM – 6 PM, Thursday – Saturday: 11 AM – 8 PM.  Parking is available.
Rocky Neck Gallery 53 Rocky Neck Ave
Gloucester, MA 01930  978-282-0917
http://www.rockyneckgallery.com


THE SCHOONER CHALLENGE out of Gloucester Harbor on Monday, June 17th LIMITED TICKETS AVAILABLE CALL NOW!

Join the crews for this once-in-a-lifetime event!

THE SCHOONER CHALLENGE out of Gloucester Harbor on Monday, June 17th 6pm-8pm.

The three Essex-built schooners are, Thomas E. Lannon, Ardelle and Fame.

This fun-filled Challenge will benefit the Essex Shipbuilding Museum’s 86 year-old

Schooner Evelina M. Goulart. This would make an ideal club, association or family team event!

For more information, and to buy tickets now, please visit our Museum’s secure web site:

http://www.essexshipbuildingmuseum.org/details-of-our-next-events-27.html#SchoonerChallenge.

Don’t Delay–Limited tickets are available so sign-on NOW.

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Marsh Milkweed from Brooke Welty

Brooke writes-

Hi Joey, 

I wanted to pass along a picture to you and Kim of the milkweed I just got. You can’t really see it, as it’s in the back. I made some helpful arrows so you know where they are.

Brooke

flowers

What a beautiful garden!

CBS and Boston Magazine Cover Our Darth Maul Lobster

Here Is a Lobster that Looks Like Darth Maul
Because Monday.

By Eric Randall | Boston Daily | May 20, 2013 11:52 am

Gloucester Lobsterman Lands Darth Maul Look-A-Like

May 20, 2013 11:13 AM

darth maul, Gloucester, joey c, Lobster

 

Darth Maul Lobster (Photo Courtesy GoodmorningGloucester.com) & Darth Maul (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)

Darth Maul Lobster (Photo Courtesy GoodmorningGloucester.com) & Darth Maul (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)

GLOUCESTER (CBS)

Make Room On The Trophy Shelf- Gloucester Brings Home The Gold Again, Natch

Sarah Garcia forwards-

The results from the national competition for the MUSE awards are in:

The HarborWalk Walking Cinema won the GOLD!  Go Gloucester! 

In our category – "Audio Tours & Podcasts" – the winners were:

Gold – Walking Cinema: Posts from Gloucester, Maritime Gloucester and Untravel Media

Silver – Riddle of the Room family, Barnes Foundation

Bronze – The History Explorer, National Museum of American History

Peter Sollogub from Cambridge 7 Associates tells us that in the history of the MUSE awards, they have only won a gold once:  for the Patriots Hall of Fame!  We are in good company.  (and aren’t we in the Patriots Hall of Fame too?!)

Thank you Cambridge 7 Associates for designing a Walk with the originality and quirkiness of Gloucester.  The Walking Cinema are great fun!

Best to all,

Sarah Garcia


Catherine Ryan adds-

h, my goodness. The nomination itself is an achievement. Gold– Congratulations!  2013 HarborWalk = MUSE AWARD WINNER

2012 Last year’s winner in the same category went to 2 museums partnering: the Philadelphia Museum of Art with the African American Museum of Philadelphia (gold). The silver went to the Getty (as it did in 2010).

2011 gold was LA Museum of the Holocaust

2010 gold was Chicago History Museum

2009 gold was Mauerguide: Walk the Wall (Berlin Wall)

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There’s always competition and big players vying (eg Whitney and MoMa last year winning in other categories). It’s definitely good company to be in. I can’t wait to hear the complete 2013 list and see Gloucester in the mix.

Sincerely,

Catherine

Community Photos 5/20/13

Nubar Alexanian submits-

Chris Thomas on the board early this morning all the way over here in the Essex River.  His first first of the season: 29 inches.  We had an excellent morning of fishing.

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New Launch Boat Submitted By Judy Caulkette

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The View That Never Disappoints from Ann Kennedy-

Could stand here forever watching whatever comes and goes. 

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