
Michael Forgette Playing Minglewood Thursday Night!

My View of Life on the Dock


Are you interested in taking an in-person boating safety education course? Classes are starting to be scheduled throughout the Commonwealth and will continue to be added as they become available. To view the current list of courses and to register, please visit: https://www.mass.gov/service-details/boating-safety-course-schedule.
The Boat Massachusetts program is NASBLA-accredited and reciprocal nationwide.
https://www.mass.gov/service-details/boating-safety-course-schedule
Hello Joey,
As you continue to report on everything-Gloucester, please consider telling your readers about Brace Cove’s Community Grants. See: www.bracecove.org
Brace Cove Community Grants are in the amount of $500 to $1000 and intended for projects to enrich our community. We make these grants easily accessible to nonprofits by eliminating a formal application process and responding quickly to project ideas. Examples include Amy Kerr’s “I am More” project and Seaside Sustainability’s seaside clean-up efforts.
I hope you’ll share this information with your readers.
Thank you!
Lianna, Nancy & Walter

Meet vendors in every category in preparation for your wedding day. While you’re here, you will have the opportunity to mingle with all of our exclusive preferred vendors while viewing one of of the North Shore’s premier wedding venues, Cruiseport Gloucester. The fun filled evening will be hosted by 617 Event Group!
@617weddings
We will also be showcasing Beauport Cruiseline, docked just outside Cruiseport. Specializing in all of life’s celebrations, our Cruiseship is perfect for your unique rehearsal dinner or wedding!
Go to eventbrite for tickets,or use this link:
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/512054778627
Limited Quantity Available- Reserve Yours Now. (Don’t Be The Jabroni That Waits, They Sell Out and Then You Say I Shoulda Placed My Order)
Shipping Available Upon Request Once They Come In.
White Beach Towels 30×60 inches with Da Logo!
*No Plovers Were Harmed In The Production Of This Beach Towel. Thank You.


Save Our Beaches – Eat More Plovers Beach Towel No Shipping.
White Beach Towels 30×60 inches with “sleeping” plover large and In the middle of the towel. You will be notified when the towels come in. *No Plovers Were Harmed In The Production Of This Beach Towel. Thank You.
$36.00

4 Pack Discount: Save Our Beaches – Eat More Plovers Beach Towel No Shipping.
4 White Beach Towels 30×60 inches with “sleeping” plover large and In the middle of the towel. You will be notified when the towels come in. *No Plovers Were Harmed In The Production Of This Beach Towel. Thank You.
$120.00


Here are a few updates and highlights from the Mayor’s office and City Hall this week:
➡️ MassDevelopment’s Northeast team presented an overview of MassDevelopment programs to local officials from neighboring Cape Ann communities at Gloucester City Hall this week. The presentation included information on their traditional lending services, Brownfield financing, Collaborative Workspace Programs, and Real Estate services. It was an excellent opportunity to collaborate and connect with local leaders from neighboring communities.
➡️ The Action Plan for MBTA Communities form has been submitted to the Massachusetts Department of Housing and Community Development to put the City into temporary compliance with State law. The Action Plan includes a high-level timeline for the City’s Comprehensive Planning Initiative and general next steps in the process. To view the submitted Action Plan and for the most up-to-date and accurate information regarding the State Mandated Zoning, please visit: https://bit.ly/401W0Ct
➡️ Fourteen projects were approved for funding from the Community Preservation Fund this week. These include historical, community housing, open space, and recreation projects – totaling over $1 million in funding support. After a thoughtful and rigorous process, the Community Preservation Committee recommended these meaningful projects for funding. To learn more about the Community Preservation Committee, please visit: https://bit.ly/3RjIhmr
I welcome any questions or feedback, so don’t hesitate to contact my office by email (mayor@gloucester-ma.gov) or phone (978-281-9700). A reminder that comments are not monitored 24/7 – phone or email is the best way to contact my office.
So you call any of these restaurants and they contact Delivery shark to get your food to you



One day he’s gonna open up a restaurant and he’s gonna kill it.
Submitted by: Carol A. Kelly, Gloucester Cemeteries Advisory Committee

On a recent visit to Bayview Cemetery, I stood stunned before four gravestones that had been vandalized. Unfortunately this does sometimes happen– but this time I wasn’t looking at graffiti tags or off-color drawings. Instead, someone had used either a Sharpie or black paint to trace over part of the carved names and dates on the stones. Did they think that they were making the stone more readable? Did they mean well? Sadly, whatever the intention, the ugly stark black now standing out against the beautiful white stone is still vandalism.
The Cemeteries Advisory Committee of Gloucester and its wonderful volunteers have been working hard for the past several years to restore our cemeteries. This means spending hours cleaning the stones and removing moss and lichen, as well as stains from weathering…. and now we also have to figure out how to get rid of whatever this is.
The four vandalized stones are all markers for a single family, the Joneses. I wonder if the vandal was worried that the inscriptions were fading with time and weather and were at risk of being lost. I wish they had been aware that the Committee (and a lot of volunteers) have worked hard to create an online database of the inscriptions in our cemeteries, making sure that the information is available to the people of Gloucester. Perhaps, if our vandal had known that, they wouldn’t have felt the need to damage these markers.
That database is actually the culmination of a project that began well over a century ago, in 1890. That was when the City of Gloucester, concerned about losing grave inscriptions to the years and the weather, paid a Civil War veteran named William Dolliver to travel through the Gloucester Cemeteries (and some Rockport ones as well) and record all the inscriptions. Our project, which began five years ago, took his handwritten records from the City Archives, transcribed them and digitized them; they are now available to everyone on the Cemeteries Advisory Committee website: https://gloucester-ma.gov/1073/Dollivers-Cemetery-Inscriptions. There, our well-intentioned vandal could have read the inscriptions for the Jones family, and perhaps with that reassurance would have left the stones alone.
As we prepare to celebrate Gloucester’s 400th anniversary, our cemeteries offer so many ways to remember our history and the people who made it, even as we continue to work to preserve and restore these places and these markers. We urge anyone concerned about the state of specific gravestones, or about the risks of losing an inscription, to visit the Dolliver online archive and/or contact the committee rather than attempt any kind of DIY restoration– especially with paint or a Sharpie! Good intentions aside, Mary B. Jones, and her family, deserve better.

Each spring, Backyard Growers hosts a calendar of workshops and community events to empower people to grow their own food and connect neighbors over the shared experience of vegetable gardening. Check out the full calendar below – save the dates and register (where necessary!)
All workshops are $15 general admission / FREE for Backyard Growers program participants (e.g. Community Garden, Backyard Garden, and GrowBag Garden Programs managed by Backyard Growers)
🥕 In-Person Workshop: DIY Healthy Soil Amendments @ February 23
🌿 Virtual Workshop: How to Start Seeds Indoors @ March 8
🐝 Community Event: Free Seed Giveaway – Seeds to Start Indoors @ March 9
🦋 Community Event: Free Seed Giveaway & Swap at Burnham’s Field @ April 1
🍅 In-Person Workshop: How to Plan Your Vegetable Garden @ April 8
🌽 Virtual Workshop: How to Plan Your Vegetable Garden @ April 12
🌱 Community Event: April Seedling Sale (Online…
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Bill Wrinn submits:_
Seeking Clayton Stockbridge

I’m doing some Gloucester 400/local theatre research and wondering if anyone knows of any living relatives or friends of Clayton B. Stockbridge (1895-1973), known back in his day as “The Plumber Playwright of Gloucester.”
He was married to the late Agnes (Ballantyne) Stockbridge, and apparently had no offspring. He retired from the William Swett Company in 1954.
If you think you can help, please DM or email me at wmwrinn@gmail.com. One of his plays will be performed this summer as part of the Gloucester 400 celebration and we’d love to know more about him. Thank you!
(Photo: Gloucester Daily Times July 23, 1953)
Hello Joey,
Just a thought and you may be the right person to implement it:
At Blackburn Circle there is no food facility. With all of the businesses, schools, Gloucester Biotech Academy,
Spaulding, and doctors offices, etc.,
and not enough time for all of those people to run out on breaks or at lunch to get food, I though that having one or more food trucks driving through that area on a daily basis would really help a lot of people!
Do you think posting about this problem would get some attention of local food vendors and get them up to that part of town? Would be a great year-round business for food vendors.
Thank you,
Anonymous
P.S. Please don’t post my name or email address.
Thank you again for listening.

The Sawyer Free Library is pleased to announce some exciting additions and promotions to the staff at the start of this new year.
Meghan O’Neill has recently joined SFL as a new Community Librarian with a focus on serving newcomers and the Gloucester High School teen community. Joella Allen is the new Digital Services Librarian responsible for managing digital learning programs and digital resource access through SFL’s website. In addition, Joann Dunajski has been promoted to the newly created position of Customer Experience Supervisor, and Leah Svensson to the role of Community Librarian.
“I am thrilled to say that there are two more dynamic reasons to visit the Sawyer Free Library at 21 Main Street with the addition of Joella and Meg to our dedicated and talented staff. I am also delighted to share the news of the well-deserved promotions of Joanne and Leah,” stated Jenny Benedict, the Sawyer Free Library Director…
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Diane B photos

