Art in Schoolhouse
What a list of great local artists that are showing at this Art event.
Skip Montello
Phil Cusumano
Leslie Heffron
Sue Ann Pearson
Kathy Roberts
Deb Nypaver
Josiah Bedrosian
Susan Drennan
Robert Williams
Mary Anne Brewer
Rusty Kinnunen
Abby Quinn
Audi Souza
Judy Robinson-Cox
Wilmarie Torres
Joey Ciaramitaro
Laureen Maher
Donna Ardizzoni
Erin Pequeno
Lara Barnett
Bridgette Matthews
Powers-Smith and daughter
Amy Bain
A Few More Pics From Last Night
June 1, 2015 GHS Senior Moose Lodge #1471 and Women of the Moose Chapter#896 Youth Awareness Speaker Award’s Ceremony
The annual G.H.S./MOOSE Youth Awareness Program recently awarded scholarships to this year’s senior speakers. The program, now in its seventh year, features GHS student leaders, developing and facilitating mentoring skits, at Gloucester’s five elementary schools. The speaker’s unique themes are aimed at advising their youthful peers in proper responses on topics including Positivity, Recycling, Making Good Decisions, Being Yourself, Importance of Reading, and Goal Setting.
Left to right Linda O’Maley, Junior Grad of Moose Chapter #896 and Jason Psalidas, Governor of Moose Lodge #1471, Val Gilman, Skit Coach, GHS Principal Erik Anderson, GHS Youth Awareness Liaison Don Riley, and far right is GHS Youth Awareness Advisor, Rory Gentile
Sitting left to right in the GHS main lobby are GHS senior $200.00 scholarship winners Tess Benson, Tess Destino (who was also awarded $3,000 for her national presentation this month in Orlando, Florida and a $500.00 district award), Kelly Hurd, (also awarded $500.00 scholarship for her speeches to Gloucester Elementary School K-4th graders) and Jaqi McCarthy, $200.00 scholarship winner. GHS Senior $200.00 scholarship recipients in back row include Everest Crawford, left, and Bart Margiotta, right.
Left to right front row… Linda O’Maley, Junior Grad of Moose Chapter #896 and Program Liaison; $3,000 national, and $500 District, scholarship winner Tess Destino; $500.00, District scholarship winner Kelly Hurd; and Rory Gentile, GHS Teacher/Youth Awareness Advisor.
Left to right back row… Valerie Gilman, Skit Coach, Don Riley Youth Awareness Liaison, and Jason Psalidas, Governor of Moose Lodge #1471
Who Sees weasels? Al Bezanson, That’s Who!
Our boy Al Bezanson submits-
Pop!
I was approaching my back steps and focusing a telephoto lens on these flowers when up popped a weasel. He appeared for just a few seconds three times, and I managed this quick shot on his last pop. He seemed to be staring me down, and my expression mirrored his I’d guess. I was very happy to see him, for a single weasel typically kills hundreds of mice in a year.
Have you ever seen a weasel? Fairly certain I haven’t. Is that weird that I haven’t seen a weasel?
Cape Ann Chambers Small Business Person of the year
What a wonderful evening at the Studio for our Joey, Cape Ann Chamber of Commerce small business person of the year. So proud of Joey. He does so much to make for our community.
You Know Our Lobsterman Who Everybody Loves- Tuffy? Well His Daughter Launched A Metallic Tattoo Brand- TribeTats. check ‘Em out!
![]()
Check It Out Here- http://www.tribetats.com/
Seems like a pretty cool and NON-permanent way to add a little fun to someone’s style-
From the site-
TribeTats is the highest quality metallic tattoo brand, representing the intersection of jewelry, tattoos and body art.
Using only the best materials to create non-toxic body jewelry with a deluxe adhesive that lasts for up to six days, TribeTats is raising the bar in its category.
It is also the exclusive provider of perforated sheets for easy separation — no scissors required — and Rose Gold designs. All U.S. orders ship free; worldwide shipping for only $10.
This Guy!
Thank you Johnny!
https://instagram.com/p/3ck2ZCjymz/
A Little Slice of Rockport
Safe to say that Motif No. 1, Bearskin Neck, Tuna Wharf, Halibut Point, and the shops on Main Street are amongst the Go To places when one considers Rockport as a destination. A less known, but not-to-be-missed little slice of Rockport, is Millbrook Meadow….and its Mill Pond. Together, the park and the pond, create a quaint little scenic masterpiece.
I was sad to have missed the Rubber Duck Race held in the park this past Saturday, but I knew that GMG’s Paul T. Morrison and his famous (infamous) RD were on the job.
Read his race coverage HERE
We’ve spent several quiet days grabbing lunch downtown and then sitting in the park. It is incredibly beautiful and wonderfully quiet. Located directly across from Front Beach and next to Nate’s at Front Beach is a small path that will lead you into the park. Nate’s, for the record, is one of many places in town to pick up a fantastic lunch or breakfast to eat at Millbrook Meadow!
See Nate’s Menu HERE!
Please, do yourself a favor, and read more about the park, its pretty incredible history, and the Millbrook Meadow Conservancy HERE! Great things are happening thanks to some great people. A big restoration is planned and no doubt the results will be phenomenal!
Huge Thanks To Everyone For Last Night At The Studio
What a fantastic evening. I can’t thank enough Ken , Kerry and the rest of the Staff at The Chamber of Commerce along with Greg Halle and his staff at The Studio. It was great to have Mayor Sefatia and Mayor Kirk in attendance (two great leaders) Thank you for all the representatives from the Chamber that made it down to Rocky Neck last night as well. You all made the night one to remember for our GMG Family.
My Boy John McElhenny- our friendship runs deep my man. Your introduction was tremendous!
The room- the food-the drinks-all spot on.
The thing that makes nights like last night shine above all else is the company.
Who is richer than us to be surrounded by such loving friends and family?
If I’ve said it once I’ve said it a thousand times- I’ll take my crew over anyone else’s 100 times out of a hundred and then some!
When we work as a team and pull in the same direction for good, stuff like last night happens. Let’s keep at it!

Love You Mom- Wish Dad Could Be With Us
Our Dad Would Have Been So Proud!
So Very Proud of Our Joey for Winning the CACC Gloucester Small Businessman of the Year Award
Joey gets an award.






Winners of 2015 Gloucester Citizenship Awards
Janet Young submits-
Recipients of the 2015 Gloucester Citizenship Awards pose with their certificates in the entrance hall of the 1806 Gloucester Unitarian Universalist Meetinghouse.
From left to right: Janis Bell, James Fialho, Arline Moore, Harold Burnham, Greg Bover, Mary Rhinelander McCarl, Rosemary Ginivan Attridge, Nicole Richon Schoel, Roger Armstrong, Bill Melvin, Brent “Ringo” Tarr.
Back row: Jerry Ackerman, Carol Ackerman.
Congratulations to all!
Note from Joey: See the people in this photo? Every one of them has either directly or indirectly made all of our lives better as a community and individually. They are the fabric which makes Gloucester the special place it is. Thank you for all you’ve done and thank you to the UU for holding these award nights, they are special nights which reaffirm what an incredible place we live in.
Joey Takes Over the Microphone with Heartfelt Speach!
Live From Chamber Small Businesses Man of Year Ceremony
Live Celebration! Joey C’s Party!
Come on out if you ain’t here already! It’s the big night celebrating GMG and Joey C’s contribution to the community and its businesses!!!! We’re live @ The Studio in Rocky Neck
Schooner Roseway at the Gloucester Marine Railways
We love living up the hill from the Gloucester Marine Railways–never a dull moment!
History of the Gloucester Marine Railways from the Railways website:
“In 1855, Dodd & Tarr Fisheries was started on the tip of Rocky Neck in Gloucester Harbor. As the fisheries business grew to encompass a wharf, a grocery store, warehouses and 15 schooners, the need arose for a way to repair and maintain the fishing vessels. In 1859, the company constructed the first of two marine railways on the northern-most tip of their property on Rocky Neck. From then until about 1970, the Railways used a steam engine to haul up the vessels. One note of interest is that the gears used in the steam engine were produced at the same factory that built the engine for the Civil War battleship, the Monitor.
In 1874, the Tarr bothers of Gloucester took over the firm of Dodd & Tarr and by 1879 the company was listed as “Rocky Neck Marine Railways Association”. The name “Dodd & Tarr & Co.” was reserved for the fishing business only. By 1892, the railways was maintaining 20 first class vessels. In 1907 Capt. Frederick Albert Cook reportedly brought his schooner to the Railways to be sheathed for ice and outfitted for an Arctic expedition. In the 1920s and 30s, schooners participating in the International Fishermen’s Races were hauled out at the Railways for painting and last minute repairs. In the late 1980s the Mayflower II came for repair. Recently the privately owned 128 foot Nantucket Lightship was hauled up in dry dock as she received fresh paint and maintenance.
Since 1859 the Rocky Neck Marine Railways, now known as the Gloucester Marine Railways Corp., has maintained and repaired thousands of fishing, commercial and pleasure boats from the wooden schooners of the last century to the present day steel and fiberglass vessels. A modern Travelift has recently augmented the original railways as GMRC keeps moving ahead, from one century to the next, distinguished as the oldest continuously operating marine railways in the country and a well respected member of the marine industry in the Northeast.”
Read more about the Gloucester Marine Railways Corp on their website here.
About the Schooner Roseway from the World Ocean School website:
“In the fall of 1920 a Halifax, Nova Scotia, newspaper challenged the fisherman of Gloucester, Massachusetts, to a race between the Halifax fishing schooners and the Gloucester fleet. Therefore many schooners, such as Roseway, built at this time were not strictly designed for fishing but in order to protect American honor in the annual races.
Roseway, 137′ in sparred length, was designed as a fishing yacht by John James and built in 1925 in his family’s shipyard in Essex, Massachusetts. Father and son worked side by side onRoseway, carrying on a long New England history of wooden shipbuilding. She was commissioned by Harold Hathaway of Taunton, Massachusetts, and was named after an acquaintance of Hathaway’s “who always got her way.” Despite her limited fishing history,Roseway set a record of 74 swordfish caught in one day in 1934.
Roseway was built and maintained to an exceedingly high standard, using a special stand of white oak from Hathaway’s property in Taunton. She had varnished rails and stanchions and had a house built for her every winter. She was so well maintained that the coal for the stove was washed before being stored in the bunker. This kind of treatment, which contributed to her longevity, was unheard of in the commercial fishing fleet.
On December 7, 1941, just prior to the attack on Pearl Harbor, the Boston Globe reported the purchase of Roseway by the Boston Pilots Association. In the article, the Pilots describedRoseway as “sturdily constructed of oak, the craft is fully capable of withstanding the battering of heavy seas and onslaughts of terrific gales that pilot boats maintaining the lonely vigil off Boston Harbor are called upon to meet.” Clarence Doane, agent for the Boston Pilots, stated that Roseway “approaches as close as possible to specifications of the ideal pilot boat as any vessel. . . .”
Live Celebration! Joey C’s Party!
Come on out if you ain’t here already! It’s the big night celebrating GMG and Joey C’s contribution to the community and its businesses!!!! We’re live @ The Studio in Rocky Neck



























































