Edward Hopper Exhibit

Copyright ยฉ 2023 – Cape Ann Museum. All Rights Reserved.

Adventure Calls

Adventure Calls!

New this year, Gloucester’s flagship and only National Historic Landmark vessel will be located at PierI4C2 during Gloucester’s 39th annual Schooner Festival. Sail  an authentic part of Gloucester’s fishing heritage. Captain Miller-Shelley says” We’ve been preparing all season for this weekend. We’ve taken every tack and opportunity to train for the race in hopes of making the shortest time possible around the marks. I’m looking forward to the excitement and friendly competition of sailing alongside other schooners and their crews.”

For more information and tickets visit our website calendar

For more information and tickets visit our website calendar

Friday, September 1

Kick-Off Sail

10 AM – 1:00 PM

Catch a glimpse of the excitement building out on the water.

Festival Fleet Sail

1:30 – 4:30 PM

Greet the fleet as they begin to arrive.

Saturday, September 2

Heritage Day Sail

8:30 – 11:30 AM

Sail out among 28 other Schooners from around the nation.

Sunday, September 3 
Mayor’s Cup Race & Parade of Sail

8 AM – 5 PM

This all day excursion complete with breakfast and lunch is the biggest sailing day of the year! Help Adventure’s captain & crew lead the parade and capture first place in the race!

THE WRITER’S BLOCK

with John J. Ronan

Season Premier of the 34th Season

September 7, 2023

1623 Studios and Gloucester resident John J. Ronan have announced the 34th season of the television series, The Writer’s Block with John J. Ronan.  The award-winning production is one of the oldest, continuously-running public access shows in New England and has been recognized with a First Prize for an Educational Program at the New England Cable Television Association.

This season again kicks off with the winners of the Poetry Without Paper contest, held each spring for all Gloucester students by the Lyceum at Sawyer Free Library.  The program airs Thursday, September 7, 2023, at 8:00 p.m., channel 12, and will  repeat a week later. From September 19 onward, the series will move to channel 6. After their premieres, all programs are uploaded to YouTube for the general public. 

 

John Ronan, producer and host of The Writer’s Block, is a former Gloucester Poet Laureate and a National Endowment for the Arts Fellow.  His most recent book, Taking the Train of Singularity South from Midtown, appeared in 2017.  (theRonan.org)

 

“I am happy that The Writerโ€™s Block has been a part of the Gloucester 400 celebration,” Ronan declares.  โ€œWe have survived the virus and are starting strong on the next 400 years!โ€ 

 

For more information, send an S.A.S.E. to: The Writer’s Block with John J. Ronan

Box 5524, Gloucester, MA 01930

Mini Schooner On Display in Essex

With the Maritime Gloucester Schooner Fest just days away (Aug 31-Sept 4 2023), it seems appropriate to share this schooner model I noticed at the Essex Shipbuilding yard on Main St in Essex a few days ago. She’s a beauty! Hoping to see you along the Harbor Loop and out on the harbor for the Schooner Fest!

Boat Parade Of Lights Is Saturday September 2 and Here’s Our Modest Plan

I’m getting a good sized power bank with usb outlets, some led rope lighting and fake neon signs and plugging them in. then zip tying it to the arch of our boat and joining the party!

If I wasn’t working so much this time of year at our lobster company I’d get more creative but what the hell, just being in the Boat parade is a blast. So much fun!

Here’s some links to our setup this year-

These rope lights have a 50% off coupon, sync to music beaing played and they are prime shipping which means I should get them within 2 days! Link to purchase here- https://amzn.to/3KWwRmE

Neon Bar Sign. This is 20 inches wide and also runs cool to the touch.

Link to order here- https://amzn.to/3OVLDLt

Zip ties to hang everything

Link to purchase here- https://amzn.to/3sx8TrV

Large Capacity Power bank- great to have in emergencies (we use it to run the podcast for hours with more intense lighting. Also check the box for $10 off.

Link to purchase here- https://amzn.to/3szBVHu

More info about the Boat Parade Of Lights- Link Here For ALL The Info-ย https://www.facebook.com/boatparadeoflights

Crab cakes sure are yummy.

Crabmeat is my favorite seafood even though theyโ€™re a lot of work to shuck. Crab cakes are really easy to make with mostly ingredients you probably already have in the pantry. YouTube any crab cake recipe- theyโ€™re all good! I did mine in the air fryer 15 minutes at 375. I highly recommend this method

International Space Station Passes Eastern Massachusetts (some knucklehead leaves Cape Ann out of the title)

34th Annual Mary Parisi Memorial Lanes Cove Bluefish Tournament Sunday September 3rd.

Iโ€™ll never forget the day I showed up to work over 30 years ago and the Peavey boys had a pickup truck bed full of bluefish- loose and without ice the day following the Lanโ€™s Cove Bluefish Tour

60 YEARS AGO TODAY: Listen to archival audio and video from the March on Washington. Can you help name the choir members?

Author’s Note: From the National Archives collection, this contemporaneous 20 minute highlights newsreel covers the sights and sounds from the historic March On Washington for Jobs and Freedom, distributed in 1964. In 2021, I timestamped the music splits, and identified the speakers and performers included in this particular POV reel. (Still missing a few. Can you help?) Re-sharing on this 60th milestone anniversary Aug. 28, 2023.

video title: The March on Washington, 1964 film by the US Information Agency compilation for overseas from the National Archives and Records Administration collection (20 min)

TIMESTAMP OF SPEAKERS AND PERFORMERS APPEARING IN FILM CLIP

Among the speakers and performers on the program (* appear in film clip):

Marian Anderson, Josephine Baker, Joan Baez* (audio early, then w/video 9:38-10:26), Harry Belafonte, Dr. Eugene Carson Blake* (16:59-17:28), Bobby Darin, Ossie Davis* (but only when he introduces Burt Lancaster 10:27), Ruby Dee (co-emcee with Ossie Davis), Bob Dylan, Freedom Singers* with choir (We shall not be moved 7:14 โ€“ 9:06), Dick Gregory, Martin Luther King Jr.* (18:18 โ€“ 18:59 press conference), Lena Horne, Mahalia Jackson, Eva Jessye Choir* (12:41 Freedom is the thing weโ€™re talking about โ€“ Yolanda Clarke on organ), Burt Lancaster* (traveled from Paris to speak, 10:35-12:02), John Lewis* (video only โ€“ standing behind Reuther 17:29), Dr. Benjamin Mays* ( 14:34-15:36 benediction), Odetta, Peter Paul & Mary* (clips & audio of Blowin in the wind and If I had a hammer 3:18-4:33 first set), Asa Philip Randolph* (16:16-16:57 and again intro MLK 18:18), Bayard Rustin* (12:11 video only); Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth* (9:08- 9:27), Walter Reuther* (17:29-18:16), Camilla Williams (stepped up for the National Anthem; with the big crowds, Marian Anderson was too late, and would sing later in program. Williams famous, too, and worked with Jessye on Porgy & Bess.), Roy Wilkins* (13:41-14:28) and Josh White.

Opens with crowd walking and singing โ€œwe stay home and youโ€™ll be goneโ€ฆjail for more than a week, all I had was beans to eatโ€ฆbecause my home is Danvilleโ€ **Can you identify this song?**

Parade and marching band 4:34-5:40.

About the Eva jessye Choir

Eva Jessye Choir at 7:14-9:06 with Freedom singers โ€œWe shall not be movedโ€ and later โ€œFreedom is the thing weโ€™re talking aboutโ€ where Eva Jessye herself can be seen directing from back. Can you help identify the soloists- the gorgeous baritone, Robeson-esque at 12:36, and at 18:69 a stunning soprano soaring โ€œWe shall overcomeโ€ choir version, with crowd? The Eva Jessye Choir was the official choir for the March on Washington. Her long and storied career took off as chorus director for the Virgil Thomson and Gertrude Stein opera, โ€œFour Saints in Three Actsโ€ in 1934 and Gershwinโ€™s โ€œPorgy and Bessโ€ the following year. She worked with Marian Anderson, Paul Robeson and more.

OTHER NOTABLES

Among the notables marching with the crowd and/or mingling with dignitaries and speakers already mentioned above: Faye Anderson, Josephine Baker, James Baldwin, Leon Bibb, Marlon Brando, Diahann Carroll, Tony Curtis, Bobby Darin, Sammy Davis Jr., Tony Franciosa, James Garner, Charlton Heston, Kiyoshi Kuromiya, Joseph Mankiewicz, Rita Moreno, Gordon Parks, Paul Newman, Rosa Parks, Gregory Peck, Sam Peckinpah, Sidney Poitier, Jackie Robinson, Bill Russell, Robert Ryan, and Joanne Woodward. Senators present: Phillip Hart (D-Mich), Wayne Morse (D-OR), William Proxmire (D-WI), and Mayor Wagner (NYC).

The ‘Lincoln Memorial’ program and the newsreel do not mention one tragic impetus for this specific date: Emmett Till (1941-1955) lynching happened August 28

King delivered an earlier iteration of the sermon in Detroit, orchestrated by Rev. C.L. Franklin, Aretha Franklinโ€™s father. During the march, news spread that W. E. B. DuBois died the previous night in Ghana. So much hope and progress, and mere weeks later, retaliation. The Birmingham Baptist church bombing was on September 15, 1963. Within five years of the March on Washington, Malcolm X and King were killed.

“Weโ€™re going to march. Weโ€™re going to walk together. Weโ€™re going to stand together. Weโ€™re going to sing together. Weโ€™re going to stay together. Weโ€™re going to moan together. Weโ€™re going to groan together and after a while, we will have freedom, freedom, and freedom now. And we all shall be free.”

Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth not formally asked for the program but asked to speak that day, one of many adjustments on the fly, rose to the occasion, primed the crowd

1)Who were the choir members that day? [Eva Jessye Choirย at 7:14-9:06 with Freedom singers โ€œWe shall not be movedโ€ and later โ€œFreedom is the thing weโ€™re talking aboutโ€ where Eva Jessye herself can be seen directing from back.]
2)Can you help identify the choir and soloists- the gorgeous baritone, Robeson-esque at min 12:36, and the women (with earrings )at min 18:69, and the stunning soprano soloist soaring โ€œWe shall overcomeโ€ choir version, with crowd?

National Archives description of the film (added 2009 and still as of 2021): 

โ€œARC Identifier 49737 / Local Identifier 306.3394. Scenes from Civil Rights March in Washington, D.C., August 1963. People walking up sidewalk; gathering on Mall, standing, singing. Lincoln Memorial, Washington Monument, crowd gathered on the Mall. People marching with signs, many men wearing UAW hats. People at speakers podium, men with guitars. Crowds outside of the White House, sign: The Catholic University of America. Band, people marching down street. Many signs, including All D.C. wants to vote! Home Rule for DC; Alpha Phi Alpha; and Woodstock Catholic Seminary for Equal Rights. Lincoln Memorial with crowds gathered around reflecting pool. People singing and clapping at speakers platform. Signs, people clapping. Man speaking, woman playing guitar and singing at podium. More speakers and shots of the crowd. A chorus, NAACP men in crowd. Close-ups of people in crowd with bowed heads. Shots taken from above of White House. More speakers, including Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. Women at podium singing We Shall Overcome. Crowd swaying, singing, holding hands.โ€


1963

1963 GORDON PARKS COLOR PHOTOGRAPH

photo: installation view at The Cooper Gallery Harvard, Gordon Parks exhibition 2019 by C. Ryan โ€” Parksโ€™ photo journalist and cinematic chops in this sea of us momentous moment, March on Washington, 1963view from Lincoln Memorial to Washington Monument. [*Lincoln designed by Daniel Chester French unveiled 1922; Washington Monument designed by Robert Mills; completed by Thomas Casey and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, dedicated 1884.] For more about Gordon Parks work in Gloucester, Mass. see 2012-14 here

[photographer Thomas J. Oโ€™Halloran, aerial view of marchers, from the Lincoln Memorial to the Washington Monument, at the March on Washington, 1963, Library of Congress.]