Get your Ressies in Now!
Where else can you get one of these?

My View of Life on the Dock
Get your Ressies in Now!
Where else can you get one of these?

The Cape Ann Museum is pleased to present a book signing and reading with Wayne Soini, author of Gloucester’s Sea Serpent (History Press, 2010). Mr. Soini will be at the Museum on Saturday, December 18 at 3:00 p.m. This program is free and open to the public. Books will be available to purchase through the Museum Shop. Surprise a loved one this holiday season with an autographed copy of this new publication!
In 1817, as Gloucester, Massachusetts was recovering from the War of 1812, something beneath the water was about to cause a stir in this coastal community. It was a misty August day when two women first sighted Gloucester’s sea serpent, touching off a riptide of excitement among residents that reached a climax when Matt Gaffney fired a direct shot at the creature. Local historian Wayne Soini explores the depths of Gloucester harbor to reveal a treasure-trove of details behind this legendary mystery. Follow as he tracks Justice of the Peace Lonson Nash’s careful investigation—the world’s first scientific study of this marine animal—and judges the credibility of numerous reported sightings.
Wayne Soini was born in Gloucester in 1948, regrettably too late to see the sea serpent swim into or out of the harbor. He graduated from Gloucester High School in 1966. His most recent degree, a master’s degree in history from the University of Massachusetts-Boston, was awarded in 2009. Soini coauthored the biographical sketch and local sports history book, Judge Fuchs and the Boston Braves, with the late Robert Fuchs in 1998. Soini is a member of the National Writers Union, Local 1981, Boston Chapter, and of the Boston Athenaeum. He makes his living as a lawyer and lives with his partner, Anne, in Brookline, where he basically reads and watches his weight. Mr. Soini is donating the proceeds of his book to benefit the Cape Ann Museum and the Gloucester High School Scholarships Fund.
The Cape Ann Museum is located at 27 Pleasant Street in Gloucester. Hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., and Sundays from 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. The Museum is closed during the month of February, on Mondays, and on major holidays. Admission is $8.00 adults, $6.00 Cape Ann residents, seniors and students. Children under 12 and Museum members are free. The Museum is wheelchair accessible. For more information please call: (978) 283-0455. Additional information can be found online at www.capeannmuseum.org.
The wonderful Jane Ward has some great ideas, over at Food and Fiction.
Heather Atwood from the Gloucester Times has her picks at Food For Thought
Media giant Seth gives up the best of Lynn at Lynn Happens.
North Shore Dish spices things up with their weekend picks here North Shore Dish
Choices from all over New England at The Two Palaverers.
Good Morning Gloucester weekend picks here
Weekend Picks from North Shore Kid here
Abby shares her picks from 5th Joy.

If you haven’t been to Rocky Neck in E. Gloucester before, then this is a wonderful opportunity to check out the galleries and studios, enjoy some festive cheer and shop local. If you are a regular we look forward to seeing you to show you the new works we have available.
IMAGINE will be sponsoring a fundraiser for the Gloucester Education Foundation (GEF) which supports the arts and science in the Gloucester public school system, as well as The Open Door Food Pantry. 50% of all proceeds will be split between these two wonderful community organizations. Do your holiday shopping and benefit local charities ~ such a deal!
Joey,
We’ve decided to use Men’s Night as a chance to showcase some to Gloucester’s finest. We will be having tastings by Ryan and Wood and Cape Ann Brewing Company, along with all sorts of beautiful gifts handmade in Gloucester.
All that and we promise LIVE GIRLS KNITTING!
I am attaching a little flier I put together.
Thanks!
Amanda Cook
MIDDLE STREET WALK BUTTONS AVAILABLE FOR $2 DONATION- PROCEEDS TO SUPPORT THE WALK
Thanks to Bill from North Shore Kid For Making this Legible Enough For Me To Use-
| 9 am – 3 pm | Unitarian Universalist Church,10 Church Street Fair & Luncheon, Pictures with Santa ( 9am1pm), tours highlighting Glosta Dalton (17231813) a black religious freedom pioneer (11am1pm). |
|---|---|
| 10am-3pm | City Hall, 9 Dale AvenueSchooner Adventure“Schooner Brunch” $10.00 per person. “Ships Store” will offer items for sale to support Schooner Adventure and an ongoing children’s activity making “Sailor’s Valentine Ornaments”. Committee for the Arts will sell postcards of City Hall’s WPA Murals and have a table with information on City Hall Restoration efforts. The Gingerbread House Contest Displaywinner will be announced in Kyrouz Auditorium. The Phyllis A. Marine Associationwill have an information table. Girl Scouts Troop #235 Bake/Cocoa SaleGirl Scout Cookies for sale. |
| 9 am – 6 pm | Saunders House, Middle Street entrance at Sawyer Free Library, SeArts Wearable Arts Show and Fundraiser Raffle Sale to benefit Sawyer Free Library – tickets sold at Saunders House and at Library. |
| 10am-2pm | Saunders House, Middle Street entrance at Sawyer Free Library, presentation of history of murals and Samuel Sawyer. |
| 10 am2pm | Cape Ann Museum, 27 Pleasant Street, Arts and Crafts for Families, decorate gifts for the holidays. |
| 10 am – 3 pm | Trinity Congregational Church, 70 Middle Street Cape Ann Thrift Shop Seasonal Goods Sale. |
| 10 am – 4 pm | Cape Ann Art Haven, 180B Mains Street, Free Events10 am–12 pm (or until complete) help create a Giant Ice Sculpture (ice courtesy of Cape Pond Ice), Buoy Painting for Lobster Trap Tree. |
| 10 am – 4pm | Sargent House Museum, 49 Middle Street, Open House decorated for the season, Holiday Goodies, Seasonal Gifts. |
| 11 am & 2pm | Cape Ann Museum, 27 Pleasant Street, will host tours of the Elias Davis House with period “Winter Display” decorations for the Holidays by Gloucester Civic & Garden Council. |
| 11 am | Unitarian Universalist Church, 10 Church Street – tour highlighting Gloster Dalton (17231813) a black religious freedom pioneer. |
| 11 am | Children’s Room Sawyer Free Library, 2 Dale Avenue, Robb Preskins Magic Show “Arctic Fantasy”. Refreshments will be served. |
| 11 am | City Hall, 9 Dale Avenue, Cape Ann Big Band Performance. |
| 11am – 2 pm | City Hall, 9 Dale AvenueTours of City Hall Tower on the half hour by Maggie Rosa, Chair of City Hall Restoration Committee. Ring the bell for $100 donation. |
| 12pm | Trinity Congregational Church, 70 Middle StreetThe Heavenly Bell Choir performs Seasonal Music. |
| 12pm – 2pm | Middle Street Trolley Rides, narrated historical tour along with the Songbirds singing seasonal music, courtesy of CATA. |
| 1pm | Cape Ann Museum, 27 Pleasant Street, Connie Richards Plum Cove Singersstudents singing Holiday Songs. |
| 1pm | Unitarian Universalist Church, 10 Church Street, tour highlighting Glosta Dalton (17231813) a black religious freedom pioneer. |
| 1 pm | St. John’s Episcopal Church, 48 Middle Street Children’s chorus concert with children’s chorus groups from St. John’s, Annisquam Village Church and St. Mary’s. |
| 1pm – 4:30 pm | Brown’s MallKids Unlimited & Dawn’s School of Dance, 271 Main Streetsinging and dance performance starting at 1:30pm.Visit with Santa and photos for sale. Goodie bags and penguin tattoos |
| 1:30 pm | Trinity Congregational Church, 70 Middle Street, piano and cello concert with Louis Stella and flutist. |
| 1:30pm – 3:30pm | Sawyer Free Library, 2 Dale Avenue, The Dan Murphy Trio playing a variety of musical selections including holiday SingALongs. |
| 2pm | City Hall, 9 Dale Avenue, St. Ann’s School Student Concert. |
| 2 pm | Cape Ann Museum, 27 Pleasant Street, will host tour of c.1804 Captain Elias Davis House decorated for the holidays by Gloucester Civic & Garden Council. Museum with period “Winter Display”. |
| 3 pm | Unitarian Universalist Church, 10 Church Street, O’Maley Middle School Band and Gloucester High School Chorus perform. |
| 4pm | Trinity Congregational Church, 70 Middle Street, Old Fashioned Holiday SingaLong and refreshments. |
| 5 pm | Cape Ann Art HavenAnnual Lobster Trap Tree Lighting at Police Station Plaza with a visit from Santa |
| All Day till 8pm | Rocky Neck Art Colony, 117 Main Street 6th Annual Winter Exhibit. Shop open from 10 am – 8pm. |
Good Morning Joey,
Great – this will be fun. Attached is a little info about me, and a painting I did of a turnabout (this painting was donated to the Sawyer Free Library for their annual art auction), info below about it and its history. EJ-
Did you know
That the National 10 class was originally known as the Turnabout class, built in 1953 by Harold R.Turner as a small wooden single or double handed dinghy class at the Parker River Marine. The boats were initially built as a junior training boat, although adults enjoy the boats as well. The class has grown mainly in the New England and Northeastern regions of the U.S. Fleets are located in Northern Lake George, New York, Boston, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Maine and New Jersey. This turnabout, located in Annisquam on Lobster Cove, is said to be the first turnabout ever built.
I went by the Art Auction display at the library this morning and leafed through the bid book. there were many gorgeous paintings without any bids.
My suggestion is for you to go to that auction tomorrow night (Wednesday) for the live auction and you might just walk away with a great piece for very little dough.
Details-
Annual Art Auction 2010 Rescheduled
The live auction will take place December 8 at 7pm. with a Preview Party at 6pm. Please join the Library for this very special evening.
Wednesday, December 8
Main Floor, 7:00pm
To check out E.J.’s work-
E.J. Lefavour-Khan Studio
www.khanstudiointernational.com
The spirits of Christmas Past, Present and Future return to Blackburn Performing Arts in the annual production of Ian McColl’s adaptation of Charles Dickens’ “A Christmas Carol,” featuring a cast of 40 residents from Cape Ann.
The family-friendly show features caroling and dancing as the story of Ebenezer Scrooge unfolds. The audience will watch as Scrooge transforms from his miserly ways to a man eager to share in the tradition of giving. The spirits of Christmas Past, Present and Future lead him on a mystical journey through which he discovers the true meaning of Christmas.
This year’s production features writer/director Ian McColl as Scrooge, Daniel Diamond in two roles, as Bob Cratchit as well as the spirit of Jacob Marley and Evie Gariepy as Mrs. Cratchit. The cast includes children, teens and adults in an array of roles including angels, urchins, spirits, townspeople, and of course the Cratchit family, including Tiny Tim who is being played by O’Maley student Jack Favazza.
Actors as young as 4 and as old as 60 are working together to tell this story to their Gloucester audience. The ghost scenes are not too scary, and the show is appropriate even for the youngest audience members – and, of course, it comes with a big happy ending.
McColl is thrilled when he sees former alumni return to see the production as part of the audience, and has been looking forward to the day when the next generation of children would carry on the tradition of their parents by taking part in the annual show. This year Bailee Militello, who is playing an angel, is the daughter of Brianna Saunders Militello, who played an angel and a Cratchit child in this production 15 years ago, fulfills McColl’s dream.
The cast will perform the show a seven times over the next two weeks when the words of Dickens once again will ring out under the stage spotlight.
Cast: Isaac Aiello, Bonnie Barrish, Anna Bonacorso, Alexis Brown, Zach Brown, Briana Bruni, Katie Burke, Richard Crowell, Jake D’Ambrosio, Zach DaSilva, Daniel Diamond, Alexis Exama, Jada Exama, Marissa Exama, Jack Favazza, Evie Gariepy, Christina Giambanco, Rosalia Giambanco, Alicia Gibney, Ava Glass, Belle Graves, Alexandra Legendre, Jessica Lupo, Melodey Mathews, Clara Mazo, Victor Mazo, Molly McCarthy, Ian McColl, Bailee Militello, Stefanie Millefoglie, Allie-Rose Nicastro, Linda York Robbins, Olivia Rodier, Sabrina Siragusa, Rachel Sternlicht, Sarah Urbanski, and Nancy Williams.
What: Ian McColl’s adaption of “A Christmas Carol” by Charles Dickens
Where: Blackburn Performing Arts at 1 Washington St. in the Blackburn Building in Gloucester
When: Opening on Friday December 10th at 7:30 p.m. Performances are scheduled for Thursday, Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30 p.m. and Sundays at 3 p.m. through Dec. 19th. Tickets are available at the door. $12.00 for adults and $10 for students and 65+
Photo 1: Alexis Brown, Daniel Diamond, Jack Favazza, Evie Gariepy, and Belle Graves as the Cratchits
Photo 2: Cast Photo
Hey Joey!
It’s that time of year and we’re getting prepared for a pretty awesome couple weeks here at Art Haven, so I wanted to make sure you know what’s going on! I think you already get the regular emails, but I’m also attaching a flier about buoy painting and the two fliers about winter workshops to this email. It’s quite a bit of info, so let me know if any of it is undecipherable [or we can always just do an interview or two to explain it ;-)] Hope you had a great Thanksgiving and are getting excited about buoy painting and ice sculpting and the Middle Street Walk!
Thanks and hope to see you soon!
Dawn Gadow
Art Haven Director
Here are my weekend picks-
8:00 p.m. – Division 1A, Bridgewater-Raynham v. Gloucester; TV/Radio: WSBK TV 38, 98.5-FM
Choices from all over New England at The Two Palaverers.
Media giant Seth gives up the best of Lynn at Lynn Happens.
The wonderful Jane Ward has some great ideas, over at Food and Fiction.
North Shore Dish spices things up with their weekend picks here North Shore Dish
Heather Atwood from the Gloucester Times has her picks at Food For Thought
Fourth Annual
Holiday Arts Sale & Open House
134R Leonard Street, Annisquam MA 01930
Friday, December 4th – 5 pm to 9 pm, Saturday, December 5th – 10 am to 4 pm, Sunday, December 5th – Noon to 4 pm
Paintings, planting, pottery, painted furniture, wreaths, cards, culinary treats & more!
Artists /Crafts persons
Bonnie Stafford, Connie Sweet, Margaret Sweet, Diana Hoyt, Pia Nadel, Evy Stewart
Purchased at last years sale, Soap Dish by Evy Stewart

Clipper Ship "Flying Cloud" by H. Boucher 1915
Photo Courtesy MFA
Join in the Excitement of the New MFA
Local resident and noted MFA lecturer Mimi Braverman will lead a guided tour of the decorative arts, furniture and maritime galleries, drawing parallels between the collections at the MFA and those at Beauport, the Sargent House, the Cape Ann Museum and other Gloucester attractions.
Sunday, December 5, 2010 1:00PM -2:30 PM
Meet at West Entrance opposite Garage
Price Per Person $125 Tickets must be purchased in advance
Tickets at www.sargenthouse.org
Questions: Call 978-281-5801

Rocky Neck comes to downtown Gloucester for its sixth annual winter exhibit and sale from November 26 through December 23, 2010 at 130 Main Street in Gloucester. The public is invited to a Meet the Artists reception on Saturday, December 4, from 5 to 8 pm, featuring tastings from your favorite local restaurants including Passports, the Topside Grill and Espresso Italian Grille.
The special focus of this exhibit is great art on a small scale to give or enjoy. The show will feature painting, photography, sculpture, mixed media, ceramics, and jewelry by members of the Rocky Neck Art Colony.
The Bounty is preparing to depart Boothbay Harbor for San Juan, Puerto Rico imminently. She has just spent a good amount of time undergoing repairs in the Boothbay Shipyard.
There is an opportunity for a couple of new crew to come aboard for a three week trip. The current captain, three mates and deckhands have long experience aboard this ship. Also, a full time experienced cook is aboard for this trip. Departure is planned for Monday, Nov. 29. Short notice,ya, but maybe you know someone who would be interested?
If so, contact Caleb Twombly at 978-290-6010
Heather Atwood from the Gloucester Times has her picks at Food For Thought
Media giant Seth gives up the best of Lynn at Lynn Happens.
The wonderful Jane Ward has some great ideas over at Food and Fiction.