The entry below is being cross posted from Marjorie Arons-Barron’s own blog. The Known World by Edward P. Jones , published in 2003, is a richly woven saga set in antebellum South between 1840 and 1860. The central focus is the Townsend family headed by Augustus and Mildred, who are freed former…
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There was no Lowell City Council meeting this week due to the summer schedule so today’s newsletter will dip into Lowell history. Two weeks ago, I wrote about the history of Clemente Park, the three-acre parcel on Middlesex Street that has become a center of social, cultural and recreational activity…
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Popular Eateries, Lowell, 1960s By Leo Racicot Once our circle of friends got our driver’s licenses, it enabled us to socialize beyond the confines of school. A frequent gathering place was Skip’s Restaurant, out on Chelmsford Street. It was also a magnet for families wanting good, plain, American fare, or…
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After the Rallies By Rev. Steve Edington Said Joe what they could never kill went on to organize. “Ballad of Joe Hill” by Alfred Hayes As I went home from the two No Kings rallies I attended last Saturday (6.14)—one at Kerouac Park in Lowell and one in my…
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Drowning Out the End of Democracy By Bill O’Connell I’d rather trim my grass and sit when I want to than tackle the world gone rogue — Trump’s hawking crypto and missiles in the Middle East, abetting genocide. I’d rather clip a rosebush, plant more peas — I’d rather keep…
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Living Madly: New Tricks By Emilie-Noelle Provost Learning a new skill can be difficult, especially if you’re an adult. This is true even for people who are enthusiastic about learning something new. One of the reasons for this, I think, is that by the time most of us are adults,…
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Take Me to Church: An Inside Look at the Smith Baker Center By Cameron DaCosta All photographs herein were taken by and provided courtesy of the author. “The report of my death was an exaggeration.” -Mark Twain It has been one of the Mill City’s greatest points of contention for…
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Street Wide – (PIP # 73) By Louise Peloquin After the piece on the Bridge Street Bridge in 1924 (1), here’s another “peek” into Lowell’s infrastructure development. L’ÉTOILE – September 2, 1924 Legal Objections to Widening Aiken Street The city of Lowell will not be able to continue working on the Anna…
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The entry below is being cross posted from Marjorie Arons-Barron’s own blog. “All politics is loco,” Senator Ed Markey told a gathering of the New England Council on Monday, paraphrasing a favorite saying of House Speaker Tip O’Neill of Cambridge. Just part of the craziness this week is the President’s…
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The entry below is being cross posted from Marjorie Arons-Barron’s own blog. Kingmaker by Sonia Purnell, author of A Woman of No Importance, is another display of the author’s mastery of biography. In this scrupulously researched and documented chronicle, her subject is Pamela Churchill Harriman, a too-often-dismissed woman of consequence. A woman of power…
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