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Tag: newburyport

  • TGIF: What’s up this weekend in Greater Newburyport

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    “Art & Inspiration: Author & Artist in Conversation” will be featured at Newburyport Art, 65 Water St., Newburyport., on Saturday from 4 to 5 p.m. Join author Jane Ward and painter Christine Molitor Johnson as they discuss ideas, inspiration and influences. For more information: newburyportart.org.

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  • Symposium on privateers set for March 23

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    NEWBURYPORT — The Museum of Old Newbury, working in partnership with the Custom House Maritime Museum, Lowell’s Boat Shop and Firehouse Center for the Arts, presents “Revolutionary Privateers at Sea Symposium: Newburyport and the Wider World” on March 23.

    The symposium, sponsored in part by the state Office of Travel and Tourism, is from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Firehouse Center for the Arts in Newburyport, and includes a visit to the Custom House Maritime Museum.

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  • TGIF: What’s up this weekend in Greater Newburyport

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    The Wolfe Club of Newburyport’s fourth annual Wolfe Club Ball is Saturday from 7 to 10:30 p.m. at Steeple Hall above Mission Oak (26 Green St.), transforming the historic venue into a Mardi Gras–meets–the ‘80s masquerade experience. For tickets and more information, visit www.zeffy.com/en-US/ticketing/the-fourth-annual-wolfe-club-ball.

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  • Woman’s body recovered from water in Newbury

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    NEWBURY — A woman’s body was pulled from the water Thursday on Plum Island north of Fordham Way, according to Essex County District Attorney Paul Tucker.

    Newbury police responded to a call about a body in the water near Harvard Way at 11:46 a.m. The unidentified woman’s body was recovered by the Newburyport Fire Department and transported by the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, Tucker said in a statement late Thursday.

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  • Bone found on beach could be from missing man

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    NEWBURYPORT — A human bone found near Plum Island last week has a New Hampshire family hopeful it could be from their missing relative, Joakim “Joe” Courteau, who disappeared this summer.

    Courteau was last seen on The Great White leaving the mouth of the Merrimack River on a trip to Boston Harbor where it capsized and sank on Aug. 23. He never surfaced.


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    By Jamie L. Costa | Staff Writer

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  • Search for person continues after boat sinks in Merrimack River

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    NEWBURYPORT — A person is missing after a boat capsized and sank in the Merrimack River on Saturday afternoon, according to area safety officials. 

    About 4 p.m., Newburyport police officers, firefighters and Harbormaster Paul Hogg responded to the Merrimack River to assist the U.S. Coast Guard after receiving reports of a capsized boat. Newburyport Fire Marine Unit 2 also responded. 


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  • Rockport artist featured in Newburyport gallery

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    NEWBURYPORT  — Newburyport Art presents “Coastal Blues,” a featured artist exhibition by Rockport resident Heidi Caswell Zander through Nov. 17. 

    An opening reception with Caswell Zander will be Friday, Nov. 8, from 5-7 p.m.

    “Coastal Blues” features 25 pieces in oil and cold wax inspired by Caswell Zander’s upbringing on Cape Ann and connection with nature. As a child, she spent her summers in adult plein air groups, gaining appreciation and sharing enthusiasm for the process from the initial creation to the finished product being hung on a wall.

    Her work evolves through mark making, each stroke capturing the energy and passion of transforming an experience into a visible realm for the viewer. She has long embraced Mattise’s statement about art, wanting her work to be “like a gentle armchair at a day’s end” for the viewer.

    Caswell Zander’s work has been exhibited widely in the United States and Europe, and is held in Canadian, American and European collections. She is the recipient of numerous awards including the Hemphill Travel Grant and Sjoden Artists Grant. She is the owner of the Tidal Edge Gallery, 3 School St. in Rockport, past president of the Rockport Art Association & Museum and serves on .

    Running concurrently in the Sargent and Hartson galleries is the Members’ Fall Juried Show, on view until Nov. 17. 

    The galleries are open to the public at no cost Tuesday through Saturday, from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sunday, from 1 to 5 p.m. Newburyport Art is closed on Mondays. The ground-floor Hills Gallery has an accessible entrance. More information, as well as an online gallery is available at newburyportart.org.

    Founded in 1948, Newburyport Art is dedicated to promoting and exhibiting members’ work and to providing art education and access to the visual arts for the entire community.

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  • Cape Ann artists featured in Outdoor Sculpture at Maudslay

    Cape Ann artists featured in Outdoor Sculpture at Maudslay

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    NEWBURYPORT — Outdoor Sculpture has returned to Maudslay State Park. The exhibition runs through Sept. 29.

    An artist reception and self-guided tour takes place Sunday, Sept. 15, at 2 p.m. at Maudslay State Park. Stop by Riverwalk Brewing Company on Saturday, Sept. 14, at 6 p.m. for a “Thread” photo exhibit and meet the artists celebration.

    Among the artists are Nancy Dudley, and Lynne and Jay Havighurst, all of Essex;dCharles Edward Brewer, Kerry Mullen and Sinikka Nogelo, all of Gloucester; Nina Kruschwitz of Ipswich; and Cape Ann native James Seavey. Caroline Bagenal, the Geotemann Artist in Residence at Ocean Alliance in Gloucester through Oct. 2, also has piece in the show.

    For 25 years, Outdoor Sculpture at Maudslay has provided a three-week non-juried exhibition featuring local artists and community members interested in sharing their understanding of the world through site-specific sculptures in Maudslay State Park. The annual show, which has produced over 950 works of art, is open to all artists with a connection to the North Shore and Merrimack Valley and is organized by participating artists who volunteer their time and materials. Reflecting upon the desire to explore material boundaries, concepts, and themselves, this year’s group of 49-plus artists chose “Thread” as the theme for the 25th anniversary show.

    Participants include a poet laureate, a retired art teacher, a former puppeteer, a former African wildlife conservation worker, at least two graphic designers, a store owner, an author/illustrator, homeschool students, a bass player, a Reiki healer, a former town selectman, two web designers, a yoga instructor, a machine builder, a structural engineer, a ceramics engineer, an architect, a multimedia composer/musician, and more.

    For the first time, there will also be artworks across the street at the park’s music pasture, near where summer concerts are held. These include a 10-foot-wide flower, a labyrinth, an 8-foot-by-8-foot fan, a bridge of sticks and rope, and more. Altogether, there will be 49 installations for viewers to ponder.

    Winner of a 2005 Gold Star Award from the Massachusetts Cultural Council, Outdoor Sculpture at Maudslay has been recognized as a model community art project celebrating quality, accessibility, diversity, and collaboration. Outdoor Sculpture at Maudslay is supported in part by grants from the Amesbury, Georgetown, Groveland, Merrimac, Newbury, Newburyport, Rowley, Salisbury, and West Newbury Cultural Councils, local agencies that are supported by the Massachusetts Cultural Council, a state agency.

    Free printed catalogs will be available in artistic mailboxes at the two main entrances to the park. Trailhead signs will provide instructions for downloading a simple virtual catalog, including the map, photos of each piece, artist’s statements, and their bios.

    Maudslay State Park is located at 74 Curzon Mill Road, Newburyport.

    More information is available by visiting www.maudslaysculpture.org, or www.facebook.com/SculptureAtMaudslay/

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  • Off to the (bed) races

    Off to the (bed) races

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    NEWBURYPORT — On a day when Newburyport firefighters were thinking of a comrade taken from his family and his community way too soon, they raced down Federal Street in a bed resembling a fire engine and won Thursday’s annual Newburyport Lions Club Bed Race for the third year in a row.

    Newburyport firefighter Brett Burkinshaw died July 1, 2021, at age 47, of brain cancer.

    The victory, witnessed by thousands of onlookers, was by the slimmest of margins as the Fire Department (1:13.35) beat out the Winner’s Circle Running Club (1:13.40) by .05 seconds.

    If the results feel familiar it’s because the same two squads came in first and second last year. That year, local firefighters won by an entire second (1:15 to 1:16).

    The bed race, which turns Federal Street into a drag strip, is one of Yankee Homecoming’s marquee events.

    It serves as a fundraiser for the Lions Club and sees teams of racers pushing beds decked out as clipper ships, fire boats and evening a squared circle.

    Per regulations, one person must ride inside the bed as their teammates chug down the road with crowds on both sides cheering them on.

    Teams from the Newburyport Youth Council, Theater in the Open, The Dojo and The Wolfe Club, among others, also competed in the race. Many of the teams focused on presentation rather than speed and made little to-no effort trying to go fast. Instead, they soaked in the applause, hoots and hollers hurled at them by a smiling crowd.

    Dispatcher and on-call firefighter Justin Burle took the role of team leader for the Newburyport Fire Department, overseeing a group of men who raced a bed that was, once again, made up to look like a replica of the city’s fireboat.

    He said the racing bed was dedicated in honor of Burkinshaw, as well as fellow late firefighter Tony Raven.

    Burle added his team’s slim victory this year was sweet.

    “We were just giving all we had, pushing the whole time and we’re all still standing,” he said.

    The Winner’s Circle member Peter Blake said coming in .05 seconds too late was another tough loss.

    “I feel a burning desire to be better, next year,” he said. “But I give props to the Fire Department. They are stronger, burlier men.”

    The Newburyport Recreation and Youth Services’ Youth Council went with a Mario Kart theme, with enrichment coordinator director Tara McGregor riding in the bed dressed as the eponymous video game plumber.

    MacGregor said the Youth Council enjoys playing Mario Kart after school, so they went with the theme.

    “It’s a nostalgic memory that everybody can share, regardless of age,” she said. “Who doesn’t love Mario Kart?”

    Youth Council member Georgia Macmillian had a large, red and white mushroom on her head to emulate another character: Toad.

    “I picked Toad because I wanted to make a mushroom hat,” she said. “It’s not too heavy, not too hot.”

    Museum of Old Newbury Executive Director Bethany Groff Dorau was dressed as an 1850s ship’s figurehead carving.

    In her white dress and clipper ship hat, Groff Dorau rode on a bed adorned with four grandfather clocks.

    “I’m an angel,” she said. “I’m flying through time. Hopefully, we’re flying into the wind.”

    Groff Dorau spent her time before the race fanning herself in the heat with a cardboard advertisement for the museum. But she said she expected to be going so fast, once her runners got moving, that she wouldn’t need any fans.

    Unfortunately, the museum’s bed suffered mechanical problems forcing crew members to slam on the brakes and fix what turned out to be a damaged wheel.

    Massage Only owner Cheryl Fisher was wearing a blue wig, along with the rest of her four runners, while her daughter, Isabella Schwind lay on a massage table, recording the whole event with her cell phone.

    “Blue is our color,” Fisher said.

    Racing a bed down Federal Street, Fisher added is a “lost art form.”

    “I’ve been really honing my skills and am ready to show up,” she said, before her team began charging down Federal Street.

    Michael Switzer, founder and president of the charitable men’s organization The Wolfe Club, was once again dressed as British Gen. James Wolfe.

    He carried a plastic sword and rode atop a foam horse that was sitting on a bed, complete with speakers playing galloping sounds in the background.

    “We’re going for speed but I think we have a nice combination for speed and style,” Switzer said.

    This year’s teams also competed to win in a number of other categories – most creative, fastest overall, most team spirit and loudest crowd cheering.

    The winners were scheduled to be announced over the weekend on the Lions’ Facebook page at www.facebook.com/NewburyportLions.

    Daily News editor Dave Rogers contributed to this report.

    Staff writer Jim Sullivan covers Newburyport for The Daily News. He can be reached via email at jsullivan@newburyportnews.com or by phone at 978-961-3145. Follow him on Twitter @ndnsully.

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    By Jim Sullivan | jsullivan@newburyportnews.com

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  • Woodworth gives slideshow on local history

    Woodworth gives slideshow on local history

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    NEWBURYPORT — Local historian Ghlee Woodworth presents a slideshow of little-known images, featuring everything from Plum Island to Maudslay State Park, on Wednesday at 1:15 p.m. at the Newburyport Senior/Community Center.

    The presentation is part of the Greater Newburyport Village Talks series.

    Woodworth will highlight her recent research of the city’s early Black community and show images that include a look at the Joppa neighborhood, downtown restoration, shipyards, bicyclists, balloons, pole vaulters and beachgoers enjoying watermelon, according to a release.

    The historian, a Newburyport native and 12th-generation descendant of Robert Adams – one of the first settlers of Newbury, will provide a peek at images never seen by the public that were recently acquired by the Museum of Old Newbury.

    Those who attend will learn about former slaves, local business owners and others who contributed to the social and economic fabric of Newburyport.

    Woodworth is the creator of Newburyport’s Clipper Heritage Trail, a series of self-guided history tours available online and through brochures and smartphones.

    She is the author of “Tiptoe Through the Tombstones, Oak Hill Cemetery” (2009). Woodworth has also written “Newburyport Clipper Heritage Trail Volume I” (2020) and “Newburyport Clipper Heritage Trail Volume II” (2022) – both of which will be available for purchase by cash or check.

    Woodworth has won several awards for her contributions in honor of Newburyport’s history, the release said. She recently received the Massachusetts Daughters of American Revolution’s Historic Preservation Medal and was honored at the Newburyport Literary Festival.

    In the past 17 years, Woodworth has given more than 230 slideshow presentations and walking, bus and boat tours of cemeteries, neighborhoods and the city.

    She is researching and writing about Newburyport’s early Black history and just completed two brochures.

    Woodworth has restored more than 1,600 gravestones, including those in Oak Hill Cemetery and other community burying grounds.

    A complimentary lunch is available prior to the talk courtesy of the Friends of the Council on Aging and the Greater Newburyport Village. Call the Senior/Community Center at 978-462-0430 to reserve a lunch.

    Village Talks are offered by the Greater Newburyport Village at no cost for the enrichment of the community. They are usually held the third Wednesday of the month.

    For more information about Village Talks, check the event calendar at www.greaternewburyportvillage.org, email info@greaternewburyportvillage.org or call 978-206-1821.

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  • Bridging the gap: Newburyport, West Newbury negotiate repair project

    Bridging the gap: Newburyport, West Newbury negotiate repair project

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    West Newbury Town Manager Angus Jennings doesn’t mince words when he talks about the Plummer Spring Road/Middle Street bridge repair project.

    “We don’t have time to waste,” Jennings said. “It’s now or never.”

    The bridge, an important link between West Newbury and Newburyport, was closed in August 2019 after a failure in the spandrel wall.

    The bridge sits on the border between the two communities, and each shares a legal obligation to maintain and repair the structure.

    Efforts to secure funding to rebuild the bridge have been underway for six years, according to Jennings.

    On June 11, town and city officials, including Jennings, Newburyport Mayor Sean Reardon and Newburyport City Council President Ed Cameron met with Sen. Bruce Tarr of Gloucester, the District 4 engineer and a representative from the state Department of Transportation to work out an intermunicipal agreement, or IMA, between the communities.

    After what Jennings termed a “good and frank discussion” at the meeting, a draft agreement is now in the hands of Newburyport’s mayor and City Council.

    At a City Council meeting Monday, Cameron sponsored a motion to send the draft to Newburyport’s Public Works & Safety Committee.

    Cameron spoke briefly, indicating that the bridge has been in decline since 2017.

    “We’ve got to decide what our role will be in finalizing the IMA, which we need to do whether we decide to share in funding or not,” he said.

    Cameron acknowledged that the project comes with “a fair amount of urgency” but said the council and committee members will gain a better understanding of the bridge project’s specifics “over the next couple of committee meetings.”

    The council agreed unanimously to send the motion to the committee.

    After a review, the city will decide if it will share costs with West Newbury and what amount, if any, Newburyport would allocate for the project.

    Newburyport received two MassDOT Small Bridge Program grants in 2018 totaling $293,952, according to the draft agreement. These grants are due to expire Sunday without an extension from the state.

    Earlier this year, Newburyport was awarded a third Small Bridge grant of $750,000. West Newbury was awarded a $1 million MassWorks grant of $1 million in late 2023 and a $750,000 Small Bridge grant in early 2024.

    A construction cost estimate for the necessary bridge work comes in at about $3,605,000, with an added 25% construction contingency fee of $901,250.

    A resident engineer fee of $200,000 and a construction engineering services charge of $100,000 brings the total remaining project costs to roughly $4,806,250.

    These numbers do not include previous design/permitting costs of approximately $500,000 (the project has been fully permitted since May 2023). The amount of remaining net local costs totals $2,012,298.

    With a 50% cost share, each municipality would be responsible for $1,006,149 beyond what has been already apportioned.

    West Newbury’s town manager expressed a sense of urgency in the project because of safety concerns related to the bridge’s infrastructure and the possible loss of grant funding if a cost-sharing resolution is not reached quickly.

    Jennings believes the bridge repair would prevent further erosion and possible liability should the hole in the spandrel wall not be fixed.

    In the future, Jennings said, “emergency funding would be needed for cleanup” if the bridge is further compromised.

    “There’s a cost to doing nothing,” he said.

    Jennings’ concerns about a loss of funding stem from the American Rescue Plan Act requirement that the project needs to be under contract by the end of this calendar year; grants awarded must be spent by the end of 2026.

    Once the funding is received and the two municipalities have agreed on a cost share plan, the project can go out to bid.

    Contracts are typically awarded 30 to 60 days after the requests for bids go out. To stay within the timeframes for funding, Jennings and West Newbury would like the contract to be awarded this summer, with construction to start next spring.

    West Newbury officials are continuing to move forward optimistically. They are fine-tuning procurement documents in preparation for sending out the request for proposals.

    They plan to update the town website with a public post informing residents of the project’s status.

    Jennings reported “a tremendous amount of support” for the project in West Newbury, with many resident writing letters to endorse the project.

    In spite of what appears to be an “overpass impasse,” Jennings said he is hopeful that a final agreement can be reached between the two communities in the interest of the shared public good.

    “If we’re aligned in our intent to go forward, we can get this done,” he said.

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    By Lisa Rinaldi | Correspondent

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  • Anna Jaques Hospital awards $100K in grants

    Anna Jaques Hospital awards $100K in grants

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    NEWBURYPORT — Anna Jaques Hospital will award $100,000 in grant money over the next two years to 10 community-based organizations serving the health needs of area residents.

    The grants are part of the hospital’s Community Benefits Program to support programs that address community health priorities and help those facing the greatest health inequities within the hospital’s service area, according to a release from Anna Jaques.

    Residents of Newburyport, Amesbury, Haverhill, Salisbury and Merrimac will benefit from the funding. Anna Jaques is part of Beth Israel Lahey Health.

    The selection criteria for the grants included four major health priorities affecting the community that were identified during the hospital’s most recent Community Health Needs Assessment, completed in 2022: equitable access to care, social determinants of health, mental health and substance use, and chronic/complex conditions.

    “By supporting and investing in local organizations that share our goal in addressing the health needs of our region, we improve the quality of life for local residents while strengthening the communities that we serve,” Glenn Focht, M.D., the hospital’s president, said in the release.

    “We are proud to support these local organizations and the important work they do to reduce health disparities and inequities throughout our region,” he added.

    The following 10 nonprofit organizations will receive two-year grants of $5,000 per year, for a total of $10,000:

    Common Ground Ministries: This program provides basic services aimed at alleviating hunger and homelessness while being an advocate for those in need. The grant will help 90 to 100 people who the program serves each day.

    Mitch’s Place, Emmaus, Inc.: This temporary overnight emergency shelter provides adults with a bed, meals, and housing search and employment assistance along with help securing permanent housing and health and social services. The money will help the shelter serve the 400 people it assists annually.

    McKinney-Vento Program, Haverhill Public Schools: The grant will fund food programs, including food closets and a food pantry program, for families whose children attend Haverhill Public Schools and are experiencing homelessness. The program seeks to help an additional 40 students and up to 15% more families.

    Jeanne Geiger Crisis Center, Youth Empowerment Series: This series provides violence prevention programs that teach students of all ages to lead conversations on healthy relationships and to make positive decisions. The money will fund expansion of the series into Newburyport, allowing the program to serve an additional 100 to 150 participants.

    Link House: Children and Teen Center for Help (CATCH): CATCH seeks to empower and support those ages 5 to 18 and their families across the region to understand and nurture their mental well-being. The funding will help to increase the number of young people served by 10%.

    Northern Essex Elder Transport (NEET): This volunteer driver program provides adults age 60 and older across the region with no-cost transportation to medical appointments. The funding will support the 4,000 rides provided to 500 people annually.

    Nourishing the Northshore: VEGOUT program: This program provides free fresh, locally grown produce to food pantries and senior centers across the region from June to October. The money will help provide 280,000 servings of food — a 55% increase from 2023.

    Our Neighbors’ Table: Wednesday Meal Program: The grant will assist this weekly community program based in Amesbury, which provides a hot, three-course meal served by volunteers or as carry-out orders to 300 people each Wednesday.

    The Pettengill House: Behavioral Event and Substance Support Team (BESST): The money will provide a social worker and support for people and families with mental health and substance abuse needs in Merrimac, Salisbury, Amesbury and Newburyport. The program assisted 462 people in 321 households in 2023.

    Sarah’s Place Adult Health Center: This senior adult day health program offers outreach and education to assist people in remaining healthy and independent in their own homes. The funding will help enroll an additional 25 to 50 participants in the program.

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