TODAY'S EDITION IN ONE SENTENCE: Marblehead
moved through one of those weeks when remembrance, restoration and the
next thing coming all seemed to crowd into the same frame: at Village
School, 4th and 5th graders pressed 1,807 handmade paper poppies into
the lawn and learned that Memorial Day is not just a long weekend but a
promise to remember the town’s war dead; at the Marblehead Museum, a
five-year, $1.4 million restoration is about to open the Brick Kitchen
and Slave Quarters to the public as “Resistance and Resilience: Slavery
and Freedom in Marblehead,” asking visitors to sit with lives recovered
from fragments, ledgers and records never meant to honor them; Lauren
McCormack, whose steady work helped make that fuller public history
possible, is preparing to leave the museum for Freedom’s Way National
Heritage Area; marine scientist Steve Wolf and Sustainable Marblehead
are trying to bring oysters back to Marblehead harbors after more than a
century away, beginning with roughly 60,000 baby oysters at Tucker’s
Wharf; David Modica’s blunt Town Meeting question is headed to Beacon
Hill by invitation, where Abundant Housing Massachusetts expects about
120 advocates to gather May 27; at Abbot Hall, five Marblehead High
School seniors have turned more than 300 works by 7th through 12th
graders into an art show about growth and maturity; historian
Christopher Magra traces Marblehead’s revolutionary story back to cod,
commerce, John Glover’s schooner Hannah and the saltwater economy that
helped push colonists toward revolt; voters now have early-voting hours
for the June 9 town election, the League of Women Voters is bringing 18
candidates before residents for Candidates’ Night on May 26; the
Marblehead Fireworks Committee is warning that about $80,000 still needs
to be raised for this year’s fireworks and Harbor Illumination; and,
because a town also announces its future in the young people it sends
out into the world, the Rotary Club of Marblehead awarded $25,000 in
scholarships to five students whose stories run through leadership,
journalism, chess, military-family service and a turn toward public
policy, sending the week out on the clearest note a town can ask for:
That what we choose to remember, repair and fight over still matters
because someone is coming up behind us to inherit it — Cheers, Will
This edition of The Independent's newsletter is made possible by the support of Glover Property Management Inc.:
Village students plant 1,807 poppies for Marblehead’s war dead
At
Marblehead Village School, 4th and 5th graders pushed 1,807 handmade
paper poppies into the lawn Friday, May 22, in a remembrance project
built around John McCrae's "In Flanders Fields."
Marine
scientist and Marblehead resident Steve Wolf said a pilot project
could raise about 60,000 baby oysters at Tucker’s Wharf before testing
them around the harbor. Supporters hope the effort can improve water
quality, ease erosion and revive a species long diminished north of Cape
Ann.
After
a five-year, $1.4 million restoration, the Marblehead Museum is opening
“Resistance and Resilience: Slavery and Freedom in Marblehead.” The
exhibit recovers enslaved lives connected to Marblehead families and
asks visitors to confront history built from incomplete records.
McCormack to depart after reshaping Marblehead's public history
Lauren
McCormack will leave the Marblehead Museum on June 30 to lead Freedom’s
Way National Heritage Area. Her tenure included the $1.4 million Brick
Kitchen and Slave Quarters restoration and broader work on Marblehead’s
Black and Indigenous history.
David
Modica, whose blunt Town Meeting question drew more than 1 million
combined views on Instagram and X, is to speak at Abundant Housing
Massachusetts’ May 27 lobby day. The group is pushing statewide zoning
changes as Marblehead’s housing fight continues to echo beyond town.
More
than 300 works by 7th through 12th graders fill Abbot Hall through May
27. Five seniors curated the exhibition to show students’ artistic
growth from middle school to graduation.
Christopher
Magra told a Salem audience that Marblehead’s fishing economy helped
push the colonies toward revolution. He tied the town’s cod trade,
Parliament’s 1775 Restraining Act and the schooner Hannah to a saltwater
origin story for American independence.
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Early voting set for June 9 election
Marblehead
voters will have three days of early voting at Abbot Hall before the
June 9 election on a tiered operating override and trash question.
Mailed ballots must reach the Town Clerk’s Office by 8 p.m. on election
day.
The
Marblehead League of Women Voters will host Candidates’ Night on May 26
at the Marblehead High School Library. Voters will hear from candidates
in six contested races before the June 9 town election.
The
Marblehead Fireworks Committee says it needs about $80,000 to keep this
year’s Independence Day fireworks and Harbor Illumination on track.
Committee chair Alexander Falk said the gap followed the loss of the
annual fundraising letter in the town census mailing.
We
reflect on Lauren McCormack’s years at the Marblehead Museum and
the way her research made local history immediate. Her work helped
return names, places and overlooked stories to the town’s public memory.
This
week's community bulletin highlights key town deadlines, meetings,
programs, events and civic reminders. Click any blue item to go directly
to source material, registration pages or full details.
Rotary Club of Marblehead awards $25K in scholarships
The
Marblehead Rotary Club awarded five $5,000 scholarships to students
chosen from 44 applicants. The recipients’ paths include journalism,
student leadership, chess, military-family service and a turn toward
public policy. Full story.
Counseling center honors Aldrich, names scholarship winners
The
Marblehead Counseling Center presented its second annual Amy Saltz
Community Champions Award to Dave Aldrich, founder of Grab the Bagel, on
May 1 and celebrated the honor Thursday at the Beacon Restaurant during
the organization's Community Champions Celebration. Aldrich, a Nahant
resident, founded the national Grab the Torch foundation about two
decades ago and launched Grab the Bagel in 2024 as a nonprofit social
enterprise whose bagel-sale revenue benefits local families, first
responders, schools and community services in Marblehead and Swampscott.
Nominator Paul Todisco said Aldrich "selflessly gives of his time and
energy without expecting anything in return. Full story.
Household hazardous waste collection day set for June 13
The
Marblehead and Swampscott health departments will sponsor a household
hazardous waste collection day on June 13 from 9 a.m. to noon at the
Marblehead Transfer Station, accessible via the Green Street entrance.
Residents can drop off items including oil-based paints, stains,
solvents, pesticides, motor oil, antifreeze, propane tanks, pool
chemicals and fluorescent bulbs. The program does not accept ammunition,
explosives, asbestos, prescription medicines or commercial waste.
Materials should be left in original containers with caps tightened,
sorted by category and packed upright in sturdy boxes. Proof of
residency is required. Costs range from $40 for up to 3 gallons to $90
for up to 25 gallons, with payment by credit card or check only. For
more information, contact the Board of Health at 781-631-0212. Full flier.
Diann Baylis secures Governor’s Council ballot spot Marblehead
immigration attorney Diann Baylis has qualified for the Sept. 1
Democratic primary ballot for Governor’s Council in the 6th District
after submitting more than 1,380 certified nomination signatures to the
Secretary of State’s Office. Baylis said the campaign is entering a new
phase as she prepares to meet voters across the district’s 20
communities and make her case on judicial appointments, constitutional
rights, elections and immigration-related issues. Details.
MHS performing arts students honored at annual awards banquet Marblehead
High School celebrated its performing arts seniors and award winners
during the annual Performing Arts Banquet and Awards on May 21. Students
were recognized across orchestra, chorus, band and theater, with honors
including the National School Orchestra Award, Director’s Award for
Orchestra, Fred Waring Director’s Award for Chorus, John Philip Sousa
Award, Patrick S. Gilmore Award and Louis Armstrong Jazz Award. Details.
Patriot Houses Tour to open four historic Summary:
Marblehead Museum will hold its 2026 Patriot Houses Tour from 10 a.m.
to 2 p.m. June 13, giving visitors a self-guided look inside four
historic private homes connected to families who supported the fight for
American independence. This year’s tour includes the Nathaniel Hooper
House, Jonathan Glover’s Eagle House, the Jeremiah Lee Carriage House
and the Benjamin Stacey House, along with access to the museum’s 1768
Jeremiah Lee Mansion. Details.
Marblehead Food Pantry launches Amazon wish list Summary:
The Marblehead Food Pantry is offering residents a new way to donate
food by ordering through an Amazon wish list and shipping items directly
to the Masonic Lodge at 62 Pleasant St. Organizers say the option is
meant to make giving easier for residents who want to help but may not
be able to make a grocery trip and separate drop-off, especially as food
costs and local budget pressures add strain. Details.
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