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Summary of 5th Community Meeting

BPL & Utile Host 5th Community Meeting February 10, 2025

Attended by more than 60 people, the fifth community meeting offered more detailed preliminary designs for our new library.  It was hosted by BPL staff and facilitated by Utile, our architectural firm, with attendance by members of the Public Facilities Department, representatives from the City Councilors’ offices and the Mayor’s office, and many community members.

A recording of the meeting and the presentation slides are available on the South End Library page of the BPL website here.

Using the format from previous meetings, Utile summarized each of the previous community meetings and then provided revised floor plans with additional details and refinements.  

Following the revised floor plans, they gave us a first look at how the building exterior could look from Tremont St, W. Newton S, and Library Park and then initial concepts for the interior of the building including the entrance lobby from the first and second floors and the children’s and adult’s reading areas. 

 

A look at the timeline indicated a 6th Community Meeting sometime before Fall 2025.  In the interim considerable design work will take place, refining both the exterior and interior concepts, with the expectation of putting the design out for construction bids in the fall, and construction starting at the end of the year and continuing for 18-24 months before completion/occupancy. 

 Questions & Comments from Attendees covered a wide range of topics:

·      Concerns about the location of the Zero Waste Oscar Bins being inappropriate for the front of an important public building and a suggestion that these bins should not be the sole receptacles for the whole South End.  Data supporting the high usage of the bins by residents reinforced the need.  Response:  Discussions are going on with the appropriate departments and the Zero Waste staff about how best to roll out this pilot program.  Utile is considering how to accommodate this compost service while these discussions take place.

·      What is the nature of the three staff spaces?  Response:  Space is allocated for facilities equipment, such as snowblower and other implements, a work room for staff to manage materials, a staff lunchroom, and a Friends storage space.

·      Community members had previously voiced a desire to engage more directly from the building to the park and this design represents a lost opportunity for that, despite the good visual connection via windows.  Response:  For security reasons and issues with the flood plain elevation, there will be only one entrance to the building.

·      Do we really need the phone nook?  Response:  Community members have expressed the desire for a variety of space sizes, including the phone nook, for activities such as interviews or health related inquiries, which in other branches have been well used.

·      Will the community room be able to hold musical performances, PowerPoint presentations and will there be accessible parking on the street?  Response: There will be presentation equipment, and the room will be acoustically designed for concerts, films, etc.  Details regarding street interaction/accessibility and the blue bikes have not been worked out yet, although there are no plans at this moment to move the blue bike station.

·      What type of restrooms are being considered?  Response:  All the restrooms will be gender neutral with closed toilet rooms and open sink areas.

·      Previously, community members expressed their desires for a third floor to avoid encroachment into the alley and the park, to promote ease of wayfinding and use of the building, and for various types of programming, such as nutritional education.  The issue of internal ease of use has been solved, however, the left side of the building (entrance, ramp, borrowers’ desk) needs more work.  It doesn’t foster the integration between inside and outside sufficiently.  Perhaps there’s a way to improve this. 

·      Additionally, the building seems quite “serious” and needs more “fun.”  Perhaps this can be handled by furnishings.  The exterior is hard-edged; perhaps it could be made softer to reflect more of the neighborhood aesthetic.  Response:  The next phase of the design work will focus more on the details of both the interior and the exterior.  Gratitude was expressed for these comments/suggestions.

·      One community member asked about the comparatively small size of the teen area to the adult and children’s areas and was concerned about the poor reading scores of Boston’s public-school children.  Response:  Not all activities for teens will be held in this dedicated area.  For example, SAT preparation classes that are held in other branches will also be held in the SEL branch in the community room or the multipurpose room.  All people will have access to the whole library; the space for teens is meant as a designated space for teens to do homework, read, relax, and research.

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BPL Hosts 4th South End Library Community Meeting on December 4th

The 4th Community Meeting hosted by BPL and facilitated by Utile, the architectural firm charged with designing the new branch, was held virtually on December 4th and attended by more than 80 people including BPL staff, City Public Facilities Department staff, representatives from City Councilors’ offices, our South End Liaison to the Mayor’s office, team members/presenters from Utile, their landscape partner firm Arcadis, and many members of the community. 

A recording of the meeting and the presentation slides are available on the South End Library page of the BPL website found here.

Project Schedule

After the welcomes and introduction, Brett Bentson, project lead from Utile, shared the agenda which included the schedule for the project indicating we have entered the 12-month Design Phase to be followed by the Construction Phase, typically 20-24 months. 

Claudia Porras of Utlle recapped the previous three community meetings for any attendees who are new to the project.  Slides and recordings of these can be found on the South End Branch of the BPL website mentioned above.

The Park/Landscaping

In reviewing their approach to Library Park, James Kros of Arcadis, Utile’s landscape partner, explained they plan to preserve as it is with two exceptions:  expansion of nine feet into the park toward Rutland Street and three and a half feet into the alley to accommodate a somewhat larger building footprint.  Kros shared a diagram of service truck access via the alley and indicated that these footprint expansions will not affect existing access to the alley. 

The arborists report the trees are in good condition and they want to preserve the current vegetation and continuity of materials.  Plans include expanded seating (some paving changes required by the new building footprint), the planting of a magnolia tree at the new entrance, and plantings on the alley-side in place of the current sidewalk with potted trees. There is no plan to move/change the fences. 

The park will have to be closed during construction.  To protect it during this phase, there will be chain link fenced zones to separate mechanical vs manual earthwork areas for preservation of trees, roots, and the irrigation system which is still in use.  FOSEL will need to provide them with “as built” drawings of the irrigation system.

Shadow Analysis

Presentation of a shadow analysis of the proposed building for our four annual seasons indicated there will be no meaningful increase of shadows in the neighborhood.

Floor Plans

Porras shared the preliminary floor plans noting a 40% overall increase in space distributed across various areas such as the community room, the collection/reading zones, and central services.  The entrance door will face Tremont Street, and visually communicate its presence.  Just inside there will be a ramp of two and a half feet to bring the first floor up to the required flood zone level.  An elevator will be available just inside the door to bring people to either the first or second floor, where they will be greeted by staff stationed on both floors.

A significantly enlarged community room (double the current room with 104 seating capacity) and a large children’s room will occupy the first floor with the children’s area facing Tremont Street and the community room backed up to the wall adjacent to the alley.  Community members asked that attention be paid to balancing safety/security of the children with the desire to allow visibility in and out of the library through windows facing the street.  The Community Room will have storage, a sink, and water available, but there will be no kitchen facilities in the new building.  This is disappointing to FOSEL, particularly because the branch has a long history of including food at its programs.

The teen space will be on the second floor along with the adult collection/ reading areas adjacent to a staff desk so that these spaces can be properly monitored for safety and civility.

There is a third floor that consists of space for mechanical and electrical equipment and a staff storage area for library materials.

Sustainability

The overall goal is LEED Silver which is defined as a recognition of the project's initial steps toward minimizing its environmental impact. (Silver 50-59 points. The Silver certification level indicates that a project has surpassed the basic LEED requirements, achieving more than 50% of the available points.) 

 Specific goals mentioned include all electric (no fossil fuels), roof-ready for solar panels which will be installed after final construction, highly insulated structure, triple-glazed windows, and storm water capture to underground chambers for preserving wood piling foundations in the neighborhood.  Demand Ventilation based on room occupancy will be used for spaces within the building to ensure efficient use of HVAC.

 Q & A

What about a food pantry?  Some branch locations have this capacity, it was not yet clear if SEL would have this.

Art display is important and there will be walls and picture rails that will allow for this.  Rotating art exhibits are desirable.

Natural light is crucial and there will be lots of visual connections to the park, as well as from the outside to enable people to see what’s going on inside.  The façade on Tremont Street will have windows with natural light along the street and along the park.  The entrance will be visually evident from all angles and welcoming.

The SE History Collection will be housed in the adult area and easily accessible to patrons. Currently it has been moved to Central where Paul Wright can meet with Melissa Andrews, Collections Director, to help assess what’s there and how it might be made available in the new building.  The hope is for local authors and history materials to be “front and center” at the branch.

What about a Library of Things?  Central and other branches are incorporating this concept.  Foley mentioned telescopes and sewing machines as examples and suggested community members access the link on the branch web page to offer suggestions/ideas for what might be included in this exciting concept. https://www.bpl.org/library-of-things/

Utile explained in more detail how the bathrooms will be set up.  Both floors will have all-gender bathrooms which include two fully private, accessible ADA rooms plus individual private toilet rooms, and communal sinks.  In the children’s area there will be a family bathroom accessed within that space.

There will be additional community meetings as the design progresses, although no specific target dates were identified.

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3rd COMMUNITY MEETING

Video and article of 3rd Community Mtg

 

Click the image to watch a video of the meeting including the discussion after the presentation.

Click here to see a slideshow of the presentation for in depth study and please leave comments at https://www.bpl.org/south-end-project/

Summary of Third Community Meeting by FOSEL Founder Marleen Nienhuis

Lively SE branch planning hearing focused on balancing strong support for 3-rd story option with cost & timing restraints; a kitchen facility; branch's visual connections to street and park

The June 12  community meeting of the "programming phase" for the new South End branch brought some 75 people to the discussion about what size the building should be to accommodate the programming options South End residents had requested in hearings held earlier this year.
Among the options: adding a third floor.
The hour-and-a-half (friendly enough) skirmish over size, cost, timing and programming between Boston Public Library president David Leonard and Utile Architects' Brett Bentson on one hand, and passionate library users accompanied by some of their elected representatives on the other, illuminated the concern that by the time the new library's doors open, around 2027, the $30 million construction project will be inadequate for the library needs of the South End's growing population.
"Libraries are not just built for now but for the future," commented Bob Barney, chair of the Claremont Neighborhood Association. Compared to library square footage as it relates to population in other neighborhoods, Barney added, "we are really low."
The current plan is for a two-story, 16,000 sq ft new building on the same site as the now-closed library, one that jots out into the park by 9 feet, but preserves all the trees. It will also slice off 3.5 ft from the private alley between library and abutters' homes on W Newton Street. By locating mechanical equipment and library storage on a "partial" third floor, however, additional programming space was opened up on the lower two floors, as per the lego-like massing diagram above. 

Utile principal Brett Bentson's presentation highlighted exciting new features proposed for the branch, including multiple large windows overlooking Library Park, back alley and Tremont Street from all floors; one large community room and four smaller-sized ones; almost a dozen separate restrooms for children, teens, adults and families; dedicated teen, adult and children's areas and a "grand staircase" to the second floor. Bentson emphasized the importance of keeping specific programming and collections on one floor instead of splitting them up over several. David Leonard added he had encouraged Utile to use as much glass and transparency as possible.

From the proposed park-side entry, a ramp and elevator would take visitors from the street up to the lobby. Bentson explained that risk from flooding due to storm and sea level rise has made it necessary to raise the first floor above existing street grade by some 30 inches.
   Concepts like sustainability and even a green roof would be considered in the one-year design phase that starts in September, as well as issues such as the actual location of all the programs within the building, which audience members suggested could be moved elsewhere. Suggested changes were a Tremont street-side entrance rather than one on the park's side; siting the large community room next to the park; and placing the children's area where they can make noise not but not disturb other visitors, perhaps on a higher floor. 

Countering persistent public comments by participants, including two local architects, that a third floor is needed because 16,000 sq ft is inadequate for the South End's estimated 38,000 residents, BPL president David Leonard insisted there would be enough space to accommodate all the programming requested on the proposed two floors, including dedicated spaces for seniors, Latino/Latina and the Chinese communities, as well as kitchen infrastructure for nutritional programming. and storage space.

Calling the proposed 16,000 sq ft project within the "sweet spot" of the 12,000 to 16,000 sq ft sized buildings popular for new libraries "across the country," Leonard described the South End branch's proposed square-footage increase "the largest by point of comparison" to all new branches elsewhere in Boston.

However, as Steve Fox, chair of the Rutland Square Association pointed out, most of the new branches cited in that comparison were in neighborhoods with two or more libraries serving populations of comparable magnitude to South End's, like Jamaica Plain, Dorchester and Brighton. The South End would have only one library for its 38,000 people. A general rule of thumb is to have minimally 20,000 sq ft in libraries serving 25,000 people or more, numbers that are already reflected in space allocations of existing libraries in Boston neighborhoods.

The limited square footage proposed for the two-story South End branch also appears to circumscribe how many computers will be available: only 19, divided among adults, teens and children. It's a small number in light of the high computer usage at the now-closed 7,000 sq ft South End branch. In the first quarter of 2019, for example, with 20,632 visitors, the library had 738 wireless and 2,845 computer sessions.

In comparison, Jamaica Plain's two branches offer public usage of 23 computers to 37,000 residents. The 21,000 sq ft Mattapan branch, serving 36,800 residents, has 32 computers. The 27,300 sq ft Roxbury library has 39 computers. The Roxbury population, moreover, is served by not just the Roxbury but also the Eggleston and Parker Hill branches. They have a total of 63 computers available to its almost 60,000 residents.
(The image below, of what Brett Bentson called "the chicklets," shows all the components that will have to go into the new library building, locations to be determined in the design phase coming up next.) 

President Leonard reminded the audience that the library's construction was on an "accelerated pace" and that a budget of more than the $30 million that has been approved "would have to go beyond a whole different level of review," especially in a time of "escalating construction cost."
   He compared the South End branch's construction budget to the one for the 15,000 sq ft Fields Corner branch. That library, however, is in a neighborhood of  20,000 people, when the South End branch's reach is for 38,000 residents.
    Architect Ken Kruckemeyer suggested that a taller building with a smaller footprint might have the same price tag as a two-story building with a larger one, as a result of lower costs for the perimeter's foundation construction. He also cited the importance of visual/auditory connections for visitors when viewing a building from within an atrium, and the opportunity that offers to quickly understand where what can be found using those visual/auditory prompts.

State rep. John Moran was one of the last speakers to comment. He described how, as a relatively new representative, he had become aware of how everywhere in his culturally rich and diverse district culinary programs created a sense of community.

"I like to dream of a scenario where we do have a kitchen," he said. If money stood in the way of building "a really good community library," he added, "let me try from the State perspective to get you the money."

"It's just an ask," he said.

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Volunteers Wanted to Help Prepare Library Park for Summer Concerts

FOSEL is excited to once again be able to present our summer Jazz & Blues concerts in Library Park this August.  FOSEL President Yvette Jarreau, with the help of Chris Fagg, has been hard at work getting the Park ready, weeding, pruning and cleaning the garden.  They have made good progress but there is more to do. 

FOSEL invites all interested friends and neighbors to come to the Park and lend a hand, spend some time outdoors with other volunteers, and ensure the Park is looking its best for the upcoming concerts.  

If you are interested, please contact us at info@friendsofsouthendlibrary.org.

 

 

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FOSEL Delights Neighborhood Children with First Ever Book Giveaway

2020 has been a difficult year for all, and with limits on gatherings in place, FOSEL was unable to lighten the mood with its annual Holiday Party.  Instead, we aimed to spread a little much-needed cheer by making gifts of books to neighborhood children.  Despite a gray and rainy day on Saturday, December 12th, the event opened with a line of parents and their children, masked and socially distanced, waiting to be the first recipients of the Library’s gift books. Tables with new, carefully selected titles, organized according to age, were set up in Library Park and children were invited to choose their favorites to take home in brightly colored book bags emblazoned with the FOSEL logo.  A handful of chocolate kisses were tossed in with each bag, adding a touch more sweetness to the treat of reading.  

Among the books on offer were classics for the very young, including board book versions of Corduroy, Pete’s a Pizza, The Snowy Day and Snowmen at Night, and popular picture books for 4-10 year-olds including Library Lion, Strega Nona, and A Bad Case of Stripes.  Also available was artist/activist Faith Ringgold’s beautifully illustrated Tar Beach, loved by adults as well as children. For slightly older kids, there were two chapter books, Ricky Ricotta’s Mighty Robot and The Unicorn Rescue Society’s The Creature of the Pines (described as “the perfect fit for newly independent readers”).  And for kids who prefer to read in Spanish, the program offered No dejes Que La Paloma Conduzca el Autobus by beloved children’s book author and former Sesame Street writer Mo Willems, and Un Caso Grave de Rayas.

Tracey Bolotnick, FOSEL board member and one of the organizers of the program, notes that the gifting of books to children living in the South End is a first for our Library.  “It’s been a tough year for our community. An event like this brings us together, gives us something we can all joyfully anticipate, and promotes reading to boot.”

Regretfully, the planned second weekend of the Holiday Book Giveaway had to be cancelled due to Boston’s intensified Covid restrictions, but FOSEL is committed to distributing the remaining books to neighborhood kids and plans to partner with the Boston Public Schools to do so.  The librarians will hold back a portion of the remaining gift books to hand out to families who come by the Library while supplies last.  

  

All images courtesy of Hermine Muskat

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FOSEL Planted Another 3,000 Spring Bulbs in Library Park, Aiming for Colorful Blazes of Flowers that Bloom in Timed Sequence

FOSEL assistant Chris Fagg, Library Park regular Reggie, and volunteer Walter Newman planting spring bulbs in Library Park

FOSEL assistant Chris Fagg, Library Park regular Reggie, and volunteer Walter Newman planting spring bulbs in Library Park

At the end of October, a small group of Library Park aficionados chased away the pandemic and election-season blues by taking planting tools and 3,000 recently delivered ‘harbingers of spring’ to Library Park. Buffeted by cold weather, rain, high winds and three inches of the season’s first snow, they raked the leaves, removed the fallen branches, dug holes and planted until the last bulb was covered.

Hokus Crocus will spring into flower in early March 2021

Hokus Crocus will spring into flower in early March 2021

Spanish Bluebells will be the ‘blue finale’ in June 2021

Spanish Bluebells will be the ‘blue finale’ in June 2021

Big Up tulip blend will pop in May and June 2021

Big Up tulip blend will pop in May and June 2021

As in previous years, the choice of tulips, daffodils, grape hyacinths, crocuses and Spanish Bluebells was made based on a timed sequence of anticipated blooms, so that from March through June something will be in flower. Expect the blue-hued Hokus Crocus and Grape Hyacinth Muscari Latifolium, along with daffodil selections Gold Shoulder and Spring Loaded, to usher in the Spring in March and April, followed by two kinds of tulips - Big Ups and Twin Peeks - in April and May. More tulips -- Angeliques and French Blends -- will bloom in May and June, together with more blues and purples -- Grape Hyacinth Blend and Spanish Bluebells -- in June. Charm Offensive, Cheerfulness and other bulbs in the Spring Loaded daffodil blend will join the tulips in May and June.

Charm Offensive daffodils are scheduled to flower in May and June 2021

Charm Offensive daffodils are scheduled to flower in May and June 2021

The final 500 bulbs were in the ground…

The final 500 bulbs were in the ground

The new tradition of planting thousands of spring bulbs in Library Park began in the fall of 2018, when FOSEL learned that City funding for the Park’s re-design would exclude plantings. Rather than leave the Park’s garden with nothing to show for the makeover but a thin layer of brown mulch where plants used to be, FOSEL brought in the first load of 3,000 bulbs that fall and watched them bloom profusely in the spring of 2019. During that 2019 summer, with the help of South End State Reps., Jon Santiago and Aaron Michlewitz, FOSEL secured $25,000 for soil improvement, perennials, an irrigation system and new low-level interior fencing as well as exterior fence repair.

Another 3,000 bulbs were ordered and placed in the ground in the fall of 2019, which in 2020 provided much appreciated visual relief from the gloom of the pandemic that forced many South Enders to stay close to their homes. Subsequent Park improvements necessitated temporary removal of all plantings from the soil, including the bulbs. But the now-completed October project to replace them will ensure that the Park again comes alive with color and cheer in the Spring of 2021 and offers all passers a respite from the bleak, winter-beaten city streets.

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Kimberly Crucioli Succeeds South End Liaison to the Mayor's Office, Faisa Sharif, Who Was Promoted to Deputy Director of Neighborhood Services, October 26

fosel+mayor 2.png

Faisa Sharif will be transitioning out of her role as Mayor Walsh’s liaison to Bay Village and the South End, and will become the new Deputy Director in the Mayor’s Office of Neighborhood Services. Mayor Walsh has appointed Kimberly Crucioli to step into liaison the role effective Monday, October 26th.

Faisa Sharif

Faisa Sharif

Faisa had the following to say about her departure: It has been an incredible three years working with neighbors, civic groups, businesses and institutions on issues large and small. We may not have had time to accomplish every single thing before us but I’m proud of the collaboration and progress we made. I learned so much from all of you about our neighborhoods and your advocacy has personally benefited me as a resident of the South End. I never took that for granted.

Many thanks to Faisa for all of her work with FOSEL and the South End Library and a warm welcome to Kimberly!

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Library Park's Long-awaited Renovation Has Been Completed, Pandemic or Not, with Funding from City and State, and Private Donations

Library Park landscaping.png

In June and July, with the City still in a lockdown except for permitted construction work, Blade of Grass landscapers and Henry Hafenrichter, a local fencing contractor, completed the multi-year renovation of Library Park. Three years ago, the Parks Department agreed to redesign the park, rather than just repair what was broken (which was just about everything). The most important change, neighbors said in a local meeting about various proposed plans, was that the park offer an open plan, visible from all corners, with a variety of seating arrangements and a welcoming feel.

libr prk butterfly garden.png

After the redesign, no money was left for landscaping the park but a $25,000 earmark from the State, requested by the then-newly sworn-in South End State Rep. Jon Santiago, and supported by our other State Rep., Aaron Michlewitz, came through in January 2020. That allowed FOSEL to contract with landscapers and fencing contractor, get approval from South End Landmark Dictrict Commission, and overcome the additional hurdles of Covid-19 permits in time to spend the State’s money before June 30, the end of their fiscal year. If it had not been spent by that time, the State would have taken back the earmark. Fancy footwork, assisted by knowledgeable employees of the BPL, helped to make it all happen in time. Additional renovation costs were covered by capital funds FOSEL had raised in 2017-18.

library park two guys.png

Library Park will only look better as the plantings settle in over the next year or two. They include Veronica, Echinacea, Buddlea, Amsonia, Liatris, Rudbekcia, Carex, Ginger, Ferns, Woodland Phlox, Hosts and Hydrangeas. The butterfly garden along Tremont Street has already shown its lovely colors. A timed drip-irrigation system was installed as well, to help the plants survive the latest drought. And FOSEL’s board has approved additional funding for another round of spring bulbs to make the spring 2021 habit of Library Park as beautiful as it was before. We’re culling the catalogues now, will order in the bulbs in the next week and plant in late fall.

Chances are, when abloom again, we and the park will live in better days.

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BPL Trustees Vote to Change the Name of “Dudley Library” to “Roxbury Library” When It Reopens This Summer, Disappointing Supporters of the "Nubian" Moniker for the Renovated $17.2 Million Branch

The $17.2 million project to renovate the 27,000 square-foot Roxbury Library is located in Nubian Square, and due to reopen in the next few months.

The $17.2 million project to renovate the 27,000 square-foot Roxbury Library is located in Nubian Square, and due to reopen in the next few months.

The BPL Board of Trustees in their Annual Meeting on May 26, voted 7 to 4 to change the name of the Dudley Library to the Roxbury Library, after a heated but civil debate among the Mayoral appointees that sidelined the other proposed moniker: Nubian Library, championed by the Nubian Square Coalition. The vote follows earlier successful efforts by the Coalition to replace the names of Dudley Square, where the library is located, with Nubian Square, and the Dudley MBTA Bus Station’s, which is to be renamed Nubian Station.

The BPL’s Board of Trustees held its Annual Meeting on May 26, the first via ZOOM

The BPL’s Board of Trustees held its Annual Meeting on May 26, the first via ZOOM

Last year’s non-binding City ballot question about the proposed name change for Dudley Square was solidly defeated citywide, but within the precincts surrounding Dudley Square it passed with about the same lopsided numbers as it was defeated elsewhere. This is why Mayor Marty Walsh decided the local vote would ‘weigh heavily’ in the final decision. Thomas Dudley, a prominent Puritan politician and governor of the Bay State in the mid 1600s when slavery was officially sanctioned, left no trace of having owned slaves himself.

Trustee Linda Dorcena Forry, a former legislator, supported the name Roxbury Library

Trustee Linda Dorcena Forry, a former legislator, supported the name Roxbury Library

Trustee Chair  of the Board Bob Gallery also supported the change to Roxbury Library

Trustee Chair of the Board Bob Gallery also supported the change to Roxbury Library

The vote to resolve what name Dudley Branch should have was to some extent forced by the impending reopening of the 27,000 square-foot branch library, renovated after decades of neglect at a cost of $17.2 million. A desire to settle the signage question in time for the reopening began the discussion, although BPL president David Leonard made it clear it was not determinative. And while the non-binding ballot question did establish strong support for changing the name of the square where the branch was located, it did not survey the specific question of whether the branch library should be called the Nubian Library, as well.

The Friends of Dudley Branch, who for decades lobbied and advocated to improve the branch library, favored calling it the Roxbury Branch, as did the Roxbury Historical Society. Some of the trustees supporting the Roxbury name said the branch would not just serve the largely African-American community living close to the library, but a much larger one surrounding it. Trustee Evelyn Arana-Ortiz pointed out that Roxbury was once largely German and Irish before it became African American, and is now increasingly seeing the growth of a very diverse demographic that includes a sizable Latino population. “Nubian Library doesn’t represent fully the history of Roxbury,” she commented.

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FOSEL's "South End Writes" Program, Now Featured Remotely via ZOOM, Offers FREE Copies of the Speakers' Books from a "Little Free Library" Box on West Newton Street

The Little Free Library Box on West Newton Street brings free copies of books by authors hosted on its South End Writes via ZOOM speaker program

The Little Free Library Box on West Newton Street brings free copies of books by authors hosted on its South End Writes via ZOOM speaker program

Now that libraries are closed, bookstores more difficult to access and navigate, and the South End Writes author program has become a ZOOM event, FOSEL is making a small number of copies of the featured writers’ books available for free on a first-come/first-serve basis from a Little Free Library box installed in the front yard of 160 West Newton Street.

Separately, the Boston Public Library (BPL) has started a program to deliver new books for children and adults, purchased from local booksellers to vulnerable populations in Boston. The goal of the privately funded BPL initiative, called Books for Boston, is to distribute 5,000 books. Several thousand have been delivered through partner organizations, including Healthcare for the Homeless, the Pine Street Inn and the Women’s Lunch Place, among others.

little free library red.png

FOSEL’s initiative uses money from its South End Writes budget previously reserved for refreshments and flowers for its live events. As such, in the last week, copies of Laura Zigman’s Separation Anxiety (hosted by SEW on April 14) and Barbara Shapiro’s The Collector’s Apprentice (May 26) were placed in the library box. Ashley Molesso’ and Chessie Needham’s The Gay Agenda: A Modern Queer History and Handbook, will be next (June 9), followed by copies of the widely praised novelist Carter Sickel’s The Prettiest Star and The Evening Hour (June 23). Martin Espada’s poetry collection, Vivas to Those Who Have Failed, will be made available after that (July 14) as well as an anthology of 93 poets edited by the celebrated poet, What Saves Us: Poems of Empathy and Outrage.

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FOSEL RECOMMENDS: A Resource List from All Over the World for Keeping Kids and Young Adults Engaged While Home

The virtual Everywhere Book Fest on May 1 and May 2 will feature kid-lit authors, books and readings

The virtual Everywhere Book Fest on May 1 and May 2 will feature kid-lit authors, books and readings

FOSEL RECOMMENDATIONS FOR KEEPING KIDS ENGAGED WHILE HOME 

Compiled by Tracey Bolotnick

We know that many South End families rely on the library not only as a source of reading material for kids, but also as center of educational activity and community connection.  Although libraries across the Commonwealth, including the South End library, are closed for now, there are many great options out there for keeping kids connected to books and learning while staying safe at home.  We all look forward to the day when we can safely convene again in our beautifully renovated library.  Until then, here is a list of some recommended online alternatives for keeping kids engaged:  

        

 BOOKS AND READING

Thumbs-Up Books recommends picture books for children

Thumbs-Up Books recommends picture books for children

Boston Public Library Online Resources.  It is still possible to borrow books and other resources from the Library even while it is closed by visiting:   https://www.bpl.org/stream-and-download/.    You can download or stream eBooks, audiobooks, magazines, newspapers, movies, and more.  (Contact Anne Smart at asmart@bpl.org, (339) 203-0997 or Matt Krug mkrug@bpl.org for help using the library’s online services.)  

A Korean interface from the International Children’s Digital Library

A Korean interface from the International Children’s Digital Library

International Children’s Digital Library.  A free and easily searchable source of online access to books from around the world in multiple languages for kids ages 3 to 13:  http://en.childrenslibrary.org/

Author Hosted Readings and Activities.  Browsing You Tube or the web for live or recorded readings of your favorite children’s book authors will pull up loads of options.  Here are some favorites:    

 Grace Lin, an illustrator and author of middle-grade novels and picture books, is posting readings and drawing tutorials from her books on her You Tube channel:  https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCIQet5ij4zAuR_QGOQ1vAxQ.    

A children’s book in Farsi from the International Children’s Digital Library

A children’s book in Farsi from the International Children’s Digital Library

 Oliver Jeffers, author of The Day the Crayons Quit and many other much beloved picture books is doing a daily live reading and posting the recordings on his web site:  https://www.oliverjeffers.com/books#/abookaday/

Story Time from Space On this site astronauts read children’s books in space (!) from the International Space Station: https://storytimefromspace.com/

Audible Stories.  Audiobooks for kids in six languages, free during the pandemic:  https://stories.audible.com/discovery

BPL Recommended Online Story Times and Do-It-Yourself Story Timeshttp://guides.bpl.org/c.php?g=1012154&p=7331668 http://guides.bpl.org/remote_resources_for_families/diy_storytimes

Games and Puzzles from the TATE Kids UK website

Games and Puzzles from the TATE Kids UK website

Everywhere Book Fest.  In response to the dozens of canceled books festivals, three young adult writers decided to start the Everywhere Book Fest, “a virtual gathering of kid-lit authors, books and readers that will bring the book festival experience to everyone” on May 1st and 2nd:  https://everywherebookfest.com  

ABC Mouse.  A digital education site for kids ages 2-8 with stories, games, and puzzles.  This is a paid service but offers a 30-day free trial: https://www.abcmouse.com/abt/homepage?8a08850bc2=T1240128372.1585770828.7485&cjevent=805ea6cb745211ea8328002d0a240613

BPL’s Booklists.  Book recommendations for different ages from the BPL: http://guides.bpl.org/c.php?g=1012154&p=7331685

Thumbs Up Books.  A resource for parents of young children looking for picture book recommendations:  https://thumbsupbooks.weebly.com/

Live footage from all over the world on Explore Live Cams website

Live footage from all over the world on Explore Live Cams website

 SCIENCE AND ARTS & CRAFTS

Tate Kids A dedicated kids’ website from the Tate Galleries in the UK with an assortment of art-themed games and quizzes: https://www.tate.org.uk/kids/games-quizzes.

BPL Crafts and Games List.  Links to a variety of crafts and games for kids from the BPL:  http://guides.bpl.org/c.php?g=1012154&p=7331687

Draw Everyday with JJK.  Jarrett J. Krosoczka, author of the Lunch Lady books, hosts a basic illustration lesson every weekday at 2pm:   https://www.youtube.com/studiojjk

Mo Willems Doodling.  The popular picture book author of the Knuffle Bunny series and other picture books is hosting doodling sessions on You Tube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RmzjCPQv3y8&feature=emb_title

The ArtisTree Community Art Center.  Videos with ideas for how to stay creative while staying at home: https://www.youtube.com/user/artistreevt

The American Museum of Natural History’s site is chock full of videos and activities about our natural world.

The American Museum of Natural History’s site is chock full of videos and activities about our natural world.

 Ology.  A science website for kids from the American Museum of Natural History with videos, games, activities, etc. on a variety of subjects:  https://www.amnh.org/explore/ology

New England Aquarium:  Visit the aquarium from the comfort of home:  https://www.neaq.org/visit/at-home-events-and-activities/?fbclid=IwAR2Psh0apSlCIn7VbS6X0UfbjYD9z6E8Bry7-gq0-F7Y-2T1R0tO-M3CJTA

The San Diego Zoo.  A site for kids including behind-the-scenes videos and stories, as well as a variety of printable activities and online games:  https://kids.sandiegozoo.org/videos

Explore Live Cams.  Live footage of elephants in Africa, of Earth from the International Space Station, of oceans, birds, stars and much more:  https://explore.org/livecams

Ranger Rick Magazine.  A kids’ nature magazine that normally requires a paid subscription but is free for now with games, activities, information, and back issues:  https://rangerrick.org/stuck-indoors/

Farm Food 360.  Canadian farm and food tours—from raising pigs to making milk and cheese, and virtual egg farm field trips and egg-speriments from the American Egg Board:  virtual egg farm field trips /  https://www.farmfood360.ca/

Did you know that some Canadian family dairy farms allow their cows to decide when they would like to be milked? And why should they not have a say in it? Find out on Farm Food 360’s website.

Did you know that some Canadian family dairy farms allow their cows to decide when they would like to be milked? And why should they not have a say in it? Find out on Farm Food 360’s website.

Skype a Scientist.  A program that allows kids to request to speak to a scientist and then connects them for a Skype conversation:  https://www.skypeascientist.com/for-families.html

The Kid Should See This.  A website of interesting and educational videos on a host of subjects:   https://thekidshouldseethis.com/

Science Kids.  Facts, games, quizzes, experiments, and more on a variety of topics:  http://www.sciencekids.co.nz/

The story of ten influential works of architecture on Kids Kanopy

The story of ten influential works of architecture on Kids Kanopy

Architecture for Young Adults, An Exciting Introduction, featuring a Kanopy Film on Architecture.  A 57-minute film telling the stories of ten influential works of architecture:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4DA8L9dvyp0

Kiwi Co. Innovation Factory A website with loads of art and science project ideas for kids of all ages:  https://www.kiwico.com/kids-at-home.  

The Trustees at Home.  Virtual events and activity ideas from the Trustees of Reservations while their properties are closed:  http://www.thetrustees.org/things-to-do/month/virtual.html

Kids/Kanopy Movies: Now, Kanopy offers children’s programming with Kanopy Kids. Parents can browse educational and engaging videos for children of all ages that promote positive social and emotional development and inspire creativity in young minds. We have partnered with Common Sense Media™ to provide developmentally appropriate age ratings for videos on Kanopy Kids. www.kanopy.com

 

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Community News FOSEL Community News FOSEL

South End Library Reopens after Four Months, with Many Kudos to FOSEL for the Success of their Public/Private Partnership to Pay for the Renovations

The festive reopening of the South End library on February 18 brought elected and appointed officials who complimented FOSEL on its public/private partnership to pay for the library’s improvements. From left to right: State Rep. Jon Santiago, City C…

The festive reopening of the South End library on February 18 brought elected and appointed officials who complimented FOSEL on its public/private partnership to pay for the library’s improvements. From left to right: State Rep. Jon Santiago, City Councilor Ed Flynn, FOSEL president Marleen Nienhuis, South End Forum chair Steve Fox, City Councilor Frank Baker, chair of the BPL board of trustees, Bob Gallery, BPL president, David Leonard.

(Above: Marleen Nienhuis, president of FOSEL, and David Leonard, president of the BPL)

Since October 2019, Southenders have torn their hair out about not knowing where to go for neighborhood meetings, yoga classes, children’s stories, computer access, income tax assistance, movies, books, DVDs, museum passes, reserved book pickups, newspapers, magazines, a trip to the public restroom, or simply a chat with their friendly librarian. But on Tuesday, February 18, the South End library finally reopened its doors after a four-month stretch when the library’s interior was ‘refreshed’ with new flooring, fresh paint, additional outlets, reupholstered seating and new furniture. The festive occasion brought numerous elected and appointed city officials to the branch, as well as FOSEL board members and many library supporters who finally had a place to go for library services. “This may not seem like a long period of time for a library to be closed,” said BPL president, David Leonard, “but when you count on your library for computer access and story time, it is a long time indeed.”

A variety of seating arrangements in the adult area at tables wired to recharge electronic devices

A variety of seating arrangements in the adult area at tables wired to recharge electronic devices

Leonard spoke to the excited crowd assembled in the adult reading room and lauded the Friends of the South End Library (FOSEL for the public/private partnership they put together to begin the renovation process at the long-neglected branch library. The cost of the ‘refresh’ was about $190,000,” he said. FOSEL wrote a check for part of the refresh of $50,000 from a fundraising campaign that raised $100,000 in a few months during 2017-18. Chair of the BPL board of trustees, Bob Gallery, echoed his appreciation for FOSEL’s public/private partnership, the first time a Boston library Friends group collected funds for capital renovation of a branch library.

The contributions by you, our generous donors, allowed us to write a check for $50,000 for the new furnishings that will benefit all South End library users. Thank you.

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Comfortable seating near the parkside windows

The library now features light-blue and easy-to-clean new floors imported from the Netherlands; an attractive palette of blues on its diagonal walls; a fresh coat of paint throughout the first and second floors, new upholstery; a reconfigured space to allow for a variety of seating arrangements; electrically wiring inside high and reading tables; an attractive seating area for teens underneath the stairs; new upholstery and rugs in the Children’s Room; new electrical outlets throughout the space; a ceiling-mounted projector and slide-down screen in the Community Room; and much-improved signage. And, to the relief of many parents and caregivers, each of the two restrooms now offers a changing station. The space reconfiguration and furniture choices were recommended by FOSEL board member, architect Michelle Laboy, during a multi-year planning process that was combined with the quick and successful fundraising effort by FOSEL in the fall of 2017.

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A small but separate area for teens and tweens with floor lamps and outlets to recharge electronic devices; panels divide the space from the adult computer area and can be used as a white board

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A row of adult computers is now separated from the teen and children’s space with colorful panels

children's room.png

The refreshed Children’s Space features new rugs and upholstery, and new computer tables (below)

The heavily used banquette near the library’s entrance on the right was reupholstered and outfitted with new electrical outlets new the floor.

The heavily used banquette near the library’s entrance on the right was reupholstered and outfitted with new electrical outlets new the floor.

The ‘refresh’ originally began as an effort by FOSEL to jumpstart a major renovation of the dilapidated branch, which was not scheduled for any improvements, et alone an expansion, until 2025 due to an enormous backlog of many other sub-standard library buildings in the 24-branch BPL system. The FOSEL proposal called for a multi-phased renovation that would combine public and private funds for a new South End facility. The Friends raised $100,000, of which $50,000 was added to a 2017 City budget allocation of $132,000 for the First Phase of the project. But happily, the Walsh Administration decided two years ago to completely renovate and expand the size of the South End library after all, beginning with a Programming Study in FY 2020. As a result, the First Phase face lift became a “refresh” to last for the next three to five years, while the multi-million-dollar ‘Big Reno’ is being planned in an upcoming process of community meetings, demographic fact-finding, and design studies that will start sometime this year.

Librarian Matt Krug is thrilled with his standing desk near a parkside window.

Librarian Matt Krug is thrilled with his standing desk near a parkside window.

Mayor Walsh’s Administration has made a major investment in the Boston Pubic Library system which, according to his South End spokesperson, Faisa Sharif, is a reflection of his dedication to making neighborhood public spaces accessible to all. Since he took office six years ago, more than $82 million was spent on the Central Library’s Johnson Building, now an attractive bustling hub that features a WGBH studio, the popular Newsfeed cafe, and a BPL Gift Shop. The almost $16 million renovation of the Central Library’s Rare Books and Manuscripts Department, to open to the public next year, will make it into an internationally recognized state-of-the-art facility of historical and art treasures. In addition, the BPL is in the process of looking for an architect to renovate the stately McKim building which adjoins the Johnson Building on Copley Plaza.

Among the BPL’s branch renovations, Jamaica Plain got a $10 million new facility a few years ago. The Adams Street branch, at $19 million, will be ready by 2021 and the $15 million Dudley Library renovation (perhaps Nubia library in the future?) is scheduled to reopen this spring. For the next five years, another $127 million is budgeted for several other library renovations, including the South End branch.

The current South end library improvements include a charming mural near the Children’s Room depicting a number of South End landmarks and cultural icons which FOSEL suggested the artist, Tony Capozzi, consider in his design, and he did. They include the BCA kiosk; Back Bay station; a row of bow-front brownstones; the Union United Methodist Church; a same-sex couple embracing; musical venues; planes flying over; and a number of cats, among other features. No dogs, regrettably. A similar mural is on he wall in the Chinatown branch, with its own iconic images.

he new Tony Capozzi mural in the South End library next to the Children’s Room, based on dozens of suggestions by FOSEL board members, each one of whom had their personal favorites.

he new Tony Capozzi mural in the South End library next to the Children’s Room, based on dozens of suggestions by FOSEL board members, each one of whom had their personal favorites.

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Community News FOSEL Community News FOSEL

On the 125th Anniversary of the completion of the BPL's McKim Building, President David Leonard Announces the Search is on for an Architect to Upgrade the 19th Century Masterpiece on Copley Place

The entrance to the McKim building on Copley Square

The entrance to the McKim building on Copley Square

Reported by Yvette Jarreau

At the January 30 BPL Trustees meeting at the Central Library, BPL president, David Leonard announced he had sent out a Request for Proposal to find an architect to update the Copley Square McKim building. Tied at the hip to the beautifully renovated Johnson Building on Boylston Street, McKim was originally completed in 1895. Designed by Charles Follen McKim, the building had fallen into disrepair by the 1990s. A fundraising campaign by the BPL board of trustees at the time, which included library devotees William O. Taylor, publisher of the Boston Globe and William Bulger, president of the Massachusetts Senate, led to a partial restoration. But today, on the 125th anniversary of the McKim, another face lift is coming. While a firm amount of the expected cost has not yet been established, it is reasonable to assume it will not be less than the more than $80 million spent on the (very successful) renovation of the adjacent Johnson Building five years ago, according to sources within the BPL. Most, if not all, of the funding is at this point expected to come from private donations, according to City officials.

In his report to the trustees, Leonard pointed out that this anniversary year of the McKim the BPL is highlighting several civil rights achievements: the commemoration of the ratification of the 19th amendment, giving women the right to vote; hosting the post-conference venue of the NAACP Conference in July; and a number of Boston Pride events to celebrate equal rights victories of the LGBTQ community.  Reporting on the capital improvement projects now underway, Leonard noted the South End branch will reopen doors after the four-month closing for its ‘refresh,’ on February 18th. The Chinatown branch, closed due to a renovation of the China Trade building where it is located, may swing open its doors at the end of February or early March. And the long-awaited completion of the Dudley Branch is imminent, while great progress is being made with the expansion and renovations of the Adams Street and Roslindale branches.

The Bates reading room at the McKim building

The Bates reading room at the McKim building

BPL’s chief financial officer, Ellen Donaghey, highlighted key changes in the BPL budget from 2019, including increases in salaries and overtime related to collective bargaining and minimum wage increases; hiring into open management positions; and utilities cost increases, some of which are related to the impending opening of the 27,000 square foot Dudley Branch. Donaghey explained several energy efficient programs are being put in place to reduce energy costs.  The BPL’s Finance and Audit Committee approved a vote to move $6 million to a global equity manager called Impax Asset Management, a diverse, socially engaged, environmentally conscious money manager.

abbey room.png

Chief of Collections, Laura Irmscher, Director of Library Services, Michael Colford, and Chief of Communications, Lisa Pollack reported on current BPL library usage:

  • A recent Gallup Poll showed that the largest chunk of leisure time was spent visiting the library, across all age ranges, with an average of 10.5 trips during 2019, almost one per month, and outpacing time spent attending the movies. 

  • During 2019, of the more than 21 million items in the BPL collections, nine percent are checked out and taken home; 75 percent are non-circulating materials used for research in the library; and 16 percent are special collections such as rare books, maps, prints, photographs, etc.  

  • The top five branches in check-out usage were Jamaica Plain, West Roxbury, East Boston, Brighton, and South Boston.  

  • Book check-outs have remained stable at about 2.2 million from 2009 to 2019, but big increases  have occurred with downloading and streaming materials over that time span, with some decreased use in DVDs and CDs.

  • BPL collections are “on the move” with 25 percent of the materials checked out at a branch coming from “elsewhere” in the BPL system. 

  • DIGITAL SERVICES

    • The BPL offers several digital services:  Overdrive, Kanopy, RB (Recorded Books), and Hoopla, with almost 60 percent of usage in e-books, about 40 percent in audiobooks and the rest in music and video.  

    • In the past three years, digital circulation use has accelerated and will likely overtake physical use during the next year.  

    • The library has over 130 various online resources, across a wide range of subject areas which are accessible from home; the BPL is continuing to digitize BPL collections with focus on the most used.   

    • Reach in the last five years has increased about 23 percent system-wide.  Reach is defined as the usage of all library services including programs and attendance, visits, circulation, computer use and number of wireless sessions.

    • Computer and WIFI usage are changing as laptops and WIFI become more ubiquitous.

    • There is an upward trend in attendance at programs;  next steps will be analysis of what programs are most attended and and measurements of satisfaction with them. 

    •  Outreach is growing, activities like visiting schools, senior housing, providing services at other locations may become more important in our communities

    • Looking ahead the BPL will capitalize on digital growth, continue to make more collections available to more people, attempting to meet people where they are.  

DIGITAL COMMONWEALTH.ORG

  • BPL manages this non-profit collaborative organization, founded in 2006, that provides resources and services to support the creation, management, and dissemination of cultural heritage materials held by Massachusetts libraries, museums, historical societies, and archives. It currently has more than 180 member institutions from across the state.

  • Digital Commonwealth provides access to thousands of images, documents, and sound recordings that have been digitized by member institutions so that they may be available to researchers, students, and the general public.

WEB SERVICES

  • The BPL website and catalog are integrated now and it is possible track usage behavior.  

  • About 20 percent of the activity is related to “search” and one’s “account”

  • 35 percent of sessions begin with search

  • 42 percent come from mobile or tablet platforms rather than desktops

  • Coming soon:  analyses of flow or paths within the site, event analyses, event registrations; all are opportunities for effective marketing of information and events.

 NEW BUSINESS

Ellen Duncan introduced members of the 2020 BPL Boston Marathon Team, a group of fifteen people.  Their fundraising goal this year is $112K; last year they received $135K.  More information can be found at this link here.

 PUBLIC COMMENT

(the members of the public at the BPL trustees meeting can sign up for public comment at the end of the public session. below, some of the comments:)

QUESTIONS/COMMENTS

  • If a particular item is requested several times, does it get priority for digitization?  Yes.

  • Is tracking on the website specific to individuals or is it anonymous?  It is anonymous.

  • Trustees Meetings should be posted on the front page of the website when the date is nearing making it is easier to find.  Draft minutes should be connected to the meeting agenda so that people can see them easily.

 

THE NEXT BPL TRUSTEES MEETING WILL BE HELD ON THURSDAY, MARCH 26 AT 4:00 PM AT THE WEST ROXBURY BRANCH, 1961 CENTRE STREET, WEST ROXBURY. THE PUBLIC IS CORDIALLY INVITED. FOR ADDITIONAL TRUSTEES MEETINGS, CLICK HERE.

 

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Community News FOSEL Community News FOSEL

At the November BPL Trustees Meeting, More Good News for Boston Libraries Including, at Last, a Gift Shop

Reported by Yvette Jarreau and Marleen Nienhuis

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BPL mugs with images of either the McKim or the Johnson Building now for sale in the Central Library’s gift shop next to the Newsfeed Cafe

BPL mugs with images of either the McKim or the Johnson Building now for sale in the Central Library’s gift shop next to the Newsfeed Cafe

 At the November 19 Boston Public Library Trustees meeting, BPL president David Leonard and his team continued to paint a cheerful picture of a public library solidly on the upswing. A new focus on staff development, community engagement and a review of its decade-old mission is going hand-in-hand with a good financial picture and major capital improvement projects across the entire system. Last but not least, after many years of comments by many suggesting a gift shop for the Central Library to capitalize on reproductions of its rich collection for a new BPL funding stream, one has opened next to the Newsfeed Cafe. “We now have the ability to prioritize and can step back from the crisis work to focus on the library of the future,” Leonard said. 

 Capital investment and operational budget support for the BPL under Mayor Marty Walsh continues to be strong. Staff morale, a perennial problem at the BPL, likely got a great lift when, for the first time in many years, the BPL closed its doors to the public for a day this fall to have a three-hour all-staff meeting with some 492 library employees. “It was a great event,” Leonard said. They focused on better customer service, community engagement, staff development and diversity. A staff appreciation dinner followed, with awards for years of service for some, topped by a visit from Mayor Walsh himself, who showed the flag of support for the BPL and answered the audience’s questions. 

A BPL all-staff meeting in November included a visit by Mayor Marty Walsh

A BPL all-staff meeting in November included a visit by Mayor Marty Walsh

Leonard also proposed a “draft road map” to refresh the current BPL mission, based on the so-called Compass principles hammered out a decade ago by his predecessor, Amy Ryan, after a successful fight against the Menino Administration’s plan to close up to a third of the branches. Leonard’s proposal aims to both place the BPL more squarely in the life of the community, while still preserving today’s information and records as “the history of tomorrow.” “We don’t want to be an archive because there already is an archive in the city,” Leonard said, “but we do want to be engaged with the larger community.”

 The current BPL mission was based on recommendations from public comments at a number of local branch libraries in 2010, including the South End branch. The goal was to:

  • Be user centered

  • Be a community gathering place

  • Focus on special collections

  • Focus on children and teens

  • Be a center of knowledge

  • Focus on access and innovation

  • Be sustainable

  • Be fun.

 These principles are still relevant today, Leonard said told the Trustees. But his proposed “road map” places’ sustainable funding growth’ right at the top of his list, together the with system-wide improvements to buildings, spaces and infrastructure that have been underway. Improvement and enhancement of staff and organizational culture, long a sore point among library users, also is in the spot light. Being ‘ready for the unexpected’ may seem an odd point until one recalls that the 2015 Marathon bombings happened on the Central Library’s doorstep on Boylston Street: 

  1. Facilitate sustainable funding growth

  2. Systemwide improvements to buildings, spaces and infrastructure

  3. Enhance collection management, acquisitions, and access supporting the community’s needs

  4. Enhance services systemwide with special emphasis on youth services

  5. Develop and implement a digital, technological and innovation plan 

  6. Improve and enhance the staff and organizational culture with a focus on support, engagement, productivity and customer service 

  7. Be ready for the unexpected.

Leonard said the plan is for his roadmap to be reviewed by division, department, and staff meetings, and, refreshingly, to establish a process of public engagement, yet to be defined.

An architect’s image of the Rare Books and Manuscript Department’s renovation at the Central Library which will reopen to the public in the fall of 2021

An architect’s image of the Rare Books and Manuscript Department’s renovation at the Central Library which will reopen to the public in the fall of 2021

The Adams Street library, 13,000 square foot in size, will include a reading garden and re-open in 2021.

The Adams Street library, 13,000 square foot in size, will include a reading garden and re-open in 2021.

The new 27,000 square foot Dudley Library will reopen sometime in 2020

The new 27,000 square foot Dudley Library will reopen sometime in 2020

 An update by the BPL’s Major Projects Manager, Alison Ford, provided a glimpse of the “system wide improvements” mentioned in Leonard’s report. The BPL’s capital projects under the Walsh Administration have amounted to well over a hundred million dollars spent so far for improvements at the Central Library, tens of millions more at some of the branches, and a similar amount to be spent over the next five years at others. There’s the $17.2 million, 27,000 square foot Dudley Square library, due to be completed in 2020; the $15.7 million overhaul of the Central Library’s Rare Books and Manuscript Department; and the $19.2 million, 13,000 square foot Adams Street library, to re-open in 2021. Other construction projects and upgrades are in the hopper as well, to wit, the South End library’s current interior improvements, to be completed in February 2020. Ford presented a list of other library renovation plans which have yet to be prioritized, among them the program study in the current budget for a new and expanded South End library, as well as for those of Roslindale, Faneuil, Fields Corner, Uphams Corner, Chinatown, Lower Mills and South Boston branch libraries.

Browsing at the Central Library’s new Gift Shop, next to the Newsfeed Cafe

Browsing at the Central Library’s new Gift Shop, next to the Newsfeed Cafe

 Ellen Donaghey, BPL’s Chief Financial Officer, gave information about the new BPL Gift Shop, a venture enthusiastically supported by the Trustees and staff. It offers a variety of items for sale, including ornaments, note cards, BPL mugs, mittens, hats and teddy bears. Separately, Trustee Evelyn Arana-Ortiz, chair of the Finance and Audit Committee, reported that the overall performance YTD 2019 of BPL investments was “strong” but the plan is to make some investment changes as a hedge after ten years of a bull market.

 During the Public Comment section, a library patron complained that the BPL only offers single-user access to the Boston Globe and the Boston Herald as a result of their “pay wall.” This is because neither publication has agreed to offer the BPL a “library product,” as for example does the New York Times., the BPL staff said. The best remedy would be for library patrons to contact these newspapers and ask them to make the Globe and the Herald accessible to library users, they said. 

 The Trustees of the BPL, appointed by the Mayor of Boston for five-year terms, have their Annual Meeting in May and schedule regular meetings every other month, either at the Central Library or at branch libraries. All meetings are open to the public and provide interesting information about BPL developments to the community. Public comment is welcomed at the end of every meeting. 

 The next BPL trustees meetings are as follows:

Thursday, Jan 30, 2020, 3 pm, Central Library

Thursday, Mar 26, 4pm, West Roxbury Branch

Tuesday, May 12, 8:30am, Annual Meeting at Central Library. 

For further info about BPL Trustees, click here.

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Alison Barnet's Two October Presentations of her Recent Book, "Once Upon a Neighborhood: A Timeline and an Anecdotal History of he South End of Boston," Drew Crowds Passionate about Their 'Hood'

Author and urban historian Russ Lopez, who introduced Alison Barnet (right)

Author and urban historian Russ Lopez, who introduced Alison Barnet (right)

Ann Hershfang introducing Alison Barnet on October 15

Ann Hershfang introducing Alison Barnet on October 15

In a first for the South End Writes author series, local history chronicler Alison Barnet had such an overflow audience for her scheduled talk about Once Upon A Neighborhood: A Timeline and Anecdotal History of he South End of Boston on October 8 that a follow-up event was held a week later. South End neighbors and friends passionate about the local scene filled the library’s community room on October 15 as well, reminiscing about the neighborhood as it was then (“a sense of community,” “people recognizing humanness,” “multiculturalism,’ “people easier to talk to”) and, perhaps less so, as it appears to be now to at least some (““coldness,” “distancing,” “gentrification,” “$5,000 baby carriages”). The emotions reached such a pitch that someone felt compelled to caution the audience that “history can become nostalgic. We shouldn’t idealize ‘our moment’ and not see the potential in ‘this moment,’” the attendee said. “Without denigrating history, there is our moment here, too.”

The author wearing a Hite Radio and TV t-shirt

The author wearing a Hite Radio and TV t-shirt

The author of a series of perceptive, original and passionate analyses of the South End as both a place and a character, Barnet landed in the South End in the 1960s when, as a transfer student to Boston University, she was not offered dorm space. She found room in one of the “approved” living spaces for women at the time, the Franklin Square House on East Newton Street, where her love affair with the South End began as she walked from the South End back and forth to BU every day. As she reported in a previous book, South End Character, “I liked it when people spoke to me, and I found what they said witty, offbeat, profound, poetic, right on target, and never boring.” One of the founders of the South End News in the 1980s, Barnet also wrote Extravaganza King: Robert Barnet and Boston Musical Theater and Sitting Ducks.

Urban historian, Russ Lopez about to introduce Alison barnet on October 8

Urban historian, Russ Lopez about to introduce Alison barnet on October 8

Pages from Once Upon a Neighborhood

Pages from Once Upon a Neighborhood

Longtime South End resident Ann Hershfang, founder and board member of WalkBoston and a member of the South End Library’s History Collective, introduced Barnet on October 15 while urban historian, Russ Lopez, also part of the Collective, had done the honors for Barnet’s talk on October 8. Copies of the book were hot off the presses on the first night, and sold out at both events. At each reading, Barnet wore a series of T-shirts with logos of historic South End organizations.

The time line format in Once Upon a Neighborhood

The time line format in Once Upon a Neighborhood

Writing Once Upon a Neighborhood began five years ago, Barnet recounted, inspired by another Boston historian, James Vrabel, author of When in Boston: A Time Line & Almanac. Initially believing it would be a few short pages, she became obsessed by its potential and, with the continued support of the Collective, completed it after four-and-a-half years. Helpfully organized as a time line, Once Upon a Neighborhood is a treasure trove of South End history with references to, among other items, an amazing list of publications, some of which survived but many not. They included, for example, the Midtown Journal; the Boston Chronicle; the South End Sun; the Boston Guardian; a newsletter called Hi Neighbor; the New South End; the South Bay Union; the SEPAC newsletter; the People’s South End News; The Neck. and many others.

Alison Barnet with a t-shirt from Chico’s Variety & News Co.

Alison Barnet with a t-shirt from Chico’s Variety & News Co.

FOSEL has received a number of inquiries about where to purchase a copy of Once Upon a Neighborhood: A Timeline and Anecdotal History of the South End of Boston. Since the South End library is closed for an upgrade until sometime in February 2020, the traditional location for the book’s acquisition is not available. The author has emailed us to say that buyers can call her at 617-267-7018 and leave a message with a phone number. She will then arrange a sale, for $30, cash. When the library reopens, the book will be available at the counter.

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"Traces of the Trade," by Filmmaker Katrina Browne, a Descendant of the Largest Slave-trading Family in the US, Lays Bare New England's Complicity in Slavery and its Institutional Amnesia About It

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When filmmaker Katrina Browne read her grandmother’s words two decades ago about the illustrious and prosperous Rhode Island family she was a part of, she noticed a brief reference to the ‘unpleasantness’ of the family’s trade in slaves. What she suddenly realized could be the true story of her ancestors rocked Browne to the bottom of her soul, said Dain Perry, her cousin, and led her to produce the documentary, Traces of the Trade: A Story from the Deep North.

Shown to a packed audience at the South End library in September, Perry and his wife, Constance, who descended from slaves, facilitated the movie’s discussion, and described it as the unvarnished history of the largest slave-trading family in the United States, the DeWolfes, of Bristol, Rhode Island. “What happened then is not taught in schools or discussed at the dinner table,” Dain Perry said. “We suffer  from institutional amnesia, but Katrina wants us to discuss it. Slavery is a cancer on the soul of our nation. We have to build the muscle to talk about it. We don’t look for finger-pointing or guilt. We want to better understand how we became so stuck over race. It is not a problem of our own making. It is a terrible legacy. Our job is to figure out how to move forward as a nation.”

The DeWolfe cousins preparing for the trip that retraced their ancestors’ slave routes.

The DeWolfe cousins preparing for the trip that retraced their ancestors’ slave routes.

Browne had never made a movie before but delved into the archives of her ancestral home, now a museum, in Bristol. With ten of her cousins, including Dain, she traveled to re-trace the route the slave ships sailed, from Bristol to Cuba to West Africa, with rum to trade for African men, women and children. The documentary tells the story of how West-Africans were captured, baptized, made slaves in the name of God, and taken to DeWolfe plantations in Cuba. They were sold at auction in Havana and Charleston, while sugar and molasses were brought from Cuba to the family-owned rum distilleries in Bristol. In the movie, another DeWolfe cousin sarcastically described the “brilliant vertical integration” of the DeWolfe empire on three continents, with slaves, ship-building, industrial processing of rum with molasses and sugar, as well as trade in textiles. Another of the cousins remarked upon the stomach for violence slave-trading required: A letter in archives requested a whipping pole be moved from in front of the writer’s store as it caused “blood to be splattered on the window panes.”

FOSEL board member, Gary Bailey, introducing Traces of the Trade: A Story from the Deep North

FOSEL board member, Gary Bailey, introducing Traces of the Trade: A Story from the Deep North

The documentary premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2008, and was nominated for an Emmy for Excellence in Historical ResearchFOSEL board member, Gary Bailey, an assistant dean for Community Engagement and Social Justice at Simmons University, introduced the Perrys and, referring to his own family’s history, said, “Three of my great grandparents had been enslaved. There can be no reconciliation without acknowledgment of slavery. The descendants of the DeWolfe family have begun to do the hard work of telling their story.”

Files in the Bristol Historical society show that slave-trading was supported by the whole town of Bristol and all the coastal towns along the New England shoreline, even when slave-trading had become illegal. The DeWolfe family sold shares to finance their voyages, and founded their own banks, insurance companies, distilleries and shipbuilding enterprises. They transported as many as twenty thousand enslaved Africans and amassed a fortune, together with enormous political power. By the end of his life, James DeWolf had been a U.S. Senator, receiving dispensation and favors from Thomas Jefferson, whose brother was installed as a customs official in Bristol to made sure the illegal slave trade could continue in that town.

Dain and Constance Perry, former South End residents, one descended from slave traders and the other from enslaved Africans, respectively, facilitated an audience discussion after the screening.

Dain and Constance Perry, former South End residents, one descended from slave traders and the other from enslaved Africans, respectively, facilitated an audience discussion after the screening.

 Dain and Constance Perry lived in the South End four decades ago, he on Rutland Square, and she on Dilworth Street, once part of the New York Streets area, which no longer exists. She remembers “Mr. Crite” painting pictures of the neighborhood, a reference to Allan Rohan Crite, the now-famous painter of South End scenery. In the post-movie discussion, Constance Perry said that “my Jewish friends celebrate and remember their difficulties. They emphasize the importance of remembering. It is not the same here when it comes to those who were enslaved. We want to forget, not remember. We should remember through a lens of truth. Kierkegaard said that “we live our lives moving forward but we understand our lives by looking back.” 

She and Dain Perry asked the audience for one word to describe their feelings after seeing the movie, which produced a long list: Frustration; Sadness; Loss; Grieving; Hope; Anxious; Urgency; Disconnected; Terrified; Learning; Legacy; Gratitude; Truth; Aware; Anger; Shame; Despair; Lucky; Greed; Power; Useless; Time; Unknown; Ache; Resilient; Forgiveness; and Uncovered. Asked to elaborate on their words, one member of he audience said that after seeing the movie the idea of a white person’s ‘proud ancestry’ as the foundation of his life is somewhat ‘shakey.’ Another said that “white privilege is not about money, but about power.”

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