Wednesday, June 7th, 7pm – 8:30pm Join Reference Librarian Jeff Klapes, ‘The Traveling Librarian,’ for another of his popular armchair travel presentations via Zoom. This series highlights travel photography and stories and travel tips about destinations around the world. This month we’ll be going to the next great up-and-coming destination in Eastern Europe, Bosnia! Inexpensive, full of history, and splendidly scenic, we’ll focus on the historic town of Mostar with its famous stone bridge and see some of the lovely mountain scenery and traditional villages in this sunny Mediterranean part of the country. Click HERE to register. Jeff Klapes is the Head of Reference Services at the Lucius Beebe Memorial Library in Wakefield, Massachusetts. ***This is an online presentation. Registered participants will be sent a link to the Zoom meeting prior to the program..*** This program is made possible by a grant from the Coburn Charitable Society.
Children’s Scavenger Hunt!
Register on Beanstack! Runs July 6-Aug. 20 Scavenger Hunt Packet 2021
Ipswich’s copy of the Declaration of Independence on view!
Come see some history! Ipswich’s copy of the Declaration of Independence Broadside is on view at the Library through September 2021. We are excited to present this unique object in an intimate exhibition. Learn more about the July 4th holiday and the complexity of Independence Day in the US and right here in Ipswich. The Ipswich town clerk has served as steward for 245 years of a nationally significant object of American history, the town’s original copy of the Declaration of Independence Broadside. To celebrate the July 4th holiday and share this document with the community and beyond, we have mounted a special exhibition highlighting this object and its history in the context of the foundation of the United States government. The show highlights Ipswich’s role in the fight for independence from Great Britain and the experience of indigenous and enslaved people during this time of great turmoil. Both original documents and reproductions from the Library’s local history and special collections are included. “We often think of the Declaration of Independence and the Revolutionary War as national history removed from our local experience in small towns and cities. These documents reconnect us to the individuals living during this tumultuous time in the history of this continent. Ipswich residents learned of the declaration from this very document printed in Salem and read aloud to the community. Alongside the broadside we are presenting contemporaneous documents to help contextualize this time in Ipswich for viewers. A bill of sale for an enslaved teenage boy helps us to understand the range of experience during a time we have historically referred to as our fight for independence. It is critical for us to consider who was and was not gaining independence. This is a unique opportunity to see these objects in person.” – Meghan Fahey Petersen, Library Archivist.
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 19
- 20
- 21
- 22
- 23
- …
- 46
- Next Page »