Saturday, January 28, 2012

Wadsworth Diary - Jan 28, 1892


Pleasant & cold, growing warm. Chored about. Split some wood, fixed barn some. See to the trains for Willie & c & c.
E. Simonds came to night, & went to G.W. Foster’s.

In the 1850s, on a busy working farm in the southern part of Franklin, a man named George Wadsworth started writing in a journal about everyday events. When he filled that journal, he bought another, and filled that up too. Two dozen journals, and 27 years later, he had written about almost everything that can happen in a small New England town. His words were lost to history until 1986, when town resident Gail Lembo came across some of the journals at a yard sale. 


From the Franklin Historical Museum website
http://www.franklinhistoricalmuseum.com/p/wadsworth-diaries_30.html  



Sunrise Montessori School Open House



Are you starting to look for a preschool or kindergarten for the fall? Or do you have a 3 year old that you think could benefit from starting before then? Consider Sunrise Montessori in Franklin. 
Sunrise will be having an Open House this Saturday, January 28 from 11:00am - 1:00pm. Please stop by to meet the teachers, discuss the program and explore the classrooms.  Sunrise has many great program options.  They offer half day programs as well as full day programs.  They also have the added flexibility of before and after school care for working parents.  Stop by and see for yourself!  Many people have questions about how a Montessori Education is different.  See the short blurb below or feel free to contact me directly if you have any questions.  I have had my children there for the last three years and can't say enough good things about the education they have been receiving. 
Montessori emphasizes learning through all five senses, not just through listening, watching, or reading. Children in Montessori classes learn at their own, individual pace and according to their own choice of activities from hundreds of possibilities. Learning is an exciting process of discovery, leading to concentration, motivation, self-discipline, and a love of learning.  Montessori classes place children in three-year age groups (3-6) forming communities in which the older children spontaneously share their knowledge with the younger ones.


Sunrise Montessori School OpenHouseSaturday, January 28, 11:00 am - 1:00 pm
31 Hayward St
Franklin, MA
509-541-8010

Check out Sunrise online: http://www.mysunrisemontessori.com/
 

In the News - rail trail, state growth, cell phones



Upper Charles River Trail in Milford reopens with cleanup nearly done

FPAC to feature concert with Jamie Barrett

Sent to you by Steve Sherlock via Google Reader:

via Wicked Local Franklin News RSS by GateHouse Media, Inc. on 1/27/12

The Franklin Performing Arts Company (FPAC) will present Jamie Barrett singing family favorites on Sunday, Feb. 5 at 1 p.m.

Things you can do from here:

Friday, January 27, 2012

Should the Wadsworth Diary continue?

I have enjoyed stepping back into 1892 and seeing what George Wadsworth wrote of his life here in Franklin. I do plan to explore the diaries more. How he says what he says intrigues me. For example, he frequently says "c & c" and that is a short cut for some combination of activities. But what exactly?


While I have this interest, what about you?


I have created a quick poll question to ask: 

SHOULD THE WADSWORTH DIARY CONTINUE TO BE SHARED DAILY FOR FEBRUARY?
Your answers will be gathered through Jan 31 at 10:00 PM and if the majority say "Yes", I'll continue.


Note: the poll can be found in the center column on the home page for Franklin Matters right above the calendar of events.


If you can't wait to see what happens daily, you can always visit the the Franklin Historical Museum website:



Wadsworth Diary - Jan 27, 1892


Pleasant & cold. Chored about, see to trains & c for Willie. Nettie made me 2 apple pies, I cut the apples & c.

In the 1850s, on a busy working farm in the southern part of Franklin, a man named George Wadsworth started writing in a journal about everyday events. When he filled that journal, he bought another, and filled that up too. Two dozen journals, and 27 years later, he had written about almost everything that can happen in a small New England town. His words were lost to history until 1986, when town resident Gail Lembo came across some of the journals at a yard sale. 


From the Franklin Historical Museum website
http://www.franklinhistoricalmuseum.com/p/wadsworth-diaries_30.html  

The Campaign for a New Franklin High School Needs Your Help!

The Campaign for a New Franklin High School Needs Your Help!

Many of you might be wondering:
  • How do we get word out about "Vote Yes For FHS" to those who may not be on Facebook, Twitter or regularly use the Internet?
  • How do we keep up the momentum for the "Vote Yes For FHS"?
  • How can I, when I am so busy with work/family, help the "Vote Yes For FHS" campaign. What can I do?

The answer to these questions is simple! We are asking each and every one of you to please consider a financial contribution to "Vote Yes For FHS".

The Citizens For A New Franklin High School is currently working on its print advertising campaign. In order to get this important component of the campaign underway, we need funds. And your contribution will support other important campaign needs. Your contribution will help us with:
  • Printed flyers
  • Postage
  • Lawn signs
  • Obtain voter registration listing
  • Held signs on day of vote


How much you contribute depends on your personal financial circumstances. Experts from other towns who have run similar campaigns recommend a contribution of $10 per family member. However, any donation is welcome and will be put to good use.

Any funds remaining when the campaign is over will be donated to the Franklin Food Pantry.

If you are able to make a financial contribution, please direct your non-deductible contribution to "Citizens For A New Franklin High School". These checks can be mailed to Mary Jo Peterson, 10 Juniper Road, Franklin, MA 02038.  Contributions will be promptly deposited into our account at Dean Bank, and every contributor will be listed on the Supporters page of our web site.

We need your help. To learn more about the campaign for a new Franklin High School, please visit our web site at: www.newfhs.com.

Remember: Vote Yes for FHS! A Real Need. The Right Time.

Best Regards,
Mary Jo Peterson, Treasurer
Citizens For A New Franklin High School

"funds from casinos and the slots go to local aid"

With the talk of casinos possible in the area (Foxborough or Milford), the Milford Daily News reports on a meeting of residents to prepare:

“We need to be able to act quickly, and we need to be able to act in concert,” state Rep. Carolyn Dykema told a packed auditorium at the middle school. 
The Holliston Democrat and two other legislators hosted the forum to explain how area communities can protect themselves if a casino lands in their backyards. 
Many in the audience wanted to talk about how they don’t want casinos, but organizers steered the discussion toward how towns can cope with them. 
“We’d like to talk more about mitigation and less about just say no,” Holliston selectmen Chairman Jay Marsden said.

Read more: http://www.milforddailynews.com/news/x739237137/Focus-among-local-towns-turns-to-dealing-with-casinos#ixzz1keejZRM6


Should Franklin prepare too?

Or wait until there is a definite proposal for a location to respond to?


Dala with Amy Black Feb 4th

The Circle of Friends Coffeehouse is one of Franklin's gems. If you haven't been, please consider going. There are a variety of performances available to choose from each year. This is very reasonably priced for live entertainment. The coffee and desserts are all home made and deliciously decadent! The acoustics are superb.

And when the lights dim on the performer, the trees in the yard appear magically enhanced through the window to create a very memorable effect. When I hear a song on the radio that I have heard performed at the Circle of Friends, I get transported back to that night in an instant! An amazing place to be for live music.

Oh and they do raise money for the Franklin Food Pantry each night that is greatly appreciated!




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Circle of Friends Coffeehouse
262 Chestnut St , Franklin, MA  02038
Phone: 508 528 2541
> Map       > Official Site       > ReverbNation Profile


DALA
with special guest
Amy Black
Saturday, Feb 4th $20
 
Jake says, "Don't miss this one!"
Dala
Dala

 
Canadian duo Dala performs at the Circle of Friends Coffeehouse on Saturday, February 4th at 8PM. Amanda Walther and Sheila Carabine of Dala have come a long way in a short time. The two best friends, who met in their high school music class and wrote their first song together in 2002, have since become darlings of the Canadian music scene and are now poised to bring their fresh brand of acoustic pop music to the world.

DALA has become one of the hottest selling acts in the folk-pop world, selling out concerts wherever they are booked. They won the coveted Canadian Folk Music Award for "Best Vocal Group" and were nominated for a Juno, Canada's Grammy. Last year they were featured in a PBS special "Girls from the North Country".

According to Exclaim they are "…the angels of folk music. Ethereal, eloquent and downright beautiful, the music they create is faultlessly performed."

Drawing upon influences like The Beatles, Joni Mitchell, Neil Young and Bob Dylan, Dala write songs that are both catchy and insightful. Amanda's ethereal soprano voice blends seamlessly with Sheila's velvety alto, creating the lush harmonies that have become their trademark.

The sheer joy with which they perform is infectious, turning first-time listeners into instant fans. http://www.dalagirls.com/
 
Amy Black
Amy Black
Amy Black opens the show. She lives in Massachusetts but her influences, like her roots, are clearly from below the Mason-Dixon line. Her live performances cover the styles and traditional themes of American music: loving, lying, drinking, dying and going to heaven – but not necessarily that order. She writes and performs her own music and weaves classics by her influences, including Loretta Lynn, Bonnie Raitt, Johnny Cash and Waylon Jennings into her show. http://amyblack.com/
 
The Circle of Friends Coffeehouse is a non-profit organization affiliated with Franklin's First Universalist Society. Concerts are presented in a smoke free and alcohol free environment at the Society's handicapped accessible Meetinghouse, 262 Chestnut St. in Franklin, and begin at 8:00 PM; doors open at 7:30 PM. Beverages and gourmet desserts will be available. Admission is $20. Please call (508)528-2541 or visit http://www.circlefolk.org/ to purchase tickets or for more information.

UPCOMING SHOWS
PLAY Sat Jan 28 12, 08:00 PM
Buskin & Batteau, Trina Hamlin
Tickets: $20
Trina Hamlin opens
Tickets
PLAY Sat Feb 04 12, 08:00 PM
Dala, Amy Black
Tickets: $20
Tickets
PLAY Sat Feb 18 12, 08:00 PM
Tracy Grammer
Tickets: $20
tracy grammer Age Limit: All Ages tracy grammer
Tickets
PLAY Sat Mar 03 12, 08:00 PM
Susan Werner, Rose Cousins
Tickets: $20
Rose Cousins opens
Tickets
  Sat Mar 10 12, 08:00 PM
Forever Young
Tickets: $20
Neil Young cover Band
Tickets
PLAY Sat Mar 24 12, 08:00 PM
Peter Mulvey
Tickets: $20
Tickets
  Sat Apr 14 12, 08:00 PM
Peter Yarrow
Tickets: $35
Tickets
PLAY Sat Apr 28 12, 08:00 PM
SONiA & disappear fear
Tickets: $20
SONiA and Cindy Get Your Phil!
Tickets
PLAY Sat May 12 12, 08:00 PM
Deborah Henson-Conant
Tickets: $25
Tickets
PLAY Sat Sep 15 12, 08:00 PM
Tom Rush
 
PLAY Sat Nov 03 12, 08:00 PM
Pesky J. Nixon
Tickets: $20
Co-billing with our dear friends Spuyten Duyvil. This will be the kind of show you remember for months so you better be there!
Tickets
> See More / Details

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Physical inquiries can be sent to: 262 Chestnut St, Franklin, MA, 02038, US
If our email is in your Spam/Junk Folder, please add circlefolk@gmail.com to your address book.

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Area towns get share of state's unclaimed property

Woo hoo! That's quite the haul Franklin!

Yes, indeed - Franklin gets a total of $882 from this. I am being ironic, of course any dollars help, but realistically this won't go far.

Sent to you by Steve Sherlock via Google Reader:

via The Milford Daily News News RSS by Staff reports on 1/26/12

Local towns are among the 124 municipalities receiving a share of the unclaimed property money from the State Treasurer's Office.

Things you can do from here:

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Wadsworth Diary - Jan 26, 1892


Clear, but very windy & cold. Seems the coldest yet. chored about, see to the trains & c for Willie. Carried a load of husks for him to E.Taft,(850 lbs.). Willie had a bad night last night, Dr. Hull there to night. Mr. Smith the tin peddler is stopping here to night.

In the 1850s, on a busy working farm in the southern part of Franklin, a man named George Wadsworth started writing in a journal about everyday events. When he filled that journal, he bought another, and filled that up too. Two dozen journals, and 27 years later, he had written about almost everything that can happen in a small New England town. His words were lost to history until 1986, when town resident Gail Lembo came across some of the journals at a yard sale. 


From the Franklin Historical Museum website
http://www.franklinhistoricalmuseum.com/p/wadsworth-diaries_30.html  

In the News - No Name Calling Day

The Benjamin Franklin Classical Charter School is one of the schools mentioned in this article:


Local schools stand up to bullying on No Name Calling Day

Funding for new Franklin High School approved by state

With the funding approved by the state, the next step will occur at the Town Council meeting on Feb 1. The Town Council will hear this news officially from the School Building Committee and then discuss the amount and date for the debt exclusion vote.

Sent to you by Steve Sherlock via Google Reader:

via The Milford Daily News News RSS by GateHouse Media, Inc. on 1/25/12

Funding for a new Franklin High School got the go-ahead from the state today.

Things you can do from here:

New Report: A First Look at the Governor's FY 2013 Budget



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A First Look: The Governor's FY 2013 Budget
Today, the Governor released his proposal for next year's budget. Our First Look examines some of the major initiatives as well as the funding levels for important programs

Faced with a large deficit, the Governor proposes to balance the budget largely through cuts and other savings. This is on top of the $3 billion in cuts and savings which have been enacted over the last four years.

The Governor's Proposal does include modest revenue initiatives--among them a proposed increase in the cigarette tax and the end of the sales tax exemption for candy and soda. It also makes use of one-time resources, primarily from the state stabilization fund (the "rainy day fund").  

MassBudget provides independent research and analysis of state budget and tax policies--with particular attention to the effects on low- and moderate-income people.


This email was sent to shersteve@gmail.com by nberger@massbudget.org |  
Massachusetts Budget and Policy Center | 15 Court Square | Suite 700 | Boston | MA | 02108

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Wadsworth Diary - Jan 25, 1892


Pleasant & thawy. Chored about. Went up the hill, & showed Mrs. Kimball Willie’s hay & c & c. I loaded the stalks up there & had to unload part of them, as came near to breaking the hay rack. Peter helped take part off onto Willie’s wagon. I carried 1145 lbs. to E. Taft, & have the rest now on my hay rack. Broke the folk handle. Nettie came home to day this PM.

In the 1850s, on a busy working farm in the southern part of Franklin, a man named George Wadsworth started writing in a journal about everyday events. When he filled that journal, he bought another, and filled that up too. Two dozen journals, and 27 years later, he had written about almost everything that can happen in a small New England town. His words were lost to history until 1986, when town resident Gail Lembo came across some of the journals at a yard sale. 


From the Franklin Historical Museum website
http://www.franklinhistoricalmuseum.com/p/wadsworth-diaries_30.html  

Volunteer for the Food Pantry 2nd Annual Phone Drive


My name is Maureen Roy and I am writing to you on behalf of the Franklin Food Pantry.

We are currently planning our second annual phone drive and are requesting volunteers to help us with making calls to Franklin residents. Last year, we had 40 volunteers help us raise over $12,000.00 for the food pantry and we hope you will consider joining us again this year!

We will be making calls on Saturday, February 18th and Saturday, February 25th, from 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.

We request that volunteers commit to at least two hours of calling time:

10:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.
12:00 p.m. to 2:00 p.m.
2:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.
4:00 p.m. 6:00 p.m.

We will return to Dean College this year, although we will be in a different location due to recent renovations. More info will follow on this.

Like last year, we will provide a script for you to follow, along with several informational talking points.

If you would be willing to help with this effort, please contact me at maureen@franklinfoodpantry.org with the times you are available.

Thank you for your time. If you have any questions please contact me at the e-mail address referenced above.



Note: I am also on the Board of Directors for the Franklin Food Pantry and your assistance in this effort is appreciated!

"schools opt out of School Choice"

As expected, the School Choice program will not be available to those outside of Franklin again for the next school year 2012-2013:
The district has 20 school choice students now, and even with the program discontinued, Sabolinski said she expects 28 classes to be over School Committee guidelines for class size. 
Students already in the schools by school choice may remain, and Franklin’s lack of participation does not prevent residents from using choice to send their children out of district.

Read more: http://www.milforddailynews.com/news/x1368168082/Franklin-schools-opt-out-of-School-Choice-program#ixzz1kSqryBFg


The School Choice history as previewed during the School Committee meeting
http://www.franklinmatters.org/2012/01/fps-school-choice-history-2003-2012.html



Rules for using Franklin's Dacey Field Dog Park

Sent to you by Steve Sherlock via Google Reader:

via The Milford Daily News News RSS by GateHouse Media, Inc. on 1/24/12

Rules for the Dacey Field Dog Park have been announced.

Things you can do from here: