FRAMINGHAM, MA – The Framingham Public Library has announced it’s buildings will reopen to the public April 5, 2021 for “limited browsing and computer use”.
Curbside pickups and returns will continue and the majority of public activities and events usually held at the library will continue to be held online (mostly via ZOOM).
Entries due by Monday, February 23rd, 2015 at 5:00pm.
FRAMINGHAM, MA – Calling all middle and high school students! Tell us what you love about our town by writing a 500 word essay.
Include three or more features of Framingham that you love. Possible topics; your school, Framingham Public Library, Framingham sports, our history, multicultural community, or something you love about the town.
All essays will be awarded a thank you gift. One winning essay from each middle & high school will be chosen and read by the author at the Deluxe Depot Diner, Thursday February 26th, 2015 at 6:00pm.
20% of proceeds to be donated to the Framingham Public Library Foundation.
Essays due by Monday, February 23rd, 2015 at 5:00pm. Please pass in to the Homework Center at the Framingham Public Library. For more information, contact Judy Gatlin at jgatlin@minlib.net
Framingham, MA – World YoYo Champion John Higby will presenting his YoYo Show at the Framingham Public Library on Sunday, April 27th, 2014 starting at 1:30pm.
When John was 10 years old, his Grandfather gave him a yo-yo he found in the attic, showed John a few tricks — and the rest was history!
John now holds 4 Guinness World Records and is a World YoYo Champion! He regularly per performs at “Busker Festivals” in the U.S.A., Canada, Japan and other countries, has been seen on the David Letterman show, performed many times for U.S. troops stationed in Europe and the Mid-East — he even ran a National Yo-Yo contest in Malaysia. John now performs with his wife Rebecca who at metin 2000 at a Yo-Yo event in his home town, Denver, Colorado.
Skilled precision, deft timing, swingin’ music and humor make the YoYo Guy a favorite for people of all ages as he performs old favorite yo-yo tricks and amazing new ones.
Show will be held in the Costin Room of the Framingham Public Library, 49 Lexington Street, Framingham, MA. There is no charge for admission. Refreshments will be served.
Silent era film classic, ”The Kid” (1921), will be featured at Framingham Library’s Friday Night Films, November 8th, 2013.
FRAMINGHAM, MA – In the USA in 1920’s, on any given Friday night there’s a good chance you would have gone out to see a silent movie.
But, the theater would be anything but silent. A pianist played “mood music” along with the films.
On Friday, November 8th, 2013, slip into the past at the Framingham Main Library.
The library’s Friday Night Film will be a Silent Movie Show featuring Richard Hughes, Silent Movies Pianist who will set the mood as black & white films flicker on the screen.
Richard Hughes, Silent Movies Pianist
Hughes, who began classical piano training at age 7, spent over a decade researching and scoring “mood music” pieces to recreate the original period sound of the 1920’s “silent movie” houses.
He writes on his website, “Every time I screen another old silent film and prepare a musical score for it, I feel like a geologist who has just discovered a rare find hidden deep in ancient layers of rock. Many of these films are gems and my mission is to reacquaint, introduce, educate, and entertain audiences of all ages to the silent (more…)
Brothers Jack, Eric and Sam Hendler of Jack’s Abby Brewing to host Framingham (Library) Fermentable Fundraiser December 1st, 2012.
FRAMINGHAM, MA – Award-winning Framingham craft brewery Jack’s Abby Brewing is teaming up with the Framingham Public Library Foundation for a fermentable fundraiser.
On Saturday, December 1st, 2012 from 7:00pm to 9:00pm, the brewery, located at 81 Morton Street, will host a guided tasting of its beers and a private tour of the facility.
The event is to help the Foundation raise money to offset the cost of building a new McAuliffe Branch Library and create an endowment fund for other library projects.
The evening will feature talks about beer styles and the brewing process by head brewer and co-owner Jack Hendler along with local newspaper writer Norman Miller who is (more…)
Dennis Lehane – Author, Screenwriter, (Photo by Diana Lucas Leavengood)
FRAMINGHAM, MA– You’ve read the books and seen the movies — “Mystic River“, “Gone, Baby, Gone“, “Shutter Island“, and “The Given Day” — one of his most recent books which has been hailed as a classic Great American Novel.
Now you can meet famed author and Boston-area native Dennis Lehane, in Framingham.
On Saturday, October 6th, 2012, from 7:00-9:00 p.m., the Framingham Public Library Foundation presents “An Evening With Dennis Lehane”.
A coffee and dessert reception will be followed by a talk and a book signing by Mr. Lehane, a passionate supporter of public libraries.
The New England Mobile Book Fair will be on site selling Mr. Lehane’s books, and all attendees will be entered in a drawing for a signed copy of his novel Moonlight Mile.
Admission to this fund raising event for the Framingham Public Library Foundation is $30 per ticket.
Tickets go on sale beginning September 4th, 2012 at (more…)
Framingham Library, 49 Lexington Street, Framingham, MA 01702
FRAMINGHAM, MA – Anyone interested in filling a one-year vacancy on the Board of Trustees of the Framingham Public Library should send a letter of application to the Library by or before noon Thursday, February 9, 2012.
The application should include the applicant’s qualifications and reasons for wishing to become an FPL Trustee.
Application should be sent attention of Ruth Winett, Library Chair, to:
Framingham Library
49 Lexington Street
Framingham, MA 01702
(Applications may also be submitted by email (more…)
FRAMINGHAM, MA – SOAR 55 is currently accepting applications from former and current (part-time) executives and professionals with marketing or development expertise who are available to help local nonprofits with management projects through the award winning SOAR 55 Nonprofit Management Consulting Group program, generously funded through the Tufts Health Plan Foundation.
Train to provide management consulting assistance to local nonprofits using your marketing or fundraising/development expertise
The group works in teams of 3 on short-term assignments requiring (more…)
FRAMINGHAM, MA – This weekend, June 11th and 12th, 2011, The Sudbury, Assabet, and Concord Wild & Scenic Rivers Stewardship Council is holding “RiverFest” its annual celebration of the Sudbury, Assabet, and Concord Rivers. The following 3 events are taking place in Framingham.
Paddle The Sudbury River
Saturday, June 11th at 8:30AM – Join Bill Fadden and the Framingham Conservation Commission for a scenic 2 mile paddle on the Sudbury River. *** UPDATED: Although the RiverFest website indicates canoes will be put in at Little Farms Rd, others are putting in at the Central St. / Kellog St. canoe drop at the bottom of the hill by the Learning Center for Deaf Children and paddling to the reservoir in Saxonville *** The Little Farms Rd. landing is located just north of the Cameron School, off Elm Street. Participants are encouraged to (more…)
The Christa McAuliffe Branch of the Framingham Public Library is located on the corner of Water St. and Nicholas Rd. in Saxonville.
FRAMINGHAM, MA – I got my first library card at the Saxonville Branch Library when I was about 8 years old. That was in the late 1960’s.
In 1988 the library was rededicated as the Christa McAuliffe Branch, after Christa, who grew up in Framingham, graduated from Marian High School in 1966 and from Framingham State College in 1970 was killed in the 1986 Challenger Space Shuttle explosion and after beating out every other applicant for the honor of becoming the “First Teacher in Space”.
I’m probably prejudiced by the fact that I’ve been going to that library for over 40 years now — but I don’t think Framingham should move the McAuliffe Library to Nobscot.
For several years the Framingham Library Trustees have been trying to convince the Town to spend millions of dollars to build a new McAuliffe library.
The arguments for a new library have all been made; the current building was designed for 1/5 of the patrons it serves and books it holds; the building is not ADA compliant; the parking is across the street; and generally that it’s just too small.
The idea that the State and Federal Government keep offering millions of dollars in matching funds grants for the construction of libraries drives local bibliophiles crazy. “Matching funds” are the operative words.
In 2004, after years of being on a waiting list for construction money, the McAuliffe Branch was awarded $1.65 Million as a provisional Library Construction Grant
There was a hitch though — the community had to come up with the rest of the $5 Million to retain the grant and build the library.
In a Special Town Meeting, March 15th, 2005 , Article 2 on the Warrant asked Town Meeting Members to vote in favor of the funds, (to build a new library on the Pinefield Shopping Center property).
The article failed to get the required two-thirds of TMM votes. The grant expired in May of 2005, but the idea of building a new library didn’t.
Formerly called the Saxonville Branch, the building which currently houses the Christa McAuliffe Branch of the Framingham Public Library may close when and if a new library is built in Nobscot.
In December 2005, improvements were made to the McAuliffe Branch for handicapped accessibility.
Recently the sidewalks were redone, the front entrance was expanded and a raised, textured walkway connecting the library to the parking lot across the street was added.
Library Trustees are now asking for even more money to build a $6.5 Million dollars library in Nobscot.
The old arguments and new plans are being bolstered by the fact that a larger grant is now available, but with the caveat that the Town will need to spend more to get it.
The logic reminds me of shoppers who fall for advertising that claims; “The More You Spend The More You Save!“. The truth is, the more you spend — the more you spend.
With that said, it may seem strange that I am 100% in agreement with the plan to build a library in Nobscot. But, even if money was not an issue, (which it is), I just don’t like the idea of closing the Saxonville / McAuliffe Branch when Nobscot gets back its library, (Nobscot used to have a library — I’ll get to that in a minute).
The latest plan is to build a 17,000 square foot library in Nobscot to replace the 5000 sq. ft. one now in use in Saxonville.The new library is slated to be built on land next to the Nobscot Shopping Center.
In November 2010, the Library trustees put out an “RFP”, (Request for Proposals). Only two proposals came in. One from the owner of Pinefield Shopping Center offering to sell the Town 2 acres at double its current value, and a second much more generous offer from the Rousseau family.
The Rousseaus are offering to sell the Town five parcels of land located next to the Nobscot Shopping Center. The parcels total 3.7 acres of land, and in such a prime location, the deal is practically a give-away. The Rousseau’s are asking $739,800 — which is only the assessed value of the property.
Five parcels of land owned by the Rousseau family are the site of a proposed new Nobscot library. The properties, located along Water Street abut the Nobscot Shopping Center and railroad property.
Newcomers to Framingham may not recognize the Rousseau name. The family has been involved with business and development in Framingham for almost a century. The 1950’s Albie’s Oil truck with its distinctive brown paint — which is now only seen in parades and car shows — is probably the most recognizable icon of the Rousseau family’s Framingham legacy.
Albie’s Oil was established in 1932 and operated along with a gas station on the corner of School St. and Concord St. in Saxonville until the year 2000. The family trust also owns several other Framingham properties strategically purchased decades ago next to railroad lines and other major intersections of transportation and commerce.
This home located at 746 Water St., in Framingham sits on the proposed site for new Nobscot Library.
The main house sitting on the 746 Water Street (front) lot with it’s Mansard style roof could be renovated into a very suitable temporary library for far less than the millions now being proposed for a new building.
The Town should take to opportunity to buy the Nobscot land — personally, I think the site is an excellent location for a library — and so did earlier inhabitants of Framingham.
Back in the late 1990’s, Bill Dyan, a local history buff, discovered a small building that looked like an oversized chicken coop sitting near the railroad tracks about 50 feet back from Water Street on the Rousseau property.
Bill’s research uncovered facts that it was much more than a chicken coop — it was (and is) an irreplaceable piece of Framingham history.
Restored Nobscot Post Office (c.1878), which also served as a Library and Railroad Ticket Office.
The multi-use building had once served as Framingham’s oldest Post Office, and from 1905 to 1953, half of the building’s 12’x24′ space was used as a library, (called the “Nobscot Depository).
Aside from postal and library duty, the 300 square foot building also served as a railroad office, with a ticket window in back facing the railroad tracks.
In June of 2000, in time for the Town of Framingham Tercentennial, and thanks to Bill Dyan’s and other’s efforts and donations, the building was restored and moved across Water Street, where it sits opposite the proposed site for a new Nobscot Library.
Framingham’s north side has gotten by with a branch in just Saxonville for the past 50 years, and one in just Nobscot for 50 years before that — wouldn’t it be nice if both villages had their own libraries?
My proposal, one I believe which has a better chance passing a Town Meeting vote, is for the Town to buy the entire piece of Nobscot land, but build a smaller library — about 10,000 square feet, and leave the Saxonville Branch open. The old Nobscot Post Office / Library could be moved back across the street to its original location (next to the railroad tracks) as a historic feature on the new library grounds.