Archive for December 3rd, 2010

December 3rd, 2010

Early deeds to St Patrick Church in Lowell

by DickH

Recall that back in August, three professors from Queen’s University in Belfast traveled to Lowell as part of a joint venture with UMass Lowell to do an archaeological dig in front of St Patrick Church. I wrote a post about the dig back then and now I’m trying to assist long-distance by researching some of the early deeds to the church.

The current St Patrick property consisting of the land underneath the church, the rectory, the school and the parking lot, was cobbled together over many years from many smaller parcels. Compiling the ownership history of the entire property is like putting together a big jigsaw puzzle.

The earliest deed is dated September 13, 1830 when the Proprietors of Locks and Canals for $1 conveyed a 8140 square foot parcel across from the “new canal called the Western Canal” to “the Right Reverend Benedict Fenwick, Bishop of Boston.” This deed required the new owner to build and operate a church for public religious services on the parcel, failing which the Proprietors had the right to repossess the property. Nearly a year later, on June 1, 1831, the Proprietors conveyed an adjacent parcel, this one 1605 square feet in size, to the Bishop. A third deed, this one for a 2884 square foot parcel, was conveyed to the Bishop on June 3, 1835.

Twenty years later, there was another burst of land acquisition as the current day St Patrick Church was being constructed. On June 23, 1853, John Knowles of Chelmsford conveyed to “John B. Fitzpatrick of Boston” (the then Catholic Bishop) as 5729 square foot parcel on Adams Street for $1500. In the deed, Knowles reserved the right to remove “the buildings and building materials including stone thereon within a reasonable time or such time as the tenants can be moved.”

On September 9, 1853, a John McCarthy of Lowell conveyed to Bishop Fitzpatrick a parcel that was only 101 square feet in size. What’s significant about this deed is this language: “The said southerly line of said parcel of land being six inches south of the outside of the southeast buttress in the wall on the south side of the new Stone Church now being erected.” So that deed tells us that the current St Patrick Church was in the midst of being constructed in early September 1853.

I’ll share more information as it becomes available.

December 3rd, 2010

Follow-up to Dust-Up in the 17th Essex Rep Race

by Marie

According to a follow-up story in today’s Eagle-Tribune, there may be more fall-out from the campaign filings and informational disclosures of Paul Adams who won the race to replace current Rep Barry Finegold – and State Senator-elect – in the 17th Essex District. Massachusetts Democratic Party Chairman John Walsh will call upon two state agencies – the State Office of Campaign and Political Finance and the State Ethics Commission – “to investigate the source of $50,000 that Paul Adams lent his campaign for the State House this year, following questions The Eagle-Tribune raised about whether the money was his own.”

Keith Eddings – the Eagle-Tribune reporter -who did the research for the original Paul Adams story printed last Sunday, noted the Mass Dems Party chair’s reaction to his article:

“The story raises serious questions that deserve clear and unambiguous answers,” state Democratic chairman John Walsh said in a press release calling for the investigations he issued yesterday. “At a minimum, it is a bumpy beginning for the representative-elect. Mr. Adams needs to immediately provide cancelled checks and bank statements documenting these questionable transactions.”

Read my original post on the E-T Sunday story here: http://www.richardhowe.com/2010/11/28/in-the-merrimack-valley-part-two-dust-up-in-andover-lawrence-tewksbury%e2%80%99s-17th-essex-rep-race/

Read today’s frull article here in the Eagle-Tribune/ BreakingNews: http://www.eagletribune.com/breakingnews/x1894464067/Mass-Democrats-seek-probe-into-contribitions-to-GOPs-Rep-Paul-Adams

December 3rd, 2010

For Hillary-ites Still Dreaming of the WH…

by Marie

This item by reporter Robert Burns is published on today’s HuffingtonPost.com:

MANAMA, Bahrain — Hillary Rodham Clinton says her work as U.S. secretary of state will be her final public position.

She told an interviewer in the Persian Gulf nation of Bahrain that she does not plan to run for president. And she appeared to rule out taking any other public role, saying that instead she expects to return to private life as an advocate for women and children around the globe.

She said she had enjoyed an interesting and rewarding public career and will be ready to get back to the advocacy work she did as a young lawyer.

Some had speculated she might succeed Robert Gates after his expected retirement next year as secretary of defense.

December 3rd, 2010

‘Messiah’ at Durgin Hall, UMass Lowell, Tonight, 7.30 pm

by PaulM

Combined choirs and volunteer singers will present Handel’s “Messiah,” ending with the “Hallelujah” chorus, tonight at 7.30 pm in Durgin Concert Hall, 35 Wilder Street, UMass Lowell South Campus. Free and open to the public. Parking available in the lot at Wilder and Broadway. Don’t miss this.

A brief, informal, unrequired rehearsal starts at 6.30 pm for community people who want to join in the singing. Music will be provided or you can bring your own. Murray Kidd, Handel expert, will lead the group.

December 3rd, 2010

University Ave Bridge in Lowell

by DickH

Tony Sampas takes some photos from atop the University Ave Bridge.

December 3rd, 2010

SNL TSA

by Tony

I am sure we’ll see this skit many more times. It will surely make the best of Saturday Night Live shows in coming years.

December 3rd, 2010

Lowell “Boxer’s Life” – Micky Ward and “The Fighter”

by Marie

 Irish Micky Ward and  Mark Wahlberg

Boston Herald sports and boxing writer Ron Borges has a timely interview with  Lowell’s Irish Micky Ward in today’s edition. In a few days Paramount Pictures will release the long-awaited, shot-in-Lowell movie about Ward and his fighting career culminating (in the movie) with his victory over Shea Neary in London for the  the World Boxing Union light welterweight championship. Borges  knows more than most about Ward,  his career, his  personal ups and downs and the fight business. As he notes in the article:

Next week the world will see the cinematic version of not only that night, but of Ward’s sometimes dysfunctional family life and how, in the end, he triumphed over all of it with his troubled older half-brother, Dickie Ecklund, in his corner. Dickie had seen his own career and much of his life dissipated by drug abuse.

It is not always a happy story, but it’s a feel-good ending, one that has left the 45-year-old Ward wealthy beyond his dreams, yet still happy to work as a driver on movie sets for the Teamsters and occasionally run the road grader he used to operate when he needed that road crew job to supplement his boxing income.

For a fighter like him, with no one behind him when he made his pro debut at Roll-On America Skating Rink in Lawrence in 1985, it wasn’t supposed to end with a movie and several million dollars’ worth of income late in his career. That’s not what boxing is very often.

There’s a story to tell both in the article and on the screen. “The Fighter” opens in Boston and environs on December 10th with a sold-out preview for charity in Lowell on December 9th. Some feel the acting is Oscar-worthy… for some it’s the story that’s worthy.

Read the full article and interview here in today’s Boston Herald on-line.

December 3rd, 2010

EB Is Premier Event Sponsor for Philanthropy Event, 12/6

by PaulM

In my post of 11/29 about the Celebrate Giving philanthropy event of the Greater Lowell Community Foundation, set for 12/6, I listed the many Philanthropist Level Sponsors of the event but somehow missed acknowledging the prime event sponsor, Enterprise Bank (EB). My apology to the folks at Enterprise Bank and GLCF for the omitting the one business in that category of giving. Scroll down and look for older posts to see the 11/29 original, now corrected, post.