Archive for November, 2011

November 28th, 2011

Electing Lowell’s Mayor – 1970

by DickH

Even before the final vote was counted a few weeks ago, speculation as it always does had turned to who will be the city’s next mayor. Talk is that Patrick Murphy and Rodney Elliot each have three committed votes with one or more others being noncommittal in the hopes that a stalemate will lead to a compromise candidate. I have my own guess as to what will happen this Inauguration Day, but I’ll keep that to myself for now. While most mayoral contests in the recent past have been decided long before the councilors-elect walk into the chambers that day, not all mayoral elections go as anticipated. Such was the case on January 5, 1970.

The 1969 city election was a tumultuous one that saw the election of five new councilors. Incumbents Tom Crowley, Bob Maguire (who had served as mayor the preceding term), John Cox and Ray Gilbride all failed to win reelection while Ed Early had not run after having been elected state representative the year before. The four incumbents who won reelection that year were Ellen Sampson, Richard Howe Sr, Armand LeMay, and Sam Pollard. Joining them were newcomers Brendan Fleming, Phil Shea, Paul Tsongas, John Mahoney and Leo Farley.

Not long after the election, Howe (my dad) had gained the support of three of the new councilors – Fleming, Shea and Tsongas – while LeMay gained commitments from Mahoney and Farley. Both Sampson and Pollard were non-committal.

That changed the week before the inauguration when Sampson privately told my dad that she would vote for him. With five first ballot votes seemingly in hand, our extended family all arrived at the Monday morning ceremonies in a celebratory mood. As an eleven year-old seventh grader, I was old enough to understand (and clearly remember) what happened next.

When we arrived at city hall, my mom and my younger brother and sister headed into the council chamber to secure some seats while my dad and I carried all of the family’s winter coats into the otherwise empty council cloakroom. While we hung the coats in my dad’s wooden locker, Mrs. Sampson swept into the room. Her first words were “Dick, I’m not going to vote for you.” I was stunned so I can imagine how my dad felt. He told me to go join the rest of the family so I got to break the bad news to all of them. As I subsequently came to understand it, Sampson’s grievance was that my dad had supported the appointment of someone she disliked which was (1) not true and (2) probably just a pretense for some other reason, but the bottom line was that she reneged on her commitment.

There are no secrets in city hall so when the councilors elect walked in to take the oath of office the crowd in the chambers was tense. Soon it was time to elect a mayor. On the first ballot, Howe received four votes (Howe, Fleming, Tsongas & Shea); LeMay had three (LeMay, Mahoney & Farley); while Sampson had two (Sampson & Pollard). The second ballot was a repeat of the first. On the third ballot, Pollard voted for LeMay (giving him four votes) while Sampson voted for herself. On the fourth ballot, the same thing occurred, only Sampson voted for Pollard instead of herself.

On the fifth ballot, Leo Farley, voting first (they vote in alphabetical order) stunned the crowd by switching from LeMay to Howe who then received the four votes he had carried from the beginning, making Richard Howe Sr the new mayor of Lowell.

At the post inaugural luncheon, held at the Towne House Motel (which was located where the 99 Restaurant now stands at Chelmsford Street and Industrial Ave, I overheard my dad thank Farley for his vote and Farley reply that he didn’t like the game that was being played and decided to put a stop to it. I’m not quite sure what game he was talking about, but I didn’t care because I and the rest of the Howe family was quite pleased with the result.

November 28th, 2011

Barney Frank to Retire!

by Marie

Well! Well! According to breakingnews on Channel 7  and elsewhere – Congressman Barney Frank will NOT seek relection in 2012. This timing is strange! Who is next? Will Congressman Tierney take a hard look at his situation? Will long-termer Congressman Markey decide that his time has come? Will Congressman Capuano make way for a “minority” candidate? I don’t expect members Niki Tsongas, Jim McGovern, Richie Neal or Bill Keating to drop-out… that leaves Stephen Lynch. Hmmmm. Frank press conference scheduled for early afternoon. Politics in Massachusetts is never dull! Stay tuned.

November 28th, 2011

In the Merrimack Valley: State Takeover of Lawrence School A Done Deal?

by Marie

While State Commissioner of Education Mitchell Chester and the Board of Elementary and Secondary Education have invited Lawrence residents to a hearing to give their thoughts on a possible state takeover of city’s schools, many think that the “takeover” is already a done deal. The hearing is scheduled for this evening in Malden. In today’s Eagle Tribune writer Alex Bloom notes comments from current and incoming school committee members and the teachers union president that indicate their concern on the one hand of the need for some intervention but on the other that the process might be too speedy.

Will Mitchell make the takeover recommendation to the Board? Bloom tells readers that he indicated so in a recent memo and what the fall-out would be:

“On November 29, I likely will recommend that you declare the Lawrence Public Schools a Level 5 (“chronically underperforming”) district,” state education commissioner Mitchell Chester said in the first sentence of a memo last week to his board members.

The recommendation would give the state’s 11-member Board of Elementary and Secondary Education guidance on what to do about the city’s failing public schools. The board will vote tomorrow morning on the designating Lawrence as “chronically underperforming,” giving Chester the power to install a receiver to takeover the city’s school system. The move strips the city’s School Committee of its authority to govern.

Read the full article here at eagletribune.com.

 

November 27th, 2011

‘Pears for Tea’ by Richard Marion

by PaulM

“Pears for Tea” by Richard Marion (c) 2011

See more artwork at www.richardmarion.net

 

November 27th, 2011

Bicentennial of the War of 1812

by DickH

As we approach the start of 2012, remember that the coming year, besides bringing a presidential election and continued recognition of the 150th anniversary of the American Civil War, willmalso be the Bicentennial of the War of 1812. I don’t expect many commemorative activities locally since mostmof New England vehemently opposed the war, but the conflict still has some local connections.

For instance, the USS Constitution – more familiarly known as “Old Ironsides” – gained much of it’s fame from victories over British ships during this conflict. Indeed, the amazing accomplishments of a handful of frigates like Constitution against the most powerful navy in the world, set the United States and it’s navy on a course of global maritime dominance that continues today.

Closer to home, the war’s disruption of imports of cotton cloth created a market for domestically produced textiles that was fulfilled by Francis Cabot Lowell and his Boston Associates’ mill in Waltham. It was the incredible demand for domestically produced textiles that flowed from the war’s shortages that led Lowell’s companions to the Pawtucket Falls as the site for a larger, more powerful manufacturing center that quickly became the most important manufacturing city in America which was names for their late inspirational friend, Francis Cabot Lowell

November 27th, 2011

In the Upper Merrimack Valley: Union Leader Endorses Newt Gingrich

by Marie

In the Manchester, New Hampshire influential newspaper – the Union Leader:

After careful consideration and extensive review of the major candidates in the Republican Presidential Primary, the New Hampshire Union Leader and Sunday News, the only statewide newspapers in the Granite State, announces their endorsement in Sunday’s editions.
No  on-line text from the Union Leader, so here’s the story from the Associated Press (AP):

WASHINGTON – New Hampshire’s largest newspaper is endorsing Newt Gingrich,
giving the former House speaker a jolt in a state that has the first
presidential primary.

The New Hampshire Union Leader wrote in Sunday’s editions that the former
Georgia lawmaker is the choice of the conservative editorial page. 

The decision was published in a banner headline across the front page of the
Sunday edition.

The nod had the potential to reset the contest in the state.

The Union Leader has long had great sway in Republican politics in the state,
and the newspaper used Page One editorials and columns to help Sen. John McCain
win the state’s primary four years ago and start his path to the GOP’s
nomination.

With this endorsement - supporters of Mitt Romnery as well as observers of the political scene need to stay tuned.
November 27th, 2011

Lowell’s Cardinal William Henry O’Connell ~ Red Hat Centennial

by Marie

William Henry O’Connell, Cardinal/Archbishop of Boston, Massachusetts

On this day – November 27, 1911 – William Henry O’Connell – priest and bishop of the Archdiocese of Boston, Massachusetts and Lowell native – was elevated to the Roman Catholic College of Cardinals by Pope Pius X. He was 52 years of age. Born on June 8, 1852, O’ Connell died on April 22, 1944. He served as a priest for nearly 60 years, as a bishop for nearly 43 years and as cardinal for 32 years. His influence on the American Catholic Church and particulary the Archdiocese of Boston was enormous. His  leadership of the Archdiocese of Boston was preceded by Archbishop John Joseph Williams and followed by Cardinal Richard J. Cushing.

 In his book, Boston Catholics – A History of the Church and Its People, Thomas O’Connor, university historian at Boston College, O’Connell’s alma mater, notes that during O’Connell’s tenure as head of the Archdiocese of Boston, the number of women in religious life increased from 1567 to 5459; the number of parishes increased from 194 to 322; the number of churches increased from 248 to 375; the number of diocesan priests increased from 488 to 947; the archdiocese was operating 3 Catholic hospitals. At page 208 of Boston Catholics, O’Connor writes: “It was under O’Connell’s influence too, that the Catholic Church in the Archdiocese of Boston assumed a conceptual solidarity and impressive visibility that it had never seen before and would never see again.”

A few weeks ago the nation’s oldest Catholic newspaper – The Pilot – noted the centennial of Cardinal O’Connell’s taking of the “red hat” with a article entitled “The Church in Boston at Full Mast.” Read the full article  here. (Note: there is an incorrect date – the election was on the 27th.) O’Connell was not without controversary. The biography Militant and Triumphant by James O’Toole professor of history at Boston College gives readers a different take on the life and times of Cardinal O’Connell.

Just a few weeks ago, William Henry O’Connell – an 1876 graduate of Lowell High School – was honored as an LHS Distinguished Alumni. He was represented by his grand-nephew former U.S. Senator Paul Kirk. See our blog post here. A parkway named in his honored highlighted with a fountain and bust of the Cardinal  - located just near City Hall – was recently restored.

 

 

November 26th, 2011

Northern Canal, Textile Memorial Bridge & the Merrimack River

by DickH

Northern Canal, Textile Memorial Bridge and the Merrimack River. Photos by Tony Sampas.

November 26th, 2011

‘South Common Haiku Set’

by PaulM

I’ve been posting a haiku daily on Facebook as a poetry experiment. It’s always good to go where the readers are. The feedback has been good. This series of haiku is loosely arranged around my observations and experiences at the South Common, across the street from my home. Following are the first eight in the set.—PM

.

Seen for seven years—

Jim from the housing complex

rounds the morning track.

.

Chainlinked bittersweet.

Red beads in orange wrappers

make a micro Fall.

.

Eliot’s gray spire

higher from the Common floor.

Room for the hungry.

.

Into the freeze time

trees still rigged with water bags

lit by traffic beams.

.

All kinds of plain threats

in and out of the shadows—

my spasmodic dog.

.

The full empty pool—

acres of after-effects

in the open field.

.

What surrounds, informs:

house, school, church, store, train, court, jail—

ambulance and hearse.

.

Cold morning hotshot.

Glimpse of half-court one-on-none

through the diamond fence.

.

—Paul Marion (c) 2011

November 25th, 2011

Occupy Best Buy

by DickH

I couldn’t help but note the irony of the above photo from yesterday’s New York Times. It shows tents erected by shoppers outside a Best Buy store. They want first crack at the incredibly inexpensive but in short supply electronics goods that were to go on sale in the early morning hours today.

The irony I see is that if you set up a tent outside a Best Buy, the mainstream media celebrates you as the hardy descendent of the pioneers who first settled this country, enduring physical hardship to get the best possible buy. But if you erect a tent on a public park in protest of the transference of wealth from the middle class to those who already possess great fortunes, you are portrayed by the mainstream media as a societal parasite who mustn’t want to work in the first place. It all depends on where you pitch your tent.