Boston, MA
Turtle ice sculptures for First Night recognize aquarium’s rehabilitation work in Boston
BOSTON – Preparations for First Night are underway in Boston, where artists carved ice sculptures of turtles outside the New England Aquarium on Sunday.
Recognizing endangered turtles
Outside the aquarium, the ice sculpture team was putting the finishing touches on one of their many displays for First Night. One of the sculptures depicts Kemps Ridley sea turtles, one of the endangered species cared for by the aquarium.
“The Kemps Ridley is the smallest and most endangered sea turtle in the world and 90% of the turtles that we rehabilitate in Quincy are the Kemps Ridleys so we’re getting the message out there that every one does count,” said Lindsay Lory, the rescue and rehabilitation manager at the aquarium.
This year marks Donald Chapelle’s 44th year of being involved with First Night and carving ice sculptures for the celebration. On Sunday, his team was busy carving out a catch and release piece.
“We have seaweed in the background, we have some cod and haddock swimming around,” said Chapelle. “And then we have a woman releasing turtles.”
Carving ice in mild weather
With Sunday being on the mild side, Chapelle said he’s used to working in these warmer temperatures.
“I just bought 250 pounds of dry ice, we’re going to put dry ice on all the figures and double wrap them and triple wrap them and hopefully they’ll make it through to tomorrow’s rainstorm,” said Chapelle.
On Sunday, families like the Wolfsens from Vermont watched and were mesmerized by how the process of creating the ice sculpture works.
“I like the piece of coral that the turtles are on. I like watching it and I think it’s entertaining to watch,” said 11-year-old Julian Wolfsen.
Chapelle said he will also work on a number of pieces that will be displayed for Harbor Walk in the Seaport on New Year’s Eve.
“The locals of Boston really get the ice thing and they know it’s warm out, they know it’s not going to last and they know to get down here and have a quick peek before we wrap it up,” said Chapelle.
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Boston, MA
Rainy morning, with strong winds moving in later in the day
Rain will scoot through early Wednesday, with a few hints at sunshine in the mid/late morning. As the storm continues to develop to our north, any sun will be swallowed up by clouds as a final round of showers comes through later in the afternoon and evening.
All in all, not a horrible start to the new year, and certainly not that cold, with highs nearing 50.
That will change in the coming days. Our main focus will be the increasing winds late Wednesday night and Thursday.
Howling gusts between 45-55 mph are in order as the mid-atmosphere responds to the deepening storm center in the Gaspe Peninsula far to our north. These winds will be capable of some damage and possibly a few isolated power outages. Colder air will eventually surge in as well, dropping us into the 40s Thursday and 30s on Friday. Thankfully, the winds won’t be as fierce Friday, but we’re still seeing some gusts from time to time.
This weekend, we’ll establish the pattern that will carry us through much of next week. It stays quiet and cold, with occasional increases in wind as storms move by to the south and then far offshore.
In fact, a fairly decent snowfall is on tap from the Mid-South to the Mid-Atlantic late Sunday into Monday, which acts to sharpen the cold over us through the middle of the week.
Happy New Year!
Boston, MA
Boston Urban Archive started as a hobby but turned into a way to unearth history – The Boston Globe
When I travel and visit people in other cities and states, I’ve realized that many people still don’t grasp the diversity that exists within Boston. Sometimes, I hear questions like “There are Black people in Boston?”
I actually grew up outside of Boston itself, but I would come into the city on weekends and during the summer to see my dad, who was based in Dorchester. He is from Barbados originally — and Dorchester is home to all of these Caribbean communities, which was so exciting and a culture shock to be introduced to when I visited. I loved coming here. I moved to Boston full-time when I was 12 years old and eventually enrolled as an English major with a focus on journalism at UMass Boston.
One semester, I took a music history class on hip-hop with UMass Boston professors Jeffrey Melnick and Akrobatik, who is also a well-known rapper from Boston. They brought in lots of cool artists and speakers. They also told us about this archive that existed in the campus library: the Massachusetts Hip-Hop Archive. So, I made an appointment, walked in, and there were all of these boxes and folders all around the main table. I just went to town in there for an hour and a half.
When you learn about the history of a city, you start to realize that a lot of stories eventually come full circle. They echo across generations. And as I dug through the Massachusetts Hip-Hop Archive, I was reminded that stories of Boston as this multicultural place are often untold. I couldn’t find a place online where you could even access that community history. As I kept finding all of these photos and videos — not just in the hip-hop archive but also in the Boston Public Library and Northeastern University Library, state archival databases, and television archives — I decided to create that resource online: the Boston Urban Archive.
When I launched the Boston Urban Archive’s account on Instagram in 2023, I was strategic with my approach. I wanted it to be a space that was aesthetically pleasing — very neat and organized. And I wanted to captivate people.
One of my earliest posts — which ended up getting something like a million hits — was this old video from the 1980s that featured Mark Wahlberg [a Boston-born actor and rapper] as a child. That video was a way of bringing people in and gaining traction before sharing a wider range of photos, videos, and stories from the archives. I also try to choose stories that have some connection to what is going on in the present. Recently, I posted this mid-1970s clip from a supermarket in Dorchester in which a reporter talks about rising food costs and customers are complaining about $2 steaks.
On Oct. 25, I wanted to publish something about youth in Boston. I had a video clip from 1990 of a reporter speaking with little boys at the Franklin Field housing project on the north side of Franklin Park. The reporter asks them about crime and a curfew that the city had been considering putting into place back then. I really liked the boys’ energy. They said, “Yeah, this is our neighborhood and if there’s a curfew, we’re probably not gonna abide by it, but we’re gonna be playing basketball and minding our own business.” When I heard that, I chuckled a little bit, and I decided to use that bit as the intro to another clip that showed the boys playing basketball. Within hours of posting the video on the Instagram account, all of these comments came rolling in, many of them saying the same thing: “RIP EMOE.” There were dozens of them.
So I’m like, “Who’s EMOE?” None of the video descriptions from the archive had information identifying the boys, because they were minors. But then another person commented on the post claiming to be EMoe’s cousin. So I messaged them, and I soon learned that EMoe was the nickname of the boy in the video who made the comment about staying out past curfew playing basketball. His name was Eric Paulding. And in 1997, Paulding was shot while leaving his girlfriend’s house around Franklin Park. I learned that his killing was notable because it came after a two-and-a-half-year period of no juveniles being killed in Boston. He was killed in the same neighborhood where that clip with the reporter took place seven years earlier.
Not long after Paulding’s cousin and I exchanged DMs, his aunt messaged me and said, “Thank you so much for sharing this. It was great for his grandmother to see.” That really hit a soft spot for me. The video clip was over 30 years old. When I imagined Paulding’s grandmother hearing his voice, seeing him, all these years later — I can only imagine how it made her feel.
In the beginning, I had some idea that sharing these archival videos and photos might inspire people from the community to contribute their own memories and information. But I didn’t realize how big this platform would become and that it could be a way of bringing a community together or how it would be this place where we all learn from each other. I’ve learned a lot from the comments. I posted a video of an early 1990s rap group called Joint Ventures, thinking, “Wow, this sounds like something that could’ve come out of New York.” And then the daughter of the group’s lead rapper, MC Fly Ty, commented and said, “That’s my dad! He ended up passing in ’94. Thanks for posting this.” I’ve even seen some folks reconnect with each other in the comments on certain posts! They’ll spot a familiar face, tag their friends, and say, “Oh my gosh, isn’t that Miss So-and-so from when we were kids?”
The Boston Urban Archive began as a hobby, but now it’s opened doors. People watch these videos, study these photos, and ask about the people in them: “Where are they now? What happened to them?”
As a journalist and a writer, I want to be able to answer those questions, to give voice to stories and experiences from the community that haven’t received the recognition that I think they should.
Ebony Gill is the creator of the Boston Urban Archive, which curates archived film, newspapers, documents, and photography from Boston, with a focus on underrepresented communities in the city. Miles Howard is a freelance writer in Boston and the founder of the Walking City Trail. He publishes the weekly hiking newsletter Mind the Moss.
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