Monday, June 23, 2025

Town Report Season: 2025

It’s that time of year again! Across the Commonwealth towns are preparing their yearly town reports and sending copies to the State Library, per M.G.L. chapter 40, sections 49 and 50. Although we receive town reports throughout the year, there’s always an uptick towards the end of the fiscal year.

2024 Town Reports from the towns of Waren, Cohasset, Belchertown, Winchendon, and Wrentham

The State Library collects both physical and digital copies of these reports. The physical copies get shelved in a special room in the stacks which we refer to as the “Town Report Room.” This room contains centuries of Massachusetts town history – I’ve included some photos of our older volumes for you to enjoy – I’m only now noticing that I need to fix the shelving for Marlborough . . . oops! Anyway, ignoring that for right now, all the digital versions we have of these reports get uploaded to our Digital Collections Repository.

Town Reports from the town of Marlborough, dates 1897-1908

Left: Town Reports from the town of Malden, dates 1898-1902
Right: Town Reports from the town of Hyde Park, dates 1869-1911

You can read more about the Town Reports at the State Library by reading our past blog posts:

Visit our Massachusetts State and Local Resources in the State Library page to learn more about State Documents Collection!

Thank you to all the Town Clerk’s Offices who have sent their 2024 reports to us!

Update: After scurrying back to the Town Report Room to reorient the Marlborough Town Reports and curse whoever shelved them that way (probably me), I realized that the volumes are actually right side up and the titles along the spines were printed the other way. Some librarian of yester-year, probably opting for a more consistent and aesthetically pleasing look, placed the call numbers accordingly!


Maryellen Larkin, Government Documents Librarian


Monday, June 16, 2025

Reference Tip: Legal Dictionaries

In any library, a reference collection will have dictionaries. At the State Library, the reference section is stocked with legal and general dictionaries for your legislative research.


An essential resource for any law library is Black’s Law Dictionary. The first edition was published in 1891 by author, lawyer, and legal scholar Henry Campbell Black (1860-1927). While not the first legal dictionary to exist, Black’s became popular for being concise and comprehensive. A second edition was published in 1910 with more terms and case citations. In 1933 a third edition was released. The 1933 dictionary was the first published after Black’s death with a new title and the title still used today; the first two editions were titled A Law Dictionary.

The State Library has in its collection the 1933 edition. This edition also includes the preface that Black had written for the first edition and the second edition. The third edition was compiled by editors from West Publishing. Black’s Law Dictionary is now in its 12th edition (2024) and it remains the most used and cited legal dictionary. The current edition is available on Westlaw as well as past editions back to the 4th revised (1968).

Legal dictionaries such as Black’s are a great, fast resource to pull when coming across an unfamiliar legal term or phrase. Historic dictionaries can also be used as a resource for legislative history. When tracing a statute or interpreting intent, historic legal dictionaries provide valuable context by revealing how specific words or terms were understood and used at the time a law was written.

In addition to historic dictionaries, the State Library has in its reference collection the following:

A special thank you to our Preservation Librarian for repairing and preserving both the 1933 dictionary and the sixth edition; both copies had wear and tear from use, which is a testament to the importance of Black’s permanent position on the reference shelf.


April Pascucci
Legislative Reference Librarian


Thursday, June 12, 2025

Catch an Oystercatcher in the Library!

With summer and beach days on the horizon, it's time to share some shorebirds in our Audubon case! This month, we're displaying the Pied Oyster-catcher (plate 223). A fun addition to this depiction is an as-seen-from-above sketch of its head and long beak; the only other time that we've seen this addition to Audubon's prints is in the American Flamingo


According to the Bird Observer website, American Oystercatchers are migratory shorebird that breed from Maine all the way to Florida. Here in Massachusetts, 25% of the state’s oystercatchers have nested on Nantucket, 20% on Martha’s Vineyard, 15% on the Bristol County coast of Buzzards Bay, and 16% in Boston Harbor (link). Maybe you will spot one, with its bright-colored and prominent beak, on your next beach trip!

Visit us from June 11 through July 9 to catch the oystercatcher in our reading room! And check out our previously featured shorebirds here: piping plover, herring gull, brown pelican.


Elizabeth Roscio
Preservation Librarian

Monday, June 9, 2025

New Exhibit at the State Library: The Spongy Moth Infestation in Massachusetts and Beyond

The State Library of Massachusetts is pleased to announce our latest exhibit: The Spongy Moth Infestation in Massachusetts and Beyond, now on view outside the Library’s entrance. This exhibit highlights the history, impact, and management of one of the Commonwealth’s most destructive forest pests. 

Formerly known as the gypsy moth, the spongy moth (Lymantria dispar) is an invasive species with deep roots in Massachusetts history. First introduced to the state in the late 1860s, this insect has caused widespread damage to forests and landscapes for more than a century. Known for its destructive caterpillars that strip trees of their leaves, the spongy moth remains a threat to local ecosystems during periodic outbreaks.

This exhibit traces the story of the spongy moth in Massachusetts, from its accidental arrival to modern-day control efforts. Visitors will find historical documents, scientific illustrations, photographs, and state reports that show how the Commonwealth has monitored and responded to this pest over time.

Whether you're a nature enthusiast, a history lover, or simply curious about one of Massachusetts' most notorious insects, we invite you to explore this fascinating and impactful chapter of our state’s environmental history.

View the exhibit during our open hours, Monday through Friday, 9:00 to 5:00. You’ll find it in the hallway outside of the Library (room 341 of the State House). This exhibit is on display now through September, so be sure to visit us to learn more about the spongy moth’s impact on Massachusetts and beyond.


Exhibits Working Group

Thursday, June 5, 2025

State Library Newsletter - June Issue

Welcome June! It's a busy month at the State Library, and you can read all about it in our latest newsletter. This month, we have displays, events, and general information about some of June's many distinctions: Pride Month, Juneteenth, and the Battle of Bunker Hill. And more!

Pictured here is a preview, but the full issue can be accessed by clicking here. And you can also sign up for our mailing list to receive the newsletter straight to your inbox.




Monday, June 2, 2025

For Juneteenth – The Emancipation Proclamation

This month, our Collection Spotlight case recognizes Juneteenth, the federal holiday that commemorates the ending of slavery with the final enforcement of the Emancipation Proclamation in Texas on June 19, 1865. We are displaying the copy of the Emancipation Proclamation found in our collection, which was published as a pamphlet by the War Department on January 2, 1863, and distributed to the Army.

In the midst of the Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln issued the Preliminary Emancipation Proclamation on September 22, 1862 stating his intention to free all individuals held as slaves in secessionist states on January 1, 1863. The Emancipation Proclamation itself was then issued on January 1, 1863. The version that we hold in our collection was published the following day by the War Department with the notation that “The following Proclamation of the President is published for the information and government of the Army and all concerned.” The proclamation was relevant to the War Department because also within it was the announcement that freed Black men could enlist in the Union Army and Navy. Later in January, following the enactment of this provision, Massachusetts governor John Andrew received permission from the U.S. War Department to raise a Black regiment as part of the Union Army. Enlistment began in February, and those who joined became the 54th and 55th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment. You can read more about those regiments, and see some photographs of enlisted soldiers, in previous blog post.

Juneteenth is celebrated on June 19, 1865, the date that marks the official end of slavery, when General Gordon Granger and Union troops arrived in Galveston, Texas and enforced the Emancipation Proclamation, over two years after it was initially issued. Since then, Black communities have gathered on that date to celebrate Juneteenth as an Independence Day. Part of those celebrations sometimes includes a reading of the Emancipation Proclamation, which is why we have chosen to display it this month. You can read more about Juneteenth on the National Museum of African American History & Culture website, and view the original Emancipation Proclamation at the National Archives.

Visit us from June 3 through July 1 to see the Emancipation Proclamation pamphlet on display. Though only the first page of the Emancipation Proclamation can be exhibited, we have included facsimiles of the subsequent two pages. Also on display is a copy of the official proclamation issued by Governor Charlie Baker in 2020, which established Juneteenth Independence Day as a state holiday. The following year, President Joe Biden signed the Juneteenth National Independence Day Act into law, establishing Juneteenth as a federal holiday.


Elizabeth Roscio
Preservation Librarian

Tuesday, May 27, 2025

Silence Dogood and The New-England Courant


Dearest Gentle Reader,

Lady Whistledown might run the rumor-mill of a fictionalized, Regency Era London in the Bridgerton series, but did you know that colonial Boston had its own version of Whistledown? Between April 2nd, 1722 and October 8th, 1722, a mysterious person under the penname Silence Dogood (pronounced “do good”) submitted fourteen letters to the Boston-based newspaper, The New-England Courant, which published them for the rest of Boston to read.

In her missives, Dogood routinely provided commentary on various aspects of New England society, as she noted in one of her early letters:

“… I intend to proceed, bestowing now and then a few gentle Reproofs on those who deserve them, not forgetting at the same time to applaud those whose Actions merit Commendation. And here I must not forget to invite the ingenious Part of your Readers, particularly those of my own Sex to enter into a Correspondence with me, assuring them, that their Condescension in this Particular shall be received as a Favour, and accordingly acknowledged.” – Silence Dogood, The New-England Courant, April 30, 1722.

Charity, education, and even women’s fashion were just some of the topics she treated. Though writing with a satirical angle, she broached topics which were highly relevant to the social-political climate of the day – such as the dangers of mingling of religious power with political power: “A Man compounded of Law and Gospel, is able to cheat a whole Country with his Religion, and then destroy them under Colour of Law” (Dogood, The New-England Courant, July 16-23, 1722.). An even more precarious topic she tackled was freedom of speech. In one of her letters, she used a lengthy quotation about free speech which she had taken from the London Journal to comprise the entirety of her letter’s body. The quote opens with “Without Freedom of Thought, there can be no such Thing as Wisdom; and no such Thing as publick Liberty, without Freedom of Speech; which is the Right of every Man, as far as by it, he does not hurt or controul the Right of another.” Proceeded only by a brief salutation and an even more succinct valediction, the passage in that week’s entry must have seemed to her colonial readers as Dogood’s pointed support of freedom of speech and the press. More savvy readers might have picked up on the fact that this letter was published after the arrest and imprisonment of the newspaper’s owner (and Dogood’s principal addressee, “Author of the New-England Courant”), James Franklin.

Unlike Julia Quinn’s fictional writer, Silence Dogood was more than willing to share details about her life. In her first two letters to the Courant, she divulged that she was a reverend’s widow, a mother to three children, and not against marrying a second time (provided her prospective beaux measure up to certain standards). These small crumbs were not enough to satisfy her readers, however, and speculation about her identity continued – with some people claiming to know her, as Dogood herself observed in one of her letters:

"... I so far indulg’d in my self the Humour of the Town in walking abroad, as to continue from my Lodgings two or three Hours later than usual ... I met indeed with the common Fate of Listeners, (who hear no good of themselves,) but from a Consciousness of my Innocence, receiv’d it with a Satisfaction beyond what the Love of Flattery and the Daubings of a Parasite could produce. The Company who rally’d me were about Twenty in Number, of both Sexes; and tho’ the Confusion of Tongues (like that of Babel) which always happens among so many impetuous Talkers, render’d their Discourse not so intelligible as I could wish, I learnt thus much, That one of the Females pretended to know me, from some Discourse she had heard at a certain House before the Publication of one of my Letters; adding, That I was a Person of an ill Character, and kept a criminal Correspondence with a Gentleman who assisted me in Writing. One of the Gallants clear’d me of this random Charge, by saying, That tho’ I wrote in the Character of a Woman, he knew me to be a Man; But, continu’d he, he has more need of endeavouring a Reformation in himself, than spending his Wit in satyrizing others.” – Silence Dogood, The New-England Courant, September 24, 1722.

Opinion on Dogood was clearly divided, as this overheard conversation shows, yet her column drew in readers who submitted correspondences addressed to her in the Courant.
Front page of The New-England Courant, Issue No. 43, May 21-28, 1722.
Image source: HathiTrust
But who was the author behind the penname? The true identity of colonial New England’s sassiest widow was none other than one of our country’s founding fathers, Benjamin Franklin. Franklin, who was sixteen at the time, concocted Dogood as a means of getting published in the Courant, something which the owner, Franklin’s older brother James, wouldn’t allow him to do. Although young Benjamin’s stint as Silence Dogood was short-lived, these letters remain a highly entertaining resource for anyone researching Franklin and society in 18th century America. You can access more digitized issues of The New-England Courant on HathiTrust here. If you want to see more of the Dogood articles – check out the Massachusetts Historical Society’s digital project about them here. Transcriptions of the Dogood articles, as well as other works by Benjamin Franklin, are also available here.

If you would like to learn more about Franklin, Dogood, and colonial press – check out these books in the recommended reading list:

Please note: these books are from other libraries in the CW Mars network, if you have a library card with the State Library, you can request these books through our online catalog.

Happy reading!

Maryellen Larkin, Government Documents & Reference Librarian

References:
The Papers of Benjamin Franklin