TODAY'S EDITION IN ONE SENTENCE: Marblehead moved through one of those weeks when one story kept giving shape to the next and, almost in slow motion, you could see a town change: voters turned out in record numbers to approve a $15 million operating override and a separate trash override that together added $17.3 million in permanent taxing capacity, broke more than two decades of resistance to paying for the regular work of town government and made for one of the biggest override nights in state history; override supporters swept the top races and the new Select Board turned almost immediately from victory to accountability; turnout itself shattered the town’s recent records; a new Revolutionary exhibit at the Marblehead Museum made room for loyalists and expulsion inside a town story that is usually told more cleanly than it was lived; Juneteenth speakers, in a different register but with a similar demand, pressed the point that history is not much use if it is only told in ways that flatter the people doing the telling; police investigated a stolen car found off Grace Oliver’s Beach after damage at the high school football field and the bomb squad rendered decades-old grenades safe after a house clean-out; Salem State prepared to host a congressional debate; and Slow Roll Marblehead tried to make biking feel a little more social and a little more possible.— Cheers, Will
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New 250th exhibit lets Marblehead’s Revolution speak — loyalists included
A new exhibit at the Marblehead Museum marks the Revolution’s 250th anniversary by telling a fuller and more complicated town story, including the fate of loyalists driven out by their neighbors. Rather than settling for familiar patriotic pride, it asks visitors to confront the messier truths of rebellion, exile, intimidation and how Marblehead’s past looked to the people who lost on the winning side of history.
At Marblehead’s Juneteenth, celebration made room for hard truths
Marblehead’s Juneteenth event moved beyond a ceremonial observance and became a fuller public conversation about delayed freedom, local Black history, memory and the persistence of anti-Blackness. The gathering combined dance, music and community celebration with direct, unsparing remarks about whose stories get told, how history is distorted and what justice still asks of the present.
Marblehead says yes to a $15M override and a very different future
Marblehead voters approved a $15 million operating override and a separate trash override, delivering the town’s first successful operating override since 2005 and ending years of resistance to raising taxes for day-to-day services. The result does more than close a budget gap: it resets the financial direction of the town, gives leaders new long-term revenue and signals that a majority of voters were ready to pay more to protect schools, town services and trash collection.
Override supporters didn’t just win the question. They won the night
The same electorate that backed the override also elevated candidates aligned with that push, handing victories to Erin Noonan and Rossana Ferrante in the Select Board race and reinforcing the political coalition that argued Marblehead had to spend more to preserve core services. In other words, voters did not just approve a policy change. They also chose the people they want in charge of carrying it out.
Missed an issue? The Independent’s newsletter archive keeps the whole run in reach
The Marblehead Independent’s newsletter archive gives readers one place to revisit past editions, catch up on weeks they missed and track how the town’s biggest stories unfolded over time. It is an easy way to browse the paper’s recent history in the format many readers know best: a full, curated weekly edition built around the stories that mattered most.
A remarkable 47.5% of Marblehead’s registered voters cast ballots, producing the biggest annual town election turnout in the Independent’s available records. The scale of participation showed just how deeply the override fight, school funding debate and broader questions about town services had gripped residents, with every precinct clearing levels that would have been extraordinary in past years.
NEWS ANALYSIS: Marblehead didn’t just pass overrides. It made state history
Marblehead’s combined $17.3 million override night ranks second in Massachusetts Proposition 2½ history, placing the town in rare company statewide. The analysis explains why that matters: this was not merely a large local vote, but one of the most consequential permanent levy increases the commonwealth has ever seen, a sign of both Marblehead’s fiscal squeeze and the growing strain many Massachusetts communities face.
Less than a day after voters approved the override, the Select Board shifted from campaign-season argument to the harder work of accountability. Its message was that the new money is not a blank check, and that trust will have to be earned through clear reporting, disciplined oversight and visible follow-through on the promises made to voters before Election Day.
Decades-old grenades found in a Marblehead garage ended with a bomb squad trip to the dump
A house clean-out on Arrowhead Road took an alarming turn when several old military devices, including grenades, were discovered in a garage loft where they had apparently sat for decades. Officials moved the devices to the transfer station so the Massachusetts State Police bomb squad could render th
Salem State debate will put congressional hopefuls on stage
Candidates running to succeed U.S. Rep. Seth Moulton in the 6th Congressional District will meet June 17 at Salem State University. The free forum, hosted by the Frederick E. Berry Institute of Politics, will give North Shore voters an early look at the field.
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Pride celebration brings family fun to Shubie’s
Marblehead Pride’s Family Fun Event is set for Sunday, June 14, from noon to 3 p.m. at Shubie’s Marketplace. A broad group of local businesses, town departments and community organizations is backing the afternoon of connection, activities and Pride.
The Marblehead Fireworks Committee says it needs about $80,000 to keep this year’s Independence Day fireworks and Harbor Illumination on track. Committee chair Alexander Falk said the gap followed the loss of the annual fundraising letter in the town census mailing.
Marblehead’s new slow-roll bike ride wants neighbors, not speed
Slow Roll Marblehead is pitching something gentler than a cycling club and more social than a workout: a recurring community ride built around easy pacing, conversation and making town biking feel more welcoming. The story captures a small but appealing civic idea, one that ties together public space, neighborliness and the hope that more residents might start seeing Marblehead by bike.
This week's community bulletin highlights key town deadlines, meetings, programs, events and civic reminders. Click any blue item to go directly to source material, registration pages or full details.
Holly Aloha Jaynes exhibit opens at Stetson Gallery Holly Aloha Jaynes, a multimedia artist and longtime Marblehead arts volunteer, is presenting “Creative Journeys,” an art exhibit and sale, at Stetson Gallery at the Unitarian Universalist Church, 28 Mugford St., during the first three weeks of June. The exhibit includes oil paintings, watercolors, photography, collage, assemblage and jewelry made with sustainably purchased Navajo beads. Jaynes will host a closing thank-you party June 21 from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Details.
Marblehead artist to discuss Danvers exhibit NorthShore Unitarian Universalist Church in Danvers will host an art reception and artist talk with Marblehead artist Cathy Marie Michael on June 21 from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Her exhibit, “Art as Prayer, Resistance and Joy,” features pastel portraits of people showing strength and resilience against injustice, along with vibrant pastel landscapes. The event will be held at 323 Locust St., with original artwork, giclée prints and magnets available for purchase. Details.
Marblehead Food Pantry launches Amazon wish list The Marblehead Food Pantry is offering residents a new way to donate food by ordering through an Amazon wish list and shipping items directly to the Masonic Lodge at 62 Pleasant St. Organizers say the option is meant to make giving easier for residents who want to help but may not be able to make a grocery trip and separate drop-off, especially as food costs and local budget pressures add strain. Details.
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