Daily Archives: April 2, 2020


Monday, April 27 – Wednesday, April 29, 9:30 am – 3:30 pm – Graphite Mastery: Advanced Techniques – POSTPONED

The graphite pencil is a fundamental tool in botanical art. It is humble, overlooked and essential. There is a great deal to be gained by using this simple device with accuracy and finesse. Susan Fisher will help you explore familiar graphite skills – line, form, value, edges and textures – to take each one beyond your current ability. Exercises in graphite application will focus on the subtle and more obvious methods of use for each of these critical elements. Develop the patience and appreciation for this enduring medium and improve all your botanical work. This Wellesley College Botanic Garden three day course, April 27 – 29 from 9:30 -3:30, will be held in the Cheney classroom at Elm Bank, 900 Washington Street in Wellesley, and is $395 for Friends of Wellesley College Botanic Garden members, $495 for nonmembers. Register at 781-283-3094, or email wcbgfriends@wellesley.edu.


Wednesday, April 22, 6:00 pm – 7:00 pm – Rainsford Island: A Boston Harbor Case Study in Public Neglect and Private Activism – Cancelled

Author Bill McEvoy explores the history of Rainsford Island in Boston Harbor. His talk will take place at the Boston Public Library Central Branch in Copley Square on April 22 at 6 pm. Beginning with private ownership from 1636 to 1736, the island then was owned by the Province of the Massachusetts Bay, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, and finally the City of Boston.  The island’s complex history is best told by segmenting its various periods. Until 1854, it was occasionally a place of quarantine, as well as a summer resort for the wealthy. In 1854, while under the ownership of the Commonwealth, the island’s use took a turn, beginning sixty-six years as an off-shore repository for Boston’s unwanted. Its inmates were victims of poverty, lack of health care, mental illness, senility, addiction, lack of proper housing, poor sanitary conditions, inability to pay a small fine, men unable to find work, incarcerated as paupers, and unwed pregnant women.

We note two heroes: Alice Lincoln and Louis Brandeis. Their efforts resulted in the City ending Rainsford Island as a warehouse for the poor, the unwanted, and the mentally ill. Rainsford entered its final 26 years as the Boys’ House of Reformation. Further examples of inept management, cruelty, neglect, and death, of “Unfortunate” boys ages eight to eighteen are documented. Sentences ranged from playing ball on Sundays to murder. Those boys were commingled on the 11 acre island.

His book is dedicated to the memory of all who were sent to Rainsford Island, especially those who remain buried there, still neglected but now not forgotten. This book dedicates a chapter to those who never left the island and are buried in unmarked graves, including a War of 1812 sailor, 9 Civil War soldiers who died on active duty, and 108 Veterans of the Civil War who died between 1873 and 1893. Fourteen of those Veterans were African American, – one was a member of the 54th Massachusetts Regiment.

Bill McEvoy is a US Army Veteran (1968-1971). He earned a BA from Bentley University, MBA from Suffolk University, and MA in Political Science from Boston College. While at BC he had the privilege of participating in a semester long colloquium with Dr. Thomas H. O’Connor, the Dean of the History Department.

He retired as a Massachusetts District Court Magistrate in 2009. He has volunteered for eight years with the No Veteran Dies Alone program at the Bedford Veterans Hospital where he is still glad to be actively working, as well as performing pro bono work as a Magistrate, one day per week, for ten years until this past fall.

Since his first month of retirement, he has performed many large-scale cemetery research projects, several as a volunteer at Mount Auburn Cemetery (MAC). In addition to Rainsford Island he performed a four year study of the 23,000+ people (primarily Irish immigrants or their first generation descendants) buried from 1854 to 1920 at the Catholic Mount Auburn Cemetery (CMAC), Watertown, MA. He is presently writing a book about the cemetery, as well as the people buried there.