Boston Busing / Desegregation Project Film

Boston Buses

Boston Buses

The William Monroe Trotter Institute and the Joseph P. Healey Library at the University of Massachusetts Boston will screen the film Can We Talk: Learning for Boston?s Busing/Desegregation Crisis on February 14 from 11 am to 1 p.m.

The screening will take place on the 11th floor of the Healey Library at UMass Boston. For more information, email library.archives@umb.edu or call 617-287-5944.

Can We Talk? is a film by media producer Scott Mercer. The film was commissioned by Union of Minority Neighborhoods (UMN) to capture some on the voices that motivated UMN to begin the Boston Busing/Desegregation Project (BBDP). The film?s purpose is to inspire many others to tell their stories of this era and to invite them into the Project. To learn more about the BBDP, visit http://bbdplearningnetwork.wordpress.com.

The film offers powerful stories of the 1970?s busing/desegregation crisis that changed Boston forever. Most of those in the film have never publicly shared their stories. It documents how this crisis is still felt today. It aspires to prompt a long-overdue honest conversation about public education and racism, classism, and social injustices that have plagued not only the Boston public schools, but the city of Boston as a community.

They include a bus driver who delivered children to neighborhoods and schools that didn?t want them. A resident of the projects whose admittedly racist family refused to let her be bused to a school with children of color talks about how she was shunned and stigmatized for being poor in the school she attended instead. We also learn from a parent who got involved in politics by accident because of the forces of systemic racism that denied quality of education and simple

respect. These individuals express their feelings, thoughts, and opinions in a candid, honest and, at times, raw way.

While these stories are powerful, there are many, many more stories is to be told if this period is to be understood. The film is an invitation to a process of truth, learning and change and a much larger discussion of what everyone can learn from this iconic period in Boston. The film is a vehicle to help spark honest reflections, dialogues and conversations across the city that would help lead to truth telling about and learning from this era and ultimately to deepen engagement in and commitment to strengthening Boston?s public school system for all its residents.

Audience comments and personal stories will be welcomed, and encouraged, following each screening of Can We Talk?

You’re invited! Mar 14th 2012 “Calling the Heart Back Home”: Irish-American Stories from the Archives

March 14, 2012  |  4:00-7:00 pm  |  Free and open to the public

The Joseph P. Healey Library at the University of Massachusetts Boston invites you to join us on Wednesday, March 14, 2012 to celebrate an exciting new addition to our archival collections: the historic records of the Massachusetts Catholic Order of Foresters, dramatically rescued by TIARA (The Irish Ancestral Research Association) in 2005. The Foresters records include detailed insurance policy applications dating back to 1879 that afford unique genealogical and historical information about more than 70,000 individuals in Massachusetts, most of whom are of Irish descent.

Join us for this celebration, view sample Foresters records, discover the historical resources and community-focused public history endeavors of Archives and Special Collections at UMass Boston, and learn about upcoming projects and opportunities for historical inquiry and engagement.

This event is free and open to the public. Refreshments and hors d’oeuvres will be served.

RSVP to andrew.elder@umb.edu or call 617-287-5944 for more information.

Location: Joseph P. Healey Library  |  University of Massachusetts Boston  |  100 Morrissey Blvd., Boston, MA 02125-3393.

James Green Papers Ready for Researchers

Prof Jim Green

The papers of UMass Boston Professor James Green have been fully processed and are now available for research consultation. See Green, James : Papers, 1964 – 2010

This collection is divided into 13 series detailing the scholarly career and activist history of Professor Green dating from 1964-2010. Scholarly materials consist of research materials related to Professor Green’s published books and work related to his contributions to documentary films as well as essays, published articles, book reviews, public addresses, political speeches, papers presented and correspondence with scholars and colleagues.

This collection was ably processed by Simmons College graduate and intern Ken Selnick.  The Finding Aid may be found on our OpenArchives site.

Thompson’s Island Student Visits the Archives

Dale Freeman, Bud Roberts, Peggy Roberts at UMass Boston Archives

“A GOOD AGE: Weymouth student, 79, tells ‘real story’ of old Farm & Trade School”

Patriot Ledger reporter Sue Scheible interviewed Thompson’s Island Farm and Trade School student Bud Roberts, accompanied him and his wife Peggy to Thompson’s, and visited the Archives at UMass Boston where archivist Dale Freeman assisted them in exploring records and artifacts from his years at the School.