Arts & Entertainment

Lost Art Finds Home With Peabody Essex After 6 Decades: Patch PM

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Peabody Essex Museum officials hope that the discovery of panels 28 and 16 — which depicts Shays' Rebellion, the 1786–87 tax revolt in western Massachusetts, leads to the discovery of the three panels that remain missing.
Peabody Essex Museum officials hope that the discovery of panels 28 and 16 — which depicts Shays' Rebellion, the 1786–87 tax revolt in western Massachusetts, leads to the discovery of the three panels that remain missing. (Dave Copeland/Patch)

SALEM, MA — It's Tuesday, March 2. Here's what you should know this afternoon:

  • Peabody Essex Museum locates painting missing for six decades in a New York City apartment.
  • Dr. Seuss Enterprises, which oversees the business and legacy of the late, Massachusetts author, said it will stop publishing six titles because of racist and insensitive imagery.
  • The mother who left her newborn in a Dorchester trash can pleads not guilty.
  • Worcester police in December agreed to adopt a controversial new crime forecasting tool, nearly three weeks before the idea was presented to the public.

Scroll down for those and other stories Patch has been covering in Massachusetts today.


Today’s Top Story

A second panel from American artist Jacob Lawrence's sweeping series "Struggle: From the History of the American People" that has been hidden from public view for six decades has been located, the Peabody Essex Museum in Massachusetts announced Tuesday.

Find out what's happening in Salemfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The painting known as panel 28 had not been seen in public since 1960 and was known only through a black-and-white reproduction.

The 12-inch-by-16-inch panel was found in a New York City apartment, like another painting in the series, panel 16, that was rediscovered in a different home in October.

Find out what's happening in Salemfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Read the full story here.


Nearby News


Today’s Other Top Stories In Massachusetts

Six Seuss titles get shelved — permanently: Dr. Seuss Enterprises, which oversees the business and legacy of the late, Massachusetts author, said it will stop publishing six titles because of racist and insensitive imagery. The announcement on Tuesday —which is Dr. Seuss's birthday —follows complaints from a Cambridge Librarian in 2017 and the 2018 removal of a mural at the Dr. Seuss museum in Springfield, where he was born.


Patch Exclusive:

Emails show backroom deal: Worcester police in December agreed to adopt a controversial new crime forecasting tool, nearly three weeks before the idea was presented to the public. The full adoption of the ShotSpotter Connect program is on hold pending City Council approval, but emails obtained by Patch show police pushed to close the deal before the end of 2020.


Mother held on $100,000 bail: A not guilty plea was to a charge of attempted murder was entered for Marie Merisier, 33, Monday. Merisier, who has a history of mental health problems and recently lost her job, is accused of leaving her newborn baby in a trash can. She is being held on $100,000 bail.


They Said It

"The father was able to keep the mother warm and as calm as the situation allowed throughout the process."


By The Numbers

66 MPH: That was the wind speed in Dennis, MA at 7:09 a.m. Monday morning, the highest recorded in the state. Most parts of the state saw wind speeds topping 50 MPH overnight. The storm caused widespread damage and left thousands without power. Some people may not get their power back until this evening. The storm also hampered the state's effort to distribute the coronavirus vaccine. The National Weather Service says we can expect high winds throughout the afternoon before things calm down this evening.


The latest on the coronavirus response in Massachusetts

A local high school is helping to give free training to people who lost their jobs because of the coronavirus pandemic and want to get into the plumbing or automotive services industries, thanks to a $100,000 grant from the governor's office. Nashoba Valley Technical High School is one of eight schools to receive Career Technical Initiative grants from Gov. Charlie Baker's Workforce Skills Cabinet amounting to $1.3 million.

Today's other stories on the pandemic:

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