Sweet Auburn: The Magazine of the Friends of Mount Auburn Mount Auburn as a Community Resource | Page 17

People and Happenings Cornerstones and Collections Mount Auburn hosted a special late-day tour on July 15 of our archival collections as part of a joint program with the Cambridge Historical Society and the Longfellow National Historic Site. Curators and archivists at each site showed highlights from their extensive collec- tions of archival manuscripts, photographs and ephemera. The public program, called “Cornerstones and Collections,” focused on the many connections among our institutions, with architecture as a unifying theme. Over 35 people, in four separate groups which visited each of the three sites along Mt. Auburn and Brattle Streets, were treated here to a glimpse of our remark- able collections, includ- ing a 19th century felt hat worn by the Cemetery gatekeeper, the 1896 watercolor proposal by Willard T. Sears for Story Chapel, a candelabra featuring Bigelow Chapel, and an 1855 petition to build a conservatory. Curator of Historical Collections Meg Win- slow, Archivist Brian Sullivan, and volunteer and Friends Trustee Caroline Loughlin gave presentations, explained the collections on display, and answered questions. The program, which began at 5:00PM, ran well into the evening. 19th century souvenir teacup, Mount Auburn’s Historical Collections Grant awarded to Mount Auburn for new entrance to Story Chapel and Visitors Center Mount Auburn was recently awarded $132,000 by Mass- Development in partnership with the Massachusetts Cultural Council (MCC) through their Massachusetts Cultural Facilities Fund (MCFF) for a proposed new entry to Story Chapel. Ours Proposed Story Chapel & Visitors Center Entrance was among 85 projects (out of a field of 132 cultural orga- nization applicants) in 2009 to receive grants. This is a 1:1 matching grant, so with it comes the challenge to raise matching funds by December 2010. McGinley Kalsow & Associates of Somerville, MA, have prepared a conceptual design that is reminiscent of a former 19th century porte-cochere at Story Chapel but yet focuses on improved contemporary visitor accessibility and increased Story Chapel with Porte energy efficiency. Cochere, 1934 Friends Trustee Caroline Loughlin wins historic landscape publication award Caroline Loughlin of Weston, MA, a Trustee and the Treasurer of the Friends of Mount Auburn, was one of three editors on a new publication (2009), The Master List of Design Projects of the Olmsted Firm, 1857- 1979 which was awarded the pres- tigious Boston Society of Landscape Architects Award of Excellence in May 2009. Caroline, and the other two editors, Lucy Lawliss and Lauren Meier, have received two other prominent awards for this book: the Award of Honor from the American Society of Landscape Architects in Chicago in September 2009 and an award from the Betsy Barlow Rogers Foundation for Landscape Studies. Fall 2009 | 15