Friends of the Robbins Library

Friends of the Robbins Library The Friends of the Robbins Library provide support for the Robbins Library in Arlington, MA through book sales, special programs and membership dues.

02/14/2025

THE ARTS IN BLOOM – FRIDAY, MARCH 7, 2025, 6:30-9:30 PM

The Friends of the Robbins Library is partnering with the Arlington Garden Club to host The Arts in Bloom an evening of glorious and unique floral displays that bring to life a variety of books, music, sculpture and writings. This event, which is akin to the Museum of Fine Arts’ popular “Art in Bloom” program, will take place throughout the Robbins Library on Friday, March 7, 2025 from 6:30-9:30 pm.

Local florists as well as Garden Club and Friends members will make the flower arrangements. Jim Nicoloro with Jazz Ambiance will entertain with light jazz in the Reading Room. Delicious savory hors d’oeuvres and sweets will be served, and wine and beer will be offered for sale.

Tickets are $40.00 in advance ($45.00 at the door) and are available for purchase by credit card below or by cash or check at the Circulation Desk of the Robbins and Fox Libraries.

Proceeds will benefit Arlington’s libraries and the Arlington Garden Club Civic Development program.

09/17/2023

CANCELLED - What’s New in Arlington Housing” event was scheduled for Wednesday, September 27, 2023

The Friends of the Robbins Library is a volunteer organization with the overall goal of supporting and enhancing activities of the Robbins and Fox Libraries for the benefit of the local community. In addition to hosting book sales, the Friends of the Robbins Library offers a number of public and music events to the community.

One of the Friends’ annual programs is to showcase a Town Department. This series is solely to educate and inform the public on their local government. This year the Friends invited the Department of Planning and Community Development (DPCD) and other Town Committees working with the DPCD to give an overview of housing in Arlington and proposed changes. As stated, the intent of this program was to educate and inform.

Due to recent incidents around the warrant article discussions, the Friends of the Robbins Library is cancelling the “What’s New in Arlington Housing” event scheduled for Wednesday, September 27, 2023.

Please join the Friends of the Robbins Library as we present the next in our series of informational events showcasing a...
09/11/2023

Please join the Friends of the Robbins Library as we present the next in our series of informational events showcasing a specific Town Department, this time the Department of Planning and Community Development (DPCD).

In addition, we have invited representatives from two other Arlington organizations working to improve community housing in our town, the Arlington Housing Authority and the Housing Corporation of Arlington. This program is co-sponsored with Envision Arlington’s Civic Engagement Group and the Arlington Affordable Housing Trust.

We will welcome to the panel Claire Ricker of the Town of Arlington Department of Planning and Community Development, Jack Nagle of the Arlington Housing Authority, Erica Schwarz of the Housing Corporation of Arlington, and volunteer resident member Sanjay Newton of the MBTA Communities Working Group. Our panelists will help us understand and discuss the current status of housing in Arlington, what is new and what changes are being discussed. A Q&A session will follow. The evening will be moderated by ACMi Communications Manager James Milan. We would like to encourage Town Meeting Members to attend, so that the conversation begun at this event might continue in the precincts.

HOW TO SUBMIT A QUESTION

The public is invited to submit questions in advance of this event at [email protected]. Deadline for submission is midnight Friday, September 22.

Please note that we anticipate significant community interest in this topic and will hold the event in the Arlington Town Hall, 730 Mass. Ave., on Wednesday, September 27 at 7 pm. Admission is free and open to all. Proceedings will be filmed by ACMi.

TOWN DAY BOOK SALE - SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2023It’s time again for one of Arlington’s favorite Town Day traditions- th...
08/15/2023

TOWN DAY BOOK SALE - SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2023
It’s time again for one of Arlington’s favorite Town Day traditions- the Friends of the Robbins Library’s Town Day Book Sale! The Sale will be in the parking lot behind the Library as well as downstairs in the Library’s Community Room.
There will be thousands of books at very affordable prices - come browse and enjoy and purchase books, media (including record albums), tote bags and more to support Arlington libraries! The Sale this year is on Saturday, September 23 from 10:30 am – 3 pm. Friends’ members may come early - at 10:00 am. Please note new time for the Sale. You may become a Friends’ member that morning if you would like to join the fun early.
Donations of gently used paperback and hardcover books plus media for the sale may be left in the large blue bin located in the front lobby of the Robbins Library beginning Tuesday, September 5. Please do not donate any textbooks, encyclopedias, videotapes, or guidebooks more than ten years old, or books without covers or damaged books. All other books, books on cd, music cd's and DVD's are welcome.
Donations of vinyl record albums are also appreciated!

Anyone wishing to assist the Friends with the sale should contact Friends' Coordinator Amy McElroy ( [email protected].) We will then send you a link to our SignUp Genius. Volunteers are needed to sort books during the weeks prior to the sale and to set up, organize, and clean up on the day of the sale.

The Friends are PROUD to help the Pride Prom be a safe, fun and successful prom!
05/26/2023

The Friends are PROUD to help the Pride Prom be a safe, fun and successful prom!

05/20/2023

We feel so grateful to the community who came out to shop our vintage vinyl as the Robbins successfully de-accessioned its entire collection. We are so glad that the whale song album, all the birdsong albums, most of the Betty White Dance instructional records happily found new homes. If you came by today, what special album caught your eye? Feel free to share in the Comments!

Come down to buy vintage vinyl!! The vinyl sale is on!
05/20/2023

Come down to buy vintage vinyl!! The vinyl sale is on!

Please join the Friends of the Robbins Library on Thursday May 18th at 7:00 pm. Arlington resident Marion Kilson, a volu...
05/08/2023

Please join the Friends of the Robbins Library on Thursday May 18th at 7:00 pm. Arlington resident Marion Kilson, a volunteer with the Friends of the Robbins Library, and Gwen Wong, the Secretary for the Friends will discuss Martin Kilson’s memoir, A Black Intellectual’s Odyssey: From a Pennsylvania Milltown to the Ivy League. Kilson takes readers on a fascinating journey from his upbringing in the small Pennsylvania milltown of Ambler, to his experiences attending Lincoln University, the country’s oldest historically black university, to pursuing graduate study at Harvard University before spending his entire career there as a faculty member. In 1969, Kilson became the first African American to be appointed a full professor in Harvard College where he taught courses on African and African American topics for more than thirty years. His memoir describes his personal story–his youth, education and academic career, as well as his research in West Africa. This is as much a story of his travels from the racist margins of twentieth century America to one of the nation’s most prestigious institutions, as it is a portrait of the places that shaped him.

Interested readers can find Martin Kilson’s memoir on the “Arlington Authors” book shelf in the Reading Room.

This event will take place in the Robbins Library Community Room (lower level) on Thursday, May 18 at 7 pm. Admission is free and open to all.

Please join the Friends of the Robbins Library and the Arlington Garden Club, co-sponsors of this virtual event, for a p...
04/24/2023

Please join the Friends of the Robbins Library and the Arlington Garden Club, co-sponsors of this virtual event, for a presentation by Deborah Chud, a retired Massachusetts physician turned garden-maker, consultant, and educator. entitled: “New Perennials: A Love Story”. Deborah’s talk is a personal introduction to the design principles of the New Perennialists who gave rise to the hottest gardening trend in the world today—naturalistic landscaping. In the US, their influence can be seen in New York’s High Line, Chicago’s Lurie Garden, the Oudolf Meadow at Delaware Botanic Gardens, and Oudolf Garden, Detroit.

Deborah’s six years of research on these gardens (among many others) led to her own, highly unusual New Perennial garden and the only known database of New Perennial plant combinations. Part 1 of the talk traces her discovery of their work, her research on their plant combinations, and her use of that research to create a garden in the New Perennialist style. Part 2 explores the historical context in which the New Perennialists emerged, and Part 3 provides an introduction to their design principles—particularly a radical concept of structure and a special balance between coherence and contrast that approximates nature’s own. At the end of the talk Deborah will offer home gardeners (and pros as well) some practical “dos & don’ts” for solving the problem of excessive contrast.

This online event will take place on Wednesday, April 26 at 7 pm. Bring your questions and join the conversation. The event is free and open to all, but registration is required to receive the link.

To register: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/new-perennials-a-love-story-tickets-520385345577

To close this season’s Reading Room Music Series the Friends of the Robbins Library is delighted to welcome Erin Ash Sul...
04/19/2023

To close this season’s Reading Room Music Series the Friends of the Robbins Library is delighted to welcome Erin Ash Sullivan. Erin is a Massachusetts-based, Americana/folk singer-songwriter who loves a good storytelling song. In 2021 she released her debut solo album, We Can Hear Each Other, which reached #10 on the FAI Folk DJ Chart. This year, she has been a Grassy Hill Emerging Artist at the Falcon Ridge Folk Festival, the recipient of the Mark Erelli Judge’s Choice Award in the New England Songwriting Competition, and a Songwriter Serenade Semifinalist. She was also a 2021 Finalist in the Rose Garden Performing Songwriter Competition and a finalist in the 2021 Mid-Atlantic Song Contest. Victor Infante of the Worcester Telegram & Gazette describes her music as “delicate and evocative” with songs full of “nuance and emotional resonance.” What better way to spend a Sunday afternoon? More information about Erin and her music is available at www.erinashsullivan.com,

This event will take place in the Reading Room of the Robbins Library on Sunday, April 23 at 3 pm. Space is limited and on a first-come, first-served basis, so be sure to come early! The event is free and open to all.

04/11/2023

Join the Friends of the Robbins Library for a moderated discussion on local journalism: Why All News is Local, featuring local journalists Jeff Barnd of Arlington Community Media (ACMi), Crystal Haynes of Channel 25 News, and Bob Sprague of YourArlington.com. Hear from these experienced journalists on the state of local news reporting, and how the world of media has changed. The panel discussion will be moderated by Assistant Director of Libraries Amanda Troha and followed by a period for Q & A.

This is an in-person program to be held in the Community Room of the Robbins Library on Wednesday, April 12 at 7pm. The event is free and open to all.

The presentation will be preceded by the Friends’ brief Annual General Meeting, which will include remarks from Board members and Library Director Anna Litten.

As News Director at ACMi TV, Jeff applies his 25+ years of experience to produce and air a nationally recognized award-winning newscast, and guide the reporters, interns, writers and news/public affairs producers to tell compelling stories that have a direct impact on the viewing audience.

Jeff is a 13-time Emmy Award-Winning recipient in Television News broadcasting, including three Emmys in the “News Writing” Category and “Boston’s Best Anchor” (1998). He has served as weeknight anchor in Boston, MA, Baltimore, MD, and Portland, ME markets for 25 years, and as National Correspondent in Washington, DC for the Sinclair Broadcast Group for 3 years. Along the way he has garnered several statewide awards and reported on internationally intriguing news stories from around the world, including Singapore, Kuwait, Iraq, Italy, Prague, Rio de Janeiro and the Amazon rainforest.

Crystal Haynes is an Emmy-award-winning journalist with more than 15 years of broadcast experience. Her award-winning work has focused on equity in education, the housing crisis and maternal health. Crystal is a part-time lecturer at Northeastern University. She is also the Chair of the Arlington Martin Luther King Jr. Birthday Observance Committee, member of the Boston Association of Black Journalists, NAACP, and is a trained facilitator in gender-based violence prevention and incidents in racism through Northeastern University’s Center for Sport in Society. Crystal holds a B.S. in Broadcast Journalism from Emerson College, and a Masters degree in Media Advocacy from Northeastern University’s College of Arts, Media and Design. Crystal grew up in Springfield, MA, but has called Arlington home since 2017 joining her husband and his family who have lived in town for more than four generations.

Bob Sprague has been a working journalist since 1970. His professional experience includes periods as editor at the Advocate, (where he won several awards from National Newspaper Association, New England Newspaper Association and New England Press Association), Town Webmaster/schools’ communications specialist for Arlington, copy editor at The Boston Globe and Network World, Assistant production manager for Cutter Consortium in Arlington, reporter for Cambridge Day covering the 2011 Cambridge city election, Contributing Editor for Tufts University, Office of Publications, and publisher of the community website YourArlington.com, a community-news, citizen-journalism site covering issues in Arlington. Bob has also held positions at Emerson College teaching journalism, and at Northeastern University. Bob holds an M.A. in English from Lehigh University and a B.A. in English from Washington & Jefferson College.

Address

700 Massachusetts Avenue
Arlington, MA
02476

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