W.E.B. Du Bois Sculpture Project Awarded Grant

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GREAT BARRINGTON, Mass. — The W.E.B. Du Bois Sculpture Project has been awarded $50,000 from the Massachusetts Office of Economic Development for completion of a statue of W.E.B. Du Bois to be sited in front of the Mason Public Library on the main street of Great Barrington.
 
The funding was requested by State Senator Paul Mark, Chair of the State's Joint Committee on Tourism, Arts, and Cultural Development. 
 
"Few people know that Du Bois—a civil rights giant and founder of the NAACP—was born and raised in Great Barrington," said Sen. Mark. "These funds will help complete the monument and promote Black history and tourism in the Berkshires."
 
"We are grateful to Senator Mark for supporting our efforts to recognize Du Bois and eager to join him in promoting Black history in the Berkshires," said Ari Zorn, co-chair of the W.E.B. Du Bois Sculpture Project.
 
The non-profit Sculpture Project has partnered with Great Barrington and the Mason Public Library to redesign the library front as a community meeting place. A life-size statue of Du Bois will welcome visitors while, inside the library, a collection of Du Bois's books and private correspondence will be on display.
 
The Sculpture Project has raised $290,000 for the statue from foundations and private donors. Sculptor Richard Blake is now at work on the monument, which will be dedicated in 2025. 
 
QR codes that direct visitors to the Du Bois homestead and other Black historic sites in the Berkshires will also be developed.
 
The W.E.B. Du Bois Sculpture Project was launched in May 2022 by a volunteer group of local citizens to recognize Du Bois' scholarly achievements in the fight for racial equality. 

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Lee Breaks Ground on Public Safety Building

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

Lee Town Administrator Chris Brittain says the community voted to invest in its future by approving the new $37 million complex. 

LEE, Mass. — Ground was ceremonially broken on the town's new public safety building, something officials see as a gift to the community and future generations. 

When finished, Lee will have a 37,000 square-foot combined public safety facility on Railroad Street where the Airoldi and Department of Public Works buildings once stood. Construction will cost around $24 million, and is planned to be completed in August 2027.

"This is the town of Lee being proactive. This is the town of Lee being thoughtful and considerate and practical and assertive, and this project is not just for us. This project is a gift," Select Board member Bob Jones said. 

"This is a gift to our children, our grandchildren."

State and local officials, including U.S. Rep. Richard Neal, gathered at the site on Friday, clad in hard hats and yellow vests, and shoveled some dirt to kick off the build. 

Town Administrator Chris Brittain explained that officials have planned and reviewed the need for a modern facility for the public safety departments for years, and that the project marks a new chapter, replacing 19th-century infrastructure with a "state-of-the-art" complex.

"The project is not just about concrete and steel, it's a commitment to the safety of our families, the efficiency of our first responders, and the future of our community," he said. 

He said he was grateful to the town's Police, Fire, and Building departments for their dedication while operating out of outdated facilities, and to the Department of Public Works, for coordinating site preparation and relocating its services. 

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