20181028-Exhibit-opens

November 11, 2018, is the 100th Anniversary of Armistice Day – the end of World War I. At 11:11 AM, Berkeley Mayor Jesse Arreguín will hold a ceremony on the steps of the Veterans Memorial Building for the World War I memorial plaque, newly restored. Immediately following, there will be a presentation in the building’s auditorium hosted by the Berkeley Historical Society. 

The program will include City Councilmember Linda Maio speaking on her experiences with Sanctuary City movements in Berkeley. In addition, representatives from the Berkeley Peace and Justice Commission and Code Pink will speak about one Sanctuary City moment: a 2011 resolution that the Guantanamo prison should be closed and the welcome of one of the refugees to the Berkeley community with an event known as “From Guantanamo to Berkeley.” 

Exhibit curators Phyllis Gale and Harvey Smith will then present introductions to the subject matter of the new exhibit. The exhibit will be opened for viewing for approximately one hour, with light refreshments served in the lobby. 

Following this event, people may wish to attend the United Against Hate Week kickoff across the street in Civic Center Park, scheduled from 1 to 4 PM. 

The Center Street Parking Garage, a block from the Veterans Building, has just reopened. Parking is $3 per hour. You may also find free parking behind Old City Hall or on the streets west of Martin Luther King Jr. Way.

20181007-Soskin-Kennerly

Betty Reid Soskin is the 96-year-old ranger at Rosie the Riveter WWII Home Front National Historic Park, author of the recently published memoir Sign My Name to Freedom, former co-owner of Reid’s Records on Sacramento Street in Berkeley and field representative to Assemblymembers Dion Aroner and Loni Hancock. She became politically active during the Civil Rights Movement, wrote and performed protest songs, fundraised for the Black Panthers, and became involved in Berkeley politics upon taking over the management of Reid’s Records in the late 1970s.

Carole Davis Kennerly, MSW/LCSW, was the first African American woman on the Berkeley city council and served as vice mayor. Earlier this year she received a Lifetime Achievement Award for activism at the Martin Luther King Jr. Community Breakfast, having spearheaded the Byron Rumford memorial on Sacramento Street.

Tina Jones Williams is the author of Things I Want You to Know and the “Julia Street” series of novels, set in the same South Berkeley neighborhood as Reid’s Records, the Rumford statue, and the South Berkeley Senior Center.

20180826-BHS-picnic

Come meet and greet other Berkeley history enthusiasts! Please bring a contribution of food and/or non-alcoholic beverage. We have reserved a picnic area in San Pablo Park in southwest Berkeley, an area whose history we are pursuing through a number of routes. This park was the City of Berkeley’s first, opened in 1914.

20180805-Book-Talk

Our next installment of the Book Talk Series features Paula Friedman and her new novel, The Change Chronicles: A Novel of the Sixties Antiwar Movement. Friedman was a young activist in late 1960s Berkeley protesting the Vietnam War, and a reporter at the “underground” Berkeley Barb. In The Change Chronicles, Friedman provides an intellectually and emotionally intense tale exploring the human depths of the Bay Area’s antiwar and proto-feminist struggles of 1965-1969.  

Admission is free (donations always welcome), but space is limited, so please register on Eventbrite to be sure of a seat. Doors open at 2:30; talk begins at 3:00. Light refreshments will be served after the talk, and the author will be available to sell and sign copies of the book.