Follow us on Twitter: @snaProv
Just another way to stay in touch…
Come on out for the 2010 Summit Music Festival, on Sunday August 15 from 1 – 5pm.
Featured local bands include Brown Bird, The Gnomes, and Sunday Night Jammers. There will also be a magician and lots of vendors featuring local crafts and other goods.
Come join your neighbors for a few hours of music in the park! Great time for the family!
The new SNA site is here!
And here it is…. We hope that you enjoy it! It can be accessed through www.summitneighbors.org and www.sna.providence.ri.us .
Please keep in mind that in the transition process, blog posts from January 13, 2010 through today will not appear. That is the time period we were working on this site, so the ones in the middle got cut with the old site.
Please feel free to leave comments, and if you have something you would like posted, email it to sna@sna.providence.ri.us .
Thanks to Ian Donahue and Sam Holland for their help with the site!
01:00 AM EST on Wednesday, January 6, 2010
The $180,000 project, which will be put out to bid in late February, calls for installing new plumbing, lighting and a water recirculation and filtration system. The fountain has been in disuse since 1982, when the city shut off its water due to rising operating costs, according to city Parks Supt. Robert McMahon.
“We have to assume after 28 years that some of the existing brass and copper piping within the granite fountain structure is deficient … The piping itself is not a significant cost, but the process of dismantling the fountain and putting it back together will be expensive,” he said.
Designed in a modern style by the Providence firm Jackson, Robertson & Adams, the fountain is the centerpiece of Lippitt Park, where Hope Street meets Blackstone Boulevard, near the Pawtucket city line.
It was erected in 1940 in memory of the late Henry Bowen Anthony, a U.S. senator (1859 to 1884), Rhode Island governor (1849-1851), and publisher of The Providence Journal. He died in 1884 at 69.
When it is operational in June, the fountain will join three other public outdoor fountains in Providence: the Bajnotti fountain in Burnside Park (Kennedy Plaza), the DePasquale fountain in DePasquale Plaza (Atwells Avenue) and the Clements fountain in Jacqueline Clements Park (Friendship and Dudley streets).

Ray Watson, Greg Gerritt and David Kolsky find their bearings on an insurance map from the early 20th century. Sue Korté (left) provided the maps.
About 20 neighbors took part in our “Where the East Side Used to Be” History NIght on Tuesday, November 23 at Church of the Redeemer. This neighborhood history event was organized in partnership with the Mt. Hope Neighborhood Association to give everyone a chance to share their own stories about the past of our neighborhood. After looking at maps from the 1900s and 1950s, we made a short list of vanished stores, restaurants and schools. We agreed to continue exploring the past by seeking knowledge, photos and other records of the past from our neighbors with more events and projects in 2010.
We focused mainly on the area between North Main Street or the Moshassuck River on the west to Hope Street on the east and from Olney Street north to Pawtucket. About 20 people attended. The first joint History Night was held in September of 2008 and focused on the history of North Main Street, including the Providence Steamroller football team, (1928 National Football League champions!) which held games on the site of the present Shaw’s Plaza.
Maps and images
After introductions, we got up to inspect two sets of maps on display. One set of photocopies of Sanborn insurance maps from 1957, showed what the neighborhood looked like about the time it first reached full “build out” (all land developed) but before major projects like University Heights, Route 95 and Miriam Hospital expansion occurred. We also had a few images of buildings from the Historical Society collection and Mt. Hope Neighborhood Association.
Another collection of original, full-size color insurance maps, brought by Susan Korté, showed different sections of the neighborhood from sometime prior to 1920, perhaps as early as the 1890s. These maps showed some very interesting “used to be” sites:
Attendees were invited to share recollections of businesses, schools and neighborhood groups by adding Post-it notes to the maps. Here were some of the places we could remember: (more…)
Do you remember….
Where the East Side Used to Be?
SNA joins with the Mt. Hope Neighborhood
Association for our second annual joint neighborhood
History Night on Tuesday, November 24 from 7 to 8:30
p.m. at the Church of the Redeemer, 655 Hope Street.
This time around, we invite neighbors to create their
own history of the East Side by calling on Rhode
Island’s most important navigational aid: our memory
maps of where vanished neighborhood landmarks used
to be. Do you remember the Jenkins Street or Summit
Avenue Schools? Did you shop at Miller’s Deli or Carl’s
Diggin’s? Did you bowl at Down Under Duckpins
(which was where Sullivan’s Lanes used to be)?
Last year’s event on the history of North Main Street
was very well attended. One of the highlights was the
wealth of memories shared by audience members. This
time around, we’ll devote the entire program to
audience participation. Please join us on Nov. 24th for
a lively exploration into remembered neighborhood
stores, schools, restaurants and organizations.
East of Hope Lorimer Blackstone map-99
Ninth-Eighth to Pawtucket maps-97-98
Frost to Pawtucket east of NMS maps-95-961
Frost to Pawtucket east of NMS maps-95-96
Fouth to Nighth-Eighth maps-91-92-93-94
Rochambeau to Fourth maps-88-89-90
Contents
Introduction 3
Contents 4
Charrette Overview 5
Charrette Schedule 6
Neighborhood Overview 7 – 11
Mount Hope, Hope and Blackstone History Timeline 8 – 9
The People – Neighborhood Demographics 12 – 13
Development Patterns – Neighborhood Typologies 14 – 18
Historic Districts 19
Business and Industry 20
Neighborhood Issues 21 – 25
Neighborhood Action Plan 26 – 36
Next Steps 37
Hope For The Earth Festival on Hope Street
Sunday April 26 from 12-3 PM (rain date May 3rd)
The Hope Street Merchants Association is organizing a festival on Hope Street; and it does sound festive!
There will be many events for kids. Just some of the activities are listed below.
v Blooming Blossoms agreed to hold a work shop for children
v Fresh Purls will also hold a workshop at her store for kids
v Kreatelier will also do a kids workshop
The Roli Poli Guacomoli Band will be performing. This was fully funded by The Friends of Rochambeau Library
Also,
* Sidewalk Sales will be set up by merchants
* Groden Center will be selling locally grown herbs
* Seven Stars will have a “Decorate the Earth” cookie workshop
India Restaurant and Pizzico will be serving special “GREEN” food treats
At the Hope for the Earth Festival the new Hope Street trash barrels will be unveiled and a “Name that can” event will take place for kids
WHAT
The first phase of the Narragansett Bay Commission’s
Combined Sewer Overflow (CSO) project went
on-line in November 2008, with the purpose of
protecting our urban rivers and Narragansett Bay
from weather-related sewage overflows. The
centerpiece of the project is a 3+ mile long, 250-ft
deep tunnel that begins in the Port of Providence and
terminates west of the Foundry Complex.
Since the tunnel went on-line, over 400 million gallons
of CSO flow has been prevented from overflowing
and has been diverted to the Field’s Point Wastewater
Treatment Facility for treatment.
In Phase II of the CSO project, the NBC will build
two near-surface interceptors to convey additional
flow to the Phase I tunnel and will construct separate
storm sewers in the Summit Avenue neighborhood.
At this meeting, the NBC will present plans for
construction and discuss construction-related impacts
to the neighborhood.
Please save the date…
Thursday, March 19th
for our neighborhood night at
Nanda Interiors and luxe boutique
From 6-7:30 Nanda Head, from Nanda Interiors
will be hosting
“Do’s and Don’ts of Decorating”.
Come learn the insider tricks to decorating your home and
browse the store for new ideas. Refreshments will be served.
Her store is located 782 Hope Street.
Please RSVP to events@sna.providence.ri.us.