top of page
IMG_2192_edited_edited_edited_edited_edited.jpg

Monday 10-2

Tuesday 3-6
Thursday 10-2

Friday 3-6

Save the dates and come see what's happening!


-every Monday 10:30 Mahjong

-every Thursday 10-12 Fiber Arts - Bring your spinning wheels, your weaving, your embroidery, what have you!

November 9 Fly Fishing

November 11 CommuniTea

November 13 Closed for Veterans Day

November 13 Write Here

November 18 Carolyn Brodginski in Concert

November 27 Banish the Blank Page


Yoga M 9am, T 7pm, Sat 9am



Philadelphia Blues Guitarist,

Shakey Lee Lyman



Shakey plays blues guitar in a style that is a hybrid of both Delta and Texas blues. You’ll hear him play guitar and harmonica, keep a beat with tap shoes, and take care of the vocals! He plays all over, mostly near Philadelphia, but also Austin Tx and the west coast. A veteran performer at Jewett City’s Vision and Grit festivals (2011 - 2014), he came to enjoy playing in Connecticut.

Shakey’s influences run from Robert Johnson to Hank Williams, from early last century to modern times.

If you want to hear a silly bluesabilly from Philly, come see Shakey play at the Middle Haddam Public Library June 2nd at 6pm.


Proceeds to benefit our project to digitize, organize and preserve our archive.


Advance Tickets are $20.


You can purchase advance tickets by sending payment to Venmo or PayPal (@middlehaddampubliclibrary) or in person.


Thank you for your support!




Ann C Burke, PhD. is a student and teacher of evolutionary morphology, a discipline of Biology concerned with understanding the pattern and diversification of forms over long lengths of time.

Burke’s enduring curiosity about the dynamics of time and change has taken her to many remote locations. In her art, she uses collected natural objects and her own innate curiosity to explore the roles of development and variation in respect to change.


This set of three-dimensional assemblages represent a renewed relationship to these objects; a re-consideration of function, grace, ornament and simply overlooked bits of nature.




bottom of page