The kindness you can see from the sidewalk

The kindness you can see from the sidewalk

Two local stories from the last 48 hours: Massachusetts third graders raised money to help preserve a Revolutionary War-era house, while Unalaska neighbors made Pride a public promise of safety and belonging. Both are small, visible acts of care that other communities could copy.

Just Heartwarming News
June 16, 2026 · 3:35 PM
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Some good news arrives with a rescue helicopter feeling: dramatic, fast, impossible to miss. The two stories I kept coming back to this morning are quieter. In both, people made care visible by doing ordinary work in public.
In Massachusetts, third graders turned chores and lemonade stands into preservation money. In Alaska, a small city turned a Pride gathering into a plainspoken promise that neighbors belong. Neither story fixes everything. That is partly why I trust them.

The help was small enough to copy

At Glover Elementary School in Marblehead, third-grade students raised $1,172 for preservation work at the Gen. John Glover House, with money coming from lemonade stands, household chores and yard work, according to Swampscott Tides. 1
The children did not just hand over a check. On Monday morning, they marched through three streets near the school with members of the reenactment group Glover's Regiment, carrying signs that read "Save the Glover," then presented the money to Nancy Schultz of the Swampscott Historical Commission. 1
A student-made preservation check is presented outdoors with reenactors standing behind it
A check from Glover School students became the center of a small preservation ceremony. 1
There is a sweet practical streak in this. The kids learned a local history lesson, then answered it with kid-scale labor. Their teacher, Sally Shevory, said the project grew from a lesson about colonial children's responsibilities into a community service project about "hard work, generosity and civic responsibility." 1
Schultz, who received the check, put the adult side of the story plainly: the preservation effort is meant for the children and future generations, so they can see the house where it has stood for the past 275 years. 1
I like that this is not a miracle-donation story. It is $1,172, plus a promised dollar-for-dollar match from Swampscott resident Charlie Patsios. 1 It is a meaningful amount because of who earned it, and because it gave children a way to touch the future of a place they are still learning to inherit.

The welcome was said out loud

About 4,600 miles away, in Unalaska, Alaska, more than 100 people of all ages attended the city's annual Pride event on June 12 at the Burma Road Chapel, KUCB reported. 2
The event was organized by Unalaskans Against Sexual Assault and Family Violence, known as USAFV, and included face painting, sidewalk chalk, kite flying, burgers and homemade fry bread tacos. 2
A public Pride sign in Unalaska reads Every One Is Welcome Here
A sign outside Unalaska's Pride event made the message hard to miss. 2
Karen Kresh, USAFV's chair, told KUCB the group wanted a public event because LGBTQ community members face higher risks of self-harm, suicide and abusive comments. "We wanted to have a public event to show support for people in that community and show that there is love and acceptance in Unalaska for all Unalaskans," she said. 2
That quote is doing real work. A picnic does not erase danger. But a public welcome changes the atmosphere a little. It tells a teenager, a parent, a coworker, a person who has been measuring every sentence before speaking, that the room is not only for people who already feel safe.
USAFV has hosted the event for more than three years, and part of the group's mission is to create "a culture of nonviolence and respect," according to KUCB. 2 The organization also runs a shelter; its 24/7 crisis line is 907-581-1500, and it accepts texts at 907-359-1500 between 8 a.m. and 11 p.m. 2

What these two stories share

These stories have different stakes. One is about children helping save a historic house. The other is about a community making LGBTQ neighbors safer by being publicly, unmistakably welcoming.
But they rhyme. Both ask people to move care out of private feeling and into visible action: a lemonade stand, a march, a sign on a door, a phone number that still matters after the event is over.
That is the version of good news I want first thing in the morning. Not sweetness as escape. Proof that ordinary people still know how to make a place feel held, one specific act at a time.

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