
Sarah-Ann Shaw 
The
Roxbury branch of the Boston Public Library will be renamed the
Shaw-Roxbury Branch in honor of groundbreaking local journalist
Sarah-Ann Shaw, who died in March 2024.
The Roxbury branch of the Boston Public Library is slated to be renamed to honor longtime community leader and local journalist Sarah-Ann Shaw.
In voting to rename the library, which will officially be known as the Shaw-Roxbury Branch, the Trustees of the Boston Public Library noted Shaw’s contributions to the Roxbury community and to representation for Black female journalists in the television news industry.
Shaw, a lifelong Roxbury resident, worked at WBZ-TV as a news reporter — the station’s first Black news reporter — for over 30 years. She died in March 2024.
Family and friends of Shaw said the name was fitting for a woman who spent years connected to and in support of the institution.
The library, said Klare Shaw, her daughter, was a spot that would bring “real joy” to Sarah-Ann’s face.
“When people say they’re in their happy place, she was in her happy place when she was at the library,” Klare Shaw said.
The move to rename the library after her, Klare Shaw said, would have “humbled and honored” her mother.
Joyce Ferriabough Bolling, who has advocated the renaming of the library after Sarah-Ann Shaw for almost a decade, said Shaw, her mentor, was “very deserving of this honor.”
In 2018, knowing that Shaw was ill and that a renovation of the library was happening — and amid the renaming of the former Skycap Lounge function hall on Warren Street
after Thelma D. Burns — Ferriabough Bolling penned an op-ed in the
Boston Herald celebrating the naming of local buildings after Black
leaders and calling for the Roxbury branch to be named after Shaw.
“I’ve
always associated her with the library,” Ferriabough Bolling said.
“Doing something for the library, being in the library, speaking in the
library, helping somebody in the library. She’s always been connected to
the library.”
Ferriabough
Bolling said she only wishes that Sarah-Ann Shaw — who she said, upon
seeing the 2018 op-ed, called to thank her for writing it — could have
been alive to see the name change in her honor.
“I
just wish that she had seen it happen before she passed away,”
Ferriabough Bolling said. “But I’m very happy that she at least saw it
coming in the advocacy. Nobody deserves it more.”
Klare
Shaw said her mother was a long-time supporter and advocate for the
library and for the community as a whole — participating in fundraising
efforts, attending performances and book talks, and tutoring the
community’s young people.
The
current branch library opened in 1978, and although it’s not the one
Klare Shaw grew up visiting, she certainly has memories of going to
other libraries with her mother. The branch that will soon bear her
mother’s name is a spot that she has taken her kids and grandkids to
with Sarah-Ann Shaw.
Klare Shaw said she hopes that the renaming will serve as a reminder to young people in the neighborhood of what they can do.
“Mom
was born in 1933 and that was a time when Boston didn’t always have the
best access for people of color and Black people,” Klare Shaw said. “I
think that it’s very significant to be able to see her recognized,
because I think it speaks to other children who are growing up in
Roxbury and saying, ‘I can achieve, and something can happen like this
for me as well.’”
Local leaders, in a press release, celebrated the steps to honor Ms. Shaw.
Mayor
Michelle Wu, recognized Sarah-Ann Shaw’s legacy in her announcement of
the name change, saying that she “paved the way for generations of
journalists, storytellers and leaders.”
“Throughout
her career and long after her retirement, she dedicated herself to
mentoring the next generation and creating opportunities for education
and [the] community to thrive — a mission intertwined with that of our
public libraries,” Wu said. “Her legacy will live on in this library
branch that serves as a hub for the neighborhood.”
Rep. Ayanna Pressley called Shaw a “trailblazing, beloved, and proud daughter of Roxbury”
and said that her lifelong commitment to shining light on the brilliance
of Boston’s Black and brown community is an inspiration.
“May
her legacy be forever honored in Roxbury, where so many of us recall
seeing her building community at the newly renamed Shaw-Roxbury Branch
Library at Nubian Square for decades and attempt to live up to the
example she set through her words and deeds,” Pressley said in a
statement.
Through
this process, the city also is looking to recognize other community
leaders who had a significant role in the branch library’s history,
including civil rights activist Mimi Jones and Francine Gelzer, the
first Black librarian at the branch.
The
name of the library, which was known as the Dudley Library, after the
nearby square until the area was rechristened “Nubian Square” following a
2019 non-binding ballot question and city decision, has been under
debate for some community members.
A
separate local effort has called for the branch to be named the Nubian
Library, like the square, to represent an all-inclusive Black cultural
perspective.
Klare
Shaw said that she doesn’t think her mother was a particular advocate
for renaming things “Nubian” — a claim some advocates have made — but
said she doesn’t care whether it bears the name “Roxbury” or “Nubian” as
long as her mother’s name and legacy is represented.
“If
that is the will of the city and the will of people, that would be fine
with me,” Klare Shaw said. “I just want to see her name linked to that
and her name there at the front of the library.”