Photo: James Rojas/WBZ NewsRadio
The city of Salem unveiled a memorial on the waterfront Friday morning, honoring Salem residents who lost their lives to COVID-19.
The memorial at Palmer Cove Park was created through a joint effort between the city’s Department of Planning and Community Development, the Salem Housing Authority and Mayor Dominick Pangallo’s office, according to the city.
The city said the memorial was installed as part of recent improvements to the park, and Pangallo said it seemed like the perfect fit.
“Located at the end of a beautiful walking path along the water … people can really use it as a punctuation mark as they walk the paths and reflect on this space,” Pangallo said.
Around 140 Salem residents lost their lives to COVID-19, according to the city.
“We’ve learned lessons from history, that’s what we do here in Salem. We’ve learned that lesson from what happened here in 2020 and 2021,” Pangallo said.
Claudia, who was at the ceremony, said she and many others can relate.
“I look at my life and I say before and after COVID, just like 9/11,” she said. “These are momentous milestones in the life that I’ve lived.”
Photo: James Rojas/WBZ NewsRadio
A plaque on a stone at Palmer Cove Park reads “Dedicated to the people of Salem,” along with a poem from J.D. Scrimgeour, Salem’s poet laureate.
Pangallo said this memorial represents that community is everything.
“[We] really wanted to make sure that we’re building a stronger foundation for the future so that people are protecting one another, they’re protecting their families and their loved ones, and we’re protecting each other as a community,” he said.
WBZ’s James Rojas (@JamesRojas.bsky.social) reports.