Borrow and enjoy audiobooks, eBooks, comics, movies, TV, magazines, or music everywhere you have a screen-your computer, your phone, your car, even your TV.
The Hubbard Memorial Library offers some digital and physical resources that can help you discover Ludlow's history and maybe even your own. This link will take you to our Local History page with more information.
Watch the recorded Gravestone Girls presentation, Welcome to the Graveyard. You'll go on a virtual tour of Ludlow and local cemeteries. You'll learn about different gravestones and the history of cemeteries. This presentation was given at the Hubbard Memorial Library on October 17, 2024. It was filmed by Ludlow Community TV.
Color full-page and article reproductions of thousands of U.S. and international newspapers and magazines including the Boston Globe. PressReader has an app available for Android, Apple, and Amazon Fire.
AtoZdatabases is a leading job search, reference & mailing list database including 30 million business profiles & 240 million residents. Ideal for sales leads mailing lists, market research, employment opportunities, finding friends and relatives, and more.
Value Line provides a vast array of financial measures for over 6,000 stocks, 18,000 mutual funds, 200,000 options, and other securities. Delve into Value Line’s accurate estimates, projections and historical data to discover opportunities that fit your investment strategy.
Watch the recorded speaker event, Witness to History: A Holocaust Survivor's Story. Abraham Rodstein, currently a Ludlow resident, shares his story of surviving the Kovno Ghetto and the Dachau Concentration Camp. It is facilitated by local writer, Tom Slawiak. This event was sponsored by the Hubbard Memorial Library and the Ludlow Historical Commission. Recording was made possible by Ludlow Community Television.
New in January 2025!
HeritageHub provides comprehensive coverage of obituaries and death notices from 1704 through today from all 50 U.S. states and territories.
Explore over 1,000 Community History Archives offered by institutions across the United States that have partnered with Advantage Archives to provide free access to local primary sources. These "portals to the past" are free to use by anyone to discover, learn from, and share the stories of people, places, and events that shaped history!