
Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047

Mary’s Meals Help Mary’s Meals feed even more children! $21 feeds a child for the school year! Mary’s Meals are now providing more than 2 million children in some of the world’s poorest communities with a nutritious meal every day they attend school. Please consider giving nourishment to one of the poorest of the poor through St. Stephen’s. Ways to Help This Lent You may send your donations to St. Stephen’s Religious Ed, 75 Sanfordville Rd, Warwick, NY 10990 with checks made out to Mary’s Meals.
Continue to Drop off NY deposit bottles and cans behind the school in the Mary’s Meal Shed! Every penny counts towards another meal served! Knights of Columbus Council 2952 also collects deposit cans and bottles in the bin next to the clergy parking on the side of the church. All of the proceeds will be donated to Mary’s Meals. Bottles & Cans with NY deposit only! No Gatorade, iced tea, or Tropicana! No food cans or jars!

Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047

Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047

Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047

the Writers Group meets every Wednesday in the Library;’s Board Room. Bring in 6 copies of up to four pages, typed and double-spaced, to be critiqued by fellow writers in a friendly, constructive manner. All forms of prose accepted (NO poetry please). this is a non-instruct0inal program for adults; new members always welcomed!

Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047

2026 Commemorative Events
- January 18, 2PM. Lecture on environmental context & impact of the Revolutionary War (Albert Wisner Library).
- Feb. 11, 6 PM: “American Revolution in the Hudson Valley” with author Anthony Musso. New York’s Hudson Valley played an important role in the nation’s quest for independence. To register for the program please visit the library’s website at www.floridapubliclibrary.org.
- Feb: Great Chain Across the Hudson and reproduction chain link exhibit at Warwick Town Hall (foyer)
- Feb-March date TBA Installation of the John Clark Murder historical marker at Dutch Hollow.
- Thursdays Feb 4-March 12: “Watch Party for Ken Burns Revolutionary War series, 5:30 PM, Albert Wisner Library
- Feb. 19 11:30 talk on Revolutionary Warwick by Sue Gardner (Warwick Golden Seniors, Town Hall)
- Feb. 22, 2-3:30 PM: “Three Objects that Tell Warwick’s Revolutionary Story: A Conversation with Sue Gardner”. Buckbee Center, Free to members, $5 for the public. Warwick Historical Society.
- March: Great Chain Exhibit, Sterling Forest State Park Visitor’s Center
- March 7, 2 PM. Florida in the Revolutionary War. Talk by S. Gardner. Florida Public Library.
- March 21: Warwick Day at Sterling Iron Works 10-4. Featuring 18th century forge demonstration, reenactors, interactive activities. Sterling Forest State Park, Lautenberg Visitors Center. Friends of Hathorn Historical Society.
- April: Details TBA: Planting of disease resistant elm in memory of the Washington Elm at Sanfordville (Arbor Day)
- April 26. 12-4: Revolutionary War in Orange County “History Fair” organized by Alex Prizgintas, Town of Woodbury Senior Center
- May 7 6:00 PM: Aaron Burr and the Hamilton Musical: This program delves into the women who shaped Burr’s life and highlights unforgettable songs from the Broadway smash, including The Election of 1800 and the fateful Hamilton-Burr duel. Albert Wisner Public Library
- May 17: Annual Founders’ Day at the Gen. John Hathorn historic site: Honoring Our Founding Veterans. A living history activities campus and “meet and greet” with some of Warwick’s Revolutionary War Veterans.
- July 1: Village of Florida Time Capsule event (details TBA)
- July 4: Official Town of Warwick USA@250 Parade, 11 AM, Village of Greenwood Lake
- July 4: Fireworks at Greenwood Lake
- July 18: George Washington Day 5K Fun Run, Warwick Historical Society
- July 22: Battle of Minisink Commemoration, 6:30 PM Annual reading of Hathorn’s Battle of Minisink report, Warwick Cemetery

Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047

Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047

2026 Commemorative Events
- January 18, 2PM. Lecture on environmental context & impact of the Revolutionary War (Albert Wisner Library).
- Feb. 11, 6 PM: “American Revolution in the Hudson Valley” with author Anthony Musso. New York’s Hudson Valley played an important role in the nation’s quest for independence. To register for the program please visit the library’s website at www.floridapubliclibrary.org.
- Feb: Great Chain Across the Hudson and reproduction chain link exhibit at Warwick Town Hall (foyer)
- Feb-March date TBA Installation of the John Clark Murder historical marker at Dutch Hollow.
- Thursdays Feb 4-March 12: “Watch Party for Ken Burns Revolutionary War series, 5:30 PM, Albert Wisner Library
- Feb. 19 11:30 talk on Revolutionary Warwick by Sue Gardner (Warwick Golden Seniors, Town Hall)
- Feb. 22, 2-3:30 PM: “Three Objects that Tell Warwick’s Revolutionary Story: A Conversation with Sue Gardner”. Buckbee Center, Free to members, $5 for the public. Warwick Historical Society.
- March: Great Chain Exhibit, Sterling Forest State Park Visitor’s Center
- March 7, 2 PM. Florida in the Revolutionary War. Talk by S. Gardner. Florida Public Library.
- March 21: Warwick Day at Sterling Iron Works 10-4. Featuring 18th century forge demonstration, reenactors, interactive activities. Sterling Forest State Park, Lautenberg Visitors Center. Friends of Hathorn Historical Society.
- April: Details TBA: Planting of disease resistant elm in memory of the Washington Elm at Sanfordville (Arbor Day)
- April 26. 12-4: Revolutionary War in Orange County “History Fair” organized by Alex Prizgintas, Town of Woodbury Senior Center
- May 7 6:00 PM: Aaron Burr and the Hamilton Musical: This program delves into the women who shaped Burr’s life and highlights unforgettable songs from the Broadway smash, including The Election of 1800 and the fateful Hamilton-Burr duel. Albert Wisner Public Library
- May 17: Annual Founders’ Day at the Gen. John Hathorn historic site: Honoring Our Founding Veterans. A living history activities campus and “meet and greet” with some of Warwick’s Revolutionary War Veterans.
- July 1: Village of Florida Time Capsule event (details TBA)
- July 4: Official Town of Warwick USA@250 Parade, 11 AM, Village of Greenwood Lake
- July 4: Fireworks at Greenwood Lake
- July 18: George Washington Day 5K Fun Run, Warwick Historical Society
- July 22: Battle of Minisink Commemoration, 6:30 PM Annual reading of Hathorn’s Battle of Minisink report, Warwick Cemetery

Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047

Mary’s Meals Help Mary’s Meals feed even more children! $21 feeds a child for the school year! Mary’s Meals are now providing more than 2 million children in some of the world’s poorest communities with a nutritious meal every day they attend school. Please consider giving nourishment to one of the poorest of the poor through St. Stephen’s. Ways to Help This Lent You may send your donations to St. Stephen’s Religious Ed, 75 Sanfordville Rd, Warwick, NY 10990 with checks made out to Mary’s Meals.
Continue to Drop off NY deposit bottles and cans behind the school in the Mary’s Meal Shed! Every penny counts towards another meal served! Knights of Columbus Council 2952 also collects deposit cans and bottles in the bin next to the clergy parking on the side of the church. All of the proceeds will be donated to Mary’s Meals. Bottles & Cans with NY deposit only! No Gatorade, iced tea, or Tropicana! No food cans or jars!

Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047

Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047

Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047

the Writers Group meets every Wednesday in the Library;’s Board Room. Bring in 6 copies of up to four pages, typed and double-spaced, to be critiqued by fellow writers in a friendly, constructive manner. All forms of prose accepted (NO poetry please). this is a non-instruct0inal program for adults; new members always welcomed!

Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047

2026 Commemorative Events
- January 18, 2PM. Lecture on environmental context & impact of the Revolutionary War (Albert Wisner Library).
- Feb. 11, 6 PM: “American Revolution in the Hudson Valley” with author Anthony Musso. New York’s Hudson Valley played an important role in the nation’s quest for independence. To register for the program please visit the library’s website at www.floridapubliclibrary.org.
- Feb: Great Chain Across the Hudson and reproduction chain link exhibit at Warwick Town Hall (foyer)
- Feb-March date TBA Installation of the John Clark Murder historical marker at Dutch Hollow.
- Thursdays Feb 4-March 12: “Watch Party for Ken Burns Revolutionary War series, 5:30 PM, Albert Wisner Library
- Feb. 19 11:30 talk on Revolutionary Warwick by Sue Gardner (Warwick Golden Seniors, Town Hall)
- Feb. 22, 2-3:30 PM: “Three Objects that Tell Warwick’s Revolutionary Story: A Conversation with Sue Gardner”. Buckbee Center, Free to members, $5 for the public. Warwick Historical Society.
- March: Great Chain Exhibit, Sterling Forest State Park Visitor’s Center
- March 7, 2 PM. Florida in the Revolutionary War. Talk by S. Gardner. Florida Public Library.
- March 21: Warwick Day at Sterling Iron Works 10-4. Featuring 18th century forge demonstration, reenactors, interactive activities. Sterling Forest State Park, Lautenberg Visitors Center. Friends of Hathorn Historical Society.
- April: Details TBA: Planting of disease resistant elm in memory of the Washington Elm at Sanfordville (Arbor Day)
- April 26. 12-4: Revolutionary War in Orange County “History Fair” organized by Alex Prizgintas, Town of Woodbury Senior Center
- May 7 6:00 PM: Aaron Burr and the Hamilton Musical: This program delves into the women who shaped Burr’s life and highlights unforgettable songs from the Broadway smash, including The Election of 1800 and the fateful Hamilton-Burr duel. Albert Wisner Public Library
- May 17: Annual Founders’ Day at the Gen. John Hathorn historic site: Honoring Our Founding Veterans. A living history activities campus and “meet and greet” with some of Warwick’s Revolutionary War Veterans.
- July 1: Village of Florida Time Capsule event (details TBA)
- July 4: Official Town of Warwick USA@250 Parade, 11 AM, Village of Greenwood Lake
- July 4: Fireworks at Greenwood Lake
- July 18: George Washington Day 5K Fun Run, Warwick Historical Society
- July 22: Battle of Minisink Commemoration, 6:30 PM Annual reading of Hathorn’s Battle of Minisink report, Warwick Cemetery

Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047

Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047

Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047

Mary’s Meals Help Mary’s Meals feed even more children! $21 feeds a child for the school year! Mary’s Meals are now providing more than 2 million children in some of the world’s poorest communities with a nutritious meal every day they attend school. Please consider giving nourishment to one of the poorest of the poor through St. Stephen’s. Ways to Help This Lent You may send your donations to St. Stephen’s Religious Ed, 75 Sanfordville Rd, Warwick, NY 10990 with checks made out to Mary’s Meals.
Continue to Drop off NY deposit bottles and cans behind the school in the Mary’s Meal Shed! Every penny counts towards another meal served! Knights of Columbus Council 2952 also collects deposit cans and bottles in the bin next to the clergy parking on the side of the church. All of the proceeds will be donated to Mary’s Meals. Bottles & Cans with NY deposit only! No Gatorade, iced tea, or Tropicana! No food cans or jars!

Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047

Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047

Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047

the Writers Group meets every Wednesday in the Library;’s Board Room. Bring in 6 copies of up to four pages, typed and double-spaced, to be critiqued by fellow writers in a friendly, constructive manner. All forms of prose accepted (NO poetry please). this is a non-instruct0inal program for adults; new members always welcomed!

Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047

Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047

Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047

Warwick Repair Cafe Is Back! Bring your beloved damaged items to our Repair Café! ♻️ Our skilled repair experts will work their magic and help you fix your items, minimizing waste, saving you money, and uplifting out local craftswomen and men . Join us for a fun and sustainable way to give your items a new lease on life! Don’t miss out! ??
Repair Cafe | Mar 21, 2026
Hours: 10 AM-4:00 PM
Senior Center, Town Hall Complex, 132 Kings Hwy, Warwick
Bring Your BELOVED BUT BROKEN Items
*FIX Them For FREE With Our Repair Coaches
*Lamp Parts Available at our cost
Mechanical & Electrical
Quick Repairs & Consultations – Laptops, Tablets, Cell Phones
Clocks, Jewelry, Wooden Things, Clothing, Home Textiles, Soft Toys
Knife &Tool Sharpening
Limit TWO Items Per Person!
Sorry no gas or propane-powered Items
organizerwarwickrepaircafe@aol.com
RepairCafeHV.org

2026 Commemorative Events
- January 18, 2PM. Lecture on environmental context & impact of the Revolutionary War (Albert Wisner Library).
- Feb. 11, 6 PM: “American Revolution in the Hudson Valley” with author Anthony Musso. New York’s Hudson Valley played an important role in the nation’s quest for independence. To register for the program please visit the library’s website at www.floridapubliclibrary.org.
- Feb: Great Chain Across the Hudson and reproduction chain link exhibit at Warwick Town Hall (foyer)
- Feb-March date TBA Installation of the John Clark Murder historical marker at Dutch Hollow.
- Thursdays Feb 4-March 12: “Watch Party for Ken Burns Revolutionary War series, 5:30 PM, Albert Wisner Library
- Feb. 19 11:30 talk on Revolutionary Warwick by Sue Gardner (Warwick Golden Seniors, Town Hall)
- Feb. 22, 2-3:30 PM: “Three Objects that Tell Warwick’s Revolutionary Story: A Conversation with Sue Gardner”. Buckbee Center, Free to members, $5 for the public. Warwick Historical Society.
- March: Great Chain Exhibit, Sterling Forest State Park Visitor’s Center
- March 7, 2 PM. Florida in the Revolutionary War. Talk by S. Gardner. Florida Public Library.
- March 21: Warwick Day at Sterling Iron Works 10-4. Featuring 18th century forge demonstration, reenactors, interactive activities. Sterling Forest State Park, Lautenberg Visitors Center. Friends of Hathorn Historical Society.
- April: Details TBA: Planting of disease resistant elm in memory of the Washington Elm at Sanfordville (Arbor Day)
- April 26. 12-4: Revolutionary War in Orange County “History Fair” organized by Alex Prizgintas, Town of Woodbury Senior Center
- May 7 6:00 PM: Aaron Burr and the Hamilton Musical: This program delves into the women who shaped Burr’s life and highlights unforgettable songs from the Broadway smash, including The Election of 1800 and the fateful Hamilton-Burr duel. Albert Wisner Public Library
- May 17: Annual Founders’ Day at the Gen. John Hathorn historic site: Honoring Our Founding Veterans. A living history activities campus and “meet and greet” with some of Warwick’s Revolutionary War Veterans.
- July 1: Village of Florida Time Capsule event (details TBA)
- July 4: Official Town of Warwick USA@250 Parade, 11 AM, Village of Greenwood Lake
- July 4: Fireworks at Greenwood Lake
- July 18: George Washington Day 5K Fun Run, Warwick Historical Society
- July 22: Battle of Minisink Commemoration, 6:30 PM Annual reading of Hathorn’s Battle of Minisink report, Warwick Cemetery

Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047

Mary’s Meals Help Mary’s Meals feed even more children! $21 feeds a child for the school year! Mary’s Meals are now providing more than 2 million children in some of the world’s poorest communities with a nutritious meal every day they attend school. Please consider giving nourishment to one of the poorest of the poor through St. Stephen’s. Ways to Help This Lent You may send your donations to St. Stephen’s Religious Ed, 75 Sanfordville Rd, Warwick, NY 10990 with checks made out to Mary’s Meals.
Continue to Drop off NY deposit bottles and cans behind the school in the Mary’s Meal Shed! Every penny counts towards another meal served! Knights of Columbus Council 2952 also collects deposit cans and bottles in the bin next to the clergy parking on the side of the church. All of the proceeds will be donated to Mary’s Meals. Bottles & Cans with NY deposit only! No Gatorade, iced tea, or Tropicana! No food cans or jars!

Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047

Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047

Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047

the Writers Group meets every Wednesday in the Library;’s Board Room. Bring in 6 copies of up to four pages, typed and double-spaced, to be critiqued by fellow writers in a friendly, constructive manner. All forms of prose accepted (NO poetry please). this is a non-instruct0inal program for adults; new members always welcomed!

Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047

Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047

Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047

Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047

Mary’s Meals Help Mary’s Meals feed even more children! $21 feeds a child for the school year! Mary’s Meals are now providing more than 2 million children in some of the world’s poorest communities with a nutritious meal every day they attend school. Please consider giving nourishment to one of the poorest of the poor through St. Stephen’s. Ways to Help This Lent You may send your donations to St. Stephen’s Religious Ed, 75 Sanfordville Rd, Warwick, NY 10990 with checks made out to Mary’s Meals.
Continue to Drop off NY deposit bottles and cans behind the school in the Mary’s Meal Shed! Every penny counts towards another meal served! Knights of Columbus Council 2952 also collects deposit cans and bottles in the bin next to the clergy parking on the side of the church. All of the proceeds will be donated to Mary’s Meals. Bottles & Cans with NY deposit only! No Gatorade, iced tea, or Tropicana! No food cans or jars!

Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047

Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047

Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047

the Writers Group meets every Wednesday in the Library;’s Board Room. Bring in 6 copies of up to four pages, typed and double-spaced, to be critiqued by fellow writers in a friendly, constructive manner. All forms of prose accepted (NO poetry please). this is a non-instruct0inal program for adults; new members always welcomed!

Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047

Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047

Albert Wisner Public Library is the community’s favorite place to meet, discover, learn and connect.
An extensive menu of programs for children, teens, adults, including books, ideas, lectures, movies, visiting authors, exhibits, art galleries, and much more!
Monday Movie Schedule for March:
March celebrates Women’s History and Irish-American Heritage
- March 2: AWPL Classic Monday: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) Elia Kazan’s adaptation of Betty Smith’s 1943 novel stars Dorothy McGuire, Joan Blondell, James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner. Smith’s best-selling work, based on her own childhood experiences growing up in a Williamsburg slum is set in Brooklyn circa 1900; the Nolan family manages to enjoy life on pennies despite great poverty and Papa’s alcoholism – young Francie yearns for a life beyond her surroundings. Rated PG: 2 hours 9 minutes.
- March 9: The Six Triple Eight (2024) Tyler Perry’s war drama, based on Kevin M. Hymel’s article “Fighting a Two-Front War” (published in the February 2019 issue of WWII History Magazine). During World War II, 855 women joined the fight to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail – known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, an all-black, all-female battalion; faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time. The film features an ensemble cast, including Kerry Washington, Ebony Obsidian, Milauna Jackson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Gregg Sulkin, Susan Sarandon, Dean Norris, Sam Waterston, Kylie Jefferson, Moriah Brown, and Oprah Winfrey. Rated PG-13: 2 hours 7 minutes.
- March 16: Brooklyn (2015) Two countries, two loves, one heart. Romantic period drama, based on Colm Tóibín’s 2009 novel, stars Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters. The plot follows Eilis Lacey (Ronan), a young Irish woman who immigrates to Brooklyn in the early 1950’s to find employment. After building a life there, she is drawn back to her home town of Enniscorthy and has to choose where she wants to forge her future. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 57 minutes.
- March 23: Calendar Girls (2003) They dropped everything for a good cause. British comedy based on a true story of a group of middle-aged Yorkshire women who produced a nude calendar to raise money for leukemia research under the auspices of the Women’s Institutes in April 1999 after the husband of one of their members dies from cancer. The film stars an ensemble cast headed by Helen Mirren and Julie Walters, with Linda Bassett, Annette Crosbie, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Geraldine James, Harriet Thorpe and Philip Glenister. Rated PG-13: 1 hour 48 minutes.
- March 30: Summerland (2020) Love. Magic. Hope. British drama starring Gemma Arterton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lucas Bond, Dixie Egerickx, Siân Phillips, Penelope Wilton and Tom Courtenay. Alice is a reclusive writer, resigned to a solitary life on the seaside cliffs of Southern England while World War II rages across the channel. When she opens her front door one day to find she’s to adopt a young London evacuee named Frank, she’s resistant. It’s not long, however, before the two realize they have more in common in their pasts than Alice had assumed. Rated PG: 1 hour 39 minu
Library Hours
Monday, Friday, Saturday: 10am-5pm
Tuesday – Thursday: 10am-7pm
Sunday: 12pm-4pm
Curbside Pickup available daily: please call: (845) 986-1047