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Lincoln through the lens

Fee fife fo fum? (Lincoln Through the Lens)

April 18, 2018

Before the annual Patriots Day “Lincoln Salute: A Festival of Fife & Drum Music” featuring some of the best fife and drum groups from New England, the United States, and abroad, the groups are invited to the Pierce House for a luncheon hosted by the 4-H Fifes & Drums and the Lincoln Minute Men. But it wasn’t the British Invasion.

Because fifers and drummers stood alongside officers and played a vital role in communication in 18th-century armies, it was important for officers to be able to identify musicians readily—so if the coat colors of the unit, for instance, were blue coats with red facings, then the musicians would wear red coats with blue facings, explained Don Hafner, a Belmont resident and professor of political science at Boston College.

Thus, the redcoats who appear to be invading the Pierce House are in fact “friendlies”—American fifers and drummers. And the young man in the blue coat with red facings (below right) from the William Diamond Junior Fife & Drum Corps is wearing what the regular soldiers would have worn (though as a musician, he really should have been in red as well, Hafner noted).

(Photos courtesy Nancy Beach)

The musicians gathered at the Brooks School Auditorium in Lincoln later in the afternoon (rather than Pierce Park in a concession to the weather) for a fife and drum concert. Other guests at this year’s event included the U.S. Army Old Guard Fife & Drum Corps, the Colonial Williamsburg Fife & Drum Corps, the 1st Michigan Colonial Fife & Drum Corps, the Bluff Point Quahog Diggers, the Musick of Prescott’s Battalion, the Sudbury Ancients, and the Aleppo Pipe Band.

Category: history, Lincoln through the lens

A sign of spring? (Lincoln Through the Lens)

April 1, 2018

A worker prepares last week to unload some brand-new brushes for the town’s street sweepers at the DPW. Some of the roads in town get swept of sand and other winter debris when the threat of snow has passed. However, given Monday morning’s forecast, it may be a few more days before the brushes get put to use.

Category: Lincoln through the lens

Giving thanks for not much snow? (Lincoln Through the Lens)

March 22, 2018

Turns out the weather forecasters were turkeys on this latest storm (March 2018 nor’easter #4), which at one point was predicted at 6-12″ but wound up being barely enough to show footprints. (Photo by Rich Rosenbaum)


Readers may submit photos for consideration for Lincoln Through the Lens by emailing them to lincolnsquirrelnews@gmail.com. If your photo is published, you’ll receive credit in the Squirrel. Photos must be taken in Lincoln and include the date, location, and names of any people who are identifiable in the photo. Previously published photos can be viewed on the Lincoln Through the Lens page of the Lincoln Squirrel.

Category: Lincoln through the lens, nature

Snow sightings (Lincoln Through the Lens)

January 7, 2018

Scenes from last week’s blizzard: Harold McAleer’s Christmas wreath as viewed from the warmth of indoors, and a dark-eyed junco photographed by Nancy Hutchings (thanks to Gwyn Loud for the species ID).

Category: Lincoln through the lens, nature

From the ground up (Lincoln Through the Lens)

December 21, 2017

Minuteman High School took delivery this week of its first truckload of structural steel for the new school building under construction. The photo shows the skeleton of an automotive classroom. (Photo by Ford Spalding)


Readers may submit photos for consideration for Lincoln Through the Lens by emailing them to lincolnsquirrelnews@gmail.com. If your photo is published, you’ll receive credit in the Squirrel. Photos must be taken in Lincoln and include the date, location, and names of any people who are identifiable in the photo. Previously published photos can be viewed on the Lincoln Through the Lens page of the Lincoln Squirrel.

Category: Lincoln through the lens, schools

Art on the water (Lincoln Through the Lens)

November 29, 2017

Harold McAleer’s photo of swans on the Sudbury River got a painterly treatment from Photoshop.

Category: Lincoln through the lens, nature

Goose eggs? (Lincoln Through the Lens)

November 23, 2017

These Canada geese seem decapitated by the chill on Farrar Pond. (Photo by Harold McAleer)


Readers may submit photos for consideration for Lincoln Through the Lens by emailing them to lincolnsquirrelnews@gmail.com. If your photo is published, you’ll receive credit in the Squirrel. Photos must be taken in Lincoln and include the date, location, and names of any people who are identifiable in the photo. Previously published photos can be viewed on the Lincoln Through the Lens page of the Lincoln Squirrel.

Category: Lincoln through the lens, nature

Rollin’ on the river (Lincoln Through the Lens)

November 16, 2017

Kayakers are framed by the Sudbury River and fall foliage. (Photo by Harold McAleer)


Readers may submit photos for consideration for Lincoln Through the Lens by emailing them to lincolnsquirrelnews@gmail.com. If your photo is published, you’ll receive credit in the Squirrel. Photos must be taken in Lincoln and include the date, location, and names of any people who are identifiable in the photo. Previously published photos can be viewed on the Lincoln Through the Lens page of the Lincoln Squirrel.

Category: Lincoln through the lens, nature

Workin’ on the railroad (Lincoln through the Lens)

November 5, 2017

MBTA workers clear trees and brush from the side of the railroad tracks across from the commuter lot in Lincoln. (Photo by Allen Vander Meulen)

Category: Lincoln through the lens

Talking turkey (Lincoln Through the Lens)

September 6, 2017

Four big birds have a chat as they amble up the slope in the field at Silver Hill and Trapelo Roads. (Photo by Alice Waugh)

Category: Lincoln through the lens, nature

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