31 Old Concord Rd. — James Dwyer to 31 Old Concord Rd. LLC for $675,000 (April 15).
16 Todd Pond Rd. — Gabriela Traynor to the Jeannie T. Lee Trust and the 16 Todd Pond Road Realty Trust for $2,875,000 (April 22).
There will be a Lincoln trail-use public forum held on Zoom on Wednesday, May 18 from 7–8:30 p.m. sponsored by the Lincoln Conservation Commission and the Lincoln Land Conservation Trust. The two organizations have completed a comprehensive review of the multiple uses of Lincoln’s trails and how best to manage them for the protection of open space and overall public benefit. Over the last year, they’ve sought public comments and feedback regarding ways people use and enjoy our open spaces and trails.
At the forum, the Conservation Commission will review the process we used to evaluate changes in allowed trail uses, present draft trail use regulations, and discuss proposed changes to our trail biking map and dog walking rules. Additional comments will be sought during and after this meeting. Afterwards, the commission will post the draft trail-use regulations on the Conservation Department website. Submit any comments to the Conservation Department (conservation@lincolntown.org or 781-259-2612) by Tuesday, May 25. Click here for the May 18 Zoom link.
The long-awaited 2022 Lincoln directory produced by the Friends of the Lincoln Library will be delivered to all households in Lincoln this week. If you do not want a printed phone book, please bring your copy to either the main post office or the library.
Concord Road (4:30 p.m.) — Caller reported an odor of natural gas outside. Fire Department responded and found no odor.
Weston Road (4:49 p.m.) — Resident called reported being locked out of their house. Fire Department responded and assisted the resident.
Conant Road (10:22 a.m.) — A resident came into the station to speak to an officer regarding a civil matter. An officer spoke to them and advised them of their legal options.
Mount Misery parking lot (4:07 p.m.) — Caller reported a vehicle on fire. The vehicle was in the lot and was overheating but not on fire.
Concord Road (5:44 p.m.) — Wayland police advised that their police units are all busy with a certain matter and request that Lincoln police remain near the town line to respond to any emergencies in Wayland.
South Great Road (6:55 p.m.) — Report of a dog walking in the area with no tags. Animal Control was advised.
Lincoln Police Department (11:44 p.m.) — Concord Police requested a courtesy booking for an arrest they had made.
Waltham Street, Lexington (1:20 p.m.) — Lexington Fire Department requested an ambulance for a medical issue in their town. Lincoln Fire Department responded and transported a party to the Lahey Clinic.
National Park Visitor Center (1:07 a.m.) — Officer checked on an unoccupied vehicle parked in the lot.
Trapelo Road (7:59 a.m.) — Two-car crash Trapelo Road at Old County Road. No injuries; one vehicle was towed.
North Commons (8:36 a.m.) — Caller reported their dog went missing the previous night and asked to speak to Animal Control. Animal Control was notified to contact the resident.
Lincoln Road (2:20 p.m.) — A shop owner asked to speak to an officer regarding kids misbehaving at their store and causing a problem. An officer responded and spoke to the shop owner and will be following up with the parties involved.
Donelan’s Supermarket (4:20 p.m.) — Two parties came to the station to report that they just got into a verbal exchange with a party outside Donelan’s and they wanted to make the police aware. An officer took a report; no crime had occurred.
Hanscom Field (9:24 a.m.) — Massport Fire asked the Fire Department to respond for a plane en route with an emergency. Call was cancelled while en route.
Harvest Circle (3:26 p.m.) — Officer responded to a minor motor vehicle crash in a parking lot involving a pedestrian. An officer took a report and the party refused medical treatment on scene.
Wells Road (6:22 p.m.) — Caller complained about racoons in their backyard. The animals were on private property and the management company was advised that they need to handle the matter with a wildlife/pest company.
Massachusetts Avenue, Lexington (1:29 p.m.) — Detective Ian Spencer assisted Lexington police with a forensic sketch regarding an investigation of theirs.
Concord Road (2:19 p.m.) — A family member requested a well-being check on the resident. An officer responded and everything was fine. The officer assisted the party with locating the GPS function on their new phone to get to an appointment.
Acorn Lane (8:50 p.m.) — Caller complaining about a vehicle parked on the street. The owner of the vehicle lives nearby and is moving the vehicle into their driveway.
Donelan’s Supermarket (1:13 a.m.) — Officer checked on a vehicle parked in the lot. The vehicle belongs to the cleaners working at Donelan’s.
Trapelo Road (1:24 a.m.) — Officer found a couple bags of trash on the side of the roadway near Tabor Hill Road. The DPW was notified.
Rockwood Lane (3:47 a.m.) — Sudbury police requested a well-being check on an individual who was overdue in meeting someone in Sudbury. Sudbury police then called back to report the party has been located and everything was fine.
Smith Hill Road (6:35 p.m.) — An officer responded to the residence to give notification of the passing of a family member.
Lincoln Police Department (8:50 p.m.) — A walk-in to the station was looking to a place to stay. The party was traveling from New York City and thought they were close to Concord, N.H. An officer assisted the party with a ride to Alewife to get into Boston.
Cambridge Turnpike westbound (11:14 a.m.) — Caller reported two dead animals in the breakdown lane. State Police Concord notified.
Wells Road (6:09 p.m.) — A party came to the station and reported being the vehicle of a scam via the internet. Report taken.
Cambridge Turnpike westbound (6:26 a.m.) — Report of a one-car crash into the woods near Bedford Road. No injuries; officers assisted State Police, who handled the crash report.
South Great Road (9:53 a.m.) — Car-vs.-deer crash. Minor damage to the vehicle. DPW was notified to remove the deceased deer from the side of the roadway
Baker Bridge Road (8:20 p.m.) — Officer checking on a party parked in the Food Project lot. They had pulled over to use their phone.
Mill Street (3:05 a.m.) — Officer checked on a construction vehicle with its lights on. It appeared to be neglect; the officer was able to turn the lights off.
Indian Hill Road, Weston (8:08 a.m.) — Weston Fire Department requested an ambulance for a medical issue. Lincoln Fire Department responded and transported a party to a local hospital.
South Avenue, Weston (8:35 a.m.) — Weston Fire Department requested an engine to cover their station as they have a fire in town.
Codman Road (10:51 a.m.) — A party came to the station reporting being the victim of check fraud. Report taken, investigation ongoing.
Trapelo Road (12:22 p.m.) — Caller reported a party came to their door and identified themselves as a federal law enforcement officer and they thought it was suspicious. Officers responded and made contact with the party; they were in fact who they said they were.
Wells Road (6:53 p.m.) — Caller reported an odor of gas. Fire Department responded and checked and found no readings; everything appeared to be fine.
The YouTube video of the May 5 “election integrity” event in Bemis Hall (see the May 11 Lincoln Squirrel story headlined “Bemis Hall speakers push claims of 2020 election fraud”) has been restored after it was taken down for several days for violating the platform’s community guidelines. The video is also available on Groton resident John Abrahamsen’s Facebook page, which contains links to other far-right conspiracy sites and commentators. The May 11 Squirrel story has been updated.
Among the categories of material prohibited by YouTube are misinformation about election integrity, specifically “content that advances false claims that widespread fraud, errors, or glitches changed the outcome of select past national elections, after final election results are officially certified.” By clicking on the three dots under the right-hand side of the video frame, users can report videos that violate YouTube standards.
A memorial service was on May 11 for Lincoln resident Jerome “Jerry” Rappaport, one of the most storied figures in modern Boston history. Jerry was a famed developer, philanthropist, and civic leader who helped transform the Boston skyline and is sometimes known as the man who rebuilt Boston.
Rappaport, who passed away in December 2021 at age 94, was honored with a celebration of life held at Harvard University. Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government is home to the Rappaport Institute for Greater Boston, which has helped educate many top government leaders in Boston and throughout the country and helped shape enduring public policy. Rappaport helped shape Boston’s current political scene by mentoring some of the best and brightest who are now top elected officials, including Boston Mayor Michelle Wu and U.S. Attorney for Massachusetts Rachael Rollins, both of whom are Rappaport Fellows and spoke at the service.
Rappaport first came to prominence after graduating from Harvard College and Harvard Law School when he helped John B. Hynes defeat Boston Mayor James Michael Curley in the historic 1949 mayoral election. He quickly moved on to reshape Boston’s neighborhoods and skyline as a developer, most famously for the West End renewal project, which brought many residents back to the city and led to a housing renaissance.
While Rappaport’s legacy is evident in our current landscape, he is also credited with shaping our politics and creating a generation of government leaders who take a thoughtful approach to policy and governance. He founded the Harvard Law School Forum and New Boston Committee, which promoted and supported Boston City Council and School Committee candidates in a very successful venture. He also founded the Rappaport Institute for Law and Public Policy, which is now at Boston College Law School. With his beloved wife Phyllis, Rappaport also contributed more than $30 million to public policy, health, and arts initiatives through the Phyllis and Jerome Lyle Rappaport Foundation.
The celebration of Jerry’s life was attended by a veritable “who’s who” of top government and education leaders. Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker told the crowd of hundreds that Rappaport “found ways to truly make a difference and the legacy of much of his work will live on long after many have joined him in the great beyond.”
“Someone like me, who never would have imagined any of this was possible — I am only here because Jerry believed it was possible,” Wu said.
Harvard University President Lawrence Bacow said Rappaport “believed in us, he created spaces for us, he made us all better than we might have been, stronger than we might have been, wiser than we might have been without him.”
A long list of dignitaries spoke at the Memorial Hall service honoring Jerry’s life, including others whose lives and career have been enhanced through participation at the Rappaport Institute for Greater Boston. Maria Magdalena Campos-Pons, the Cornelius Vanderbilt Endowed Chair of Fine Arts at Vanderbilt University and Rappaport Art Prize Winner, gave an emotional tribute in honor of her mentor.
Phyllis and Jerry Rappaport at Harvard Law School’s inaugural Rappaport Forum, launched in 2020 to promote discussions on current affairs. (Photo by Tom Fitzsimmons)
Others who spoke included Jerry Rappaport, Jr.; longtime former Rappaport Institute Director Ed Glaeser; former Massachusetts Rep. Jeffrey Sanchez; Dr. Jacob Hooker, professor of radiology at Harvard Medical School; and Chestnut Hill Realty CEO Edward Zuker.
The service concluded with a beautiful tribute to Jerry by his wife and true love, Phyllis Rappaport, who said, “Jerry was a life force with a twinkle in his eye — sharp, warm, incisive, mischievous, determined, brilliant, loving and loved.”
The Rappaport Institute for Greater Boston strives to improve the governance of greater Boston by strengthening connections among the region’s scholars, students, and civic leaders. The institute pursues this mission by promoting emerging leaders, producing new ideas, and stimulating informed discussion. It was founded and funded by the Phyllis and Jerome Lyle Rappaport Charitable Foundation, which promotes emerging leaders in greater Boston.
In 2000, the foundation also funded the deCordova’s Sculpture Park and Museum’s annual $35,000 Rappaport Prize.
Rappaport is buried in Lincoln Cemetery. Donations in his memory may be made to the Rappaport Institute of Greater Boston.
Editor’s note: this is a lightly edited version of a piece provided to the Lincoln Squirrel by Regan Communications Group.
Dear Lincoln Squirrel readers,
My name is Andrew Craig and I am a junior at Lincoln-Sudbury Regional High School. I have had the pleasure of volunteering with the Society of St. Vincent de Paul, our amazing local food bank at St. Joseph’s Church, that serves the residents of Lincoln and Weston. SVdP does incredible work for our community, providing vital emergency food and monetary assistance for those in need. The recent (and ongoing) Covid pandemic and challenging economic times many are experiencing only highlights the continued need to support organizations like SVdP whenever possible.
I am organizing a spring food drive with several friends to benefit SVdP on Saturday, May 21. Please consider donating any extra nonperishable food items you may have. We will happily stop by your home that morning to pick up and collect as many bags as you are willing to donate and will deliver them to the food bank that day. Our goal is collect food items from at least 50 households if possible.
Please email me directly at andrewcraig1210@gmail.com if you are able to contribute in any way. In order to continue to follow proper social distancing/safety measures, please leave your items in a bag for us to collect in a visible location near your front door, driveway, or mailbox. We would ask that you place your items outside by 10 a.m. on Saturday, May 21.
Thanks for reading and I hope to hear from you!
Sincerely,
Andrew Craig
10 Farrar Rd.
“My Turn” is a forum for readers to offer their letters to the editor or views on any subject of interest to other Lincolnites. Submissions must be signed with the writer’s name and street address and sent via email to lincolnsquirrelnews@gmail.com. Items will be edited for punctuation, spelling, style, etc., and will be published at the discretion of the editor. Submissions containing personal attacks, errors of fact, or other inappropriate material will not be published.
The headline for the May 15 News Acorns item “Bench honoring Beaver Pond land donor is dedicated” was misleading. The stone seat given by the Garden Club was to honor all people who have been active in conservation in Lincoln over the years, not just land donor Jean Preston. The original headline has been updated.
Gather on the grass for a benefit for St. Vincent de Paul of Lincoln & Weston (SVdP) featuring music by Brian Moll, Mara Bonde & Sandra Piques Eddy, and the Kemp Harris Band on Tuesday, May 24 at 6 p.m. in Pierce Park (rain date: May 25). Bring your own chair, drinks, and picnic. Suggested donation: $50 (or more). Buy raffle tickets for great prizes. Interested in becoming a sponsor? Email svdplincolnweston@gmail.com. The Ogden Codman Trust is challenging SVdP to raise $15,000, which it will match. Help support the SVdP’s work running the food pantry, providing emergency financial assistance and awarding scholarships.
Melvin Edwards, “Ukpo. Edo,” 1993/1996. Courtesy Alexander Gray Associates, New York; Stephen Friedman Gallery, London © 2021 Melvin Edwards/ Artists Rights Society, New York. Presented by Public Art Fund at City Hall Park, New York City, May 4–Nov. 28, 2021. Photo: Nicholas Knight, Courtesy of Public Art Fund, NY.
Lincoln residents, students and employees are invited to a special open house at the deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum on Sunday, June 5 from 11 a.m.–2 p.m. Join deCordova in celebrating new additions to its Sculpture Park, including “Melvin Edwards: Brighter Days” and “Prowse” by Rosemary Laing. Throughout the afternoon, deCordova’s curatorial team will offer guided tours exploring “Brighter Days,” a focused look at Edwards’ accomplishments in large-scale sculpture and public art through six sculptures from 1970 to today. Complimentary treats from Twisted Tree Café at deCordova. No RSVP required.
The Sexuality and Gender Alliance (SAGA), a 30-member organization with students from grades 5-8 in the Lincoln School and Hanscom Middle School, is hosting a LGBTQ+ Pride community celebration on Wednesday, June 8 from 1:30–4 p.m. at the Pierce House. There will be guest speakers, food and drinks, games, music, a raffle, and giveaways. All are welcome. SAGA helps students build connections with each other, support all identities, hosts events, learn to be allies, increase understanding and improve visibility. Questions? Email Lincoln Public Schools Adjustment Counselor Alyssa Rosenfeld at arosenfeld@lincnet.org.
Lincoln Sudbury Friends of Music (LSFOM) invites all parents of music students and community members to its annual meeting on Tuesday, June 7 at 7 p.m. at LSRHS in the Chorus Room (A211). Join us to get information, talk to board members, have questions answered, meet fellow music program supporters, and learn about opportunities to get involved. There will be committee reports, a review of open positions, nominations, and elections. Board members may be elected from among LSFOM members and the community at large. For more information, visit www.lsfom.org.
The Lincoln Agricultural Commission is hosting a contest to design a logo for its site and publications. The winner of the logo design will receive a $100 award. A description of the commission is below. Please send all designs and questions to Sherry Haydock at gshaydock@gmail.com. The contest will close on June 15. The purpose of the Agricultural Commission is to preserve, protect, and promote agriculture in Lincoln: to provide leadership, technical guidance, vision, planning, and coordination to help support, define, promote, and enable new agricultural opportunities, stability, and enhancement of ongoing operations as well as foster strong community and regional support that will work to create a sustainable agricultural community in Lincoln.
The Foundation for Educators at Lincoln-Sudbury (FELS) is seeking new members for its board. They meet seven or eight times a year and welcome parents of middle schoolers, current L-S parents, and parents of L-S alumni. Serving on the FELS board offers an opportunity to know grant recipients more deeply than day-to-day encounters as a parent and allows one to really understand the positive value of what the grants provide, both to the applicant and more broadly to the student experience at Lincoln-Sudbury. Interested individuals may visit www.felsgrant.org and/or email admin@felsgrant.org.
FELS is a nonprofit founded in the early 2000s by Lincolnite and then-LSRHS parent Peter von Mertens to support teachers and staff in pursuing their personal passions and interests. Grants fully or partially fund a wide array of opportunities that include travel, education, refreshment and enrichment, locally and well beyond.
Top photo, left to right: Larry Buell and Kim Buell of the Lincoln Garden Club (LGC), Stacy Carter (Conservation), Sara Lupkas (LLCT), Katherine Preston, Geoff McGean (LLCT), Annie Knowlton, Nancy Henderson (LGC), Jane Layton (LLCT), and Jennifer Glass (LGC). Bottom photo: Preston and Knowlton.
Members of the Lincoln Garden Club, the Conservation Department, and the Lincoln Land Conservation Trust recently gathered to dedicate a new granite bench on Beaver Pond. Katherine Preston and Annie Knowlton, whose mother Jean Preston donated the land where the bench is sited to the LLCT, were also in attendance. The bench was funded by the Garden Club and installed by the Conservation Department. Garden Club members Kim Buell and Nancy Henderson chose the granite pieces and designed the plaque. Click here for more photos and click here for a map showing where the bench is located.
Some time after the story headlined “Bemis Hall speakers push claims of 2020 election fraud” was published in the Lincoln Squirrel on the evening of May 11, the linked video of the May 5 event in Lincoln posted by YouTuber “bluesmovers” was taken down by YouTube for violating the platform’s community guidelines. Those guidelines cover a number of categories, but the video was most likely removed for violating the elections misinformation standards, which include a prohibition on videos about election integrity with “content that advances false claims that widespread fraud, errors, or glitches changed the outcome of select past national elections, after final election results are officially certified.”
Due to recent data showing an increase in positive Covid-19 cases in Lincoln and Massachusetts, the town Board of Health strongly recommends that people wear masks in public indoor spaces until the middle of June. Also, anyone who is eligible should get the second booster. The town has seen an average of 7.4 cases per week during March and April but 22 for the week ending May 5 (that does not include rapid antigen tests dine in a lab or at home). If you do test positive for Covid-19, call your doctor for a prescription of Paxlovid, which has been shown to be effective in reducing symptoms and avoiding hospitalization.
The Select Board voted on May 9 to grant a provisional entertainment license to the Tack Room. The restaurant will be allowed to have live outdoor entertainment on Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays from about 4:30–9:30 p.m. between the building and Lincoln Road. The board gave the OK on April 25 for the Tack Room to expand into part of that area during warm weather.
The entertainment license will also permit indoor acoustic performers and perhaps a trivia night if the owners decide it’s feasible given the limited space. Tack Rom co-owner Brandon Bunnewith said they hoped to have up to five outdoor events with amplified sound, though nothing had been booked yet. the license is valid through the end of the calendar year, can be withdrawn if there are complaints about excessive noise.
Lincoln officials met recently with MBTA and Keolis representatives to learn more about what caused the frightening near-miss at the Route 117 railroad crossing on April 11. Town Administrator Tim Higgins, Police Chief Kevin Kennedy, and Select Board member Jim Hutchison were told that “the investigation is still in progress,” Higgins reported. Since a maintenance crew was in the area at the time, it’s most likely that human error was responsible.
The MBTA and Keolis promised to come to Lincoln and share their findings once they were available, and to visit all four of Lincoln’s railroad crossings to look at possible additional safety measures. Kennedy suggested that signs be installed at crossings when rail work was happening nearby to warn drivers.
Elizabeth “Betty” Teabo, age 93, passed away peacefully at her home in Lincoln surrounded by the love of her dearest family members. She grew up in Jefferson, Maine with six siblings, resided in New York City, and eventually found her home in Lincoln, where she met and married her beloved husband of 64 years, Prince “Bud” Teabo, who preceded her in death.
Betty was a member of St. Anne’s-in-the-Fields Episcopal Church. She served on their Altar Guild for over 50 years, taught Sunday school to children, and mentored many others. She worked with her dear friend Judy Gross at Country Weddings in Lincoln for several decades, where she exhibited her floral talents at innumerable weddings and celebrations. She was also a member of the Lincoln Garden Club. Her artistic eye and attention to detail yielded floral compositions of singular beauty that live on in photographs.
Betty loved animals and was known to take in a stray from time to time. This brought opportunity for joyful laughter from family members in response to their comedic antics.
Mom loved to cook, but rarely wrote down her recipes; they were committed to memory only. With some encouragement from the family, we persuaded her to memorialize our favorites to perpetuity and we enjoy them thoroughly still. She was host to many memorable holiday celebrations, and never let anyone go home hungry.
We remember picking raspberries, apples, walks to Drumlin Farm, and car rides to Crane’s Beach with friends.
Devoted to her family for so long, we became devoted to her care in her struggle with Alzheimer’s. Mom leaves us now and is survived by her four sons and their spouses, David and Nadine (Rando) of Hudson, Michael and Tammie (Corey) of Marlboro, Timothy and Pauravi (Dalal) of Carlisle, and Scott and Melanie (Borromeo) of Wilmington. She is also survived by 16 grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.
Family and friends will gather to honor and remember Betty on Saturday, May 21 at 2 p.m. for a memorial service at St. Anne’s-in-the-Fields Church in Lincoln. She will be interred after the service in the Peace Garden at St. Anne’s beside her beloved husband.
Arrangements under the care of Concord Funeral Home, 74 Belknap St., Concord, MA 01742 (978-369-3388).
Obituaries are provided by the funeral home to Lincoln Squirrel for a fee.