The January 2 story headlined “Lincoln mirrors national surge in Covid-19 cases” has been updated to include month-by-month data for Covid-19 cases in the Lincoln Public Schools, as well as the latest number of cases at Lincoln-Sudbury Regional High School.
My Turn: Craig will not run for reelection
I am writing to announce that I will not be seeking re-election to the Select Board this March. Even after six busy years, untold number of meetings (in person and virtual), and continuously adapting to the ongoing global pandemic, this was not an easy decision.
I have been truly fortunate for the past five years to serve with two terrific colleagues in Jennifer Glass and Jonathan Dwyer, and I will dearly miss working alongside them to address the issues of our town. I also cannot say enough about, nor will I be able to fully thank our dedicated and professional town staff, including Tim Higgins, our Town Administrator, Dan Pereira, our Assistant Town Administrator, Peggy Elder, our Administrative Assistant, and many others with whom I have had the pleasure of working over these years.
During my two terms on the board, it has been a privilege to work on important town issues such as the school building project, addressing affordable housing needs with the Oriole Landing project, chairing the town’s Housing Trust, integrating the deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum with the Trustees of Reservations, launching what is now called the Bicycle and Pedestrian Advisory Committee, developing our town’s policies related to the legalization of marijuana in Massachusetts, and currently participating as the Select Board’s representative to the Planning Board’s South Lincoln Planning and Advisory Committee, which is evaluating the feasibility and town’s desire for potential zoning changes in the Lincoln Station area.
I would also like to express special thanks to Peter Braun and Renel Fredriksen, with whom I served (and learned a great deal) during my first year on the board, as well as the wonderful advice and support I have received over the years from former Select Board members including Noah Eckhouse, Sarah Cannon Holden, Gary Taylor, and Sara Mattes.
Finally, to all of you who volunteer and serve the town on various boards and committees — thank you! It is this spirit of service which truly makes Lincoln such a special place.
Happy New Year to everyone and here’s hoping for a healthy, safe and (somewhat more) Covid-free 2022!
Sincerely,
James Craig
“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.
Lincoln mirrors national surge in Covid-19 cases
After months of single-digit weekly Covid-19 case numbers, Lincoln’s caseload shot up in the last two weeks of 2021, with 15 cases for the week ending December 23 and another 29 cases in the following week. This is the biggest two-week total since the beginning of the pandemic, surpassing the 27 cases seen in the last two weeks of 2020.
The spike mirrors that of neighboring towns as well as the rest of Massachusetts and the U.S. Over the same time period, Carlisle has recorded 73 positive cases, and there have been 190 in Concord, according to Public Health Nurse Tricia McGean. Local public health officials are responsible for tracking and contact tracing Covid-19 cases, but the state Department of Public Health recognizes that local boards of health don’t have the capacity to follow this surge “and suggests we try to focus on priority groups such as K-12, congregate living situations, daycares, and the like,” she said on December 31.

Massachusetts DPH figures show the distribution of Covid-19 cases in Massachusetts by age for the week ending on December 31.
“That being said, the ones that I do contact generally have mild to moderate symptoms,” McGean continued. “Transmission often happens when groups gather, so I expect more and more cases each day after this holiday week.”
The omicron variant spreads three times as fast as previous variants, so once one family member tests positive, the virus often jumps quickly from one person to another, and “this is where I’m seeing most of the transmission in the cases I interview. One household case turns to two turns to three all in a matter of days,” she said.
McGean could not immediately provide data on the ages of those who have tested positive in Lincoln, but statewide, 40% of cases in the last two weeks of the year were in adults age 20-39, according to DPH figures.
Lincoln schools are reopening on January 3 after the holiday break with “heightened attention to known, effective precautions,” Superintendent of Schools Becky McFall said in a letter posted to LincolnTalk on December 30 by School Committee member Susan Taylor.
All student after-school activities are cancelled for the week, and families are asked to reinforce symptom checking and mask wearing. Teachers and all school employees were instructed to self-test before arriving to work Monday and will wear state-issued KN95 masks at all times indoors. School and health officials will reassess following the results of weekly pool testing, McFall said.
“I recognize that it is concerning that we are returning to school under conditions of increasing numbers of Covid-19 cases. This is not surprising, and while the numbers are higher, we are following a trend similar to last year at this time with a spike in cases following the holidays. If the pattern holds, we can hope to see a large decrease in cases at the end of January,” McFall added.
Since the start of the school year, the Lincoln Public Schools have recorded 82 cases of Covid-19 (68 students and 14 staff), according to the LPS Covid-19 dashboard. That includes nine cases each in September and October, 29 cases in November, and 35 in December. Sixty-one cases were on the Hanscom campus and 21 on the Lincoln School campus.
Lincoln-Sudbury Regional High School’s Covid-19 dashboard says there have been almost 60 cases of Covid-19 among faculty and staff as of January 3, up sharply from 17 during the week ending December 29.
Federal and state health officials have issued new isolation and quarantine guidelines for those who test positive or are exposed to someone with Covid-19. Regardless of vaccination status, anyone who tests positive is required to stay home for five days. If they have no symptoms or the symptoms are resolving after that time, they can leave the house but must wear a mask when around other people for another five days.
McGean said there is no concrete threshold for closing the schools and moving to remote learning in the event that cases in town continue to rise sharply in coming weeks. Any such decision will be made after discussion among McGean, Superintendent of Schools Becky McFall, the Lincoln Board of Health, the state epidemiologist, and the state Department of Elementary and Secondary Education.
Judith Glassman, 1948–2021
A funeral will be held in Canton and streamed online on Tuesday, Jan. 4 at 12 p.m. for Judith Glassman, who retired as principal of the Brooks School in 2006. The Cambridge resident passed away peacefully surrounded be her family on December 31 after a long struggle with Alzheimer’s disease.
She leaves her loving husband of 50 years, Mitchell Glassman of Cambridge; two sons, Adam Glassman and husband Yoo Jin Glassman of Cambridge, and Matthew Glassman and husband Jeremy Eaton of Ashfield; four grandchildren (Nicolas Glassman, Sarah Glassman, Julius Glassman and Davi Glassman), and two sisters, Anne Mack of Charlton and Debbie Feingold of Worcester and their families.
Judy was born in Lynn and was raised in Worcester, a daughter of David Levy and Selma (Turow) Levy. She graduated Doherty Memorial High School and Boston University and completed graduate work at Leslie College.
She was a beloved teacher, mentor and colleague for over 30 years, working in the Walpole, Holliston, and Lincoln school systems, retiring in 2006 as the principal of the Lincoln Brooks School. She was well known for the love she had for her work, her professional leadership, her no-nonsense sense of humor and as a loyal and life-long friend to many of her colleagues wherever her career path took her.
She was an avid runner for many years and ran the Boston Marathon in 1986. In retirement she enjoyed working part time as a new-teacher evaluator for Wheelock College and spending many hours on the beach in Truro with her husband, children, and grandchildren. Her adventures included traveling much of the world with her husband and winning the chance to dine with Barack and Michelle Obama during their second campaign for the White House in 2012.
She was a member of Temple Beth David in Westwood and later of Temple Beth Zion in Brookline.
The family would like to take this opportunity to thank the personnel at Newbridge on the Charles and Cadbury Commons for their dedicated and compassionate care. Donations in Judy’s memory can be made to Alzheimer’s Family Support Center, 2095 Main St., Brewster MA 02631.
To view the funeral service, make a gift, or leave a remembrance, visit Glassman’s page on the website of Stanetsky Memorial Chapel, which prepared this obituary.
2021: The year in review
Much like 2020, 2021 was a year where Covid-19 dominated our daily lives, including a year-end surge in cases — but we also saw the library, Town Hall and the swap shed reopen, and high vaccination rates and lower disease severity make us cautiously optimistic that the days of widespread deaths and patients on ventilators are in the past.
Other than that, it was a relatively quiet year in Lincoln. The biggest news stories were two town institutions changing hands (Donelan’s and The Commons); the completion of Phase I of the school project, and — perennial Lincoln favorites — the hopes for a new restaurant, and discussions over zoning and how to create a more vibrant South Lincoln with new development.
Looking ahead, 2022 will almost certainly feature a complete school and concrete steps toward a community center, and maybe even some zoning changes. Stay tuned!
Here are some of the top stories from the Lincoln Squirrel in 2021, followed by an alphabetical list of obituaries. If you’re interested in articles on a certain topic (including Lincoln history, My Turn, police logs, land use, etc.), select one from the “Categories” pulldown in the left-hand column, or just type it in the Search bar at the right-hand column of every page.
December
- Stanley won’t be Lincoln’s representative after January 2023
- The Commons to be sold; town seeks assurance on tax payments
- Archivist, family members unwrap a historic quilt
November
- Lincolnite plies her art in music, film, and now a book
- Town gets $400,000 for South Lincoln septic plant design work
- New book probes the past and present at Mt. Misery
- SOTT #2: South Lincoln, climate action, and diversity and inclusion
- MassDOT goof apparently led to water main break
- SOTT #1: Community center could cost more than $25 million
October
- Five-year-old lost in woods is found by hiker
- South Lincoln treatment plant has capacity for more development
September
August
- Lincoln’s newest farmer hopes for organic growth
- Lincoln sees one-week spike in Covid-19 cases
- Survey shows mixed feelings about boosting development in South Lincoln
July
- Monthly used-book sales end for good as revenue source moves online
- Plans moving ahead for bike and pedestrian-friendly improvements
June
- Lincoln author’s history of the Civil War in the Southwest is a Pulitzer finalist
- McLean Hospital abandons Bypass Road plans
- Donelan’s grocery stores purchased by Patel family
- Lincoln is eligible for more than $2 million in Covid-19 relief funding
May
- Lincoln fully reopens after more than a year
- New survey seeks input on the future of South Lincoln
- 2021 Town Meeting roundup
- Accessory apartment issue results in razor-thin votes
- Panel opts to stay the course with current water treatment plant
- Donelan’s employee qualifies for world-class ski event
April
- Clark Gallery moving from mall to Lewis Street
- Swap shed plans to reopen soon, seeks volunteers
- New restaurant not opening this month after all
- New app means happy trails for Lincoln woods walkers
- Racist “Zoom-bombing” incident leaves attendees shocked and hurt
- Jessica May is the new artistic director at the deCordova
- Charity saw sharp increase in need for food and financial assistance in 2020
- Despite recent accident, intersection isn’t among most dangerous in town
March
- Town election results: Doo wins seat on Parks and Rec Committee
- Uncertainties surround new state multifamily housing law
- Repaving and more are planned for Route 2A
- New Lincoln Conservation Director takes the reins
February
- Turenne restaurant to open in Lincoln in April
- New state law requires towns to allow multifamily zoning near train stations
- Lincoln set to launch green energy program for buying electricity
- Lincoln’s affordable accessory apartment program OK’d by state
- Anonymous emails were leaked by Burney’s daughter, police say
January
- Town offices and library close again due to pandemic
- School mulls going temporarily all remote for some grades
- Town sees 27 cases of Covid-19 in last half of December
Deaths in 2021
- Max Brizard
- Susan Burt
- Vicki Dobrow
- Dorothy Gagne
- Pamela Gallup
- Elizabeth Grimm Hoskins
- Priscilla Hunt
- Kathleen Lane
- Morris Levy
- Michael McHugh
- Steven Perlmutter
- Sophie Poulos
- Bojan Rip
- Joseph Santosuosso Jr.
- Al Servi
- Manson Solomon
- Margaret Stathos
- Melvin Stone
- Kerri-Jae Sussman
- Royce Taylor III
- John Terrell
- Allen Vander Meulen Jr.
- Carol Wagner
- Christopher “Cricker” Williams
- Ruth Williams
L-S team qualifies for High School Quiz Show
A team from Lincoln-Sudbury Regional High School will compete as a wild-card qualifier on WGBH’s High School Quiz Show tournament early next year. The six students (including core member Gray Birchby of Lincoln) will face off against Buckingham Browne & Nichols (BBN) on Saturday, Feb. 5 at 6 p.m.
High School Quiz Show is a fast-paced, bracketed academic competition for teams of Massachusetts high school students. Seventeen teams made the cut from 72 that competed in Super Sunday, a 50-question quiz in November. The wild cards were the two teams with the next-highest scores that have not been previously featured on the show, or haven’t competed in five or more years.
Among the top 17 qualifiers are returning Season 9 champion Andover High School (which will face the winner of the wild-card contest on February 19); Lexington High School, which took home the trophy in Seasons 7 and 8; and defending Season 12 champion Belmont High School. Three teams will make their High School Quiz Show debuts: Canton High School, Notre Dame Academy, and BBN. The other qualifiers are the British International School of Boston, Hopkinton High School, Mansfield High School, Mystic Valley Regional Charter School, North Quincy High School, Sharon High School, Shrewsbury High School, the Bromfield School, Westford Academy, and Weston High School.
In addition to Birchby, the L-S team comprises fellow core members Jack Grosberg, Henry Hurtt-Rensko, and Spencer Reith, and alternates Kenneth Hawkey and Cameron Cho. The team’s coach is Spanish and French teacher Desiree Butter, who began coaching the same year she started teaching at L-S a decade ago.
“When we first competed, the number of schools were less than half what they have today,” Butter said. “It’s been quite an experience to be able to compete with so many schools in the area.”
Aside from “Jeopardy!”, High School Quiz Show is the most popular academic quiz show on American television. In the 12 previous seasons, more than 700 students from over 70 schools across the Commonwealth have competed on the program.
During the tournament, teams of four will play remotely as Billy Costa moderates from WGBH studios in Brighton. The 2022 state championship will take place on May 21. Questions on the show are aligned with the Massachusetts high school curriculum standards in subjects that include literature, history, civics, science and math, as well as current events and general knowledge.
Police log for December 13–19, 2021
December 13
Paul Revere lot, North Great Road (5:48 p.m.) — Caller reported striking a deer with their car. Officers responded and there were no injuries. The vehicle was towed from the scene.
December 14
South Great Road (12:38 p.m.) — Documents delivered to the resident from the Registry of Motor Vehicles.
Wells Road (3:33 p.m.) — Caller reported being involved in a minor motor vehicle crash in the lot of Wells Road. Officer responded and took a report. No injuries.
Harvest Circle (8:08 p.m.) — Caller reported an odor of natural gas coming from the maintenance building. Fire Department responded but got no readings of gas.
Tower Road (8:16 p.m.) — Officers checked the address for a missing juvenile with no results.
December 15
Wells Road (11:40 a.m.) — Caller requested a well-being check on a resident. Everything was fine.
Hanscom Vandenberg Gate (4:38 p.m.) — Hanscom Security Forces reported a party with no license at the gate. Arrangements were made for the party to get a ride.
I-95 northbound (8:02 p.m.) — Ambulance responded for a motor vehicle crash and transported one patient to the Lahey Clinic.
Wells Road (8:02 p.m.) — Caller reported being threatened earlier in the day. An officer responded and took a report of the incident.
December 16
North Great Road (9:12 a.m.) — Report of a two-car crash on Route 2A at Brooks Road. Officers and Fire Department responded. No injuries; one vehicle towed from the scene.
South Great Road (5:57 p.m.) — Resident called with questions regarding their car’s technology. An officer assisted the resident.
December 17
Wells Road (6:12 a.m.) — Caller report their car was damaged overnight and was broken into and a camera was stolen. Officer responded and took a report.
Minuteman Technical High School (7:32 a.m.) — Officers were at the school due to a national school threat of violence that was made over TikTok.
Lincoln School (7:53 a.m. and 2:29 p.m.) — Officers were at the school due to a national school threat of violence that was made over TikTok.
Lincoln Road (1:23 p.m.) — Caller reported that the catalytic converter was stolen from their vehicle. Report taken, investigation ongoing.
Sandy Pond Road (4:45 p.m.) — Officer responded to a very minor motor vehicle crash. and assisted the parties with exchanging papers.
Cambridge Turnpike westbound (7:16 p.m.) — Two-car crash at Bedford Road. Two parties were transported to the Emerson Hospital. Officer assisted with traffic; the crash is being investigated by the state police in Concord.
December 18
Hanscom Drive (8:55 a.m.) — Hanscom Security Forces reported someone trying to get onto the base with marijuana. Officer responded and spoke to Security Forces, who will handle the matter.
December 19
Hiddenwood Path (6:55 a.m.) — Caller was having a problem with a medical alert device in the residence. An officer responded and assisted the party.
Hanscom Drive (10:50 a.m.) — Fire Department responded to Hanscom Field for an incoming plane with an emergency. The call was cancelled while responding and the plane landed safely
Huntley Lane (10:55 a.m.) — Caller reported being bitten by a dog in the house. An officer responded and took a report and notified the Animal Control Officer.
Tower Road (2:36 p.m.) — Report of goats running in the area. An officer responded and Animal Control was notified. The owner rounded up the goats.
Tower Road (3:20 p.m.) — Property owner reported noticing damage to the residence. Report taken.
Cambridge Turnpike eastbound (6:24 p.m.) — State Police in Concord reported a vehicle was involved in a pedestrian hit-and-run in Concord and asked Lincoln police to keep an eye out for a white SUV with a partial registration plate. Officers checked the area but were unable to locate.
South Great Road (7:49 p.m.) — Caller reported that a party came into their driveway looking for directions to Mt. Misery and they thought it was odd. Officers checked the area; no contact made with the party.
Correction
In second paragraph of the December 21 article headlined “Stanley won’t be Lincoln’s representative after January 2023,” one of Lincoln’s new districts was listed incorrectly. It should have said that eastern Lincoln will be in the 14th Norfolk, not the 9th Norfolk. Also, the 2023 representatives for Lincoln’s precincts were reversed. If reelected, Carmine Gentile would represent Precinct 1 (western Lincoln) and Alice Peisch would represent Precinct 2 (eastern Lincoln). The original article has been updated.
Stanley won’t be Lincoln’s representative after January 2023
As the dust settles from redistricting after the U.S. census, one thing is clear: Lincoln will no longer be represented on Beacon Hill by Waltham resident Rep. Thomas Stanley after January 2023.
Stanley (D-Waltham) has been the state representative for the 9th Middlesex district, which comprises Lincoln and part of Waltham, since 2001. But the new House maps split Lincoln between two districts along the town’s voting precinct line: the 13th Middlesex (Precinct 1 in the western part of town) and the 14th Norfolk (eastern Lincoln). The precinct line within Lincoln is not changing because the population in town did not shift enough to warrant an adjustment.
In the state Senate, Lincoln will still be in the 3rd Middlesex Senate district (now represented by Sen. Michael Barrett), but that district has shrunk a bit geographically — it will no longer include part of Sudbury.
“I was very disappointed that I’m going to lose Lincoln in my district. I’ve made a lot of great relationships and really enjoyed representing the town and working with the elected and appointed people there,” he said in an interview with the Lincoln Squirrel. “Unfortunately for me, combinations had to be made to address other redistricting issues around the state, and they did a great job as a body with the majority-minority districts. But whenever you change one district, there’s ripple effects.”

The portion of the new House district map showing how Lincoln will be split between the 13th Middlesex (lighter green) and the 9th Norfolk (darker green). Click here to see the full Massachusetts map.
If the change happened today, Lincoln’s Precinct 1 would be represented by Rep. Carmine Gentile (D-13th Middlesex), who lives in Sudbury, and and Precinct 2 by Rep. Alice Peisch (D-14th Norfolk), a Wellesley resident. Before the next election in November 2022, voters will know whether they and other incumbent representatives decide to run again and whether they win their party’s nomination in the primary.
As for Lincoln being split between two districts starting in 2023, “a lot of towns might look at that as a negative, but I don’t,” Stanley said. “The fear is that [being] such a small part of a district means they won’t get attention, but it’s in the representative’s interest to treat every precinct as if they lived there. And just from a purely political perspective, it only helps the incumbent if they’re responsive to small towns.”
Stanley also noted that during the run-up to the next election, “Lincoln will have three representatives looking out for their interests” as Peisch and Gentile (assuming they run for reelection) learn about and meet people in town. “I think Lincoln will be very happy with Alice and Carmine,” he added.
Carol “Cici” Caswell, 1929–2021
Carol Bradley Caswell passed away on December 13 in Lincoln at the age of 92. Born Carolyn Fontaine Bradley in Washington, D.C., she attended the Potomac School, the Madeira School and Briarcliff Jr. College. After marrying John Caswell, also of Washington, they lived in Cambridge, Mass.for a short period and then moved to southern California for five years. She and John also spent two years on Kwajalein atoll in the South Pacific while John managed the Raytheon installation there.
Carol and John moved back to the East Coast and settled into Lincoln, where they raised their five children. Carol was active in the Junior League of Boston, loved her plants, and enjoyed playing and watching tennis. Her grandchildren love seeing the picture published from time to time in the Boston Globe of Carol hiding out of sight behind Julia Child on the kitchen set of WGBH, where she volunteered collecting and cleaning her cooking utensils.
She loved staying connected to her family both near and far, and for many years she and John spent a part of their winters on Longboat Key, Fla. As a child, she treasured her time at Rockywold-Deephaven Camps on Squam Lake, N.H., a tradition that has continued with her own family and her brother’s family ever since. The house in Westport Island, Maine, where she and John loved to visit, continues to nurture and grow the bonds of family.
As a volunteer, she was the assistant tax collector for the town of Lincoln for several years and volunteered for a number of other town organizations. She was an active member of the St. Anne’s Church Altar Guild and chair of the Commission of Trust Funds. Upon becoming one of the first residents of The Commons in Lincoln, she was active on the Residents Committee, continuing her tie to the town that lasted more than 64 years.
“Cici” cherished her children and grandchildren above all else. Her greatest desire was to spend time with them and hear about their adventures and achievements. She was so gracious that she always asked about you and how you were rather than telling you about herself. Her self-deprecating humor and wry wit could catch you by surprise until you saw the mischievous twinkle in her eye. Her lasting legacy and one of the greatest joys of her life was annually hosting her family together for a week away, building a bond of love and caring throughout the generations.
She was predeceased by her younger brother Frederick Bradley and her husband of 60 years, John Ross Caswell. She leaves her dear friend Dr. Jerome Perry and his family ,who have added years to her life and life to her years after the passing of her husband John.
Carol is survived by her brother Thomas Bradley and his wife Anna (Washington, D.C.); her children Brad and Fran (Pennington, N.J.), Chris and Patricia (Sarasota, Fla.), Fred and Pam (South Freeport, Maine), Wally and Brenda (Randolph, Vt.), Carolyn and Jonathan Dwyer (Lincoln); 14 grandchildren and two great-children; niece Christina Bradley and her husband Larry Sampas; and nephews Tom Bradley and Philip Bradley and his wife Susan Bradley.
Donations can be made in her memory to the Friends of the Lincoln Council on Aging & Human Services, PO Box 143, Lincoln MA 01773. Services will be held at a later date. Arrangements are under the care of Concord Funeral Home. To share a memory or offer a condolence, click here.