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One of Lincoln’s historic house builders started with Sears Roebuck

July 7, 2021

By Craig Donaldson

Did you know… that one of Lincoln’s foremost builders started with house plans from a Sears Roebuck catalog?

Robert Douglass Donaldson was born in Tatamagouche, Nova Scotia, in 1870. He migrated to Boston in 1888. Like many immigrants, he came without formal schooling past the eighth grade, but with farming and building experience, family and community values, and motivation.

In the banner year of 1900, he married Charlotte Alcock, daughter of Irish immigrants, and became a U.S. citizen. In 1902, the couple acquired the house at 7 Old Lexington Rd., the original part of which was completed by the town in 1786 as the poorhouse. At the time, Lincoln was a farm town with a scattering of rural estates and summer homes, sufficiently close to Boston for farmers to take their produce to market and for Bostonians to escape via road or railroad for fresh air.

The Donaldsons quickly got busy raising a family (four boys and two girls), expanding a contracting business, farming, and engaging in civic activities. To his kids and grandkids as well as employees, R.D. Donaldson was well known as “the boss.” The well-kept secret was that his bride, Charlotte, was at least the co-boss, with her bookkeeping and communication skills. Other Nova Scotians from his home community migrated to Lincoln for work with Donaldson, including his brother James and the Langilles, Isaac and Claire.

R.D. Donaldson at the age of about 40 (ca. 1910).

Donaldson served as a Selectman from 1913-1939 and on the Board of Health and the Cemetery Commission. The Lincoln chestnut tree on Lincoln Common, included on the town seal, was salvaged by Donaldson after it succumbed to the chestnut blight. He milled and stored the boards, some of which now line the conference room at Town Office Building. By 1942, he was a leader of the Congregational Stone Church on Bedford Road when it merged with the Unitarian Church to form the consolidated First Parish, sealing the deal by handshake with Dr. Robert L. DeNormandie. The Donaldsons’ Glendale Dairy of Guernsey cows functioned until 1947 on land at 16 Weston Rd. acquired from John H. Pierce.

Donaldson constructed his first house in Lincoln in 1895 at 27 Tower Rd., using plans bought from the Sears Roebuck catalogue. His later projects included moving the Old Town Hall from its adopted site beside the Unitarian white church to its current location on Lincoln Road across from the Town Office Building. Because it was in use as a general store and post office, the Old Town Hall was kept open during its ride on rollers to the new site. The Center School (now the Town Office Building) was completed by Donaldson in 1908.

Scattered along the south side of Trapelo Road are many houses displaying Donaldson’s craft, including one that was cut off from a piece of a house on Weston Road and rolled across the field. More than 90 Lincoln buildings were constructed or altered by Donaldson, including the Farrington Memorial, the current Massachusetts Audubon headquarters, and the Storrow/Carroll School.

An image from a 1912 Sears Roebuck catalog of a complete home via mail order. This model resembles one of the R.D. Donaldson houses still standing in Lincoln. Sears sold this house — blueprints and all building materials delivered to the site — for $753.

R.D. Donaldson placed a distinctive mark on the town’s architecture. Rob Loud has described the style as “vernacular.” A unique feature of the style is a sleeping porch, examples of which are evident at 3 Pierce Hill, 1 Old Lexington Rd., and 27 Lexington Rd.

Robert and Charlotte’s kids also placed their mark on the town. Three of the four Donaldson boys played baseball in school and college and were members of the Lincoln Mohawks, coached at one time by Robert. All six offspring were put through college in pursuit of careers in business, law, medicine, hospital care, and resort hospitality. During the 1950s and ’60s, they all lived at one time or another in Lincoln Center’s “Fertile Valley” neighborhood with families totaling 11 grandchildren. The original Donaldson house in Lincoln is now occupied by one such grandson, with another grandson and three great-grandchildren still currently in town.

Robert Douglass Donaldson, builder of Lincoln, died in 1964.


“Lincoln’s History” is an occasional column by members of the Lincoln Historical Society.

Category: history 4 Comments

Police log for June 22–28, 2021

July 6, 2021

June 22

Donelan’s lot (1:23 a.m.) — Caller reported two vehicles in the parking lot. The vehicles were two ride-share drivers waiting for fares.

Hanscom Drive (8:01 a.m.) — Hanscom Law Enforcement reported an individual with an active arrest warrant. Manuel Madrid, 21, of Lowell was taken into custody, booked, and transported to Concord District Court.

Weston Road (1:48 p.m.) — A vehicle had been parked at the Pierce House for approximately one week. The owner was waiting on a part to fix the vehicle.

Lincoln Road (7:16 p.m.) — A driver reported a past incident of possible road rage.

June 23

Wells Road (8:48 a.m.) — Paperwork was delivered to a resident.

Lexington Road (9:56 a.m.) — Police moved a tree crew that was working in the area.

Lincoln Road (12:20 p.m.) — A deceased wild animal was discovered at the end of a driveway. The DPW was notified and the animal was removed.

Chestnut Circle (1:32 p.m.) — Wayland police requested assistance in the area for a missing party from their town. A short time later, the person was reunited with family.

Drumlin Farm (4:32 p.m.) — Two dogs were seen tied off to a fence with no one in the area. Police arrived and spoke with the owner of the dogs.

Old Concord Road (5:49 p.m.) — A resident reported that a possible fraudulent account was used to make purchases in their name.

Sandy Pond Road (6:19 p.m.) — Police were dispatched to Flint’s Pond for individuals fishing. The parties were located and advised they were fishing in a prohibited area.

Huckleberry Hill (7:20 p.m.) — A homeowner reported an odor of natural gas in their home. The Fire Department arrived and measured the levels which showed no escaping gas.

June 24

Emerson Hospital (1:09 p.m.) — Concord Police requested assistance at the hospital.

Trapelo Road (8:42 p.m.) — Caller reported a possibly injured deer close to the roadway. Upon arrival, the police saw the deer walk into the woods.

June 25

Lincoln Road (10:11 a.m. — Police were requested to the area to assist with parking and vehicle traffic during an estate sale.

Bedford Road (10:51 a.m.) — A resident reported their identification may have been compromised and used for a fraudulent purchase.

Page Road (11:31 a.m.) — Paperwork was delivered to a resident.

June 26

Brooks Hill Road (1:48 a.m.) — A resident heard a suspicious noise coming from the outside their house. Police checked the residence as well as several side streets but nothing was found.

Bedford Road (6:03 a.m.) — A resident reported a male standing near two vehicles in the driveway. Police checked the area and found nothing.

South Great Road (6:16 a.m.) — A resident briefly lost their dog at Mt. Misery but found it a short time later.

South Great Road (10:33 a.m.) — Police assisted a vehicle and trailer that were parked partially on the side of the road.

Trapelo Road, Waltham (10:55 a.m. — Waltham Police requested assistance with a motorcycle rally.

Hanscom Vandenberg gate (12:58 p.m.) — Hanscom Law Enforcement reported an individual with an active arrest warrant. Leland Buskey, 39 years old, of Monponsett, Mass., was taken into custody, booked, and transported to Concord District Court.

Trapelo Road (8:07 p.m.) — Two parties fishing in the Cambridge Reservoir were told to leave.

June 27

Walden Street, Concord (3:03 a.m.) — Lincoln police assisted Concord police with an individual in the area of Walden Pond.

Concord Road (9:22 a.m.) and Baker Bridge Road (2:15 p.m.) — Reports of vehicles parking alongside the road to access Walden Pond. The vehicles were moved from the area.

June 28

Harvest Circle (1:12 p.m.) — A resident reported that several pieces of jewelry were stolen from their residence. The items were ultimately located several days later.

Mill Street (3:42 p.m.) — A resident reported that an item was stolen from the end of their driveway.

Prairie Street, Concord (5:47 p.m.) — Lincoln firefighters along with others from Weston, Sudbury, Bedford, Lexington, Littleton, Boxborough, Acton, and Maynard responded to a three-alarm fire at the Thoreau Elementary School. The Concord Fire Department was alerted by the building’s fire alarm system, which indicated smoke alarm and sprinkler flow switch activations, according to this press release. The fire was in the attic space and was extinguished by about 10:30 p.m. Three alarms were struck to bring in more manpower due to the extremely hot weather and the need for relief crews.

The cause of the fire is under investigation, but fire officials think a heater installed in the attic for winter use to prevent the sprinklers from freezing may have been involved. Two classrooms sustained fire damage and a total of nine suffered water damage and will not be ready for the start of school in the fall, according to Thoreau School Principal Angel Charles.

Category: news, police Leave a Comment

Chipmunk addendum

July 6, 2021

Due to a mysterious technical glitch that’s now been resolved, one of the submissions for the last issue of the Lincoln Chipmunk did not appear when the issue was first published last week. “Painting Oak Leaves” (a story and painting by Mary Ann Hales) is now on the Chipmunk home page at chipmunk.lincolnsquirrel.com.

Reminder: the deadline for submitting material for the next issue is August 15. We’re planning a “summer” theme, so send us your photos and paintings of summertime flora or fauna, a reminiscence about a summer in your past, fiction with a summer-related theme, a piece about a summer-related book or movie you enjoyed, or whatever else strikes your fancy. Click here for information on how to submit, or contact Alice Waugh at lincolnsquirrelnews@gmail.com.

Category: arts Leave a Comment

Obituaries

July 4, 2021

Thompson

Gerrig

Bernice “Bunny” Gerrig, 89

The mother of Beth Gerrig, Richard Gerrig, and Timothy Peterson died on June 24. Obituary and guestbook.

Randall “Robin” Thompson, 87

The architect and veteran of the 82nd Airborne Division passed away on June 12. Obituary and guestbook.

Dobrow

Stathos

Vida “Vicki” Dobrow, 85

Dobrow was a longtime teacher in Great Neck, N.Y. before moving to Lincoln 21 years ago. She died unexpectedly on June 8. Obituary and guestbook.

Margaret Stathos, 95

Stathos, who died on June 8, was a former concert pianist and board member of the New England Antivivisection Society. Obituary and tribute wall.

Category: obits Leave a Comment

The latest issue of the Lincoln Chipmunk is here

July 1, 2021

Click on over to the Lincoln Chipmunk to see creative writing and visual arts by your fellow Lincolnites.

The deadline for submitting material for the next issue is August 15. We’re planning a “summer” theme, so send us your photos and paintings of summertime flora or fauna, a reminiscence about a summer in your past, fiction with a summer-related theme, a piece about a summer-related book or movie you enjoyed, or whatever you like. Click here for information on how to submit.

We’re also looking for help in promoting the Lincoln Chipmunk to encourage more Lincoln residents of all ages to submit creative work. You don’t ave to be a subscriber to submit, so tell all your neighbors, friends and family who have a connection to Lincoln. Contact Squirrel/Chipmunk editor Alice Waugh at lincolnsquirrelnews@gmail.com or 617-710-5542 if you have ideas or questions.

Category: arts Leave a Comment

News acorns

June 29, 2021

Free mental health counseling for Lincoln adolescents

The Lincoln Council on Aging and Human Services has been hearing from many people that it’s nearly impossible to find a mental health counselor for children, although the need has been great due to the environment created by COVID. In response, the COA&HS, with help from the Board of Health and the schools, has been able to arrange for Sara Hickey, MSW, LCSW (Eliot Community Human Services) to be on the Hartwell campus during the afternoon on the second and fourth Tuesdays of July and August starting on Tuesday, July 13. This is a totally free service — simply call the COA&HS at 781-259-8811 and ask to speak to either Director Abigail Butt or Assistant Director Amy Gagne, who can field questions, provide more information, and book appointments.

Household hazardous waste collection day on July 17

The next area-wide hazardous waste collection day is Saturday, July 17 at the Minuteman Household Hazardous Product Collection Facility (60 Hartwell Ave., Lexington) from 9 a.m. – 2 p.m. This is open to all residents of Arlington, Bedford, Belmont, Concord, Lexington, Lincoln, Waltham, and Watertown. All residents must pre-register online by clicking here. Pick a date, time slot, and estimated amount of waste you plan to bring, and submit. When you go, you’ll need to show your license or a bill as proof of Lincoln residency. The other collection dates in 2021 are August 21, September 19 (a Sunday), October 16 and November 6.

Change in procedure for discarding used mattresses, box springs

Residents may now drop off mattresses and box springs for recycling at the transfer station in the tan container next to the attendant’s shed. Mattresses and box springs should no longer be placed in the large dumpster. Please stack mattresses and box springs on their side inside the container. Mattresses that are excessively torn, punctured, soiled or moldy are not acceptable. Wet, frozen or twisted mattresses and box springs are also not acceptable.  

MassDEP estimates that 200,000 mattresses and box springs are thrown out by Massachusetts residents each year, but more than 75% of mattress components can be recycled. They take up a lot of space in landfills, are hard to compact, and get caught in processing equipment. For more information or questions, please contact the DPW office at 781-259-8999 or email Susan Donaldson at donaldsons@lincolntown.org.

Register for Thoreau Society virtual conference

The Thoreau Society invites you to their live virtual conference, “Thoreau and Diversity: People, Principles, and Politics,” from July 7–11, when the organization livestreams its 80th annual gathering to an international audience. The event is co-sponsored by the Walden Woods Project in Lincoln. The conference will include 35 hours of educational sessions that will be recorded and available to registered attendees through December 2021, so if you’re unable to attend one of two concurrent sessions, you can still watch the one you missed. You can view any session at your leisure through the end of the year. The virtual conference will also offer the opportunity to gather with friends and colleagues through its built-in video-networking feature. Register at www.thoreausociety.org.

Conservation Commission has an opening

Would you like to expand your knowledge of conservation land management and wetland issues?  Are you someone who favors open space and appreciates Lincoln’s natural beauty? Do you like being a part of interesting discussions and decision-making? If you have answered yes to these questions, consider applying for a vacancy on the Lincoln Conservation Commission (LCC). The seven-member commission reviews activities/work proposed to take place within 100 feet of wetlands and 200 feet of perennial streams to ensure protection of wetlands in accordance with state and local law. The panel also provides policy direction to staff on the ecological stewardship and management of Lincoln’s 1,500 acres of conservation and agricultural Lands.

Meetings are held in the evening every three weeks. Training classes (mostly virtual) can help you become knowledgeable about wetlands resources and the laws protecting them. To apply, please download and fill out Lincoln’s volunteer sign-up form, and either email it to elderp@lincolntown.org or mail it to the Office of the Select Board (16 Lincoln Rd., Lincoln MA 01773). Interested applicants are encouraged to contact the Conservation Department staff at 781-259-2612.

Library board seeks new member

The Board of Trustees of the Lincoln Public Library is still seeking a Lincoln resident willing to serve for six years and who is committed to supporting the library’s work on and dedication to initiatives promoting diversity, equity, and inclusion. The process for applying for the position and a summary of a trustee’s responsibilities are available online on the library trustees web page. Interested candidates interested should apply in writing to Peter Sugar or Jacquelin Apsler, c/o Lincoln Public Library, 3 Bedford Rd., Lincoln MA 01773 by Friday, July 2. For more information, please call Library Director Barbara Myles at 781-259-8465.

Category: charity/volunteer, news Leave a Comment

Lincoln author’s history of the Civil War in the Southwest is a Pulitzer finalist

June 28, 2021

By Maureen Belt

Megan Kate Nelson holds a copy of her award-winning book at Lincoln’s iconic Ponyhenge.

It was a little after 1 p.m. on Friday, June 11, and Megan Kate Nelson was sitting in her Lincoln kitchen direct-messaging a friend as Columbia University broadcast a livestream of the 2021 Pulitzer Prize ceremony.

Nelson and her correspondent each had an entry for the esteemed award that recognizes excellence in American journalism, literature and music, and were sharing witty color commentary for each announcement as if they were watching the Oscars. “We didn’t have any expectations of any awards or prizes, ” she said. 

Nelson’s husband Dan was upstairs working from home and their Siamese/ragdoll cats, G-Ball and Ding-Dong, were chilling in the living room. The livestream announced the candidates for the prize in history, the category for which Nelson’s publisher submitted her 2020 work, The Three-Cornered War: The Union, the Confederacy, and Native Peoples in the Fight for the West.

“I knew Scribner submitted the book,” Nelson said. “That was all I knew.”

The prize went to Marcia Chaitlain for her book, Franchise: The Golden Arches in Black America. Then followed the announcement of two other finalists, or writers whose work the prestigious jury deemed Pulitzer-worthy. Megan Kate Nelson was one of them.

“I screamed,” Nelson recalled. “I screamed so loud that my cats just took off. They ran upstairs and ran under the guest bed. I just kept screaming and screaming and my husband came down. He didn’t think I was being murdered, but he was like, ‘What? What happened?’ It was all very dramatic.

“I was still DM-ing with my friend and I was like, maybe I had a fever dream.” 

This was no dream. Like the content of her book, it was reality verified by a quick online search. Nelson was indeed named a Pulitzer finalist, and the organization’s website dedicates a full page to accolades about her research, writing, and scholarship. 

“A lively and well-crafted Civil War narrative that expands understanding of the conflict’s Western theaters, where pivotal struggles for land, resources and influence presaged the direction of the country as a whole,” the Pulitzer committee wrote about her book.

A week after the big reveal, Nelson is still wrapping her head around it. The good news hadn’t completely sunk in, even after receiving of a congratulatory letter on official Columbia University stationery. 

“I’m not going to believe it until I see it,” she said via a Zoom interview with the Lincoln Squirrel. 

Following her passion

Nelson has taught at local universities including Harvard and MIT, and Dan is a lawyer in Boston. But in 2014, she said she “took a leap of faith” (or some might call it, “followed her passion”) and left a tenure-track university position to write full time. 

“I just decided I wanted to write,” Nelson said. “Writing is what I love to do most — writing and researching.”

She hitched a bike to the back of her BMW 3 series and drove from Lincoln, where she and Dan have lived since 2009, to Littleton, Colorado, where the two attended high school together. (They met as high school seniors who were both accepted into Harvard’s Class of 1994, and began dating when he was in law school and she in graduate school.) 

Based at her parents’ house, Nelson worked every day poring over archives, diaries, letters, and rare book collections at public, university, and manuscript libraries. She compiled research into her blog, Historista, and then journeyed south to learn more about Civil War soldiers, Native Americans, and other historical figures.

Nelson rode her bike along the Rio Grande and other routes that would have taken a toll on the BMW. “You see so much more on a bike,” she said, adding cycling also helped offset the flavorful and filling local cuisine.

She even connected with the manager of Ted Turner’s ranch. The Valverde battlefield and the ruins of the Union Army’s Fort Craig are deep in the rugged terrain of the cable mogul’s Armendaris Ranch, which spans 923 square miles in southern New Mexico. The ranch manager had little faith the sedan could handle the terrain and suggested she try again another time.

Nelson chose to tell the little-known history of the Western theater of the Civil War though the eyes of nine players, some major and others with lesser-known supporting roles. One is John R. Baylor, a Texas legislature and officer in the Confederate Army. Another is Louisa Canby, the wife of Union Army Col. Richard Canby and a nurse who tended both Confederate and Union soldiers. A third is Apache chief Mangas Coloradas, whose request for peace was met with brutal betrayal.  

Much of the history of New Mexico Territory (what is now New Mexico and Arizona) and its importance in the Civil War did not make it into standard-issue textbooks or the growing plethora of thick hardcovers devoted to the minutia of Bull Run and Gettysburg. What little is known was shared locally, and even then, mostly to kids on school field trips.

“If you are a Civil War history nerd, you’re not going to go to New Mexico,” Nelson said.  “The Western theater of the war was functionally erased.”

Nelson, who grew up in the area and received her Ph.D. in American studies from the University of Iowa, was astonished to learn that soldiers from Colorado were called up by the Union Army to New Mexico Territory to fight Native Americans as well as Confederates . 

“Whenever you find out something you don’t know, It’s like, ‘How did I not know about this?’” Nelson said. She attributes the omissions in U.S. history accounts to military historians who focused primarily on the Eastern theater of war “because that’s where the action was.”

In 1861, both the Confederate and Union armies had their eyes on New Mexico Territory. Northerners wanted to keep the region free of slavery and knew that securing it would be a win President Lincoln. The Southerners planned to expand slavery and grow profits by exporting cotton from Western ports. 

“That was what was at stake — control over the entire region,” Nelson said.  

Both sides recognized the benefits of a major thoroughfare to California’s gold mines and were equally eager to eliminate or remove Native Americans, Nelson added. Southerners planned to enslave them while northerners planned to imprison them on reservations. 

“People don’t want to hear that part of the story,” Nelson said. “It’s why people don’t like to talk about it. It’s a hard truth.”

History has always been a side interest of Nelson’s, but her true devotion is to “unloved and strange places.” It was her research on one such place — the largest blackwater swamp in North America — that put Nelson on an indirect path to Civil War’s Western theater.

Nelson spent the early aughts researching the impact of human interaction on culture, habitat, the environment, and industry at the Okefenokee Swamp. She was captivated by the ruins, some dating back to the 1700s, that she found surrounding the swamp along the Florida-Georgia line. 

“And what creates the most ruins in the American landscape? The Civil War.” She followed this new passion for ruins to the lesser-known battle fields in the American West, and the rest is Pulitzer history. 

Nelson isn’t sure if Pulitzer finalists receive the gold medal designed by Concord native Daniel Chester French, or if she and Dan get to attend the awards gala at Columbia University this fall. “I would absolutely go if I was invited,” she assured.

Meanwhile, her new literary distinction is making headlines among noted historians. Just this week, Doris Kearns Goodwin personally persuaded Nelson to participate in a documentary. Scribner is updating the covers of not just The Three-Cornered War, but the upcoming book it inspired: This Strange Country: Yellowstone and the Reconstruction of America. New jacket covers for her earlier books, Ruin Nation: Destruction and the American Civil War (2012), and Trembling Earth: A Cultural History of the Okefenokee Swamp (2005), will also tout the honor.

Nelson is just one of several award-winning historians and novelists in Lincoln — see the exhibit on the second floor of the Town Hall to learn more. Her books are available at the Lincoln Public Library, though there is currently a long waitlist for The Three-Cornered War. They can also be purchased at the Concord Book Shop and Amazon.com. 

Category: arts 1 Comment

Property sales in May 2021

June 27, 2021

82 Virginia Rd. #204 — James Brennan Jr. to Christopher J. Voce Irrevocable Trust for $438,000 (May 28)

148 Weston Rd. — Keith McDonald to Robert and Christie Waitt for $1,375,000 (May 26)

38 Round Hill Road — Vaja Koumantzelis to Maureen and Enda Quigley for $1,789,000 (May 19)

52 Greenridge Lane #15A — Elisa Sartori to Amy Sanders for $425,000 (May 14)

14 Greenridge Lane #8 — Jeffrey Childs to Christopher City for $530,000 (May 4)

 

 

Category: land use Leave a Comment

Lincoln girls triumph in regional soccer tournament

June 24, 2021

By John Greco

The 2021 Lincoln Leopards. Back row, left to right: head coach Ginger Reiner, Bella Bono, Maya Lieblich, Mikayla Doo, Evie Packineau, Lucy Reiner, Anneka Doughty, and assistant coaches John Greco and Bryan Doo. Front row, left to right: Fiona Crosby, Violet Lucchese, Ellery Curtiss, Kate Greco, and Olivia Ancillo (click to see a larger version).

The Lincoln Leopards, Lincoln Youth Soccer’s sixth-grade girls’ team, won the Boston Area Youth Soccer (BAYS) Girls Grade 6 D3 2021 President’s Cup on June 19. They won four games against West Roxbury, Natick, Sudbury, and finally Milford-Hopedale to emerge as champions during the course of the four-week eastern Massachusetts competition.

The Leopards their journey with a first-round 4-0 win over West Roxbury’s Parkway United squad. Olivia Ancillo’s first-half brace gave the Leopards a halftime lead, and Maya Lieblich’s second-half goal iced the game for the Leopards. Kate Greco added the final tally with a chip shot over the Parkway goalie off of a long throw-in by Ellery Curtiss. Defenders Lucy Reiner, Mikayla Doo, and Anneka Doughty limited Parkway United’s chances throughout the match to help the Leopards advance.

The quarterfinal game was decided in a penalty shootout over the Natick Terriers as the Leopards came from behind to tie the game 1-1 in the 50th minute when Violet Lucchese emphatically slammed in a Greco cross. After a scoreless two periods of overtime, Lincoln clinched the game on shootout penalty kicks from Reiner and Ancillo, while keeper Evie Packineau stood tall in goal, stopping all five Natick tries.

The Leopards continued their run with a stirring 1-0 semifinal victory over the Sudbury Gunners as Greco took a pass from Ancillo to touch home a left-footed goal in the 47th minute. Short one player due to injury for much of the second half, the sturdy Leopard back line held on for the win as Curtiss contained the speedy and dangerous Sudbury wings and Doo cleared some challenging bouncing balls. Goalies Packineau and Lucchese combined for the shutout, together conceding only one goal through the entire tournament.

In the final game against Milford-Hopedale, the Leopards finished their championship season, again stunning a larger town with a 4-0 victory. Strong teamwork by the Leopards resulted in a 2-0 halftime lead as nifty passing sprung Ancillo, who opened the scoring 17 minutes into the game with a rocket off the far post. Two minutes later, Lieblich intercepted a Milford-Hopedale pass and sent it to Concord native Bella Bono, who buried the first of her two goals to give Lincoln a 2-0 advantage. Fiona Crosby finished a cross from Doo midway through the second half to stretch the Leopard lead to 3-0, and Bono added her second goal in the 58th minute to complete the scoring and crown the Leopards as Presidents’ Cup Grade Six Champions.

Click to see larger captioned versions of these photos by Leopard siblings Matthew Greco, Russell Reiner, and Kai Doo:

Leopards-katie-evie
Leopards-maya-bella
Leopards-violet-fiona

Lincoln Youth Soccer is open to boys and girls of any experience level in grades K-8 who live or attend school in Lincoln. Fall 2021 registration is open now and requested by July 7 at www.lincolnsoccer.com.


John Greco is the Lincoln Leopards’ assistant coach and the father of player Kate Greco.

Category: kids, sports & recreation Leave a Comment

Police log for June 12–21, 2021

June 23, 2021

June 12

Tower Road (11:00 p.m.) — After a noise complaint, a gathering of individuals outside a residence were asked to move inside.

June 13

Old County Road (1:27 a.m.) — Report of a party taking photos of the residence. the individual could not be located.

Old Sudbury Road (3:40 p.m.) — A bicyclist fell off their bicycle and was transported to hospital. No vehicle involved.

June 14

Tracey’s Corner (11:33 a.m.) — A maintenance worker arrived at the residence unannounced.

Wells Road (2:11 p.m.) — Caller reported an incident of harassment.

Cerulean Way (2:21 p.m.) — Minor crash involving a motor vehicle and school bus. No injuries and no damage to the vehicles.

June 15

Wells Road (8:33 p.m.) — Caller reported an incident of harassment.

Wells Road (8:50 p.m.) — Caller reported that the rear window of their vehicle was smashed.

Old Sudbury Road (2:19 p.m.) — A vehicle drove off the road into a ditch. No injuries.

June 16

Old County Road (11:43 a.m.) — Report of a man walking in the roadway talking to himself. He was gone on arrival.

Cochituate Road, Wayland (2:08 p.m.) — Det. Ian Spencer assisted the Wayland Police Department with a forensic sketch.

Harvest Circle (6:06 p.m.) — A victim provided an unknown caller with their bank account information.

Emerson Hospital, Concord (6:59 p.m.) — Police assisted Concord Police with an unruly patient at Emerson Hospital.

Conant Road (7:15 p.m.) — A lost cat was located and the owner was notified

June 17

South Great Road and Cambridge Turnpike eastbound (approx. 6:50 a.m.) — Brief power outages for unknown reasons.

Smith Hill Road (7:32 am.) — Report of a suspicious person resulted in a medical call where the patient was transported to Emerson Hospital.

Concord Road (7:39 p.m.) — An odor of gas was reported in the area. National Grid was notified.

June 18

Sandy Pond Road (9:03 a.m.) — Person was fishing at Flint Pond. After being advised it was not allowed, they cleared the area without incident.

June 19

Transfer station (8:38 a.m.) — A resident lost their car keys while at the transfer station. After a transport back to their home for their spare set, they were on their way.

June 20

Bedford Road (12:41 p.m.) — 911 caller reported that a large truck was occupying a lane on Bedford Road near the Birches School. When an officer arrived on scene, the truck was gone.

South Great Road (12:46 p.m.) — Vehicle struck a utility pole near Concord Road. The driver of the vehicle was transported to the hospital for minor injuries and was issued a written warning.

South Great Road (2:20 p.m.) — 911 caller reported a crash involving a car and a motorcycle near Meadowbrook Road. Both operators refused medical treatment.

North Great Road (2:49 p.m.) — Two-car motor vehicle crash near Bypass Road. Minor injuries reported.

Wheeler Road (10:18 p.m.) — Police checked on a motor vehicle that was pulled to the side of the road. Both vehicle and operator were fine.

June 21

Sandy Pond Road (12:33 a.m.) — Caller reported her friend was two hours past due. Police made contact with the late party and reported back to the caller.

Aspen Circle (12:47 p.m.) — Car crash with minor injuries was reported but the patient refused transport to the hospital. The vehicle was towed from the scene.

Wells Road (1:52 p.m.) — Police were requested for assistance that was ultimately not needed.

Wells Road (5:57 p.m.) — Caller reported that someone was fraudulently using their identity in an online chat room.

Category: news, police Leave a Comment

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