Due to predicted extreme heat, the Farmers Market on Saturday, July 20 at Codman Farm has been cancelled (the first cancellation for this reason in 30 years of its history).
Five from Lincoln earn Girl Scouts’ highest honor

Lincoln’s 2019 Girl Scout Gold Award winners are (left to right) Anya Elder, Audrey Ory, Ashley du Toit, Alison Dwyer, and Lia Darling.
By Linda Hammett Ory
Five girls from Lincoln Girl Scout Troop 72886 who have been Scouts since kindergarten — Lia Darling, Ashley du Toit, Alison Dwyer, Anya Elder, and Audrey Ory — attained the honor of earning their Gold Award, the highest achievement in Girl Scouting.
All five graduated from high school this year (du Toit, Dwyer and Elder from Lincoln-Sudbury High School, Darling from Beaver Country Day School, and Ory from the Middlesex School).
The girls were recognized at the State House on June 14 along with 88 other awardees from across Massachusetts. Lincoln had the most number of girls at the ceremony of any town represented. The girls received special commendations for their accomplishments from multiple sources, including the Massachusetts State Senate and House of Representatives, their local state representatives, U.S. Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Edward Markey, and Gov. Charles Baker.
To earn the Gold Award, Girl Scouts must identify an issue in their community they’a passionate about, and then complete a project to address the issue that will continue to operate in their absence. Each girl created her own project plan and team, and then devoted at least 80 hours to implement the plan.
Darling’s project was designed to address the lack of information about mental illness in her school and community. She formulated a plan and a team that used facts and stories to educate herself, classmates, and teachers about how to be mentally healthy and informed about types of mental illness and prevention.
“Girl Scouting is where you can challenge yourself to do things that you thought you couldn’t do,” said Darling, adding, “it’s a way to make incredible bonds with girls that will always support you throughout life.”
Du Toit focused on bicyclist safety in Lincoln. She worked with Lincoln’s local government and a special committee to successfully install road signs around town letting motorists know that “bicycles may use full lane,” and then wrapped up her project by organizing a bicycle safety event for children.
“Girl Scouts teaches girls how to speak out and be bold without fear of being criticized,” said du Toit.
Dwyer’s project focused on increasing residents’ participation in Lincoln’s town government. She conducted several studies to identify best communication practices about how town decisions are made, and she developed a curriculum about local government that will now be added to the middle school social studies program.
Through the process of earning the Gold Award, “I discovered I enjoyed working with people I never thought I’d talk to, and I learned from others in the process,” Dwyer said.
Elder aimed to reduce cyberbullying by creating a program that will now be offered annually at her school to educate and bring awareness around the topic, with the aim of reducing the frequency of this damaging online behavior.
Girl Scouting “taught me not to shy away from opportunities or challenges, but rather, to embrace and appreciate them,” Elder said.
Ory developed and taught a financial literacy curriculum for middle school girls to foster both knowledge about finances and the confidence to pursue their interests in related fields. She pinpointed this critical developmental age as an important way to help address the lack of women in the finance industry.
“Without Girl Scouting, I wouldn’t be the person I am today, and I never could have done what I have been able to achieve,” said Ory.
In addition to learning all these life skills, Lia Darling reflected that “Girl Scouting is a way to make incredible bonds with girls that will always support you throughout life.”
Research has shown that girls who earn their Girl Scout Gold Award display a more positive sense of self, participate in more community service and civic engagement, and reach higher levels of education and income. If your daughter is aged 5–18 and is interested in joining the Lincoln Girl Scouts, contact Heather Coughlin at hmcoughlin@gmail.com.
News acorns
Minuteman Library Crawl on Aug. 1
Visit multiple libraries in the area on the 2019 Minuteman Library Crawl on Thursday, August 1 from 1–5 p.m. It’s a 21st-century scavenger hunt; the challenge is to visit as many as you can and take a picture of yourself with a designated item in each library. At the Lincoln Public Library, it’s the Lincoln Library quilt and/or the “Let the Rumpus Begin” bench. If you go to at least five libraries, you’ll get a prize (one per group). Each library will have handouts and giveaways as well as refreshments. All ages are welcome to participate in this self-guided tour that starts and ends wherever you like. Click here for your “passport” detailing the items to photograph n each library along with their addresses.
“Black Robe” screening at library
The next film to be shown by the Lincoln Library Film Society will be Black Robe (1991, rated R) on Thursday, August 1 at 6 p.m. in the Tarbell Room. A young Jesuit priest seeks to convert the Indian tribes in Canada while also trying to survive the harsh winter. Directed by Robert Beresford, starring Lothaire Bluteau, Aden Young, and Sandrine Holt.
Look for disability letters from the VA
By now, all veterans collecting disability compensation from the Veterans Administration (VA) should have received their “money letters.” This letter, which states the percentage of compensation and the dollar amount of money the VA will pay this year, is the basis for obtaining the Veterans Property Tax Abatement for Lincoln taxes. Exemptions run from $800 to $2,000, with most veterans receiving exemptions falling into the $800 range. Some dependents whose spouses died as a result of injuries or disease contracted in a war zone will receive total property tax exemption. If you have any questions, please call Carolyn Bottum from the Council on Aging at 781-259-8811. She will take your contact information and have Lincoln’s Veterans Services Officer be in touch with you.
Yarn corridor invites walkers to explore Lincoln pathway

Lincoln Planning Department senior volunteer Gary Davis and summer intern Emily Glass walk along the yarn corridor.
The new Lincoln Yarn Corridor installed by Mass Audubon’s Drumlin Farm Wildlife Sanctuary aims to offer an unexpected place for contemplation or nature play on the walk from Lincoln Station to the farm.
Designed in support of the town’s effort to highlight the destinations that are accessible on foot from Lincoln Station, the colorful installation ties together the themes of the nature of the surrounding area with the sheep and wool of Drumlin Farm and serves as a point of interest on the walk from Lincoln Station to the farm.
The hand-woven yarn corridor winds among and within trees along the south sidewalk of Lincoln Road across from the Police and Fire Department. Starting from the trailhead at the new kiosk next to the commuter parking lot, walkers can follow the new wayfinding signs all the way to Drumlin Farm, with stops along the way at Codman Farm, Codman House and the new art installation.
As the materials in the exhibit age, volunteers will work with the farm (following its philosophy of “sustainable interpretation”) to refresh the corridor, eventually letting the exhibit degrade naturally until it’s time to replace it with another installation around a different nature/art theme.
Eyes in the sky (Lincoln Through the Lens)

Some interesting “ocular” cloud formations in the sky over Lincoln’s Muster Field off Sandy Pond Road looking toward the Lincoln School in the early evening of July 2. (Photo by Chris Thompson)
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.
14 Lincolnites to pedal in 40th Pan-Mass Challenge
On Aug. 3 and 4, more than 6,700 riders, including 14 from Lincoln, will pedal up to 192 miles in the Pan-Mass Challenge (PMC) with the goal of raising $60 million for cancer research and patient care at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute.
Cyclists from 43 states and 12 countries will convene in Massachusetts to participate in the PMC, taking on one of 12 routes that pass through 47 towns and range from 25 to 192 miles, designed to cater to all levels of cycling and fundraising ability. Riders range in age from 13 to 88 and include everyone from seasoned triathletes to weekend warriors. Many ride to honor a family member or friend who has battled cancer, while more than 950 riders and volunteers are cancer survivors or current patients themselves.
Participants are required to raise between $600 and $8,500, depending on their chosen route, though the average cyclist raises more than $8,825. If the PMC reaches its 2019 fundraising goal of $60 million, Overstock.com CEO Patrick Byrne, a cancer survivor and PMC rider, has committed to donate an additional $1 million to the cause.
One hundred percent of every rider-raised dollar is donated directly to Dana-Farber through the its fundraising arm, the Jimmy Fund, and the PMC is the institute’s largest single contributor, accounting for more than 55% of the Jimmy Fund’s annual revenue. In 2018, the PMC donated $56 million to Dana-Farber, bringing its 39-year contribution to more than $654 million.
Riders from Lincoln are listed below. To make a financial contribution to a rider or become a virtual rider, click here or call 800-WE-CYCLE. You can also connect with #PMC2019 and #PMC40 on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and LinkedIn.
- James Alden
- Don Alden
- Peter Blacklow
- Mark Deck
- Jack Fultz
- Keith Gilbert
- Richard Glanz
- Erica Gonella
- Weston Howland
- Kim Mooney
- Julia Parrillo
- Dan Pereira
- Kimberly Phillips
- Tom Wilmot
Lincoln resident finally gets medal for WWII spy work — and she’s delighted

Patricia Warner reacts in surprise as she gets her medal on Memorial Day in Lincoln from Rep. Katherine Clark (left). (Photo courtesy Rep. Katherine Clark’s office)
By Alice Waugh
America recently observed the 75th anniversary of D-Day, but 98-year-old Lincoln resident Patricia Warner was serving the country as a wartime spy years before the invasion — and she was finally recognized for her efforts in May with a Congressional Gold Medal.
Warner had been married for only a few months when she learned that her husband, Robert Fowler, was killed in action at Guadalcanal while serving on the U.S.S. Duncan. Out of a sense of duty but also seeking a measure of revenge, the newly widowed Warner left her infant son (who never met his father) in the care of his grandparents and signed up with the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), the precursor to the CIA. She traveled for two years as a spy during World War II, working in New York, Washington, London, and Madrid.
“I was devastated, of course, and I wanted to help the war effort as best I could,” Warner said in an interview with the Lincoln Squirrel. “As a widow, nobody seemed to want to take me on in America, so I went over on a troop ship to London.”
Although she was listed as a secretary in Spain, her real job was to communicate with the French underground to get downed American pilots out of the Nazi-occupied territories while also socializing and gathering intelligence from Nazi sympathizers in Franco’s Spain, which was neutral in the war.
“I’d be sent to watch people they thought were very iffy and giving secrets to the Germans,” said Warner, adding that she didn’t speak Spanish when she began. “I found out the flamenco dancers were all involved in German activities, so I signed up for flamenco lessons.”
“She was really beautiful. She could go to a cocktail party and get the ear of some high-ranking diplomat as well as staying in contact with those behind enemy lines,” her son Chris Warner said. “But she didn’t really talk about it that much — I just got impressions of going to bullfights and flamenco dancing. We got the romantic side of things.”
The only real danger Warner faced was not from the Germans, but from a black widow spider that bit her. She had to be hospitalized, but her fellow Americans made sure she didn’t suffer alone. “They thought if I were incoherent, there was no telling what I might reveal, so my friends asked if they could be with me in the hospital in case I said anything that I shouldn’t and give away any secrets,” she said.
OSS “mercy missions” at the end of World War II saved the lives of thousands of Allied prisoners of war. At its peak in late 1944, the agency employed almost 13,000 men and women; today, fewer than 100 are still living.
In December 2016, the OSS was collectively honored with a Congressional Gold Medal, the highest civilian award in the United States (along with the Presidential Medal of Freedom), but Warner was unaware that she was eligible for the award. With the help of her son Chris, Rep. Katherine Clark’s office secured the award and surprised her with her own medal as she was surrounded by her family and friends during Lincoln’s Memorial Day observance in May.
Post-war career
After the war, Warner returned to New York and earned a B.A. from Barnard College in international relations in 1949. She was awarded a Fulbright Scholarship in 1951 but turned it down to marry Charles Warner, a history professor, with whom she had five more children. Her daughter Cecily was diagnosed with anorexia around the time the family moved to Lincoln in 1972 and endured years of involuntary hospitalization and forced feedings.

Patricia Warner in her Todd Pond Road home. Behind her is Boston Herald article about her medal. (Photo by Alice Waugh)
Warner immersed herself in the issue, founding Anorexia Bulimia Care in 1978 (later the National Eating Disorders Association), which was named one of George H.W. Bush’s Thousand Points of Light in 1991. She later earned a master’s degree in independent studies (specializing in eating disorders) from Lesley College in 1985 at the age of 64. Just two years ago, Warner published Will You Love Me When I’m Fat?, an autobiography focusing on her family’s struggles with Cecily’s anorexia.
During her varied career, Warner was also involved in the civil rights movement, taking part in one of the Selma-to-Montgomery marches, and was a painter and board member of the Institute of Contemporary Art in Boston.
Warner’s 1939 high school yearbook entry was prescient, noting that her goal was to be a spy or the first female director of the FBI but that she was more likely to be a diarist like Samuel Pepys. In her recent book, she’s modest about her war exploits. “I like to think of myself in the OSS, skulking around darkened bars draped in mascara and allure, dropping truth serum into Nazi officers’ champagne. But I’m not sure I made any meaningful contribution to the war effort,” she wrote.
But others would beg to differ. “It was an incredible honor to celebrate Patricia and her fearless patriotism at the ceremony,” Clark said. “Patricia represents the best of American values: bravery in the face of injustice and an unrelenting commitment to our country’s democratic cause.”
Kids run for a good cause (Lincoln Through the Lens)

Dozens of families from the Birches School and the Waltham Boys & Girls Club dashed through the woods behind the school on Bedford Road earlier this month in the Run for Good, an event to build a foundation of healthy habits and connect kids with nature in their own backyard. The fundraiser for the Birches School and the Waltham Boys & Girls Club was cosponsored by Saucony. (Photo by Joshua Milne)
New outdoor artwork at deCordova
The deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum has unveiled several new outdoor works ranging from small-scale bronze pieces in Alice’s Garden to large-scale commissions on the park’s main lawns to two monumental pieces that will be installed by the community in July and August in collaboration with a visiting artist. All sculptures are on loan and temporary, allowing deCordova to offer a constantly evolving landscape of art and nature for visitors.
Four of the sculptures were installed in the spring and two will be installed in July and August. On view now:
David Nash, “Spiral” (2014)
Nash consciously invokes earth, water, fire, and wind when transforming his earlier wooden sculpture, as he floats them down a river, chars their surface, or leaves them in the elements for decades. His incorporation of bronze casting as part of this practice continues themes of change, decay, and alteration, especially as he melts and solders metal. As some of Nash’s early wooden works begin to decay naturally, bronze versions offer a method of preserving their forms for posterity, while not interfering in the original wooden objects’ physical conditions
Michelle Grabner, “Untitled” (2018)
“Untitled” is part of a series of cast bronze sculptures of worn, knitted, and crocheted blankets. It transposes fiber to bronze, plush to hard, droopy to erect, warm to cold, and functional item to display object. The humility of Untitled’s formlessness lends the work a sense of irony. By appropriating bronze for a subject as sentimental and quotidian as a used blanket, Grabner throws open the tradition of cast-bronze sculpture, raising questions about why we immortalize certain subjects and how we determine which artifacts are disposable. At deCordova, “Untitled” is featured among trees, shrubs, rocks, and illusionistic sculptures in Alice’s Garden that similarly evoke familiar forms and textures from everyday life.
PLATFORM 24: Wardell Milan, “Sunday, Sitting on the Bank of Butterfly Meadow” (2013/2019) and B. Wurtz, “Kitchen Trees” (2018)
See “News acorns” in the Lincoln Squirrel (June 19, 2019). Also see the September 26 event with Milan below.
Coming up
Marren Hassinger, “Monument 3 (Standing Rectangle)” and “Monument 6 (Square)” (2018) — community installation on July 24–26 on the Entrance Lawn
Marren Hassinger’s “Monuments” envision a community coming together to create art with materials that surround us. Continuing her lifelong inquiry into the relationship of sculpture and nature, their installation requires volunteers to clean, braid, and insert branches within the wire structure of her large forms. The work will be completed in the park over the course of three days by visitors who sign up to volunteer in shifts (click here for details and registration). The artist will be on site to assist in the installation on July 26.
PLATFORM 25: Leeza Meksin, “Turret Tops” (2019) — coming August 19 to the South Lawn
For “Turrets Tops,” an original outdoor commission, Leeza Meksin will create two life-sized replicas of deCordova’s iconic museum building turrets in the park. Draping these towering conical forms with vibrantly colored neoprene, Meksin combines textile patterns and ornamental architectural details to articulate connections between the fashions we use to cover our bodies and the dwellings we inhabit. The installation encourages visitors to recognize assumptions about clothing and gender, architecture and ornament that filter into our daily lives.
Also see the August 24 workshop with Meksin below.
Related programs
Neoprene workshop with artist Leeza Meksin
Saturday, Aug. 24, 2–5 p.m.
Join PLATFORM artist Leeza Meksin for an all-ages outdoor workshop exploring neoprene, the popular fabric used for scuba gear, shape wear, mouse pads, and much more. Practice new ways of testing your creativity with different fabrics and learn more about Meksin’s new “Turret Tops” installation. Free with admission or membership; register online here.
Picnic and conversation with Wardell Milan
Thursday, Sept. 26, 12–1 p.m.
Join artist Wardell Milan for a picnic and conversation in the park, where we will channel the pastoral energy from his billboard commission “Sunday, Sitting on the Bank of Butterfly Hill.” Learn about Milan’s process and inspirational sources, from the modernist photographs by Henri Cartier-Bresson to Ralph Waldo Emerson’s essay “Nature.” Please bring your own lunch. Free with admission or membership; register online here.
Girl Scouts hit benchmark for community success

Proudly showing off their colorful bench are (left to right) Girl Scouts Lucy Dwyer, Courtney Mitchell, Marielle Soluri, and Rebecca Lupkas.
Lincoln Girl Scout Troop 82742 has installed a pair of six-foot-long benches at the Lincoln Mall shopping area after building them as part of a Silver Award project.
To earn the award, seventh-grade Girl Scouts Lucy Dwyer, Rebecca Lupkas, Courtney Mitchell, and Marielle Soluri adhered to a specific problem-solving regimen that includes identifying issues they care about, exploring the community to identify needs, finding areas where needs and cares overlap, and engaging stakeholders while developing a long term solution that is also sustainable.
The benches, made of materials generously donated by Concord Lumber, meet a community need that gives students a place to eat without interfering with other shoppers. Over the course of nine months, the Girl Scouts interviewed students, shopkeepers, landlords, and town officials about problems, researched various solutions, reviewed alternatives with these audiences and responded to feedback
During the construction process, they learned how to choose materials and waterproofing treatment, transfer design specifications to materials, use a radial arm saw and drills, fasten materials, and apply finishes. The award requires the project to consume more than 50 hours of effort each, which was easily surpassed.
The troop installed the benches at Lincoln Station and are continuing to work with the Rural Land Foundation to add additional bins for trash, recycling, and possibly compost as well as signage for the bins, which was also an identified need.
— Submitted by Carolyn Dwyer and Tara Mitchell, leaders of Troop 82742