Due to a typographical error, an incorrect phone number for OARS was given in the March 12 edition of News Acorns. The correct number to call for more information about the Wild & Scenic Film Festival on March 27 is 978-369-3956.
Town seeks about $2 million for capital, community preservation items
A new roof for the Hartwell building and an irrigation system for the playing field next to the Codman Pool make up about half of the dollars requested from the Capital Planning Committee (CapComm) and the Community Preservation Committee (CPC). The items will be put to a vote in three warrant articles at Town Meeting on March 23.
A new roof for the Hartwell building will cost $600,000, comprising the lion’s share of the $875,898 requested by CapComm (see full list below). The CPC is seeking $826,306 for a list of items for recreation, housing, and historic preservation purposes (see below), plus another appropriation of up to $400,000 for the irrigation system. Because that item is large and requires more explanation, it’s been put into a separate warrant article, Parks and Recreation Department Dan Pereira said.
The town eventually plans to install irrigation systems in all of its athletic fields, but it’s starting with Codman field because it’ll be the only one available on campus during the upcoming school renovation project and will thus be very heavily used, Pereira noted. (The central ballfield will be occupied by temporary classrooms, while the field behind Smith will be a construction zone.)
- See a draft of irrigation FAQs from the Parks and Recreation Department
Parks and Rec is asking for up to $400,000, but the actual cost next year may be significantly less than that — it all depends on the water supply that’s found. Engineers have identified several sites on the campus that look promising, but the exact yield of water won’t be known until well-drilling starts.
If a well site close to the Codman field yields enough water for that field and no more, the immediate cost might be only $200,000, Pereira said. If the well doesn’t produce enough water to irrigate on demand, there would be an added cost of about $100,000 for an underground holding tank where water can accumulate.
On the other hand, engineers might locate a single well site that could supply enough water for all the fields. In that case, a larger underground tank would be needed at an additional cost of about $200,000 — but there would be no further costs down the road for digging a second well.
“We would only spend that $400,000 if we got a great opportunity to save a ton of money later,” Pereira said.
Officials considered using town water but rejected the idea because of cost. The Water Department charges a fee for providing water that’s treated to make it safe for drinking — an unnecessary expense for irrigation water. “If we were paying annual water bills, our budget would be destroyed,” Pereira said. Drilling a well is a one-time expense, and Parks and Rec would pay only for electricity and occasional maintenance in the future.
The department uses town water to moisten the clay tennis courts on the south side of the campus so they don’t dry and dissolve, “but a ballfield needs an inch a week — that’s a mammoth amount of water” in comparison, he said.
After the new Wang field opens this spring and the school project is finished, the town will have enough fields to be able to take one out of service each year to let it rest and let the annual application of grass seed take hold. Having the fields irrigated will also greatly improve the quality of the grass.
To avoid wasting water, moisture sensors in the soil will trigger the irrigation system so the fields get water only when needed, and not in the heat of the day, Pereira said.
Capital Planning Committee requests
Capital item | Cost | |
---|---|---|
A | New pickup truck for the Department of Public Works | $42,000 |
B | Replacing outdated mobile radios for the Fire Department | $14,000 |
C | Updating the Council on Aging phone system | $6,500 |
D | Facilities condition assessment at the library | $30,000 |
E | New Kubota tractor for Lincoln-Sudbury Regional High School | $6,897 |
F | Replacing marked police cruiser #1 | $37,063 |
G | Replacing marked police cruiser #2 | $41,938 |
H | Phase 1 of the public safety radio communications project | $37,500 |
I | Replacing the roof on the Hartwell building | $660,000 |
TOTAL: | $875,898 |
Community Preservation Committee requests
(click here for a detailed explanation of each item)
CPA project | Category | Cost | |
---|---|---|---|
A | Debt service payment for the town offices renovation project | Historic preservation | $386,275 |
B | Replacing the Codman Farm Barn B, C, and office roofs | Historic preservation | $110,000 |
C | Rental assistance program for residents at risk | Community housing | $30,000 |
D | Preservation of First Book of Records 1754-1806 | Historic preservation | $20,825 |
E | Repair the headwall over the culvert on the Pierce House property | Historic preservation | $6,000 |
F | A new water chemistry controller system for the Codman Pool | Recreation | $42,500 |
G | Debt service payments due on permanent borrowing for previously voted CPA projects | — | $127,550 |
H | Community Preservation Committee administrative expenses | — | $3,000 |
SUBTOTAL: | $726,150 | ||
I | Housing reserve | $100,158 | |
GRAND TOTAL: | $826,308 |
News acorns
Lincoln middle schoolers perform “Guys and Dolls Jr.”
Considered by many to be the perfect musical comedy, “Guys and Dolls” is set in Depression-era New York City and follows the overlapping adventures of a group of gangsters, gamblers, showgirls, and mission workers. Performances are Wednesday, March 13 at 3 p.m. and Thursday and Friday, March 14–15 at 7 p.m. in the Donaldson Auditorium. Appropriate for all ages; best suited for 8+. Tickets available at the door ($10 for adults, $5 for students and seniors).
Learn about life at the high school
“Life at L-S,” a parent-to-parent conversation about the 8th-to-9th-grade transition with Lincoln School Principal Sharon Hobbs and L-S veteran parents and administrators, will take place on Monday, March 18 (rescheduled from two previous dates due to snow) from 7–8:30 p.m. in the Hartwell multipurpose room. The program will focus on extracurricular elements of a busy high-schooler’s life so families have contextual knowledge prior to the L-S course selection process in March.
Woolapalooza coming to Drumlin Farm
Celebrate the coming of spring with Woolapalooza — Mass Audubon Drumlin Farm Wildlife Sanctuary‘s annual festival featuring fiber, food, and fun — on Saturday, March 30 from 10 a.m.–4 p.m. Visitors can meet new baby animals, shop local artisans, explore the sanctuary, and learn the history of wool and sheep. Festival highlights include
- Sheep-shearing demonstrations
- Sheep-herding with border collies (weather permitting)
- A “sheep-to-sweater” interpretive trail — learn how wool becomes yarn and make a craft to take home
- Homemade lamb and vegetarian chili for additional purchase
- Local artisans demonstrating and selling handmade products
The event takes place rain or shine (or in light snow). No advance ticket purchase; walk-ins only. Tickets are $15 for Mass Audubon members, $17 for nonmembers, free for children under age 2. Parking is limited—please arrive close to 10 a.m. or after 12:30 p.m. for a better chance to get a spot.
News acorns
L-S Pops Concert on Thursday
The L-S Music Department presents its annual Pops Concert on Thursday, March 14 at 7:30 p.m. in the L-S auditorium. Performing groups include the orchestra, concert band, symphonic band, concert choir and more. The concert will feature the combined music ensembles performing “The Circle of Life” under the direction of new orchestra director Kyung-Nam Oh. Free and open to the public.
11th annual Wild & Scenic Film Festival on tap
OARS, a nonprofit that works to protect, improve and preserve the Assabet, Sudbury, and Concord Rivers, their tributaries and watersheds, is hosting an evening of award-winning films from the largest environmental film festival in the nation on Wednesday, March 27 from 7–10 p.m. (doors open at 6:15 p.m.) in Maynard’s Fine Arts Theatre Place (19 Summer St.). Enjoy fabulous film making, gorgeous cinematography and wonderful storytelling that celebrates the wild and fragile beauty of our environment, the animals and plants that populate it and the people that work to protect and preserve it. Tickets are $15; buy online at oars3rivers.org as seats sell out every year. Questions? Call OARS at 978-369-3956 or email office@oars3rivers.org.
Recycle electronics and support L-S softball
The L-S softball program and Friends of Lincoln-Sudbury Softball (FOLSS) is sponsoring an electronics recycling fundraiser on Saturday, March 30 from 9 a.m.–2 p.m. at Chiswick Park (490 Boston Post Rd., Sudbury). Safely dispose of electronics such as computer equipment, office equipment, and small appliances/electronics. Large appliances and items containing chemicals/hazardous waste materials cannot be accepted. Questions? Email FriendsofLSSoftball@gmail.com.
Mushroom-growing seminar offered
Want to learn how to grow mushrooms? The Lincoln Agricultural Commission is sponsoring a seminar on the cultivation of edible mushrooms on Thursday, April 4 at 7 p.m. in Bemis Hall, Lincoln. Elizabeth Almeida, owner of Fat Moon Farm, will discuss small-scale commercial mushroom farming of a variety of fungi species. Her presentation will be followed by a workshop led by Lincoln’s Louise Bergeron demonstrating techniques for growing shiitake mushrooms in inoculated wood logs in your backyard.
Screening of “Lucky” coming up
The Lincoln Library Film Society will screen “Lucky” (2017, not rated) on Thursday, April 4 at 6 p.m. in the library’s Tarbell Room. Directed by John Carroll Lynch and starring Harry Dean Stanton, David Lynch, Ron Livingston, Ed Begley Jr., and Tom Skerritt, the movie follows the spiritual journey of a 90-year-old atheist, and the quirky characters that inhabit his off-the-map desert town. Free and open to all.
Help tidy up Battle Road Trail
On Saturday, April 6, join fellow volunteers for Park Day 2019 at Minute Man National Historical Park and assist with landscape rehabilitation along the Battle Road Trail. Activities include removing invasive plants, raking leaves, and improving trails to prepare for commemorative tactical demonstrations and reenactments. The day will start at 9 a.m. in the Minute Man Visitor Center (3113 Marrett Rd., Lexington). The park will provide tools, safety gear, and a free T-shirt for the first 100 registrants, and refreshments, as well as an overview of the site’s history.
DeCordova prepares for 2019 Biennial opening

One of the pieces that will be featured in the deCordova Biennial: Eva Lundsager, “Invitation 29” (2018). Photo by Clements Photography and Design.
The deCordova and Museum building is temporarily closed as it installs deCordova New England Biennial 2019, which opens on April 5. The exhibition will feature works of art and newly commissioned installations by 23 New England-based artists, showcasing the dynamism, variety, and quality of art making in the region.
Featuring work across diverse media including painting, sculpture, video, photography, fiber art, and ceramics, the Biennial will occupy all galleries of the museum and extend into the Sculpture Park with new site-specific commissions. It will be on view through September 15, 2019. An accompanying publication and a full slate of public programming and performances will enrich the show’s presentation.
The 2019 deCordova Biennial artists are Mildred Beltré, William Binnie, Bradley Borthwick, Jenny Brillhart, Eli Brown, Carl D’Alvia, Anoka Faruqee and David Driscoll, Ken Grimes, Yoav Horesh, Erin Johnson, George Longfish, Eva Lundsager, Jonathan Mess, Zoe Pettijohn Schade, Jordan Seaberry, Alexandria Smith, Sheida Soleimani, Emilie Stark-Menneg, Chanel Thervil, Stephen Tourlentes, Elizabeth Tubergen, and Bhakti Ziek.
Exhibition organizers are Sarah Montross, curator; Sam Adams, Koch curatorial fellow; Elizabeth Upenieks, curatorial assistant; Martina Tanga, former Koch curatorial fellow; and Scout Hutchinson, former curatorial assistant.
While the museum building is closed, the deCordova is offering half-price admission to the Sculpture Park. The museum will reopen April 5 when the Biennial goes on view to the public, but the Cafe and Store will be open daily with normal hours during this time.
Obituaries

Theresa Panetta
Jennie Ciraso, 95 (February 24) — click here for obituary.
Richard Norcross Close, 95 (February 23) — click here for obituary.
Theresa Panetta (February 21) — click here for obituary.
Richard Johnson, 81 (January 31) — click here for obituary.
John Lee, 79 (January 29) — click here for obituary.

Richard Johnson

John Lee
Fleeting crystals (Lincoln Through the Lens)
Play highlights Lincoln woman’s role in American Revolution

Palmer Faran holds a copy of “Heroine of the Battle Road.”
A newly digitized short play, available royalty-free on a town website, dramatizes the little-known role of Lincoln’s Mary Hartwell in the dramatic events that began the American Revolution.
The idea for the play, Heroine of the Battle Road, came about “because I’ve always been interested in the lives of ordinary people caught up in the events of history—those who fell through the cracks. Ordinary people were an important part of that,” said author and Lincoln resident Palmer Faran.
Mary Hartwell was the wife of Samuel Hartwell, a farmer and a Lincoln Minute Man. On the evening of April 18, 1775, she played a crucial role in passing the word about the British troops marching from Boston. Fast-forward to the early 1990s, when Mary Ann Hales suggested to her friend Faran, a veteran of Houghton Mifflin and American Heritage, that she write something about Mary.
After doing some research with the help of Lincoln town historian Jack MacLean, Faran realized there wasn’t enough material for a biography of Hartwell, so she wrote the story as a short play that could be read and performed in schools. Hales — a librarian and the owner of the Cottage Press in Lincoln — published Heroine of the Battle Road as paperback in 1995. The play was carried by the Minute National Historical Park and by several stores in Concord and Lincoln.

The cover of “Heroine of the Battle Road.”
In 1996, the play was performed at the Lincoln School, “and it was very much a successful community effort,” Faran said. Eventually the book went out of print, and work began on making it available to a larger audience via an online version. Jim Cunningham (like Faran, a Lincoln Historical Society board member, scanned illustrations and formatted the book (retyped by Celina Zanjewski) for the LHS website.
On Patriots’ Day in April, people will once again recall how Paul Revere was captured in Lincoln — but they can also learn how Mary Hartwell was a crucial link in the chain, warning Lincoln Minute Men Captain William Smith about the advancing British as her husband rode off to prepare for the coming fight.
As Mary Hartwell’s grandson George proudly notes in Heroine of the Battle Road, “The Lincoln Minute Men were the first to arrive at Concord and the North Bridge. That was because of Grandma.”
Clarification

I heart birds (Lincoln Through the Lens)

A bluebird seems to keep watch while some goldfinches grab a bite. Photo by Tricia Deck.
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.