• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to secondary sidebar

The Lincoln Squirrel – News, features and photos from Lincoln, Mass.

  • Home
  • About/Contact
  • Advertise
  • Legal Notices
    • Submitting legal notices
  • Lincoln Resources
    • Coming Up in Lincoln
    • Municipal Calendar
    • Lincoln Links
  • Merchandise
  • Subscriptions
    • My Account
    • Log In
    • Log Out
  • Lincoln Review
    • About the Lincoln Review
    • Issues
    • Submit your work

Restored sampler gives a glimpse of life in Lincoln 200 years ago

February 15, 2023

Former Town Clerk Susan Brooks unveils the restored sampler in Town Hall.

The Lincoln Town Hall is home to plenty of historically valuable documents — but until now, few if any of them were hand-stitched.

The Lincoln Town Archives and Lincoln Historical Society recently put on display a sampler created in 1826 by 13-year-old Sophia Adams. The artifact is in a climate-controlled case just down the hall from the Town Clerk’s office, and former Town Clerk Susan Brooks (one of those who was involved in the project) pulled the string at the official unveiling.

Samplers are pieces of embroidery worked in various types of stitching that were commonly created by girls and young women as a demonstration of their skills and perseverance. Many samplers are family registers, recording the births, marriages, and deaths in the life of a family. The Adams sampler was donated to the town in 2017 by Cynthia Williams, whose husband was a great-grandson of the young seamstress.

Sophia lived on Route 2A in Lincoln (the Battle Road) on what was then known as Foster’s farm, very close to the Paul Revere capture site. There were two houses on the property: one where the Smiths lived that’s still standing across from the end of Bedford Road; the other was a rental that became the Foster-Winship­-Adams residence where Sophia worked on her sampler, according to research done by Lincoln historians.

Sophia Adams’s sampler (click image to enlarge).

The names and dates give insight into the often-too-short lives of people in that era. It begins with the 1759 birth of Joseph Adams, a distant cousin of President John Adams, and lists his first marriage to Betsey Davis, who died at age 34, less than two weeks after her youngest son’s birth. Having five chil­dren to raise, Joseph married Rebecca Patch just over two years later. This was short-lived as Rebecca died within nine months. The sampler records that he then married Mehitable Hildreth, who bore him three children, the youngest being Sophia.

Mehitable died when Sophia was six, and Joseph was married for the last time in 1821 to Lincoln widow Lydia Winship (nee Wheeler), who may have taught So­phia to sew. Lydia owned the Foster property, which had been left to her on the death of her first husband, Benjamin Winship, in 1819. Winship had originally purchased the land from widow Catherine Louisa Smith, whose husband Captain William Smith was a younger brother of Abigail Adams, wife of the second President. Benjamin and Lydia Winship had only one daughter, also named Lydia, who died at age 16. All three of them have their final resting place at Meeting House Burial Ground behind Bemis Hall.

At 31.5 inches by 21.5 inches, the sampler is especially significant because it is quite large compared to other samplers of its time. Sophia’s silk stitching (which includes cross, satin, split stem and French knot stitches) was embroidered onto a particularly fine plain weave fabric with a plain weave cotton backing. Due to the fineness of the backing, unlike the coarser linen backing used on many samplers, this would have been especially chal­lenging for a 13-year-old to stitch.

“I’m rather amazed with the care and protection of this rather important textile, and I commend all of you for doing that. For me, it was a very unique piece,” said Deidre Windsor, who carried out the painstaking preservation. Among her other projects: restoring an 18th-century embroidered silk kerchief owned by the Old State House and Old South Meeting House that was damaged in a water leak.

When she first encountered the sampler, which had been hanging on the wall of the Williams home, “it was quite gray” from soil and dust, had some insect holes, and was attached to an acidic backing, Windsor said. The nearly translucent fabric was too delicate to withstand water, so the cleaning was done using a special type of vacuum cleaner and gentle sponging. Because the fabric was so thin, it was hard to keep in place while Sophia was sewing, “so her lines have a bit of a wiggle.” 

Lincoln voters approved a Community Preser­vation Act grant of $17,675 in 2017 to restore So­phia’s sampler and prepare it for public display at Town Offices, including framing it with mu­seum-quality UV filtering acrylic and building an archival box set into the wall with four preconditioned packets of silica gel to keep the air inside at 45% humidity.

Category: history 1 Comment

New Lincoln Public Schools superintendent chosen

February 15, 2023

Dr. Parry Graham (Photo by Kyle Chen, used by permission of the Wayland Student Press Network)

The School Committee has voted unanimously to enter into negotiations to hire Dr. Frank Parry Graham as Lincoln’s next Superintendent of Schools.

Graham currently serves as the Assistant Superintendent of the Wayland Public Schools, which he joined in 2018 (read a Wayland Student Press Network profile of him here). Previously, he was Nashoba Regional High School Principal in Bolton for five years and principal of the Lufkin Road Middle School in Wake County, N.C. for four years. He also taught German at North Andover (Mass.) High School. Graham holds a doctorate in educational leadership from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, a master of arts in teaching from Tufts University, and bachelor’s degree from Williams College

The PTO, LSF and MCC thanked everyone who assisted in the search:

“The Lincoln METCO Coordinating Committee, Lincoln PTO, and Lincoln School Foundation would like to thank all members of the LPS community who participated in the Superintendent search process. Notably, we are grateful for the countless hours our School Committee devoted to ensuring a thorough and transparent process that balanced many voices. We would also like to express our gratitude to Dr. Becky McFall for giving her successor big shoes to fill — and look forward to continued academic and social-emotional growth for our students and AIDE work together with our community under Dr. Parry Graham’s leadership.”

Kristen Ferris, MCC President
Liz Butler Everitt and Maria Miara, LSF co-chairs
Julianne Schwarzer, PTO chair


“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.

Category: schools Leave a Comment

Local hospice organization gets grant, seeks volunteers

February 15, 2023

Care Dimensions, the nonprofit organization that operates the hospice house in Lincoln, will hold online training classes for those interested in becoming. You can make a difference in a patient’s life by:

  • Engaging in a shared interest or hobby
  • Helping with letter-writing or life review
  • Visiting with your approved dog
  • Reading to the patient
  • Listening and by providing a supportive, comforting presence

Volunteers are resuming in-person visits with patients in their homes, in facilities, and at the hospice houses. Volunteers are provided all necessary personal protective equipment. If patient visits are not the right fit, you can volunteer in other ways, such as providing administrative office support or making check-in phone calls to current patients or bereaved family members.

The 16-hour training will be held via Zoom on Mondays and Wednesdays from 9–11 a.m. from March 13 through April 5 (register by March 3). For more information or to register, go to www.CareDimensions.org/volunteers or email volunteerinfo@CareDimensions.org.

Care Dimensions recently received a $25,800 grant from the Parmenter Foundation to fund several programs that help elevate social engagement, care, and support for hospice patients and their loved ones, including:

  • Uber Health Rides — Provides free, reliable transportation for residents of MetroWest whose loved ones are on Care Dimensions hospice service either at home or at the hospice house in Lincoln. This service ensures family caregivers, who do not drive or cannot afford a means of transportation, can visit their loved one who is on their end-of-life journey.
  • Mobile Integrated Health Program — For hospice patients experiencing urgent pain and symptom escalations during nights and weekends. This service allows for a quicker response time and management of symptoms therefore helping to reduce emergency room visits and hospitalizations.
  • Virtual Reality — Allows hospice patients to take virtual tours to places that are special to them or places they’ve wanted to visit but are no longer able to do so. These experiences help revive joyful memories, encourage life review, and create (or recreate) an experience a patient can share with loved ones. 
  • Pocketalkers — These hearing amplification devices help hearing-impaired hospice patients remain engaged with loved ones, personal interests, and their hospice team.

Category: charity/volunteer Leave a Comment

The Commons seeks to add 40 independent living units

February 14, 2023

In this map of The Commons campus, the proposed additional units are shown in yellow (click to enlarge).

Citing a long waiting list as well as the area’s aging demographics, The Commons in Lincoln is proposing to add 40 new independent living units along with more parking‚ but some current residents aren’t happy about the prospect. 

Because The Commons resides in a zoning overlay district with specific conditions, a two-thirds majority approval is required at Town Meeting next month for the plan to go forward. The Planning Board will hold a public hearing on Tuesday, Feb. 28 at 7 p.m. via Zoom. The agenda and Zoom link will be posted on the Planning Board schedule page. There will also be information sessions in the Lincoln Public Library’s Tarbell Room on Thursday, March 2 from 6–8 p.m. and two sessions on Thursday, March 9 (2–4 p.m. and 6–8 p.m.)

Owner’s representative OnePoint Partners submitted a detailed proposal to the Planning Board on February 6 that calls for 32 new apartments in the existing Flint and Russell buildings and eight freestanding and attached cottages at various locations on the campus. Six of the 11 new units in the Flint building would be designated as affordable housing to be rented at the 80% area median income threshold, increasing the total number of affordable units at The Commons to 14.

The plan also calls for a net addition of 56 parking spaces — 82 new surface spaces at cottages and 18 new garage spaces minus 44 spaces removed for construction. The Commons currently has 259 total units, which includes 90 units in the assisted living/memory care/skilled nursing area that opened in 2016. The current proposal “is the final phase of the complete build out of the Commons,” said Sarah Laffey, partner at OnePoint Partners. 

“I think we’re all terribly disappointed. It was like a coup,” said David Levington, a resident at The Commons. “They’re adding more units so we’ll have more people but no more facilities,” he added, saying there already isn’t enough gathering and activity space — a concern expressed by other residents as well. “They’re asking us to spend more time in our rooms.” 

“NELPC [New England Life Plan Communities, owners of The Commons] and the onsite management team of The Commons is working closely with the resident council and ensuring that residents’ questions and concerns are addressed,” Laffey said.

Rey LeBlanc, executive director at The Commons, was away and unavailable for comment this week. Several residents who praised his work noted that he was “in a difficult position” as the liaison between residents and the owners of the complex since the expansion was announced.

Benchmark Senior Living and a private equity firm sold The Commons in 2021 to NELPC, a nonprofit entity. The Groves in Lincoln, as it was called when it opened in 2010, was owned by the New England Deaconess Association and Masonic Health Systems of Massachusetts but had an occupancy rate of only 59% in 2013, when it filed for bankruptcy after defaulting on payment of $88.4 million in tax-exempt bonds. 

“While the Commons currently operates profitably, the expansion will provide further economies of scale by spreading operating costs over a greater number of units, which should ultimately serve to increase the financial stability of the community,” Laffey said. “As a not-for-profit, the improved financial benefit of this expansion will only serve to shore up The Commons’ own financial resources and strengthen its own financial condition and will not inure to the benefit of an outside owner or investor.” 

When NELPC became the owner, it entered into a long-term agreement with Benchmark Senior Living whereby Benchmark would continue in its role as the day-to-day manager of the operation of the Commons.

Lincoln will earn $1.33 million in property taxes from The Commons (Lincoln’s single largest taxpayer) on an assessed value of $92.8 million in fiscal 2023. In fiscal 2022, the assessed value of its property accounted for about 4% of the town’s total, according to the Assessor’s Office. Laffey said it was still unclear how much more tax money the town could expect from the expansion, though a coUrbanize website devoted to the project says projections show a net benefit for the town of more than $200,000 annually. Despite its not-for-profit status, The Commons will continue to pay property taxes, she added.

Voters must approve both the development plan and the amended North-Lincoln Planned Development District at Town Meeting, but the project also needs a signoff from the Planning Board, the Historic Commission (for demolition of a vacant house on the property), the Conservation Commission (to ensure compliance with wetlands laws), and the MassDEP (for approval of a groundwater discharge permit).

Assuming all the permits are acquired, it’s still unknown at this point when construction might take, how long it will last, or whether it will be done in stages or all at once, Laffey said.

Category: land use, seniors Leave a Comment

News acorns

February 13, 2023

Editor’s note: the first three items briefly appeared in News Acorns earlier, but due to a computer glitch, they disappeared from the Squirrel website so we’re posting them again, along with their accompanying calendar entries, which had also disappeared.

IDEA Committee forum

The Inclusion, Diversity, Equity & Antiracism (IDEA) Committee will hold a public forum on Thursday, Feb. 16 at 7 p.m. in the Lincoln School Learning Commons. Learn about the group’s work to date, plans for the coming year, and community engagement opportunities. This is a hybrid meeting, so you may join us in person or online over Zoom (passcode: 638410).

Film: “A Yak in the Classroom”

The Lincoln Library Film Society will show the Oscar-nominated “Lunana: A Yak in the Classroom” on Thursday, Feb. 16 at 6 p.m. in the library’s Tarbell Room. An aspiring singer living with his grandmother in the capital of Bhutan dreams of getting a visa to move to Australia. Dzongkha and English with subtitles.

Event on making your home greener

“How to Improve the Envelope of your Home,” the first presentation in the Getting to Zero series, will be led by Rachel White CEO of Byggmeister Design/Build, on Tuesday, Feb. 21 at 7 p.m. via Zoom. Learn how to make the walls, floors, roof and windows of you house more energy efficient. Click here to register. Other presentations in the series:

  • Upgrading Your Windows (February 28)
  • Go with Solar (March)
  • Getting to Zero: The Historical Home, presented by FoMA (March)
  • Install Heat Pumps (April)

The Getting to Zero series is presented by CFREE, a working group of Lincoln’s Green Energy Committee, to help residents affordably achieve energy-efficient, electrified, comfortable and healthy homes.

Library hosts kids’ events for school vacation week

Dance Party with Denise
Tuesday, Feb. 21 at 10 a.m.
Families will groove to children’s songs, oldies, and a few pop favorites. Best for ages 6 and under, but all kids who like to dance are welcome. Drop in.

The Awesome Robb Magic Show
Wednesday, Feb. 22 at 11 a.m.
The Awesome Robb Show is more than just a magic show; it’s a show that entertains everyone and will have you laughing right from the start. No registration necessary. Best for ages 4 and up but all are welcome.

The Case of the Haunted Hotel: An Escape Room Mystery
Wednesday, Feb. 22 at 5 p.m.
Join us for a fun Haunted Hotel Escape Room. For children ages 10-12. Please note: a caregiver (or older sibling) must attend. Registration required; email sfeather@minlib.net.

Buildwave: A Hands-on STEM Building Game
Thursday, Feb. 23 at 1 p.m.
Buildwave is a high-energy creative building event using over a dozen different building materials. The workshop features animations and music that guide kids through different building waves. Intended for kids in grades 1+. Registration required; email dleopold@minlib.net.

“Fort” Night at the Library
Thursday, Feb. 23 at 6 p.m.
Join us for a fun-filled night of making blanket forts in the library. Make sure to bring your own clean sheets and/or blankets. Pajamas encouraged. Bring a stuffed animal and a flashlight if you like. No registration necessary; All ages welcome.

Movies and Muffins
Friday, Feb. 24 at 10:30 a.m.
Join us to watch short film versions of classic picture books and enjoy muffins and juice. Intended for children ages 2+. No registration required.

For details, visit the Children’s Department web page.

Ash Wednesday at St. Anne’s

Please join the St. Anne’s community for an Ash Wednesday evening service on Wednesday, Feb. 22 from 7–8 p.m. on the threshold to the season of Lent. We welcome everyone from all walks of life and faith. For more information, visit stanneslincoln.org.

21-day challenge on inclusion, diversity, and equity

The Lincoln Public Schools have created a 21-day AIDE Challenge (Antiracism, Inclusion, Diversity and Equity) to deepen our community’s understanding of antiracism, inclusion, diversity and equity. While the challenge is meant for individual work, participation by groups and the whole community is ideal. AIDE recommends that groups meet several times during the 21-days challenge to consider, explore, and connect to what they are learning. WIDE Lincoln can help with general facilitation, targeted help connecting this work to your equity goals, answer questions, and provide guidance for navigating issues that arise within your organizational discussion during the 21 days. It can also help people who are not aligned with an organization for this purpose to join others in meeting. Please fill out this form to request assistance.

MMNHP talk on Concord’s role in the Revolution

The Friends of Minute Man National Park will host their winter lecture, “Minutemen Revisited: Rethinking Concord’s Role in the Revolution: A Conversation with Robert Gross and Friends,” on Sunday, Feb. 26 at 2 p.m. via Zoom. Gross will discuss his revised and expanded edition of The Minutemen and Their World in conversation with Joel Bohy, J.L. Bell, and Jim Hollister. Free; click here to register. The lecture is co-sponsored by the Friends of Minute Man and Minute Man National Historical Park and is also supported in part by a grant from the Concord Cultural Council, a local agency which is supported by the Mass Cultural Council, a state agency.

Scholarship and grant applications now being accepted

The Lincoln Scholarship Committee application is now open. Both merit-based and need-based scholarships and awards are available. The application deadline is March 31. More information on the various scholarships and awards as well as an application can be found on the Lincoln Scholarship Committee website.

The Lincoln Garden Club is offering project grants and its annual Gabrielle Brenninkmeyer Award. Examples of special projects that have received grants in the past include:

  • Hiring an intern to develop a native plant bed in Station Park
  • Providing funds to the town tree warden to plant the next generation of trees along Baker Bridge Road
  • A partnership with the Lincoln Public Library Board of Trustees to care for and propagate the iconic catalpa (“twisted tree”) growing in front of the library

The club has set aside up to $4,500 to fund grant proposals in the 2023-24 fiscal year. Grant applications must be sponsored by a Lincoln Garden Club member; collaboration on the proposal with other community groups is welcomed and encouraged. Click here to apply.

The $500 Brenninkmeyer award supports projects that further the club’s twofold mission of providing community service to the town of Lincoln and giving members the opportunity to enhance and share their knowledge of such garden-related topics as horticulture, design, conservation, and beautification. The award is open to any Lincoln resident or Lincoln Public Schools student. Click here to apply.

Category: acorns Leave a Comment

Area residents and officials protest Hanscom expansion proposal

February 12, 2023

The Hanscom Field expansion area is outlined in red. Lincoln’s approximate town border is indicated by the green dashed line.

Local officials and organizations are quickly rallying to fight a proposal that would add about 408,000 square feet of new hangar space and reconfigure a taxiway to accommodate larger aircraft at Hanscom Field.

At a February 6 public forum, the possibility of a “fuel farm” was also mentioned, according to the Bedford Citizen. The online meeting, which drew dozens of residents from area towns hosted by the office of the Massachusetts Environmental Policy Act (MEPA), took place just eight days before the public comment period closes.  

The Lincoln Select Board held a special meeting on February 10 to discuss a letter in opposition to the project. Mothers Out Front and the Hanscom Field Advisory Committee (HFAC) have also written letters against the idea, and other Lincoln groups such as the Green Energy Committee and the Planning Board are also expected to weigh in. 

State Sen. Mike Barrett, a key climate activist in the state legislature whose district includes the four Hanscom towns, also spoke out at the MEPA forum, the Bedford Citizen article said. “It is striking that in the middle of our attempt as a state to deal with an existential crisis, Massport is intent on building its private jet business,” he said.

“There is a climate change emergency and every effort must be made to phase out and not expand use of fossil fuels,” the HFAC noted in a letter to MEPA.

Mothers Out Front claimed that paving and construction will lead to more stormwater runoff, fewer carbon-storing plants, and stress to wildlife, wrote. “We believe [the proposal] represents an example of profits over people,” they wrote.

The project’s proponents say that additional hangar space will reduce the need for “ferry flights” to and from full Hanscom hangars to other storage areas, but the idea that “adding 90 football fields worth of space would reduce emissions from aircraft struck me as hard to believe,” said Select Board member Jim Hutchinson at Friday’s meeting.

The draft letter, which will go out early this week, listed 10 specific requests and areas of concern about the project. It asked for more information on current and projected traffic of both aircraft and ground vehicles at Hanscom Field, data on ferry flight frequency, destinations, and emissions; the flight paths, maximum size, and noise profiles of aircraft that an expanded airfield could accommodate; and details on the fuel farm, including the amount of fuel to be stored, the size and number of vehicles that would transport it, and how potential fuel spills will be handled.

The pandemic put a dent in many businesses, but jet operations at Hanscom are actually up by 19% since 2019, Massport noted at an October 20, 2022 meeting (total operations are down by 6% as recreational and pilot training operations continue to decline).

In one sign of the strength of the private jet business at Hanscom, Magellan Jets recently opened a dedicated passenger area in one of the airfield’s buildings. Business travel dropped during Covid-19 but private flights for leisure travel mostly made up for it; the pandemic “really opened everyone’s eyes to what’s available domestically” for private travel, said Anthony Tivnan, president of Magellan, whose fees start at $6,900 per hour for use of one of its eight-passenger planes.

“This is not about military flights that are defending our country, or commercial aviation — this is about private jets getting people to where they want to go,” Select Board member Jennifer Glass said.

“I feel like bigger things were planned that was being addressed at that listening session,” resident Miriam Stason said at the elect board meeting. Hutchinson agreed, saying, “Massport doesn’t usually make these plans without a bigger picture in mind.”

Another worry: larger and more frequent flights may involve planes taking off and landing at Hanscom at night. The fine for doing so is just $400, and it’s not legally possible to increase that amount.

Officials also noted that Hanscom expansion will most directly affect the environmental justice community in north Lincoln, which includes the Battle Road Farm development, where 48 of 120 units are designated as affordable housing.

Massport tried to expand Hanscom back in the mid-2000s, but cooperation among the four towns helped defeat that effort, said Sara Mattes, who was a Board of Selectmen member at the time. “We have to look at what worked and what didn’t work” from that time, she said. “This is just round one of a long trench warfare.”

Category: Hanscom Air Field, land use Leave a Comment

October “Toby” Frost, 1933–2023

February 8, 2023

Toby Frost

October (Toby) Cullum Frost was born March 10, 1933 in New Bedford, Mass., to Eugene and Clementine Cullum and died on January 22, 2023 in Acton, Mass.

Toby was a bright and lively child. She met her future husband, Wesley Towne Frost, when she was 10 (he noticed her riding her pony) and they stayed in touch over the years. As a teen, she attended the Northfield School for Girls and then went to Radcliffe College (and was delighted after the “non-merger merger” of Radcliffe and Harvard to learn that she now had a degree from Harvard). She earned two master’s degrees — a master’s in education from Harvard and a master of arts in German from Middlebury College. Education was quite important to her. 

Toby and Wes married in 1955 and moved to the land that Wes owned as part of the Scott Nearing intentional community in Jamaica, Vt. They had two sons, Arlo and Rainer, and moved to Cambridge, Mass., and then Putney, Vt. Finally, in 1964, they settled in a small farmer’s cottage on land in what was then rural Lincoln, Mass. Wes and his sons built a home around the cottage that Toby truly loved and lived in until her final illness.

Toby loved words. As a German and Spanish teacher at Woburn High School, she imparted the appreciation of other languages to her students and led a student trip to Germany and other countries. Toby loved to play with words, spelling them in funny ways or making them up. She found fun and humor in that — humor was essential, she would say, to a healthy life. At the same time, she was a stickler for grammar. She’d correct you when you were speaking or would be unable to focus on the gist of an important letter if it was poorly crafted. So it was a natural step, after leaving teaching, to pursue a career as a technical writer, eventually retiring from Digital Equipment Corp. (now Hewlett-Packard). For several years after retiring, she contributed articles to the Lincoln Journal, sharing her views on current events.

Toby cared deeply about progressive issues. She was particularly focused on prison reform and believed deeply in the potential of restorative justice. She supported issues related to global peace, including nuclear disarmament, antiwar movements, and negotiation and communication across political divides. She also cared about the health of the planet and how we treat it. Her interests were wide ranging. She loved to read newspapers, especially the Boston Globe, and magazines from a variety of sources.

The oldest of four, Toby loved her sisters Holly, Mercy, and Merry and worked to help out their families over the years. Her nieces, in particular, note the positive influences she had in their lives.  Toby leaves behind her sons Arlo and his wife Stephanie, and Rainer and his wife Martha; her grandchildren Brendan, Riordan, Andrew, Annette, Kate and Henry; and her great-grandchildren, Imogen (Brendan), Arabella (Andrew), Oliver (Annette), and Theodosia (Kate).

A memorial service will be held in the spring in Lincoln. In lieu of flowers, Toby requested that donations be made to the charity of your choosing in her memory. The family would like to thank the staff of Atrius/Harvard Vanguard Concord, Mass General Oncology, Emerson Hospital, Life Care Center of Acton, and New England Hospice for their excellent care and support of Toby during this final illness.

Arrangements under the care of Concord Funeral Home, which provided this obituary.

Category: obits Leave a Comment

Property sales in December 2022

February 7, 2023

(Editor’s note: This was originally posted on February 6 but disappeared due a server hiccup.)

140 Lincoln Rd., Unit 11 — Catherine Dyl to Dilla Tingley for $485,000 (December 28)

2 Bedford Rd. — Geraldine H. Lattimore Trust to Ariane Liazos Revocable Trust for $955,000 (December 18)

11 Oak Meadow — Mark Hurrie to john and Mary Wakeman for $1,475,000 (December 15)

259 Old Concord Rd. — Sandra N. Bradlee Trust to Lakeside Trust for $3,000,000 (December 15)

133 Lincoln Rd. — Martin J. Powers Trust to Thomas Bray and Linda Micu for $700,000 (December 15)

29 Birchwood Lane — Karen M. Moss to Lloyd and Ann Rapoport for $855,000 (December 8)

167 Lexington Rd. — Constitution Properties LLC to Joseph and Meghan Sullivan for $1,200,000 (December 5)

124 Lexington Rd. — James F. Cunningham trust to Lachezar Ranchev and Maya Gotova for $900,000 (December 5)

0 Cambridge Turnpike and 3 Red Maple Lane — Brian P. Cassidy Trust to Vladimir Trostteanetchi and Liubov Nedzelscaia for a total of $495,000 (December 1)

Category: land use Leave a Comment

My Turn: Nicholson seeks votes for Planning Board

February 7, 2023

By Craig Nicholson

My name is Craig Nicholson, and I am a candidate for one of the two open seats on the Lincoln Planning Board in the upcoming election on March 27.  As a resident of Lincoln since 2013 along with my wife and three daughters, I would consider it a privilege to serve the town in this capacity.  

In my professional career as director of operations for a real estate development consultancy, I spend my days working closely with building owners, architects, designers, planners, and contractors in carrying out our clients’ vision for their projects. I am accustomed to working with a variety of stakeholders including abutters and municipal agencies, and I feel that this experience would serve me well in assisting the Town of Lincoln’s Planning Board in carrying out its mission and critically evaluating those proposals that come before it.

Additionally, as a member of the Lincoln School Building Committee and former lead of Washington Gateway Main Street (an organization that worked closely with residents, landowners, developers and businesses along the Washington Street corridor in Boston’s South End neighborhood), I understand the importance of hearing a range of community voices to inform planning direction within a community. Lincoln, in particular, has highly active residents who want to be heard, and I believe my experience in participatory community planning makes me an ideal candidate to join the Planning Board. My practical experience in development furthers my ability to support Lincoln in this capacity. 

I am excited by the opportunities Lincoln is faced with in strategic planning for our future. I see tremendous opportunities for our community to collectively roll up our sleeves and continue to work together on our path forward on the Housing Choice Act, the impacts of climate change, the changing dynamics in retail, the proposed expansion of Hanscom Field, improvements to our transportation network, and a desire for long-term affordable living in Lincoln.

I hope that you will find me uniquely qualified to work with you and on your behalf as a member of the Planning Board for the next three years as we carefully move our way forward preserving the Lincoln we know while thoughtfully planning the Lincoln of the future.

I welcome hearing from you to listen to your opinions and answer any questions you have about where I’d like to see the town head. I hope through my experience, knowledge of Lincoln, and passion for impactful planning to earn your support on March 27.

If you’re further interested in my experience, the following summarizes my background:

  • I hold a master’s in urban and environmental policy and planning (UEP) from Tufts University, which I obtained in 2008. The UEP program is a hybrid planning program which combines traditional planning with a focus on social justice and sustainability — a focus I believe aligns well with the pulse of Lincoln.
  • For over 15 years, I have worked in the development industry and currently manage the operations of Ajax Consulting Services, LLC, a real estate consultancy that oversees large renovation and construction projects across the country. As director of operations, I oversee project planning, scheduling, budgeting and implementation for the firm. Projects range in size from small tenant fit-out projects and mechanical projects with budgets starting in the $50K range to large renovation and ground up construction projects with budgets of $70M plus. Earlier in my career, I worked as an environmental consultant overseeing site assessments, soil testing and air quality investigations as well as longer term remediation projects.
  • I currently serve as an associate member of the Lincoln Planning Board, where I was initially appointed by the Planning Board and Board of Selectmen in 2018. As an associate member, the chair of the Planning Board may designate me to sit on the board for the purpose of acting on a special permit application in the case of absence, inability to act, or conflict of interest on the part of any member of the Planning Board or in the event of a vacancy on the board. I was reappointed to this position in 2021. I also served as a member of the South Lincoln Planning Implementation Committee from 2017 to 2020 as a member of both the Placemaking and Village Planning and Zoning teams.
  • I have served as a member of the Lincoln School Building Committee since 2017, demonstrating my deep commitment to serving the interests of our town, dedicating significant time and energy to ensure we were able to deliver on this complex multi-year effort. With the winding down of the School Building Committee in 2023, I am able to redirect this capacity to the Planning Board.
  • In addition to service in Lincoln, my past municipal experience includes volunteer service on the Town of Hanson Conservation Commission and president of the board for Washington Gateway Main Street, an organization that worked closely with residents, landowners, developers and businesses, along the Washington Street corridor in Boston’s South End neighborhood, to implement the long-term planning vision aimed at creating a sustainable mix of housing, commercial, and office uses in the district.

“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.

Category: My Turn Leave a Comment

Upcoming town election has crowded ballot in two races

February 7, 2023

(Editor’s note: This list was updated on March 10, 2023.)

The nomination papers are in, and two of the races — School Committee and Planning Board — each have four candidates running for two seats.

On the School Committee slate, incumbent Tara Mitchell is stepping down and Adam Hogue is running for reelection, but newcomers Peter Buchthal, Jacob Lehrhoff, and Matina Madrick are also in the running. Lynn DeLisi and Robert Domnitz are hoping to retain their seats on the Planning Board, but Mark Levinson and Craig Nicholson will be on the ballot as well.

The annual town election takes place on Monday, March 27 from 7:30 a.m. until 8 p.m. in the Reed Gym. The last day to submit a vote-by-mail application or absentee ballot application is Monday, March 20. For more information, call the Town Clerk’s office at 781-259-2607.

Board or CommitteeOpenings/termsIncumbent(s)
Board of AssessorsOne (three years)Ellen Meadors*
Board of Health
One (three years)Frederick L. Mansfield*
Board of SelectmenOne (three years)Kim Bodnar
Cemetery CommissionOne (three years)Manley Boyce*
Commissioners of Trust FundsOne (three years)D. Paul Fitzgerald*
Housing CommissionTwo (three years and two years)Julie Brogan (2-year)
Neil Feinberg (3-year)
ModeratorOne (three years)Sarah Cannon Holden*
Lincoln-Sudbury Regional District School CommitteeTwo (three years each)Ravi Simon (Sudbury)
Lucy Maulsby (Lincoln)
Parks and Recreation CommitteeOne (three years)Robert Stringer*
Planning BoardTwo (three years each)Lynn DeLisi*
Mark Levinson
Craig Nicholson
School CommitteeTwo (three years each)Peter Buchthal
Adam Hogue*
Jacob Lehrhoff
Matina Madrick
Trustees of BemisOne (three years)Rachel Marie Schachter
Water CommissionThree (one for three years, one for two years, one for one year)• Patrick Lawler (1-year term)
• Matthew Bio (interim, running for 3-year term)
• Steve Gladstone (interim, running for 2-year term)

* incumbent running for reelection

Category: elections, government Leave a Comment

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 76
  • Page 77
  • Page 78
  • Page 79
  • Page 80
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 437
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Recent Posts

  • Legal notice: Select Board public hearing (Goose Pond) May 14, 2025
  • News acorns May 13, 2025
  • Wentworth named acting chief of police May 13, 2025
  • Police Chief Sean Kennedy arrested on domestic violence charges May 12, 2025
  • Police log for April 26 – May 8, 2025 May 11, 2025

Squirrel Archives

Categories

Secondary Sidebar

Search the Squirrel:

Privacy policy

© Copyright 2025 The Lincoln Squirrel · All Rights Reserved.