The annual New Year’s Day gala at the Pierce House was a Lincoln tradition that seemed to be a no-go this time around—but it’s back by popular demand.
The Pierce Property Committee announced last week that it was canceling the open house scheduled for Jan. 1, 2018 due to unforeseen budget constraints. For the previous 23 years, Richard and Susan Silver, the house’s former caretakers, organized the event and started making and freezing home-made soups for weeks in advance to serve hundreds of Lincolnites who gathered to mark the first day of each new year.
During the Silvers’ long tenure, there were very few improvements in the caretaker’s upstairs living quarters, so the committee spent $35,000 on work to renovate that area and bring it up to code for new caretaker Nancy Beach, who arrived last winter. They also had to pay the Silvers $11,000 for accrued vacation time, said committee chair Terry Green.
But this year’s announced cancellation caused a wave of consternation among residents who expressed dismay on the LincolnTalk email list and offered to pitch in with food and labor to make it happen. “Lincoln is stepping up to the plate and wants the party,” said Green, who talked to Town Administrator Tim Higgins ask about possible alternative funding sources.
On Monday evening, Green reported that “town officials are on board for the celebration” and funding was “a work in progress.” The Ogden Codman Trust is expected to contribute, and the Lincoln Family Association has also offered to help. The fallback plan is to do the entire event as a potluck; though this would probably be permitted in some fashion by the Board of Health, the logistics would be formidable, Green noted.
Green warned that the event will be different than in the past, with catered food rather than home-made soup and alcohol still a question mark. However, organizers are not considering charing admission to defray expenses. “We think it’s important to have a celebration that everyone can come to without regard to cost,” she said.
Previous New Year’s events at the Pierce House cost about $7,000 in addition to the Silvers’ donated labor to make the soups. Soup and labor provided by entirely a caterer would cost about $10,000, so the menu will probably be a departure from tradition as well, Green said.
[…] First Day at the Pierce House attracted dozens of Lincolnites of all ages on January 1, overcoming an earlier danger of cancellation. […]