Thanksgiving pie purchases benefit L-S teachers
FELS (the Foundation for Educators at L-S) announces its annual Thanksgiving pie fundraiser. Get a gourmet home-baked pie while supporting summer enrichment grants for teachers and staff. Apple, pumpkin, pecan and chocolate pies are $18. Order for your family or donate to a listed local organization or charity (one donation of $18 can benefit two organizations). Order online at www.felsgrant.org. Note: pies must be ordered by November 4 due to an apple shortage from the drought.
Learn about Wheeler Farm, RLF roots
A presentation titled “‘So Much Then Remains for Us to Do’: Lincoln’s Wheeler Family and Farm–Roots of the Rural Land Foundation” will take place on Sunday, Oct. 23 at 2 p.m. at The Commons (please use the Route 2 entrance). Thoreau was moved to express these words by the death of his Harvard roommate, Charles Stearns Wheeler of Lincoln. Town Historian Jack MacLean will give an overview of the Wheelers (a prominent early Lincoln family), their homes, and the development of their farmstead, and how a visionary approach to preserve that farm lead to the formation of the Rural Land Foundation.
There will also be a tour of the Wheeler Homestead and its historic farm setting on Saturday, Nov. 5 from 1-3 p.m. and a reception from 2-5 p.m. at the Pierce House. The homestead, now under a historic preservation restriction, was previously owned by the Marsh family and is now the home of Kathryn and Christopher Boit. Members of the Historic District Commission will be on hand to answer questions, as will contractors who did the restoration work on the house. Please park at the Pierce House; the Lincoln Historical Society will provide shuttle bus service to the Wheeler House and Farm from 12:25-4 p.m. Representatives of the Rural Land Foundation will be on hand to provide further information about the RLF’s history.
First Parish hosts speaker on immigration
The First Parish in Lincoln welcomes Professor Aviva Chomsky to its service on Sunday, Oct. 23 at 10 a.m. at the Parish House (14 Bedford Rd.). An expert on immigration in the U.S., Chomsky (a professor of history and coordinator of Latin America, Latino and Caribbean Studies at Salem State University) will speak about the moral and spiritual dimensions of migration. She will also lead a question-and-answer session from 11:30 a.m. to 12:15 p.m.
Chomsky’s academic interests include the Cuban revolution, northern Columbia’s coal industry, and immigration in the United States. She is the author of Undocumented: How Immigration Became Illegal. Her visit precedes a congregational mission trip to the Arizona/Mexico border from November 12-18.