Monthly Archives: February 2012

Vine Lake Preservation Trust monthly emails are fascinating (copy attached)

Header Winter
February 2012
Hello Pete, 

February.  First there’s chocolate, and flowers, even diamonds, and Presidents…but then there’s something that lasts longer than any of these, often proving itself richer: engagement with the humanities and culture.  In a month about love, the Trust is unabashed in its affection for things that make us think, question, discover.  Treat yourself to any of these opportunities……….chocolate optional.

A Surprising Connection to Vine Lake Cemetery

Local Author to Include Story of Unsung Resident

 

General Joseph WarrenJoseph Warren was a hero of the early Revolutionary period – the author of the Suffolk Resolves, the person who sent Paul Revere on that famous ride, and the hero of the Battle of Bunker Hill. At the time of his demise, he was a widower and father of four, the youngest of whom was just 3 years old. He was betrothed to Miss Mercy Scollay, an unsung Daughter of Liberty. Learn about this tragic romance, Miss Mercy’s patriotic poetry, her interactions with leading Patriots and long life as an unofficial widow.

Samuel Forman, author of the newly published Dr. Joseph Warren: The Boston Tea Party, Bunker Hill, and the Birth of American Liberty, will share new discoveries about Miss Scollay, a most distinguished and unrecognized Medfield resident.

Learn more about this endearing couple at a March 5th program sponsored by the Medfield Historical Society.

What Makes Vine Lake Cemetery Special

Photo Galleries Provide New Perspectives

Vine Lake Cemetery is first and foremost a cemetery.

 

In addition, it is a National Historic Landmark, an outdoor museum, a peaceful and dignified open space, a repository of family history.

Using photo galleries in the Trust’s website, you can view the cemetery through a variety of perspectives.

History

Nature

Nesting With the Resting

A Sure Sign of Spring Albeit in Winter

Seen soaring above the Old Section on Friday morning, February 10th, was a Turkey Vulture.

 

So named for their featherless head, resembling a Wild Turkey, and their habit of sitting on the ground to eat, Turkey Vultures are migratory in nature but winter as far north as Connecticut.

 

They appear in Massachusetts in February and slowly make their way north for a summer spent wavering over farm fields and eating carrion or dead meat.  These birds have an acute sense of smell, reportedly being able to locate carcasses several miles away.

 

The Turkey Vulture’s return to our area is a sure sign that our days are getting warmer.  Watch the skies for these large birds; it is a better sign of spring than the iconic robin, a species now found year round in our backyards.

Celebrate Your Community
Introducing Medfield’s Cultural District Partners
 
The Trust will be one of the partners at the Thursday, March 1st gala at Medfield’s Memorial Public Library.  Plan to attend between 7 and 9pm for music, light refreshments, and activities.

Buried Treasure

Did You Know That…

…concrete is the worst product for preserving memorials?

For years  volunteers thought that concrete, a strong and lasting product, was the best solution for repairing marble memorials that were loose in their bases.  By adding a concrete collar above the base, the workers believed that a permanent solution was achieved.  Instead, this well-intended approach became a shortcut to disaster.

Concrete has two characteristics which make it unacceptable for cemetery preservation.  First, it is much harder than the marble it surrounds, not allowing any movement when the marble expands due to temperature. When the concrete acts as a vice grip around the memorial, the marble eventually cracks and then breaks and falls.

The second negative feature of concrete is that it attracts moisture. Water is constantly wicked to the marble which weakens its stability. Warm weather produces biological growth and cold weather produces ice, neither of which is desirable.

A solution might be to remove the concrete today to allow for industry-standard repairs; however, trying to chip away the harder concrete damages the softer marble because of the bond that was established. Any attempt will likely shatter the marble, and then a real mess has developed.

Today, in place of concrete, lime mortar is used to secure loose memorials in their bases.  This compound is softer than concrete and repels water.  The memorial is removed from its base, the socket is cleaned, a discrete bed of lime mortar is laid in the socket, and the memorial is reinserted with a small amount of mortar cushioning the memorial from its base.

You can easily see marble memorials in the Old Section which exhibit the incorrect use of concrete.  Our only solution is to recognize what was done before and to use today’s best practices for future preservation.

Preservation Projects Continue

Upcoming Season to Signal Next Initiative

 

The Trust’s Directors are currently establishing preservation plans for 2012. Their focus is on both volunteer and professional participation in a series of industry-standard preservation projects.  In addressing its long-term goal of sharing the cemetery with future generations, the Directors intend to be faithful stewards of funds contributed for that purpose in our recent and very successful direct mail campaign.  Thank you very much to our donors.

This photograph shows the exposed location of Elihu Chenery’s [1739 – 1807] slate memorial which broke at some date and then became covered with sod for many years. Its preservation will consist of excavating the bottom part, epoxying the two pieces, erecting it in the proper location, and cleaning.

Medfield’s Other Art Gallery On Display

Preeminent Scholar of Gravestone Carvers to Speak
Vincent Luti, a widely-known and highly-respected researcher of southeastern Massachusetts’ 18th century gravestone carvers, will collaborate with Rob Gregg to conduct a presentation at the April 2nd meeting of the Medfield Historical Society.  Our focus will be the slate carvers in the Old Section. More details will follow in the March newsletter.

Epitaphagram

A Monthly Chronicle of Inscriptions
                   “Death rides in every passing breeze,
                     He lurks in every flower,
                     Each season has its own disease,
                     Its peril every hour.
                     Turn, reader, turn, thy danger know,
                     Wher e’er thy foot can tread,
                     The earth rings hollow from below,
                     And warns thee of her dead.”
This inscription is on the memorial  to David Onion, son of David and Caroline (Morse) Onion, who died October 22, 1827 in his 39th year. [Section A-4, Grave 47]
Note:  Only the first line of this inscription remains above ground; the remaining 7 lines are now below grade.  The source for this complete inscription is the 1899 Catalog of Inscriptions.

Photograph Credits in This Issue
Vine Lake Preservation Trust, Daily Bird New England, Harvard School of Public Health, Edmund Prescottano

Comments, Questions, Ideas…?

…are always welcome; click to reply, and thank you.  Volunteers are always appreciated for projects in beautification, preservation, education, and research.
February Features
* A Surprising Connection
* Photo Galleries
* A Sure Sign of Spring
* Celebrate Your Community
* Buried Treasure
* Preservation Projects Continue
* Medfield’s Other Art Gallery
* Epitaphagram
Quick Links
 
 
Discover more about
 
 

Please Forward

 

You are invited to forward  Quiet Voices to your friends.  In turn they can sign up to be on our mailing list.

 

 Thank you
Forward this email to a Friend

Mahuman Hinsdale magnet

Upcoming Features
+ A Luminary Walk

 

+ Mail-Order Memorials
 
Third in a Series: The Landscape Lawn Gravescape

+ A ‘Walk Among the Shadows’

 
+ More about Medfield’s Other Art Gallery
 
+  A Walking Tour on Causes of Death in Early Medfield Citizens
 
+ A Walking Tour  to Highlight Medfield’s Ethnic Diversity
 
+ Present Homeowners Meet Earlier Homeowners at the Cemetery
 
+ Higher Education Today, Vine Lake Cemetery,  and the Ellis Family Legacy


Art Exhibit 

Upcoming Events – Winter & Spring 2012 

 

March 1, Thursday, 7 to 9pm 

Memorial Public Library, 468 Main Street, Medfield

 

March 5, Monday, 7:30 to 9pm

First Parish Unitarian Church, 26 North Street, Medfield

 

April 2, Monday, 7:30 to 9pm
First Parish Unitarian Church, 26 North Street, Medfield
More information to be posted in the March newsletter.
 
April 14, Saturday, 9am to 12 noon

Spring Cleaning
Bring your lawn rake for clean-up in the Old Section.

 

April 16, Monday (Patriots’ Day), 10am to 12 noon 

Kick-off Event for the Self-Guided Walking Tour Map
More information to be posted in the March newsletter.
Contact Information
Funding for Vine Lake Preservation Trust is provided by individual contributions like yours, support from local agencies and corporations, matching funds and grants, and admission fees from tours and workshops.  The Trust is registered with the IRS as a 501 (c)(3) public charity allowing your contribution to be tax-exempt.
 

Vine Lake Preservation Trust

P.O. Box 266
Medfield, MA 02052-0266

Website: www.vinelakepreservationtrust.org

Museums:  Museums.USA

Memo says it costs extra to store vehicles outdoors

Medfield Building and Planning Committee chair,Tom Erb, has circulated a memo prepared by Weston & Sampson, which states that the additional cost to store 30 DPW vehicles outdoors for their lifetime is $4 m.  More importantly, employee safety is also noted to be worse when vehicles are stored outside.

See the full memo at https://medfield02052.blog/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/20120221-ws-techmemovehiclestorage-1.pdf

Thermal imaging happened last night

Cynthia Greene of the Medfield Energy Committee reported in an email last night that Sagewell would be doing the thermal imaging of the town last night.  Cynthia was thoughtful enough to ask Sagewell to thermal image the three accessible sides of the Medfield Memorial Library – the MEC has recently had a detailed energy saving plan prepared for the library, which recommended first sealing the building shell.  Cynthia’s email follows –

“Pasi [of Sagewell]just called and said that there are 600 homes signed up for thermal imaging.   They will be driving the town streets tonight.  I asked Pasi if he could drive up the driveway of the library so we could get three sides of the building and they will do that as well.  Residents can still sign up and if Sagewell did not do their street, they come back to image that street.

He told me that they were really impressed with what we did to encourage people to sign up and they are using us as a model for other towns!

If you signed up for imaging, you should see an email from them this week.”

Town website’s new 40B page

The town website has a new set of pages related to G. L. c. 40B developments and the 40B proposal for the West Street site.

http://www.town.medfield.net/index.cfm?pid=20470 .

It is nicely done (thanks Kris) and contains links to DHCD, CHAPA, and elsewhere, as well as providing a document that lays out the history of the 40B projects on West Street (nicely prepared by the Zoning Board of Appeals’ Norma Cronin – thanks Norma!) tracing the initial 40B application for a 19 unit condo project back to 2003.

School enrollment is declining

The Medfield school enrollment is projected to decline fairly dramatically over the next several years.   The school enrollment should be declining, because the entering classes are much smaller than the graduating classes.  Total school enrollment this year of 2,930 is projected to decline by about a quarter to 2,195 over the next seven years, by 2017-2018.  This should ultimately translate into relief of pressure on the town budgets.

See the enrollment charts at https://medfield02052.blog/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/enrollment-charts.pdf

Moody’s rates Medfield Aa1

Moody’s rated Medfield Aa1 as of 2/10/12 for bonds that our Treasurer Collector, Georgia Colivas is having the town issue on 2/15/12, to be able to lower the interest rate on the existing ten year old bonds (the bonds could not be called for the first ten years).  The Moody’s rating summary is attached, and makes interesting reading.

We should all thank Georgia, as she is saving the town what is projected to be $1.7 m. over the next ten years on the new bonds.

Click to access 20120210-moodys-rating-report-medfield-ma.pdf

Weekly Political Report – Week Ending February 10, 2012

The Weekly Political Report is prepared by a political consulting group, Rasky/Baerlein, and shared with me by John Nunnari.

 In Address to the House, Speaker Vows No New Taxes

In his speech delivered to the Massachusetts House of Representatives on Wednesday, Speaker Robert DeLeo started by stating the House’s proposed FY2013 budget will not rely on new taxes and fees in order to balance it. This stands in contrast to Governor Patrick’s proposal filed in January with $260 million of newly proposed taxes and fees. In his speech, Speaker DeLeo stated that predictability and consistency in the tax code is important. Speaker DeLeo told the members of the House that any changes to revenue policy “should be approached with extreme caution and should never be done piecemeal.”

 

Poll Shows Joseph Kennedy III as Top U.S. Representative Candidate

UMass Lowell and the Boston Herald conducted a poll of 408 registered voters from February 2nd to 4th and February 6th to 8th that revealed nearly three quarters of voters in the newly designed 4th Congressional District have a favorable opinion of Joseph Kennedy III, the son of former United States Representative Joseph P. Kennedy II and the grandson of Robert Kennedy. This is the first poll to show Kennedy’s appeal against likely Republican candidate Sean Bielat by a 60% to 28% margin. Joseph Kennedy III created an exploratory committee in January but has yet to officially announce his campaign.

 

 

Service Employees International Union Endorses Warren
Three days after endorsing Congressional candidate Joseph Kennedy III, Service Employees International Union, one of the state’s largest labor groups, has formally endorsed Democratic United States Senate candidate Elizabeth Warren. The union said its endorsement followed a February 4th candidate forum that Senator Scott Brown did not attend. An SEIU spokesman said Warren and Democratic primary rival Marisa DeFranco were given equal time during the forum, held at the Bayside Expo in Dorchester. In addition, SEIU has endorsed Joseph Kennedy III after a town hall meeting last weekend where he was the only Congressional candidate to attend.

 

 

John Nunnari, Assoc AIA

Executive Director, AIA MA

jnunnari@architects.org

617-951-1433 x263

617-951-0845 (fax)

 

MA Chapter of American Institute of Architects

290 Congress Street, Suite 200, Boston MA 02110

http://www.architects.org

 

40B strategies – ideas I had to help meet the 10% threshold

Over the twelve years that I have been a selectman, I have, of course, recognized the issues that flow from  G. L. c. 40B and the 40B developments I saw effecting other towns, so I have had possible solutions percolating in my mind.  Also, I feel that as a matter of essential justice, that it is correct and proper for our society to provide affordable housing.  Given those starting points, I have made several suggestions over the years about ways for Medfield to make progress on meeting the 10% affordable housing threshold, that exempts towns from unwanted 40B developments.

  • The first proposal came from what I believe may have been at the first Massachusetts Municipal Association annual convention I attended, and I did not learn about the MMA for several years after becoming a selectman, so maybe around 2003 or 2004.  The Falmouth Housing Authority’s director was a presenter at that first MMA meeting I attended, and he told about Falmouth’s planned and systematic conversion of existing housing into affordable housing.  When the proper housing became available, Falmouth would buy it and convert it into affordable housing.  This technique has the benefit of creating affordable housing without changing the impacts on and/or densities of existing neighborhoods.  When I presented that idea to my colleagues, I specifically recall suggesting that the Town of Medfield should be buying every unit at Medfield Gardens that came on the market, in an effort do what we could to meet our 10% affordable housing threshold.  Another time when I saw a newspaper ad offering for sale a six unit property on Green Street (almost at North Street), I suggested that the town buy it to convert to affordable housing.  Converting existing housing makes for a long road to get us over 10%, unless most of Medfield Gardens suddenly became available, but such a plan could be part of a larger strategy.
  • Second, there is vacant land next to Tilden Village, which I understand is controlled by the Medfield Housing Authority.  I suggested that the town should sponsor building more elderly housing on that location.  Medfield can certainly use more elderly housing, and the municipal budget impacts would be minimal.  Where the facilities at Tilden Village already exist, for the new construction there would be savings from not having to construct what already exists there – i.e. no need for an additional administrative office and community meeting room.  I was told that the then Medfield Housing Authority was not interested in doing so.
  • The third proposal I made was for the town to build affordable housing on other town owned land.  The town itself owns parcels all over town.

There was no interest expressed in pursuing any of these ideas.

Volunteers

Yesterday afternoon I reviewed the nominations for those suggested for recognition as the Medfield Foundation volunteer of the year.  It was a truly awe inspiring couple of hours reading about the wonderful work that people are doing to make Medfield a better place on such a wide and diverse range of fronts, and I was filled with enthusiasm by their deeds.  We are all beneficiaries of these volunteers’ efforts, either directly, or by their making Medfield generally a better place, and we owe a debt to the stalwart nominators who took time to alert and educate us via the nominations.

I encourage everyone to attend the volunteer recognition event that will take place from 4- 6 PM on Sunday, March 18 at The Center.  The recognition reception is free, open to the public, and last year was an absolutely magical time as the nominators and their nominees recounted in vignette after first person vignette what they had been doing.

You can read about the incredible things that those previously suggested for recognition have done at http://www.medfieldfoundation.org/volunteer.html

The Medfield Foundation is proud that the Rockland Trust Charitable Foundation has sponsored the Medfield Foundation volunteer of the year event this year.  Whole Foods Market will again cater the refreshments.

Thermal imaging is a go

Medfield Energy Committee member Fred David, a Medfield lighting supplier and consultant at Fred Davis Corporation has been spearheading the thermal imaging initiative.  Fred reported today that Sagewell has received thermal imaging requests –   a total of 569homes in town, or 16% of the residences.  As a result of the efforts of Fred and other MEC members, Sagewell has now committed that they will survey all accessible areas of the town.

Congratulations to the MEC, and thanks for making it happen!

Enhanced by Zemanta