I am asking for your vote for re-election as a Trustee of the Bemis Free 
Lecture Series.
I am one of three elected Trustees.
My fellow Trustees are Mimi Borden and Heather Ring.
 
The Bemis Free Lecture Series began in 1892. It was held in Bemis Hall, which 
was built by Lincoln entrepreneur George Bemis. 
It was common for wealthy men of his era to leave a legacy of buildings, and 
George Bemis was no exception.
 Not only did he build the hall to be a town office and meeting place, but he 
also built the second floor to be a lecture and performance space, and he 
endowed a lecture series.
 The lecture series was modeled after the Chautauqua movement of his time, 
which aimed to bring entertainment and culture to the masses. 

The Bemis Trust charge for the lectures states that the series was “to bring 
education and edification to the citizens of Lincoln.”   The ordinary folk of 
Lincoln were to enjoy what previously had been reserved only for a wealthy and 
elite society.   The endowment for the lecture series was doubled in 1982 by 
the bequest of native son John Todd, and the charge was expanded to include 
“entertainment and recreation.”

 The series has hosted Robert Frost, Archibald Cox, John Kenneth Galbraith, 
Julie Taymor, Imago Theatre, Grace Paley, Dr. Benjamin Spock, The Steel Band of 
Blue Hill Maine, a basketball clinic run by Dave Cowens, Mission: Wolf, 
Margaret Mead, Julia Glass, Michael Fitzgerald, and many others of great note.

 These past 2 years have proved a serious challenge for an organization that 
has been known for live events.   So, like many others, we pivoted to a Webinar 
format.  In celebration of Juneeteenth, the Bemis Lecture Series and the 
Lincoln Historical Society hosted a virtual event with Professor Elise Lemire, 
who grew up in Lincoln and is author of Black Walden: Slavery and Its Aftermath 
in Concord, Massachusetts.   Dr. Lemire’s presentation was titled: “Slavery in 
Lincoln: Reckoning with Our Past, Planning for a More Honest and Inclusive 
Future.”

 The live discussion was recorded and made available through Lincoln’s online 
video archive (https://tinyurl.com/BemisLectureJuneteenth2021 
<https://tinyurl.com/BemisLectureJuneteenth2021>) as well as YouTube 
(https://tinyurl.com/EliseLemireBemis2021 
<https://tinyurl.com/EliseLemireBemis2021>).   The YouTube video has already 
been viewed by over 670 people.   Clearly, the Bemis Free Lecture Series has a 
wide reach!

 We hope to return to live events as early as this summer and look forward to 
seeing you there!
 
If you have any questions, comments, and/or suggestions, please contact me at 
(781) 259-04231 or at [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>.
 
Again, I ask for you vote on Monday, March. 28.
http://www.lincolntown.org/Calendar.aspx?EID=8929&month=3&year=2022&day=28&calType=0
 
<http://www.lincolntown.org/Calendar.aspx?EID=8929&month=3&year=2022&day=28&calType=0>
 
 

------
Sara Mattes




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