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The Swellesley Report

Since 2005: More than you really want to know about Wellesley, Mass.

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2026 Easter services in Wellesley

March 28, 2026 by Deborah Brown Leave a Comment

Easter falls on Sunday, April 5 this year, and a happy one to those who celebrate the holiday. Wellesley has many houses of worship that observe Easter, as well as the solemn holy days leading up to what is considered the most important, fundamental holiday in Christianity.

St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church
79 Denton Rd., 781-235-7310

St. Andrews, Wellesley


Wellesley Hills Congregational Church
207 Washington St., 781-235-4424

Wellesley Hills Congregational Church


Wellesley Congregational (Village) Church
2 Central St., 781-235-1988

Wellesley Village Church, Easter


First Church of Christ, Scientist
8 Rockland St, 781-235-1114

MetroWest Baptist Church
2 Brook St.  781-431-0828

Milestone Wellesley
42 Elmwood Rd.    781-235-6025

St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church
79 Denton Rd., 781-235-7310

St. John the Evangelist Parish (Catholic)
9 Glen Rd., 781-235-0045

St. Paul Parish (Catholic)
502 Washington St., 781-235-1060

Unitarian Universalist Society of Wellesley Hills
309 Washington St., 781-235-9423

Wellesley Congregational (Village) Church
2 Central St., 781-235-1988

Wellesley Friends Meeting (Quaker)
26 Benvenue St., 781-237-0268

MORE:

Where to Worship in Wellesley

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Filed Under: Churches, Holidays

     

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Obituary: Ann Carter Jameson of Wellesley, 69

March 27, 2026 by admin Leave a Comment

Ann Carter Jameson (AKA Ann Carter) of Wellesley, 69, passed away peacefully at home on March 23, 2026, after a courageous battle with cancer. Ann was the beloved wife of Philip, devoted mother of Alexandra and Elizabeth (husband Brian Civale), best friends to her twin brother Edward, sister Emilee (husband Stephen) Crowell, and sister Susan (husband Scott) Mega, and idolized aunt to ten nieces and nephews, six grandnephews, and two grandnieces. She was predeceased by her parents, Dora (Dischino) and Paul Carter, who were the major influences in her life.

Ann Carter Jameson
Ann Carter Jameson

Ann’s most cherished possession in life was the love of her family and friends. The love she shared and received back was overflowing. She also enjoyed her jewelry, handbags, and shoes as accessories to her stylish clothes, which she wore with a creative flair that seldom went unnoticed (“it was on sale!”). That creativity spilled over to her painting on canvas as well as through decorating shells as gifts, making floral arrangements, and sharing new recipes.

Professionally, she was known as Ann Carter, consultant for years with Rasky Baerlein Strategic Communications, and more recently she built her own business as AC Communication Partners. Her clients benefitted from her wisdom, insight, judgment, creative problem-solving, and understanding of people and how they work together. She had a real talent for helping organizations distill their values and share their message clearly to the outside world.

Her dedicated nonprofit and Board trustee work highlighted her selfless, caring nature – always thinking of others. Her life made a real difference. As a successful woman in business and working mother, her success achieved with humility and grace, she set a shining example and was celebrated as a mentor by many colleagues and others with whom she crossed paths. The outpouring of love and admiration for Ann both personally and professionally during this difficult time has been overwhelming, and her family is beyond grateful.

Visiting hours will be held on Sunday, March 29th, from 2-6pm at George F. Doherty & Sons Funeral Home, 477 Washington Street (Route 16), Wellesley, MA. Her funeral Mass will be held on Monday, March 30th, at 11am at St. Paul Catholic Church, 502 Washington Street, Wellesley. In lieu of flowers, the family asks that donations be made in Ann’s memory to William James College or Conservatory Lab Charter School. And always feel free to put on that piece that’s been sitting in your closet, that you haven’t found the right time to wear!


If you’d like us to run a complete obituary of your loved one on Swellesley, please send to theswellesleyreport@gmail.com

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Filed Under: Obituaries & remembrances

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Education

Commencement speakers revealed for Babson, MassBay & Wellesley College

March 27, 2026 by admin Leave a Comment

All three Wellesley college—Babson College, MassBay Community College, and Wellesley College—have revealed this spring’s commencement speakers for the classes of ’26.

Babson of course is going with a couple of entrepreneurial leaders for its May 16 ceremony.

C. Dean Metropoulos, Babson ’67, MBA’68, is executive chairman and CEO of the family-owned investment firm Metropoulos & Co. and minority owner of the New England Patriots. He’ll speak at the undergraduate ceremony, recognizing more than 740 students.

metropoulos-c-dean-450x450
C. Dean Metropoulos

Adriana Cisneros, CEO of global enterprise Cisneros, will speak at the graduate ceremony, where 540 students will receive their diplomas. The Cisneros business spans media and entertainment, consumer goods, digital innovation, global connectivity, and real estate.

cisneros-adriana-450x450
Adriana Cisneros

MassBay, the state-owned school with a Wellesley campus, has tapped Lt. Gov. Kimberly Driscoll as its commencement speaker for the May 28 ceremony.

Lt Gov Kimberly Driscoll
Lt .Gov. Kimberly Driscoll

Wellesley College has invited Rice University distinguished fellow Ruth J. Simmons to speak at its commencement ceremony on Friday, May 15. Simmons has served as president of Smith College, Brown University, and historically Black university Prairie View A&M.

Ruth J. Simmons
Ruth J. Simmons

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Filed Under: Babson College, Education, MassBay, Wellesley College

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Business buzz: Wellesley restaurants on Spring Seasonings roster; Code Ninjas opens in Wellesley Hills

March 27, 2026 by Bob Brown Leave a Comment

The latest Wellesley, Mass., business news:
 

Wellesley restaurants on Spring Seasonings roster

 
spring seasoningsThe Charles River Regional Chamber’s annual Spring Seasonings: A Taste of our Towns event returns on April 13 at the Newton Marriott (5:30-8pm) and Wellesley restaurants will be well represented.

This year, forty local restaurants will come together to showcase their distinctive and diverse cuisines, and they will be complemented by beverage exhibitors showcasing their offerings.

This year’s Wellesley restaurant participants:

● Alta Strada
● black & blue Steak and Crab
● Captain Marden’s
● Fiorella’s
● Papa Razzi
● Playa Bowls
● Smith & Wollensky
● Truly’s

Tickets: $75 for chamber members / $100 for non-members. Prices increase on April 1. Tickets are available at www.charlesriverchamber.com/spring-seasonings. No tickets will be sold at the door.
 


 

Know of Wellesley businesses opening or closing? Fill us in: theswellesleyreport@gmail.com

 


 

Code Ninjas now in Wellesley Hills

 
Code Ninjas, a place for kids to learn coding, robotics and more in a fun environment, this week held a ribbon cutting for its new location at 386 Washington St.

There had previously been a Code Ninjas location in Linden Square that opened in 2019.

The new Wellesley Hills Code Ninja will celebrate with a grand opening on March 28 from 10am-2pm.
 


 

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Filed Under: Business, Restaurants

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Obituary: Beth McGinty, 94, of Duxbury and Wellesley

March 27, 2026 by admin 1 Comment

Beth McGinty, 94, of Duxbury and Wellesley, Massachusetts, died peacefully at home with her family on March 23, 2026. Intelligent, witty and kind, Beth’s strength, curiosity, integrity and humor have been a delight to those who knew her. Always invested in others, Beth managed life’s joys and challenges by focusing her extraordinary talent on those she loved, both her large family and the countless children she taught in her long career.

Beth McGinty
Beth McGinty

Beth loved her family first, especially her children, Kathy Griffin and her husband Rob, Ellen Grieco and her husband Bill, and John McGinty and his wife Ingrid, her grandchildren, Ellen Callahan and her husband Jeff and Sarah Ducas and her husband Matt, Matthew and Emily Grieco, and Christy Brantley and her husband Geoff, Caitlin, Shannon and Anna McGinty, and her great grandchildren, Jack and Dorothy Callahan and Griffin, Natalie and Theo Ducas and Knox and Hunter Brantley.

Born in Worcester, Beth grew up and lived primarily in Massachusetts near her much loved Boston and in the heart of New England – the best, maybe the only, place to live. The daughter of Thomas and Hester Dignan, she treasured her beloved brother Thomas Dignan Jr. and his wife Mary Anne, who have survived her, her sisters, the late Joan Fuller, Hester Curtis, Ellen Dignan, and Marian Drury, and her many nieces and nephews.

A graduate of Abbot Academy and Boston University, Beth was a public school teacher for over 50 years, first in Boston, and later in the field of special education in Wellesley, teaching thousands of children to be curious, kind and confident and to love themselves whatever their abilities or challenges. She loved children and understood them in an extraordinary way, entering their world with joy, enthusiasm and no judgment. With her special appeal for young children, she communicated effortlessly, almost magically with them throughout her life. Beth’s many different grandchildren and great grandchildren all loved her as a kindred spirit.

We love her. Beth was charming and uplifting as a field of daffodils on a Spring morning, she had a curious and discerning intellect and a warm and kind heart, and she was a truly extraordinary mother.

The family plans a private burial and celebration of life.

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Filed Under: Obituaries & remembrances

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Government

Race for Norfolk DA opens after Morrissey steps down amid controversy surrounding Read, Birchmore cases

March 27, 2026 by admin Leave a Comment

By Nathan Metcalf

Boston University Statehouse Program

After years of controversy surrounding the Norfolk County district attorney’s office, voters will choose a new top prosecutor this fall as a crowded field of candidates begins to take shape.

District attorneys serve as the chief law enforcement officials in their counties, overseeing criminal prosecutions, working with police on investigations, and deciding what charges to bring or whether to bring them at all.

The race comes after longtime Norfolk District Attorney Michael W. Morrissey announced in January that he would not seek reelection, having served since 2010. Morrissey’s tenure has drawn increasing scrutiny in recent years over how his office handled several high-profile cases.

The Sept. 1 Democratic primary is likely to decide the race, as voters in 28 cities and towns including in Wellesley choose from a field of six candidates. 

High-profile cases fuel scrutiny of DA’s office

The most high-profile case in recent Norfolk County history was that of Karen Read, who was charged with killing her boyfriend, Boston police officer John O’Keefe, in 2022. Prosecutors alleged Read struck O’Keefe with her SUV and left him in the snow, while her defense argued she was framed and that O’Keefe was injured elsewhere.

The case drew national attention, fueled protests outside the courthouse, and raised questions about evidence handling and potential conflicts of interest. After a mistrial in 2024, Read was acquitted of the most serious charges in 2025, though she was convicted of driving under the influence.

Another case that intensified criticism of the office is the death of Sandra Birchmore, a 23-year-old woman found dead in her Canton apartment in 2021. Her death was initially ruled a suicide, and the district attorney’s office said it found no evidence of foul play. 

Federal prosecutors later alleged that Birchmore was killed by a former Stoughton police officer, who staged the scene to appear as a suicide, raising questions about why the case was not pursued more aggressively at the local level.

Together, the cases have prompted broader concerns about investigative practices, prosecutorial decision-making, and the relationship between law enforcement agencies in Norfolk County. Those issues are now at the center of the race to replace Morrissey.

A crowded candidate field

Several candidates have centered their campaigns on reform aimed at restoring public trust, though they differ in how deeply they believe the office’s problems run.

Djuna Perkins, a former prosecutor and civil attorney, has been among the most forceful critics of the office’s recent performance. She pointed to what she described as “bad and unethical decisions” in the handling of high-profile cases and called the failure to pursue charges in the Sandra Birchmore case a “complete failure of our government” which inspired her to run for DA. 

Perkins said she would begin her tenure with a top-to-bottom audit of the office and emphasized the need to return to “the highest standards of professionalism, integrity and transparency.”

Adam Deitch, a former federal prosecutor who worked on public corruption cases, has also emphasized restoring public trust, focusing on transparency and access to the office. 

“Folks feel like the DA’s office is closed to them, and that should not be the case,” he said.

He said he would pursue that transparency through structural changes, including regular public meetings, expanded access to information and the creation of a dedicated anti-corruption unit. He also supports the creation of dedicated task forces for elder fraud and hate crimes.

Greg Connor, who spent 25 years as a prosecutor in the Norfolk DA’s office, has taken a different approach, emphasizing experience and continuity while acknowledging the need for change. 

Connor acknowledged concerns about recent cases, saying the Karen Read prosecution was “overcharged,” but pointed to what he described as the office’s broader track record.

He highlighted the expansion of overdose prevention efforts and diversion programs such as drug court and veterans court and said he would build on those initiatives while more strictly enforcing conflict-of-interest rules requiring prosecutors or officers with personal connections to a case to step aside and introducing new units focused on cold cases and animal cruelty.

“I think that anyone who wins is going to rebuild that office in what they want to do,” he said, framing his candidacy as an effort to build on the office’s existing strengths rather than overhaul it.

Craig MacLellan, who has worked as both a prosecutor and a defense attorney, has positioned himself as another middle-ground candidate, arguing that reform is needed without dismissing the work of career prosecutors. 

“The vast majority of cases … are handled in a professional manner,” he said of the current DA’s office.

He acknowledged that recent controversies have “caused the public to lose a great deal of confidence in the office,” criticizing “certain elements” of the Karen Read case as “very poorly” handled and saying the Birchmore investigation “left a lot to be desired.”

To regain public trust, MacLellan said the office is “in need of reform” in three core areas: community engagement and outreach, the office’s internal structure, and the way deaths are investigated, all of which need to be “reinvented and reimagined.”

Macy Lee, who currently serves as director of the state’s Office of Medicaid Board of Hearings and previously led a narcotics unit in the Suffolk County district attorney’s office, has emphasized her experience managing large systems and pointed to hate crimes and constitutional protections as key priorities, drawing on her own experiences with discrimination.

Lee, who is Asian American, said she “experienced hate at a very young age,” adding that those experiences have shaped her commitment to ensuring protections for “all residents, not just citizens,” and to taking a zero-tolerance approach to civil rights violations, including by federal immigration enforcement.

Jim Barakat, a defense attorney, has framed his campaign around a broader critique of the criminal justice system and the role of prosecutors within it. 

“I’ve spent my career representing people against the full weight of the system, and that changes how you see justice,” he said.

Barakat argued that the office should move away from prioritizing conviction rates and instead focus on rehabilitation and reducing recidivism. 

“We should be asking: are we reducing harm, are we treating people fairly, and are we building trust?” he said.

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Filed Under: Government, Law

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Friday is Letters to the Editor day on The Swellesley Report

March 27, 2026 by admin

The Swellesley Report accepts letters to the editor. Letters must be of general local community interest and must be signed. Community shout-outs are also accepted and encouraged. For example, a non-profit may thank an organization for a donation received.

In a letter this week

  • New School Committee member Costas Panagopoulos thanks Wellesley voters

See more letters here.

How to submit your letter to the editor

The deadline is Wednesday at noon for letters to appear that week, or a week further out. Send letters to the editor to theswellesleyreport@gmail.com

Submitting a letter to the editor does not guarantee that your letter will be posted on The Swellesley Report.

Letters must be written for The Swellesley Report only—we do not accept form-type letters sent to multiple news agencies.

Please review detailed guidelines for letters to the editor here.


Please send tips, photos, ideas to theswellesleyreport@gmail.com

[Read more…]

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Watch the Wellesley Health Department’s Community Health Needs Assessment forum recording

March 26, 2026 by admin Leave a Comment

The Wellesley Health Department this week hosted a community forum at the Wellesley Police station to discuss the results of its recent Community Health Needs Assessment, and how the town can best use these results to plan for Opioid Abatement Fund Spending. Wellesley Media recorded the session, which lasted about an hour.

We reported on the assessment earlier this year (See “Wellesley health checkup: Strong resources, lingering mental health gaps”)

The Wellesley Health Department is also gearing up for National Public Health Week, which starts on April 6.


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Upcoming Wellesley events

Upcoming Events

Mar 28
10:00 am - 5:00 pm

Quinobequin Quilters Quilt Show

Mar 28
2:00 pm - 3:30 pm

Wellesley Middle School Drama presents ‘Footloose the Musical: Youth Edition’

Mar 28
7:00 pm - 8:30 pm

Wellesley Middle School Drama presents ‘Footloose the Musical: Youth Edition’

Mar 28
7:00 pm - 9:00 pm

Organ concert at historic Houghton Chapel, Wellesley College

Mar 28
8:00 pm - 10:30 pm

Addison Groove Project (Wellesley High alum) concert

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