Elaine Berg Wegener, 90

March 6, 2026
1 min read
Elaine (Berg) Wegener, 90,

Elaine (Berg) Wegener, 90, died peacefully on Jan. 18, with her daughter Sue Wegener Will, son-in-law Dave Will, granddaughter Carolynn Will, and grandson Kyle Will by her side.
Elaine was born Feb. 20, 1935 in Chicago to the late Frank X. Berg & Emily (Maier) Berg. While pursuing her love for ballet dancing, Elaine met her soulmate Ralph on an airplane flight returning to Birmingham, Ala. A few years after marrying in 1958, they lived in England and Germany before they settled on Hickory Hill Road in Wayland.
Elaine was an active resident in town for 63 years and owner of a well-known real estate business that she operated for over 25 years.
Elaine was predeceased by her husband Ralph Wegener Sr. Survivors include her son Ralph Wegener Jr., his wife Deborah; devoted and loyal family friend Kevin Moreau; and many siblings, nieces, nephews, and cousins. Services will be held privately at Lakeview Cemetery in Wayland.

Latest from Blog

Town reprioritizes projects for capital budget

carole.plumb@waylandpost.orgThe Finance Committee is recommending a $10.91 million capital budget for fiscal year 2027, a decrease of $2.0 million, or 15.6%, from the $12.9 million approved for FY26, reflecting a shift in

Questions surround state funding for town water system project

dave.watkins@waylandpost.orgWaylandโ€™s effort to secure low-interest state financing for its drinking water system has run into a structural problem that goes beyond a single application cycle.The townโ€™s proposed project โ€” combining a Massachusetts

Operating budget rises to $113M as cost pressures mount

carole.plumb@waylandpost.orgWaylandโ€™s Finance Committee is recommending a $112,964,253 operating budget for fiscal year 2027, an increase of $5.0 million, or 4.63%, over the $107.9 million approved for FY26, as rising personnel costs, health

How CPA project funds are allocated

The impetus behind Massachusetts Community Preservation Act of 2001 originated in towns watching key local assets disappear without having a reliable way to fund their protection. In the 1990s open land and

Don't Miss