Talk of the Town – Wayland Residents Participate in Peaceful Protest

May 2, 2025
1 min read
Penny Beer (right) and her daughter at the Indivisible Rally in Concord. (Photo by Jean Milburn)

Jean Milburn, Penny Beer and her daughter and a dozen other Wayland residents participated in the Indivisible rally on April 19, 2025. Six hundred attendees from the area assembled at the First Parish Church in Concord. Many are members of Indivisible, a national grassroots organization dedicated to preserving democracy and promoting progressive values.

The rally was peaceful, according to Milburn. She said they were protesting because they felt that the current administration has assaulted individuals’ democracy, freedoms, and vital institutions. Many members of Concord Indivisible handed out buttons and signs. Leah Greenberg, co-founder and co-executive director of Indivisible; Rufus Gifford, former ambassador to Denmark; Nikki Turpin, president of Robbins House; and Deb Paul, chairperson of Indivisible Mass Coalition. Diane Proctor of Concord Indivisible spoke at the rally.

Milburn said that most of the speakers at the event talked about protecting individual rights but Gifford gave the European perspective. He said that they were saddened by the disintegrating relationship with the U.S. that has existed since the end of the second world war.

Indivisible is a progressive movement of millions of activists across every state, fueled by a partnership between thousands of autonomous local groups. Indivisible ‘s national team offers strategic leadership, movement coordination and support to members, and also directly lobbies congress, runs media campaigns and develops advocacy strategies. Their vision is “of, by, and for the people.”

Milburn said that she has been a member since the organization was created in 2016. “Our purpose is to protect the Bill of Rights and hold the government accountable,” she said.

Latest from Blog

2025 Veterans Day Ceremony

Wayland honored all those who served with a 2025 Veterans Ceremony on Nov. 11, inside at the Town Building gym instead of the Veterans Memorial due to cold weather. The program began

Dr. Andrew Nierenberg

By Isabel Ravenna Contributing Writer Wayland’s own Dr. Andrew Nierenberg, a Wayland resident, has spent decades treating and studying bipolar disorder. Now he’s channeling that work into a national experiment in “radical

A Wayland Post Holiday Appeal

As the year winds down and December fills with concerts, menorah lightings, tree sales, and last-minute Amazon returns, The Wayland Post is pausing to recognize the most important constant in local journalism:

How Working Groups Help Wayland Get Things Done

By The Wayland Post Staff Wayland’s boards increasingly rely on small working groups and subcommittees to move complicated projects forward. When used correctly, these teams expand resident expertise, improve efficiency, and remain

Wayland Post Adjusts Holiday Publishing Schedule

The Wayland Post will shift its print schedule during the upcoming holiday season to account for holiday closures and newsroom availability. The edition that would normally be published on November 28 will