Jane Lint: The Quiet Guardian of Cheshire
In every New England town, there are people whose names may never appear on a ballot or a monument, yet whose presence becomes inseparable from the place itself. In St. Peter's Episcopal Church, that person was Jane Lint.
For generations of Cheshire residents, Jane was simply always there.
She was the familiar school bus driver navigating Cheshire’s winding backroads before satellite navigation existed. She was the woman tending graves in all seasons at St. Peter’s cemetery. She was the parishioner working quietly in the kitchen during coffee hour while others socialized. She was the keeper of continuity in a town that transformed from farms and factories into modern suburbia.
And through nearly a century of change, Jane Lint became one of Cheshire’s living links to its past.
A Cheshire Childhood During the Depression
Jane Lint, born Jane Ayers, grew up during the Great Depression in Cheshire, the daughter of Robert
Ayers and Mary (Ward) Ayers. She was raised in a large family that reflected the close-knit character of the town during the early twentieth century.
Her brothers included William, John, Kevin, and David Ayers. Her sisters included Sheila, Charleen, and Eileen. The Ayers family roots ran deep through Cheshire soil, and their lives intersected with many of the institutions that defined the town.
For decades, public records associated Jane with the longtime family home at 1111 Waterbury Road, a location that became her base as Cheshire evolved around her.
She witnessed the community’s transition from an agricultural town into the suburban Cheshire residents know today. Few people experienced that transformation more directly than Jane.
From Ball & Socket to Modern Cheshire
Like many Cheshire residents of her generation, Jane worked at the historic Ball & Socket Manufacturing Company, once the industrial heartbeat of the town.
The factory provided livelihoods for countless local families and represented the economic center of Cheshire during much of the twentieth century. Jane’s sister, Eileen Elizabeth Ayers, also worked there as an assembler for many years.
Today, the former factory complex has been reborn as an arts and cultural destination, a striking example of Cheshire reinventing its industrial past. Jane lived long enough to see both eras: the bustling manufacturing floors of Ball & Socket and its modern revival as a creative gathering place.
“Bus Driver Jane”
Long before many residents knew her through St. Peter’s Church, countless children knew her simplyas “Bus Driver Jane.”
Community stories about her years driving school buses were confirmed in a 2002 report by The Washington Post covering Connecticut politics. Jane was interviewed as a local voice of reason and identified as a Cheshire school bus driver and registered Republican.
It was a fitting role.
Driving rural bus routes required patience, toughness, and reliability—qualities that would define Jane’s reputation for decades. Cheshire’s narrow roads and unpredictable winters were navigated daily with the same steady determination that later characterized her church stewardship.
For many former students, Jane was one of the first people they saw each school morning.
The Sexton Legacy
Jane’s devotion to St. Peter's Episcopal Church was not accidental. It was inherited.
Her grandfather, Charlie Ward, was himself a legendary figure within the parish. Parish histories describe him as looking remarkably like Santa Claus. But beyond his appearance, Charlie Ward was deeply woven into church life, serving as sexton, treasurer, and caretaker of the cemetery grounds.
Jane essentially inherited both the responsibility and the spirit of that work.
In 2003, at approximately 80 years old, she formally assumed responsibility for caring for the church cemetery and grounds. While many people at that age were slowing down, Jane was hauling branches, raking leaves, clearing debris, and maintaining burial sites with remarkable energy.
Church histories vividly describe her “gnarled hands, full of cracks and filled with dirt” from decades of physical labor outdoors.
Parishioners also remember her unusual but apparently effective health regimen. Jane was often seen eating raw garlic, herbs, and roots while working outside—fuel, perhaps, for the stamina that carried her well into her nineties.
The Famous “Lint Audit”
When a new rector arrived at St. Peter’s in 2003, he quickly discovered that Jane Lint was not merely avolunteer. She was an institution.
According to parish recollections, Jane marched directly into his office, sat down uninvited, and began peppering him with questions. It was less an introduction than an examination.
The interrogation became affectionately known among parishioners as the “Lint Audit.”
After determining the new rector would “be alright,” Jane abruptly concluded the meeting and exited just as quickly as she had entered.
It perfectly captured her reputation: practical, direct, protective of the church, and unimpressed by titles.
A Life of Community Service
Jane’s involvement extended far beyond cemetery maintenance.
In February 1965, she worked on the painting department staff for a production of The Chalk Garden staged by the Actors Playhouse at Lincoln Junior High School. The production raised money for the Meriden Heart Fund and demonstrated Jane’s willingness to support community arts initiatives.
Two years later, on March 31, 1967, she was formally installed as Warder of Crescent Chapter #7 of the Order of the Eastern Star during ceremonies at the local Masonic Temple. She later remained active with Alice Chapter #76 as well.
Her husband, Warren Lint, also maintained deep involvement in fraternal organizations, including the Scottish Rite Masonic Lodge, the Cheshire Oddfellows, the Shrine, and the Order of the Eastern Star.
Warren’s life reflected another chapter of twentieth-century American history. Born in Fairfield, Maine, in 1927, he served in the United States Navy for fourteen years and saw service during World War II in Manila. Afterward, he worked as a sheet metal worker for Premier Roofing.
When Warren Lint passed away on July 4, 2007, memorial contributions were directed to both the Eastern Star Charity Foundation and St. Peter’s Church—two institutions closely tied to the Lint family legacy.
The Woman Who Watched Over St. Peter’s
For many residents, Jane became synonymous with St. Peter’s itself.
She worked in the church kitchen during events, maintained the grounds, donated flowers for landscaping, participated in parish ministries, and quietly handled countless small tasks that often go unnoticed but keep institutions alive.
One lighthearted parish memory involved “Cadfael,” a usually life-sized wooden donkey displayed at the church. During one coffee hour honoring Jane, parishioners joked that Cadfael was supervising her kitchen work and perhaps even reading “Kitchen Care Instructions” while watching over her.
It was exactly the sort of affectionate humor reserved for someone deeply loved within a church family.
In 2019, after more than ninety-four years as a parishioner, Jane moved to Eugene, Oregon, to be closer to family. Her children had spread far beyond Cheshire: Bruce in Oregon, Brian in the United Arab Emirates, and Brenda in New Hampshire.
Before her departure, the congregation held a special coffee hour in her honor.
“We will miss you,” the parish wrote, “but know you'll be cared for in your new home and community out West. You'll always be a St. Peter’s peep.”
A Living Link to Cheshire History
Jane Lint’s story is not merely about longevity.
It is about stewardship.
She represented a generation that believed communities were sustained through service rather than recognition. Whether driving buses, painting theater sets, tending graves, organizing church activities, or simply showing up day after day for nearly a century, Jane embodied the civic spirit that shaped Cheshire through much of the twentieth century.
Her life connected multiple eras of town history: Depression-era farming families, wartime sacrifice, industrial prosperity, suburban growth, and modern preservation efforts.
While official histories often focus on prominent leaders and major events, communities endure because of people like Jane Lint—the quiet guardians who dedicate themselves to preserving the places and traditions others might overlook.
And in Cheshire, few guarded those traditions more faithfully than Jane.






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