August2011OCMagazine

Transcription

August2011OCMagazine
YOUR NEWS SOURCE FOR HISTORIC ORANGE
August 5–September 8, 2011
FREE
OCMagazine
Payne’s Farm
Civil War Battlefield
with Authenticity
E
R
THCONLEY
UL AMI
A
F F
Page 4
271 Years
of History in
Orange County
Page 8
2
FALL REGISTRATION
Returning Family Registration
September 6 ..... 11:00-1:00pm & 5:00-7:00pm
New Family Registration
September 8 ..... 5:00-7:00pm (Doors will open at 4:00pm)
Classes Begin September 12th
Don’t Miss Your Chance to Register!
There are still spaces available....
Classes Available for Ages 3 to Adult – Just Call OSPA at
OC MAGAZ I N E ✦ August 5–September 8, 2011
)
540-672-9038
or Drop by and visit us at 108 Belleview Ave Orange, VA
Firehouse Theatre Presents:
Little Shop of Horrors
August 11 ..... 7:00pm
August 12 ..... 2:00pm & 7:00pm
August 13 ..... 2:00pm
Tickets are $10.00 each - Call OSPA 540.672.9038
To reserve yours NOW!!
Visit our website: www.ospa.net
What’s
INSIDE......
OCMagazine
Your News Source For Historic Orange
Publisher
C. M. Santos
[email protected]
COMMUNITY
◆ The animals of Rikki’s invites you to
celebrate the anniversary birthday party
coming soon ...page 6
Advertising Director
Judi Price
[email protected]
Advertising Accounts Manager
Diane Eliason
Graphic Production Designer
Marilyn Ellinger
◆ Learn about black bears with the Nature Lady
...page
7
HISTORY
◆ Highland and the Faulconer
family of Orange County...
pages 8-10
Correspondents
Meghann McKnight
Dan McFarland
Pat LaLand
Contributors
Rikki’s Refuge, April Pekary
April Taylor, Emily Miksovic
Orange County Historical Society
E-mail: [email protected]
Advertising Sales:
[email protected]
Mailing Address: P.O. Box 59,
Palmyra, VA 22963.
Office Location: 2987 Lake
Monticello Road, Palmyra, VA 22963
LAKE OF THE WOODS
Phone: (434) 591-1000
3
Fax: (434) 589-1704
General: OC Magazine is published monthly
by Valley Publishing Corp. A total of 6,000
copies are circulated throughout Orange
County. One copy is free, additional copies
are $1 each payable in advance to the publisher.
Display ad rates: For information including
rates and deadlines call Judi Price at 434-5911000 ext. 23.
Subscriptions: Copies will be mailed for the subscription price of $35 per year. Please mail a check
and a note with your name and address to: OC
Magazine Subscriptions Dept., P.O. Box 59,
Palmyra, VA 22963.
Submissions, tips, ideas, etc.: OC
Magazine encourages submissions and tips on
items of interest to Orange County citizens.
However we reserve the right to edit submissions
as deemed necessary and cannot guarantee they
will be published. OC Magazine will not be
responsible for returning submitted materials,
please include S.A.S.E. if you would like items
returned. Please keep Calendar submissions to
fifty words or less, Letters to the Editor to 300
words or less and feature stories to 500 words or
less. Mail submissions to: OC Magazine, P.O.
Box 59, Palmyra, VA 22963 to the attention of
applicable section, (Letters to the Editor,
Community Calendar, etc.), or e-mail [email protected]
Classified ads: Please send a written or typed
copy of the ad with a $10 check to: Classifieds
Department, P.O. Box 59, Palmyra, VA 22963.
You can also email [email protected]
and pay by credit card. Please specify the category it should appear under. Ads must be 30
words or less. Sorry, classifieds will not be taken
by phone.
Advertising deadline: Wed. August 31, for
the September 9–October 6 issue.
© Valley Publishing Corp. 2011. All rights reserved.
◆ Horsing around with
the winners of the Hunter
Horse Show...page 13
B
eth Brown and her son, Jonah,
check out historic markers explaining the
Mine Run Campaign just across the road
from the Payne’s Farm trailhead.
Photo by Tammy Purcell
Cover designed by Marilyn Ellinger.
COMMUNITY
Downtown Alliance
gets Main Street
Accreditation
Orange County Cruisers upcoming
vehicle show
See Community Page 6
✦ August 5–September 8, 2011
Saturday, August 20, 5 p.m.-9
p.m. 10609 James Madison Highway
the Buger King, Route 15, Orange.
The Orange County Cruisers hold
Cruise ins from April to October. This
is a family oriented event for people
who want to show their cars, trucks
or motocycles, or for those who just
want to view the autos and have a
Photo courtesy
good time.
www.orangecountycruisers.net
For more information phone: (434)
973-8677. Email: [email protected] or website: www.orangecountycruisers.net
( OC MAGAZ I N E
The Orange Downtown Alliance has been
designated as an accredited National Main
Street Program for meeting the commercial
district revitalization performance standards set
by the National Trust Main Street Center.
Each year, the National Trust and its partners announce the list of accredited Main
Street programs that have built strong revitalization organizations.
“We congratulate the Orange Downtown
Alliance for meeting our established performance standards,” said Doug
Loescher, director of the National Trust Main Street Center. “Accredited Main
Street programs are meeting the challenges of the recession head on and are
successfully using a focused, comprehensive revitalization strategy to keep their
communities vibrant and sustainable.”
The Virginia Department of Housing and Community Development evaluates the alliance's efforts every year, working in partnership with the National
Trust Main Street Center to identify the local programs that meet 10 performance standards.
The standards include developing a mission, fostering strong public-private
partnerships, securing an operating budget, tracking economic progress, and
preserving historic buildings.
The Orange Downtown Alliance is a nonprofit association established to
enhance the economic environment of the town of Orange.
4
COVER STORY
“A Hidden Gem”
Payne’s Farm, a well-preserved Civil War battlefield, offers visitors authenticity
BY TAMMY PURCELL
CORRESPONDENT
The 1.5-mile Payne’s Farm trail is dotted with interpretive markers
that tell the story of the November 1863 battle.
Photo by Tammy Purcell
OC MAGAZ I N E ✦ August 5–September 8, 2011
)
C
entral Virginia’s Civil War sites draw
thousands of tourists each year with
Orange and Spotsylvania Counties’
Wilderness Battlefield high on the list
of attractions.
But folks yearning to march through forest
and peer from ridges, as Union and
Confederate soldiers did 150 years ago, may
want to veer off the beaten path and visit
Payne’s Farm southwest of Locust Grove.
Part of the often-overlooked Mine Run Campaign, Payne’s
Farm -- now featuring a walking trail and interpretive markers
-- opened to the public in May, thanks largely to the efforts of
the Civil War Trust. The organization, along with the Piedmont
Environmental Council, purchased the property in 2003.
The 685-acre tract, tucked in the rural rolling hills about five
miles from the Wilderness, was the site of fierce fighting in
November, 1863 as a band of Yankee soldiers met Rebel
forces marching along the Orange Turnpike and tangled into
the night.
The battlefield, dotted with woods and fields, hasn’t
changed much since the fight, making it one of the country’s
most authentic Civil War sites.
“At Payne’s Farm, we’re lucky to have nearly the entire battlefield protected. But before this trail and signage were
installed, few people had the opportunity to fully explore this
site,” Civil War Trust president Jim Lighthizer said in a statement. “We are thrilled that locals and tourists alike are already
taking advantage of this tremendous resource.”
The one and a half mile trail winds through woods and over
ridges just off Zoar Road. Volunteers created the path during
the Trust’s annual Park Day in April, The 11 markers that dot
it were installed in corporation with the Civil War Trails program, which has erected over 1,000 interpretive signs in four
states.
“Our annual Park Day brings volunteers to over a hundred
Civil War sites around the country to clean them up and prepare
them for the tourist season. This year at Payne’s Farm, we had
quite a few volunteers come out and build the trail. It was a real
benefit and generated a lot of excitement,” Trust
Communications Director Jim Campi said, adding that Orange
County residents, including members of the Friends of the
Wilderness Battlefield, pitched in.
Thanks to those efforts, visitors can immerse themselves in a
landscape barely touched by development. While walking
through the thick woods and gazing across the quiet fields, it’s
easy to imagine what it was like on November 27, 1863 when
Union and Confederate troops slogged through mud and brush
during battle.
“The best way to understand the action that occurred on a
Civil War battlefield is to walk the land,” Lighthizer said. “Only
then does the reality of what you’ve read or seen recreated in
See Battlefield Page 5
Battlefield
5
from page 4
EMERGENCY MEDICINE
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Volunteers cleared the Payne’s Farm trail during the Civil War Trust’s annual Park
Day on April 2. Photo courtesy of the Civil War Trust.
t " GPDVT PO SFEVDJOH XBJU UJNFT ‰ PVS
Emergency Department has shortened the
average length of stay for patients to over
an hour less than the national average
t /FX QSPHSBNT BOE TUSFBNMJOFE QSPDFEVSFT
t .BLJOH TVSF UIF QFPQMF ZPV MPWF BMXBZT
have exceptional emergency care here at
home…any time you need it
Whenever there’s a need, we’re here
for you.
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We are happy to help you find
physicians in the specialty you need
24 hours a day!
JUST CHOOSE FROM THESE
TWO EASY OPTIONS:
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Line: 866-693-DOCS (3627)
t7JTJU PVS XFCTJUF www.culpeperhealth.org and click on “Find
a Doctor.”
Culpeper Regional
Health System is a
smoke/tobacco free
campus.
✦ August 5–September 8, 2011
See Battlefield Page 6
t " DPNNJUNFOU UP TBUJTGZJOH PVS QBUJFOUT
and their families
( OC MAGAZ I N E
another media come home to you. Interpretation and the visitation it encourages are the ultimate goals of battlefield preservation -- putting boots on the
ground to appreciate and learn from these hallowed grounds.”
The interpretive markers, strategically placed along the path, bring the battle
to life and place it in historical context. Signs chart the movement of troops,
delve into the minds of commanders and soldiers, and feature maps and photographs. Together, they weave a narrative of the Payne’s Farm conflict and the
brief Mine Run Campaign.
The campaign began on November 26, 1863 when the Army of the
Potomac, under the command of Union General George G. Meade, slipped
south of the Rapidan River, their eyes fixed on Confederate General Robert E.
Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia,
Meade had hoped to launch the campaign, aimed at attacking Lee’s lightly
guarded right flank two days earlier, but heavy rains stalled the advance. In the
meantime, an army scout spied the Yankees, informing Lee they were on the
move.
After they crossed the Rapidan at daybreak, Meade’s men marched down the
Orange Turnpike, hoping by sunset to reach Robertson’s Tavern. But the
muddy road slowed the Federals’ progress and Lee, armed with knowledge of
Meade’s advance, ordered his troops to march east.
On the morning of November 27th, the armies lurched toward confrontation. Skirmishes began around 11 a.m. not far from the tavern and lasted
throughout the day with both sides awaiting reinforcements.
To the north, Major General William French’s Union Third Corps plodded
along Jacob’s Ford toward the tavern, reaching a crossroads at Widow Morris
Farm. As the Yankee officer pondered his path, Confederate Major General
Edward Johnson marched his 5,300 men down Raccoon’s Ford Road in an
effort to join Major General Robert E. Rodes’ troops.
Around 4 p.m., French’s and Johnson’s men met at Payne’s Farm, battling
for hours in its forests and fields. Unbeknownst to Johnson, who attacked
aggressively, he had collided with an entire Union corps with many more men
close at hand.
Both sides charged and countercharged into the evening in the heaviest fighting of the Mine Run campaign. The Confederates managed to hold off Union
attacks, protecting Rodes’ left flank positioned at the tavern. With the farm
shrouded in darkness, the Rebels reached high ground west of Mine Run.
Poor weather stalled the action as Meade contemplated his strategy. On
November 29th, he again tried to attack Lee’s right flank but Major General
Gouvernor K. Warren failed to get his men in place until late in the day. Union
soldiers settled in for a cold night in the Orange County wilderness.
Lee was again informed about Yankee maneuvers and ordered Lieutenant
General A.P. Hill’s forces south. On the morning of November 30th, Meade
learned that Hill’s men were entrenched nearby and suspended his offensive.
By early December, Meade had again crossed the Rapidan-this time to its
northern bank. Union and Confederate soldiers hunkered down for a long winter, awaiting the bloody battles to come the next spring.
When someone you love needs
emergency care, minutes can make all the
difference. That’s why we have spent a
lifetime preparing.
Culpeper Regional Hospital’s Emergency
Department has undergone a major
transition with a renewed commitment
to medical excellence, improved facilities,
life-saving new programs, and shorter wait
times. It’s all designed so that when things
are at their worst, we can be at our best.
Partnering with the University of Virginia
Health System, our UPSTART uses a
systematic approach to reduce the time
between diagnosis and treatment for major
heart attack victims. It’s just one example of
what we’re doing for the people you love.
Registered Nurses
Holly Brooks
and Amanda
Woodward never
know what
each new day
will bring. In a
moment’s time, a
ho-hum shift can
turn chaotic. But if
you have a family
member in need
of emergency care,
they are ready.
Holly has worked
for Culpeper
Regional Hospital
for nine years and
says she enjoys the
opportunity to help
people and the
atmosphere at our
hospital. She says
it is like a second
family.
Amanda says
that nursing was
a natural decision
for her because of
her compassion
and love for
science. She says
she enjoys being
an advocate for
the patient and
appreciates the
focus Culpeper
Regional Hospital
has on patient’s
rights.
At Culpeper
Regional Hospital,
we take a longterm view of our
community’s
health. But
we’re here at a
moment’s notice...
6
Community
from page 3
Rikki's Refuge Animal Sanctuary 13th Anniversary Party!
Friends of Rikki’s Refuge
invites youto our 13th
anniversary party, Sunday,
August 14th,- - we hope that
you can join us so that we
can thank you all in person for your fantastic support.
The gates open at
11:30 a.m. Come party
like an animal at our
good luck 13th anniversary party!!!!! Take a
tour and meet our party
animals ranging from
beautiful peacocks to
happy pot-bellied pigs to
fun-loving cats! The first
tour starts at 12:30 p.m Enjoy anniversary raffles, tantalizing party refreshments, music by "Greg Allen Morgoglione
with Alice the Canine Messiah" (eclectoplasmacoustic folk'n
rock), a Magic Show by The Great Baldo Baldini, face
paining, a Children's Craft Corner, and games.
The event is outdoors so please dress for the weather
and critters! Donation: Anniversary gift of 3 (or more) cans
of cat/dog food per person. For more information
Phone:540/854-0870 or Website:www.rikkisrefuge.org
OC MAGAZ I N E ✦ August 5–September 8, 2011
)
Battlefield
While Payne’s Farm is overshadowed in the history books and tourist
brochures by other Central Virginia battles, Campi hopes Civil War enthusiasts
will visit the carefully preserved site and learn the story of a fight that cost hundreds of soldiers their lives and set the stage for the Battle of the Wilderness the
following May.
The Trust is doing its part to market the battlefield, which is already part of
a Mine Run Campaign Driving Tour designed in partnership with the National
Park Service. The group hopes to add additional signage in the coming years
and is planning an event to commemorate the clash’s upcoming sesquicenten-
Full service
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Over 21 years of experience
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Photos courtesy Rikki’s Refuge.
from page 5
nial.
“Payne’s Farm is a hidden gem in Orange County,” Campi said. “Our hope
is that tourists will stay longer in [the area], visit other sites and spend money
there.”
To visit Payne’s Farm, park at Zoar Baptist Church, located at 31334 Zoar
Road just a few miles off Route 20. Cross the highway to the one and a half
mile loop trail.
•••
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Garnett & Associates, Inc.
FAX 1-540-672-5235
127 Byrd Street
Orange, VA 22960
540-672-2000
E-Mail: [email protected]
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August 13: Bull Riding Rodeo. Oakland Heights Farm. (540)
832-3350 www.blm-bull-co.com Five of these events have $2,500
Added Money. These are the five shows on the farm in Gordonsville;
we expect 30 or more riders for each event. That makes nearly
$5,000 in prize money and that means a great show for all.
“The farm” is where, for over 20 years Sally & David Lamb have
held horse show events and operated their horse business. It is
Oakland Heights Farm just outside Gordonsville, Virginia.
August 14: 13th Anniversary Party. Rikki's Refuge. 12-4 (540)
854-0870 www.rikkisrefuge.org
August 19-21: Summer Civil War Weekend. Montpelier. (540)
672-2728 www.montpelier.org Visit Montpelier for a weekend of
skirmishes, dress parades, and Civil War history, where General
Samuel McGowan's South Carolinians encamped during the winter of
1863-1864. See a reenactment of a Civil War-era court martial on the
mansion grounds and watch reenactors use Civil War-era tools and
techniques to rebuild the huts once occupied by McGowan's troops.
Also, tour the Gilmore Farm, home of George Gilmore, born a slave
at Montpelier and emancipated after the Civil War. (540) 672-2728.
August 20 (Sat.): Rebuilding Montpelier's Civil War Huts. See
reenactors rebuild the huts occupied by General Samuel McGowan's
South Carolinians during the winter of 1863-1864. The reenactors
will use the same construction techniques as McGowan's men.10:00
a.m.—4:00 p.m. Located on Route 20 across from the Montpelier
Train Depot, 4 miles south of Orange, Virginia. (540) 672-2728.
August 21 (Sun.): Freedman's Farm Tour, and Confederate
Winter Camp Site Walking Tour. Tour the Gilmore Farm, home of
George Gilmore, born a slave at Montpelier, followed by a walking
tour of the 1863-1864 Confederate winter encampment site. 2:00
p.m. (540) 672-2728.
August 20: Orange County Cruisers. 10609 James Madison
Highway (Burger King) 5-9 (434) 973-8677 www.orangecountycruisers.net
August 20: Big Daddy's BBQ. Waugh Harley-Davidson. 9-5 (540)
672-5550 www.waughhd.com
August 21: Freedman's Farm and Confederate Camp Site
Walking Tour. Gilmore Cabin at Montpelier. 2:00 (540) 672-2728
www.montpelier.org
If you live in bear country and you keep bird
feeders up all summer, you can expect visitors. I
live near the Blue Ridge Mountains and American
Black Bears occasionally visit my yard from June
through August to forage for birdseed that has
dropped from my feeders. They need to settle for
seed on the ground because my feeder pole is
about nine and a half feet tall. That height keeps
the feeders out of reach of the bears, and although
they try to climb the pole, a baffle quickly stops
them!
It is illegal in Virginia to deliberately attract bears
to your property by putting out food for them. In
my situation, these bruins are simply cleaning up
abandoned food that needs to be fed upon by some
animal rather than sitting there to eventually rot.
Because birds and other kinds of critters do feed on
seed that has fallen, there is never enough left on
the ground to keep a big bear around for very long.
Bears eat many kinds of food. I’ve watched a
bear eat my Touch-me-not plants as well as the
fruits on my Autumn Olive shrubs. They also feed
on insects, small mammals, and carrion. Thus
even if I had no feeders out, a bear could be expected to wander through looking for any of the aforementioned items.
If your bird feeders are vulnerable to destruction
by bears, you should consider not putting them out
except when these animals are denning, from midto-late fall through winter. Black bears are often
said to hibernate but they do not exhibit the main
characteristic of true hibernation – a drop in body
temperature to within one degree of the surroundAn American Black Bear shakes
ing temperature.
a feeder pole at the edge of the
Their metabolism does drop substantially, their author’s driveway in Crozet. This
heart rate decreases from 40 to 50 beats per bear-resistant pole has kept feedminute to 8 to 19 beats per minute, and their res- ers out of reach of many a bear paw
piration (breathing) is slowed down to 2 to 4 times for more than a decade. Photos by
Marlene A. Condon
a minute, but true hibernation requires an even
greater reduction in these functions. As a result, black bears often remain inactive only
during the coldest months, whereas a true hibernator will be in a deep sleep most or all
of the winter.
A bear does not want to interact with humans so it will not usually come into a yard
with people outside. I’ve lived in my home for 25 years and have only seen bears
when I’m inside.
Naturalist Marlene A. Condon is the author/photographer of The Nature-friendly Garden: Creating a Backyard Haven for Plants, Wildlife, and People (Stackpole
Books). If you’re curious about plants or animals, or if you are wondering how to garden in a nature-friendly manner, send a question to [email protected] and
watch for an answer in this paper.
( OC MAGAZ I N E
August 28-30: Civil War Package Weekend. The Inns at
Montpelier. www.innsatmontpelier.com
7
✦ August 5–September 8, 2011
HISTORY
OC MAGAZ I N E ✦ August 5–September 8, 2011
)
HOW M UCH DOES IT COST TO ADVE RTIS E? Find out how easy it is, Call Judi Price 434-207-0223 TODAY!
8
A Long View from Highland
BY PAT LALAND
CORRESPONDENT
Exterior of Highland. Photo by Pat Laland.
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H
e looked north and said he was told the
Washington Monument could be seen on a
clear day although he has never been able
to pick it out. Then he turned west and said
that when the leaves are off the trees he
can see the traffic light at Ruckersville, maybe twenty miles
away, as the crow flies.
“I do kinda like it out here,” smiled John Faulconer,
standing in front of the house where he spent growing up
years. It’s an attractive, compact structure that contains
a three-layered enlarged two-story log cabin enclosed by
brick, all of it tucked inside a shell of aluminum siding. “For
insulation,” he added.
The outstanding view from Highland seems it would
have made an outstanding lookout point during the Civil
War but Faulconer said he never has found documentation
for that. What he does know is that when the cabin was
being used as a school after the war, an outbuilding contained canon balls and live shells the teacher had the older
boys remove and bury.
The original property, consisting of 6,500 acres, was
patented to Colonel John Baylor in 1726.
It comes down from both Faulconer’s family and that of
his wife, Dana, through an ancestor of hers, Thomas G.
Macon, kin to James Madison’s mother, who owned it in
1816. He conveyed it to Conway C. Macon who was an
Orange County Sheriff. It then was purchased by William
Bankhead who built the log cabin in 1852. The property went to his son in 1859. It was called Edgemont in
1880, and 350 acres were divided off for a site where the
senior Bankhead then built Walnut Hill that later was sold
to General, then Governor, James Kemper, who is buried
there.
The farm was owned by C. Cameron Kress, a World
War I navy physician, in 1947. He added a garage and furnace room to the original cabin that now has ten rooms,
paneled the interior rooms and bricked over the logs. The
John Faulconer shows off a bottle of Elijah Craig Bourbon
whiskey. Photo by Pat Laland.
Faulconers purchased it from Kress in 1949.
The interior of the cozy structure shows Faulconer’s
passion for collecting and caring for items from the past,
with books, prints and memorabilia displayed. The wormy
chestnut paneling that covers the original chestnut logs
was rescued from an old barn by former owner Kress, who
also embellished the fireplace mantel in the living room
and the newel post and rail on the staircase with carved
hardwood pieces. The family believes these pieces came
See Faulconer Page 9
Faulconer from Page 8
9
Meet Crystal Good...
ogan's Salon and Spa
L
is very excited to
introduce Crystal Good.
Crystal has five years of
experince, specalizing in
custom color design and
foil work. Certified in
Manicures and pedicures,
all aspects of new trends
in cuts and styles. Crystal
invites all to stop by to meet her and experince her
youthful abilities!
John Faulconer in front of Faulconer Hardware store. Photo by Pat LaLand.
See Faulconer Page 10
$5.00 off any haircut,
$10.00 off any Chemical
service. Logan's is having a special
sale on haircare products,
50% off many lines of products.
TIGI® make-up 50% off!
★Come in monday-saturday,
make your appointments
today or walk-in, must bring
in coupon to recieve discount.
Logan’s
SALON & SPA
Carved newel post at Highland,
thought to be from a former Navy ship.
Photo by Pat Laland.
132 E. Main Street • Orange, VA
540-672-5123
Gifts with a Conscience
End of Summer Sale
123 W. Main Street • Louisa, VA 23093
540-967-0910
Monday thru Saturday 10-5
Planters and Pottery
25% OFF
Through August
Discover a World of Difference
✦ August 5–September 8, 2011
Distinctive Fair Trade Gifts
Books of Local Interest
Handmade Jewelry
Alpaca Apparel
Book Swap
Shop Locally
COUPON
( OC MAGAZ I N E
from a yacht owned by the Gould
family that was used as a hospital
ship during WWI.
Faulconer fondly remembers his
school years, spent at both Orange
High School and Woodberry Forest,
and the parties he and his friends
enjoyed.
“There was one and usually two
parties every weekend,” he said, “at
one house or another.” Couples
danced in the dining room to a record
player, the boys in coat and tie, with
a fire in the living room fireplace in
the winter and plenty of refreshments.
“Mother cooked bacon and eggs
before everybody went home, usually
around midnight .” It’s easy to imagine that an ear placed to the wall still
could echo sounds of rock and roll
tunes caught in cobwebs between the
logs.
Faulconer
graduated
from
Randolph Macon with a degree in
sociology, then returned to Orange
to join the family hardware business,
BACK TO
SCHOOL
Faulconer from Page 9
10
Dining Room at Highland where the teenagers danced. Photo by Pat Laland.
Jr., went west with other family members, including preacher Elijah Craig, to
settle in Kentucky where Craig is credited with inventing bourbon whiskey. In
case someone is apt to scoff, Faulconer can produce a bottle of bourbon with
Elijah’s name branded on the label, and the legend as well.
The story is that the product was a happy accident since Craig was making
corn whiskey in the barn when it caught fire and with no money to buy new
barrels for aging the brew, he used those that survived the fire. The charred flavor they imparted to it made Bourbon County whiskey famous.
When John Faulconer, the tenth generation of Faulconers in Virginia ,
enjoys the perspective from his front yard at Highland, he sees countryside his
family has known for a long time. There have been Faulconers in Virginia for
392 years and in Orange County for 271 years. That is very long view.
•••
carpets • vinyl • laminates • hardwood floors • dustless sanding
36th Annual
Orange Street Festival
Saturday, Sept 10 – 9 am to 5 pm
Rain or Shine
Over 150 vendors – loads of arts, crafts,
clothing, wood items, toys, business
displays, jewelry and terrific festival foods.
Get an early jump with creative ideas for
Christmas Gifts
On Main & Short Streets, Orange
For info: www.orangevachamber.com
carpets • vinyl • laminates • hardwood floors • dustless sanding
)Published once a month....
OC MAGAZ I N E ✦ August 5–September 8, 2011
started by his father in 1935.
“He sold John Deere Tractors,” Faulconer said, “In the 1940s he sold the
first rubber-tired John Deere tractor seen in Orange , a new idea in farm
machinery, to Rowland Hill’s father. Dad took delivery at the train station and
drove it up Main Street, down Caroline Street to Jiggs Craun’s service station
next door to the present historical society, to fill it with gas. A crowd gathered
around to see this new innovation, laughing and saying that rubber tires on a
tractor was the dumbest thing they had ever seen. I think it’s possible that tractor still survives at Berry Hill.”
The first member of the Faulconer family to come to Virginia was Thomas,
who arrived in 1619 from England . He helped build St. Luke’s Church, the
oldest surviving church in Virginia , in 1632 and officiated there from 1632 to
1643.
The first member of the family to come to Orange County was another John
Faulconer who settled below Mine Run in 1740. He married Joyce Craig,
whose brother, Elijah, in 1766, was the first minister of Blue Run Baptist
Church in Somerset, where a road bears his name.
In 1779 the Faulconer family of ten children, all of whom, except for John,
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Carved mantle at Highland. Photo by Pat Laland.
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LAKE
OF THE
11
WOODS
A Celebrated Independence Day
HOTOS
PPHOTOS
BY D
DAN
AN M
MCCFFARLAND
ARLAND
BY
L
ake of the Woods held its Independence Day celebration Saturday, July 2nd with a daylong schedule of events
including a parade, flag raising ceremony, carnival, water ski show, and fireworks display. Parade award winners included: Orange Truck 23 – Best Appearing Fire Apparatus; Richardsville EMS – Best Appearing
Emergency Medical Services Apparatus; LOW Water Ski Club “Honor Our Vets” - Best Float; LOW Players
“Oklahoma” – Best Marching Unit; Harold Hopkins, 1956 Ford Sunliner – Best U.S. Car; Bill Halpin, Austin Healey
Mark I – Best Foreign Car; John Bays, 1931 Rolls Royce – Best Overall Car.
See Celebrating Page 12
MILLER LAW
GROUP, PC
We are a debt relief agency
NEW ADDRESS
Miller Law Group P.C.
1160 Pepsi Place Suite 341
Charlottesville, VA 22901
(434) 974-9776 • (434) 974-6773 Fax
email: [email protected]
www.millerlawgrouppc.com
✦ August 5–September 8 2011
M
Bankruptcy–Business Formations
Business Law–Family Law–Real Estate
Orange-inside
Conty Office Bldg.
Virginia National
Bank
East Main Shops
Montague Miller
110 East Main
Montague Miller
Inside
Sherry’s Shoppe
Orange Co.
Visitors Center
(Old Train Station)
Happy Garden
Logans Salon/Spa
Orange Co. Arts
Center
Jack Samuels
Realty
7-11 Store
Not the Same Old
Grind
Orange Chamber
of Commerce
Va Community
Bank
Faulconer
Hardware
BB&T
Silk Mill Grille
Subway
Marcos Pizza
Town Hall
Toliver House
Restaurant
Gordonsville Deli
Premier Real
Estate
Animal Crackers
Dudley’s
Laundrymat
Pomme
Restaurant
ABC Store/Post
Office
Gordonsville
Medical
7-11Store
Gordonsville
Pharmacy &
Butcher
Inwood
Restaurant
Subway
Gordonsville
J & B Market
(Valero)
Horton Vineyards
D’s Market /Excel
Four County
Players
Somerst Store
James Madison
Museum
PS Hair
Inn at Poplar Hill
Greenock House
Inn
Red Roof Inn
Mayhurst Inn
San Marcos
Mexican
Restaurant
Jim Woods Barer
Shop
Haynes Outdoors
New Holland
Ridgeview
Orange Nursing
Home
Sneeks
Burger King
( OC MAGAZ I N E
Formerly, Larry L. Miller P.C.
Great Wall
Food LionGordonsville
Food LionOranage
Lil’ Off the Top
Wachovia
Bank–Rt 15
Holiday Inn
Express
America House
(assisted living)
Orange Medical
Center
CVS Pharmacy
Orange County
Library
Gas & Stuff
Orange Airport
Short Food Mart
BP
Marshall Farms
Corner
Edwards
Store/Exxon
Exxon Market at
Locust Grove
Exxon-Rt 20
Between
Orange/Lake of
the Woods
Exxon Mighty
Mart– Rt 15
Mama’s Pizza
Pure Food Mart
Subway
Lins Garden
Chinese
Restaurant
Wachovia Bank
Coldwell Banker
Locust Grove Post
Office
Top’s China
CVS Pharmacy
Stellar One
Subway
Germanna
Heights
Apartments
Germanna
Community
College
Wiechert Realtors
Clearwater Grill
Montpelier
Bloom
Marios
Hornets Nest
Jeans
Orange Family
Physicians
Tractor Supply
Tucker Paint Store
Country Cookin
Farm Credit
Orange Madison
Coop
Holladay House
B&B
Adrianna Cowan
Realtors
2nd Bank & Trust
Orange Drug
Store
Orange County
Community Ser.
Elmwwod at
Sparks
Bank of AmericaGordonsville
Bank of AmericaDowntown
I MAG E I S EVE RY TH I N G adver tise in O C Magazine. It is easy, Call Judi 43 4-201-0223
Lake of the Woods Veterans Club Honor Guard commander Joe McEuen accepts the flag for the flag raising ceremony from 8
year old Riley Young. Riley’s father, grandfather, and great-grandfather are all veterans.
Where can I pick up my
OC Magazine?
12
Celebrate from Page 11
The Lake of the Woods Water Ski Club show begins with a flag formation.
OC MAGAZ I N E ✦ August 5–September 8, 2011
)
The Knights of Columbus Honor America Corps proudly display their flags in the
Lake of the Woods parade.
Classic cars like Jim Schroff’s
1965 Cobra 427 S/C are always
parade crowd pleasers.
PHOTOS
BY
DAN MCFARLAND
Jacob Borukhin, 8, rappels down
the rock climbing wall at the Lake of
the Woods carnival.
13
T
Lake of the Woods
Hunter Horse Show
he Lake of the Woods Equestrian Center held the fourth
horse show in its 2011 series of hunter shows Sunday July
10. Points earned in the series also countThe Lake of the
Woods Equestrian Center held the fourth horse show in its
2011 series of hunter shows Sunday July 10. Points earned in the
series also count toward Virginia Horse Show Association and
Battlefield Horse Show Association standings. The hot July weather may have had a dampening effect on show participation this year,
Series Show Manager Mary Tinsley estimated. “It was not the
biggest turnout we’ve had. It’s hot, people are on vacation, or they
can’t afford the gas prices, so they are not showing as much.” Still,
for the entire series, she said, “We will probably come in close to
budget.” The remaining shows in the series will be held on August
7, September 11 and October 16.
Sydney Murray and Southern Exposure clear
a fence.
Caroline Patton and Midnight Hour start
their performance.
PHOTOS
BY
DAN MCFARLAND
Sydney Carmondy and Mustang Sally
canter in the student equitation event.
Kelley Cutler and Skye’s the Limit complete
a jump.
United States Equestrian Federation Registered Judge Mike Rooks, left,
and his wife Betsy watch intently as the riders compete.
Avicii/Abigale Gonzalez
Root Beer/Taylor Youngblood
Wellington/Stephanie Hayes
Grey Gardens/Rachel Dunwell
Grey Gardens/Rachel Dunwell
Grey Gardens/Rachel Dunwell
Believe in Magic/Zoe Lumsden
Stoney Points Dragon Top/Olivia Oliver
Longacre Limerick/Charlotte Hazard
Abigale Gonzalez
Kelley Cutler
Olivia Oliver
Caroline Patton
Lindsay Wilson
Mandy Joyce
✦ August 5–September 8, 2011
Amateur Hunter
Low Hunter
Adult Pleasure Hunter
Junior Pleasure Hunter
Maiden Hunter
Green Hunter
Green Pony
Pony Hunter
Pleasure Pony
Children/Adult Equitation
Student Equitation
Pony Equitation
Short Stirrup Equitation
Pre Short Stirrup Equitation
Lead Line
( OC MAGAZ I N E
Hunter Show Division Winners
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
OC MAGAZ I N E ✦ August 5–September 8, 2011
)Published once a month....
exposure for a whole month....easy to advertise....no design fees...call 434-207-0223 TODAY
14
SERVICES
DAVID ROWE’S TREE, YARD & HANDYMAN SERVICE: CARPENTRY, painting, power washing, gutter work, fencing, tree work, reseeding, fertilizing,
mulching & more. Fully insured. Call for a free estimate 540-937-2144 or 540522-1662.
LOHR’S PIANO SALES & SERVICE: Piano tuning and repair. 40 years of quality service. Also have good new and used pianos priced reasonably. Call 540672-5388 EVENINGS.
CERTIFIED INTERIOR DECORATOR, Dianna Campagna. Need home decorating & remodeling ideas? Dianna can help you create a space to enjoy on any
budget. 15 years of experience. Call Blue Ridge Building Supply & Home Center
at 434-589-2877.
SANDS PC SERVICE Center is now open extended hours on Saturday - 9am to
2PM. No charge for estimates or advice. Students and teachers 25% off during
SERVICE DIRECTORY OF BUSINESSES
Beginning Suzuki Violin
• Now accepting
students as
young as three
• Classes held in
Orange &
Charlottesville
the month of August. 106 Crofton Plaza (between the BP & Fluvanna Hardware)
[email protected] 434-589-1272 .
FOR SALE
USED STORAGE BUILDINGS - Many styles and sizes available. Contact
Rodney at 804-363-2536 for details.
MASSANUTTEN TIMESHARE: 15K. Maintenance fees for 2011 already paid.
434-962-2839
MODULAR HOMES: WHY PAY MORE? We will beat any modular pricing! Deal
direct with the owner. Phone 434-392-2211 or web www.haleyshomesinc.com
EVENTS
LAKE MONTICELLO FIRE & RESCUE BINGO: $1,000 Jackpot every
Thursday. New Progressive Game. Doors Open at 5:30pm, Early Bird 6:45pm.
10 Slice Road, Palmyra (Off Rt. 600, near CVS) Questions? Call 434-591-1018.
HELP WANTED
SALESMAN/HANDYMAN LOUISA/ORANGE AREA - Looking for a hard working
self starter for busy indoor/outdoor retail location. Construction knowledge a
plus! Must be able to work weekend. Call 804-363-2536.
CLASSIFIED ADS:
Please send a written or typed copy of the ad with a $10 check to: Classifieds Department,
P.O. Box 59, Palmyra, VA 22963. You can also email [email protected] and pay
by credit card. Please specify the category it should appear under. Ads must be 30 words
or less. Sorry, classifieds will not be taken by phone.
HELP WANTED
Call Judy Wisniewski
(540) 854-2062
[email protected]
Your therapy. Your life. Your choice.
We offer comprehensive
therapies and state-of-the-art
equipment to help you get the
skills you need to get back to
what’s important–your life.
Call 540-967-2250 for a tour.
Louisa Health and Rehab Center
210 Elm Street • Louisa, VA 23093 • 540-967-2250
Applications now Accepted On - Line!
RN MDS Coordinator
LPN’s
FT/PT CNA’s
PRN Rehab!
Louisa Health and Rehabilitation Center
210 Elm Street
Louisa, VA 23093
Earline B. Collins
www.lifeworksrehab.com
PHONE (540) 967-2250 FAX (540) 967-9771
Opportunity Can Be Yours!
ADVERTISING SALES PERSON
OC Magazine is seeking a talented Account Executive to
join our advertising sales team. If you are a professional
self-starter with a passion for advertising and marketing
and the idea of helping local businesses appeals to you,
please respond. Must have good communication skills and
be detail oriented. Experience in advertising and/or outside
sales a plus. We offer flexible part time hours and generous commission.
Send resumé to:
Carlos Santos, Publisher
Email: [email protected]
Valley Publishing Corp.
P.O. Box 59 • Palmyra, VA 22963
15
Central Virginia Gardening
BY SUNNY LENZ
The serendipity of ditch weeds
rom mustard to aster, Virginia roadsides are
decorated through the growing season by
fabulous ditch weeds. As a gardener, I
organize nature for the eye's delight, planning for
repeated showy displays down the perennial border,
placing bright color near and far to enclose space or stretch the view. But it
is hard to beat the beauty provided by the side of the road on a summer day.
In March, Virginia bluebells can be seen near a stream while daffodils and star
flowers, planted by some early settler have gone wild and line the roadsides.
When May apples appear, it is time to search for morels and the season has
started. Dandelions and clover start the bees moving and by May, Scotch
broom pops out, giving us a bright border and an indication of the waves of
color to follow. As summer gets started in full force, chicory, yucca, daylilies
and Queen Anne's lace let us know that it is hard to produce a better garden
display than the one offered by nature on a summer day.
All over the country, ditch weeds are startling. In New England, loosestrife
has invaded every ditch and though I know it is hard to remove and is replacing more subtle growth, the purple beacons are glorious none the less. In the
deep South, trumpet vine and bull thisle blaze away while west of the
Mississippi, bouncing bette lines the roads and sunflowers move their heads to
follow the sun. Lupines, columbine and pinks adorn the mountain states and
Indian paint brush brightens the days in the Northwest. Everything under the
sun blooms in California. World wide, ditches are full of flowers. In Ireland
fuscia drip over the byways and montbretia lines the roadside. In Italy scarlet
poppies and wild tulips are so common, people sail by smiling at the booming
colors. Asia has calla lilies and rafflesia. Australia has cow kicks, cockies
tongue and Queen of Sheba orchids!
But you needn't travel at all to see a bright, changing display as here in
Virginia we have beautiful flowers all season
long just sitting at the side of the road. In
June, Jimson weed, named after its discovery
in Jamestown, climbs high. By July, blackeyed Susans are blooming and in August the
full heat of summer brings out golden rod and
iron weed with its 19,000 seeds/flower.
Some plants are toxic, some used medicinally, and some are historic. Poke berry ink
was used to write the Declaration of
Independence and Civil War soldiers used it
to write letters home. Yarrow, coreopsis,
Oxeye daisy, white heath aster, Virginia pepperweed, hairy bittercress; these and other
Growing along the roadside.
American natives led to a great spurt of plant Chicory is from the Old World,
collecting in the 1700's. Many of today's and its names, Latin and
perennials were bred from these lowly begin- English, derive ultimately from
Arabic. It is closely related to
nings.
endive. Other names include
Asters give us the first hint of fall and wild endive, blue sailors, blue
bloom until first frost. Bittersweet carries on daisy, coffeeweed, bunk, and
all the way to December. None of this is succory.
organized or arranged, none purchased or
mulched. We garden to bring a little order into our surroundings but the
serendipity of nature in the roadside ditch outshines us all.
Sunny Lenz is a professional gardner and landscape painter working in
and around central Virginia.
Volunteer opportunities are
always available for teens
interested in heath care or
community service.
Compassionate End-of-life Care
Your Local Non-Profit Community Hospice
Virginia Licensed, Medicare &
Medicaid Certified
✦ August 5–September 8, 2011
Serving Culpeper, Fauquier, Madison, Orange
& Rappahannock Counties since 1983
( OC MAGAZ I N E
Please contact
Hospice of the Rapidan today.
(540) 825-4840
or visit us online:
www.hotr.org.
I MAG E I S EVE RY TH I N G adver tise in O C Magazine. It is easy, Call 43 4-201-0223
F
16
THE PREMIER CHOICE
CHARM & CHARISMA! Beautiful Pond Views from your living room & sunroom, round top windows, tall ceilings, open
living plan with kitchen, large breakfast bar, pretty oak cabinets and a FULL walkout basement with full bath! Attached
Garage with paved driveway. This home has it all - check
out the photos - then come fall in love with your next home.
Well maintained and ready. $255,000 . Also available for
Rent $1,500 per month. Call Cindy 434-906-0274
IN
REAL ESTATE
Captivating Cape Cod. Home shows beautifully & offers 3BDR,
wide plank wood floors, gas fireplace, formal dining room, spacious screened in side porch, rear deck, brick patio and lots of
charm. Full basement; partially finished with family room & wet
bar. Located on a mature well landscaped lot with fenced rear
yard, storage shed & paved drive that provides off street parking. Located in the Town of Orange, convenient to shopping &
restaurants. $205,000. Call Cindy 434-906-0274
REDLANDS. GRACIOUS 1910 GREEK REVIVAL OFFERS AUTHENTIC
CHARACTER and breathtaking views of neighboring vineyard.
Home features large elegant rooms, 4 fireplaces and cheerful
country kitchen. The upstairs massive Master Suite is complete
with sitting room, wet bar and private porch. Finished basement
offers separate and complete living quarters. Tranquil and private
hill top setting home on 9+/- acres offered at $750,000. Additional
commercial acreage available.Cindy 434-906-0274
SELLERS WANTED!
OC MAGAZ I N E ✦ August 5–September 8, 2011
)
Take Advantage of
our Summer Super
Saver listing event.
FIRST TIME BUYERS TAKE NOTE! THIS BEAUTIFULLY
UPDATED RANCH w/ finished basement located in the
Charming Town of Gordonsville, features new kitchen
and flooring, new windows, new French doors to new
deck, open concept living area, Large MBR & bath, 2
add. light filled BR's and bath, attached garage plus a
detached garage/storage, 2,042 finished sq. ft. and a
fully fenced yard. Great Location, walk to restaurants,
shopping & library. $149,000. Call Heather 434-942-9959
List Your Home for
4.75% commission.
Call today for details.
FANTASTIC FIXER UPPER. Great opportunity for the
right buyer willing to do a Little work to make this a
home a good investment. Open floor plan with 3
bedrooms; 2 baths, gas fireplace, vaulted ceilings,
wood floors, spacious kitchen & dining, 1,366 sq. ft
and wrap around deck. 3.2+/- Acres. $105,000.
Call Cindy 434-906-0274
BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY PROPERTY. 156.79 +/ACRES offering Mountain Views & River
Frontage. Walk the land! It is truly beautiful,
mountain views, woods, springs and the
Pamunkey River. If land is loved, this is definitely something to see! The second house
and out buildings are sold "as is". They are
very charming, but in need of restoration.
Original farm house was built in 1861 and the
land offers Pamunkey River frontage.
$889,000
TRADITIONAL LIVING with elegant modern
touches throughout, make this custom 4,100 sq
home a wonderful place to call your own.
Situated on 15 acres close to Charlottesville, the
home features: 4 Bedrooms all with private
attached baths, 12ft ceilings, Brazillian Cherry
wood & marble flooring, & a true chef’s kitchen.
One flooring living is a real bonus in this custom
built home. $749,900. Call Heather at 434-9429959
THE EXTRA TOUCHES Inside and Out make this
property so wonderful: 4 BDRs, hardwood floors,
gas log fireplace, high ceilings, granite kitchen
counters, stainless steel appliances, covered
front porch with swing, screened in rear porch,
1st floor owner suite, attached garage, & paved
driveway. Property is well landscaped & manicured w/ a beautiful lawn, flowers beds, stone
walls & walkways. Easy commute to
Charlottesville, Greene, Orange, & Madison, 14
miles to Zions Cross Road, 21 miles to UVA.
$315,000. Call Cindy 434-906-0274