July 2011 Scottsville Monthly
Transcription
July 2011 Scottsville Monthly
Your News Source For Scottsville On The James June 17–July 21, 2011 FREE o tt sv Sc ill e M ! ! m B o ang! Boom Bo 4th Scottsville Skies Filled With Fireworks Streets Filled With Fun FO OD GO SP EL US IC TR AC TO R T CA R CR AF TS FL SH OW FE ST IV AL M AR ONTHLY of July EA M SH OW AR KE T Page 4 2 Barnett Real Estate 300 Valley Street, Scottsville ✦ Office: (434) 286-9900 ✦ Fax: (434) 286-9393 www.barnettre.com NEW PRICE MLS 487565 $199,900 Fantastic 4BR, 2BA ranch that shows like a dream on 13+ very, very private acres, only minutes from Scottsville, in sought after Fluvanna County. An unbelievable buy at $199,900. Call Larry or Sarah. MLS 485941 $249,000 Better than new 3BR, 2.5BA colonial on very private cul-de-sac only minutes from Scottsville. Upgrades include cork floors in kitchen, hardwood floors, Pella windows, on-demand hot water heater, and so much more. Walkout basement for storage or future expansion. Small creek in rear of this special 3 acre property. Call Larry SOLD Sold by Larry Barnett $160,000 Better than new! 3BR, 2BA ranch on 3.22 acres. Hardwood floors, family room and much more for only $160,000. MLS 482861 $535,000 Fantastic location! Walk to Downtown Mall from this charming 1929 4BR, 2BA beauty w/ 2BR, 1BA guest cottage. Great value for $545,000. Call Larry. SCOTTSVILLE MONTHLY ✦ June 17–July 21, 2011 ) SOLD MLS 482876 $69,900 Ever thought of owning your own business? This 1344 sq. ft. well-built building on busy Rt. 6 might just be for you. Corner lot w/ lots of parking and visibility. Priced $11,200 under county assessment. Call Larry. MLS 484927 $95,000 1935 charming, cozy 3BR home. Master BA on 1st level, hardwood floors. Ready for 2011 living. Wake up 1st time home buyers! Call Tom or Lil. LAND LISTINGS Albemarle MLS 472998 ◆10 AC ◆ $58,900 Fluvanna Larry Barnett 434-960-6038 BROKER Sarah Churchill 434-882-2980 REALTOR® Tom Snoddy Lillian Copeland 434-286-9072 REALTOR® MLS 488346 ◆ 6.5 AC ◆ $59,900 MLS 486207 ◆ 35.26 AC ◆ $185,000 MLS 486235 ◆ 35.53 AC ◆ $185,000 ◆ Vol. 9 No. 12, June 17–July 21, 2011 ◆ What’s Scottsville MONTHLY Your News Source For Scottsville On The James INSIDE...... Publisher C. M. Santos valleyeditor@embarqmail.com Business Advertising Director Judi Price valleysales@embarqmail.com William Burgess Scottsville’s photographer... pages 8-10 Disclaimer: The Scottsville Monthly does not endorse or recommend any product or service and is not responsible for any warranties or claims made by advertisers in their ads. Submissions, tips, ideas, etc.: The Scottsville Monthly encourages submissions and tips on items of interest to Scottsville citizens. However we reserve the right to edit submissions and cannot guarantee they will be published. The Scottsville Monthly 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: The Scottsville Monthly, P.O. Box 59, Palmyra, VA 22963. Graphic Designer Marilyn Ellinger Staff Writers Laurel Greene Ruth Klippstein Noelle Arico Funk Marianne Ramsden Contributors Nancy Gill, Evelyn Edson May Lythgoe, Scottsville Museum Ron Smith Email: valleyeditor@embarqmail.com Red Hill students visit Monacan museum exhibit ...pages 12-13 Phone: (434) 591-1000 Fax: (434) 589-1704 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: Subscriptions Dept., P.O. Box 59, Palmyra, VA 22963. Advertising Accounts Manager Diane Eliason History 3 General: Scottsville Monthly is published monthly by Valley Publishing Corp. It is the only paper that covers Scottsville exclusively. A total of 3,500 copies are circulated throughout greater Scottsville. One copy is free, additional copies are $1 each payable in advance to the publisher. Editor C.M. Santos valleyeditor@embarqmail.com A Twist on soft serve frozen yogurt..page 5 Location: 2987 Lake Monticello Rd., Palmyra Photo Submissions: valleyeditor@embarqmail.com Mailing Address: P.O. Box 59, Palmyra, VA 22963. 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 valleyads@embarqmail.com 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. Next advertising deadline: July 13 for July 22–August 18 issue. © Valley Publishing Corp. 2011 All rights reserved. Library Check out all the summer reading programs.... page 14 Scottsville gets ready for a three day celebration event for the 4th of July. Photo of poster by Nancy Gill. Cover designed by Marilyn Ellinger. C OMMUNITY Letter from the Editor See Community Page 6 June 17–July 21, 2011 Laurel Greene Editor, Scottsville Monthly Abbott Tours Makes a Visit The photographer caught the very last of a tour leaving - and the first of an economic opportunity for the town. Forty-seven people joined an Abbott Tours bus trip from Roanoke Saturday June 3, visiting the Scottsville Museum, Canal Basin Square, and Hatton Ferry. Town Clerk Amy Moyer helped with arrangements and extra docents at the Museum welcomed the sold-out tour; they continued to Buchanan before returning home. Photo by Ruth Klippstein ( SCOTTSVILLE MONTHLY ✦ S ince I have been the editor of the Scottsville Monthly since its very first issue, it is with regret that I announce my retirement or extended leave of absence from the paper (circumstances will determine which). It has been a great pleasure to work with many fine people and businesses in Scottsville and the surrounding area. The Scottsville Monthly is a local business, supported by advertising. Without your readership and advertising, we could not have succeeded all these years. Our publisher, Carlos Santos, will act as interim editor. Send your ideas, articles, pictures and questions to him at valleyeditor@embarqmail.com and thank you all again for almost a decade of community support for me and this paper. 4 COVER STORY Scottsville Heating up for the 4th! BY LAUREL G REENE CORRESPONDENT Praise and Worship Band. Bring a lawn chair and a hearty appetite. Local Charitable organizations will be selling lunch. Adults can enjoy an afternoon of music while their kids can play in a safe and friendly adjacent area. Monday all activities are kicked off at 10 a.m. with our Fireman’s Parade. At 11:30 a.m. the Scottsville Community Chamber of Commerce and James River Brewing will hold a Beer Tasting at the Farmers Market. At 3 p.m. between the Farmers Market and Dorrier Park Awesome Party Rentals is sponsoring a Mechanical Bull Rodeo. All you cowboys and cowgirls come out and show us your best 8 second ride! At 4:45 p.m. get out your dancing shoes. Soul Transit Authority will be get us grooving to memorable Motown and Funk filled tunes at the Farmers Market Pavilion. That’s not all, folks…. Turn your chairs around and walk westward a few hundred feet and get ready for some toe tapping and knee slapping. Nashville Recording act Michelle Nixon and Drive will rock us until the fireworks start exploding overhead. Event organizers have been so pleased with the support received from local businesses and citizens in helping to fund this festival. “Scottsville is such wonderful town there is so much to offer…we want everyone to have a great time but ….. great times, come with great costs attached” says Sallie Massie. “I hope everyone who comes out and has fun can help us keep this festival going next year by donating any amount of money they feel comfortable with.” No donation is too small. We will have donation buckets at the 7 p.m. musical act. We greatly appreciate your support!!” Anyone can see - not only is the weather getting hot, the town of Scottsville is heating up for the best Fourth of July celebration in years! SCOTTSVILLE MONTHLY ✦ June 17–July 21, 2011 ) he town of Scottsville is planning its first major celebration in years. A great fireworks display isn’t the only thing going off in July. Sallie Massie and Nancy Gill have been working for months to make this a weekend to remember. There are activities for the entire family to enjoy starting at noon on Saturday, July 2 through Monday, July 4. The Scottsville Farmers Market will run as usual on Saturday morning selling fresh local produce and flowers. Following the market, the Pavilion will be transformed into a sea of antique cars, muscle cars and hotrods. Interested in showing your car? Contact Jim Starkey and the Scottsville Independent Baptist Church at 434-286-4004. Brandon Maupin is organizing a tractor show for Saturday and Sunday to be held at Dorrier Park. Call Brandon at 434-286-2703. Scottsville Center for Arts and Nature is holding an arts and crafts fair at the Victory Hall Theater all three days. Call Sallie Massie at 434-286-2777 for information. No one has forgotten the children and young at heart. Awesome Party Rentals and Miller Concessions are setting up shop between the Farmers Market and Dorrier Park. There will be bounce houses, gaming trailers, lots of tasty treats and possibly a dunking booth for your favorite politician. For those who fancy themselves expert bull-riders, plan on participating in a good, old fashioned-type rodeo event on Monday beginning at 3 p.m. - riding a mechanical bull. (You will have two days to practice your technique). Every soul needs to come out on Sunday the 3rd for an inspirational Gospel Festival. Starting at 1 p.m. at the Farmers Market Pavilion we will all be entertained by the Five Boys of Zion, The Green Mountain Gospel Group and Effort Scottsville’s And hats off to all the volunteers who helped decorate the town by making street banners. Shown here: (front) May Lythgoe, Sallie Massie, Dolores Sommers, (back) Linda Lloyd and Hayley Poole. Photo by Nancy Gill 5 BUSINESS Twist A Different on a Frozen Delicacy BY MARIANNE RAMSDEN CORRESPONDENT f walking into Twist! doesn’t make you happy you are not really paying attention. Scottsville’s new, and only, soft serve frozen yogurt place is a feast for the eyes. Jini Bitzer, the proprietor who is a multi media artist with a studio shop at River Town Antiques, painted the interior and it is very colorful, jaunty, yet elegant. Stripes of different colors and shapes line the front of the marble counters. Those alone make you smile and feel good. The large logo she designed on one wall: “Peace, Love, Froyo” is a welcoming greeting and mirrors the design on the employees T-shirts. Bitzer choose to call her fat-free frozen yogurt “froyo” to make it easier on the tongue. The name “Twist!” was conceived with the idea of having a short and catchy name and, of course, the frozen soft serve yogurt is shaped like a twirl and a twist. Early this spring Cameron Crounse, who owns and operates the River Town Antiques, thought that opening a place that served frozen yogurt might be a great idea. He owned a small building right on Valley Street in downtown Scottsville that wasn’t used. Why let it sit idle? He and Bitzer, his partner, visited the soft serve ice cream and yogurt businesses all over to see how they were faring. Everywhere they went, at any time of the day, those places were packed. They did further research about serving sizes, prices, flavors and what they needed for start-up. While they waited for the necessary town permits they disposed of the furnishings that had been left by the previous tenant and gutted the interior of the building. Crounse called around to find the best price for equipment. Together with Bitzer he remodeled and furnished the interior. They painted the building a bright yellow, and ordered the sign and canopy. As almost always happens (remember Murphy’s Law?) there were some snafus. Some of the machinery arrived in non-usable conditions. The expen- Twist Specialty Soft Serve located at 501 Valley Street. sive canopy, was ruined when one of the sign company’s drivers backed over it and it has to be remade. Now everything is up and running smoothly. Bitzer will run the place with the help of two employees. Her cheerfulness and enthusiasm is evident as soon as you enter the small space. She makes you feel like a long lost friend and immediately helps you choose a flavor. There will always be vanilla and chocolate, and two other flavors every week in rotation. One is sugar free. The day I visited the alternates were banana pudding and tart, which Bitzer says tastes more like the yogurt you are used to. Not only can you get a Twist! cone, but there is a whole list, conveniently posted on the wall, of other choices. You may choose between various sizes of cones or bowls, and there is even a “kiddie size”. Sundaes come with whipped cream and a cherry on top or slathered in chocolate syrup. The milk shakes can be made in about 27 different flavors. Strawberry, peppermint, ~ colada, coffee -- the list is very long. “Twisters” are the froyo with kiwi, pina See Twist Page 6 ( SCOTTSVILLE MONTHLY ✦ June 17–July 21, 2011 COMMUNITY 6 from Page 3 James River Batteau Festival Wednesday, June 22, the James River Batteau festival comes to Scottsville. A week-long festival held every June celebrating the traditional flat-bottomed wooden boats, called batteaux, once used to carry tobacco, grain, and other goods on the James River. The boats, generally from 6-8 feet wide and 40-50 feet long, are reconstructed by local communities and civic groups, creating a fleet that travels from Lynchburg to Richmond, stopping mid-way for music, fun and festivities in Scottsville. Lessons, Prayers and Hymns for Independence Day Celebrating faith and freedom 10 a.m., Sunday, July 3, on the church yard at St. John's Church, St. Anne's Episcopal Parish. An out-door service on the church yard at St. John's Church (corner of Harrison & Bird Streets) Celebrating our faith and freedom. Dress casually & comfortably! All are welcome! Camp Cost Correction SCOTTSVILLE MONTHLY ✦ June 17–July 21 2011 ) The Friends of SAICC, in cooperation with the Piedmont YMCA, JABA, the Scottsville Center for Arts and Nature, Scottsville Library and SPACE will sponsor a summer day camp. This year, the camp will include two weeks: August 1-5 and August 8-12. Children may attend either or both weeks. Campers meet daily from 9-5 at the Scotttsville Community Center. Also, the Community Center is open from 7 a.m. until 6 p.m. each day and supervised activities are provided for those children who come early or stay a little later. The cost of the SAICC Summer Camp is $90 per week (not $155 as previously indicated.) Scottsville Vet student wins scholarship The annual Virginia Tech Virginia- Twist from Page 5 a flavor shot. The most filling choice is the banana split: one banana, several flavors of froyo with a variety of sauces, whipped cream and a cherry. You can really go wild and choose however many toppings you want. Not just Sprinkles, Skittles or M & Ms; there is a whole shelf full of choices. The prices are very rea- A special thanks Members of Scottsville's River Bend Quilters Group, Frances Herndeon, Marion Harding, Joan Anderson and Pati Smith put the final touches on a "Cathedral Window" Quilt to be raffled off to benefit the Scottsville Library. “It’s our way of saying “thank you” for allowing the group to meet at the library,” according to Ron Smith. The raffle will run from July 1st until November 1st with the drawing on November 7th, 2011. Photo courtesy of Ron Smith. Maryland Regional College of Veterinary Medicine annual awards ceremony and luncheon was held in April. The luncheon, held at the Inn at Virginia Tech, brought together more than 300 attendees into what was the biggest awards luncheon to date. After a welcome and introduction from Dr. Gerhardt Schurig, the dean of veterinary medicine, 239 students were presented with over 100 different scholarships and awards totaling over $550,000. During the ceremony, Ashley Gray, a graduate student perusing a doctorate in veterinary medicine from Scottsville was presented the Herman and Mildred Corder Scholarship. The Herman and Mildred Corder Scholarship is an award established to provide funds to Virginia residents with financial need, who excel academically, are involved in community service, and have good character. July 12, 10 a.m. Scottsville Town Office - presentation of forecast of 50 year regional water supply plan. Open to public. Rivanna will be hosting a meeting here in the Council Chambers at 10 a.m. on July 12 for a presentation by AECOM (Rivanna’s consultant) of Draft Forecast results for the state- Rescue squad has immediate need for drivers. All ages and backgrounds are encouraged to apply. Please visit www.svrs.org or email president@svrs.org for more information. sonable. You may sit in one of the bright red chairs inside or under the umbrella at the bright blue table outside. A steady stream of customers arrived during the short time I spent in the shop. I spoke with Tim, “The Frame Guy“, who said he is totally against “anything with yogurt”, but decided to try a chocolate cone anyway. He changed his mind after the first taste and said he will be a faithful customer from now on. “It didn't have that tart yogurt aftertaste and was as creamy as ice cream or frozen custard.” Another customer, Grace Rebein, ordered a bowl with a mix of chocolate and vanilla and when she saw it said: “I’ll never be able to finish this!” Bitzer offered to add a lid so Rebein could take it home and finish it later. It was gone in less than five minutes. Three very pretty girls came in and wanted milk shakes. One was a little dubious about the banana froyo and was offered a teeny tasting cup of it. She ordered a banana milk shake in a heartbeat. The opening hours are Monday through Thursday 12 to 8 and Friday and Saturday 12 to 9. Bitzer said: “If we see people walking down the sidewalk we’ll stay open a little later”. Watch for discount coupons in all the local papers and at many of the town businesses. My vanilla and chocolate cone was absolutely delicious. I’ll be back for more. ••• mandated 50-year regional water supply plan. 50-year Regional Water Supply Plan Meeting Drivers Needed ARTS/MUSIC CALENDAR Scottsville Center for Arts and Nature offers a variety at Victory Hall Theatre. Acoustic Jam Fri, July 8, 7 p.m. – 10 p.m. 401 Valley Street Acoustic Jam - a variety of music is open to all levels of players, listeners and toe-tappers. Thu, June 16 and June 30, 6 p.m. – 7 p.m. 401 Valley Street A combination of instruction and playing West African drum rhythms. All level of experience. Bring your own djembe. If you don't have a drum, call 434-2862806 and tell us. Instructor/Circle Leader: Jennifer Marks Borishansky Suggested Donation: $5. As You Like It - Pay What You Will - Dress Rehearsal Thu, July 14, 7 p.m. – 9 p.m. 401 Valley Street As You Like It - Performance Fri, July 15, 7 p.m. – 8:30 p.m. 401 Valley Street Performance of Shakespeare's "As You Like It." A Two Lisa's Workshop Tickets: $7/Adult and $3/Children As You Like It - Performance Sat, July 16, 3 p.m. – 5:30 p.m. 401 Valley Street Performance of Shakespeare's "As You Like It." A Two Lisa's Workshop Tickets: $7/Adult and $3/Children 7 Live Music at 330 Valley Street No cover charge June 17, 9 p.m. Santa Fe (Country) June 18, 9 p.m. Big Daddy Roadshow June 25, 9 p.m. Classix June 22, 8 pm Bluegrass Ramblers June 23, 8 p.m. Acoustic Thursdays Will Thomas June 24, 9 p.m. The Seedz (Rock N Roll) June 25, 1 p.m.-6 p.m. Summer afternoon open mic June 30, 8 p.m. Acoustic Thursdays Scott Ward July 1, 9 p.m. Jacabone (Blues) July 2, 1 p.m.-6 p.m. Summer Afternoon open mic, 9 p.m. Karaoke Hatten Ferry 2011 Season Opened on April 16 and goes until the end of October Operating Hours Saturday: 9am - 5pm Sunday: Noon - 5pm Ferry may operate at other times by special arrangement. Where can I pick up my Scottsville Monthly? Scottsville Monthly on SCOTTSVI LLE MONTH LY ✦June 17–July 21, 2011 & Scottsville Library Scott Ward Casies’s Place Real Estate III Municipal Building Esmont Post Office 330 Sports Bar Evolve Hair Barnett Real Estate Colemans Outdoors Remax Bruce’s Drug Store Goco Scottsville Coin Laundry Kidds Store, Rt. 6 330 Sports Bar Evolve Hair Barnett Real Estate Colemans Outdoors Remax Bruce’s Drug Store Goco Scottsville Coin Laundry Kidds Store, Rt. 6 Revolution Health ( Review Office Vintage Market Green Mountain Store Piedmont Vet Scottsville Elementary School Augusta Co-op High Meadows Lumpkins Restaurant Outside Box & Inside BB&T Bank Scottsville Post Office Silver Screen Video China Cafe Laundrymat Chester B&B WF Paulett (Ace Hardware) Albemarle Family Practice, Rt. 6 Yancey School Brown’s Market Howardsville Store Glenmore Store, Tr. 655 (to the right) Midway Market Re-Instore N Station Spangler’s P & S Market, Rt. 20 South James River Vet HISTORY 8 Mama’s Mama’s Place Place Life, in black and white Margaret Napier welcomes Scottsville High School classmates, lots of locals, out-of-towners and folks from out of state to stop by Mama's Place. BY R UTH KLIPPSTEIN CORRESPONDENT SCOTTSVI LLE MONTH LY ✦ June 17–July 21, 2011 ) New Items Every Week Wall to wall, good stuff at great prices, • frames • posters • dolls • books • kitchen ware • tin ware • great furniture • toys • mirrors • advertising clocks • signs • bric a brac Almost anything! Mama's Place on the James River 320 Valley Street, Scottsville 9 to 6 Saturday 1 to 6 Sunday By appointment to arrange for pick-up. William Burgess at the Temperance Bridge on the Hardware River. “We cannot offer you ‘SPECIALS’ in work,” ran a June 29, 1911 ad in the “Scottsville Enterprise” newspaper. But photographer William Burgess of Idylwood Studio promised “Our work is ‘Special’ all the time.” As photography was still beginning its broad—and continuing—effect on our world, one practitioner brought it on a daily basis to Scottsville. William Edward Burgess, often know as Willie, and more recently called a “poet-historian with the camera,” was born in 1871 at Locust Grove, his family’s home on the Hardware River about six miles from Scottsville towards Fork Union. His father was Pleasant Madison Burgess, his mother Sarah (Sally) Clarke; there were eight children in all, two of the girls the first and second wives of Captain John Pitts of Scottsville. This information and these Burgess family photographs come from Irene Dorrier Schneider, whose father, Scottsvillian Edward Dorrier “always referred to Burgess as ‘Uncle Willie.’ Burgess was,” Irene thinks, “somewhat eccentric, certainly nice looking, and very focused on his work.” Irene spread her trove of photographs on a table and referred often to family genealogy she’s amassed. “The Pitts, Dorriers, and Burgesses were all interrelated in different ways,’ she says. Someone once observed, “You have a tangled family!” Irene describes the Burgesses as “farmers, but fairly well-to-do.” The children “travelled daily by horse and buggy to a one-room schoolhouse at Central Plains,” according to L.H. Halliburton in a December, 1974, article he wrote with Bob Spencer for the Fork Union Military Academy “Sabre.” Willie, she gathers, “was spoiled.” Irene says that one daughter, deaf since childhood, was later sent to art school in Pennsylvania. This was Irene’s grandmother Laura Adelaide, who continued to paint in watercolors, later oils, all her life, including a picture Irene displays of Willie’s house and studio, Idylwood—on Driver’s Hill, between the current Albevanna Spring Road and Route 6, now burned. Three of the Burgess siblings, Irene says, were artistic, but she does not know any family history suggesting why or how Willie picked up photography, though it is assumed he was self-taught, and as a teenager, probably learned from books. His work, however, was not the first in town, as Fannie Patteson, in her 1934 manuscript, “Childhood Days in Scottsville, Virginia, 1860-1870” says: “About 1869 came the Floating Gallery, and was anchored near the bottom of our garden in a wide part of the canal called the basin. That was the first we knew of photography and See Burgess Page 9 Burgess from Page 8 9 $1 OFF Any Purchase Over $5! Only 1 coupon per day/per customer. Expires July 31, 2011. No cash value. CANNOT be used July 1st–4th. Advertising from a Burgess calendar advertising his business; children include, center, Irene Dorrier Schneider's father Edward. Scottsville and established a professional photography business, with part time accounting employment with the Pitts and Morris Construction Company, contractors for the last railroad job on the line from Bremo Bluff to Palmyra to Gordonsville.” Burgess collected a variety of photography equipment, some of it “state of the art.” The story is often written of the “special box” he built to “place in the swift waters at the edge of the Hardware River near his home” to wash chemicals from his prints. Halliburton credits Irene’s father, Edward Dorrier, with describing this; apparently Willie’s son, William, would help with this work. The Scottsville Museum’s website on ( See Burgess Page 10 Scottsville Monthly on & SCOTTSVI LLE MONTH LY ✦ June 17–July 21, 2011 everyone far and near hastened for a sitting….Before that time Mr. Ellis was our dependence for ‘likenesses,’ which was easier to say than Daguerreotype.” Willie, his brother Lawrence wrote in a letter, 1987, now in Irene’s possession, graduated from Massey Business College in Richmond, “with a degree in accounting, and was employed on graduation by the C&O railway in their Washington, D.C. office. During the westward expansion of the railroad…to Chicago he was stationed at various construction locations to monitor the activities of construction contractors. During this time he was actively pursuing his avocation of amateur photography. On completion of the railroad expansion, about 1905, he returned to HISTORY 10 Feeding the little turkeys at Locust Grove. Burgess from Page 9 Burgess notes that his prints retain their archival quality “more than 100 years later.” Jack Hamner thinks that Burgess’s Scottsville photos “were extremely instrumental in putting Scottsville on the map, promoting the area. People got to know about us at a time there weren’t a lot of other means to circulate information.” “He’s very collectible,” says Bob Spencer, who counts this “pioneer of photography” as kin. “There’s a great interest still in his postcards.” Burgess would show up at all events—the earliest photograph in Willie Burgess with sons Lawrence and Harold, probably at Locust Grove. William Edward Burgess and wife Gentry Just to Say I Love You, SCOTTSVI LLE MONTH LY ✦ June 17–July 21, 2011 ) Dad! Don’t forget Fathers Day, June 19th, gift baskets starting at $25.00. Plenty of home and gift items on sale throughout the summer, Swim items in stock for the kids. the Museum’s Burgess collection is of Race Day, 1890, at Scottsville’s James River Valley Fair; in 1911 he recorded the Gault camping party setting off, boys in knickers, women in broad-brimmed hats and middy blouses, for a week of tent living and outdoor activities near Schuyler. A circa 1898 print in Council Chambers at the Municipal Building shows a lamp lighter on Valley Street, looking north along the dirt-packed road. Bob Spencer says Willie would also come to family parties with his tripod and big box camera, flash powder ready to be ignited, and ask everyone to pose, sitting still for the long time required for each exposure. Burgess was, in fact, sometimes considered “a pest.” John Randolph Phillips, in “Of Town and the River,” 1976, says, “In his sentimental, delightful, and sometimes exasperating way Mr. Willie Burgess was one of Scottsville’s characters, with a capital C.” Besides the 485,000 postcard views and 20,000 pictures he left at his death, by heart attack on a photo shoot in Altavista, 1935, Burgess published “at least two anthologies of Feeding the little turkeys at Locust Grove.Interior of Burgess's studio at Idylwood his poetry, perhaps more.” As his brother Lawrence writes, “he was a vivid and sensitive personality.” He became the operator of Victory Hall when it opened in 1920, owning the franchise to show movies there— silent films with live musical accompaniment and early talkies—and other cultural events. The housekeeper Burgess hired after his wife's death was Bertha Mayo, who later operated the player piano for Burgess's silent movies at the Victory Hall Mayor A. Raymon Thacker, a family friend, became “a reluctant executor” of Burgess’s estate at Burgess‘s sister, Helen Pitts‘ request, selling the pictures widely to raise money for the family. Currently, a grandson lives in Lake Monticello and a great grandson in Charlottesville. Burgess’s photographs offer us a vista into history: how Scottsville saw itself, what it held important, and details we can still reference in maintaining the integrity of the town’s architecture. Hairstyles and clothing have changed, the covered bridges are gone, but we can still see, thanks to Burgess, attitudes and places from the past, images that are always with us. [Great thanks to Irene Dorrier Schneider for suggesting this essay, for providing the facts and the photographs. And to her husband, Fred, for technical assistance and breakfast. Read and see more at the Scottsville Museum website.— rk] HISTORY 11 All photos courtesy of Scottsville Museum Museum School Visit BBYY M MARIANNE ARIANNE R RAMSDEN AMSDEN CORRESPONDENT Evelyn Edson teaches students about clay pot-making techniques used by the Monacans. Students stand in front of a hand-drawn hose reel cart used by the Scottsville Volunteer Fire Department from 1916-1942. Recently, the Scottsville Museum hosted a lively visit by Nancy Koenig and her 14 second graders from Red Hill School. Museum president Evelyn Edson spoke to them about the Monacan Indians, who had a settlement here long before the Europeans arrived. The enthusiasm got kicked up a notch when students realized they were allowed to touch some of the Indian artifacts. Arrow heads, spear points, and a clay cooking pot were passed around and carefully and lovingly handled. An exuberant scavenger hunt was arranged before they all left with a basic knowledge of Scottsville’s Native American past. See Museum Page 12 ( Three Red Hill students enjoy a movie, The James River, in the Museum’s video booth. Fresh Fruits - Vegetables -Meats - Eggs - Plants Herbs - Artisan Breads - Handmade Items OPEN Thursdays 3:30-7:30 Saturdays 8:30-12:30 Scottsville Pavilion (4340 286-7402 A Red Hill student stares with amazement at an aerial photo of flood damage to Scottsville after Hurricane Camille struck in August 1969. SCOTTSVI LLE MONTH LY ✦ June 17–July 21, 2011 BUY LOCAL! 12 MUSEUM from Page 11 Thacker Brothers Funeral Home 650 Valley St. – Scottsville 434-286-2791 Thacker Brothers Lake Monticello Funeral Home 138 Heritage Dr. – Palmyra 434-589-0920 www.thackerbrothers.com Evelyn Edson shows Red Hill students a replica of a Monacan deerskin tunic. Time to Celebrate Moving To Better Serve You We Invite You to Come See Us SCOTTSVI LLE MONTH LY ✦ June 17–July 21, 2011 ) Formerly, Larry L. Miller P.C. M MILLER LAW GROUP, PC We are a debt relief agency Bankruptcy Business Formations Business Law Family Law Real Estate NEW ADDRESS Miller Law Group P.C. 1160 Pepsi Place Suite 341 Charlottesville, VA 22901 (434) 974-9776 • (434) 974-6773 Fax email: millerlawgrouppc@millerlawgrouppc.com www.millerlawgrouppc.com Red Hill 2nd grade students feel the sharp edge of a Native American arrowhead All photos courtesy of Scottsville Museum 13 ( Visa, MasterCard, Discover and American Express Honored at participating Ace Stores July 2011 SCOTTSVI LLE MONTH LY ✦ June 17–July 21, 2011 ★ ★ Prices good through July 31, 2011 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 127 Irish Road (Hwy. 6) • Scottsville • 286-2521 ★ ★ Visit our website: www.wfpaulettace.com ★ LIBRARY 14 Grown-ups who read The Scottsville Book Club meets at 6:30 p.m. at the library in Scottsville. On June 21 William Saroyan and his works will be the subject of discussion. A selection of his works are currently available at the Scottsville Library. Join your neighbors for a fun, informal discussion and light refreshments. New members always welcome. Young Adult Programs Young Adult Summer Reading Programs June 18-July 30, 2011 You Are Here is the theme for this year’s summer reading program for teens at the Jefferson Madison Regional Library for anyone at least 11 years old, or going into the 6th grade, up through age 18. Visit the library to register and get a reading log. You also get the chance to be entered into weekly drawings for cool prizes. Theatre Games Thursday, June 23. 2 p.m.-3:30 p.m. Are the bright lights calling your name? Don’t let stage fright keep you away! Presenting an acting workshop with professional actor/student, Koda Kerl. Theatre games, improve, stage combat, and lots more. You never know when a star will be born! Registration required and begins Thursday, June 9th. Limit: 20 participants. Creative Writing with Author Elizabeth Massie Thursday, July 7. 2 p.m.-4 p.m. Do you like to write? Don’t miss this workshop by Elizabeth Massie, A former middle school and elementary teacher and award-winning author of adult, young adult and juvenile fiction! Registration required and begins Thursday, June 23. Limit: 20 participants. The Inklings: A Book Club for 11-18 Year Olds Thursday, July 21. 2 p.m.-4 p.m. Join Scottsville’s long-running book club to discuss “The Gideon Trilogy” by Linda Buckley-Archer. Pick up a copy of the books at the circulation desk. Expand Our horizons! Send us a postcard and tell us about your summer adventure. It may be in your own backyard or far away. We’ll display them in the library. SCOTTSVI LLE MONTH LY ✦ June 17–July 21, 2011 ) Young Children Programs Toddler Time! Wednesdays at 10 AM. June 22 – July 27 A storytime especially for babies and toddlers emphasizing simple concepts, patterns, and unconditional acceptance. We stress “I Love You” rituals that help optimize your child’s brain for success at school and in life. This 20 minute program includes books, songs, finger plays and flannel board stories. No registration required. Preschool Storytime! Wednesdays at 10:30 a.m. June 22 – July 27 An independent activity for children ages 3-5. This 30 minute program of books, songs and flannel board stories introduces more complex concepts and ideas, increases vocabulary, improves listening skills and promotes reading readiness. No registration required. These programs are made possible through the support of The Friends of the Library. Tuesday Afternoon Adventures A program for 5-10 year olds, 3-4:45 p.m. Professional performers have been engaged to entertain us with these special exciting events. Registration required and limited to 40 participants. Registration begins June 14. June 21 – Social Butterfies with Linda Marchman! Local butterfly enthusiast, owner of Social Butterflies, and participant in the Monarch Watch Tagging Program will share her expertise on these jewelwinged wonders. We’ll learn about the secrets of life as a butterfly and the planting of butterflyfriendly gardens. Then we will tag and release monarchs and wish them well as they take wing and begin their journey. July 5 – Stories Increasing with the Origami Swami! Watch and listen as Megan Hicks creates a tangible story as she folds her way through a fantastic tale. Megan is a Parents’ Choice Silver Award winner and a Parents’ Guide to Children’s Media award winner. She has been honored as Storyteller of the Year and has earned Storytelling World Honors. Don’t miss your opportunity to enjoy her storytelling. July 12 – Unbeatable: Sullivan Carter! World Traveler Sully invites you to feel the beat of the king of the elephants. Listen to drum stories from around the globe and around the corner, and try your hand at a rhythm or two. Wacky Wednesday, July 27 Tell the staff about the wacky stuff going on at the library and win a wacky prize! Join us for this fun event in honor of the wonderful wackiness of Dr. Seuss! Family Fun Time! For children with an accompanying adult. Thursdays at 10 a.m. June 23 – Richmond Indigenous Gourd Orchestra. Dance to the home-grown sound of musicians with dirt under their fingernails! Band members fashion locally grown gourds into instruments to play world-inspired music sprung from Virginia soil. June 30 – Zephyr the Magician. Kids of all ages will be amazed, astounded, astonished and have a really great time with Zephyr. His magic show is filled with music, comedy, unexpected happenings and audience participation. Register for programs at the library, by email bg@jmrl.org or call 434-286-3541. C L A S S I F I E D A D V E RT I S I N G SERVICES TONY'S TREE SERVICE: Tree care professional. Takedowns, tree removal, wood chipping, pruning, and much more. Licensed and insured. Free estimates. Serving the Central Virginia area. Call Nick at 804-314-2038. 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: Come to SandS PC for all your Tech problems, installation hassles, upgrades, virus removals and more! June special is a domain name regis- tered, unlimited email accounts and a home page for $150 for the year. www.sandspc.com, info@sandspc.com, 434-589-1272. FOR SALE 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 DRIVEWAY STONE: 9-ton Slate Crush Run $150, Stone $200 (Average). Includes delivery and spread. Call 434-420-2002. MASSANUTTEN TIMESHARE: 15K. Maintenance fees for 2011 already paid. 434-962-2839 SERVICE DIRECTORY OF BUSINESSES 15 Meeting the needs of Scottsville and beyond To Advertise Call Judi Price (434) 591-1000 ext. 23 • Email : valleysales@embarqmail.com ISION C E R P N LAW ICE , LLC RV SE Superior Lawn Care for Lake Monticello & Surrounding Areas at an Affordable Price CAN’T KEEP UP WITH YOUR LAWN? CALL US TODAY! Let us take care of it. Don t forget to ask about all our landscaping and lawn care services. Free estimates. Monthly, weekly, or one time service Locally owned & operated • Fully Insured 434-989-9247 SMITH’s TREE SURGEONS C obb Construction, Inc. 3535 Carys Creek Rd. Fork Union, VA 23055 Topping • Pruning • Cabling Brush Chipping • Stump Removal Professional Take Downs Firewood • Free Estimates CUSTOM HOME BUILDER Cecil L. Cobb REASONABLE RATES 434-842-3953 Mobile: 434-962-4626 Dane Smith www.precisionlawnservice.webs.com Mountain Laurel Landscaping Jeff O’Dell Landscape Contractor FULLY INSURED (434) 589-2689 Joe’s Heating & Cooling For Total Comfort Landscape Design & Installation Trees, Shrubs, Annuals Retaining Walls, Picket Fences Walkways & Patios Locally Grown Quality Plants Available for You to Purchase Local Company 434-589-8218 mtnll@earthlink.net Repairs & Installs Doug Osteen 434-589-4113 Cell 434-531-4133 ( Directory–3 month package– ( 1/16 page $20/month–larger sizes also available) Call Judi Price (434) 591-1000 ext. 23 Email : valleysales@embarqmail.com SCOTTSVI LLE MONTH LY ✦June 17–July 21, 2011 PRICES: Services 16 PRICE REDUCED! SOLD! LOVELY CUSTOM BUILT HOME IN CHARLOTTESVILLE LOCATED ONLY MINUTES TO DOWNTOWN, UVA, & I 64. 1588 SF, 3 BR, 2.5 BATHS. BUILT IN 2006. LOTS OF AMENITIES. 794 SF UNFINISHED IN BASEMENT WHICH HAS ROUGH IN PLBG FOR ADDITIONAL BATH AND A ONE CAR GARAGE W/OPENER. CLOSE,CONVENIENT AND IN MOVE IN CONDITION, $250,000. CALL JUNE WARD SEAY 434286-2022 OR 434-981-9038.MLS # 486812 HUGE REDUCTION. 1600 SF, 3 BR, 2 BATH RANCHER WITH FULL BASEMENT ON 8.15 ACRES. FAMILY ROOM DOWNSTAIRS WITH WOOD BURNING FIREPLACE AND BONUS ROOM. PRIVATE SETTING. A BARGAIN PRICE AT $99,900. CALL JUNE WARD SEAY 434-2862022 OR CELL 434-981-9038. MLS # 488295. THIS IS A FANNIE MAE HOMEPATH PROPERTY. RENOVATED 19th CENTURY CLASSIC VICTORIAN (1850)SITTING ON 1.5 ACRES THAT OVERLOK THE VILLAGE OF LOVINGSTON. LOVELY LARGE YARD W/ MATURE TREES LOCATED ON DEAD-END STREET. GREAT PLACE FOR CHILDREN. INCLUDES 2 OUTBUILDINGS (16 X 16 AND 12 X 17). THIS PROPERTY IS APPROVED FOR HOMEPATH MORTGAGE FINANCING. PURCHASE WITH AS LITTLE AS 3% DOWN. PRICED TO SELL AT $159,900. CALL A. SCOTT WARD, JR 434-286-2022 OR CELL 434-981-3343.. MLS # 484557. UNDER CONTRACT! LAKE MONTICELLO- PRICED BELOW TAX ASSESSMENT-BEAUTIFUL 3 BR HOME ON WOODED LOT. FT PORCH/REAR DECK. NEW APPLIANCES, BEAUTIFUL NEW WOOD FLOORS. $122,500. CALL A. SCOTT WARD, JR 434-286-2022 OR CELL 434-434-981-3343. MLS # 487865. 434-286-2022 OR CELL 434-981-3343. PRICE REDUCED! BRICK RANCH 3200 PRICE REDUCED! SF 4 BR, 2 BATH ON 2.57 ACRES. HARDWOOD FLOORS, NEW ROOF, SUNROOM AND LARGE DECK. THIS IS A FANNIE MAE HOMEPATH PROPERTY AND PRICE TO SELL. $129,900. CALL A. SCOTT WARD, JR 434-286-2022 OR CELL 434-981-3343. MLS # 485310 PRICE REDUCED! ENJOY PEACEFUL LIVING IN THE VILLAGE OF SCHUYLER. GREAT 3 BR, 1 BATH HOME. WALKING DISTANCE TO WALTON MOUNTAIN MUSEUM AND ACROSS THE STREET FROM "IKE GODSEY's STORE. LARGE DECK AND FENCE FOR ENJOYING OUTDOORS LIVING. $76,000. CALL A. SCOTT WARD, JR 434-286-2022 OR CELL 434-981-3343. MLS # 484154. 14.66 ACRES WITH VERY PRIVATE LOCATION. 1734 SF HOME BUILT IN 1995 HAS 3 BR, 2 BATH AND DETACHED 2 CAR GARAGE W/ ATTACHED 384 SF STUDIO/OFFICE WITH IT'S OWN FULL BATH. GORGEOUS WOODED AND MOUNTAIN VIEWS. LISTED AT $169,900. CALL A. SCOTT WARD, JR. 434-286-2022 OR CELL 434-981-3343. MLS # 486239. PRICE REDUCED! SCOTTSVI LLE MONTH LY ✦ June 17–July 21, 2011 ) LAKE MONTICELLO WATER FRONT! FANNIEMAE FORECLOSURE. LARGE 2403 SF HOME WITH 2024 SF BASEMENT. 5 BEDROOMS ON 3 ACRES. PRICE TO SELL "AS-IS". PROPERTY IS APPROVED FOR HOMEPATH RENOVATION MORTGAGE FINANCING. PURCHASE FOR AS LITTLE AS 3% DOWN. $89,900. CALL A. SCOTT WARD, JR 434-286-2022 OR CELL 434-981-0636. MLS # 488150 PRICE REDUCED! THIS LOVELY HOME HAS 121 FT. OF WATERFRONTAGE, BOAT DOCK, LARGE SUNDROOM ACROSS THE BACK WITH RELAXING WATER VIEWS, MASTER SUIT WITH PRIVATE DECK AND VIEWS, COLORFUL LANDSCAPED GARDENS. REMODELED KITCHEN, VAULTED CEILINGS AND A HISTORIC FIRE PLACE. $299,900. CALL A. SCOTT WARD, JR 434286-2022 OR CELL 434-981-3343. MLS # 486963 SCOTTSVILLE 'S OLDEST LOCALLY OWNED SCOTT & FRANKIE WARD, BROKERS/OWNER Office: 434-286-2022 Toll Free: 800-818-1693 Fax: 434-286-3554 ascottward@aol.com www.scottward.com SOLD! LOCATED IN PEACEFUL VILLAGE OF SCHUYLER. TOTALLY RESTORED 768 SF HOME. 2 BR, 1 BATH. LARGE LOT WITH 1 CAR GARAGE AND STORAGE SHED. CLEAN, NEAT AND WELL PUT TOGETHER $89,000. CALL A. SCOTT WARD, JR 434-286-2022 OR 434-9813343. MLS # 486625. UNDER CONTRACT! FOUR SEASONS TOWNHOUSE-GREAT LOCATION! SLIDING DOORS OFF LIVING ROOM LEAD TO REAR PATION WITH PRIVATE OFF-STREET PARKING AND STORAGE AREA. BEDROOMS ON UPPER LEVEL. HOA COVERS AREA/EXTEROR MAINTENANCE, CABLE, MASTER INSURANCE POLICY, PLAY AREA, SNOW REMOVAL AND TRASH PICKUP. $95,000. CALL JUNE SEAY WARD 434-286-2022 OR CELL 434981-9038. MLS # 487842. NEW LISTING! TRICE LAKE-CABIN LOCATED IN LAKE COMMUNITY. GREAT ROOM, BR, BATH, KITCHEN SCREENED FT PORCH/REAR DECK. LAKE VIEWS. SELLING "AS-IS: ASKING $43,900. CALL A. SCOTT WARD, JR, 434-2862022 OR CELL 434-981-0636. MLS # 488210 REAL ESTATE AGENCY A. SCOTT WARD, JR, REALTOR, JUNE WARD SEAY, ASSOC. BROKER
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