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Start now, and you’ll be cooling off in your very own pool in no time

Nobody wants to sit in a backyard, jungle gym-side with a cold beer on a hot Saturday afternoon. Sandbox-side? Forget it.

But poolside? Now we’re talking.

Unfortunately, pools aren’t cheap. And homeowners can’t expect to get much on resale out of their natatory investment. But if you’re willing to sink the upfront coin (maybe with the help of some choice financing), your backyard could be the hottest chill-out spot in the neighborhood in a few short weeks.

“An investment in a swimming pool is a very good investment if you want to have a lot of great family time,” says Jeff Meadows, owner and president of Valley Pool & Spa in Waynesboro. “My family lives by the pool. When my kids were younger they all had their friends over, and I always knew where my kids were.”

Ready to take the plunge (obvious pun intended)? Let’s go.

Match your space

No backyard is a non-starter when it comes to putting in a pool, according to Tim Coleman of Augusta Aquatics.

“Any home or backyard is a good candidate, but we like to take the time to get to know our clients to find out what they really want,” he says. “Do you want a lap pool, something that you can dive into, or maybe just something to cool off in and play volley or basketball?”

Coleman indeed says he’s seen pools as small as 300 square feet tucked into yards.

The biggest impediment, especially at the base of the Blue Ridge, is a yard with steep grading, according to Meadows. But even that can be overcome—at higher homeowner expense—with retaining walls and proper leveling.

Choose your pool type

Meadows says homeowners have three main surface options if they want an in-ground pool: vinyl lined, fiberglass or concrete/gunite. Vinyl and fiberglass are the least expensive and easiest to install. Concrete gives you that luxury hotel feel.

“The fiberglass is going to be the most maintenance-free, and the concrete is the most intensive,” Meadows says. “With fiberglass there is no weekly maintenance, but every 12 to 15 years you have to drain the pool and replace it.”

Chemistry also presents options, from the traditional chlorinated pool to the trendy saltwater-type (which still often includes chlorine). Even trendier non-chemical, eco-friendly sanitation systems are gaining some traction, Meadows says.

Coleman adds hybrid-type and natural pools to the structure list and says Augusta Aquatics starts by asking what size pool customers want, followed by depth and liner-type. “After we have asked those questions, we will follow up with, ‘Are you interested in a salt system? Do you want a UV and ozone system, do you want a pool cleaner? Have you thought about automation? Do you want deck jets?’ The list can go on and on.”

Other options include heaters or solar blankets, features that can lengthen Charlottesville’s five-month swim season up to seven months.

Time is money

Get this: You could have a pool installed in your backyard in less than two weeks for as little as $20,000. But as with any custom, designed-in-place piece of engineering, costs and lead times vary significantly, particularly if you want to start building in peak season. (Read: now.)

“When people ask me, ‘How much does a pool cost?’ I say it’s the same as a car,” Meadows says. “It depends on what you want.”

Roughly speaking, vinyl pools are $20,000 to $60,000 and can go in over one to two weeks. Fiberglass pools, which can be installed in the same amount of time, are about $10,000 more. Concrete pools start around $45,000 and run up over $80,000. They can be installed in three to eight weeks.

“It’s a chunk of change,” Meadows says. “So deal with a reputable company and talk to folks who already have pools.”

Those lucky ducks.

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Future in common: New downtown social club returns to its roots

Before they could build a place to bring people together, the founders of Common House had to keep it from falling apart.

Five years ago, longtime friends Josh Rogers, a creative director, and Derek Sieg, a filmmaker, returned to their hometown with a desire to help people in Charlottesville’s burgeoning creative community connect. “People are here,” Rogers says, “but they don’t have anywhere to belong.”

They found an ideal spot—the former Mentor Lodge, originally an African-American social club, at 206 W. Market St.—close to the Downtown Mall, but “just slightly off the beaten path,” Rogers says. Ben Pfinsgraff, former general manager at Clifton Inn, joined them as co-founder, and they enlisted architect Dave Ackerman of local architecture firm Wolf Ackerman to rebuild the space. By late January 2016, they were ready to start construction. Enter: Winter Storm Jonas.

Under thousands of pounds of melting snow, the building’s roof collapsed, “sagging like a water balloon,” Ackerman says. To keep that weight from pulling down the interior walls, his crews had to cut the roof’s remaining rubber membrane, soaking the interior.

The library offers Chesterfield sofas for relaxing and billiards for gaming. Photo: Andrea Hubbell
The library offers Chesterfield sofas for relaxing and billiards for gaming. Photo: Andrea Hubbell

“We didn’t have a roof for months,” Pfinsgraff says. “Everything on the interior just got destroyed.” Insurance covered the damage, but “we lost a few years at the end of our lives.”

Rather than raze the building, the co-founders tore down half of it—then salvaged and cleaned every brick and usable plank of 100-year-old heart-pine wall sheathing. The former went back into the wall. The latter became herringbone flooring, tables and other features in the renovated space.

Reconstruction added 2,500 new square feet to Common House’s existing 5,000, making room for a rooftop terrace and a full kitchen serving breakfast, lunch and dinner.

Common House opened May 17 with roughly 300 of a planned 500 total members on board. Successful applicants can enjoy the club’s amenities, which include regular concerts, lectures and movie screenings, plus Saturday summertime swimming at the Blue Ridge Swim Club.

Outside Vinegar Hall on the ground floor—a members-only co-working space by day, event hall by night—cell phones and computers aren’t permitted, to encourage members to unplug and strike up conversations. The second floor includes a bright, airy tea room and a double-sided wood-burning hearth that provides a faint, pleasant whiff of smoke. The bar, clad in marble and charred wood, shares a clandestine hatch—for discreet food and drink service—with the adjoining Bridge Room. When it’s not a stage for in-house concerts, members can book this small, semi-private space for meetings, board games or LP listening sessions on a vintage hi-fi cabinet with all-new electronics inside. A billiards table, private library and diverse display of local and regional art round out the eclectic, earth-toned space. A central staircase connects all three floors and “borrows light for the center of the building” from the rooftop, Ackerman says.

The roof terrace includes its own bar, a cabana shaded with solar panels that will provide roughly 20 percent of the building’s annual energy needs and a clever oil-derrick sculpture to support and protect the chimney for the hearth below. Neither bar has stools, deliberately. “We don’t want you to post up here and close yourself off,” Pfinsgraff says. “We want you to open yourself up to the club, meet some new people.”

The co-founders hope that Common House will bring members into new social circles and help them make new friends. “We all have the powerful desire to belong, and to connect with other people,” Sieg says.

Now that the challenge of construction is over, Ackerman—a member himself—says he’s particularly looking forward to hanging out on the roof he helped rebuild. Common House “is a neat, kind of quirky collection of things,” he says, “and I think that’s what they hope their membership will be.”

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Function and games: A family pool anchors a multi-use landscape

The couple was not looking to revamp their pool, but the year after they moved into their Albemarle house, the pool began to cave in. They realized they had a project on their hands. And they had an opportunity—to make the pool and its surroundings much more amenable to their lifestyle.

“They asked me to design a pool that would accommodate not just their family, but a lot of entertaining with other parents,” says landscape architect Jill Trischman-Marks. Her clients have twin girls and wanted a space that could support lots of different kinds of fun: outdoor ping pong, swimming, campfires and grilling out. So the plan would have to include not only the pool itself and a game area, but also a cabana to house a kitchenette and bathroom.

A wall of foldable glass doors opens the homeowners' new pool house to the outdoors, but keeps things air-tight (and cozy!) in harsher weather. Photo: Paul Whicheloe
A wall of foldable glass doors opens the homeowners’ new pool house to the outdoors, but keeps things air-tight (and cozy!) in harsher weather. Photo: Paul Whicheloe

For the latter, Trischman-Marks enlisted architect Andy Thomas, and the two worked in tandem to create an overall plan that would harmonize with the surroundings. Trischman-Marks turned the pool perpendicular to its former orientation. “It was kind of in a hole surrounded by really tall plantings, and you couldn’t see this magnificent mountain view,” she says. Now the pool, cabana and fire pit all open up to the vista.

One of the clients is originally from Hawaii, and her home state was an influence on the aesthetic of this project. “I liked the idea of a relaxed open-air space that combines the indoors and outdoors,” she says. Thomas’ cabana design includes a wall of glass doors that can fold completely out of the way, melding indoors and out. But the building can also turn back into a weathertight space, says Thomas, “remaining cozy even in harsh weather—this being Virginia, after all.”

As for the pool deck, made of stamped concrete, it too recalls faraway islands. “We were hoping for a warm-colored deck that brought back the feel of Hawaiian sand,” says the client. The team—including general contractor Baird Snyder and pool contractor Valley Pool & Spa—worked hard to accommodate this desire, in the end inventing something of an experimental technique. “What we ended up doing was using a white aggregate in this white concrete,” says Trischman-Marks.

Plantings (installed by landscape contractor Stuart Robertson) provide color and privacy. “We have tall evergreens around the edges and then a lot of sweeps of flowering shrubs,” says Trischman-Marks. “Then as you walk down into the pool from the driveway, where you’re going a little bit slower, that’s where there are perennials.” She included a mix of native and pollinator-friendly plants: serviceberry, stewardia pseudocamellia, sourwoods, wandflowers and Lucerne blue-eyed grass. “There are a number of butterfly bushes, noninvasive ones,” she adds. “And there’s a hedge of blueberries.”

Photo: Paul Whicheloe
Photo: Paul Whicheloe

The client says her family’s first spring with the new plantings has been a treat. “Every day something else is unfolding,” she says. “As one plant’s blooms start to fade, another pop of color appears somewhere else.”

She and her husband and daughters have been savoring all the functions of their new landscape.

“My husband and I go out in the evenings while our kids are studying and sit at the fire pit and watch the sunset with a glass of wine,” she says. The girls take study breaks to toast marshmallows, and when it’s play time, the whole family plays ping pong or giant Jenga games on the grass.

“Even when we just go out there for a few minutes to watch a sunset or see if the blueberry bush has fruit,” says the client, “we always comment that it feels like we’ve had a little getaway in our own backyard.”

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News

McAuliffe anoints Berkmar Drive, talks Morva

Virginia traffic officials began discussing ways to make U.S. 29—a highway that carries 50,000 vehicles a day—flow more successfully about three decades ago, Secretary of Transportation Aubrey Layne says. When Governor Terry McAuliffe took office three-and-a-half years ago, he made it a top priority.

Today, the governor and his colleague visited Albemarle County for a Virginia Department of Transportation ceremony to mark the opening of the Route 29 Solutions projects, which included extending Berkmar Drive from Hilton Heights Road to Towncenter Drive.

McAuliffe, Layne and about 70 prominent guests stood before the Berkmar Drive extension to celebrate and eventually cut the ribbon with several small pairs of scissors.

Governor McAuliffe speaks with City Councilor Kristin Szakos and Supervisor Ann Mallek. Staff photo
Governor McAuliffe speaks with City Councilor Kristin Szakos and Supervisor Ann Mallek. Staff photo

When the 72nd governor of Virginia took the podium, he said the people of Charlottesville and Albemarle County “made a lot of noise” about the busy highway corridor when he first took office. He remembers local entrepreneur Bill Crutchfield as the main squeaky wheel.

“Tell Bill the road is here,” McAuliffe said. And later he added, “You can bike, you can run, you can walk, you can do whatever you want.”

Virginia is the best state in the country, he claimed while clad in a navy suit and orange tie, but it won’t be if people can’t access it. “They’re not going to come to our state if they’re stuck in traffic.”

Layne, Board of Supervisors Chair Diantha McKeel and House of Delegates Minority Leader David Toscano also made remarks. In attendance were a number of supervisors and city councilors, as well as former supervisor Jane Dittmar, who ran for 5th District representative last year.

Other Route 29 projects, of which there are eight, include widening Seminole Trail from four to six lanes and extending Hillsdale Drive from Greenbriar Drive to Hydraulic Road. And the people of Charlottesville rejoiced when another project, the Route 29-Rio Road grade-separated intersection, opened last summer—46 days ahead of schedule.

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Ribbon cutting. Staff photo

After the ribbon cutting, McAuliffe was grilled on other topics, including today’s scheduled lethal injection of William Morva, who was sentenced to death for the 2006 killing of hospital security guard Derrick McFarland and Montgomery County Sheriff Deputy Corporal Eric Sutphin. Morva, incarcerated for burglary and attempted robbery, was receiving medical treatment when he overpowered a guard watching him, fatally shot McFarland, escaped, and shot and killed Sutphin, who was searching for him.

Many have petitioned McAuliffe to grant the man clemency on the premise of him allegedly being mentally unstable at the time of the murders.

“I’ll be honest with you, I didn’t sleep a wink last night thinking about it,” the governor said, but didn’t give any indication of his final decision. Hours later, he decided not to grant clemency.

As for the KKK’s plans to rally in Charlottesville this Saturday, McAuliffe, who has vetoed more bills than any other governor, said a number of them discriminated against women and the LGBT community.

“To me, any discrimination breeds hatred,” he said. “People are entitled to free speech, but I’m not for hate speech.”

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Monticello still down—and still functioning, despite hack

For more than a week, Thomas Jefferson’s home has reverted back to a time when it didn’t have online ticketing and phone service. And despite the ransomware hack that hijacked its computer and phone systems, the 18th century estate has soldiered on during one of its busiest weeks of the year, when people throng to its July 4 naturalization ceremony.

Trouble was first spotted on June 27, a Tuesday morning. “It was pretty obvious we had been the victim of ransomware,” says Ann Taylor, executive VP with the Thomas Jefferson Foundation. The malware encrypted files, making them inaccessible without the encryption key or rebuilding the files from backups, she says.

Because the attack is under an ongoing criminal investigation, she declines to give particulars of how much was demanded—and whether the foundation paid up, which some victims of hacks have done and still not gotten the encryption key.

But it’s not like it’s the first time the mountaintop manse has found itself without 20th century conveniences. “We have manual protocols for power outages,” says Taylor.

It’s been a minor inconvenience for visitors unable to buy tickets online in advance, she says, but that hasn’t prevented them from coming to the third president’s home. Guests are getting the $3 discount usually given to those buying online, and at the ticket counter, staffers unearthed old-fashioned, mechanical credit card machines.

Taylor praises the staff and volunteers who have rallied to maintain operations. “Certainly it’s been inconvenient for staff, working on cell phones,” she says. And the IT staff has been working around the clock. “Fortunately we have great partners willing to come onsite and help us rebuild the systems,” she adds.

This morning, 10 days after the attack, Taylor says she still can’t say when those systems will be up and running.

“It’s gratifying so many people turned out July 4 to welcome 75 new citizens,” says Taylor. Attendance was 2,349 for the ceremony, more than last year. And from July 1 to July 4, more than 11,200 people visited Monticello, keeping pace with last year, she says.

 

 

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Sister cities, brotherly love

Little more than 40 years ago, former Charlottesville mayor Nancy O’Brien received an unexpected letter. Sent from Poggio a Caiano, a tiny, two-square-mile municipality in the Italian province of Prato, the epistle recounted the tale of a very special—and very old—friendship.

“We were preparing to celebrate the 200th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, and the people of Poggio a Caiano were extremely excited about it, because they’d discovered a relationship between a prominent native of the town, Filippo Mazzei, and Thomas Jefferson,” says O’Brien. “Their interest was so great, they requested to send over a delegation and take part in the festivities. We thought it was a fantastic idea, and we enthusiastically agreed.”

It was this initiative on behalf of the Italians that, according to O’Brien, spawned what has become Charlottesville’s Sister Cities Program, and led to its membership in Sister Cities International. A global nonprofit, SCI—and, by extension, the CSCP—seeks to create partnerships between the U.S. and international communities at the municipal level by promoting cultural exchange and fostering mutual economic development.

“The group from Poggio a Caiano ended up visiting Charlottesville and we hosted them in our homes and showed them around as best we could,” says O’Brien. “Then we followed up by going over there and staying with them in their homes. After that, things just sort of took off.”

Soon after, Prato reached out to Albemarle County, explaining that it was for Poggio a Caiano what Albemarle was for Charlottesville. Agreeing to a partnership in 1977, the two regions became united. “I was part of a group of seven or eight people participating in that first visit, and while we were there, things went so well we began a discussion about doing student exchanges,” says Gerald Fisher, who, at that time, was chairman of the Albemarle County Board of Supervisors. “Eventually, we began sending students from the city and county to live with Italian families for a period of weeks, and they sent back students to live with us as well. It was all very successful and, ultimately, fostered a special sense of community between our city and theirs.”   

Poggio a Caiano Mayor Marco Martini presented Nancy O’Brien, the mayor of Charlottesville when the Sister Cities relationship with the Italian city began, with a photo of O’Brien and Poggio’s then-mayor Sergio Pezzati signing the official proclamation 40 years ago. Last week, O’Brien hosted an Italian delegation and local representatives in her home. Photo courtesy of Eze Amos.
Poggio a Caiano Mayor Marco Martini presented Nancy O’Brien, the mayor of Charlottesville when the Sister Cities relationship with the Italian city began, with a photo of O’Brien and Poggio’s then-mayor Sergio Pezzati signing the official proclamation 40 years ago. Last week, O’Brien hosted an Italian delegation and local representatives in her home. Photo courtesy of Eze Amos.

Since that inaugural visit, many more public and private exchanges have occurred. Marching bands and orchestras from Charlottesville and Monticello high schools have performed in concerts, parades and events in Italy. Soccer teams have competed in friendly competitions. Artists from the McGuffey Art Center have studied painting and sculpting. Restaurants have exchanged chefs. And, perhaps most importantly, families have struck up lifelong friendships.

In this latter camp, retired SunTrust bank president and long-time Charlottesville resident Steve Campbell is a prime example. After agreeing to host an Italian family in 1998, he got hooked. “My wife and I and our two young kids hosted a visiting family and it was such an amazing experience we decided to complete the circle by visiting them in Italy,” he says. “It was a beautiful place with a culture that we found intriguing and appealing and, since then, we’ve routinely hosted visitors and been back almost every year. We visit the same families, and our children have grown up alongside theirs. In a way, it’s almost like we’re dual citizens.”

During their interactions, Campbell was introduced to a subject that has become a passionate intrigue bordering on obsession. “We’d be eating and the wine would be flowing and the conversation would turn to this obscure, historical friendship between [Thomas] Jefferson and a guy named Filippo Mazzei,” he says. “I’m pretty big into history, but I’d never heard of him. I’d listen to the things that were being said and think to myself, ‘There’s no way.’ But then I’d go do some research and find out that what they were saying was true. And the more I discovered, the more I wanted to know.”

Campbell began visiting libraries, digging through records and stacks of centuries-old correspondence between the two men. Starting with the Jefferson Library at Monticello, his hunger for knowledge eventually carried him to Paris, London, Pisa and several other European locations. Twenty years and “hundreds of hours on the project” later, O’Brien jokes she’s anticipating Campbell’s book on the matter (there isn’t one, at least not yet). He says he’s still just scratched the surface.

Who was Filippo Mazzei and what was the nature of his curious friendship with Thomas Jefferson? According to Campbell, it’s best to start at the beginning.

Early years

Born in Poggio a Caiano in 1730, what brought Mazzei to Virginia was, above all else, wine. “He’d established himself as a wine merchant in London, which is where he met Benjamin Franklin,” says Gabriele Rausse, director of Monticello’s gardens and grounds. “Franklin liked Mazzei and was able to convince him the Virginia climate was similar to that of the Mediterranean, and that he should come here and seek to establish grape vines, olive trees and other citrus plants.”

When Mazzei arrived in Williamsburg in 1773, he brought along 11 indentured servants, and was greeted by a group of the state’s most prestigious citizens, including George Washington, James Madison and George Wythe. From there, having been granted 5,000 acres in Augusta County by the Virginia Assembly, he headed west with intention of establishing the first North American vineyard. However, en route to the Shenandoah Valley, he stopped at Monticello. “He spent the night there and, in the morning, he and Jefferson were the first to wake,” says Rausse with a chuckle. “They began talking and there was a spark—they found they had much in common. And that conversation marked the beginning of a lifelong friendship.” 

As it turned out, even more than winemaking, Mazzei was passionate about the burgeoning ideals of personal liberty and representative democracy. “The two men shared similar interests and political ideas, and appear to have felt an immediate kinship for one another,” says Gaye Wilson, Shannon senior historian and deputy director of the Robert H. Smith International Center for Jefferson Studies at Monticello.

Considering Mazzei’s résumé, is there any wonder? He was an intellectual and had served as a doctor in the Middle East. He was well-traveled and had cultivated friendships with powerful European leaders such as Pietro Leopoldo I, who was the duke of Tuscany and would later become the Holy Roman emperor. He was a skilled viticulturalist, loved gardening and, of course, had been a celebrated wine merchant for nearly 20 years.

“The bond was so striking, Jefferson convinced Mazzei to abandon his plans and install himself basically next door,” says Wilson. “In fact, he gave Mazzei 193 acres of his own land, which Mazzei accepted on the spot. …In a sense, it was a mutual sacrifice and an investment. Clearly, the two men were enamored with one another.”

“The two men worked together to hone and craft their ideas, and the parallelism of their thought is astounding. It’s clear they were influencing one both philosophically and intellectually, and that Mazzei played a role in shaping ideas that eventually found their way into the Declaration of Independence.” Steve Campbell

However, according to Rausse, like so many things with Jefferson, the move was simultaneously pragmatic and self-serving. On the one hand, as a lover of fine wine, he very much wanted to secure for himself a source free of the cumbersome—and expensive—realities of importing European vintages. On the other, as an agrarian, he felt Virginia’s economic future depended on what could be grown on the land and, from that vantage, the notion of producing domestic wines that could compete with European varieties was enticing. “[Jefferson] was a tinkerer and loved to experiment with plants,” says Rausse. “This was a kind of exciting challenge for him, and he wanted to be a part of it. But he always kept in mind the possibility of what the project could mean economically, first for the Virginia colony, then for nation-building.”     

The plot Jefferson gave Mazzei was located along the current intersection of state Route 53 and Milton Road, today the location of Salt artisan market, and included the site of what is now Jefferson Vineyards. With the help of his new friend, Mazzei purchased an additional 281 acres of land from Edward Carter, and began building a home on the estate, which he named Colle, in honor of the area where he was born.

In the meantime, he boarded with Jefferson. “While he ordered workers to install grapevines at Colle almost immediately, he was living with Jefferson and was passionately engaged in discourse regarding the possibility of a new republic,” says Wilson. “He already knew Franklin, Washington and Madison, and was soon introduced to John Adams, James Monroe, Patrick Henry and others. He corresponded with all of these founding fathers and played an active role in the conversation surrounding the formation of America.”

Naturalized as a Virginia citizen by colonial governor Lord Dunmore in 1784, Mazzei quickly became a frequent contributor to the Virginia Gazette. And while his English was excellent, he wrote in Italian, which Jefferson, who was fluent in that language, translated. “The two men worked together to hone and craft their ideas, and the parallelism of their thought is astounding,” says Campbell. “It’s clear they were influencing one another both philosophically and intellectually, and that Mazzei played a role in shaping ideas that eventually found their way into the Declaration of Independence.”

Mazzei_Louvre
Filippo Mazzei, depicted in this unfinished portrait by Jacques-Louis David, first came to Virginia in 1773 and was a contemporary of Thomas Jefferson’s who lived on an adjacent plot of land that’s now home to Jefferson Vineyards. The two men shared many ideals, including ones about democracy. File photo.

Filippo Mazzei, depicted in this unfinished portrait by Jacques-Louis David, first came to Virginia in 1773 and was a contemporary of Thomas Jefferson’s who lived on an adjacent plot of land that’s now home to Jefferson Vineyards. The two men shared many ideals, including ones about democracy. File photo.

But don’t take Campbell’s word for it. This excerpt, written by Mazzie and plucked from a 1774 edition of the Virginia Gazette, reads uncannily like the opening lines of the Declaration of Independence: “All men are by nature equally free and independent. Such equality is necessary in order to create a free government. All men must be equal to each other in natural law.” In 1994, the scope of Mazzei’s contribution to the document was officially recognized in a congressional resolution stating, “The phrase in the Declaration of Independence ‘All men are created equal’ was suggested by Italian patriot and immigrant Philip Mazzei.”

Jefferson and Mazzei’s collaboration continued, and, in 1776, led to the production of another important political document, the “Instructions of the Freeholders of Albemarle County to their Delegates in Convention,” in which Mazzei argued the colonies should have “but one and the same constitution.”

“Their relationship was close and quite profound,” says Wilson. “Among other things, Jefferson gave Mazzei a draft of the Declaration of Independence to review, and used an excerpt from Mazzei’s [“Instructions of the Freeholders…”] in his attempt to institute a new state constitution.”

Additionally, Mazzei signed a petition for Jefferson’s Committee on Religion to abolish spiritual tyranny, and, after becoming a member of the local vestry, proceeded to present the argument from the pulpit of the occasional area church.

Worldly influence

In 1775, at the dawning of the American Revolution, Mazzei enlisted as a private in the Independent Company of Albemarle. However, his peers—namely, Henry, Mason and Jefferson—had different plans. Aware of Mazzei’s friendship with the duke of Tuscany, the men sent him back to Italy in 1779 with instructions to secure much needed funding for the revolution. “Mazzei knew Leopoldo because Poggio a Caiano was the site of a Medici villa and the duke had spent some summers there,” says Campbell. “As tensions were escalating in the colonies, Mazzei shared current events with him, sending along an early copy of the Bill of Rights, for instance. The duke appeared sympathetic to the revolution, and Mazzei felt there was a good chance of getting a loan.”

Meanwhile, while overseas, Mazzei had rented his estate to Hessian general and prisoner of war Baron von Riedesel. “The general paid no mind to Mazzei’s vines and his horses trampled them all,” says Rausse. In response to the tragedy, Jefferson later lamented: “[They] destroyed the whole labor of three or four years, and thus ended an experiment, which, from every appearance, would in a year or two more have established the practicability of that branch of culture in America.”

After spending five years in Europe lobbying the American cause and raising money for the war effort, Mazzei returned to the U.S. in 1783, hoping to receive a consular post. And while that ultimately didn’t happen, prior to departing North America for good just two years later, the Italian made one last contribution to the republic from its home soil. “He founded the Constitutional Society of 1784, which had 34 members, including James Madison, James Monroe, George Mason and John Marshall,” says Campbell. “Almost all of the group’s members went on to take major roles in the new government, and The Virginia Plan arose at least in part from the group’s discussions.”

After writing letters of introduction ahead of Jefferson’s arrival in Paris as a minister to France, Mazzei joined his friend in Paris in 1785. There, the two continued to work together to further the American cause.

“Jefferson decided to publish his Notes on Virginia while in Paris and, by way of accompaniment, suggested to Mazzei he should write a history of the United States from the perspective of a European,” says Campbell. Not one to shy away from a challenge, the result was a four-volume history of the colonies, Recherches Historiques et Politiques sur les États-Unis de l’Amérique Septentrionale. Published in 1788, the history was the first of its kind written in French, and relied heavily on Mazzei’s Virginia connections. “The idea was to have the book serve as a counterweight to British propaganda and French misinformation,” says Wilson.

And while the book wasn’t translated into English until 1976, Wilson says it received ample attention in Europe and, ultimately, achieved what it was meant to do.

After Jefferson left Paris in 1789, the two men’s paths would never again cross in person. While Jefferson went on to become the third president of the United States, Mazzei became involved in the French Revolution and, among other things, worked as an agent and councilman for King Stanislaus of Poland, helping to establish the first diplomatic relations between Poland and France.

However, the friends never ceased to correspond.

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Thomas Jefferson and Filippi Mazzei wrote letters to each other throughout their lives (Jefferson penned this letter to Mazzei on April 24, 1796) often about horitcultural topics. Courtesy of the Library of Congress.

“At one point, Jefferson wanted to obtain some portraits of explorers he felt were important to the American narrative,” says Wilson. With Mazzei acting as his agent, Jefferson acquired Florentine paintings of Vespucci, Columbus, Magellan and Cortez from the grand duke of Florence. “Virtually all later copies that found their way into other American collections were taken from these originals, including those hanging in Monticello’s parlor,” says Wilson.

Elsewhere, Mazzei sought to improve provisions for U.S. merchants in Italian ports and aided Jefferson in finding sculptors to work on projects in the U.S. Capitol. Additionally, he served as a translator of Jefferson’s public speeches and letters, and circulated them in hopes of eliciting interest in the American cause in Europe.

But, above all else, horticultural topics proved an endless source of interest for the two friends. “They always talked of retiring to be gardeners and both ended up doing just that—Mazzei in Pisa, and Jefferson at Monticello,” says Rausse. “Through the years, Jefferson sent Mazzei descriptions of his plough and constant observations regarding the success or failures of his experiments, while Mazzei sent Jefferson many seeds and plants.”

The relationship continued until Mazzei’s death in 1816. Upon receiving the news from Thomas Appleton, Jefferson responded: “[A]n intimacy of 40 years had proved to me his great worth; and a friendship, which had begun in personal acquaintance, was maintained after separation, without abatement, by a constant interchange of letters. His esteem too in this country was very general; his early & zealous cooperation in the establishment of our independence having acquired for him here a great degree of favor.”

Lasting legacy

More than 240 years after Jefferson and Mazzei’s fortuitous breakfast at Monticello, on June 26, a delegation from Poggio a Caiano arrived in Charlottesville to commemorate the 40th anniversary of the Sister Cities Program. While touring the area the group encountered more than a few reminders of their enlightened predecessor.

There is the Rivanna tributary named Colle; the salvaged lumber from Mazzei’s estate that was used to renovate Michie Tavern; the portraits hanging in the Monticello parlor and numerous trees in its orchard; and the historical plaque announcing the former site of Colle off state Route 53. And yes, the thriving viniculture at Jefferson Vineyards.

“For Italians, Mazzei is important because he came to this country at a time when it was very difficult to travel to,” says Rausse, who himself immigrated from Italy in the mid-’70s, and was later responsible for establishing the vines at Jefferson Vineyards. “We are proud of him because of his ability to be fearless and live an adventurous life and just follow his dreams wherever they took him. Meanwhile, for Jefferson, Mazzei opened the gateway to Italy. It was a land of beautiful aesthetics and rich, historical culture, and Mazzei introduced him to possibilities that were different from his British family upbringing.”

At a welcome dinner held at Nancy O’Brien’s Charlottesville home, Poggio a Caiano Mayor Marco Martini summed up the legacy of the friendship: “As we share our cities, culture and friendship, we build bridges instead of walls.”

Categories
News

Ring of freedom: UVA acknowledges its past with slave memorial

At the same time Charlottesville has faced controversy over its decision to remove a statue of Confederate General Robert E. Lee, the University of Virginia has approved a memorial—with nary a peep of protest—to the enslaved workers who built and maintained the school.

“I don’t think it’s coincidental,” says Frank Dukes, a member of the design team, co-founder of University and Community Action for Racial Equity and past director of the Institute for Environmental Negotiation in the School of Architecture. He notes that the UVA plan has been in the works since around 2008. “It’s the same impetus. So much of our history has been mistold or ignored.”

Adds Dukes, “It’s part of the zeitgeist, but it is separate.”

The Memorial to Enslaved Laborers got its start from students in UCARE, following resolutions from the General Assembly and Board of Visitors expressing regret for slavery in 2007.

A bombshell rocked the university community in 2006, when an undergrad discovered there were slaves at UVA besides those who built the university.

“The narrative here was that Jefferson didn’t allow slaves,” says Dukes. “He wanted to prohibit students from bringing their ‘servants.’”

Even as an undergrad at UVA in the ’70s, Dukes says the fact that slave labor kept the university running “was never mentioned.” Another faculty member concurred, he says. “We heard there were no slaves here.”

In 2013, President Teresa Sullivan appointed a Commission on Slavery and the University to explore the university’s historical ties to slavery and ways to commemorate the enslaved.

On June 9, the BOV unanimously approved the Freedom Ring, a dual circle that symbolizes a broken shackle designed by Höweler + Yoon. The memorial will occupy an area east of Brooks Hall and across from the Corner.

Constructed of local Virginia Mist granite, its exterior is rough, to represent the hardship the slaves endured, but it’s polished on the inside, and will bear the names of those who labored for Mr. Jefferson’s university—at least those who are known.

So far, researchers have found nearly 1,000 people worked there between 1817 and 1865, but that number could be as many as 5,000. The interior wall will have space to add names as they’re discovered.

Those working on the memorial realized, “you can’t just talk about the degradation,” says Dukes. “They had lives, families, skills. There’s an element of celebration of the lives of these people and the beauty they brought.”

He says, “These are people who couldn’t have dreamed that their descendants could attend the university as students.”

Memorials are often controversial—think the Vietnam War or World War II memorials. Perhaps that’s what’s the most unusual about the Memorial to Enslaved Laborers. “Generally we’ve been astonished with how supportive people are,” says Dukes.

Before designs were ever drawn, there was massive input from university students and faculty, as well as the community. Dukes says numerous meetings and hundreds of people weighed in on the monument and the story it should tell. “This was not some artist going somewhere and coming up with an idea,” says Dukes.

The Board of Visitors gave the project the go-ahead a year ago. “The advantage of this taking a long time is that people have gotten slowly used to this idea, and then enthusiastic about it,” he says.

He was surprised the BOV unanimously approved the design in June without wanting to tinker and consider it over the summer.

Nor were there any complaints about putting the memorial on prime, highly visible real estate across from the Corner. The administration said it could go anywhere, says Dukes, and he imagined it might be off the Lawn. “Community members said, ‘Don’t put it there. We don’t go there,’” he recounts.

“Definitely it’s about time,” says UVA religious studies professor Jalane Schmidt. “I’m so glad UVA is facing up to its past.”

While Schmidt admires the “cool” design of the memorial, she says, “We wish UVA would connect its past to the present. A lot of workers who are descendants of slaves are not making a living wage. Further steps are needed.”

Fundraising has begun for the $6 million Freedom Ring, with its flowing water and circular bench creating a space for reflection, and the university would like if finished by the time it celebrates its bicentennial in 2019.

Said Sullivan to the BOV, “Our decision to create a memorial to enslaved workers is an expression of our shared commitment to tell the full story of the university’s past, as we look toward its future.”

Updated July 6 to include the President’s Commission on Slavery and the University.

Categories
Arts

Heritage Theatre lets Woody Guthrie tell the story

Woody Guthrie—father of Arlo Guthrie and author of “This Land Is My Land”—was born more than a century ago in Okemah, Oklahoma, on July 14, 1912. And yet, many of his political protest songs of the 1940s and ’50s are as relevant now as they were then. This week, the Heritage Theatre Festival brings Guthrie back to the stage in Woody Guthrie’s American Song.

The show, directed by Bryan Garey—a Charlottesville resident who has been working in theater for 30 years—features five actors and three musicians. All the actors, including two women, alternate portrayals of Woody Guthrie throughout the show and play other characters whom Guthrie encountered in his life.

The cast includes local musician Michael Clem—who has toured with Eddie from Ohio—Greg Phelps and Alisa Ledyard from the American Shakespeare Center, Jonathan Elliott Coarsey, who has done several seasons with the HTF, and local actor Deandra Irving. Garey describes the show as “a folk music experience steeped in storytelling. …The dialogue is [Guthrie’s] own words, what he spoke or what he wrote. It’s a postcard or a letter, if you will, done in typical Woody Guthrie fashion.”

That fashion is twangy folk with a deliberate delivery and often a social justice message. The nearly 30 songs in the two-hour show span Guthrie’s prolific career. “What’s remarkable is how relevant it is today,” Garey says. He points to one song called “Deportee (Plane Wreck at Los Gatos),” a protest song that commemorates the January 28, 1948, crash of a plane carrying migrant farm workers deported from California to Mexico. “It sounds like it could be written in 2017, right from the headlines today,” he says. “It’s an amazingly beautiful piece of music that calls to mind the way we should be treating people.”

Guthrie grew up in a middle-class family in Oklahoma, no stranger to personal and economic loss. His sister died in an accident when he was 7, and his mother died of Huntington’s disease while he was a teenager. Guthrie also witnessed the oil boom and subsequent economic downturn in his town, as well as the impact of the Dust Bowl, during which he migrated to California. Such experiences influenced the songs he would later write about the plight of the working class. However, at the start of the 20th century, Guthrie had a limited view on race.

In 1937, at age 25, Guthrie sang a song on the radio that contained a racial slur. According to Will Kaufman’s 2011 biography, Woody Guthrie, American Radical, Guthrie received a letter from an African-American college student in response to the song. Guthrie was so affected by the letter, he read it aloud on the radio, apologized and promised to never use the word again. He then became not only an advocate for the working man, but also for racial justice. In Peekskill, New York, in 1949, Guthrie joined African-American singer Paul Robeson at a concert benefiting the Civil Rights Congress, after which Klansmen taunted concertgoers and musicians; they broke Guthrie’s car windows with rocks. In the early 1950s, Guthrie would pen some choice words against his Brooklyn landlord, whom he accused of racial discrimination in renting practices. His landlord? Fred C. Trump, father of President Donald Trump.

The more than 1,000 songs Guthrie wrote during his career span subjects such as World War II, racial and environmental justice and Jewish culture. Guthrie, too, developed Huntington’s disease and died in Queens, New York, on October 3, 1967, just before his son, Arlo, released his recording of “Alice’s Restaurant.”

Categories
Living

In the market: Fresh options abound from area vendors

From shumei-raised produce at Stonefield, to Piedmont Master Gardeners’ advice in Crozet, this round-up of farmers market finds includes insider tips for everyone.

Green Market at Stonefield

2100 Hydraulic Rd.
531-9646

With about a dozen local vendors per week, the Green Market at Stonefield has high-end, healthy produce, meats, bath products and more to suit a variety of tastes.

The details: Open Thursdays from 4-7pm and Saturdays from 8:30am to 12:30pm, May through October.

Pro tip: Looking for hyperlocal? Family Ties & Pies bakes its goodies about a quarter mile from the market.

Don’t miss: Anything from Legacy Farm; the owners farm their crops using shumei, a spiritual-based Japanese technique of growing and eating food.

Charlottesville City Market

100 Water St. E.
970-3371

The go-to market downtown has been around almost 45 years, and is packed with more than 100 vendors every Saturday. Want to compost, but have nowhere to put a pile? The market also has a compost and recycling program to keep C’ville green.

The details: Open Saturdays from 7am-noon, April through November.

Pro tip: The market’s downtown location draws a crowd, so get there early and stay awhile.

Don’t miss: Homemade, authentic Korean kimchi from new vendor Sussex Farms.

Farmers in the Park

300 Meade Ave.
970-3371

As a smaller cousin of the Charlottesville City Market, Farmers in Meade Park doesn’t skimp on its selection of homegrown eats.

The details: Open Wednesdays from 3-7pm, May through September.

Pro tip: The market has a niche selection of only food and produce, so if you’re looking for your next salad mix or local, ethically raised meats, this is the place.

Don’t miss: Bear Bottom Farm’s pork products, such as breakfast sausage or in-house smoked bacon.

Forest Lakes Farmers Market

1706-1710 Ashwood Blvd.
531-2733

Vendors new and old come out to the market to sell everything from fruits and veggies to wine and freshly squeezed lemonade. There’s a bi-weekly $10 coupon giveaway drawing, so you have a chance to save at the next market.

The details: Open Tuesdays from 4-7pm., April through October.

Pro tip: It’s located in the Forest Lakes South neighborhood and features typical farmers market fare.

Don’t miss: Mexican tacos; try the spicy chorizo, with both the corn tortilla and spicy meat made from scratch.

Albemarle Farmers Market

340 Towncenter Ln.
531-2733

This new market featuring 16 to 20 vendors each Saturday opened in May at Hollymead Town Center. Its diverse mix of artisans, farmers and freshly prepared foods will keep the summer bountiful.

The details: Open Saturdays from 8:30am-1pm, May through September.

Pro tip: There’s plenty of free parking, so no need to get there extra early to nab a spot.

Don’t miss: Liberty Mills Farm; not only is its produce noteworthy, but the farm is also home to the largest corn maze in Virginia.

Crozet Farmers Market

1156 Crozet Ave., Crozet
823-1092

Held in the parking lot of the Crozet United Methodist Church, this market also gives back to the community by donating vendor fees to the church’s food pantry.

The details: Open Saturdays from 8am-noon, May through mid-October.

Pro tip: Piedmont Master Gardeners volunteer every other Saturday, and answer questions about raising produce and dealing with pests.

Don’t miss: Everything needed for a backyard barbecue can be found at the market, from sweet corn to tomatoes and summer squash.

Earlysville Farmers Market

4133 Earlysville Rd.
942-8034

Get out of town at the Earlysville Farmers Market and peruse its selection of dedicated, diverse vendors. Look for eggs, honey and peaches this summer.

The details: Open Thursdays 4-7pm, April through November. Winter Market is open Saturdays 10am-2pm, November through March.

Pro tip: Cell service is spotty, so make sure you have plenty of cash on-hand because vendors can’t swipe your plastic.

Don’t miss: There are new vendors almost every week, so stop by brand-new stands for sweet and savory surprises.

Fluvanna Farmers Market at Pleasant Grove

1730 Thomas Jefferson Pkwy., Palmyra
591-1950

With a bright array of freshly cut flowers and picked produce, the Fluvanna Farmers Market does not skimp on pleasant offerings. Pleasant Grove is also on the National Historic Registry, so bring along a local history buff.

The details: Open Tuesdays 2-6pm; Saturdays 9am-1pm

Pro tip: Be sure that products are farm fresh; there’s no resale allowed at the market.

Don’t miss: Blueberry-infused honey from Mountain Dream Farm. Enough said.

Madison Farmers Market

1110 Fairground Rd., Madison, Virginia
948-6881

This community-oriented marketplace has the usual market fare, but also offers gardening classes, occasional live folk music and a special sampling of vendors’ products once a month. Stop by in August for a taste-test of local roasted sweet corn.

The details: Open Saturdays from 8am to noon May through October.

Pro tip: Beat the heat under the venue’s large oak trees and bring a blanket to join the conversation at this weekly community hangout.

Don’t miss: Homemade scones from Radiant Springs Farm, but get there early—they often sell out by 10 am.

Mineral Farmers Market

81 Louisa Ave., Mineral, Virginia
854-7626

Head to downtown Mineral to pick up your weekly veggies and then check out a selection of crafts. The market doesn’t skimp on fun—it occasionally holds pizza parties and cookouts. The Curbside Mini Market hosts vendors at the same location, selling produce, pies, jams, eggs and honey.

The details: Mini Market open Tuesdays from 5 to 7 pm June through August; regular market open Saturdays 8am to 1pm. 

Pro tip: You can bring your fur baby to the market; the entire space is dog-friendly with water bowls and room for plenty of playtime.

Don’t miss: Janey Gioiosa’s sweet and fresh fruit pies are fan favorites.

Nelson Farmers Market Cooperative

3079 Rockfish Valley Hwy., Nellysford
465-8004

It’s been 20 years since the Nelson Farmers Market was officially founded, but its core values remain the same in the hands of local farmers. The for-profit organization provides a safe, legal place to sell high-quality produce.  

The details: Open Saturdays 8am to noon, May through October, 

Pro tip: The market is under tents in Nellysford, so it’s open rain or shine (live music included).

Don’t miss: Check out Renaissance woman Katherine Herman at Gathered Threads. She sells everything from produce, teas and spice mixes, to natural skincare and fermented products such as kimchi and kraut.

Community Market at Rockfish Valley Community Center

190 Rockfish School Ln., Afton
361-1725

This market in Afton is non-traditional in that there are no hours during the summer months. But, beginning in November, stop in for live music, local produce, meats and plenty of crafts from local painters, potters and more.

The details: Open the first Saturdays of February, March, April, November and December, from 9am to noon.

Pro tip: Look forward to cozy pancake breakfasts during the market’s season.

Don’t miss: Internationally-acclaimed cheese from Caromont Farms, such as the Farmstead Chevre.

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Chapatti

Two lonely elders bonding over their love of pets—Dan owns a dog and Betty has 19 cats—might seem like a bummer of a story at first glance, but in the hands of Irish playwright Christian O’Reilly, Chapatti unfolds as a powerfully sublime ode to human companionship. Heritage Theatre Festival’s production stars Richard Warner and Judith Reagan, who are married offstage, and bring authentic chemistry to the contemporary script.

Through July 15. $15-30, times vary. Helms Theatre, 109 Culbreth Rd. 924-3376.