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Lady of the land: Ira Wallace wants to save the world, one seed at a time

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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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News

In brief: Ticked off, non-Klan events and more

Unstoppable Brogdon

Brogdon_MattRiley
Photo Matt Riley

UVA alum Malcolm Brogdon was named NBA Rookie of the Year last week. He plays for the Milwaukee Bucks, and is the first second-round pick to receive the award. No word on how many rookies have two college degrees, including a master’s in public policy.

Monticello hacked

The Charlottesville Municipal Band presents the Family Pops concert on Saturday at the Pavilion. The concert is free, despite the band’s recent loss of funding. Photo: Jack Looney
Photo Jack Looney

A cyberattack on Jefferson’s home early June 27 took down computers and phones. Although not connected with the international ransomware attack last week, hackers demanded cash to restore service. Visitors were able to buy tickets in person, and the July 4 naturalization ceremony proceeded.


“What the hell is happening in Charlottesville?”—RVA Magazine


Road rage revenge

A new law that went into effect July 1 imposes a $100 fine on the maddeningly slow drivers who refuse to relinquish the left lane, although how this will be enforced remains a little hazy.

Speaking of hazy

Another new law gives judges discretion in suspending driver’s licenses of adults caught with minimal amounts of marijuana, rather than the mandatory smoke-a-joint, lose-your-license legislation that’s held sway for years, although 50 hours of community service may be required.

Extension granted

After more than a year of construction, the $54.5 million, 2.3-mile Berkmar Drive Extended, which runs parallel to Seminole Trail, opened over the weekend. Now you can drive from the former Shoppers World (now called 29th Place) up to CHO without ever setting wheels on 29. Additional lanes make the new road biking- and walking-friendly.


Ticked off

Experts say 2017 is shaping up to be the worst tick season in awhile, thanks to 2015 being a bounty year for acorns, which produced a boom of mice in 2016, which led to this year’s bumper crop of tiny bloodsuckers, according to Slate. Locally we have three common culprits.

Lone Star Tick (Amblyomma americanum) on a white backgroundLone star tick

  • Most common cause of tick bites in Virginia
  • Transmits ehrlichiosis if attached for 24 hours
  • Look for fever, headache, vomiting

Three American Dog Ticks (Dermacentor variabilis) isolated on white background.Dog tick

  • One in 1,000 carries Rocky Mountain spotted fever
  • Must feed 10 to 20 hours to transmit
  • Look for sudden fever, muscle pain, headache, vomiting
  • Spotted rash on wrists and ankles may appear

 

Also commonly found on cats and dogs!

Blacklegged tick

  • Aka deer tick
  • Transmits Lyme disease
  • Look for bull’s eye rash three to 30 days after infectious bite

How to fight back

  • Use repellent with DEET. Most botanicals don’t work that well.
  • Clothes may be treated with permethrin, a pesticide derived from chrysanthemums.
  • Do a full-body check after being in potential tick-infested areas.
  • Remove ticks with tweezers.
  • Flush them or put them in a sealed container.
  • Cleanse bite area with rubbing alcohol or soap and water.
  • Mark date on calendar should symptoms appear.
  • Most tick infections can be treated with antibiotics.

—Virginia Department of Health


Alternative activities to the July 8 Klan rally at Justice Park

Meditation, education and discussion

9 to 11am

Jefferson School African American Heritage Center

Celebration of Indigenous Achievement

10am to 1pm

Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection of UVA

Community potluck

11:30am to 1pm

IX Art Park

Faith counter-demonstration

1 to 5pm

First United Methodist Church

Unity Day concert

with We Are Star Children, Chamomile and Whiskey, Crystal Garden and local multi-faith choirs

2 to 5pm

Sprint Pavilion

NAACP rally

2 to 5pm

Jack Jouett Middle School

Musicians mobilized against the Klan

2 to 10pm

Downtown Mall

More Unity Day concert

Grits & Gravy Dance Party 

10pm to midnight

The Jefferson Theater

Updated July 6 with additional alt activities.

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News Uncategorized

Grave concern: Local group preserves historic black cemetery

A single pink rose lies at a diagonal across the quartz headstone that has become two-toned with age in the last 125 years. The rose covers part of the inscription on Carrie Brown’s headstone, which is different from others from that time period. The Buckner family’s clustering of graves, which lies to the west of Brown’s—all have the same phrase: “Gone but not forgotten.” Brown’s last message to the world, written in a delicate cursive font, reads, “Left my home but not my heart.”

That home is the Daughters of Zion Cemetery, officially founded in 1873 by the “charitable association of colored women in Charlottesville,” according to the cemetery deed. When the society founded the cemetery, there was only one burial option for African-Americans in Charlottesville—the “colored” section of Oakwood Cemetery, the strictly segregated graveyard on Oak Street adjacent to the two-acre Zion property. Today, it is one of three public cemeteries owned by the city of Charlottesville (the city bought the title to the land in 1970) and it is one of 34 historic African-American cemeteries, both public and private, in the county. But just a few years ago, the hallowed ground was trashed, vandalized, had several broken, discolored and displaced grave markers, and was marred with overgrown vegetation and erosion.

In 2015, Charlottesville’s Dialogue on Race sponsored a public forum focused on improving the conditions of this historic African-American cemetery. Subsequently, the Preservers of the Daughters of Zion Cemetery, a group that would devise a plan of action to guide the care and improvement of the cemetery, was formed. The group submitted its preservation plan to City Council and received $80,000 to put its proposal into action.

The official preservation team, working to detect, document and preserve the graves of those buried in the cemetery, includes Edwina St. Rose and Bernadette Whitsett-Hammond.

Bernadette Whitsett-Hammond and Edwina St. Rose began preservation efforts at the Daughters of Zion Cemetery, the historic African-American cemetery off Oak Street, two years ago. Photo by Natalie Jacobsen
Bernadette Whitsett-Hammond and Edwina St. Rose began preservation efforts at the Daughters of Zion Cemetery, the historic African-American cemetery off Oak Street, two years ago. Photo by Natalie Jacobsen

St. Rose is a descendant of Burkley Bullock, who was enslaved with his family in Earlysville by merchant and banker Colonel John Jones. Bullock had learned to read from former Monticello slave Peter Fossett, and after being emancipated in 1865 he purchased a 35-acre tract of land between the properties of Hugh Carr and Jesse Scott Sammons in the Hydraulic Mills area. Bullock founded the Piedmont Industrial Land and Improvement Company, which helped African-Americans own homes by providing credit to prospective homeowners. He also owned a restaurant near Union Railroad Station, which served as a communal space for the African-American community, and was a founding member of Union Ridge Baptist Church, which still stands on Hydraulic Road.

While St. Rose considers herself lucky to have learned about the slave history of her ancestor because her family continued to reside in the same city as he did, she doesn’t think many descendants of the enslaved know of this history.

For this reason, she believes that preserving these cemeteries is one of the few remaining measures to honor the dead. “The homes that they lived in are oftentimes no longer in existence, the neighborhoods are no longer in existence, so you have this one last place that you can come to, to remember the people who once lived.”

To Whitsett-Hammond, who has spent every year since her childhood coming to the ruined Daughter of Zion cemetery on Memorial Day and paying respects to her ancestors, protecting and preserving these cemeteries is only natural.

“I think that if you know the type of people that you have originated from, it helps you in finding your way as you live your life day-to-day, and I’ve just been amazed by the dedication, and the fortitude of the people who went before me,” says Whitsett-Hammond.

Discovering ties to the past

A sizable section of land with a copious number of towering trees, generous foliage and dead leaves and twigs that make crunching sounds beneath your feet, the plot surrounded by student dorms at the University of Virginia looks like any other dense thicket of land on Grounds. Small steps lead to a wooden bridge over a creek, and upon looking closely, one may notice a few stones scattered amid the leaves.

In the past two centuries, these stones have been disturbed and displaced, the plot of land is unrecognizable for what it actually is—a cemetery of the enslaved.

The cemetery is surrounded by the Stadium Road Residence Area, where thousands of students reside, but hardly any of them realize they’re living next to a gravesite, let alone a slave cemetery, says Lynn Rainville, an anthropological archaeologist who specializes in the study of African-American burial grounds. When she first visited the cemetery, it took her two hours to locate it—the signage was in an odd spot near a staircase and was almost camouflaged by the wall that it was on. With construction underway, the previously incorrectly placed sign is now completely covered, making the cemetery practically unidentifiable.

This area was originally part of the Piedmont plantation that belonged to the Maury family, and among all the people the family enslaved, more than 70 are buried in this plot, which is now called Maury Cemetery.

Although the University of Virginia has made an effort to preserve the ground that was first discovered in the 1980s, the plot looks much different than it did in the period of enslavement. Over the years, trees have been cut down and headstones have been removed or defaced, says Rainville.

The problems with identifying slave cemeteries isn’t unusual in the United States. If you take the example of a single state like Virginia, Rainville estimates that 60 percent or more slave cemeteries are unidentified, damaged, built over and, even when preserved, very few people know about them.

The reasons for this range from vandalism, to natural deterioration, the lack of local history documentation and not having proper historical records of the enslaved.

“The homes that they lived in are oftentimes no longer in existence, the neighborhoods are no longer in existence, so you have this one last place that you can come to, to remember the people who once lived.” Edwina St. Rose

It was much more difficult for African-Americans to preserve their legacies than it was for white Americans. “White communities have tended to have greater resources at their disposal to preserve and maintain their cemeteries,” says Adam Rothman, a history professor at Georgetown University.

Jesse Scott Sammons, born a free black man in 1853, was a descendant of Monticello slave Mary Hemings, sister of Sally. Sammons attended what is now Charlottesville’s Jefferson School and went on to become principal of the first high school for African-American students in Albemarle County. Sammons ran for a position in the Virginia General Assembly in 1880 and held a state-level office in the Baptist church. The respected community leader and educator died in 1901 and was buried on land he owned near the south fork of Ivy Creek. In 2012, it was discovered that Sammons’ gravesite, as well as that of three others, including his daughter’s husband, George Ferguson, the first African-American doctor to have a practice in Albemarle County, lay in the path of the controversial proposed Western Bypass. The 6.2-mile road, plans for which were first suggested in 1979 and resurrected in 2011, would skirt the commercial corridor on U.S. 29.

The Virginia Department of Transportation proposed moving the graves because it was determined the plot “lacked historical significance” either with “significant historical events or association with a person of great importance,” but Sammons’ descendants asked the state to reconsider. In 2014 the project was put on hold after a federal agency would not grant environmental clearance, and the headstones remain untouched, just outside city limits.

In February, the state of Virginia passed House Bill 1547, which directs funds to organizations that preserve African-American gravesites. Previously, the state only subsidized the preservation of cemeteries that contain graves of Confederate soldiers. This preferential treatment to preserving and honoring white heritage is another manifestation of racial inequality in the United States, Rothman says.

Rainville, who has created a database of African-American cemeteries in Amherst and Albemarle counties, believes this inconsistency is a problem. On the eve of the Civil War, the population of African-Americans and white Americans in Virginia (and in many other states) was almost equally proportionate. “For every white burial, there is a black burial somewhere,” she says. “But today, there are many more preserved white cemeteries than there are black cemeteries, especially slave cemeteries.”

For Rothman, preserving these cemeteries and fighting for equality in their treatment is crucial to preserving the memory of the people who have made profound contributions to the growth of the country. “Recognizing where these burial grounds are and doing something to restore, preserve and maintain them is a way of repudiating, rejecting and overcoming the legacy of racism. It’s saying that these people should be honored as well.”

Lynn Rainville, an anthropological archaeologist who specializes in the study of African-American burial grounds, created an online database of historic black cemeteries in Amherst and Albemarle counties. She lists 34 cemeteries in Albemarle, with eight public hallowed grounds shown above.
Lynn Rainville, an anthropological archaeologist who specializes in the study of African-American burial grounds, created an online database of historic black cemeteries in Amherst and Albemarle counties. She lists 34 cemeteries in Albemarle, with eight public hallowed grounds shown above.

Preservation efforts

On Sunday, May 28, “Decoration Day,” St. Rose and Whitsett-Hammond shared with a crowd at CitySpace the history of the Daughters of Zion Cemetery and a recap of improvements that have been made there in the last year, followed by a ceremony at the cemetery. Among one of the biggest changes is the use of ground-penetrating radar to determine if there are more people buried there than the 218 currently recorded.

Steve Thompson, principal investigator with the Rivanna Archaeological Services, began working with St. Rose and Whitsett-Hammond last fall, when he helped bring in local company Naeva Geophysics to do the radar detection work, first on a 50-by-125-foot patch of land on the hillside and later on an area four times that size. Thompson overlaid a grid that divided the cemetery into average burial size plots on top of the radar results from 4.5 feet below ground. The concentration of mass shows a pattern that lines up with the grid: Currently headstones mark only eight graves out of a possible 250 to 300 in that one area of the cemetery. According to Thompson’s map, the graveyard has the capacity for 2,000 graves.

“The cemetery is almost certainly far fuller than we’d be led to believe by the stones that are visible on the surface,” he said.

Although the total number of burials will never be known, the radar will be used again this summer along the western edge of the cemetery where the preservers hope to erect a fence. The radar will determine where the exact edge of the cemetery lies, and will be used to stake fence posts so no existing plots are disturbed. Going forward, when the group applies for money from the state as part of the new House bill, it could receive more funds based on the higher number of people projected to be buried there.

“The Daughters of Zion Cemetery represents an important aspect of Charlottesville’s history,” Thompson says. “Preserving the landscape and making sure what it is is understood by residents of the city is important.”

Lola Flash, a photographer and teacher, flew in from New York for the Decoration Day ceremony. Flash’s great-grandparents lived on Sixth Street Northwest, and her mother, Jean James Green Henderson, visited them every summer. Over the years, Flash had visited the Daughters of Zion Cemetery with her mother and heard stories of her mom’s visits to Charlottesville. When her mother decided to write down their family’s legacy in a book titled Our Charlottesville Roots, Flash helped transcribe her mother’s words (Henderson was blind at the time and spoke into a tape recorder). Flash learned more about the Bullock family legacy and how her mom’s grandfather, Charles Bullock, started a lot of the YMCAs when they were still called the “YMCA for Colored Men.” Burkley Bullock is a shared ancestor with St. Rose.

When Flash returned to the cemetery last month, this time with her camera and 91- year-old Teresa Jackson, one of her mother’s childhood friends from her Charlottesville visits, she discovered something new—the gravestones of her Bullock ancestors.

Flash knelt down beside one of the gravestones, and extended her left arm out in front of her. At first she smiled at the camera but then changed her expression to a more somber one. She captured a moment of quiet reflection on a day when those championing the preservation of the cemetery have come together to lay roses on every grave marker.

Says Flash, “A lot of African-American families don’t want to talk about the history because it’s so sad and because of a lot of the language that was used around it, but my mom has a quote—I hope I don’t mess it up. She says ‘finding her Charlottesville roots was like walking through a rose garden, thorns and all, but at the end of it there’s a bouquet.’”

A bouquet that on this day has been divided into single pink, white and yellow roses, each a tribute to the known 218 men and women who are buried at the Daughters of Zion Cemetery, and whose legacy and impact on Charlottesville live on, as well as that of the unknown, whose quiet influence is not forgotten.—Text by Ifath Sayed and Jessica Luck

A version of this story originally appeared on Sojourners’ website, sojo.net.


The Tonsler family plot. Photo by Natalie Jacobsen
The Tonsler family plot. Photo by Natalie Jacobsen

Virtual reality

Former City Councilor Dede Smith worked with Edwina St. Rose and Bernadette Whitsett-Hammond to create an audio walking tour of the Daughters of Zion Cemetery through an app called izi.TRAVEL. The app uses GPS to determine your location, and nearby audio tours automatically pop up. For the cemetery tour, start at cemetery’s sign on Oak Street, where you’ll then be guided to one of 14 stops to learn more about some of the men and women who made huge impacts on our city.

At Decoration Day, Smith told the audience that the Goochland Historical Society recently contacted her after learning about the Daughters of Zion tour, and she’ll be working with them to create a driving African-American historic tour.

Benjamin Tonsler

Tonsler was a well-known civic leader who fought for the education of African-American children. He was born April 2, 1854, though it’s not known whether he was born to an enslaved or free family. His descendants were believed to have been employed by a University of Virginia professor, who may have taught Tonsler to read and write.

Tonsler graduated from the Hampton Institute and returned to Charlottesville as a teacher at the Jefferson Graded School, the only school for African-American students in the city at the time. After a few years, Tonsler became principal of the school, a role which he held for almost 30 years. At the time it was illegal for African-American students to study past the eighth grade, and Tonsler held classes for older students in secret after the school day was over.

Today, Tonsler Park on Cherry Avenue is named in his honor. His gravestone at Daughters of Zion reads “Erected by the Alumni of the Jefferson Graded School and Friends.” He’s buried alongside his wife, Fannie Gildersleeve Tonsler, and other relatives of the Tonsler, Heiskell and Buckner families.

Reverend M.T. Lewis

Lewis came to Charlottesville in 1873 to serve as pastor of the Delevan Baptist Church, which was later renamed First Baptist Church. Delevan Baptist was founded in 1863 as the first independent black church in Charlottesville after African-Americans broke away from the segregated First Baptist Church. The parishioners originally worshiped at the Delevan Hotel on West Main Street, which was torn down and replaced by the First Baptist Church building. Lewis died at the age of 40 before he could deliver a sermon in the new building.

Lewis’ burial site at the Daughters of Zion Cemetery is surrounded by Victorian piping decoration (look for the image of the Masonic emblem on the back of his tombstone). His wife, Mary Lewis Kelser, and her second husband, George Kelser, both teachers in the community, were laid to rest next to him.

The Goodloe family

The Goodloe family plot of 15 graves resides in a fenced area in the northern section of the cemetery bordering Dice Street. The Goodloes were instrumental in helping to build and bury the African-American community at the end of the 19th century and into the 20th century. Charles Goodloe and his sons built many of the African-American homes and businesses in the area for four decades; Goodloe also served on the board of directors for the Piedmont Industrial and Land Improvement Company, which provided credit to African-American homebuyers. Other Goodloe family members worked as embalmers and undertakers.

Goodloe’s daughter, Willie, married Jackson P. Burley, a well-respected educator in the city and for whom Burley High School (now middle school) was named when it was built in 1951. In 1935, after the Daughters of Zion Society disbanded, Courtney Goodloe bought Zion Hall on Fourth Street Northwest in the Vinegar Hill neighborhood to keep the legacy alive (the site was razed in 1964 and it’s now the location of the Residence Inn by Marriott Charlottesville Downtown). One of the organizations housed there over the years was the Janie Porter Barrett Day Nursery, now named the Barrett Early Learning Center and located up the road on Ridge Street.


Segregation in death

Like Edwina St. Rose and Bernadette Whitsett-Hammond, others have begun participating in the cemetery preservation effort. Students at Georgetown University started the Tombstone Restoration Initiative to restore the graves of the 272 slaves that were sold by the Jesuit order connected to the university when it was suffering from debt in the 1830s.

Apart from honoring the dead, slave cemeteries are also significant because they were so meaningful to the enslaved. “[A funeral] was a place for shared grief and collective expression of their own values,” says Adam Rothman, a principal curator of the Georgetown Slavery Archive, a project that involves uncovering Georgetown’s history with slavery and making the information available to the public.

Slaves did not just attend funerals to honor and mourn the dead, but also for their practicality.

Because this was one of the few times family members who had been separated or sold could reunite, the enslaved would also use funerals to find marriage partners or as a time to meet their wives and children, says Lynn Rainville, African-American cemetery historian.

In the United States, not many slave cemeteries are recognizable; most of them have no markers to identify the dead. They’re in ruins, trashed, vandalized and don’t even look like cemeteries.

Monticello’s Park Cemetery is an anomaly. The plantation was home to nearly 400 slaves in Thomas Jefferson’s lifetime, some of whom are buried in this cemetery.

Right beside the David M. Rubenstein Visitor’s Center parking lot at Monticello, a signboard displays the significance of the bare plot of fenced land. Another board has a list of the names of the enslaved people who died at Monticello. Together, these give context to the lives of those buried here.

Inside the fenced plot, two stones of different sizes lie in close proximity to each other. According to Niya Bates, public historian of slavery and African American life at the Thomas Jefferson Foundation, these stones are the headstones and footstones of the person buried, and the small distance between the stones signifies that this is the grave of a child.

When graves were first discovered here as part of archaeological fieldwork in 2001, temporary signage was put up and the area was fenced so it could remain undisturbed. However, Rainville doubts that all the graves are inside the fenced area. According to her, the fact that many of these graves were unmarked indicates that unidentified graves may have been overlooked and may have been covered by what is now the parking lot.

Apart from difficulty in identifying graves, locations of slave cemeteries are also worth notice. The Jefferson family graveyard is higher up the hill, closer to the main house, while the slave cemetery is at the bottom, which is similar to the location of burial grounds of the enslaved on other plantations.

“Very few slave owners were willing to give slave communities a valuable piece of land to bury their dead,” says Rainville. The transfer of unsuitable land to the enslaved means slave cemeteries are often in the center of an old field, usually a rocky one, or one with a huge tree that made it difficult to plow, or a field that was undesirable for any other reason.

Categories
Living

LIVING Picks: April 12-18

NONPROFIT

McGuffey Open House
Saturday, April 15

In conjunction with the Tom Tom Founders Festival, the art center hosts a day of yoga, demos, workshops and plein air painting. Free, 8:30am-5pm. McGuffey Art Center, 201 Second St. NW. Register for workshops at tomtomfest.com

FAMILY

Founder’s Day at Monticello
Thursday, April 13

Monticello marks the 274th anniversary of Thomas Jefferson’s birth with a celebration on the West Lawn featuring a keynote address by chef Alice Waters, the 2017 recipient of the Thomas Jefferson Foundation Medal in Citizen Leadership. Free, 9:45-11am. Monticello, 931 Thomas Jefferson Pkwy. monticello.org

FOOD & DRINK

Taste of Monticello Wine Trail
Thursday, April 13, through Saturday, April 15

There will vino sad wine-lovers this week, as the Monticello Wine Trail Festival comes to town. The three-day affair includes the Monticello Wine Cup Awards, wine tours and culminates in a tasting event on Saturday at the Sprint Pavilion. $10- 240, times vary. monticellowinetrailfestival.com

HEALTH & WELLNESS

Women, Wine & Wellness
Wednesday, April 19

Enjoy heart-to-heart chats with Sentara Martha Jefferson Hospital cardiologists, a registered dietitian and a cardiac rehab expert, while also sampling wine and light refreshments. Free (registration required), 6:30-8:30pm. The Paramount Theater, 215 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. (800) 736-8272.

Categories
Real Estate

Spring Happenings: Fireworks, Festivals, and Community Fun

By Ken Wilson – 

Although it’s hard to say when exactly it happened this year, spring has sprung, and with it the hundred ways we show it. Whether it’s to make us parade down Market, run along the Rivanna, or jog up a mountain, spring energizes us all. Here are a few of the many ways.

Charlottesville Dogwood Festival
Its official mission is to promote goodwill and community service, and promote Charlottesville and Albemarle and their adjacent counties as springtime tourist attractions. But really, it’s a lot more fun than it sounds. With everything from a grand parade to a municipal band concert, a benefit breakfast, a movie in the park, and a carnival, the 68th annual Charlottesville Dogwood Festival, March 23 through April 23 is a month-long celebration of springtime and springtime’s renewing vigor. Many events are free.

The Dogwood Carnival in McIntire Park takes place evenings from April 6 through April 23 starting at 5:00 p.m. The fireworks display in the park starts at approximately 8:45 p.m. on April 7.  Disney’s 2016 animated hit film Finding Dory will be shown at 7:00 p.m. on April 8 in the park’s softball field. The Doubletree Hotel hosts a breakfast with a Silent Auction to benefit the Monticello Little League Challenger Division on April 21 from 7:30 to 10:00 a.m. Doors open at 7:00 a.m.; the buffet starts at 8:00.

The Grand Feature Parade begins on McIntire Rd at 10:50 a.m. on Saturday April 22, heads down Market St. to 7th St NE, then East High St, and finishes back at McIntire Road. This year’s theme is Red, White, & Bloom, and awards will be given out for Best Floats and Dogwood Spirit. The Dogwood Vietnam Memorial rededication is the same morning at 11:00 a.m. in McIntire Park East. The Charlottesville Municipal Band’s Dogwood Festival Spring Concert in Dickinson Auditorium at Piedmont Virginia Community College is on April 23 at 3:30 p.m.

As always, the Dogwood Court will be made up of eight “princesses,” ages 16 to 24, winners of pageants in surrounding counties. These young ladies spend the final week of the Festival with the Dogwood Queen, attending events and visiting in the community. The Queen’s Ball will be held at the Doubletree Hotel on April 22 at 7:00 p.m. Tickets are $20 per person.

This year’s Dogwood Queen, Georgianna Kaylee Woodward, will graduate from Madison County High School with honors this spring, and hopes to attend either Radford University or West Virginia University. Her career ambition is to work with special needs children. Woodward’s platform—her special Festival cause, which she hopes to speak about whenever opportunity arises—is “Raising Tourette Awareness.”

Woodward herself was diagnosed with Tourette in the fourth grade and has spoken to many different groups about the disorder and the bullying that often accompanies it. Also at the Queen’s Ball, the Dogwood Community Achievement Scholarship will be awarded to the high school senior who best personifies an ongoing commitment to “exemplary community service.”

Charlottesville Marathon
Starting and finishing at historic Court Square, it passes by the Rotunda and along the banks of the Rivanna River on a course voted one of the most scenic in the East. This four-in-one race—the Charlottesville Marathon, Half Marathon, Marathon Relay, and 8K & Kids K—has been called America’s Destination Marathon for the beauty and historical import of its course. Twenty-five hundred runners (including walkers in the 8K) are expected to participate in the 2017 race, April 1 starting at 7:00 a.m. for adults and 8:00 a.m. for kids. Paid advance registration is required. 

Bow Wow Walk
Animal lovers can support the animals and life-saving programs of the Charlottesville-Albemarle SPCA on Saturday, April 8 with a K-9 2.5K Bow-WOW-Walk beginning at 10:00 a.m. in Charlottesville’s Lee Park. The walk is for both dogs and their humans (and humans carrying photos of their cats), and winds through the lovely and historic downtown mall neighborhood before heading back to Lee Park for a post-walk festival featuring human and doggie entertainment, a canine competition, treats for dogs and dog owners, and animal-friendly sponsors. Pre-registration can be completed online or in person on April 8 from 8:30 to 9:45 a.m., costs $35 for adults and $25 for persons 18 and under, and comes with a pet bandana, a human tee-shirt, and a walker goodie bag. The walk begins at 10 a.m.

Remembering Vinegar Hill
On Saturday, April 8 from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. the Jefferson School African-American Heritage Center in Charlottesville holds a “day soirée” entitled Remembering Vinegar Hill: The Neighborhood Beneath the Pavement. Co-created by students from the Miller School of Albemarle, the annual event honors the former Vinegar Hill neighborhood, the city’s principal black business district and the center of African-American social life, which was demolished in the name of urban renewal in the 1960s. Expect music, food and games.

Tom Tom Founders Festival
While the demolition of Vinegar Hill is remembered today with shame and sorrow, the city that is home to the University of Virginia and has nurtured the minds of such notable figures as Edgar Allen Poe, Georgia O’Keefe, Woodrow Wilson and Tina Fey has a rich legacy of creative thought and innovation. The Tom Tom Founders Festival, April 10 through 16 at fifty venues in Charlottesville, is intended to build on this history “through a diversity of disciplines and engagement with forward thinking makers and doers.” Beginning on Founder’s Day (April 13), the Festival re-imagines the city “as a creative canvas for innovators, visionaries and artists.” More than sixty bands, 200 speakers and 400 community organizations will take part.

The weeklong festivities will kick off with a Community Potluck on Monday, April 10 at 5:00 p.m. in IX Art Park. The Founders Summit, April 13-15 at the Paramount Theater, will feature over fifty innovators and entrepreneurs including New America President and CEO Anne-Marie Slaughter and New Belgium Brewing Company cofounder Kim Jordan to share their stories and offer advice on start-ups. The Hometown Summit, April 13-15 at the Jefferson School African American Heritage Center, will explore the future of small and mid-sized cities with dozens of keynotes, workshops, and peer-led panels featuring three hundred elected officials, practitioners, policymakers, and investors in such dynamic small cities as Akron, Boulder, Madison, and Chattanooga.

At the Paramount Theater at 8:00 p.m. on Thursday, April 13, birthday of the third and most locally celebrated U.S. President, the Festival will present a three part program, co-sponsored by the Miller Center, entitled “Innovations In Democracy: First 100 Days Of Trump.” Mark Warner, U.S. Senator from Virginia, and Bill Antholis, Director and CEO of the Miller Center, will speak. Ed Ayers and Brian Balogh of the PBS history program Backstory will join Christa Dierksheide, a historian at the Robert H. Smith International Center for Jefferson Studies at Monticello, in a panel discussion on the “History of Media and the Presidency.” Other speakers will include Peter Baker, chief White House correspondent of The New York Times; Chris Cillizza, Washington Post columnist and soon-to-be CNN commentator; Russell Riley, co-director of the Presidential Oral History Program at the Miller Center; Douglas A. Blackmon, Pulitzer Prize-winning author and host of the Miller Center’s American Forum TV program; and Nicole Hemmer, columnist for US News & World Report and Vox.com and assistant professor of presidential studies at the Miller Center.

Earlier at the Paramount, at 6:00 p.m., UVA’s School of Engineering and Applied Science will present “Innovations In Energy,” exploring the future of renewable energy with Zoetic Energy Founder & Chairman Jerome Ringo, University of Virginia professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Eric Loth, and Apex Clean Energy President & CEO, Mark Goodwin.

Open air block parties in Lee Park, April 14, 15 and 16 will feature hip bands, a craft beer garden, tech and art showcases, and dozens of local and regional food trucks. 

Founder’s Day and Jefferson’s Birthday Celebration
On Thursday, April 13 Monticello will mark the 274th anniversary of Thomas Jefferson’s birth with a celebration and ceremony on its West Lawn. The pre-ceremony performance will begin at 9:45 a.m., and will feature a keynote address by renowned chef, author and foodie movement pioneer Alice Waters, the 2017 recipient of the Thomas Jefferson Foundation Medal in Citizen Leadership. Past recipients of the medal include economist and former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan and civil rights leader John Lewis. Admission to the ceremony is free. Regular pricing for house tours will apply.

Taste of Monticello Wine Trail Festival
Longsuffering Thomas Jefferson might not believe it, but today there are over 30 wineries within 25 miles of Charlottesville, scarcely more than a day’s ride from where that famously ambitious agriculturalist repeatedly tried and failed to produce a decent vintage.

If only Jefferson were around for the Taste of Monticello Wine Trail Festival, Friday April 13 through Sunday April 15 at the Sprint Pavilion and the Jefferson Theater. As a veggie lover, he’d be amazed by the creativity of the modern day chefs at Friday’s Rosé Lunch, Sparkling Wine Brunch, and the Winemaker’s Dinners. As a farmer and scientist, he’d be fascinated by what he’d learn on Friday’s vineyard tours. As a serious wine lover, he’d be thrilled and amazed by the nationally and internationally acclaimed vintages he’d sample at each event. And as a late 18th-early 19th century guy, he’d be amazed at the rate of inflation reflected in the actually quite reasonable ticket prices, ranging from $29 for Saturday’s Tasting, featuring 25 wineries and live entertainment from the Rick Olivarez Trio, to $175 for a three-day, all events pass.

Tickets to Thursday evening’s Monticello Cup Awards at the Jefferson Theater are $65. Individual wineries will host a variety of activities on Friday, followed by winemaker dinners at some of Charlottesville’s best restaurants. Jefferson, in spirit, will attend each day.

C’ville Earth Week Eco Fair
The mission of the 2017 C’ville Earth Week Eco Fair is to “bring local communities together in ways that promote awareness of the value of the natural world and encourage the public to learn about the environment, with the goal of creating strong, engaged stewardship that lasts beyond [the] April events.” The Fair and other Earth Week activities, featuring eco-friendly non-profits and businesses and organizations, count several thousand attendees each year.

This year’s fair takes place on April 23 from 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. at the eastern end of the Downtown Mall, and at the adjoining Sprint Pavilion. Participating will be over 50 Earth conscious organizations and businesses, plus local vegetarian & vegan friendly food trucks.

Expect live music, fun and educational activities for kids, raffles and a free noontime Yoga class by Rebel Yogi.

The Montalto Challenge
Runners will gather at the base of the Saunders-Monticello Trail on Saturday, April 29 at 7:30 a.m. for the Montalto Challenge, a 5K race to the top of the mountain rising 410 feet above Monticello, Jefferson’s first acquisition of land in 1771. The tough course offers views of Monticello, Charlottesville, and the Blue Ridge Mountains. The entry fee is $35 ($45 after April 20), and will benefit the Thomas Jefferson Foundation to preserve and maintain the Saunders-Monticello Trail. Runners who wish to donate more may purchase entry at the Race & Trail Support level of $55.

Sipping, sauntering, sampling and staring (openmouthed)—these are just some of the ways we celebrate spring in Central Virginia.

Categories
Living

LIVING Picks: Week of December 7-13

Family

Monticello gingerbread house workshop
Saturday, December 10 and Sunday, December 11

Feast on cookies and hot chocolate as you create a colorful new addition for your holiday décor. $55 for a four-member family pass, 2-4pm. Smith Woodland Pavilion at Monticello, 931 Thomas Jefferson Pkwy. monticello.org

Nonprofit

Santa Pancake Breakfast
Sunday, December 11

Enjoy breakfast while sharing your heart’s desire with the big guy in red. $12 non-members; family four-pack discounts, various times. Virginia Discovery Museum, 524 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. RSVP required to 977-1025.

Food & Drink

Michie Tavern Yuletide Feast
Friday, December 9 and Saturday, December 10

Strolling musicians entertain as you dine on a banquet of Virginia staples in the tavern’s decorated dining room. $19.50-38.95, 6 and 8pm seatings. Michie Tavern, 683 Thomas Jefferson Pkwy. michietavern.com.

Health & Wellness

Intuition workshop
Saturday, December 10

This workshop, led by transformational life coach Colleen Coles, teaches you how to balance your wants and shoulds. Free, 1:30-3pm. Ivy Yoga School, 1042 Owensville Rd. ashtangacharlottesville.com

Categories
Living

LIVING Picks: Week of October 26-November 1

Family
Animal Connection Anniversary Party
Saturday, October 29

Get Fido and Fifi ready to party in celebration of Animal Connection’s 15th anniversary. There will be free treats and goody bags, plus opportunities to sit for sessions with a pet portrait artist, a pet photographer and an animal communicator. Free, 9am-4pm. 1701-E Allied St. 296-7048.

Nonprofit
Spirit Walk
Saturday, October 29

Tour the Old Albemarle Jailhouse courtesy of the Albemarle Charlottesville Historical Society, and learn the stories of some of the inmates held behind its bars between 1876 and 1974. Old Albemarle Jail, 409 E. High St. $8 children, $12 adult, 30-minute tours given from 6-9pm. albemarlehistory.org.

Food
Apple tasting
Saturday, October 29

Today’s supermarkets provide but a small slice of the world’s thousands of apples—so join Monticello gardeners to taste, savor and rate some of the more uncommon varieties. Woodland Pavilion, Monticello, 931 Thomas Jefferson Pkwy. $24, 10am-noon. 984-9800.

Health & Wellness
Danger! Zombies! Run! 5K
Sunday, October 30

Escape the undead as a human, or run as a zombie and chase humans to turn them into zombies by taking their lives, er, ribbons on their backs. Humans get a 90-second head start, but the zombie with the most kills, er, ribbons, wins. Downtown Mall. $20-50, 8:30am. badtothebone.biz.

Categories
News

Hemp happens: A new flag flies at City Hall

A proud group of industrial hemp supporters hoisted an American flag made of the crop on the Downtown Mall May 25, announcing that it would be presented to Willie Nelson—another major advocate for its legalization—at his concert that night.

“We’re trying to end this insanity of prohibition,” Mike Bowman, a Coloradoan and chair of the National Hemp Association, said before cranking the lever that raised the flag. Calling hemp the “crop of our founding fathers,” he noted that about 30 states have already legalized that variety of the cannabis sativa plant.

Virginia is one of those states. Last year, Governor Terry McAuliffe signed a bill allowing Virginians to legally grow industrial hemp, which has a minimal level of THC and a different genetic makeup than marijuana.

Mike Lewis, one of the first in America to privately farm hemp, grew the materials used for the flag and noted at the ceremony that his flag flew over the U.S. Capitol building on Veterans Day.

Supporters are now gathering signatures for HR525, a resolution called the Industrial Hemp Farming Act, which amends the Controlled Substances Act to exclude industrial hemp from the definition of marijuana. They will present the signatures to Congress on July 4, Bowman says.

Mitch Van Yahres, a former mayor of Charlottesville who served as the city’s delegate in the General Assembly for 12 two-year terms, was a hemp advocate who pushed legislation to study the economic benefits of the cash crop in the ’90s. He passed away in 2008.

“Mitch really led the charge to legalize industrial hemp,” former mayor Dave Norris said at the flag raising. “I really, really wish Mitch had been here today to see the fruit of his labor.”

Even our beloved Thomas Jefferson can be traced back to the plant. It is widely known that he grew hemp, which can be farmed as a raw material that can be incorporated into thousands of products, including clothing, construction materials, paper and health foods.

“Some of my finest hours have been spent on my back veranda, smoking hemp and observing as far as my eye can see,” Thomas Jefferson is often quoted as saying, but researchers at Monticello, who have consulted many of his papers and journals, say they have never validated the statement and there is no evidence to suggest the third president of the United States was a frequent hemp or tobacco smoker.

Less contested is the TJ line: “Hemp is of first necessity to the wealth and protection of the country.”

Categories
Magazines Real Estate

July 4th naturalization ceremony at Monticello welcomes new citizens

Like George M. Cohan, composer of such patriotic favorites as Grand Old Flag and Yankee Doodle Dandy, Charlottesville’s Hiromi Johnson was born on the Fourth of July. Well, sort of.  Cohan’s birthday was actually July 3rd, and Johnson calls Independence Day her second birthday.

“That day,” she says with deep feeling, “is my birthday of being a citizen.”  It almost didn’t happen, though. Last year she had been looking forward to taking her oath at Monticello when, with no explanation, she received a “de-scheduling” notice. “Thomas Jefferson is my hero,” she says, “The letter did not say why it was cancelled. I was so disappointed.”

Johnson had moved here from Japan with her American husband, Martin. She brought her own long-time practice of t’ai chi and established Hiromi T’ai Chi in Charlottesville with classes and outreach to persons with disabilities, senior citizens, and after-school programs. She also made many friends.

When her friends and students learned of the de-scheduling, they leaped into action and several days later Johnson reported, “Senator Warner’s office emailed me that the de-schedule notice was wrong. And Congressman Hurt’s office confirmed this is true.”

So Johnson she joined with more than 75 men and women from more than 40 different nations as they took their Oath of Citizenship on the lawn at Monticello. And how did she feel?

“I was speechless,” she confesses. “I had been dreaming and waiting for a long time for that day.” There’s a hint of tears in her eyes as she recalls the ceremony. “It was nice to see other people waiting for that day, too. Almost like a family.”

Coming to America

Many things draw people from all parts of the globe to Charlottesville and often they remain. The University of Virginia is a main attraction. Other times it’s been an Internet meeting leading to marriage, a new job, or leaving a homeland become dangerous.

“Charlottesville is increasingly cosmopolitan and we all benefit from that,” says Charlottesville Vice Mayor Kristin Szakos. “Our public schools have students who are native speakers of more than 60 languages. Although that can be a huge challenge in getting students up to speed in English, it’s also an amazing experience for all our kids to get to know folks from so many other cultures. Immigration is one of the things that has defined the strength of this country, and Charlottesville’s no exception.”

“In some cases, people coming here are fleeing political or religious persecution,” observes former Charlottesville mayor Kay Slaughter, citing new residents from Tibet and the Balkans. “We continue to be a nation of immigrants.”

The Monticello ceremony punctuates the nation-of-immigrants theme. Since 1963, more than 3,000 people from many nations have become naturalized at this memorable annual ceremony. This Independence Day will mark the 52nd Naturalization Ceremony at Monticello—a powerful experience celebrating what Thomas Jefferson termed “the great birthday of our Republic.”

Standing on the steps of Monticello as new Americans, their faces wearing wide smiles often coupled with emotional tears, these new citizens create a living snapshot of our “melting pot” nation.

An Interaction of Cultures

“We who live in and around Charlottesville are privileged to witness an interaction of cultures,” says REALTOR® John Ince, President of the Charlottesville Area Association of Realtors and an Associate Broker at Nest Realty. “We see it on an international level and a local level as academics and blue collars, good ol’ boys and preppies, goths and jocks all mingle on the stage that Thomas Jefferson set so long ago. On the whole, I think we do it very well.”

The University of Virginia’s Weldon Cooper Center for Public Service’s Demographics Research Group reported earlier this year that about 9 percent of Charlottesville’s population is foreign born.

This diversity is reflected in education from UVa to local elementary schools. It’s also very visible in local businesses, restaurants, religious settings, Fridays After Five, and every facet of life.

REALTOR ® Olga Morse, who works with Sloan Milby Real Estate Partners, was born in Puerto Rico so she is automatically an American citizen. Still, she remembers it wasn’t easy when she came to U.S. in the mid-70s. “I felt like an outsider trying to learn the language,” she recalls.

When she moved to Charlottesville in 1987, however, she was surprised to feel at home. “It was very special from the first day,” she says. “People were welcoming and it was friendly hearing people talking other languages.”

Morse definitely has a niche in real estate. “Because of its diversity, Charlottesville is a welcoming city,” she explains. “I can facilitate services, especially for Spanish-speakers who may be fluent in English but unfamiliar with the special language of real estate.”

Morse is also the founder of FORWARD/ADELANTE BUSINESS ALLIANCE (FABA) and publisher of FORWARD-ADELANTE, a bilingual magazine with its main circulation in the greater Charlottesville area.  “The mission of FABA,” she explains, “is to connect the English-speaking business owner with the Spanish-speaking market place where professionals, business leaders, and organizations can share ideas and build relationships.”  

Connections to the world

While many American cities have a foreign “sister” city, Charlottesville has not one, but four with formal ties to Besançon (France), Pleven (Bulgaria), Poggio a Caiano (Italy), and Winneba (Ghana). The city is an active member of  HYPERLINK “http://www.sister-cities.org/” Sister Cities International, a nonprofit citizen diplomacy network that creates and strengthens partnerships between U.S. and international communities, seeking to build global cooperation, promote cultural understanding, and stimulate economic development.

The Charlottesville Sister City Commission, appointed by the City Council, is the organizing body devoted to assisting the individual Sister City relationships with community activities and promotion. The City of Charlottesville website has information and photos of the sister cities and local citizens may propose additional sister cities.

“I love that we have real relationships with our sister cities,” says Vice Mayor Kristin Szakos enthusiastically. The sister-city program is aimed at both adults and young people, she explains. “In the past year, we’ve had various exchanges with our sister cities in France and Ghana that have been real examples of mutual benefit.”

One particularly visible example of Charlottesville’s welcoming atmosphere is its mayor. “It says a great deal about our community that they accept diversity,” says Mayor Satyendra Huja, a Sikh who came from India in 1960 to attend Cornell University. He became a citizen at Monticello on Independence Day in 1987. “It was wonderful,” he says of that day.  “I go back every year.”

Mayor Huja sees our region as offering an appealing environment with cultural facilities that most communities don’t have, saying, “I think it enriches the lives of all the people when you see other cultures and ideas.”

Marilyn Pribus and her husband live near Monticello. One of their daughters-in-law is a recently naturalized citizen from Kazakhstan and Marilyn’s paternal grandparents were naturalized citizens from the Netherlands.