10-23-2013 Colonial Beach / Westmoreland Journal

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Colonial Beach • Westmoreland

Volume 37, Number 43

Wednesday, October 23, 2013 50 Cents

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Spooky Town and County Halloween activities slated Richard Leggitt Beginning this weekend, Westmoreland County will be the frightful scene of a busy week of spooky Halloween activities, from the Scarecrow Fest at the Colonial Beach Museum to the Third Annual Halloween Trunk or Treat in Montross. On Friday, Oct. 25, Scarecrow Fest at the Colonial Beach Museum will begin at 1 p.m. Sponsored by the Colonial Beach Historical Society to benefit the museum, the event will feature teams of of all ages and up to five persons building scarecrows. Cookies and punch will be served. Scarecrow builders are asked to bring the materials needed to build their scarecrows including markers and paints needed to decorate the face. The scarecrows will remain on display at the museum on Hawthorne Street through Thanksgiving. Scheduled for Saturday, the 26th is the Colonial Beach Halloween Golf Cart Parade. Entrants will be decorating golf carts and riding them in the parade which begins at 4

p.m. Stratford Hall will host a Spooktacular Halloween beginning at 5:30 p.m. and Oak Grove Baptist Church will host a Harvest Party which begins at 2 p.m. On Monday and Tuesday, Oct. 28 and 29, Westmoreland Berry Farm will continue its Haunted Hayrides. Food, drinks, crafts and the farm’s famous fruit and berries will be available. The Westmoreland Berry Farm is located at 1235 Berry Farm Lane in Oak Grove. On Halloween night, Thurs., Oct. 31, the Inn at Montross will host Halloween Bistro Night beginning at 5 p.m. There will be Scary Storytelling at the Montross Library beginning at 6:30 p.m. and the Westmoreland County Museum and the Inn at Montross will host a Things That Go Bump In The Night Bonfire beginning at 7:30 p.m. and show the movie “It’s The Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown” beginning at nightfall. The O’Gara Group at 18047 Kings Highway in Montross will be hosting a See spooky, page 3

The Westmoreland Board of Supervisors has unanimously approved a request for a one year extension of a construction permit allowing Verizon to build a 195foot cell phone tower on Monroe Bay Circle between the Colonial Forest and Westmoreland Shores subdivisions. The supervisors approved an initial application for a one year permit to construct the Verizon tower on Nov. 12. 2012. Work on the project has not yet begun due to a delay in Verizon’s construction plans so an extension was requested until Nov. 14, 2013. Beth McDowell, a planner with the Westmoreland Land Use Administration told the supervisors Leonard Banks

After many hours of hard work by a group of dedicated volunteers, Town staff and Northern Neck Planning District staff, the Town of Montross hosted the first public preview of the facade improvements recommended by architects Ray and Dana Herlong, and the Facade Improvement Committee. A group of 35 business owners, residents and members of the facade committee met at the Westmoreland Fire Department last Wednesday, Oct. 16, to learn how recipients were chosen and to view a slideshow preview of improvements that are planned.

Herlong & Assoc. were on hand last week in Montross to announce the ten businesses that have been chosen to receive money from the Community Development Block Grant through the facade improvement program. Recipients will match grant money equally, with their own money and work, to make improvements to their facades. Napa, Helms Antiques, Jameka, and the Wakefield Museum will be offered $10,000 each. Angelo’s Pizza, Art of Coffee, P&D Auto, Allegiance Title, and George Townsend will all receive $7,200, and Montross Body Shop will receive $4,000. The ten recipients of the grant

See verizon, page 3

Future photographers marvel at their photographs during a recent Drifters varsity football game.

Ten Montross businesses properties chosen to receive facade grant money Linda Farneth

Wmd. Board Extends Verizon Construction Permit

Stay Focused!

Sewer upgrades Dump Truck Driver Patrick Patterson and Foreman George Harris look on while Ethan Taylor gives hand signal directions to Bryant Lynch, operating the excavator. G.L. Howard, Inc. has been contracted to replace sewer pipes throughout the numbered streets for the recent sewer upgrades. A section of Fifth Street was previously lined. The lining, however, will not work in this section due to an excess of groundwater. G.L. Howard will dig at both ends of the pipe, insert a series of metal rods, and pull new piping through, replacing the old. This procedure allows residents to continue using their sewer systems without interruption, and minimizes the need to dig up the entire length of the piping.

money were chosen from 29 applicants by the facade committee. The Herlongs did provide guidance by presenting the committee with various criteria to use when choosing recipients, but remained neutral, leaving the decision up to the committee members. Members of the committee were chosen by the council and were citizens who had no ties to the properties or their owners to ensure the group was independent and had no stake in the decision process. The Herlongs worked with the applicants to choose ideas for See FACADES, page 3

October Art Walk Artists

Theresa Alo Theresa Alo works in many mediums, all of which stimulate her tactile sense. Sculpting with clay, however, gives her a special joy. Alo says, “Maybe it is the endless possibilities that such a diverse medium offers. Maybe it’s just the feel, but either way, clay has an inherent mysterious quality that offers unforeseen potential to be anything.” More of Alo’s work can be viewed at Theresa-Alo.com or you may reach her at (301) 743-9487. Her work is currently on display at the Potomac River Fisheries Commission.

Kathleen Walsh

Kathleen Walsh often stays with friends and camps out on private properties for the day to paint her subjects (with permission of the owners, of course). Walsh said, “I have a passport that says ‘USA’ so I can sleep peacefully at night and go to the grocery store - there’s always food. My neighbors are so generous to me. People invite me to paint on their properties, their farms, and there are two canoe takeouts in our town. The guys at each establishment give me keys, so I can go to these places and paint in the early morning or evening.”

Walsh has a little studio in Liberty Town, Fredericksburg, where she works when she is not on site. Walsh was born in the Bronx, New York. She has lived in places like Eastern Europe, Africa, and Fairmont in Western Europe. She has also worked in Latin America. Walsh, originally trained as a physiotherapist, started painting ten years ago, at the age of 55. Walsh said she moved to Switzerland to pursue a dream job of working at the United Nations, but she couldn’t get a work permit. If that wasn’t enough of a blow she broke her leg. Feeling down

Kathryn Murray

and lost she said, “I decided I would either drown myself in the lake or change my life.” Walsh said the water was so cold, that she decided to change her life. Walsh found some artists that she admired the work of, and asked them if she could hang around them and learn. They accommodated her, and she said, “I just started working from there.” At the age of 65, Walsh has a childlike amazement for life that is rare to find at her age. Her impressionistic oil paintings on display now at the JarrettThor Fine Arts Gallery until

Nov. 3, include open landscapes and seascapes. For more information, contact the gallery at (804) 224-7200, or visit the JarrettThor Fine Arts Gallery at 100 Taylor Street. Kathryn Murray is a former New Yorker who moved to Washington, DC, then moved to the Northern Neck 20 years ago. As a teenager, she was given a camera and has been photographing for 40 years. Murray said, “Four years ago everything started to come into focus.” She said that she had a lot of experience associated with creative

fields: advertising, architecture and design. The Northern Neck is now her inspiration. She leans towards foggy or misty photos, which she has infused in aluminum. This procedure allows the owner to clean the photos and produces a sharp image. Murray’s work is also on display now at JarrettThor Fine Arts Gallery until Nov. 3.

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