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Falls Church News-Press 9-12-2024

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September 12 - 18, 2024

Fa lls Chur c h, V i r g i ni a • ww w. fc np. c om • Fr ee

Fou n d e d 1991 • Vol. XXXIV No. 31

The City of Falls Church’s Independent, Locally-Owned Newspaper of Record, Serving N. Virginia

F.C.’s Fall Festival & Taste of F.C. Is Saturday

W&OD TRAIL’S BIG ANNIVERSARY

Good Weather Forecast For Popular Local Event by Nick Gatz

Falls Church News-Press

Falls Church, VA — The 48th Annual Falls Church Fall Festival is set to bring the community together once again on September 14, 2024, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the City Hall Campus. This much-anticipated event promises a day of familyfriendly entertainment, local flavors, and a vibrant celebration of the city’s community spirit. The festival, which draws large crowds, will feature a variety of attractions for all ages. Highlights include amusement rides, live music, children’s activities and pony rides, making it an ideal outing for families. The event’s Taste of Falls Church will showcase the city’s diverse food scene, offering festival-goers a chance to sample signature dishes from local restaurants​.

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CELEBRATING THE 50TH anniversary of the founding of the W&OD Trail through the City of Falls Church, the gathering near the trail’s bridge over West Broad St. was held last week, with F.C. Mayor Letty Hardi in the center. Memorable accounts of the popular trail’s founding were recounted, including the battle to keep it from becoming a bus route. (Photo: Gary Mester)

50th Anniversary of W&OD Trail Celebrated by Brian Reach

Falls Church News-Press

It was a picture-perfect day last Saturday when representatives of the City of Falls Church joined those of the Northern Virginia Regional Park Authority (NVRPA or “NOVA Parks”) at a sign unveiling and dedication ceremony for the The Washington and Old Dominion (W&OD) Trail commemorating the 50th anniversary of the first ride on the trail. The ceremony was held on the trail down from the bridge that crosses W. Broad in the Little City.

The first ride took place on September 7, 1974 in The Little City, where the first segment of the trail purchased and opened by NVRPA was located (the rest was purchased in sections between then and its eventual completion in 1988). Today’s W&OD is a 45-mile long, 100foot wide park and paved trail (with a 32-mile adjacent gravel horse trail) stretching from Shirlington to Purcellville. “The W&OD was one of America’s first conversions of an abandoned rail line to a recreational trail, and it’s

inspired many similar projects,” said Paul Baldino, the Falls Church representative on the NOVA Parks board, at the event. “There are now more than 2,400 rail trails in the U.S.” Baldino added that the W&OD’s proximity to D.C. has allowed government staffers and members of Congress to visit the trail and — after seeing its success — support funding for similar projects elsewhere. The journey to transform an abandoned railroad into a thriving recreational corridor was filled with challenges — and

the unwavering determination of community advocates like Barbara Hildreth. Hildreth, a former NOVA Parks Board Member, played a critical role in the development of the trail after the Washington & Old Dominion Railroad stopped running. “I knew that right of way would never be put back together once it was carved up,” Hildreth recounted to the crowd of 75 in attendance at Saturday’s event. “Something

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