_______ Malverne/West HeMpstead ______
HERALD $1.00
90th anniversary for W.H. bakery
Soccer win for West Hempstead
Crossroads Farm turns 10
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VOL. 28 NO. 40
SEPTEMBER 30 - OCTOBER 6, 2021
A milestone for Malverne Parade will mark its centennial and 28th annual Fall Festival ing getting people back out and into our downtown area,” Monroe said, “and coming out to The Malverne Centennial meet and greet our merchants Committee has teamed up with who have had a very rough year the Malverne Chamber of Com- and a half. I’m most looking formerce to celebrate 100 years as ward to trying to make some an incorporated village with a normalcy in our commerce.” float parade that will kick off the The festival will include a chamber’s 28th children’s fun zone annual Malver ne with activities that Fall Festival Oct. 3. will include a At 10:30 a.m., the mechanical bull, floats will proceed pumpkin patch, rock south on Hempstead wall, three-cab Avenue, from Sydtrackless train ride ney Avenue to Utterand bouncy houses. by Road and Church Two live bands, 2nd Street, for what is Chance and T he expected to be a L e g e n d a r y M u r45-minute procesphys, and dance sion. The Malverne demonstrations by chamber is working Church Street’s Tap HENRY with the Centennial to Pointe Dance CenCommittee to host a STAMPFEL ter will be showsafe and memorable Malverne Chamber cased on the mobile fall festival, which stage. of Commerce will run from 11 a.m. There also will be to 5 p.m. that Sunday. the traditional The village will shut down the antique car show, with nearly center of town, Church Street 120 cars expected to be on exhiband the Village Green, where up it. Chamber officials said they to 100 local merchants will set up also expected the Malverne Fire for the event. Chamber President Department and the Malverne Kathy Monroe, who also served Volunteer Ambulance Corps to as a co-chair of the Centennial attend with emergency vehicles Committee member, is in cannotwait mode. “I’m most anticipatCONTINUED ON PAGE 11
By LISA MARGARIA lmargaria@liherald.com
T
Christina Daly /Herald
ON SEPT. 19, a fire devastated a row of businesses and apartments in West Hempstead, displacing five businesses and about 30 residents.
Community comes together for fire relief in Lakeview By JORDAN VALLONE jvallone@liherald.com
By all accounts, West Hempstead and Lakeview are tight-knit communities. On Sept. 19, a fire tore through a row of business and apartments at Woodfield Road and Eagle Avenue in Lakeview. As previously reported by the Herald, 24 fire departments responded to the scene from the Lakeview-Malverne area, with some as far away as Port Washington and
Manhasset. All occupants were uninjured, and five firefighters were treated for smoke inhalation. Wi t h f ive bu s i n e s s e s destroyed, and close to 30 residents displaced from their homes, the West Hempstead and Lakeview communities quickly responded to the needs of those affected. Longtime West Hempstead resident Mary Tator, who grew up in the area and has three sons in the school district, said that her efforts to
collect items for those in need were immediate. “I just took a whole bunch of donations, from quite a few people in the area — and even someone in Malverne,” Tator said. On Sept. 22, Tator dropped off “at least 10 bags of clothing — if not more” at the George Washington School in the West Hempstead School District. “I emailed the principal CONTINUED ON PAGE 12
he village feels that this is a great time to promote the centennial — and it is.