October Wine Wednesday: Celebrating Virginia Wine Month

October is Virginia Wine Month, and a great time to discover why Wine Enthusiast magazine named us one of the 10 best wine travel destinations in the world. Each turn of our scenic roads brings a new adventure. In one afternoon, you can go from rolling vineyards, to picturesque horse farms, to cozy country inns. A mouthwatering barbecue stand to a five-star restaurant. A stunning Viognier to a world-class Cabernet Franc. This is Virginia. It’s how we roll.

 The more time you take, the more you’ll discover ― every region, every vintage, every winery in Virginia is unique. The one constant is a warm welcome. 

 Virginia wines are now recognized among the world’s best, and there are over 250 local wineries ready to show you why. There are exciting events and special promotions going on all month long. Be sure to visit VirginiaWine.org for a complete list of October Wine Month activities.

Drink Local October Challenge Be true to your roots, Virginia! In celebration of Wine Month, please choose a Virginia vintage when enjoying wine during the month of October. Whether at home or in a restaurant, be sure to support our local wineries. Tell us about your Virginia Wine crush at #VAWine and #OctVAWineMonth.

Always drink responsibly. VirginiaWine.org 804-402-1896




Finding Peace After War

With rods and reels, clear water and quiet conversation, a new local program is helping veterans heal

It’s a calm summer night on the James River, and the downtown Lynchburg skyline is hazy and shimmering in the early evening sun. Four guys load up a couple of jon and drift boats with fishing tackle and push off the Amherst County boat ramp.

They steer upstream, passing under the John Lynch Memorial Bridge and navigate the rocky shallows toward the base of the dam where they anchor for a while, bait hooks, and cast off into the river.

This fishing trip is just a fishing trip, really. A couple of hours on the river, a few nibbles, a small catch or two.

Except, in a quiet and unassuming way, this fishing trip is so much more: All but one of the four is a veteran, and this particular fishing trip is part of a national program that’s new to Lynchburg called Project Healing Waters.

Founded in 2005, the program’s goal is to teach disabled veterans how to fly fish, rehabilitating their physical and mental health.

The program provides everything, so there’s no charge whatsoever to the participant. There are frequent local trips, plus larger regional outings or even expeditions outside of the United States.

The leader of the group, Zack Brown, is quick to point out he’s not a veteran. But in his line of work, he’s met a lot of vets who have struggled with the transition back to civilian life, and as of this year, he’s the local chapter director for Project Healing Waters.

“I work for Columbia Gas, and we’re part of a team called NiVets [Columbia Gas kept its name locally when NiSource purchased the company in 2000]—basically, we’re just trying to help veterans out. I was trying to find an organization that could align with me. I ran into Project Healing Waters and started working with the old program leader [for Central Virginia],” says Brown.

When that leader stepped down, he passed along Brown’s name as a replacement.

Besides a passion for helping veterans, Brown brings a lifelong love of fishing to the program, a love that started where he grew up below Monticello. “Ever since I could carry a tackle box … we had a farm pond at the base of the mountain,” Brown remembers.

“So as soon as my mom let me carry my stuff, I’d walk up there every single day after school and catch little fish.”

Brown’s entire family is in the military, “so I’ve seen it firsthand too,” he says.

Then in recent years, he has watched his colleague and Project Healing Waters assistant Robert Davis deal with civilian life after combat.

“It’s just a small way to help somebody. It doesn’t help everybody but I said, you know, shoot, I can take these guys fishing, get their minds off of things, get them outside, get them away from stuff,” says Brown. “And it helps some. I mean it doesn’t help them all but it does… it does help.”

Another guy on the water is Toby Williamson—tall, with a bushy red beard, and a Marine Corps tattoo on his calf. He joined the Marine Corps in 2000, fresh out of high school, and very quickly got caught up in the whirlwind of post-9/11 overseas offensives.

On his first tour, he had one of the jobs most kids don’t imagine they’ll face when they sign up—among other billets throughout his career, Williamson was assigned to mortuary affairs where he and his team were assigned the heavy responsibility of gathering their fallen comrades off the battlefield. This was in Fallujah, a particularly bloody site during the early 2000s, and the things he saw will stay with him forever.

“I did not do well in the transition to civilian life,” says Williamson. After that first tour—literally a couple of weeks afterward—he enrolled at Liberty University.

“That was a quick transition that I was not prepared for,” he says. “Within a few weeks, I had to drop out. I was home for about six months when I volunteered for another tour of duty—the only way I knew how to function was in chaos.”

Williamson signed up for a second tour. He says he didn’t know how to cope with student life, but he also didn’t want mortuary affairs to be his only experience serving his country. “I was able to see a lot more of the angles of war. I worked a lot with the civilian population, the local Iraqis. My team was responsible for winning the hearts and minds [of the people there],” Williamson says.

He’s not shy about his diagnosis. “While I did not suffer any physical wounds, or physical trauma, I do suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder,” he explains. “Which is becoming a lot more talked about, a lot more accepted in society. As far as folks coming back from war, the thing that affects them most is the mental side. It’s a lot harder to address. There’s a stigma.”

He knows he’s lucky he’s been able to face his struggles head on. Some of his comrades made it back from war, but couldn’t deal with the memories. “It’s part of my healing process to talk about it.”

Project Healing Waters does a good job of understanding that, and of offering activities that get you out in nature … you know, fishing is meant to be peaceful,” says Williamson.

In fact, talking about it is his job now, literally. A resource officer with the Virginia Department of Veteran Services, Williamson travels around the Commonwealth to talk to vets about the transition to civilian life and about how to cope with life after combat.

While he stresses that he’s not endorsing Project Healing Waters as an agency officer, he says fishing fits well in his own personal healing journey—and it’s something that fits well with what he tells veterans.

“It’s been a slow go … We’ve only had a handful of trips so far,” Brown says of the five months he’s been heading up the local program chapter. “It’s a brand-new program here in Lynchburg … it’s hard to reach out to veterans.”

As Williamson can attest, many veterans are reluctant to talk about their struggles at first.
That’s why Brown is working hard to spread the word so more local vets can enjoy the peace of the river and the company of folks who share similar experiences.

At the end of the night, the boats turn back for shore. The guys pull the boats up out of the water, shoot the breeze for a few minutes, shake hands and head for home. Nothing’s changed: the memories are still there, under the surface, and the demands of home and civilian life haven’t abated.

But for a couple of hours, the calm of the river took their minds off it all, just a bit.




Sopa de Pollo

Bueno for the Soul

This time of the year is one of the busiest. There’s a chill in the air, the kids are back in school, and the days are shorter. Sometimes we just want an easy, quick and comforting dinner—especially one we don’t have to make ourselves!

Everyone has a favorite Mexican restaurant to hit when there’s not a lot of time to linger; it’s likely conveniently located near your home and where you probably know a few of the waiters by name.

Chances are you have your “usual” number or combination on the menu too. A few months ago when fighting a summer cold, a friend recommended I try the sopa de pollo at my local Mexican place. I was taken aback. I had never had chicken soup at a Mexican restaurant before. Fajitas, burritos, guacamole, gallons of cheese dip—check. But I’d never even noticed chicken soup on the menu.

Not one to turn down a food recommendation, I drove straight to my local spot, placed my order and was blown away.

Served in a huge bowl, the steamy liquid was fragrant and hinted at something spicy inside. The large serving is loaded with shredded chicken, sliced jalapenos, cilantro, bits of corn, onions, tomatoes and rice. On top there are ample slices of fresh avocado with lime wedges served alongside to squeeze into the already very well seasoned soup.

Whether you’re getting your first cold of the season or just need a warm and quick meal, this absolutely irresistible dish is a spicy, yet soothing, choice for the whole family.




Tombstone Tales

A “Who’s Who” of Local Cemeteries

There are lots of famous folks buried in Lynchburg’s cemeteries, some of whom are outright famous and others who probably should be.

Maria Wilson (1861-1878), buried at Old City Cemetery, made newspapers all over the country when she leapt to her death from a window at Court Street Baptist Church.

On Oct. 16, 1878, the church was packed with more than 2,000 people for a wedding, an “immense throng,” a Kansas newspaper reported. When someone heard plaster falling or glass breaking—reports varied—people started running and at least 14 people were killed.

A Michigan newspaper said, “Many leaped from windows, and a few who were in the gallery jumped from the third-story windows. Three women who made that venture were killed outright.”

The Lynchburg News pondered Wilson’s final moments: “The view from the window through which Maria Wilson jumped to an instant death is simply fearful. Whether her neck was broken by concussion against the fence or pavement is not known, but certainly ninety-nine in a hundred would never know afterwards that they had attempted the leap.”

It’s been said that Ota Benga (1883-1916), a Congolese Pygmy once exhibited with primates at the Bronx Zoo, was buried at Old City Cemetery. Benga lived in Lynchburg for several years, but homesick for Africa, he committed suicide.

White Rock Cemetery also claims Benga. According to FindAGrave.com, he “was reportedly buried in an unmarked grave in Lynchburg’s Old City Cemetery before being moved to the city’s White Rock Cemetery.”

The entry goes on to say that “his actual burial site (White Rock Cemetery) was deliberately kept secret for many years as it was feared that officials from his homeland … would attempt to retrieve his body and ship it back to Africa.”

A plaque memorializing Benga at White Rock, perhaps in response to his time at the zoo, states, “I am a man. I am a man.”

Poet and activist Anne Bethel Spencer (1882-1975) and husband Edward (1876-1964) are buried at Forest Hill Burial Park, located on Lakeside Drive across from the Moose Lodge. The Spencer plot is about 100 yards from the entrance, on the left side of a traffic circle. Sharing the plot are the Spencer’s daughters, Bethel and Alroy, and son Chauncey.

Spencer, longtime librarian at Dunbar High School, co-founded Lynchburg’s chapter of the NAACP. She also was the second African-American poet to be included in the Norton Anthology of Modern Poetry.

She and Edward hosted many notable African-American intellectuals in their Pierce Street home, among them W.E.B. DuBois.

Chauncey Spencer (1906-2002) was a pioneering aviator and educator who pushed for racial integration of the U.S. Army Air Corps during World War II. At the time, Air Corps leaders believed African Americans were not suited to be pilots.

Spencer and another pilot set out to prove them wrong, renting a small plane, embarking on a multi-city tour and taking their cause to Missouri Sen. Harry Truman. After World War II, President Truman desegregated the military.

As stated in the Richmond Times-Dispatch in 2004, “without Spencer … the Tuskegee Airmen might never have existed to help pave the way for integration of the nation’s armed forces.”

Also at Forest Hill is blues pioneer Luke Jordan (1892-1952). According to a historic marker, Jordan was one of the black musicians credited with “creating a syncopated and upbeat style” of blues “called Piedmont or East Coast Blues.”

Sgt. Charles L. Scott (1930-1950) died during the Korean Conflict but wasn’t buried in Fort Hill Memorial Park until 2013. Scott graduated from Boonsboro High School in 1948, joined the Army and was sent to Korea. He was reported missing in action in 1950.

For decades, Scott’s unidentified remains were buried in Hawaii at the National Cemetery of the Pacific. Thanks to DNA testing, his remains were identified and moved to Lynchburg in 2013. He was buried with full military honors.

Fort Hill Memorial Park manager Kevin Schley said that on the day of the funeral the road into the cemetery was lined with people who had come to pay their respects.

City founder John Lynch (1740-1820) is buried at the South River Meeting House Graveyard. In the late 1700s, Lynch operated a ferry service across the James River. In 1786, he founded Lynchburg.

The church, known today as Quaker Memorial Presbyterian, served area Quakers until 1839. By then, most had moved away because they opposed slavery. Resting not too far from Lynch is Revolutionary War soldier John Preston (1750-1820).

Local businessman and philanthropist Samuel Miller (1792-1869) is buried at Spring Hill Cemetery. In “Campbell Chronicles and Family Sketches,” R.H. Early writes that Miller was the “son of a poor widow and had few advantages.”

After moving to Lynchburg at 18, he prospered in business, becoming a multi-millionaire. Among other things, he donated land for Miller Park and the Lynchburg Female Orphan Asylum, also known as Miller Home.

Lt. Gen. Jubal Anderson Early (1816-1894), Gen. Robert E. Lee’s “Bad Old Man,” is buried at Spring Hill.

Early reportedly had a nasty temper but was brilliant on the battlefield. When the Civil War ended, he refused to swear allegiance to the Union. Instead, he fled to Mexico and later Canada. Eventually, he settled in Lynchburg.

Early’s death, reported in newspapers all over the country, was preceded by a fall. A California newspaper reported he was “ascending the stairs at the post-office when he fell heavily, the ice on the steps rendering them slippery. He struck on his head and the concussion was so severe as to render him unconscious.”

Artist Georgia Morgan (1869-1951) is buried at Spring Hill, her tombstone decorated with a painter’s pallet and brushes. Morgan, known for her still life and landscape paintings, was chair of Lynchburg College’s art department for 30 years.

According to a historic marker, Morgan’s work was “exhibited at the Paris Salon and in galleries from Maine to Florida.”
Locally, original examples of Morgan’s work can be found at Jones Memorial Library, the Lynchburg Museum and other places. The Georgia Morgan Civic Art Show is held each February.

Don Reno (1927-1984), “King of the Flat Picking Guitarists,” is buried at Spring Hill. Reno is credited with co-writing “Dueling Banjos,” the song made famous by the 1972 thriller, Deliverance. Reno was inducted into the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame.

Edwin “Ned” Emerson (1839-1922) is buried at Presbyterian Cemetery. He was an actor, performing at Ford’s Theatre when President Abraham Lincoln was shot on April 14, 1865.

Some reports say Emerson was delivering a line from “Our American Cousin” when John Wilkes Booth, a friend of Emerson’s, killed Lincoln. After Lincoln’s assassination, Emerson quit acting and moved to Lynchburg. According to census records, he married, had children and worked in the stationery and book business.

Folk artist Emma Serena “Queena” Dillard Stovall (1887-1980) is buried at Presbyterian. A self-taught artist, she is sometimes called the “Grandma Moses of Virginia.” Her scenes of country life—farm auctions, funerals, hog killings, etc.—are in museums as well as private collections.

If you want to visit these and other famous folks from Lynchburg’s past, Old City Cemetery and Presbyterian Cemetery sometimes host tours, and all of the cemeteries mentioned are open to visitors from dawn until dusk.




Top Doctors







An Empty Feeling

How to Transition Once Kids Leave the Nest

When you have children your identity often becomes consumed with being a parent. Everything you do, and even who you are, involves your kids. So what happens when your excited 18-year-old son or daughter packs up their car and heads out the door for college? It’s only natural for parents to experience a normal series of emotions, known as Empty Nest Syndrome.

“While this transition may be scary, there are new joys to be found in this next phase of life,” said Tammy Gilbert, mother of two college-age daughters.

If you are experiencing Empty Nest Syndrome, here are a few tips to help you transition and live life to the fullest.

Tip 1: Redefine your purpose.
It is not uncommon for parents who are experiencing Empty
Nest Syndrome to feel a loss of identity. In an article titled
“How to Overcome Empty Nest Syndrome” in Psychology Today, psychologist Guy Winch, Ph.D., wrote:

“Parents often struggle with a profound sense of loss, not just because they miss their child, but because their very identities have been significantly impacted.”

To help move on from this huge transition in life, it is helpful to redefine your purpose. Although your children still need you, they don’t need you in the same way. “It’s hard, but you just have to let them go,” said Melody Key, insurance agent at Croft Senior Services. “They have their own life to live.”

It may be helpful to make a list that defines who you are:
wife, mother, daughter, sister, volunteer, etc. Take a moment to list your qualities: encourager, thinker, funny, honest, supportive, etc. Then, see if you can form a redefined purpose. For example, if you enjoy volunteering and know you are an encourager, maybe you can find an organization where you can volunteer your time encouraging young mothers.

Tip 2: Stay physically and mentally active.
Key says she tries to be more active now since her children left home. She enjoys getting outside doing yard work and taking walks.

Is it a beautiful day outside? Find a shady park bench and enjoy a good book, or soak up the sun swimming at a community pool.

Getting involved in your community is another great way to stay active, lend a hand and meet new people. Communities typically have lots of involvement opportunities. Check with Lynchburg Parks and Recreation to see what classes they offer. Also, organizations such as Big Brothers Big Sisters of Central Virginia and Habitat for Humanity are always looking for volunteers.

Tip 3: Utilize technology.
If your kids move far away, the great thing about living in the 21st Century is that technology helps us stay connected. Try to set up times to chat on Facebook, Skype or FaceTime. Even a quick email in the morning wishing your child a good day will help you feel closer.

“When our youngest daughter left for college, we had just lost our 12-year-old dog as well, which made the silence and loss of activity in the house even more pronounced,” Gilbert said. “It was hard to walk by their empty bedrooms and not see them every day. FaceTime became a great way to keep in touch. We looked forward to hearing all about their new experiences.”

Tip 4: Rekindle romance and friendships.
No one can deny that having children takes time. When they leave home, start reconnecting with old friends and, if you are married, spend more time with your spouse. As explained in an article by Mayo Clinic, “When the last child leaves home, parents have a new opportunity to reconnect with each other, improve the quality of their marriage and rekindle interests for which they previously might not have had time.”

Book that trip you and your spouse have always dreamed of taking, or buy that hot tub you have always wanted.

“My advice would be to embrace this next chapter of your life,” Gilbert said. “Enjoy watching your children become more independent, while you relax, watch Netflix and order takeout! Take on projects that have been put off and travel more often. Enjoy your time together as a couple.”

Tip 5: Find a new hobby.
Is there a hobby you have always wished you had time for? Now is the time.

Whether you have always wanted to take up painting, woodworking, cooking, playing the piano (you name it!), try to learn something new.

In his article, Winch explained that with any loss, you cannot simply adjust by getting used to the change. He says it is “essential to replace meaningful aspects of our lives in one way or the other when we lose them… We therefore need to identify possible new roles and interests to explore and we must consider existing ones we might be able to expand.”

Although Empty Nest Syndrome is not technically a clinical diagnosis, it does not mean parents cannot feel a strong sense of emotions—even loss. So if you are feeling a little blue this fall, it might be time to build that model ship.




A New Grade, A Fresh Start [Back to School]

5 Pieces of Advice to Improve the School Year

Whether a child is starting school for the first time or returning to the classroom as a senior student, heading “back to school” is the perfect time to start fresh and begin the year in the right mindset.
We asked people in all areas of Lynchburg City Schools to give their best piece of advice to students of all ages.


“Be involved as much as you can.”

Marcy Farris sent her son, Ben, off to school for the first time in the fall of 2016. She said during the transition process, she made sure to go to all the orientations she could and ask every question possible. “If you have questions, ask them,” she says. “Chances are someone else is wondering the same thing.” In fact, many times after a meeting she would have several parents come up to her and thank her for asking the questions they were too scared to voice.
Farris said her son’s school, Bedford Hills Elementary, was always supportive and never made her feel as if the question was too small or insignificant. If they didn’t know the answer, they were willing to find out. She felt much more prepared this year as Ben returned for his second year. Now that she has a year of the school routine under her belt, she plans on being involved as much as her schedule will allow her.


“Tell your children what to expect.”

As the principal of Dearington Elementary School, Daniel Rule is no stranger to the back-to-school mindset. However, this year is a little bit different, as his oldest headed off to Kindergarten this fall. “A lot of time, children are excited to go to school, but that excitement fades when they realize they have to keep coming back day after day for years and years,” says Rule.
Get them interested in meeting new friends and learning new things. For example, in the weeks leading up to the first day, Rule gave his child regular “Kindergarten tests” by asking him to perform tasks such as showering by himself or pouring milk. “It really gets him excited about things,” he says.
Rule’s final piece of advice is to make sure your child knows their bus number. While the teachers will know it, it’s helpful if the child knows what number to look for and has it written down somewhere they can easily check, such as on their backpack.


“Every new year is a chance to start fresh.”

“Often, students get into their heads that just because they had a bad year or weren’t a good student last year, that this year is going to be the same,” says Catherine Bragg, eighth grade English teacher at Dunbar Middle School.
However, Bragg doesn’t let this attitude stay around for very long in her classroom. On the first day of school, she lets her students know they can start fresh if they would like, giving them a chance to do better. “My eighth graders are still trying to decide if they want to participate in school or not, so I try to encourage them as much as I can,” Bragg says.
In the classroom, Bragg spreads this idea to daily life as well. She reminds students that just because they were grumpy or tired the day before doesn’t mean they can’t do well in the present. She encourages parents to utilize this mentality at home and has seen it turn student
mindsets around.


“Don’t be afraid to reach out to teachers and peers about anything you need help with.”

Mary Kate Comerford is a rising senior at Heritage High School. “When starting a new year and a new grade, it’s a big change and adjustment,” she says. Comerford says she has a lot of questions at the start of each year and utilizes those around her for answers.
Normally, she asks upperclassmen about teachers—what to expect about their personality and workload. However, last year she had a history teacher who was new to the school. Since none of her peers could offer any information, Comerford went straight to the teacher to get answers. The teacher responded by laying out all the expectations for the year, a timeline Comerford could use to anticipate assignments, and guidelines for assignments. Comerford says, “Reaching out to her made me more comfortable. I didn’t have to go in blind.”


“Stay on top of your grades.”

As the director of Heritage High School’s Future Center, Leidra McQueen helps prepare high school students for college. “Your GPA starts ticking on day one of high school, and it’s important for students not to let it slip,” she says. The clock starts even earlier for those who take high school classes while still in middle school. Even though GPAs carry over from year to year, McQueen says each year is still an opportunity to start fresh and recommit to doing well.
For those who struggle with a low GPA, assistance is available. Both E.C. Glass and Heritage high schools offer assistance through Beacon of Hope. The two Future Centers offer tutoring, SAT and ACT prep courses, financial aid assistance and college admission guidance.




Bedford’s New Gem

Discover craft beer, smoked meats (and maybe some hidden treasure?) at Beale’s Brewery and BBQ.

Bedford has got it going on. (Yes, you read that right.)
The once sleepy, always sweet small town of Bedford, Va. has a lot happening these days. The current buzz is about the opening of Beale’s Brewery and BBQ, located on Grove Street in the heart of downtown.

Owner Dave McCormack is a Petersburg developer who specializes in the rehabilitation of old buildings that most people overlook. He visited the area for the first time in 2009, then purchased a series of buildings within the Jackson and Grove Street corridor a few years later. After first bringing the Bedford Lofts to life, Dave thought the adjacent space was the ideal spot for a production brewery and taproom.

Dave is proud of the seasoned team they have put together that includes Taproom Manager Melanie Ellis, Hospitality Director Jared Srsic and Brewmaster James Frazer. Frazer (right), a Bedford native and homebrewer who has won several beer competitions, caught Dave’s attention with his signature White Ale.

According to Frazer the focus at Beale’s is on high-quality, low ABV approachable beers. “Everything is meant to be straightforward and unassuming, which is represented in our name choices,” he says.

Their flagship beer, Beale’s Gold, is a traditional Helles Lager that Frazer says is “crisp, smooth and relatable” in taste.

Other styles include:
Silver—a German-style hefeweizen, or wheat beer, with notes
Red—a light-bodied red Indian Pale Ale, perfectly balanced in sweetness and hoppiness
Black—a smooth, creamy oatmeal stout
Brown—a German-style brown lager that’s dark in color, but drinkable all year-round

The perfect complement to a delicious craft beer? Barbecue. With hints of Texas, Virginia and German styles, Beale’s offers barbecue sandwiches and smoked meats by the pound. In addition to daily staples, Chef Srsic serves up weekend specials such as Friday’s prime rib and Saturday’s “dinosaur beef ribs,” which often sell out before the end of the evening. He recommends “getting a smorgasbord of meat options, paired with the fire and ice pickles, slaw and potato salad.”

There are other options and surprises to be discovered from their “hidden menu” so don’t forget to ask your server.

Locals may already be familiar with the name choice—a nod to the legend of Beale’s Treasure. The story dates back to 1818 when Thomas J. Beale and a group of 30 other Virginians struck gold in the Rockies then brought the treasure back to Bedford and buried it.

“Three ciphers were created to tell the contents, location and names of the treasure owners, but only the cipher describing the contents of the treasure has ever been decoded,” Dave explained.

The Beale’s Treasure story, while exciting, is also believed to be a fitting metaphor for the area.
“A place of beauty, charm and value, seemingly hidden right under the noses of those looking to find it,” Dave says.

But with the opening of Beale’s and other downtown developments, it looks like Bedford has been discovered. Hopefully Beale’s is just the beginning of more great things to come for this small town with big potential.




Living Out Loud Sept/Oct 2017

“Best Of Lynchburg” Awards
The finalist round for the “Best of Lynchburg” Awards is underway now through September 25. Head to lynchburgliving.com to cast your votes for the top 10 nominees in every category! The top five of each category will be published as winners in our January/February issue.

Lynchburg Restaurant Week Donations
For the first time, Lynchburg Restaurant Week partnered with Meals on Wheels of Greater Lynchburg. During the one-week dining event June 10-17, $415 was raised for the nonprofit. Thank you, Lynchburg, for your giving spirit!

Positive Feedback
Riverviews Artspace wrote on Facebook, “Lynchburg Living did a great article on Ken Faraoni and his art. … Celebrate your local artists and local artspace!” DebraLee Hovey, organizer of the SML Charity Home Tour, wrote to the editor about the July/August Home feature: “We all loved the spread you did … It came out fabulous. Thank you for your professionalism and for making our home tour look as great as it really is!”


We Want To hear From You!

Write to Feedback, Lynchburg Living magazine, 1035 Avalon Dr., Forest, VA 24551. Send e-mail to feedback@lynchburgmag.com.

Correspondents must identify themselves; names may be withheld on request. Lynchburg Living may edit or condense letters.




Person of Interest: Claire Hansen Sept/Oct 2017

Aspiring Librarian
Age: 7

Why did you decide you want to be a librarian when you grow up?
Because you get to look at books!

Where did you get the idea to create the Little Mimosa Library at your house?
I said that I wanted to be a librarian, then my daddy showed me a little library once downtown.

You had a lot of help from your family, especially your grandfather. How did he help?
My Dan Dan built the library for me.

Have people been using the library so far?
Yes! Pinocchio was the first book checked out.

Why do you think reading is important?
Because it helps you learn about stuff. I love when my daddy and mommy read to me. I love a lot of books like Fancy Nancy, The Hobbit, and books about Narnia.

Check out the newest Little Free Library
in Bedford County, located at the Goode Rescue Squad. Usually using scrap wood and donated materials, the Bedford Rotary Club has helped create five of these across the county over the past two years. The libraries further their goal to support education and a love of reading.