Country ZEST & Style Holiday 2023 Edition

Page 48

Long Branch Traces Its History a Long Way Back

Experienced Attorneys for ALL Your Legal Needs Family Law Criminal Defense

Robin C. Gulick

T. Huntley Thorpe III

LEGAL EXCELLENCE Estate Planning Civil Litigation Real Estate Law

Karen E. Hedrick

Gulick, Carson & Thorpe, P.C. A Tradition of Legal Excellence

Every case is different. We will provide a custom strategy to fit the needs of your unique situation. Call today for a consultation. 70 Main Street, Suite 52 • Warrenton, VA 20188-0880 • www.gctlaw.com

540-347-3022

McClanahan Camera

www.mccamera.com 540 347 2533 Your Digital Specialists from Cameras to Printing

Monday—Friday 10am to 6pm; Sat. 10am to 4pm

306 W Lee Hwy Warrenton

Print Directly from Phone Photo Gift Deadline for Xmas: Dec 4

Custom Framing & Matting Ready Made Frames ~ Canvas Prints Photo Books ~ Passport Photos

Photo Restoration ~ Movies to Digital 46

I

By James Ivancic

t was 1786, three years after the Treaty of Paris ended the Revolutionary War and Great Britain recognized the independence of the 13 American colonies. In an area now known as Halfway, Long Branch Baptist Church started that very same year with 25 worshippers Long Branch worshippers gathered in a log cabin. A proper church building was erected in gather each Sunday in a church built in 1820. 1820 and worshippers gather there to this day. The pastor’s office and meeting space adjoin the sanctuary located at 5541 Long Branch Lane, off The Plains Road, equally distant from The Plains and Middleburg. Rev. Frank Fishback has been the pastor since January, 2011, and also is pastor at The Plains Baptist Church. The church has survived the Civil War, the Covid pandemic and declining church attendance. It remained open during the Civil War, though in June, 1863, fighting in nearby Middleburg made it unsafe to attend. On Oct. 15, 1864 no service was held because “only one member present beside the clerk … our pastor a prisoner and a gloom pervading the community in consequence of the oppression of the enemy,” according to church records. In-person services continued during the height of the pandemic. Sheila Burke said she started worshipping at Long Branch when her own church in Middleburg shut down. Long Branch attendees wore masks and spread out in church. Outdoors they would take hold of a Rev. Frank Fishback has been the string that symbolically “showed that we were pastor at Long Branch Baptist still connected,” Burke said. Church since 2011. Susan Schulz and her husband moved to the area from Fairfax 40 years ago and were looking for a new church. Their housekeeper suggested Long Branch. “The people were so endearing,” Schulz recalled, adding that she found “people’s arms were open” to her as a newcomer. It’s definitely a giving congregation. One room off the sanctuary holds Branch of Hope, the pantry where laundry, bathroom and personal hygiene supplies are set out on shelves for those in need at no cost. The pantry is open from 9 to 11 a.m. on the third Saturday of the month. A total of 63 families were served in September. “When we started Branch of Hope we wondered where [donations] would come from. Frank said not to worry,” said Schulz. “God has blessed us.” The church supports the Seven Loaves food bank in Middleburg, distributes school supplies for children, and assists Hope Tree Family Services in Salem, Virginia. The ladies of Long Branch also put their hands to work making blankets for the needy in Appalachia. The congregation holds a homecoming gathering every year and a picnic with food and music during the summer. There’s an occasional movie night with pizza. “Methodists and Baptists are famous for the food” as a drawing card, said Burke. “The old ladies would cook. Now we’re the old ladies.” The church holds Sunday school for adults and children at 9 a.m. Worship starts at 10 a.m. There was a time when more congregants occupied the pews at Long Branch and filled Sunday school class. The farms near the church no longer hire as many people as in years past, which Rev. Fishback and longtime members say resulted in fewer adults and children coming to worship. But members appreciate what they have and the opportunity to be of service to others. “I don’t see explosive growth here,” Rev. Fishback said. “But if we have spiritual growth, we’re more apt to go out and ask people to come join us.”

MIDDLEBURG SUSTAINABLE COMMITTEE| Holiday 2023


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

A First Love Lost

5min
page 82

A Day at the Montpelier Races

4min
page 81

Something For Everyone at Littleton Farm

3min
page 80

Head of Highland School Heading Out

4min
page 79

Cousins Meet in Pacific; Littletons Honor Visitors

3min
page 78

Looking For More Faces at the Gold Cup Races

3min
page 77

PROPERTY Writes

3min
page 76

China Folk House Retreat in Harpers Ferry

4min
pages 74-75

Conservation Partnerships Lead to Historic Battlefield Protection

3min
page 73

Edith Blackwell: An Amazing Life

3min
page 72

History Unfolds at Loudoun County’s Ebenezer Churches

4min
pages 70-71

A Familiar Face in the Kitchen at Marshall’s Blue Mountain Grill

3min
page 69

Hill School Auction Just Keeps on Giving Back

3min
page 67

On The ROAD

2min
page 66

Theodore Roosevelt’s Sporting Universe

3min
page 65

Wolver Beagles Are Now So Much History

3min
page 64

HELP WANTED: THE TRADES

3min
page 63

Umpire Mitigation Doesn’t Mess Around

3min
page 62

MODERN FINANCE

3min
page 61

Copper Fox: A Luscious Liquor Made With Love

3min
page 60

CELEBRATIONS

2min
page 58

Perspectives on Childhood, Education, and Parenting A CONVERSATION ON THE PRESSURE OF GREAT EXPECTATIONS

5min
pages 56-57

Another Fabulous West Virginia Breeders Classic

3min
page 55

Say hello to Middleburg library’s new branch manager

3min
page 54

Small Ways AI Enhances Everyday Life

4min
pages 52-53

Survival of the Fittest: Envisioning Wildlife and Wilderness with the Big Four, Masterworks from the Rijksmuseum Twenthe and the National Museum of Wildlife Art

2min
page 51

Meet Jamie Potter: Writer, Illustrator, Musician and Bartender

3min
page 49

Long Branch Traces Its History a Long Way Back

4min
page 48

How Does Wildlife Survive Winter?

3min
page 46

All Hail Haley Making College Football History

3min
page 45

COUNTRY Pursuits

1min
page 44

Sunset In The Field

1min
page 44

SURVIVAL

11min
pages 42-43

Middleburg Film Fest

2min
page 41

A NEW OLD GRANDSTAND FOR UPPERVILLE

4min
pages 38-39

Pot House Has History on its Side

6min
pages 36-37

Meet Middleburg’s New Postmaster

3min
page 34

Rory McEwen: A New Perspective on Nature

3min
pages 32-33

Up, Up In The Air

2min
page 31

The Virginia Fall Races

2min
page 30

“Tis The Season for Maintenance Musts

3min
page 28

Tranquility Abounds at St. Dominic’s Monastery

4min
page 27

Someone’s in the Kitchen at Buchanan Hall

3min
page 26

James Markham Marshall Ambler, Hero of the Arctic

7min
pages 24-25

ROOT to TABLE at AUDLEY FARM

3min
page 22

BOOKED UP

2min
page 21

The Middleburg Orange County Beagles

2min
page 18

'Tis TANNENBAUM SEASON

5min
pages 16-17

Carry Me Back: My Ghost Writer Had Just The Right Stuff

2min
page 15

HERE & THERE

1min
page 14

The Foxcroft Christmas Pageant Remains A Sacred Tradition

3min
page 12

A Garden to Honor Peggy Richardson

2min
page 11

A Buddhist Temple Offers Enlightenment in Aldie

3min
page 10

Love and Nutcrackers at The Christmas Sleigh

3min
page 8

Mike Donovan Sees the Forest Through the Trees

3min
page 7

A Plea for The Trees

3min
page 6

SO MUCH TO CELEBRATE

3min
page 4
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.