W.W. Banks was a noted Black scholar, businessman
I find it heartening to learn the achievements of people who rise from humble beginnings. Few are more inspiring than the life of William Webb Banks (1862−1928), the Winchester native who was born into slavery and became a noted scholar, journalist, businessman, churchman, civil rights activist and historian. It seems appropriate to begin with his unusually long obituary in the...
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Mayor says she did not ask city manager to resign
Winchester Mayor JoEllen Reed said this week she did not ask for City Manager Bruce Manley’s resignation. Manley, who notified the Board of Commissioners in a letter during the board’s Feb. 3 meeting, quit three days later. He had been the city manager since 2024.
Former City Manager Mike Flynn, who held the job right before Manley, is the interim city manager.
Jeff’s Playlist: Chrome Dreams II
How this 2007 album follows 2023’s Chrome Dreams I’m not quite sure, but I really like it, and I think you will too.
Roundabouts added to bypass extension plan
When the extension of Veterans Memorial Parkway (also known as the eastern bypass) is completed, it will include three roundabouts and a realignment of Boonesboro Rd with the existing Bypass Road (western bypass) to facilitate traffic between I‑64 and Boonesboro.
Both of these design elements represent changes to the original plan and are designed to facilitate traffic flow.
Being a good neighbor is universal
Any “feed” we open these days screams inhumanity. I wonder why we allow ourselves to be fed, like pigs from slop buckets, with stories of pedophiles, stormtrooper abductions, lawless lawmakers, and the like. End of sermon.
In stark contrast to the hyperbolic culture wars, most of us navigate our days in relationship to a phenomenon we call “neighbors,” ontologically, those who “live nearby,” practically, people we count on.
Editorial picks
Not in vain: What we forgot a commandment was for
Around here, word travels fast when folks think a line’s been crossed.
Recently, a local middle school drama program performed a song from Legally Blonde—the bright, bouncy opener, “Omigod You Guys.” The kids sang. The audience clapped. And then, not long after, a parent went before the school board to warn that something dangerous had happened. That students had been allowed to curse. That God’s name had been taken in vain. That young souls were now at risk.
Your Voice: Reader laments loss of Traveling Trail
The subject of this letter is the future of what we Clark Countians know as The Traveling Trail, and at its conclusion, I wish to make two appeals.
The owner of this trail property is The Greater Clark Foundation. Part of the foundation’s Mission Statement describes it as “a health legacy foundation” and states that it favors “investment in people over projects” and “ambition for a vibrant community.” It goes on to say that it believes in the
abundant capacity of people to create communities they cherish,” and that it inspires “vision and action for a compelling future.”

