Antebellum Winchester: Pre-Civil War buildings

Often referred to as the old­est com­mer­cial build­ing in down­town, the “Dodge’s Store Rooms” build­ing was con­struct­ed by David Dodge on a lot he pur­chased in 1811. According to our ear­ly his­to­ri­an, James Flanagan, Dodge built his store house in 1813–1814. The build­ing was described in a sur­vey of his­toric sites in Clark County. “Beneath a late 19th cen­tu­ry face-lifting... 
David Dodge’s Store Rooms

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Tomb Painting
Commentary

We are one letter away from a better world

Here, on the morn­ing of March 15, the day of Julius Caesar’s demise in 44 BCE, I find myself con­tem­plat­ing whether it is okay to blind­ly com­mand any­thing. An inves­ti­ga­tion of the vocab­u­lary of dom­i­nance seems par­tic­u­lar­ly time­ly today, since muni­tions bought with our hard-earned tax dol­lars are rain­ing down from above on peo­ple in oth­er lands. 
Commentary

Oestre and the Vernal Equinox

Long before cal­en­dars were inked and before clocks began telling humans when to wake, there was a hush that came each year, a long exhale of frost and dark­ness. The rivers stiff­ened. The seeds slept. Even hope seemed to curl in on itself. And in that still­ness walked Oestre, the Dawn-Bringer of the North. 
Group Of Happy Kind Adult Multiracial People Standing In Sunny
Commentary

Yes, you can ‘do you.’ But why not be kind?

Social media is filled with mean com­ments and hurt­ful posts. People seem to feel empow­ered to behave in the most awful ways when sit­ting behind a phone, tablet, or com­put­er screen. A harm­less or well-inten­tioned post or news sto­ry is met with long strings of real­ly antag­o­nis­tic, cru­el com­ments. These com­ments usu­al­ly don’t add any­thing to the con­ver­sa­tion, or, when they do con­tribute to the con­ver­sa­tion, do so in a way that just hurts feelings... 

Editorial picks

Loving with your whole heart

There’s a song by Mumford & Sons called “White Blank Page” that has fol­lowed me for awhile. It’s writ­ten as a love song — raw and unguard­ed — but like most hon­est music, it refus­es to stay con­fined to one sto­ry. Some lyrics don’t just describe a rela­tion­ship. They name a ques­tion you didn’t real­ize you were car­ry­ing. Though writ­ten about roman­tic betray­al, that ques­tion echoes far beyond romance. It sur­faces in civic life. In church pews. In friend­ships that once felt unshakable. 
Stephen Craycraft

Craycraft stresses smart growth, fiscal stability

Had it not been for his oppo­si­tion to large-scale solar ener­gy devel­op­ment on Clark County’s prime farm­land, Stephen Craycraft might nev­er have got­ten involved in local gov­ern­ment. “I got in because of the solar issue that came about a few years ago. It was my part of the coun­ty that was going to be affect­ed,” he said. “That’s what pushed me into pol­i­tics.” Now the local busi­ness­man, who is in the last year of his first term as 3rd District mag­is­trate, is run­ning for coun­ty judge-exec­u­tive in a crowd­ed Republican pri­ma­ry race. 

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