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... 
Banks’ photograph taken from The Golden Jubilee of the General Association of Colored Baptists in Kentucky (1915).

Latest stories

Winchester Mayor Jo Ellen Reed
News,  Your Government

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. 
A close-up view of the redesigned intersection of Bypass Rd and Boonesboro Rd, showing the free flowing two-lane connection between the two busy roads.
News

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. 
Photo of the wayward cat poster by Michael Andrews
Commentary

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. 
Winchester Traveling Trail

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.” 

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