You may not know his name, but you’ve seen Xpress designer Nathanael Roney’s distinctive illustrations gracing many of our covers.
Author: Jon Elliston
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BlogAsheville Awards announced
The third annual Extravablogiversapaloozathon turned the spotlight on area bloggers.
The recipe for funny
Sure, every comedian wants to make people laugh. But it’s a rare one that will go so far as to create a festival devoted to doing just that. Last year, Brown launched Laugh Your Asheville Off, a recurring spasm of standup comedy that will soon grace Asheville stages for the eighth time (see details below). […]
Gouged at the pump?
In wake of run on gas supplies and sudden spike in costs, Asheville Police Department issues statement on reporting gougers
Blog Log: The week in local blogging
Once a year, area bloggers come together in person. Get ready for the third annual Extravablogiversapaloozathon and 2008 BlogAsheville Awards.
Little toy reel meets real big fish
There are fish stories, and then there are fish stories. David Hayes of Wilkes County has a whopper of a tale after reeling in a 21 pound, 1 ounce channel catfish that broke the state record. For the record: Wilkes County resident David Hayes with his record-breaking channel catfish, caught with his granddaugher Alyssa’s Barbie […]
Asheville City Council preview: Aug. 26 meeting
Council faces a jam-packed agenda with items ranging from the mundane to the much-debated, including two matters likely to capture special attention: a request to facilitate Parkside’s construction and preliminary plans for a performing-arts center just off City/County Plaza.
Best of WNC balloting begins!
Make your voice heard in the annual Mountain Xpress reader poll — by voting online here — and help decide who takes home the proverbial blue ribbon for helping make life in WNC wonderful. Voting began Aug. 20 and ends Sept. 12.
The magnolia watchers
No one seems to know exactly how long the magnolia tree has graced City/County Plaza, a stone’s throw from the Asheville City Building. Based on old photos, most interested parties have guesstimated it to be more than 100 years old. Steve Rasmussen, Dixie Deerman And Clare Hanrahan Predicting the date of the magnolia’s demise entails […]
APD elaborates on Bele Chere suicide
Police issue statement to quell rumors
Xpress writer snags reporting award and fellowship
Rebecca Bowe honored by the Society of Professional Journalists and the Knight Center for Environmental Journalism
Into the Vault: What’s new in The Xpress Files
Now online: more Parkside documents, Camp Summerlane records, the N.C. vs. TVA lawsuit, and more.
Bele Chere: Don’t miss the official guide
Brace yourself for a good time: The Bele Chere festival returns to downtown Asheville next Friday through Sunday, July 24 to 27. And it’s no run-of-the-mill retread: It’s the 30th annual Bele Chere, and festival organizers plan to celebrate the auspicious occasion with the biggest, best go at it yet. Of course, the street festival, […]
Waterboarded in WNC?
Writer Christopher Hitchens says in the new issue of Vanity Fair that his voluntary torture trial was staged at a mystery location in Western North Carolina
You oughta be in these pictures … and maybe you are
A slew of new Xpress photo galleries shine the spotlight on recent local events
Smoked out: Camp Summerlane’s conflicted history (Part 4)
Dave Alexander, a 23-year-old cub reporter for the Asheville Times, went to work early the morning of July 12, 1963. His editors greeted him at 6:30 a.m. with an urgent tip: Something big was going down around Rosman, a town near Brevard.
The remote, sparsely populated place didn’t typically make much news, but this day would prove an exception. The state Highway Patrol had called to alert the paper that a chaotic clash was going on at the newly opened Camp Summerlane, a few miles outside Rosman. “So I jumped into my little Volkswagen, and away I went,” Alexander remembers.
Summerlane was a little more than an hour’s drive from Asheville. About 8 a.m., the reporter reached the outskirts of the camp, where he found law-enforcement officers standing watch around the perimeter. Parking his car, he walked toward them and started to ask, “What’s going on?”
Showdown: Camp Summerlane’s trial by fire (Part 3)
Robin Ludwig’s first experiences in the South were something close to magical. The 14-year-old New Yorker started summer vacation at the brand-new Camp Summerlane in the first week of July 1963.
To get there, he’d hopped on a bus that joined a caravan of campers from up north who were headed for Western North Carolina. The first day of the trip, “We drove and drove, and somewhere in Virginia, we pulled over to the side of the road in this incredible grove of giant pine trees,” Ludwig recalls. “There were fireflies everywhere, and we just spread out our sleeping bags and camped out. When we woke up in the morning, we found out we were in the middle of a boysenberry thicket, so we got to eat boysenberries for breakfast. We were all little teenagers from heavy, urban places … and suddenly, we were turned into nature.”
That sense of wonder continued as the caravan reached Camp Summerlane, a 165-acre retreat a few miles outside Rosman, a mountain town southwest of Brevard. “It was someplace else,” he says. “We figured we were in the middle of a bluegrass song.” Along with the rest of the 50-some campers, Ludwig planned to stay for the remainder of the summer.
Storm clouds: Camp Summerlane’s hopeful start turns troubled (Part 2)
In April 1963, seven Camp Summerlane staff members journeyed to Western North Carolina from assorted points around the country. “The dogwoods were just starting to bloom,” one of them remembers, and at first, springtime in the mountains seemed to offer a welcoming setting for the new camp.
Granted, there was much work to be done to prepare the facility—an inactive summer camp about 15 miles southwest of Brevard, near the tiny town of Rosman. Fifty-some children, along with 10 or so additional adult staffers, would be arriving in July.
And while they would need the usual amenities for a summer of hiking, swimming, roasting marshmallows and such, Summerlane was also preparing to implement an unusual social experiment: At this camp, children and adults would be given an equal say in determining most camp rules and activities. There was also a social-service component, as some of the older campers would be doing outreach work with migrant laborers. And even as civil-rights battles flared around the South that summer, children of all races were invited to attend.
Two days to cinematic glory: PHOTO GALLERY
Last weekend, contestants in the third annual Asheville 48 Hour Film Project scurried around town, trying to craft a masterwork in two short days. Xpress followed the team “We Make Pictures Move” from start to finish.
Cruel Summer: Digging deeper online
The Xpress investigative series Cruel Summer: The Attack on Camp Summerlane tells a little-known story. See these online resources to learn more.
Burning memories: The short, hard history of Camp Summerlane (Part 1)
The short, hard history of Camp Summerlane
Tomm Friend was snoozing in his cabin when gunfire and the whoosh of flames pierced the night quiet. “I was awakened by a blast,” Friend remembers 45 years later. That summer, the 15-year-old was attending a camp on the outskirts of Rosman, N.C., a small mountain town about a dozen miles southwest of Brevard.
Dressing quickly, Friend bolted into the dark. “I ran down in the direction of the blast, and a woman dropped out of a tree with a machete, right in front of me,” he recalls. Recognizing her as a camp counselor, a relieved Friend blurted out that they knew each other—that he was with the camp, not the mob that was assaulting it.
“She was basically hiding in a tree, protecting children. She had a machete because she didn’t have a gun,” Friend explains; the camp’s few firearms were in other hands. “Then she told me to be careful and climbed back into the tree.”
The camper pressed on, as shouts and gunshots split the hum and gurgle of crickets and streams. Down a hill, in the cove near the camp’s entrance, Friend came upon a surreal scene: A small lake was on fire, the flames wafting across the water.
The attack on Camp Summerlane was under way.