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The Sweet Sounds of Nashville
Oct 01, 2008
By: Marshall Chapman
Music City is rich in culture, song, and southern soul
Live in Twangtown
Oct 01, 2008
By: Marshall Chapman
With an abundance of great venues, Nashville lives up to its name
Beyond the Music
Oct 01, 2008
By: Jim Myers
As any local knows, Nashville is more than juke joints and concert halls
The Brazen City
Aug 12, 2008
By: Candice Dyer
Atlanta surprises and sparkles with energy, unity, and unabashed self-promotion
Dishing It Out
Aug 12, 2008
By: John Kessler
The top ten things to eat in Atlanta
Secret Atlanta
Aug 12, 2008
By: John Kessler
Exploring A-Town can feel like a treasure hunt, but that’s the fun of it
Higher Living
Jun 20, 2008
By: Donovan Webster
Thomas Jefferson imagined Charlottesville as home to a great university. It is that—and so much more
Hallowed Grounds
Jun 20, 2008
By: Donna M. Lucey
A not-so-stuffy tour of Mr. Jefferson's university
From Dawn to Dusk
Jun 20, 2008
By: Donovan Webster
A local's take on the best that Charlottesville has to offer
Local Luminaries
Jun 20, 2008
By: Cathy Harding
From farmers to musicians, an eclectic mix makes Charlottesville home
The Raw and the Cooked
Apr 22, 2008
By: Hunter Kennedy
Ten things you simply must eat
The Forever Plantation
Apr 22, 2008
By: William Baldwin
History and lunch at Middleton Place
Uncharted Charleston
Apr 22, 2008
By: Maura Hogan
An insider's guide, from morning til night
The Wild Bunch
Apr 22, 2008
By: Chris Dixon
How landowners and conservationists have banded together to protect the Carolina coast
City by the Sea
Apr 21, 2008
By: Jack Bass
The culture and soul of Charleston, South Carolina
Augusta: No Clubs Required
Mar 09, 2008
By: Clint Bowie
Georgia's Garden City offers more than tee time
Augusta: The River and the Reds
Mar 09, 2008
By: David Foster
Augusta: The "I Feel Good" Driving Tour
Mar 09, 2008
By: William Cameron Henry
Augusta: Great Augustans
Mar 09, 2008
By: Rick Brown
Destination Oxford, Mississippi
Jan 07, 2008
By: Lisa Neumann Howorth
The Little Easy No More
Oxford Town, Oxford Town . . .
Jan 07, 2008
By: Lisa Neumann Howorth
Your Guide to Oxford
Oxford Personalities
Jan 07, 2008
By: Lisa Neumann Howorth
Meet some of Oxford's more notable personalities
The Pleasures of Palm Beach
Nov 07, 2007
By: Les Standiford
Henry Flagler's Paradise Shines On
Gold Coasting
Nov 07, 2007
By: M. B. Roberts
A stroll along Worth Avenue in Palm Beach is sport for the avid shopper
Well-Heeled in Wellington
Nov 07, 2007
By: Shanon Robb
A Palm Beach outpost hosts the horsey set
All-Star Casting
Nov 07, 2007
By: M. B. Roberts
Billionaire’s Row lures anglers of every stripe
Memphis Calling - Swine Dining
Sep 25, 2007
By: Andria Lisle
Memphis Calling - Notable Folks
Sep 25, 2007
By: Andria Lisle
Eating Local in Memphis
Sep 25, 2007
By: Andria Lisle
Writers in Residence
Jun 26, 2007
By: Jennifer Paddock
A Rising Class of Writers Finds Roots in Mobile
Upwardly Mobile
Jun 26, 2007
By: Jennifer Paddock
A look Around Town
page: 1 2 3 4

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Local Luminaries

By: Cathy Harding
June 20, 2008

Steve Murray, The Farmer
credit: photograph by Rob Howard
Time and again, people in this town cite Charlottesville’s inspiring blend of rich countryside and edgy urbanity. The question: Is it a small city or a big town, traditional or progressive? The answer: Yes. Here are a handful of leading lights who keep the beautiful contradiction alive.


1. The Farmer
STEVE MURRAY
One night in 1995, Steve Murray went to bed a troubled livestock farmer facing a financially precarious marketplace newly skittish about beef safety. The next day he woke up a visionary: “I said, let’s start looking at these eight hundred and thirty acres as a resource instead of a farm. What can you do with that resource?”

Given that the property includes a mile of reservoir frontage and glorious views, for many people the answer would be “Build on it.” But Murray is not among them. “I was prompted by a love of the land—and a distaste for development,” he says.

And so began the transformation of Panorama Farms—where Murray was raised in a large family—from a working farm to a premier composting operation. It now manages some four thousand tons of city leaves annually and keeps scores of area gardeners and landscapers happy with its top-grade compost and mulch. Besides that, Panorama, host to eight annual cross-country meets, is outfitted with running trails that serve UVA and high school athletes all season long. Murray leases hay-making and hunting rights on the property, too. And he goes to sleep nowadays secure about Panorama Farms’ future.


2. The Wine Grower
FELICIA WARBURG ROGAN
“Living in New York, the South meant nothing to me. There was New York, California, and Japan,” says Felicia Warburg Rogan, referencing Saul Steinberg’s famous New Yorker map. Nevertheless, after her third marriage—to a Virginian—brought her to Charlottesville thirty-two years ago, she imprinted her new home with a unique brand of assertiveness and style. In 1983 she opened Oakencroft Vineyard and Winery, leading the way for an industry that nowadays is a major tourist draw to Charlottesville and an important factor in local agricultural preservation.

Rogan says she’s never shied from a challenge, and in the 1980s Virginia wine certainly fit the bill, with winery owners themselves mixing what she calls “garage wine.” Rogan helped establish the Jeffersonian Wine Grape Growers Society, ushering in much-needed expertise. For her tireless promotion of Monticello as an American Viticultural Area, now with about two dozen wineries, and other industry initiatives, she was recognized as Virginia’s First Lady of Wine.


3. The Novelist
JOHN GRISHAM
John Grisham and his wife, Renee, originally packed up for Charlottesville from Oxford, Mississippi, looking for a place to hide out. Besides the appeal of not knowing anyone here, they were drawn by climate, natural beauty, and culture (“It’s as far north as I could possibly go,” Grisham says). Fifteen years later, the best-selling novelist is one of the town’s best-known residents, mingling among townsfolk he describes as “very warm but also very respectful of each other’s space.”

But privacy does not mean anonymity. Grisham sustains things like Cove Creek Park, the Little League field he built into a true field of dreams, and he and his wife put a couple thousand rural acres into a conservation easement, and donated big bucks to renovate the flapper-era Paramount Theater into a downtown performing arts jewel. And those are but a few of his local credits.

These days the Grishams spend half their time in Italy, but Charlottesville still stands up next to even the brightest lights of Europe. “We live in a very remote part of the county where it’s very peaceful and there’s no traffic, and especially when I go off to a city and enjoy the electricity…and the chaos and all that a big city has to offer—man, I can’t wait to get back home to see some cows and trees and stuff like that.”


4. The Preservationist
WILLIAM JAMES
In a town replete with statuary—great presidents, great explorers, great generals—novelist and playwright William James’s concern is the history that’s not captured in marble. Vinegar Hill, a dense, mostly African American neighborhood originally settled by Irish immigrants, was razed forty-some years ago, scattering its residents and leaving behind the predictable scars of urban renewal. “If you walk to the downtown area, you’ll see signs that you’re entering the Downtown Historic District. If you go to Lee Park, you’ll see a monument. At UVA, you’ll see statues of Thomas Jefferson,” he says. “In the African American community, we don’t have this to identify with.”

In his play Vinegar Hill Revisited, now in preproduction for a run in Charlottesville, and in his books, James tries to preserve the people, places, and things so recently gone. He worries about Starr Hill and Fifeville, other historically black neighborhoods that are starting to look good to developers. But it’s not change he opposes; it’s careless change. “If you went back to your neighborhood, you’d expect to see change, but if you go back and everything is razed to the ground—not just renovated—and they tell you it’s progress, could you accept that?”


5. The Fiddler
BOYD TINSLEY
As a platinum-selling rock star, Boyd Tinsley is used to strangers approaching him to talk. But when he’s home in Charlottesville, the violinist for the Dave Matthews Band gets a different kind of greeting: “It’s great to have people come up to me on the street and say, thanks so much. My son, or my daughter, is in the music program and they’re doing well and it helps with their interest in school in general.” In the past five years, the Boyd Tinsley Fund has donated more than $350,000 to programs that serve the city’s public schools, including scholarships for young musicians for everything from music camp to instruments and private tutoring.

Tinsley says it’s simply a matter of joining the chorus, so to speak. As a middle-school kid growing up in Charlottesville, he was loaned a violin to play in the then-new strings program. Eventually, he won a scholarship for private instruction, too, thanks to a boosters group. The rest is rock history.

“People rally around to help each other here,” says Tinsley, forty-four. “Charlottesville has grown quite a bit, but it still has a small-town vibe. So many people around me when I was growing up who have given back—they’ve been examples to me.”

His career takes him around the globe, but Tinsley says he “breathes a sigh of relief” when that landscape comes in to view through the airplane window. “Everything that I am as a person, as a musician—my character—all that comes from Charlottesville.”