Flat Rock 101: A Quiz

Howdy!

Howdy!

How well do you know Flat Rock? Are you conversant in the history and lore of the place referred to as The Little Charleston of the Mountains?

Well here is a quiz designed to separate the Flat Rock insiders from the carpetbaggers just down for the day from Asheville.

Take the quiz and see where you rate. Answers below.


Flat Rock 101 Quiz

1. Which actor honed their craft at Flat Rock Playhouse during the early years of the theater?

a) Natalie Wood

b) Tony Curtis

c) Lee Marvin

d) Mark Warwick


2. Flat Rock observed its “Bicentennial” in 2007 to celebrate what seminal event in 1807?

a) The earliest Flat Rock estate, Mountain Lodge, was constructed.

b) Abraham Kuykendall received the first land grant in the Flat Rock area

c) Flat Rock was first mentioned by geographers in public records

d) Flat Rock was incorporated as a village


3. Which famous character on the Howdy Doody Show retired in Kenmure in the 1990s?

a) Clarabell the Clown

b) Buffalo Bob

c) Cheif Thunderthud

d) Detective Butterball


4. Greenville Highway (Rt 225) closely follows the route of what original colonial road?

a) The Great Philadelphia Wagon Road

b) Mountain Bridge Wilderness Trail

c) The Ancient Cherokee Highway

d) Old Buncombe Turnpike


5. What major geological feature can be found in Flat Rock?

a) The Carolinas Traverse Seismic Fault

b) The headwaters of the Ohio River

c) The Eastern Continental Divide

d) The geographic center of the USA from 1821 until the admission of California in 1854


6. The first movie ever shown at the Flat Rock Cinema was?

a) The Sound of Music

b) Pirates of the Carribean

c) Requiem for a Dream

d) Lost in Translation


7. Flat Rock Square (Formerly Singleton Center) was originally the site of?

a) Flat Rock High School

b) Corporate Offices for Ingles Groceries

c) Site of the stables for Hendersonville Police horses in the late 1800s

d) The Original Flat Rock Millhouse


8. Christopher Memminger, the first Secretary of the Treasury for the Confederacy, buried millions of dollars of confederate gold (in legend) where?

a) Saluda Cottages

b) Below the Great Flat Rock

c) Connemara

d) Bonclarken


9. The clubhouse at Kenmure was originally known as what?

a) Argyle

b) Glenroy

c) Elliott House

d) Tall Trees


10. The iconic Wrinkled Egg store received its name from where?

a) The elderly aunt of the owner who referred to herself as “An Old Wrinkled Egg”

b) The shape of a boiled egg eaten during a conversation on what to name the new store

c) The German word “wringëlt” meaning charmed or indicative of good luck

d) The unique eggs produced by a beloved hen owned by the founder’s grandfather


Answers:

1) c. Lee Marvin

2) c. Flat Rock was first mentioned by geographers in public records

3) b. Buffalo Bob

4) d. Old Buncombe Turnpike

5) c. The Eastern Continental Divide

6) b. Pirates of the Carribean

7) a. Flat Rock High School

8) c. Connemara

9) b. Glenroy

10) d. The unique eggs produced by a beloved hen owned by the founder’s grandfather

How did you do?

Number Correct:

9-10: You probably remember when Greenville Highway was a dirt road.

6-8: Almost good enough to qualify as a native. Almost.

3-5: You need to get out and about in Flat Rock more often.

1-2: Well bless your heart.

Día de los Muertos

Casabermeja Cementario 2.jpg

I was lost in Spain. On October 31st.

Driving alone in the days before ubiquitous GPS devices, I ended up in the town of Casabermeja - and couldn’t find my way out. Not a problem I thought. I’ll just employ my finely tuned and almost supernatural sense of misdirection. Predictably, I managed to get hopelessly lost in the incredibly narrow and winding cobblestone streets of the ancient town. 

Eventually, I gave up and found myself parked in front of Casabermeja's Municipal Cementario.

In Spain, as in most Spanish speaking lands, Halloween is known as "Día de los Muertos." The name notwithstanding, it is a joyous holiday...a time to remember friends and family who have died. Officially commemorated on November 2 (All Souls' Day), the three-day celebration actually begins on the evening of October 31. 

It is a time to honor the dead who are believed to return to their homes on Halloween. Many families construct an altar in their home and decorate it with candy, flowers, photographs, fresh water and samples of the deceased's favorite foods and drinks.  Relatives also tidy the gravesites of lost family members, including snipping weeds, making repairs and painting. The grave is then adorned with flowers, wreaths or paper streamers. Because of the date, el cementario in Casabermeja was a beehive of activity with a parade of locals streaming into the cemetery with flowers and buckets of cleaning supplies.  

Curious, I walked in with them and discovered endless rows of mausoleums built side by side and stretching away in every direction. It felt like another miniature town comprised of small white stone houses with narrow winding streets.  The mausoleums were covered with a riot of colorful flowers. Incredibly, every single gravesite I saw - and there were hundreds - was adorned with flowers. 

The day was extremely blustery and chilly.  Casabermeja is perched on high on a hill and the wind whipped through the cemetery scattering flowers everywhere and creating an eerie whistling sound as it swept through the narrow passageways between crypts.  All voices and sounds of the living visitors were carried away by the wind.  As I walked among the dead, I could hear only the rush of wind, the rustle of flowers and leaves, and my own breath. 

Walking aimlessly among the graves, I turned a corner and came upon an elderly and frail-looking gentleman pushing red and white carnations through the iron gate on the front of a grave - one flower at a time.  He looked very unsteady in the wind and a sudden gust blew the beret he was wearing off his bald head.  

The cap started rolling down the walkway between crypts and I scrambled after it to retrieve it for him.  As I walked back towards him with cap in hand, I realized that he had never looked up to see where his beret had gone.  He was still pushing carnations through the grate.  I glanced at the inscription on the bronze plaque of the grave.   

Maria Diaz González.  
2 Agosto 2010. 
A las 79 Años.
 

His wife. Gone less than a year. 

I stood next to him for a moment - my hand extended with his hat.  Not until the last flower had been pushed between the iron bars did he turn to look at me.  I guessed he was in his eighties.  Thin, stooped, with rheumy eyes set deep and dark into his face.  For a moment we simply stared at one another.  Señor González and the stranger holding his cap.  Two incredibly different lives from two profoundly different cultures. The only sound was the wind whistling through the cemetery. 

His loss was evident in his eyes. I could feel the sorrow in his heart reach across the short distance between us. I thought of all that I have lost, or foolishly given up, or taken for granted until it was too late, and realized that he was not the only person feeling a keen sense of loss that day. Slowly his hand reached up to take the beret. We both held the cap for a moment and stared at each other.  I could see the question in his eyes. Who was this strange-looking person standing before him? Ironically, that was the very same question I had been asking of myself since my arrival in Spain on a solitary journey of self-discovery.  

He mumbled a barely audible, "Gracias".  "De nada", I replied.  And I turned to leave him alone with his wife and his loss. 

A while later I found my way back to Señora Gonzalez's grave.  Her husband was gone. I picked up a couple of loose flowers that had been blowing around in the walkways and slipped them through the grate.

Casabermeja Cementerio.jpg
Casabermeja Cementario 3.jpg
 

Celebrate Día de los Muertos in Flat Rock

What: Day of the Dead Celebration
When: 5:30 -6:30 p.m., Friday, November 1. 2019
Where: The Gallery at Flat Rock, 2702-A Greenville Highway, Flat Rock
How much: Free and open to the public 

To pay homage to the traditional practice in Mexican Culture to honor those who have passed, The Gallery at Flat Rock is presenting a special Day of the Dead celebration on Nov. 1. The event is in conjunction with the current exhibit, “Crossing Cultures,” featuring the paintings , sculptures and work on paper by Jose Bayro C., of Puebla, Mexico. 

Day of the Dead, or Día de los Muertos, constitutes a multi-day celebration during which family and friends gather to pray for and remember friends and family members who have passed on, in order to support loved ones on their spiritual journey. Gallery owner Suzanne Camarata is hopeful that the community will add to the makeshift altar set up at the gallery for the event.

Participants are welcome to bring by an object or photo during the gallery’s regular business hours, or to stop in on November 1, 5:30-6:30, when sweets will be shared with those dropping in to the celebration, as well as Flying Wish Paper to burn. 

“This is for the community to express their love for someone they’ve lost with a memento, photo, or something they’ve made,” said Camarata. “We are celebrating the cycle of life and the ‘Crossing Cultures’ show by combining the traditions of Day of the Dead.”

Where is it, Flat Rock?

How well do you know Flat Rock?

Can you identify where these four photos were taken? They’re all in Flat Rock and they’re all prominent locations in our Village.

Send us your guesses with the form below and win a Flat Rock Together t-shirt!

This month we will have two winners. If you can identify even 1 of the photos, you will be entered into our drawing for some really cool FRT swag.

And, if you are particularly Flat Rock savvy and correctly identify the location of all four photos, you will be in a drawing for the much coveted, and extremely rare, Flat Rock Together T-shirt. We guarantee you will be the envy of all your friends and neighbors!

Click on the button below the photos to play! Good luck!


Last Month’s Winner and the Answers

And a shout out to our first winner of the August Where Is It? contest. Alyson Gooch correctly identified these four photos:

  1. The Great Flat Rock

  2. Sandburg Historic Home - Side Yard

  3. The Park at Flat Rock - Trail

  4. Building next to Hubba Hubb BBQ

Alyson is now the proud owner of a Flat Rock Together t-shirt. Perfect for every casual occasion, doing yard work, and for foisting off on an unsuspecting family member or co-worker during a holiday gift exchange.

Congratulations to Alyson … and good luck to all of our entries this month.


Karen Kennedy and Firefly Craft Gallery

Like many residents in Flat Rock, Mike and Karen Kennedy first discovered the village as a great place to vacation. It wasn’t long, however, before they realized that living in Flat Rock would be even better.  “Mike and I bought a house here in 2009 as a vacation home. We were coming up from Florida loved it so much that we finally decided to move here full-time in 2012.”

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Meet the Miles to Go Hiking Group

Even a Monday morning drizzle couldn’t dampen the smiles of this delightful group of visitors to the Carl Sandburg Home. Meet the Miles to Go Hiking Group from the Reynolds Mountain neighborhood in Asheville. They visit Flat Rock every year to hike up Glassy Mountain at the Sandburg Home. From the overlook, you can see their hometown in the distance - at least you can if the weather permits.

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New Dog Water Fountains at The Park

Jack enjoys a cool drink of water at his favorite park!

Jack enjoys a cool drink of water at his favorite park!

Dogs that visit The Park at Flat Rock during hot summer days have their own drinking fountain. 

Thanks to the generous donations from Charlotte McGinnis and Judy Cox, the park recently installed fountains that can take care of everyone’s thirst.  The fountains are ADA compliant and feature water spigots for both adults and children (and dogs, of course). 

There is even a feature to fill a water bottle so you can have water while you walk the trails.  

There’s never been a better time to enjoy a walk (and a cool drink of water) at The Park at Flat Rock. Keep up with all the latest news at their Facebook Page.