Around the Campfire with Budy Finch

Around the Campfire with Budy Finch

Growing up in Gainesville, Florida, Amelia Brashear was immersed in a family culture that embraced the preparation and sharing of good food as an act of love. At the same time, 500 miles away in the mountains of North Carolina, young Kip Lindsey was watching and helping his talented and well-known father, Larc Lindsey, excel in the kitchen of the Highland Lake Inn Restaurant in Flat Rock.

At the time, they had no way of knowing that their formative childhood experiences would play such an important role in their lives - ultimately resulting in a marriage and partnership that launched them on a decades-long adventure exploring their passion for exceptional food, gracious hospitality, and shared community.

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The Society of Necessity

The Society of Necessity

The advanced guard of a winter storm loomed on the horizon as I struggled to upright his fallen tombstone. The rose-colored granite resisted my first attempts to lift it back into place. Determined to see his name, I gave the ponderous stone one last heave and it slowly returned to its base – crooked and off-center, but upright, nonetheless.  There, slightly discolored from resting the red North Carolina clay, I could now read his name.

“Hello, Henry,” I whispered into the wind. “I’ve heard a lot about you.”

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The Season of Anticipation

The Season of Anticipation

Flat Rock Playhouse announced its 2023 season this week and the intriguing lineup of shows promises something for everyone. The Playhouse playbills will be full of familiar titles, classic favorites, a regional premiere, an original production by a member of the Playhouse staff, music that runs the gamut from country to Christmas, the first-ever production of Shakespeare on the Playhouse main stage, and a family show sure to enthrall audiences of all ages.

In short, Flat Rock Playhouse’s 2023 season offers a delightful variety and promises to be one of the most entertaining years in the long and storied history of the Vagabonds Players.

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Rutledge Cottage Memories

Rutledge Cottage Memories

In the early 1960s, Gordon McCabe, Jr. decided to sell the cottage property and 25 acres to Laurie and Alex Schenck of Greensboro, North Carolina. In no time the Schencks renamed the house Rutledge Cottage in honor of the Rutledge family. They quickly became one of the best stewards of this historical gem where three years later, Alex Schenck founded Historic Flat Rock, Inc.

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Favorite Five Stories from 2022

Favorite Five Stories from 2022

Selecting five favorite stories from 2022 is akin to the proverbial dilemma of picking a favorite child. Each story has its merits and is deserving in its own way. Meaning of course, that any list has a distinctly arbitrary quality about it.

Still, there are stories that stick in our memory and elicit special feelings when we look back at 52 weeks of Flat Rock Together. Here are five of our most popular stories from a year full of great personalities, amazing accomplishments, fascinating history, and heart-warming stories which make Flat Rock the fascinating place it is to live.

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Tryon Toymakers and Woodcarvers

Tryon Toymakers and Woodcarvers

In 1915 Eleanor Vance and Charlotte Yale, co-founders of Biltmore Estate Industries, left Asheville, N.C. and resettled in Tryon, a small mountain community just 40 miles southeast on the South Carolina border. Already a center for arts and crafts, Tryon became the new home for Vance and Yale’s little non-profit business, the famous Tryon Toy Makers and Wood Carvers. The company focused on two operations; the toy makers created small, painted wooden figurines based on classic nursery rhymes, while the carvers created mantles, furniture, church altars and other specialized wooden pieces.

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From Kyiv to Flat Rock

From Kyiv to Flat Rock

Packing only what was necessary, Oleksandr and Halyna left Kyiv and headed 30 miles east of central Kyiv and away from the heaviest shelling, seeking refuge at her parent’s home. Although they did not know it at the time, that short journey of just 30 miles was to be the first step on a much longer odyssey leading them to a small village in the mountains of North Carolina -  5,246 miles away.

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Saving Mountain Lodge

Saving Mountain Lodge

Mountain Lodge — considered to be the first house built by Charlestonians in the Flat Rock settlement — was purchased out of bankruptcy by Historic Flat Rock, Inc. The house was in extremely poor condition due to its age, lack of maintenance, and vandalism. The preservation group submitted an offer from a revolving fund it uses to buy and resell endangered historic properties. Their purpose was to stabilize the house and find a preservation-conscious person to buy it.

The story of Mountain Lodge’s origin and its ultimate return to glory …

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Louise Howe Bailey

Louise Howe Bailey

North Carolina poet laureate and Henderson County native Robert Morgan wrote of Louise Howe Bailey, “No one has taught us more about our heritage than Louise. She has served as our essential guide to the past, reminding us of our achievements with humor and respect. She has reminded us of who we are, and what she has told us is what we will pass on to our children and future generations.”

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To the Rescue

To the Rescue

Those of us who live in Flat Rock drive past Blue Ridge Fire and Rescue’s Station #2 almost daily. Sitting adjacent to Village Hall and atop “the Great Flat Rock” that gives the village its name, the old substation was renovated last year to add living quarters. As of February 2022, Station 2 is now the home away from home for the dedicated men and women who are committed to keeping area residents safe, healthy, and protected.

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Apples to Apples

Apples to Apples

From Granny Smiths to Red Delicious, autumn in Western North Carolina delivers a bounty of sweet varieties from Henderson County’s 150 apple orchards. Occupying more than 5,500 acres, the county’s apple production ranks as the seventh largest in America and brings visitors from near and far to the orchards for wholesome fun like apple picking, hayrides, baked goods, and corn mazes.

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Alley Oop in Flat Rock

Alley Oop in Flat Rock

The year 1933 was a very good year for dinosaurs. The movie, King Kong, was released and featured a giant ape captured on an uncharted island inhabited by long-lost dinosaurs. It was also the year of the Chicago World’s Fair which featured animatronic, roaring dinosaurs. The prehistoric creatures even found their way into newspapers around the country via a cartoon strip about a Stone Age caveman and his pet dinosaur, Dinny. The strip was called Alley Oop.

Improbably, that same caveman would later find a home in Flat Rock, NC.

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Rediscovering Carl

Rediscovering Carl

When John Quinley moved to Henderson County in 2006, it was a reunion of sorts. John grew up in Maywood, Illinois just a few blocks from where a young reporter named Carl Sandburg had lived for five years. Half a century later, John found himself once again living close to a Sandburg home. Destiny, one might argue, was calling the life-long educator to revive and retell the story of Carl Sandburg.

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A Brief History of The Episcopal Church of St. John in the Wilderness

A Brief History of The Episcopal Church of St. John in the Wilderness

For nearly two centuries the Episcopal Church of St. John in the Wilderness has rested on a wooded knoll in the Village of Flat Rock. What most people likely don’t know is that the building they see today sitting on the corner of Greenville Highway and Rutledge Road is actually the third place of worship to stand on that site.

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