A place for those interested in the future of Highland Lake and its surrounding communities in Flat Rock, North Carolina
Monday, April 28, 2014
Mr. Peace's postcards
The Markley Blacksmith shop was on West Blue Ridge Road. No longer there, the location is designated by a Historic Flat Rock marker.
The old Rhett Mill was at the base of Highland Lake (formerly Rhett's Pond), next to the dam, and where the Flat Rock Playhouse got its start.
Wednesday, April 23, 2014
An end to the beginning. . .
The Park at Flat Rock |
Yesterday, the Village of Flat Rock officially opened the perimeter trail at The Park at Flat Rock. Students from Flat Rock Middle School were invited to participate by planting a sugar maple at the park to commemorate Earth Day. The event was covered by both the Times-News and the Hendersonville Lightning.
For me, this felt like an end to the beginning. . .
On October 20, 2011, the front page of the Times-News declared:
The Henderson County Board of Commissioners voted today to purchase the Highland Lake Golf Club in Flat Rock to convert the property to a soccer complex and public park.From that day to this has involved many people, lots of time, and a big financial commitment on the part of the village council and the citizens of Flat Rock once the decision was made to buy the property. The village avoided county control of a large area of pastoral land at one of the gateways into the village as well as the traffic and noise that would have resulted if a soccer complex had been built, especially since the county saw it as a regional soccer destination for tournaments and possible night play.
In a 4-1 vote, commissioners agreed to buy the 65-acre site, currently a 9-hole public course, for $1.15 million.
Commissioner Larry Young was the lone dissenter. He said he could not support the project at a time when the county has cut its budget by 7.5 percent. . .
Much more work needs to be done, and part of that will fall to the Flat Rock Park and Recreation Foundation and their new director of development, Maurean Adams, as they start fundraising efforts.
Early on, in 2011, three residential neighborhood homeowner associations (HOA) worked together to keep the county from buying the property: Highland Golf Villas, Highland Lake Village, and Staton Woods. Those developments surrounded the Highland Lake Golf Club and would have been the most impacted by any soccer complex development.
In deciding how to handle the situation under time pressure, the HOAs made the commitment to seek legal counsel. Looking at it from the outside (since I wasn't on the village council at the time), I think this was the deciding factor in keeping the county from purchasing the property. Once counsel was retained, I think everyone realized they needed to take a breather and really investigate what was going on. The village discovered that they had the final control because of village zoning, and the county realized that they could not dictate the end result.
It wasn't an easy decision to hire an attorney since no one knew how much time would be needed to present a case and what the final costs would be. Ed Foster, then president of Highland Golf Villas, took the lead in committing to retaining legal advice, even though it wasn't what he signed up for when he became HOA president. Without that commitment from Ed, I think it would have been much more difficult to stop the county. Donations for the legal fund were asked for, and residents responded. In fact, the amount donated was just over what the legal bill ended up being--so all donors got a little back. I always thought that was pretty amazing.
Now that The Park at Flat Rock is a reality, I would like to thank Ed for starting the process of pushing back on the county when he called a meeting of local residents at the Henderson County main library on October 26, 2011; for always supporting the efforts to stop the county purchase; and for always being willing to take the next step in any way needed while this issue was being fought. I'm glad to see he was at the trail opening ceremony on Tuesday--with, I may add, his dog very properly on a leash!
Ed Foster and his dog, Spook, watch the event. [photo by Taylor Heery Griffith, Hendersonville Lightning] |
So if this is an end to the beginning, I guess that means we're at the beginning of . . . what? Huummm . . .
Friday, April 18, 2014
And in 1910. . .
The Highland Lake Club--"an exclusive colony in the mountains conducted on the co-operative plan"--was planned but never completed. The plat below shows the lots that would have been available for sale and a planned road at lake's edge that was never built (although parts of it still exist on county records). The large building was the club house, which was built and used for a few years until it burned (approximately where Highland Lake Inn is now) [correction: the club house was north of where Highland Lake Inn is now]. I have always heard that a real estate bust at the time ended the development idea.
From the Highland Lake Club booklet for the 1911 season:
From the Highland Lake Club booklet for the 1911 season:
Nowhere east of the Rockies can a more commanding porch view be had than from the spacious verandas of the Club. Ordinarily, such views are only possible as the result of long drives. But in our own location we have a source of continual joy. One can sit and enjoy by the hour the grandeur of Pinnacle Mountain as seen over Highland Lake, or else, to the North, the Bear Wallow Range, in the centre of a beautiful picture framed by Sugar Loaf and Pisgah Mountains. The reader should know that Sugar Loaf is eighteen miles from the Club, and Pisgah is forty, although both are easily seen.
1910 survey of Highland Lake Club lots |
Thursday, April 17, 2014
When Bonclarken wasn't Bonclarken
Heidelberg, now Bonclarken |
Bonclarken on Highland Lake was first named Heidelberg.
Built in 1886 by Dr. Arthur Rose Guérard (1851-1937, originally of Charleston) for his Swiss wife, Eugenie Engels, it was a private residence and for a short time, a planned school, Heidelberg Academy, "a modern home and garden-school for girls." Scheduled to start in 1914, the school never opened because of the beginning of World War I.
Dr. Guérard sold the property in 1921 to the Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church and moved to Baltimore and then New York. With his first wife, Eugenie, who died in 1900, he had seven children and then five more with his second wife, Madeleine di Marcarellos.
One of the most well-known of his children is Antoinette Francesca Guérard (1881-1964), an artist specializing in etchings during the "Charleston Renaissance" period in the 1920s-1930s. Her work has been exhibited in various museums in Charleston and the South.
Antoinette Francesca Guérard Rhett |
Park trail opening ceremony on April 22, Earth Day
Part of the perimeter trail in The Park at Flat Rock |
From the Village website:
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
The Village of Flat Rock invites the public to a ribbon-cutting ceremony at The Park at Flat Rock as we officially open the completed portion of the perimeter trail on Tuesday, April 22, 2014 (Earth Day), from 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.
After opening remarks by Mayor Bob Staton, students from Flat Rock Middle School will help plant a tree to commemorate Earth Day and to enhance the park’s natural beauty. Lemonade and cookies will be provided by the Flat Rock Park Advisory Board, and representatives from the Flat Rock Park and Recreation Foundation and the Flat Rock Greenways Committee will be there as well.
The perimeter trail is the first amenity to be developed in the park and is about three-quarters completed. Once finished, it will follow the outer boundary of the park and provide a 1.5-mile loop through a variety of landscapes. The current loop of completed perimeter trail and part of one of the secondary trails totals approximately 1.3 miles of flat, all-season walkable surface that begins and ends at the parking lot. The trail’s soft surface is made of finely crushed compacted rock, and is able to handle possible flooding with minimal damage.
While there is currently no seating in the park, we encourage those coming on Tuesday to bring blankets, folding chairs, and their lunch so that they can enjoy a day in the park.
Anyone wishing to donate towards the park’s reforestation project is welcome to contribute to The Village of Flat Rock, with a designation that the money be directed to the Flat Rock Park and Recreation Foundation for trees.
The Park at Flat Rock is located at 48 Highland Golf Drive, Flat Rock, N.C. For more information, please contact Judy Boleman, Flat Rock village administrator, at 828.697.8100.
Tuesday, April 1, 2014
Season's chef wins competition
From the Hendersonville Lightning:
Michelle Bailey pumped a triumphant fist in the air as "Got To Be NC Competition" host Jimmy Crippen announced that she had become the first woman chef to lead a team to victory since the series started in 2012.Read it all.
Bailey, the chef at Season's at the Highland Lake Inn in Flat Rock, won the close battle with Asheville's Sam Etheridge of Ambrozia Bar + Bistro with the dessert course.
Eight chefs from Asheville, Boone and Flat Rock competed in the seven-dinner series that began March 10 and concluded Monday night at the Lioncrest at Biltmore in Asheville. Diners watched tensely as the final scores and numbers posted for each dish. Bailey triumphed in the close battle by almost three points. . .
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