Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Snappy Lunch Makes Top 25

Wednesday, June 30th, 2010

The Tar Heel 25
From the mountains to the sea, the tastes that define the state

By Kathleen Purvis and Andrea Weigl
kpurvis@charlotteobserver.com; andrea.weigl@newsobserver.com
Posted: Wednesday, Jun. 09, 2010 – Charlotte Observer
If you could boil the essence of North Carolina down to its essential flavors, what would you get? You’d have a salty hint of Wilmington and a cooling bite of Asheville, some small-town seasoning and a little big-city spice.

To put together the ultimate N.C. eater’s guide, we [The Charlotte Observer] combed through years of food trips, stories and memories to come up with 25 must-have eating experiences, from Carolina classics to chef creations.

Mount Airy’s own Snappy Lunch was ranked #7 in the state for their pork chop sandwich. A battered pork loin chop as big as a pie plate and fried until golden crispiness.

The Snappy Lunch was opened in 1923 by George Roberson and Deuce Hodge. In 1943, Charles Dowell began working at The Snappy Lunch doing odd jobs and learning the business. He was compensated the whopping sum of $10 per week. Eight years later, Charles negotiated to purchase a share of The Snappy Lunch and began his career as a local business owner.

During those days, The Snappy Lunch catered to local workers and students who enjoyed bologna sandwiches for a nickel and ten cent hot dogs items that remain on the menu today. Students, like now famous Andy Griffith who attended nearby schools, would frequently visit the Snappy Lunch for a quick lunch because the local schools had yet to add cafeterias.

In 1960, Charles Dowell completed his transition to sole owner of The Snappy Lunch and enjoyed more freedom to develop his own recipes and try different combinations of seasonings. It was during this time Charles Dowell began to perfect his unique creation, The World Famous Pork Chop Sandwich.

This wonderfully messy sandwich, served in so many variety of ways, has become the trademark meal of choice for locals and visitors alike. It is the only sandwich that may have you washing your hands AFTER you finish eating it.

WBTV visits Mount Airy, says, “Life is just a little sweeter when you whistle while you walk.”

Monday, May 17th, 2010

In an article posted on WBTV’s web site, Reporter Liz Horton writes, “Antique stores, general stores, trading companies and souvenir shops line the friendly streets. They are supported by a beautiful mountain backdrop.  Mt. Airy is nestled at the base of the Blue Ridge mountains, which are just a short drive away.  Perhaps my favorite thing  about this historic village is the happiness you feel when you hear the Andy Griffith theme song broadcast along the streets.   Life is just a little sweeter when you whistle while you walk.”

White Sulphur Springs is just a few easy miles drive from the heart of wonderful Mount Airy. Proximity to the town is just one of the many reasons that life is simple, easy, and loaded with grace at White Sulphur Springs. Give us a call. Let us show you how you can create a carefree and simple lifestyle at White Sulphur Springs.

On The Road- In the heart of Mayberry - WBTV 3 News, Weather, Sports, and Traffic for Charlotte, NC- (20100517)

Mount Airy becomes a Mecca for old-time music.

Monday, March 1st, 2010

White Sulphur Springs is an easy five miles from the center of Mount Airy, a delightful small southern town near the Virginia border. It’s in Surry County, becoming broadly known for it’s fine wine. blue-grass music and general all-around pleasant way of life. The following article was recently published in The Mount Airy News. Enjoy.

OLD TIME MUSIC FANS FLOCK TO MOUNT AIRY

By Tom Joyce

Mount Airy became a “Mecca” this weekend, not for pilgrims making a religious journey but people drawn by the old-time music for which Surry County has become widely known.

“I think without exception, everybody I’ve talked to has been from out of town,” said Executive Director Tanya Jones of the Surry Arts Council, which sponsored the ninth-annual Tommy Jarrell Festival Thursday through Saturday.

Danny Shepherd of West Jefferson was one such individual attending the event that provided fans a little bit of everything in the way of old-time music.

“This is the first year I’ve ever been,” Shepherd said Saturday afternoon after flatfooting to a tune performed by a trio including fiddler Kirk Sutphin and associates Kevin Fore and Chester McMillian.

Shepherd said he also enjoys bluegrass, but has developed a preference for old-time music due to “just the good rhythm and being easy to dance to.”

While the two styles are similar, bluegrass emphasizes the melody through close harmonies and solos by the mandolin, fiddle, banjo or guitar. Old-time musicians play in a style that many would call “jamming,” which stresses rhythm — with no instrument gaining a particular dominance over the others.

“That beat’s infectious, I guess,” Shepherd said as Sutphin and company cranked out an instrumental version of “Cindy,” an old-time favorite.

All this was taking place at the recently constructed Old-Time Music Heritage Hall beside the Andy Griffith Playhouse — one of several venues hosting activities honoring Jarrell, who died in the 1980s. A legendary fiddler, Jarrell has been described as influencing old-time music the way Frank Sinatra influenced pop music.

And whereas fans of that genre once made pilgrimages to Jarrell’s home on Franklin Road to learn from the old master, they now come to Mount Airy each February to help perpetuate his legacy.

The weekend included jam sessions, a film presentation, an old-time fiddle demonstration, a dance in Jarrell’s honor, a youth old-time competition and the Tommy Jarrell Birthday Concert Saturday night at the playhouse which climaxed the festival. Jarrell was born on March 1, 1901 in the Round Peak area of Surry County, which has long been considered a hotbed of old-time music.

In addition to the heritage hall and playhouse, events were held at the Downtown Cinema Theatre as well as WPAQ radio, an old-time music broadcaster that offered festival visitors tours of the station Saturday afternoon.

Jones said the recent opening of the Old-Time Music Heritage Hall greatly enhanced this year’s offerings compared to previous festivals. “It’s broadened our scope of activities,” she said.

In addition to the music and dancing opportunities there Saturday, artwork and photographs of old-time musicians, including Jarrell, was available and local luthiers had instruments on display.

The heritage hall also is equipped with “audio guides” that allow visitors to hear biographies of various old-time artists whose pictures dominate the walls, in addition to examples of their music.

“They have all kinds of different opportunities to appreciate it,” Jones said of the old-time music highlighted by the festival.

“Folks come for an experience, and they’re getting an experience,” added the Arts Council official. “They don’t just come and look at something and walk away.”

Organizers were pleased with the weekend’s turnout.

“We’ve had good traffic all day long,” Jones said Saturday afternoon.

“Last night, the dance floor was overflowing,” she said of the Tommy Jarrell Festival Dance at the heritage center, which Jarrell’s son Wayne was assigned to call.

“And the room was packed — there was literally standing room only.”

Contact Tom Joyce at tjoyce@mtairynews.com or at 719-1924.

Music

Enjoy the fine article by Joe Tennis (Bristol Herald Courier) about the Andy Griffith Musum

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

Picture 9

By Joe Tennis | Features Writer / Bristol (TN) Herald Courier
Published: February 18, 2010

Andy Griffith Museum pays tribute to popular actor, TV shows

MOUNT AIRY, N.C. – Even in New York, Wayne and Marcella had heard of the real-life Mayberry.
This couple – their last name is Pryputniewicz – had longed for a quiet town to retire to after living near Syracuse at Waterville, N.Y.
They wanted convenience and safety. But they also wanted some fun.
Mount Airy, N.C., fit the bill.
“The people here are really genuinely friendly,” said the 58-year-old Marcella Pryputniewicz.
Just a few months after retiring to the self-styled “Friendly City” of Mount Airy, the couple wandered into the recently relocated Andy Griffith Museum, housed in a newly built brick building.
And they were surprised to find many original costumes worn by characters on “The Andy Griffith Show,” like the drunkard Otis Campbell’s shirt and hat plus Deputy Barney Fife’s famous salt-and-pepper suit.
“I expected more pictures than anything,” the 59-year-old Wayne Pryputniewicz said.

‘BEING THELMA LOU’
Yet there was even more – a living relic from the show. As the Pryputniewicz couple walked in, they heard a familiar voice explaining her journey from Los Angeles to Mount Airy.
A long-haired lady, in her 80s, talked about her house getting robbed in California. Yet she bragged about her newfound friends along the North Carolina-Virginia border – and about her recent decision to move to Mount Airy.
This was the voice of Betty Lynn, the movie actress who portrayed Thelma Lou in the early years of “The Andy Griffith Show.”
Thelma Lou was the girlfriend of Deputy Fife, a TV character portrayed by the late actor Don Knotts.
Now, skip ahead several decades.
This year marks 50 years since the premiere of “The Andy Griffith Show” in 1960. Still, the show remains in reruns.
As for Lynn, not all has changed.
“I have been very busy just being Thelma Lou all the time,” Lynn said, smiling. “Everybody, when I go anywhere, they’ll say, ‘Are you Thelma Lou?’ ‘I can tell by your eyes,’ they’ll say. ‘I can tell by your voice.’ ”
Lynn blushed.
“Everyone’s been great to me here,” Lynn said. “It’s a lovely town. It’s so pretty. And kind people. I like it very much. So that’s about it, I guess. They’re kind of stuck with me for a while.”
Occasionally, now, Lynn will wander down to the Andy Griffith Museum, a repository of Mayberry memorabilia assembled by longtime Griffith friend and fan Emmett Forrest.
“It really is amazing. I love it myself,” Lynn said. “I can’t take it all in at once. People can’t do it all in a few minutes. It’s overwhelming.”

‘DISPLAYED PROPERLY’
Forrest’s fortune of photos, records, articles and artifacts has traveled to various sites around town for years – including Mount Airy’s Main Street.
“It’s wonderful to have it displayed properly,” said Forrest, an 82-year-old retiree who became friends with Griffith when the actor was 10 years old.
A collector for 25 years, Forrest first showed off his Andy Griffith collection a few years ago at Mayberry Days, an annual fall festival celebrating Mount Airy’s connection to “The Andy Griffith Show.”
Back then, Forrest had only a few pictures and trinkets. Since, he has assembled much more. And he has also coaxed his good friend Griffith into giving goodies to Mount Airy for display.
That includes a suit Griffith wore on another long-running hit TV series, “Matlock,” plus the wooden gavel used by Griffith as Sheriff Andy Taylor on “The Andy Griffith Show.”
Still, Forrest said, “The pride and joy of the whole collection are the signs on the courthouse door.”
One sign says “SHERIFF.” The other says “JUSTICE OF THE PEACE.” Both were actually seen in “The Andy Griffith Show.”
Yet, for years after the show went off the air, Forrest said, they were left to hang in Griffith’s garage – until Griffith donated them to Forrest and the museum.

‘SPEND DAYS’
Inside the museum, fans of CBS-TV’s “The Andy Griffith Show” can view decades of photos showing Griffith, now in his 80s and living in seclusion at Roanoke Island, N.C.
Historical artifacts span Griffith’s life from his childhood to his early acting experience, portraying Sir Walter Raleigh on stage at Roanoke Island’s “The Lost Colony” outdoor drama – a time when the actor was billed as “Andrew Griffith.”
“You could spend days looking at everything we have,” said museum director Jessica Morris.
On various walls, posters document Griffith’s success in movies and plays, on records and on television. Aside from “Matlock” and “The Andy Griffith Show,” the actor also showed up occasionally on “Mayberry, R.F.D.,” a successor series to “The Andy Griffith Show.”
Later, in the 1980s, both Griffith and Lynn starred in a Mayberry reunion movie that also featured Knotts.
“And once we got going,” Lynn said, “it was like we had just worked together the day before.”

‘ONLY ANDY KNOWS’
Today, Forrest said, it is common knowledge that much of Mayberry on “The Andy Griffith Show” was based on Griffith’s growing-up years at Mount Airy.
TV scripts flip-flopped the name of nearby “Pilot Mountain” to create “Mount Pilot.” Also, several real-life places of Mount Airy – including streets called Rockford, Haymore, Oak, Elm, Orchard, Maple, Pine, Willow, River, Spring and Banner – showed up on the show.
Forrest, too, figures his first name was remembered at Emmett’s Fix-It Shop, a fixture on the latter-day episodes.
Really?
Forrest grinned then quietly hinted, “Only Andy knows …”

IF YOU GO
What: Andy Griffith Museum
Where: 218 Rockford St., Mount Airy, N.C.
When: Open daily
Info: (336) 786-7998
Web: http://www.surryarts.org
ON TELEVISION
Watch more on Mount Airy, N.C., and the Andy Griffith Museum on WJHL’s “Cable Country,” airing on Feb. 19 at 5:55 p.m.

White Liquor and Dirt Tracks: The Origins of NASCAR

Friday, January 8th, 2010

When a committee at the Mount Airy Museum of Regional History started talking about a racing exhibit, the members had no idea that it would escalate into a three-day event.

White Liquor and Dirt Tracks: The Origins of NASCAR will take place in downtown Mount Airy Jan. 22-24. Originating from a museum exhibit which will debut during the weekend, the event will offer everything from vintage stock car displays to autograph sessions to a book-signing with an author.

“There is very clearly a local connection to the origin of racing with bootlegging and moonshine to the dirt track racing. That really was the foundation of NASCAR,” said Matt Edwards, executive director of the museum. “It’s a weekend-long celebration of the roots of racing.”

The event will kick off on Friday with the opening of the “White Liquor and Dirt Tracks” exhibit at the museum. That evening, “Thunder Road” will be shown at the Downtown Cinema.

The exhibit is being designed for display at the Mount Airy museum for several months and will then be available for display at other small museums. It will cover topics from the moonshine and bootlegging industry to the dirt track racing to the Mount Airy race track and the evolution of the industry.

“It will feature artifacts, photos and bits and pieces of race cars, the whole gamut,” said Edwards.

Saturday will feature a full day of events including an autograph session with old-time drivers and NASCAR drivers and the sale of racing memorabilia and souvenirs in the museum’s annex on Oak Street. There will be a panel discussion about racing including drivers, and NASCAR will have souvenirs and show cars on display.

Saturday also will see the closing of half of Main Street for a display of between 50 and 75 vintage stock cars.

Author Sharyn McCrumb and co-author of her new book, Adam Edwards, will be available to sign copies of their book, “Faster Pastor,” which is not due out in stores until April. McCrumb, whose ballad novels brought her notoriety as an author of historical fiction, developed an interest in the history of racing which led to the publication of two other novels, “St. Dale” and “Once Around the Track.”

Saturday night will feature a concert by Matt Dylan, a new Nashville, Tenn., recording artist who has an original song, “Carolina Moonshine,” on the soundtrack to “Red Dirt Rising.” “Red Dirt Rising,” which was filmed in North Carolina, is based on the true story of racing’s origins through the lives of Jimmie Lewallen and his friends Bill Blair and Fred Harb, who find escape from life in racing. The film is in post-production and will make its debut on the film festival circuit this year. A number of actors from the film will be available during the weekend for an autograph session.

There will also be a cruise-in Saturday afternoon for local residents who want to bring their cars out for a showcase.

“It’s kind of a come-as-you-are event for local car folks,” said Edwards.

— The Mount Airy News

Mount Airy honors NASCAR

Mount Airy honors NASCAR

Wintertime!

Monday, December 21st, 2009

Even though we are close to the Blue Ridge Mountains (the Blue Ridge Parkway is only eight miles away), our winters at White Sulphur Springs are frequently sweater-weather comfortable. But occasionally we enjoy in our community one of those rare and gorgeous  snowfalls  that we usually see up in the mountains from our homesites.

Last week was not an exception. The Blizzard of 2009 brought beautiful snow to White Sulphur Springs and nearby Mount Airy.  Take a look.

Things are getting festive at White Sulphur Springs

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

Holiday decorations are going up at Mount Airy’s newest community, White Sulphur Springs. There’s not a better place to celebrate holidays with family and friends. Contact us and let us tell you why. Happy Holidays!

Our entrance

Our entrance

Hello from Maddie & Mollie

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

Follow our Chocolate Lab Pups as they explore their new home at White Sulphur Springs.

Maddie and Mollie are two four month old chocolate lab puppies that recently moved to their new home at White Sulphur Springs.  It is also home to many other animals like deer, squirrels, and turkey, as well as fish in the Ararat River.

These four month old sisters prefer their yard at developer Burke Robertson’s home and the 7.5 acre Front Lawn

White Sulphur Springs Front Lawn

White Sulphur Springs Front Lawn

along the Ararat River even though there are 145-acres of protected land around them.  Their days are spent frolicking in the Front Lawn, chasing squirrels that run by and watching visitors as they come through and explore White Sulphur Springs.

Maddie and Mollie Taste the Simpler Life each day.  We invite you to visit our web site, www.WhiteSulphurSpringsNC.com, or stop by and tour the White Sulphur Springs community just 8 miles from the Blue Ridge Parkway and see for yourself what makes White Sulphur Springs unique.