首页
登录
职称英语
People who live in Taylorstown have made their choices: scenery over shoppin
People who live in Taylorstown have made their choices: scenery over shoppin
游客
2023-12-10
32
管理
问题
People who live in Taylorstown have made their choices: scenery over shopping, deer over drive-throughs. The historic enclave, although not untouched by the building boom that exploded in Loudoun County before so dramatically going bust, remains largely rural, with all the benefits and inconveniences that entails.
"It’s far from everything," Tara Linhardt, president of the Taylorstown Community Association, said with a smile. The bluegrass musician has lived in Taylorstown since she was a child in the 1970s. Clearly, she views its remoteness as an asset.
Taylorstown wasn’t always out of the way. In the 19th century, it was one of the busiest and most heavily populated areas of Loudoun, thanks to milling, mining and agriculture. Its population dwindled, however, when mining and milling became history. Taylorstown now is unincorporated, with the county divvying up its residents among the surrounding jurisdictions of Lovettsville, Waterford, Lucketts and Leesburg. Officialdom aside, the locals consider themselves residents of Taylorstown if they live within about a three-mile radius of an old store at the junction of Taylorstown and Loyalty roads.
The store, shuttered in 1998, is a passionate cause in Taylorstown. A nonprofit group with grass-roots backing is spearheading its reopening as a "very green" business and recently installed a new system. But the day that the store will again be able to sell bread and local produce "won’t come anytime soon," said Anne Larson, an artist and long-time Taylorstown resident.
It’s a matter of money, of course, and the store’s boosters are pursuing grants. Meanwhile, the store hosts occasional community gatherings, such as craft fairs and lectures on topics of area interest such as Lyme disease. Lyme disease, carried by deer ticks, is perhaps Taylorstown’s No. 1 problem. "Deer are so comfortable here," Linhardt said, "that most people have had it twice."
Richard Brown, a Quaker, founded Taylorstown in the 1730s when he built a mill on the banks of Catoctin Creek near where the store is now. Although Brown’s mill is long gone, the surrounding area has been designated a historic district and has been on the National Register of Historic Places since 1976. It is the site of two of the oldest stone houses in the county, Hunting Hill and Foxton Cottage, as well as a mill later built by town namesake Thomas Taylor.
The three-mile radius that extends from the store now encompasses about 1,500 households, said Tami Car-low, vice president of the Taylorstown Community Association. These households sit on land that is alternately rolling and open or steep and wooded.
A good number of the oldest structures got their start as "patent houses," explained historian and Taylorstown resident Rich Gillespie. In colonial times, construction of a 16-by-20-foot cabin was a requirement for obtaining a patent or land grant.
Taylorstown owes much of its pastoral beauty to its still-abundant farms. On a summer day along Loyalty Road — named in honor of Taylorstown’s Unionist sympathies during the Civil War — fields are dense with green corn or punctuated by round bales of hay waiting to be collected. Placidly grazing cattle and horses are everywhere.
These days, Taylorstown’s farms come in both the working and gentleman’s varieties, and Ken Loewinger’s 175-acre Glen wood is both. Loewinger runs a small horse-boarding operation, but he also works full time in Washington as a real estate lawyer.
"I couldn’t afford to have this in Great Falls," Loewinger said, gesturing toward a rambling red barn, rolling pastures and a large stone house that grew out of a 1750s log cabin, possibly a patent house.
The D.C.-born Loewinger initially worried about whether the country would be a good fit. Loudoun County didn’t even have a synagogue when he and his wife, Margaret Krol, moved to Taylorstown in 1991. They attended religious services in a bingo parlor. Now, the county has two synagogues, Loewinger said, and he has found the country to be "a richer environment than the city." [br] When Loewinger said "the country to be ’a richer environment than the city’"(12th paragraph), he meant
选项
A、living in the village was more comfortable than in the city.
B、there was more entertainment in the village than in the city.
C、the economic in the country better developed than in the city.
D、county people enjoyed richer spiritual life than people in the city.
答案
A
解析
句意理解题。Loewinger说这句话是在该小镇建成犹太会堂之后。这使生活更加多元化,消除了他之前的疑虑.该镇有美好的自然风光,又加上设施完善,故可推断住在农村更舒适,A概括正确。
转载请注明原文地址:http://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3261587.html
相关试题推荐
TheCeltsweredifferentgroupsofancientpeoplewhocameoriginallyfrom______
DealingwithLifeAbroadI.Cultureshockoflifeabroad1)Moreandmorepeople
DealingwithLifeAbroadI.Cultureshockoflifeabroad1)Moreandmorepeople
DealingwithLifeAbroadI.Cultureshockoflifeabroad1)Moreandmorepeople
DealingwithLifeAbroadI.Cultureshockoflifeabroad1)Moreandmorepeople
Happinessisnowapopulartopicamongmanyyoungpeople.Whatfactorsdoyou
[originaltext]OfficialsinThailandsayatleast93peoplehavebeenkilledi
[originaltext]OfficialsinThailandsayatleast93peoplehavebeenkilledi
LeavingHomeGenerally,mostpeoplehaveintheir
LeavingHomeGenerally,mostpeoplehaveintheir
随机试题
Everyonehasperiodsintheirlives______everythingseemssohard.A、whenB、where
毛笔(brushpen)是中国传统的书写工具和绘画工具。中国人使用毛笔写字作画的历史已有数千年之久,历史上有秦代蒙恬造笔的传说。笔头(nib)多用动物
患者,缺失,为判断、是否有条件做基牙设计双端固定桥,最重要的一项检查是A.牙髓电
2018年1月,甲拥有房产原值8500万,4月1日将原值500万的房产出租,出租
同种移植是A.切取的器官移植给同一种属 B.切取的器官移植给同一个体 C
药物的溶出速率可用下列哪一方程表示A.Handerson-Hasselbalch
美国心理学家维纳将成功与失败归因为四种可能性,下列错误的是A.能力 B.态度
在保险合同有效期间内,如果不发生保险事故,保险人则不履行赔偿责任,因而保险合同具
文艺复兴时期,欧洲各国的文学有( )。A.英雄戏剧 B.封建文学 C.人文
根据《建设工程工程量清单计价规范》的规定,合同价款争议的解决方式,包括下列()。
最新回复
(
0
)