6th Talbot Avenue Bridge Lantern Walk

*** IMPORTANT***

The new Talbot Avenue Bridge remains an active construction zone. The bridge is not currently completed, nor open to pedestrians and cars, and will not be so by the date of the Lantern Walk. The Purple Line team has confirmed that Lantern Walk participants may cross the bridge within a designated area and limited time frame, in order to access and participate in the event. Participants may cross, but NOT hang out and linger on the bridge. Please be respectful of these guidelines. After the community reception at Rosemary Hills ES has concluded and the lights on the bridge have been turned off, anyone entering the construction site will be considered trespassing. Please review the full safety guidelines on the Lantern Walk webpage and visit it for any last-minute updates.

Special this year: New route, new bridge, and the first time the community will have an opportunity to cross this historic space in 4 1/2 years! In observance of Montgomery County’s “Remembrance and Reconciliation Month,” be part of marking the beginning of a new chapter in the relationship of the communities connected by the bridge. Many special guests will be joining us, including members of Washington Revels’ Jubilee Voices.

WHEN:     Saturday, November 11, 2023 at 5:00p
Gather: 5:00 – 5:15 pm
Short Program & Lantern Walk: 5:15 – 6:00 pm
Community Reception: 6:00 – 7:30 pm

WHERE:   Intersection of Talbot Ave. & Lanier Dr. (Lyttonsville)
The route will start and end at the same place, crossing over the new Talbot Avenue Bridge twice and going around the two blocks closest to it, one in North Woodside and one in Lyttonsville.*
(scroll down to view map)

BRING:     Warm clothing and good walking shoes, and a lantern
                  (and a bell to ring, if you have one
)
Note: Any type of lantern will do, from a tea light candle in a glass jar to something more elaborate, either handmade or store-bought. You can find many ideas online: bit.ly/HomemadeLanterns. If you have the time and energy, we encourage you to get creative!  Extra lanterns and  tea light candles will be available for those who need them.

* The Lantern Walk will conclude with an indoor community reception at Rosemary Hills Elementary School.  All participants are invited to join us for refreshments, music, and warm mingling! The reception will be held in the school’s all-purpose room, which is accessible from the Lanier Dr. side of the school, right next to where the Lantern Walk will start and end.

For more information and to RSVP go to bit.ly/TABLanternWalk.

Support the 2023 Talbot Avenue Bridge Lantern Walk! Make a tax-deductible donation to support this and future Talbot Avenue Bridge-related events and programs and/or sign up to bring a refreshment or fill a day-of volunteer role.

Event organized by the Talbot Avenue Bridge Committee and co-sponsored by the Lyttonsville Civic Association, North Woodside Citizens Association, and Rosemary Hills Neighbors Association

Map of Lantern Walk route:

Home Tree Care 101 Class

Photos by Phyllida Paterson

On Oct 21, 2023, our neighborhood hosted our eighth Home Tree Care 101 class, offered via Conservation Montgomery and taught by arborist Jack Pond. Ten neighbors attended, as well as one guest from Bowie, another from Rosemary Hills, and Conservation Montgomery board member Lauren Brown.

We addressed tree questions at five different yards. Topics covered included: pruning street trees to ameliorate or prevent damage caused by passing vehicles; general guidelines for pruning large and small trees; cabling; powdery mildew on a beloved dogwood; a crepe myrtle with scale insect infestation; a magnolia tree declining due to increasing overhead shade; identification of a mystery tree; proper use of mulch around trees (keep it away from the trunk!) and more. Jack demonstrated pruning techniques on several trees. Reviews for the class were highly complimentary. Thanks to NWCA, which kicked in $5 per neighbor to reduce the cost of the class for the purposes of community building.

— Phyllida Paterson, NWCA Tree Committee

NWCA Testimony in Support of Lyttonsville Park

On September 7, 2023, the Montgomery County Planning Board voted to approve the design of the future neighborhood park in Lyttonsville, which, when completed, will be the closest park to many North Woodside residents. Over 25 community members and groups, including the North Woodside Citizens Association, provided oral and written testimony in support of the park, which will feature a Bridge Memorial made from the historic Talbot Avenue Bridge’s steel girders. The historic bridge spanned the train tracks between Lyttonsville and North Woodside and was the only direct physical connection between our two communities for over a century, until its demolition in 2019.

Here is the joint letter that the Lyttonsville Civic Association, North Woodside Citizens Association, and Rosemary Hills Neighbors’ Association submitted as written testimony:

View a compilation of all the written testimony submitted here.

And here is the text of the oral testimony that Anna White, a NWCA board member, presented in person on behalf of the North Woodside Citizens Association (View video of oral testimony, which starts at 20:45; Lyttonsville Civic Association’s testimony begins at 49:25, and NWCA’s at 56:45):

The North Woodside Citizens Association would like to register its strong support for the facility plan—and full funding—of the future new neighborhood park in Lyttonsville.

Our neighborhood has not always been a welcoming place for residents of the historically African American community of Lyttonsville. Founded in 1890—almost 40 years after Lyttonsville was—and developed further in the 1920s, our neighborhood had racist deed covenants that prohibited Black people from owning property or living in it, except as domestic servants. The 1940s census found just 11 Black people residing in our census district, all domestic servants. Even after racist deed covenants were ruled unenforceable, their legacy continued in patterns of urban development and neighborhood demographics. And, as we all too sadly know, the racist beliefs at their root did not all-of-a-sudden disappear. As late as the early 1960s Black people were still being denied service at popular businesses in downtown Silver Spring, just a mile from our neighborhood. This is not long ago history. This is recent history—in the lifetime of some sitting in the room and watching online today.

Current and former residents of Lyttonsville have shared with us stories of racial bigotry they experienced within North Woodside over the course of their lives, as children and  as adults, and as late as the 1990s. When the historic Talbot Avenue Bridge fell into disrepair in the 1990s and North Woodside residents—and our association—advocated for its permanent closure to vehicles, some Lyttonsville residents perceived our efforts to be racially-motivated, something we learned 5 years ago when the short documentary film “The Bridge” was released. This is completely understandable in the context of local history and Lyttonsville residents’ lived experience of racial bigotry. And, it was hard for some of us in North Woodside to hear.

In recent years, our association has taken steps to explore, acknowledge and denounce our neighborhood’s role in past racial segregation, and to build with our Lyttonsville neighbors a foundation for a new chapter in the relationship of our communities, a new chapter rooted in mutual respect, friendship, unity, and love.

In September 2018 we unanimously passed a resolution to mark the occasion of the Talbot Avenue Bridge’s Centennial Celebration, which our then President publicly presented on the Bridge to the over 300 attendees.  In it we recognized the importance of the Talbot Avenue Bridge to Lyttonsville, formally acknowledged and denounced racial bigotry, in all its forms, past and present, and, in particular, racist deed covenants. We especially recognized that current and former residents of Lyttonsville had experienced racial bigotry in our neighborhood. And we resolved that by recognizing this past and embracing our neighbors on both sides of the bridge, it enables us to work towards building a stronger community for the future.

A few years later, in May 2021, we voted to add language to our association bylaws that we “acknowledge our neighborhood’s history of legal and de facto segregation and seek to make North Woodside a place for all people.”

It is in this same spirit that our neighborhood association strongly supports the creation of a neighborhood park in Lyttonsville, and the Bridge Memorial in particular, that will further help raise awareness of Lyttonsville history, which in many ways is intertwined with our own neighborhood’s history; facilitate cross-track socializing; and deepen the shared sense of community among neighbors—and neighborhoods—connected by the bridge.

Lyttonsville, North Woodside, and Rosemary Hills community members, Montgomery Parks staff, and Montgomery County Planning Board members pose together after the Montgomery Planning Board voted on September 7, 2023 to approve the future neighborhood park in Lyttonsville.

Vote on Art for Gene Lynch Park!

Image courtesy Montgomery Parks

Montgomery Parks is inviting the public to vote on a new art installation that will be featured at  Gene Lynch Urban Park in downtown Silver Spring.  

This park, dedicated this past June, is named after a longtime North Woodside resident. Read more about Gene Lynch.

For more information about the opportunity to provide public input on artwork for the park, check out this Montgomery Parks’ news release.

Click here to vote! 

Deadline to vote: Monday, October 9, 2023

Tree Watering Party

Please join our third tree watering party of the summer this Saturday, September 2, 2023 from 9:00 am-10:00 am, at the Warren St pocket park next to Woodlin Elementary School, and meet some neighbors too!

We gave the trees a boost last week but they are still stressed and there’s no rain in the forecast. If we can pull these beeches, American sycamores, and dogwoods, plus witch hazel and spicebush shrubs, through the drought, the park will be lovely in a few years.

We’ll have hoses from two homes available to us. Bring large or small buckets or watering cans if you have them but I will have plenty to share as well. Wagons for hauling buckets welcome.

RSVP to me if you can so I have a general idea of who’s coming, but it’s fine to show up on the spur of the moment too. Projections show the temperature should be pleasant, after a cool overnight.

Thanks!
Phyllida Paterson
Chair, NWCA Tree Committee

Future Park to Commemorate Local History


On March 30, 2023, Montgomery Parks held a community meeting to unveil the revised design concept for the future Lyttonsville Neighborhood Park, featuring a Bridge Memorial constructed from the girders of the historic Talbot Avenue Bridge (1918–2019). The bridge served as a connection between the once racially segregated communities of Lyttonsville and North Woodside. Last fall, local civic groups, including the North Woodside Citizens Association, sent a letter to Montgomery Parks advocating to incorporate the girders in a way that re-creates a sense of the bridge. For more information about the future park, including many more images of the design concept, visit the park’s website.

To join community advocacy efforts for the future park, contact the Talbot Avenue Bridge Committee.

Traffic and Safety Update

By Julie Lees and Jean Kaplan Teichroew

The Traffic Committee has been working with Oscar Yen, a traffic operations engineer at the Montgomery County Department of Transportation (MCDOT), to review traffic-control and pedestrian-safety measures in North Woodside. Following is an update on the issues we’ve discussed and their status:

  1. Glen Ross, 3rd, Warren, and Lanier: To improve visibility in the intersection, MCDOT is working on the bump out at the corner of Glen Ross and 3rd. Neighbors in adjacent homes have been contacted, and the plan has been approved.

  2. Columbia:
    a. To fix the stop sign at the exit of the public parking lot, MCDOT sent an email to Montgomery County Parking Department, which maintains the parking lot.
    b. A new stop sign was installed at Rookwood.

  3. Intersection of Luzerne and Columbia: The committee suggested adding a crosswalk given the church, day care center, school bus stop, and traffic volume. But MCDOT determined that
    additional traffic control is not necessary because adequate sight lines allow pedestrians to see approaching vehicles and sufficient gaps in traffic allow crossing safely at this location. Nor will MCDOT install a crosswalk, but a work order has been sent to the shop to relocate the “No Parking/Permit Parking” sign to increase the sight line.

    Neighbors: If you can photograph overparking and/or pedestrians unable to cross safely at Luzerne and Columbia, you may help us focus MCDOT’s attention on this problem.*

  4. 2nd and Luzerne pedestrian-safety issues, according to MCDOT:
    a. All the crosswalk striping work orders were sent to the shop and forwarded to the pavement contractor.
    b. Visibility of the stop signs is adequate.
    c. Oscar had not been made aware of previous lighting concerns, but he will check to see if the streetlight at this intersection has been upgraded to LED.

  5. 2001 Glen Ross: A work order has been sent to the shop to remove the “No Thru Trucks Over 10,000 G.V.W.R.” sign. (G.V.W.R. = Gross Vehicle Weight Rating)

  6. Grace Church: MCDOT will not install a 25-mph speed limit sign because it would stand too close to the 15-mph advisory sign for the speed humps. (Note: Hanover has a 25-mph speed limit sign that was installed in error, but it will not be removed.)

  7. Stratton traffic circle: MCDOT states that a work order will be created to add yield signs along all approaches to the circle. In addition, Oscar will check the parking and no-parking zones within the circle; no parking should be allowed within the circle or 35 feet approaching it. Existing signs designate permit parking and time-of-day parking restrictions.

  8. Additional Stratton issues, according to MCDOT: A study can be conducted to
    see if speed humps are warranted. Oscar will request a 48-hour speed/volume assessment. Another measure to handle cut-through traffic is access restrictions, which will also apply to residents.

    a. Bump outs and chicanes are not feasible on this street because it is narrow
    and vehicles park on both sides.d
    b. MCDOT does not install “Children at Play” or “Traffic Calming Zone” signs.
    c. Oscar will check both ends of Stratton for speed limit signs. If absent, they can
    be added.
    d. 2nd at Stratton: MCDOT cannot install pedestrian signs (indicating pedestrian activity) for vehicles turning right from 2nd onto Stratton. Such signs are installed only at an unprotected crosswalk on the same roadway; here the crosswalk is on Stratton—not 2nd. Oscar noted that traffic law requires motorists to stop for pedestrians once they are already standing in a crosswalk; pedestrians waiting on the curb do not have the right-of-way.

* Contact the Traffic and Safety Committee

Community Tree Triangle Design Presentation

On June 15th, Kellie Cox of Strawberry Fields, LLC presented her Landscape Design Master Plan for the “Community Tree Triangle” located at the intersection of Glen Ross and Luzerne.  The virtual walk-through of the design was followed by a Q&A session.

Missed the presentation? No worries! You can watch a recording of the presentation* or scroll through the presentation slides below. After viewing, you are invited to send any questions or comments about the project to the Community Design Committee’s Chair, Cheryl Copeland, or the NWCA Board.

Please note that the committee would really love to connect with a neighbor with grant-writing experience for the next phase of the project. If that’s you or you can suggest someone, please contact Cheryl at the link above.

* Passcode: Uy?Xm@f1

A Treasure Trove of Tulips

By Jean Kaplan Teichroew

If you’ve ever strolled along Grace Church Rd. in the spring, you’ve probably seen colorful swaths of tulips blooming at the edges of the expansive lawn at 1923. Meet the man behind the tulips: Phil Costello has been planting them here every year since 2011. His interest in tulips took root when he lived in London: From his office near Buckingham Palace, he observed the planting of thousands of tulips. He also traveled frequently to Holland, where the flowers have been prized since the 16th century.

Phil starts planting his tulips in late November or after the first frost. He designs and digs trenches and places each bulb individually, this year about 750. (His all-time high is 2,100 bulbs!) Then he covers them with four to six inches of soil. Recently he has hired neighbors David Maya-Shelton and Jayden and Austin Jackson to help in the labor-intensive activity.

A major challenge is foiling predators, responsible for ruining up to 25 percent of the tulip garden. Squirrels dig up bulbs, but don’t seem to eat them. “They taunt me,” Phil laughs, “and then they throw away the bulbs,” leaving them on neighbors’ porches and in their yards. He places chicken wire over the bulbs to deter the pesky rodents and removes it so the tulips can grow when the weather warms. Deer don’t dig up the bulbs, but they do eat the blooms. “It’s constant effort,” says Phil, “vigilance is required.” He jokes that the deer of Grace Church may have changed their eating patterns after he placed signs directing them to a nearby street for better food.

Phil recommends purchasing tulip bulbs from colorblends.com. He also welcomes visitors to his garden. This writer has the advantage of seeing the vibrant flower display from her kitchen window, but you can take in the view come springtime. We’ll look for you on our street.

Wander Under Weeping Cherry

As noted recently by a neighbor on the NWCA listserv

The fabulous, giant, weeping cherry on 2nd Ave.* is in full bloom…. do take time to wander under it…

Want to behold cherry blossoms, but not up for the crowds and traffic around Washington, DC’s tidal basin? Take a stroll under this magnificent tree!

* Between Grace Church Rd. and 16th St.

No doubt a small sapling many a decade ago, the canopy of this weeping cherry now reaches high into the sky, spilling a swaying “bloomfall” of light pink blossoms over 2nd Ave. What young trees planted in North Woodside now will one day grow to great heights and beauty, and grace the path of future generations of neighbors?

If interested in planting a tree in the right of way in front of your house or on your property, contact the NWCA Tree Committee.