2025 Talbot Avenue Bridge Lantern Walk

Photo by Jay Mallin

Begun in 2018, the Talbot Avenue Bridge Lantern Walk is an annual family-friendly local community event that weaves together neighborhoods once divided by racial segregation and fittingly takes place during Montgomery County’s Remembrance and Reconciliation Month.  All are welcome!  Come join us in shining our lights in the darkness, promoting unity over division, remembering the past and taking steps toward a brighter future.

WHEN: Saturday, November 8, 2025 at 5:00pm.

  • Gather: 5:00-5:15 pm
  • Short Program & Lantern Walk: 5:15-6:00 pm
  • Community Reception: 6:00-7:30 pm

WHERE: Rosemary Hills Elementary School parking lot, just below intersection of Talbot Ave. and Lanier Dr. Address: 2111 Porter Rd, Silver Spring, MD 20910

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. To view the route, click here and scroll down.

BRING: Warm clothing, comfortable walking shoes, and a lantern

RSVP: CLICK HERE

For more detailed event information and updates: see event webpage.

The Talbot Avenue Bridge Lantern Walk is organized by the Talbot Avenue Bridge Committee and co-sponsored by the Lyttonsville Civic Association, North Woodside Citizens’ Association, and Rosemary Hills Neighbors’ Association.

Talbot Avenue Bridge Meet & Greet

All are welcome to the Talbot Avenue Bridge Community Meet & Greet, the day after Juneteenth!

As we approach the longest day of the year, join us on the new Talbot Avenue Bridge to enjoy light refreshments, informal socializing with neighbors, watching passing trains, and more.

What: Talbot Avenue Bridge Meet & Greet
When: NEW DATE! Friday June 20, 7:00 pm – sunset
Note: Original date was Juneteenth; due to likely stormy weather that evening, we’ve decided to go with the rain date.
Where: Pedestrian sidewalk on new Talbot Avenue Bridge
Event will be very casual. No program and no speakers. We’ll provide some chairs, napkins, and cups. And we’ll have chalk, bubbles, and coloring pages for kids. 

Feel free to bring (optional): Savory snack, sweet treat or drink to share; musical instrument to play; or an extra chair.

For more information: Visit the Talbot Avenue Bridge website, or email talbotavenuebridgecommittee@gmail.com

Organized by: The Talbot Avenue Bridge Committee. Cosponsored by: Lyttonsville Civic Association, North Woodside Citizens’ Association, Rosemary Hills Neighbors’ Association

We look forward to seeing many of you there!

Urban Winery Meet & Greet

Jeff Weintraub

Escape the cold, come meet your neighbors, and support our local winery. First come, first seated. No host bar, non-alcoholic beverages, and food available (see theurbanwinery.com/menu).

Thursday, February 20, between 7:00–9:00 pm
Urban Winery, 2315 Stewart Ave., Silver Spring, MD


Features music by NWCA resident Jeff Weintraub. Co-hosted by North Woodside Citizens’ Association, Linden Civic Association, Lyttonsville Civic Association, and Rosemary Hills Neighbors’ Association. For further information, email programs@northwoodside.org.

Photos: 2024 Talbot Avenue Bridge Lantern Walk

Civic association representatives and children of Lyttonsville, North Woodside, and Rosemary Hills participate in the lighting of the community Unity Lantern at the commencement of the 7th Talbot Avenue Bridge Lantern Walk on November 16, 2024. Photo by Lilian Pintea

Thanks to all who came out to the 7th Talbot Avenue Bridge Lantern Walk in mid-November!

Organized by the Talbot Avenue Bridge Committee and co-sponsored by the North Woodside Citizens’ Association, Lyttonsville Civic Association, and Rosemary Hills Neighbors’ Association, this year’s Lantern Walk was the first to cross the completed new Talbot Avenue Bridge. It also honored the memory of lifelong Lyttonsville resident and civic leader Charlotte Coffield.  Check out photos and videos at these links:

Banner created by North Woodside Roots & Shoots group. Photo by Jay Mallin

Special thanks to all the North Woodside neighbors who contributed their time, energy, resources, and talents to the event.

For more event details and a full list of acknowledgements see bit.ly/TABLanternWalk.

2024 Talbot Avenue Bridge Lantern Walk

Mark your calendars for the 2024 Talbot Avenue Bridge Lantern Walk on Saturday, November 16 at 5:00pm!

As many of you know, this is an annual family-friendly community event that weaves together neighborhoods once divided by racial segregation and fittingly takes place during Montgomery County’s “Remembrance and Reconciliation” Month.

The event is organized by the Talbot Avenue Bridge Committee and co-sponsored by the Lyttonsville Civic Association, North Woodside Citizens’ Association, and Rosemary Hills Neighbors’ Association.

This year, for the first time, the Lantern Walk will cross the fully completed new Talbot Avenue Bridge. We will also be honoring the memory of lifelong Lyttonsville resident and longtime civic leader Charlotte Coffield.

Start location: Parking lot of Rosemary Hills Elementary School, just below intersection of Talbot Ave. and Lanier Dr. (Lyttonsville side of bridge). Lantern Walk will start and end here and be immediately followed by a community reception in the all-purpose room of Rosemary Hills Elementary School.

For more information and updates about the event go to: bit.ly/TABLanternWalk

We hope you will be able to join us for an evening filled with light, love, and community!

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.