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EXPLORING
KENTUCKY - November 2002 by Katherine Tandy Brown Deck the
Banks, O Ashland's Jolly
Friendly people here make visitors feel right at home, says Sue Dowdy, executive director of the Ashland Area Convention and Visitors Bureau. Though Ive heard that from many CVBs, in Ashland I actually experienced it. Everyone I passed on Winchester Avenue, Ashlands Main Street, caught my eye to smile and give a hello or a hidee. I truly felt welcomed. Settled as Pogues Landing in 1786 by a Virginia family of that name, this Ohio River town was re-named Ashland in 1854 in honor of the Lexington estate of Sen. Henry Clay, and soon became an iron, coal and manufacturing center. Though home to big industry, the city retains a homey, small-town feel. So its fitting that holiday celebration here kicks off with an all-volunteer event involving a large chunk of the community. In its 17th year, the Festival of Trees is run by the Paramount Womens Association, which raises funds for renovations to the Paramount Arts Center (more than $8 million recently) and for its youth education program. Just named one of the states Top 10 Festivals by the Kentucky Tourism Council, this nine-day event begins the Saturday prior to Thanksgiving, with sponsors decorating 47 large Christmas trees displayed in the 325-seat theater. When this gorgeous 1931 art deco venue isnt filled with trees, its rafters ring with live entertainment. Were a world-class stage in a small town, said Kathy Timmons, the Paramounts executive director. And were right on Kentucky Country Music Highway 23. For a trip back in time, the Highlands Museum & Discovery Center is but a short two blocks from the Paramount and during Holidays at the Highlands (November 13 through December 31), the two-story facility is decorated to the hilt. Were basically a history museum but we have activities tied in with our exhibits, so that when an adult and child come in, theres something for both ages to do, said Director Nancy Smith. Running through Dec. 20, Stitches in Time is rife with well-preserved 1800s-era clothing and with lovely quilts crazy quilts, appliques and pieced works. A nice WW I and II exhibit honors local war heroes and from the museums extensive military artifact collection, Hitlers last phone, which he used in his bunker. You also can learn about area history and archaeology, then visit two Adena Indian mounds, one in Ashlands Central Park and a serpent mound in nearby Catlettsburg. And dont miss the Country Music Heritage museum. A remarkable number of well-known country music artists have come from towns either on or near US 23, and their biographies and some memorabilia are here Keith Whitley, Loretta Lynn, Crystal Gale, Ricky Skaggs, Hylo Brown, Billy Ray Cyrus, Patty Loveless, Tom T. Hall, and of course, Naomi, Wynonna and Ashley Judd. The Judds are home-grown! Smith laughs. Just another short half block and youre at the Ashland Area Art Gallery (AAAG), begun 31 years ago by regional artists to showcase their own work and expanded to include a studio where welfare-to-work mothers learn the craft of pottery. If youre just a snoop at heart and want to see how others decorate their houses, AAAGs Christmas Tour of Homes on Sunday, Dec. 8 is your license to peek. A 25-year tradition, the event features six or seven homes that can range from elaborate to modest, and is a major fund raiser for the gallerys art education program. Beginning with refreshments and seasonal harp music in the gallery, the driving tour lasts from 1 til 6 p.m., sometimes includes a church, and usually attracts some 600 snoopers. You cant possibly leave this gallery after this event and not be ready for Christmas, said Brenda Keathley, executive director of the Ashland Area Art Gallery. And were a great place to holiday shop. In addition to our artworks, well have Christmas ornaments for sale. Therell be gifts from $5 to $6,000 each! We call Winchester Avenue the cultural corridor, Keathley said. Its an extension of US 23, the Country Music Highway, and we have the performing arts with the Paramount Arts Center, visual arts with this gallery, historic preservation with the Highlands Museum, and literary arts with the Jesse Stuart Foundation. Theres nowhere else in the Commonwealth that I can think of with four separate disciplines within a five-block range. Within a short walk or drive, you can assuage your holiday appetite at any of a number of eateries, like Roccos, the Frame Up Gallery Coffee House & Tea Room, and at the Bluegrass Grill, a 50-years-plus drive-in with specialty burgers. Come Nov. 26 youll want to claim your square of sidewalk on Winchester Ave. when the Ashland Christmas Parade wends its way through downtown for two evening hours before 20,000 to 30,000 holiday happy spectators. That same day, the Tuesday before Thanksgiving, the city turns on its Winter Wonderland of Lights display. Some 750,000 tiny twinkling lights will illuminate Ashlands main thoroughfares and Central Park will be filled with 40 lighted displays. Ashland will stay alight until alcohol-free New Years Eve on the Plaza ushers in 2003. Contact the Ashland Area Convention
and Visitors Bureau for more info at (800)377-6249 or www.visitashlandky.com. Katherine Tandy
Brown is a staff writer for The Lane Report. |
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Copyright 1996-2002, by Kentucky Business Online. All rights reserved. Editorial content
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