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Silent Auction Lark After Dark
This past Saturday, Christ Church, Millwood, hosted its annual Silent Auction and Dinner at the Millwood Country Club. Guests numbered over a hundred, and the sounds of clinking cocktail glasses and excited chatter filled the air as guests,

Silent Auction items displayed at one of five tables
clad in gay holiday attire, mingled and strolled between the five display tables to enter their bids. Auction items ranged from original oil paintings, antique china dishes and vases, a handsome china rooster, copper cookware, sterling silver, and a hand-crafted coffee table to certificates for gourmet desserts, a lunch and trail ride along the Shenandoah, a skeet shooting outing, tax preparation, and a five-page web site. Tempting trays laden with specialty cheeses and crackers, caviar and salmon delicacies accompanied the cocktails before guests sat down to an elegant table setting and enjoyed roast beef served with a delectable mushroom gravy, roasted vegetables, salad, rolls and carafes of red and white table wine, topped off with a slice of good old-fashioned (and very tasty) apple brown betty.

Dining at Millwood Country Club
Dinner was followed by the live auction conducted by auctioneer Billy Watkins. Satiated with good food and wine, the guests engaged in lively bidding, garnering a significant showing of generosity for a number of tempting items, such as the one-week stay in a five-bedroom vacation home on the coast of Maine.
The evening concluded with the announcement of raffle ticket winnings, among which was a dinner for two at L’Auberge Provençal—a top 100 Zagat-rated restaurant in nearby White Post. Proceeds from the fundraising event will benefit the ministry of Cunningham Chapel Parish.
The Cemetery at Old Chapel: A Step Back in Time
What better way is there to revisit family history than to stroll through the Old Chapel Cemetery in Millwood? The lovely, serene grounds make you feel like you’ve stepped back in time to the Revolutionary and Civil War eras.
Gray, moss‑covered headstones, worn by the elements over many generations, mark your path as you wander among some of the resting places of the Nelson, Page, and Randolph families, and other notable kin. Politicians Edmund Jenings Randolph (1753-1813) and Robert Page (1765-1840)[1] are buried there. Sallie Page Nelson of Long Branch, along with her husband Hugh Nelson, Jr.—both buried at Old Chapel—can count as their ancestors a Signer of the Declaration of Independence, Thomas Nelson, Jr., of Yorktown. A pew at Old Chapel still marks Sallie’s name.
Edmund Jenings Randolph was an American attorney, Governor of Virginia, Secretary of State under George Washington, and the first United States Attorney General. He was selected as a delegate to the Continental Congress in 1779, and served there until 1782. During this period he also remained in private law practice, handling legal issues for George Washington. Randolph was elected Governor of Virginia in 1786, when he also led a delegation to the Annapolis Convention.
Robert Page served in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War. He was an attorney, a planter, a member of the Virginia State House of Delegates in 1795, and later a U.S. Representative from Virginia.
Whether you have relatives buried there or not, Old Chapel Cemetery is a fascinating outing for those seeking an adventure into the past in a setting that has not changed since the 1700s.
[1] The Political Graveyard. http://politicalgraveyard.com/geo/VA/CK.html#RAZ0VIAL5
Need an excuse to lark in the countryside?
Historic Long Branch is a great bet. The house is rich in history, with ties to the American Revolution. The Historic Long Branch House and Farm web site features a video introduction and overview: History of Long Branch Narrated by Willard Scott.

My great aunt, Sallie Page Nelson, and her husband, Hugh Nelson, Jr., were great-grandchildren of Gov. Thomas Nelson, Jr., a Virginia Signer of the Declaration of Independence. How convenient that she didn’t have to change her maiden name! She lived at Long Branch for 36 years after the death of her husband in 1915. She loved to entertain and have visitors and relatives stay at Long Branch. During the Depression, her younger sister, Charlotte Nelson Holt, Caroline Nelson Britten, and Laura Lewis Bunch were just a few to enjoy her hospitality. Story has it that Laura was
. . . known as the cousin who came to visit for two weeks and stayed twenty-seven years. Her children were Laura Crease Bunch and Tilghman Howard Bunch, Jr. The women at Long Branch became avid bridge players.[1]
Interestingly, several of these women are buried at Old Chapel in Millwood. My mother, Mary Winston Nelson Fisher, spent summers at Long Branch in her teens and early twenties, riding a horse called “Fancy.” She had wonderful stories and fond memories of her time there.
[1] Fordney, Christopher R. Long Branch: A Plantation House in Clarke Country Virginia. Millwood: Harry Z Isaacs Foundation, 1995.





