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RESIDENTIAL RENAISSANCE Improvements bring new life to historic districts SPECTACULAR METAMORPHOSIS Science center thrives within former train station Fountain of Youth Up-and-coming business leaders energize community SPONSORED BY THE DANVILLE PITTSYLVANIA COUNTY CHAMBER OF COMMERCE OF DANVILLE AND PITTSYLVANIA COUNTY, VIRGINIA 2008-09 | DANVILLEPITTSYLVANIACO.COM | VIDEO VIGNETTES TM TM TM

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Located in south-central Virginia along the border with North Carolina, Danville and Pittsylvania County are home to approximately 108,000 residents total. Preservation of historic homes and buildings showcase the city’s earliest days as a tobacco and textile powerhouse in the mid-1800s through the turn of the century. Meanwhile, some of the most innovative business development programs in the nation have attracted new investment. Downtown Danville has undergone a transformation with renovated facades, new businesses and ongoing support of community activities.

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Page 1: Images Danville-Pittsylvania County, VA: 2008-09

RESIDENTIAL RENAISSANCEImprovements bring new life to historic districts

SPECTACULAR METAMORPHOSISScience center thrives within former train station

Fountain of YouthUp-and-coming business leaders energize community

SPONSORED BY THE DANVILLE PITTSYLVANIA COUNTY CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

OF DANVILLE AND PITTSYLVANIA COUNTY, VIRGINIA

2008-09 | DANVILLEPITTSYLVANIACO.COM | VIDEO VIGNETTES

TMTMTM

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ACTION! ADVENTURE!

AT DANVILLEPITTSYLVANIACO.COM

THE MOVIETHE MOVIEImages of Danville Images of Danville

and Pittsylvania Countyand Pittsylvania County

STARTS TODAY!

WORLD WIDE WEBSHOWTIMES VALIDMONDAY-SUNDAY 24/7

SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT ANY RESEMBLANCE TO PLACES, EVENTS OR QUALITY OF LIFE IN DANVILLE AND PITTSYLVANIA COUNTY IS PURELY INTENTIONAL!

““DANVILLE AND PITTSYLVANIA DANVILLE AND PITTSYLVANIA COUNTY LIKE THEY’VE NEVER COUNTY LIKE THEY’VE NEVER

BEEN SEEN BEFORE!BEEN SEEN BEFORE!””

““IT KEPT ME ON THE EDGE OF MY LAPTOP!IT KEPT ME ON THE EDGE OF MY LAPTOP!””

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BUSINESS 28 International Infl ux

Manufacturers from around the world are lining up to do business here.

32 Biz Briefs

35 Chamber Report

37 Economic Profi le

ON THE COVER Photo by Todd BennettDanville Science Center’s Butterfl y Station and Garden

TM

OF DANVILLE AND PITTSYLVANIA COUNTY, VIRGINIA

2008-09 EDITION | VOLUME 2

DEPARTMENTS

6 Almanac: a colorful sampling of Danville and Pittsylvania County culture

22 Portfolio: people, places and events that defi ne Danville and Pittsylvania County

45 Sports & Recreation

49 Health & Wellness

5 1 Image Gallery

57 Community Profi le: facts, stats and important numbers to know

CONTENTS

FEATURES

10 RESIDENTIAL RENAISSANCEUnprecedented revitalization brightens up downtown neighborhoods.

14 SPECTACULAR METAMORPHOSIS At the Danville Science Center, learning about the world is interesting and fun.

18 FOUNTAIN OF YOUTHYoung professionals are discovering that Danville is a great place to live and work.

40 INSPIRING TURNAROUNDWoodrow Wilson Magnet Elementary earns state and national honors.

42 PAINTING A COLORFUL HISTORYThe Danville Museum of Fine Arts and History showcases the area’s rich culture.

10

This magazine is printed entirely or in part on recycled paper containing 10% post-consumer waste.

PLEASE RECYCLE THIS MAGAZINE

DANVILLE DANVILLEPITTSYLVANIACO.COM 3

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Danville: 428 Piney Forest Road • Danville, VA 24540 • (434) 797-4007

Chatham: 13924 US Highway 29 • Chatham, VA 24531 • (434) 432-3009

[email protected] • www.wilkinsandco.com

– Hampton Wilkins, President, Wilkins & Co. Realtors

“We are committed to our region’s future.”

Growing the Dan

River Region, one

family at a time

Wilkins & Co. RealtorsMore Than a Real Estate Company ...

The people at Wilkins & Co. devote much of their time and energy to charities and organizations, giving new meaning to the word “commitment”. The Dan River Region is not just where they do business, but where they live. You will not find anyone at Wilkins & Co. that is just a “realtor”. Their lives are woven into the fabric of the community, lending strength and adding touches of color, just where it’s needed most. As anyone at the firm will tell you, this is the good stuff. This is what really counts.

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SEARCH OUR ARCHIVES Browse past issues of the magazine by year or search for specifi c articles by subject.

INSTANT LINKS Read the entire magazine online using our ActiveMagazine™ technology and link instantly to community businesses and services.

EVEN MORE Read full-length versions of the magazine’s articles; fi nd related stories; or read new content exclusive to the Web. Look for the See More Online reference in this issue.

C U S TO M M A G A Z I N E M E D I A

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Walk This WayFeel like exercising? Try the 7.5-mile paved

Riverwalk Trail that winds along the Dan River.The pathway is designed for walkers, joggers

and rollerbladers, and is handicap accessible. There are several entry points to the trail, including Dan Daniel Memorial Park, Anglers Park and the Crossing at the Dan.

In addition, path connections can be made to sites such as the Carrington Pavilion, Danville’s Science Center and downtown Danville. Riverwalk Trail is maintained by the Danville Parks, Recreation & Tourism department.

Building a Tradition of Innovation

Old architecture fans, rejoice.

The historic Tobacco Warehouse District in downtown

Danville has several buildings that were constructed in

the late 1700s and early 1800s. Those were the early years

of what became a thriving tobacco industry; Danville had

billed itself by the mid-1800s as the World’s Best Tobacco

Market. It was here that the widely adopted Danville

System of offering tobacco for inspection at auction was

developed. The entire lot of loose tobacco leaves would

be placed in huge stacks so that it could be examined in

its entirety. Before, it was examined by potential buyers

in small samples.

Also of interest to sightseers is an exploration of the

nearby Crossing at the Dan, a complex of buildings at

the Dan River. The site includes three restored Southern

Railway buildings, as well as a renovated 1885 bottling

plant that is now known as the Pepsi Building.

A Hit for 15 YearsJeff Francoeur played here at American Legion

Post 325 Field, and so did Chuck James.

These current baseball players for the Atlanta

Braves got their minor league starts here playing

for the Danville Braves. The 2008 season marks

the 15th anniversary for this Appalachian League

affiliate of the Atlanta Braves.

The Danville squad is the four-time defending

Eastern Division champion in the league and

plays home games at their field in Dan Daniel

Park. The natural grass stadium was constructed

in 1992 and has seating for 2,588. A total of

39,063 fans attended home games in 2007.

Other big-name Major Leaguers

who have played for the team

include Andruw Jones and

Rafael Furcal.

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Fast Facts Danville served as the last

capital of the Confederacy, from April 3-10, 1865. President Jefferson Davis made his final proclamation to the Confederate nation there.

Danville has been nicknamed “the city of churches” because it has more churches per square mile than any other city in Virginia.

The Dan River Silverbacks is a rugby team that was formed in 1975, and today the Silverbacks play on rugby fields at Anglers Park and hold a popular annual tournament.

The Amtrak train in Danville can take passengers to New York City, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington, Charlotte, Atlanta, Birmingham and New Orleans.

More than 2,500 people a month buy books at Goodwill Industries on Westover Drive in Danville. About 4,000 books a week are donated to the store, occasionally including rare volumes.

SEE MORE ONLINE | For more Fast Facts about Danville and Pittsylvania County, visit danvillepittsylvaniaco.com.

Meet Us in Chatham

This is quite a site: The brand

new Chatham Community Center

opened in the summer of 2008.

Thanks in large part to a

$3 million grant from the

Danville Regional Foundation,

the 16,000-square-foot center

is equipped with a gymnasium,

meeting rooms and a

commercial kitchen.

An organization called

Chatham Cares Inc. oversaw

construction of the project.

The facility is open to all

Pittsylvania County residents,

and has space set aside for the

Chatham chapter of the Boys and

Girls Club of the Danville Area.

Saluting the SoldiersAtten-hut. The Danville-Pittsylvania County Veterans Memorial is now

open. It took 2 1/2 years of fundraising and work to establish the tribute at

Dan Daniel Memorial Park, as a salute to all local veterans from the

Revolutionary War to the present. The center of the memorial reads in large

letters, “Freedom Is Not Free,” and a seven-foot-high by 156-foot-long black

granite wall bears the names of more than 1,000 war casualties from this area.

The memorial also includes three flags – the U.S. flag, the Commonwealth

of Virginia flag and the POW/MIA flag. There is also a 10-foot-wide circular

brick walkway consisting of engraved memorial bricks.

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Almanac

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PITTSYLVANIA

Smith Mountain Lake

Leesville Lake

Callands

Penhook

Chatham

Blairs

Hurt

Gretna

Danville

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360

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SEE VIDEO ONLINE | Take a virtual tour of Danville and Pittsylvania County at danvillepittsylvaniaco.com, courtesy of our award-winning photographers.

Danville

Generous JamesThanks, J.T. ... for the $50 million.

Danville resident James Thomas “J.T.” Emerson

passed away in June 2005 and left $50 million

to the community. The money will be used to

fund educational scholarships and charitable

grants to students who demonstrate need. One

of the first recipients is Tina Francisco, who is

studying business management at National

College in Danville.

An interesting point about Emerson is that very

few people in the community knew him because

of the low-profile, modest life he chose to live.

The $50 million has been placed in the J.T.-Minnie

Maude [his mother] Charitable Trust that will live

on forever.

Emerson was an Air Force veteran and a

graduate of Danville Community College and

the University of Alabama.

A Plan That WorksNeed good workers? How about a new job?

Check out the Workforce Career Center in the

Piney Forest Shopping Center in Danville or its

satellite centers on Goode Street or in Chatham.

The centers help those looking to sharpen

career skills or for employment and also assist

companies seeking qualified workers.

The centers make connections between

workers, educational institutions and potential

employers, serving as coordinators for all

workforce resources in the region.

At A GlancePOPULATION (2006 ESTIMATE)Danville: 45,586

Pittsylvania County: 60,826

LOCATIONDanville and Pittsylvania County are in south-central

Virginia on the Virginia-North Carolina border.

BEGINNINGSThe first white settlement occurred in 1792 and

was named Wynne’s Falls, after the first settler.

The village was renamed Danville by act of the

Virginia Legislature in 1793, and a charter was

enacted in 1833.

FOR MORE INFORMATIONDanville Pittsylvania County

Chamber of Commerce

8653 U.S. Highway 29

P.O. Box 99

Blairs, VA 24527

Phone: (434) 836-6990

Fax: (434) 836-6955

www.dpchamber.org

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T he past is far from forgotten in Danville, which is seeing unprecedented downtown revitalization not only in its business district but also in longstanding residential areas such as the landmark Millionaires’

Row area on Main Street and its surrounding neighborhoods. People are lining up to live in the city’s historic areas, and

those properties are becoming tourist attractions in and of themselves.

“The Tobacco Warehouse District is seeing huge success, with its residential component as the main driver,” says Gerald Fischer, community development director for the city. “We’ve got four residential projects in that district, adaptive reuse

that’s turning former commercial space into residential. We have 160 units online: subsidized housing, market-rate condos and working-family units, which are for rent.”

Having a mix of renters and owners in the area will further boost downtown’s new life as a residential area, and is bringing a good variety of retail residents as well, Fischer says.

“We’ve seen people start to take ownership of downtown,” adds Anne Moore-Sparks, community development coordinator. “Retailers that already were there are sprucing up their buildings and doing

The Lawson-Overbey Inn Bed and Breakfast on Danville’s Millionaires Row now occupies the former home of tobacco clerk R.W. Lawson. Built by architect T.B. Fitzgerald in 1881, the house underwent renovations 30 years later.

STORY BY JOE MORRIS | PHOTOGRAPHY BY TODD BENNETT

RENOVATIONS AND PRESERVATION BRING NEW LIFE TO DANVILLE’S HISTORIC DISTRICTS

RenaissanceResidential

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their own landscaping. It’s a matter of pride. They now see that downtown is a success, and that’s been very important.”

Fischer and Moore-Sparks both point to the city’s early-1990s investment in The Crossing at the Dan as a key catalyst for the district’s redevelopment. The former train station and Southern Railway yard now is a multi-use complex that draws people downtown.

“We took a chance on the area, and ended up with an entertainment and educational campus that we’re very proud of,” Fischer says. “We thought our investment would produce and encourage private investment in the adjacent area; it took a few years to get to that point, but we’re seeing it now.”

On the home front, the ongoing restoration of historic homes in downtown’s neighborhoods and high-profile challenges such as saving the old “Home of Dan River Fabrics” sign are keeping the Danville Historical Society humming.

“We are seeing a lot of outsiders come in, and they’re finding that we have something unique to offer in addition to our architecture,” says Rose Shields, owner of Rose Shields Interiors and the society’s current president. “We

really are more of a destination point now – we have the old mill buildings, lots of Victorian architecture, the Tobacco Warehouse District, all [serving as] attractions for people.”

The homes were the draw for Fred Meder, who sits on the Danville Commission of Architectural Review and began restoring his first Danville historical home almost two decades ago. Now, with several under his belt, Meder says that the older neighborhoods may be seeing a permanent renaissance.

“People like to walk through the neighborhoods and look at the homes,” Meder says. “I pinch myself every morning. I have a castle. And anybody who watches HGTV knows that we have a wealth of housing stock in Danville that’s still underutilized and underpriced.”

The goal now will be to tie all these pockets of activity into an integrated whole, notes Shields.

“It all connects together, and we’re going in the direction of having everything be walkable,” she says. “People in the various districts are starting their own associations, so we’re making good strides in the right direction.”

This High Victorian Gothic mansion on Millionaires Row was built in 1874 by Charles M. Sublett. Left: Fred Meder is on the Danville Commission of Architectural Review and has been restoring historical homes here for nearly two decades.

SEE MORE ONLINE | Get a glimpse of homes on Millionaires Row at danvillepittsylvaniaco.com.

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B utterflies, trains, science and history – oh my!

At the Danville Science Center, partially housed in the

1899 Southern Railway Passenger Station at the Crossing at the Dan, learning about the world is interesting and fun.

Since it opened in December 1995, giving new life to the abandoned, city-owned historic train depot, DSC has been a major draw for visitors through-out the region. The spectacular Butterfly Station and Garden, added in 1999, is a seasonal highlight from April to October for people of all ages.

“Every day is something new,” says Jeff Liverman, executive director of the DSC for the past five years. “It’s exciting to be part of an organization where you

After 10 years, the Butterfly Station and Garden at the Danville Science Center remains a top draw. PHOTO BY TODD BENNETT

STORY BY ANNE GILLEM

utterflies, trains, science and history – oh my!

At the Danville Science Center, partially housed in the

1899 Southern Railway Passenger Stationat the Crossing at the Dan, learningabout the world is interesting and fun.

Since it opened in December 1995, giving new life to the abandoned, city-owned historic train depot, DSC hasbeen a major draw for visitors through-out the region. The spectacular Butterfly Station and Garden, added in 1999, is a seasonal highlight from April to Octoberfor people of all ages.

“Every day is something new,” saysJeff Liverman, executive director of theDSC for the past five years. “It’s excitingto be part of an organization where you

After 10 years, the Butterfly Station and Garden at the Danville Science Center remains a top draw.PHOTO BY TODD BENNETT

STORY BY ANNE GILLEM

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can really see the impact you have on a community. The presence of the science center has changed the immediate area where we are – the tobacco warehouse area of Danville. But it’s been a sign of change for the whole region as well.

“The economy in this area is somewhat challenged in that some of the major industries, such as tobacco and textiles, have left for one reason or another,” Liverman says. “This community and the people here just pitched in and said ‘we’re going to change our economy and we’re going to look to a new way of doing things.’ And I think science and tech-nology education is a signal that they really are looking to change.”

DSC, which welcomes as many as 27,000 visitors annually, has exhibits and programs for children as young as age 1 to adults. Partnering with teachers to enhance classroom instruction is also a priority. The center offers teacher workshops and even takes programs to schools.

“Our mission is science education for all Virginians,” Liverman says.

The center’s 120 volunteers are key to its success, as is community support, Liverman adds. Forty percent of DSC’s operating money comes from the state, 10 percent is from admissions and fees and a full 50 percent comes from the community.

“Our community is not just behind DSC, it provides an enormous amount of support – whether it’s volunteer time, con-tributions or pitching in,” Liverman says.

Forest Hills Elementary School teacher Katri Pavord says she takes her fourth- and fifth-graders to experience DSC each year.

“I’ve had fantastic experiences there year after year,” Pavord says. “By taking students to a place where they can do things themselves and actually see [science concepts] in an environment other than school helps them internalize information.”

One of the most special weekends during the year is the spring opening of the Butterf ly Station and Garden, overseen by gardener Allison Bellamy. The butterflies are in a screened-in green-house area surrounded by a garden.

“The garden changes from week to

week,” Bellamy says. “There is almost always something in bloom. It evolves all during the season, and the type of butterflies we have changes.

“It’s a life cycle you can watch,” she adds. “Butterf lies are so beautiful. I think of them as an ambassador into the insect world. If you were ever there, you wouldn’t have to ask why I enjoy it. It’s a wonderful, peaceful place to be.”

The Butterfly Station and Garden at the Danville Science Center changes week to week. Below: Hunters and the Hunted is a permanent exhibit at the science center. Far Right: The Danville Science Center is a focal point of the Crossing at the Dan. T

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D riving around Danville after one of her first job interviews out of law school, Rachael Sanford was amazed.

“I didn’t know Danville even existed, but after I did some research and finally visited the town, I was so surprised. When I saw everything that the city was doing to revitalize downtown, I could really see myself living here,” says Sanford, a Baltimore-area native who moved to Danville from Denver in September of 2006.

As soon as Sanford got the job offer she was hoping for with the Commonwealth Attorney’s Office, she accepted. A year later she made the transition to a local law firm and found the home of her dreams at the Burton Condominium complex, a fully renovated tobacco warehouse in downtown’s historic district that features 29 modern units.

“The first day I was in town driving around after my job interview I ended up on a cobblestone street and looked up to see the Burton. I fell in love with it as soon as I laid eyes on it. Living there has opened up a world of possibilities for me,” says Sanford, who, in her spare time, often enjoys Danville’s scenic Riverwalk Trail and the local farmer’s market, both of which are located just minutes from her front door.

Another young attorney, Trevor Moe, was also surprised by the livability of Danville and Pittsylvania County and the

UP-AND-COMING BUSINESS LEADERS ENERGIZE DANVILLE AND PITTSYLVANIA COUNTY

The North Theatre in Danville, on the opposite page, is benefiting from the youthful energy of community leaders such as Rachael Sanford, a Danville attorney who proudly serves on the facility’s Action Board.

STORY BY VALERIE PASCOE

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Young leaders in Danville and Pittsylvania County prove that community engagement can always be fun through events such as the Second Chance Prom, a fundraiser created by the North Theatre Action Board. Left: Recreational amenities, such as the River Walk Trail, are among factors drawing people of all ages to the area. PHOTO BY IAN CURCIO

area’s broadening appeal for young professionals. Moe first arrived in Danville in 2002 for a summer associate position with a local law firm after living abroad and then attending law school in the Washington area.

“What I saw when I was here that summer was an economy that was reinventing itself. As just one example, today I can look down at the tobacco district, and it’s no longer completely empty; there are condos and stores being developed. The city is turning a corner,” says Moe, a commercial transaction attorney who works with new companies locating to the area.

“Another thing I like about living here is being able to see the tangible effects on the community of what I do both professionally and civically. That’s not always possible in a larger market,” he says.

Moe also helped found a local rugby team, the Dan River Silverbacks, which competes across the region.

Both Sanford and Moe are among the growing number of young professionals participating in community programs to help attract and retain the critical 22-to 35-year-old demographic to the area. They are active in the North Theatre Action Board, a group that was formed in fall 2007 to draw more live music acts and other performances to the historic North Theatre, a renovated 1940s-era venue located on North Main Street that hosts art exhibits, movies and plays.

Both are also involved in the Danville Pittsylvania County

Chamber of Commerce’s Young Professionals initiative, a group that provides opportunities for up-and-coming business-people to connect through events and projects in the community.

According to the group’s chairman, Shannon Hair, the coordinated effort by city and county officials to transition the economy by attracting new business sectors, such as nanotechnology and bioengineering, is helping draw a new crop of young professionals back into the local workforce.

“There’s an added value in our community with the quality of life and new crop of jobs. As a result, we’re seeing more young professionals who are originally from here returning to work and live,” says Hair.

Amanda Wilson, who grew up in the area and chose to move back here from Dallas, Texas, in 2007, was pleasantly surprised by the evolution of Danville and Pittsylvania County upon her return. She is now the academic outreach program coordinator for the Institute for Advanced Learning and Research, a facility that attracts graduate students from across the globe each year.

“I have a huge appreciation for all of the things Danville has to offer today. When I look out from the patio of my apartment up Main Street toward West Main, I can see the mansions being restored. The homes and businesses are coming back to life again, and that brings a definite optimism about the community being on an upswing,” Wilson says.

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Find Fuel for Your MorningsFRESH-ROASTED BEANS KEEP CUSTOMERS COMING BACK TO COFFEE EMPORIUM

Matt Royster knows about energy, having worked for 19 years as a

mechanic for a natural gas pipeline. But six years ago, he made a career switch that changed his focus to a different type of fuel – one that starts the day off right for a growing number of residents.

At Royster’s Main Street Coffee Emporium at 547 Main St. in downtown Danville, customers can greet the morning with a cup of freshly roasted coffee and a New York bagel or other breakfast treat.

As the name of the business suggests, coffee is the main draw here,

along with all-day breakfast offerings, sandwiches, soups, salads and desserts. The “world-famous” walnut chicken salad sandwich is a popular lunch menu item, Royster says.

“We roast our own [coffee] beans – we get them from all over the world,” Royster says. “We roast them right here on the spot. We do deli sandwiches, and we carry Boar’s Head meat. We do all of the espresso-based specialty drinks, as well as regular coffee.

“Coffee is what we started with – and we’ve added these other things on,” he says. “It would be tough to make it

without the addition of food.” Main Street Coffee Emporium, which

seats 50, is a popular gathering spot for locals, Royster says.

“We’ve grown every year since we opened,” Royster says. “We’re growing this year [2008], even with the economy like it is. It is a hangout for people who come in for coffee. I get to meet all kinds of interesting folks. We’ve been fortunate we’ve been able to stay open and grow.”

For those who just can’t get away from the office, Royster also offers light catering and delivers box lunches to area businesses and schools.

Coffee is the star, but Main Street Coffee Emporium also pleases palates with a variety of breakfast and lunch offerings. Right: The walnut chicken salad sandwich is a favorite with the downtown Danville lunch crowd.

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Home of All-Around Athletes

A verett University Director of Athletics Sam Ferguson is helping

students achieve success both on the playing field and in the community, as they reach out to lend a hand in service.

“I’m real proud of our student athletes for their involvement in the community,” says Ferguson, in his current post since January 2008. “They’ve really taken a large role in that, and it’s something they’ve actually pursued.”

Ferguson played golf and basketball while he was an Averett student, and earned his undergraduate degree in physical education in Danville. He returned to Averett as sports information director in 2004 and became assistant athletic director in 2005. He earned a master’s degree in sports management and was named interim athletic director in July 2007. Ferguson is passionate about Averett, and about being able to guide young men and women to become solid contributors to society.

At the school of just under 900 students, athletes in 13 sports have the option of taking part in a variety of service projects.

Cougars football players have worked on a Habitat for Humanity home, and in 2007, the men’s basketball team received the Community Youth Service Award from Dan River Center for Voluntarism for their work with Danville Big Brothers Big Sisters. Every fall, athletes don Halloween costumes to trick-or-treat for canned goods, and there is an annual blood drive in memory of Ferguson’s late wife, Annette.

Giving back “is important,” Ferguson says. “We like to see the community out here supporting our [sports] endeavors, so it’s only fair that we do the same for them. A stronger community means a stronger university.”

Averett University athletic director Sam Ferguson encourages athletes to reach out to the community.

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Arlene Creasy of Gretna is known throughout the region for her steadfast community dedication and service with many organizations.

Arlene Creasy is officially retired after a decades-long career with

the Social Security Administration. But don’t expect to find her sitting in a rocking chair, sipping a cool glass of iced tea.

Creasy, 69, of Gretna, pursued volun-teer activities throughout her working life. And now that she has more time, she sees it as the perfect chance to do more for her neighbors and friends.

“I loved every minute of my job with Social Security,” says Creasy, who was manager for the Danville, Martinsville and South Boston offices. “I love meeting people, helping people. I am very involved in the community. Being in the public work force, I just saw a need to join some organizations to help out in any way I could with the community and the city of Danville.”

Organizations Creasy has been or remains involved with include the YMCA, Big Brothers Big Sisters, Danville Pittsylvania County Chamber of Com merce, Gretna Junction Lions Club, Dan-Pitts American Business

Women’s Association, Goodwill Indus-tries, Pittsylvania County Economic Development, Pittsylvania Crimestop-pers, Pittsylvania County Social Services, and the Downtown Danville Association.

“I like what all these organizations stand for. Keeping so busy is very fulfil-ling,” Creasy says.

How does she keep track of all her commitments? Writing them on a calendar keeps her from double booking. Energy isn’t an issue – “I have no plans whatsoever to slow down,” she says.

Creasy loves to travel, play bridge and clean house during rare leisure time. Her husband, Wayne, is retired from the U.S. Postal Service.

Creasy also has beaten back personal challenges. She was diagnosed with cancer in 2006 and had successful surgery and radiation.

“I was out of commission about a year,” she says. “All that time, I was thinking ‘how soon can I get back involved?’ Now, I’m 100 percent and going strong.”

She’s Simply Not the Retiring TypeP

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The Institute for Advanced Learning and Research

150 Slayton Ave. • Danville, VA 24540(434) 766-6717 • www.ialr.org

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Research

Technology

Education

Photos of memorabilia from early in the career of pioneering rockabilly musician Janis Martin

Remembering‘Female Elvis’

When Wayne Whitt saw teenager Janis Martin perform her rocka-

billy songs on the Old Dominion Barn Dance in Richmond in the mid-1950s, he had no idea that he would not only meet her decades later, but marry her, as well.

Martin, dubbed the “Female Elvis Presley” by RCA Records, was a pioneer as one of few female performers in the rockabilly genre. She had a short-lived career in her teens, and then lived a quiet life in Danville before coming out of retirement to make music again in her later years. She died of cancer in September 2007 at 67.

“Never did I dream in my wildest imagination that I would ever meet up with her again,” Whitt says. “I wanted to meet her several times, but they wouldn’t let you go backstage to see her.”

After a career in the restaurant busi-ness, Whitt moved to the Danville area. His father had married Martin’s cousin, and his stepmother introduced Martin and Whitt.

“That’s how we met. We hit it off and that was the end of the story,” Whitt says. “We became husband and wife in about three months. I fell in love with her when I walked in the house that night and saw her.”

Martin resurrected her career in Europe where she played to packed houses. Whitt was always at her side; they were together for nearly 30 years.

“Her voice never broke,” he adds. “She got better and better. She never abused her voice. She could sing rock, she could sing blues, and she could sing country. But her life was into rockabilly – the beginning of rock ‘n’ roll.”

Whitt is promoting a collection of unreleased songs Martin recorded not long before her passing.

“The most important thing to her was her music and her family,” Whitt says. “She was a wonderful person – a wonderful wife.”

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Call or stop by today to find out more!

(434) 791-3180432 Hermitage Drive

Turn by River Oak Church of God off W. Main St./Rt. 29 S.

Voted best in 2008 because:

Danville Regional Foundation President and CEO Karl Stauber

The Danville Regional Foundation is making a difference – investing in

the Danville, Pittsylvania County and Caswell County, N.C., area today, and, more importantly, laying groundwork for a productive future.

Established in August 2006 to invest and distribute $200 million from the sale of the Danville Regional Medical Center to LifePoint Hospitals Inc., the foundation awards grants based not just on need – but opportunity and impact, says Karl Stauber, foundation president and CEO since August 2007.

“Need is certainly important,” Stauber says. “But if you have great need and at the end of the day [grant funds] don’t change anything, then that’s probably not a good investment.

“Part of the challenge has been to get people not to just tell us how bad things are,” Stauber says. “We look at our funds as investments in the com-mu nity designed to produce tangible community benefits. We don’t look at our grants as dollars that we’re giving away. We expect something for the community in return for every dollar that we invest, and that’s community improvement.”

Stauber was president and CEO of

the Northwest Area Foundation in St. Paul, Minn., before relocating to Danville to take the reins of the DRF.

“I moved here for two reasons,” Stauber says. “One is I think there are great opportunities here and I think it’s a great place to live. Having said all that, there are real challenges here. If the problems of this region are solved, the solutions are going to be led by the people in this region.”

Having an available source of funding

for those key solutions certainly helps.In the first part of 2008, DRF awarded

$628,275 to the BEST Coalition [Building Economic Success Together], $1.4 million to the Free Clinic of Danville and $2 million to the Industrial Development Authority of the city of Danville.

In July 2006, the largest grant to date, $9.7 million, was awarded to Danville Community College to build a Health Sciences Center.

– Stories by Anne Gillem

A Foundation With Maximum Impact

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DANVILLE AND PITTSYLVANIA COUNTY DRAW FIRMS FROM AROUND GLOBE

W hile many other parts of the country are fighting to keep jobs from going overseas, Danville and Pittsylvania County are enjoying a role reversal of that scenario as

international manufacturers line up to get in.Recent years have seen an influx of businesses based

overseas, all of which have successfully tapped into the mix of state and local incentives to get their operations up and

STORY BY JOE MORRIS

International

IKEA furniture manufacturing subsidiary Swedwood set up its first U.S. facility here. Right: Swedwood North America President Bengt Danielsson PHOTO BY TODD BENNETT

running. With a well-trained and qualified workforce on hand, the newcomers have seen steady growth since setting up shop and moving into production.

“Recently we’ve gotten Com.40 Ltd. and Swedwood to come here, but we’ve always had a good international presence,” says Jeff Reed, assistant director for Danville’s Office of Economic Development. “We’ve got other inter-national companies that have been here quite a while. In the last three or four years our announcements have become more international, though.”

The diversity of products manufactured by these companies is as high-profile as the locales from which they come.

Com.40 Ltd., a Poland-based firm, makes mattresses and upholstered furniture for the IKEA home furnishing chain. The company is expected to open its Danville plant in the near future, creating more than 800 jobs.

Com.40 followed suit after another IKEA-related venture, Swedwood North America, set up shop in Cane Creek Centre

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and began production in 2007. The furniture maker operates an 810,000-square-foot facility with approximately 150 workers and is expanding steadily, says Jorgen Lindquist, vice president.

“We’re into production, and are recruiting around 10 people a month,” Lindquist says. “We had a strong commitment from the city, county and state, and knew that we could come into the site and be up and running quickly. We are following our plan.”

More relatively new industrial residents include Britain’s Arista Tubes, a manufacturer of extruded plastic tubes, and its India-based parent company Essel Propack America, which produces laminated and plastic tubes for the oral, cosmetic and health-care industries. In addition to bringing Arista to the region, Essel Propack has expanded three times in the six years its plant has been operating. The most recent, a $14 million expansion, was completed in late 2007 and added a printing center that will serve both operations, says Bob Craig, regional human resources manager.

“With the addition of Arista we’ve also expanded from two to three shifts, and it looks like we have enough sustainable business to keep it that way,” Craig says.

The companies now have 293 employees in Danville, and

there’s no problem finding new workers when jobs open up.“We’re growing and busy, but we did our workforce

development here,” Craig says. “The resources that the state and federal governments have provided in that area have really made a big difference for us.”

Japan also has a strong presence here, as Techma U.S.A. continues its growth in Gretna. The maker of electrical components and cable harness assemblies for the automotive industry has a 90,000-square-foot facility and approximately 200 employees.

With just about every continent represented in the area, the region’s economic development leaders could be forgiven if they feel a bit like the United Nations these days. But they wouldn’t have it any other way.

“We’re trying to have as much diversity as we possibly can,” Reed says. “And our new companies are telling people that they’re thrilled with the support from the city and county, that we work really hard to exceed expectations.

“The workforce is here; the training support is here; the amenities they’re looking for are here,” Reed continues. “They’re pretty impressed with the whole package, and we don’t have any intention of slowing down anytime soon.”

Essel Propack is an India-based company that produces laminated and plastic tubes for the oral, cosmetic and health-care industries. A subsidiary, the British concern Arista Tubes, also has a site here. PHOTO BY TODD BENNETT

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Redefining RetailNEW COLEMAN MARKETPLACE TO MAKE DANVILLE A TRUE SHOPPING DESTINATION

There’s a new place to shop in Danville, and it’s

unlike anything the city has ever seen. In fact, it’s

the largest retail project in the area since the 1980s.

Coleman MarketPlace, a 465,000-sqare-foot

shopping center situated on 67 acres, is being

developed by North American Properties of Atlanta.

The development is located opposite Piedmont Mall,

and key retailers include Target, Ross Dress for Less,

The Home Depot, Dick’s Sporting Goods, Marshalls,

Old Navy and PETCO.

“Many of the retailers we’ve housed in this

project had been seeking locations in Danville, but

there was never a project that could congregate them

like this,” says Mark Toro, a partner in North American

Properties. “They saw the synergy created by a large

half-million square foot development as an advantage

for their shoppers.”

Coleman MarketPlace is made up of about

30 stores with an additional 74,000 square feet

of space that will be leased to service providers such

as Verizon; restaurants, including a Mexican and a

Chinese restaurant; and smaller stores. Retailers

began opening for business in June 2008 and

will continue to open into the fall, when a grand

opening for the entire development will be held.

“This is unique for Danville because it’s the first

powercenter being built there,” Toro says. “We call

it a powercenter because it’s congregating several

big-box retailers.”

When fully operational, Coleman MarketPlace

is expected to generate $140 million in sales and

bring an estimated 1,350 to 1,650 jobs to the city.

Retail is also on the rise in other areas of Danville.

A new Sam’s Club opened in March near the

intersection of Westover Drive and Piedmont Drive.

The store created more than 150 new jobs and

occupies approximately 130,000 square feet.

– Jessica Mozo

Retailers began opening for business in summer 2008 at the new Coleman Marketplace in Danville. PHOTO BY TODD BENNETT

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The Midtown Market opened in 1921 and has been in the family of current owner and manager Jan Grant Harris since 1952. Besides its meat and produce departments, the market is renowned for its chicken salad.

A BUYER’S MARKETFew Danville businesses have earned

the degree of customer loyalty given to Midtown Market. The quaint shop has served up some of the freshest meat, produce and specialty items since opening its doors on 7 Chamber Street Dec. 21, 1921.

The market has been in the family of owner/manager Jan Grant Harris since

1952. Brother Gary Grant says the shop’s longevity can be attributed to excellent customer service and a reputation for providing high-quality products.

“We’re always on the lookout for the freshest and the best,” Grant says.

Customers to the Midtown Market find a variety of locally grown fruits and vegetables, a full-service meat department and specialty items like

pimento cheese, boxed lunches and fruit and hors d'oeuvre trays.

However, it’s Midtown’s chicken salad that has earned the shop fame. Following a recipe created by Grant’s father more than 40 years ago, the Market prepares and sells 300 pounds of chicken salad each day.

Tourism officials joke that they receive enough phone calls about where to find the Midtown Market’s chicken salad to justify designating it as an official attraction.

ENSURING A BRIGHT FUTURE

Southern Virginia is brighter than ever these days, thanks to Northern Lites in Gretna.

Owned and operated by master elec-trician Ross Johnson, the store contains more than 75,000 fixtures and displays more than $50,000 worth of lighting in its South Main Street showroom. Staffed by American Lighting Association-trained experts, Northern Lites provides in-home design consultation at no charge, as well as lighting repair and “create your own light” services.

“You bring us what you want made into a lamp, we design it and, if you like it, we build it,” Johnson says.

As a division of Ross Electric Co., the store also provides the full range of electrical services.

Johnson says customers appreciate the store’s warm, welcoming atmosphere.

“Everybody is family here,” he says. “Come to the showroom one time and, whether you buy anything or not, we will have a nice visit and make a new friend, guaranteed.”

YOU CAN BANK ON ITLong before the days of ATMs and

online banking, American National Bank and Trust Company was serving the financial needs of the Danville community. Founded on Main Street in 1909, the full-service bank is the oldest independent, locally owned community bank in the market, employing more than 250 people in its 21 area offices.

“We have tried to build relationships with customers and the community,” says Charles Majors, president and chief executive officer. “Customers know us and are able to get a response to their requests very quickly. We try to find ways to meet their needs and work hard

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to make sure we offer the types of services customers want, primarily in technology.”

It’s not only the customers who benefit from the bank’s commitment to the community. Throughout the century, American National Bank and Trust Company has significantly supported local civic efforts and charities and encourages its employees to do the same.

42 GOOD YEARS,AND COUNTING

Business is rolling along smoothly at Danville’s Goodyear plant. Since 1966, the facility has operated as the world’s largest and most modern plant for manufacturing truck and aircraft tires. The plant’s future seems as promising as its past, with a June 2007 announce-ment that the company will invest $200 million here for facility expansion and equipment upgrades over the next several years.

Plant manager Terry Tennyson over-

sees the facility’s 2,400 employees and attributes Goodyear’s 40-plus years of success to the product as well as the people behind it.

“The Goodyear name and its repu-tation for superior quality is a definite start,” Tennyson says. “The Goodyear-Danville product line and the strength of the industries those products serve would be another reason for our success. To me, the most important things are the outstanding employees we have had and continue to attract as one of the largest employers in the entire Southside Virginia area.”

IN THE BAGDanville’s Gary and Michelle Bender

have an impressive history together. As parents of five, the husband-wife team of 28 years works side-by-side as owners of Dixie Bags and More Gift Shop. The popular South Ridge Street shop opened in 2007 to accommodate their 11-year custom handbag business, which now

produces thousands of bags annually.“Our quality and uniqueness set us

apart,” says Michelle Bender. “We don’t have what everyone else has.”

Bags are available in 20 different styles from coin purses to garment bags, and come in more than 150 fabrics. Bender says cat and dog prints are customer favorites.

The store also carries a variety of local and regional artwork, including pieces from Danville Art League mem-bers. In addition, customers find a wide selection of handmade gifts, from jewelry and baby bibs to candles and soaps.

“If you want that special gift everyone will notice, come see us,” Bender says.

– Melanie Hill

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SEE VIDEO ONLINE | Learn more about Dixie Bags and More at danvillepittsylvaniaco.com.

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W hen officials with the Dan-ville Pittsylvania County Chamber of Commerce

decided to begin the U.S. Chamber of Commerce’s accreditation process, they knew they had a pretty good shot at achieving that goal. What they didn’t expect was to snag the organization’s top honor, which is Five-Star Accreditation.

“I was extremely surprised that we got the five stars,” says Laurie Moran, president. “I fully anticipated that we would become accredited, which is a huge distinction in and of itself. But there are four different levels of that, from accreditation through three to five stars. I knew we had a strong application, but still was very pleasantly surprised.”

Following the merger of the Danville and Pittsylvania County chambers in July 2001, the new organization had to wait for a set period of time before pursuing accreditation. The staff was working on the various components of the accreditation criteria during those years, but Moran says she thought the

725-member chamber’s size might keep it from scoring top honors.

“This was our first time going through the process, and in looking at the larger chambers who had five stars, I didn’t think we had the resources or the capacity to match what they were doing,” she says. “But I knew we were doing a great job with our programs, so we went for it.”

The accreditation process is lengthy, involving documentation detailing everything from the chamber’s internal organizational procedures and policies to its roster of programs and their impact on the community.

“You have to provide up to four years of supporting data for some parts of the application,” Moran says. “We had been building toward the components that we think an outstanding chamber should have, and worked on the accreditation documents for about a year before we submitted them.”

Scoring all five stars puts the Danville Pittsylvania County chamber in an elite group. Of the 6,936 chambers in the

country which are recognized by the U.S. Chamber, only 41, or less than one percent, achieve this distinction. The benefits of the recognition are imme-diate, as the chamber now will be able to enhance its membership recruitment efforts and develop new programs and services.

“It’s a wonderful marketing tool for the chamber, but we see it in an even bigger picture in that it’s a huge marketing tool for our economic development offices,” Moran says. “As new businesses and companies look to locate in our area, the message is that not only are we able to attract businesses, but once they get here we have an organization in place with national recognition. And that organization is here to work with and assist those companies. We think it’s a huge benefit. It’s always nice to be courted by an area, but the proof is whether or not you’ll be able to succeed, not just sustain, once you’ve located in a community.”

– Joe Morris

Chamber Celebrates Star-Studded EventTOP ACCREDITATION BOOSTS CHAMBER’S PROFILE LOCALLY AND NATIONALLY

Linda Lawrence Dalton, co-owner of Lawrence Distributing Co., speaks at a legislative reception hosted by the Danville Pittsylvania County Chamber of Commerce. Government relations was one of the core areas of accreditation.T

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515 Memorial Dr. • Danville, VA 24541

(434) 793-8322 • (800) 437-3885 • Fax (434) 797-2253

Carter Bank & Trust141 Westover Dr. • Danville, VA 24541 • (434) 793-3321

Carter Bank & TrustEight Offices in Danville & Pittsylvania County

124 Offices across Virginia & North Carolina

L to R: Gene Hayes, CIC, Robert Jones, CIC, Bob Willeford,

CIC, Nancy Clardy, Aaron Ewert, Jason Loughhead

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BUSINESS CLIMATEDanville and Pittsylvania County have some of the most innovative

incentives and business development programs in the nation. These

programs encourage growth and prosperity within the region’s

existing economy and bring new business investment to the area.

DANVILLE AND PITTSYLVANIA CO.

MAJOR INDUSTRIES

Industry Group Estab. Employees

Accommodation and Food Services 177 3,217

Admin., Support,Waste Mgmt., Remediation 109 2,812

Agriculture, Forestry,Fishing and Hunting 41 226

Arts, Entertainment and Recreation 27 343

Construction 287 2,061

Education Services 32 4,539

Finance and Insurance 138 1,047

Health Care and Social Assistance 213 5,542

Information 30 375

Management ofCompanies and Enterprises 18 332

Manufacturing 102 6,783

Mining N/A N/A

Other Services (except Public Admin.) 244 981

Professional, Scientific and Technical Svc 138 625

Public Administration 69 1,490

Real Estate and Rental and Leasing 79 405

Retail Trade 442 6,627

Transportation and Warehousing 77 749

Utilities 11 226

Wholesale Trade 108 1,354

TOTAL 2,344 39,735

TRANSPORTATION

AirportDanville Regional

Airport, 799-5110

HighwaysAn excellent highway system

coupled with easy access to

Interstates 40 and 85 make

Danville extremely well

suited to reach mid-Atlantic

markets and international

shipping facilities.

MEDIAN HOUSEHOLD INCOME

Danville $26,900

Pittsylvania County $46,600

HOUSING COSTS

Median Home Value(Owner-occupied)Danville $71,900

Pittsylvania County $80,300

MEDIAN RENT

Danville $404

Pittsylvania County $398

DANVILLE MSA LABOR FORCE

May 2007Civilian Labor Force 51,596

Employed 48,560

Unemployed 3,036

Unemployment Rate 5.9%

BUSINESS RESOURCES

Better Business Bureau

(540) 342-3455

Community Foundation of the

Dan River Region, 793-0884

Dan River Business Development

Center, 793-9100

Danville Community

Market, 797-8961

Danville Economic

Development Office, 793-1753

Danville Pittsylvania County

Chamber of Commerce

836-6990

Danville Welcome

Center, 793-4636

Downtown Danville

Association, 791-4470

Longwood University SBDC:

Dan River, 791-7321

Pittsylvania County Economic

Development, 432-1669

Social Security

Administration

(800) 772-1213

DANVILLE DANVILLEPITTSYLVANIACO.COM 37

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“Spirit to serve”

100% smoke free

89 rooms, three suites

Spacious lobby with cozy fireplace

Business center WHSI

Indoor spa tub & outdoor pool

Centrally located in the heart of Danville

Complimentary coffee in lobby

Restaurant delivery service

Valet service

Restaurant serving breakfast only:

6 a.m.-10 a.m. Mon.-Fri. 7 a.m.-11 a.m. Sat.-Sun.

Meeting space: Executive & special occasion suites

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Free breakfast bar: Gourmet cinnamon buns, boiled eggs, cereals, bagels, danishes, milk, juices & 100% Arabica Smart Roast Coffee

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Guest rooms: Comfortable beds, soft & firm pillows, duvet, in-room coffee service, micro-fridge, PPV & movie channels

Outdoor pool & fitness privileges at Perfect Body

New bath amenities: Kohler shower head, curved rod & plush 100% cotton towels

Business center with free WHSI

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2136 Riverside Dr. (Rt. 58 E.)Danville, VA 24540(434) 791-2661Fax: (434) [email protected]

Fueling Fast Friendships in the Southside for Over 50 Years

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MAJOR EMPLOYERS

Company No. of Employees

Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. 2,447

Danville Regional Medical Center 1,636

Pittsylvania County School System 1,515

Danville Public Schools 1,251

City of Danville 1,203

Telvista 700

Nestle USA Inc. 567

Wal-Mart 450

Unique Industries 425

Danville Community College 356

CIT 350

Roman Eagle Memorial Home 350

Intertape Polymer Group 285

A.C. Furniture Inc. 275

Columbia Forest Products 248

Columbia Forest Products, Flooring Division 232

Yorktowne Cabinetry 230

LOCAL TAXES

Property Tax Rate $100Real Estate (Market Value)

City of Danville .73

Pittsylvania County .53

Town of Chatham .22

Town of Gretna .21

Town of Hurt .14

Machinery & Tools (Original Cost)

City of Danville $1.50

Pittsylvania County at 10% $4.50

Automobiles (Market Value)

City of Danville $3.00

Pittsylvania County at 30% $7.75

Town of Chatham $4.50

Town of Gretna $2.00

Town of Hurt $2.50

FOR MORE INFORMATION

Pittsylvania County

Economic Development

34 N. Main St., P.O.Box 1122

Chatham, VA 24531

Phone: 432-1669

Fax: 432-1709

www.pittced.com

City of Danville Office of

Economic Development

427 Patton St., P.O. Box 3300

Danville, VA 24543-3300

Phone: 793-1753

Fax: 797-9606

www.discoverdanville.com

E-mail: econdev@

DiscoverDanville.com

Danville Pittsylvania County

Chamber of Commerce

8653 U.S. Highway 29

P.O. Box 99

Blairs, VA 24527

Phone: (434) 836-6990

Fax: (434) 836-6955

www.dpchamber.org

E-mail: chamber@

dpchamber.org

Sources:

www.discoverdanville.com, www.dpchamber.org,www.pittced.com,www.vaworkconnect.com

DISTANCE TO MAJOR CITIES

Greensboro, N.C. 53 miles

Lynchburg 50 miles

Richmond 140 miles

Roanoke 68 miles

Washington, D.C. 279 miles

DANVILLE DANVILLEPITTSYLVANIACO.COM 39

Business | Economic Profile

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Inspirational” is the only way to accu-rately describe the story of Woodrow Wilson Magnet Elementary School.In 2008, the K-5 elementary, which

was once considered to be an underper-forming institution, became one of only 89 schools statewide – and three locally – to receive the prestigious Governor’s Award for Educational Excellence. Also making the list were Danville’s Forest Hills Elementary and Pittsylvania County’s John L. Hurt Jr. Elementary School.

The recognition came as welcome, but not necessarily surprising, news to Woodrow Wilson Magnet Elementary School’s dedicated faculty and approx-imately 180 students.

“We were thrilled,” says Dr. Sue Davis, superintendent of Danville Public Schools. “The schools are very different in demographics but children are achieving at the same high levels. Woodrow teachers have surrounded students with support and assistance and have high expectations for the children. They don’t consider failure an

option, from the moment students walk into kindergarten.”

The school also was selected as one of 25 national recipients of the Reading Is Fundamental Program Excellence Honors for 2008. The program recognizes schools and other groups that have successfully partnered with outside organizations to advance children’s literacy in their communities.

Woodrow Wilson’s story seemed unimaginable a decade ago, before former principal Judy Williams joined the economically disadvantaged school. Williams, who Davis calls a “turnaround specialist,” looked past the school’s poor scores and inability to receive state accred-itation and saw a school with potential.

Today, Jocelyn Fitzgerald is principal and continues the mission established by the now-retired Williams.

“Our motto is, ‘We build relation-ships,’ and we’re trying to echo this throughout the community because that’s more important than anything else,” says Fitzgerald, a former guidance

Inspiring TurnaroundWOODROW WILSON MAGNET ELEMENTARY SCHOOL SHINES, EARNING STATE AND NATIONAL HONORS

Claudia Easley leads her first-grade class through an exercise at the Woodrow Wilson Magnet School in Danville.

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counselor at the school. “Team effort has been a No. 1 priority.”

Through partnerships with parents, staff and the community, the school now focuses on targeted intervention, small group instruction, developing community relationships and realigning curricula to meet state standards. Students also benefit from reading and dance clubs, morning reading and math tutorial programs and a mentoring program with students from Averett University. Fitzgerald says the mentoring program has had a tremendous impact on students’ science and history scores.

“At one time, we were labeled a little school that could, and now we’re the school that’s seen as a trailblazer for educational excellence in the community,” Fitzgerald says. “We’ve turned this negative into a positive through team buy-in and promoting goodness in things that are happening in our school.”

Davis says the school’s story has sent a real message about the caliber of students at Woodrow Wilson Magnet Elementary, which has set the bar for other schools throughout the district.

“Woodrow Wilson is a shining star,” Davis says. “Parents, teachers and child-ren are all so proud of their school.”

– Melanie Hill

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Kenny Lewis is a role model in every sense. From pro football star to principal, the George

Washington High alumnus has contin-ually found new ways to reinvent himself, inspiring generations of Danville youth in the process.

As a star athlete at GW, young Lewis soon gained the attention of coaches at Virginia Tech. One year before his Tech graduation, Lewis was drafted by the New York Jets, kicking off a four-year NFL career. Despite his success in the pros, Danville’s star athlete left the NFL spotlight to complete his academic career at Tech. Today, Lewis has dedicated his career to inspiring a new generation of students as principal and director of alternative education at the George Washington-Langston Campus.

“I returned to Danville because I felt like it was destiny for me to come back,” Lewis says. “I was supported by the Danville community and especially the education system as I grew up, and I felt compelled to come back and support this community.”

Since joining Danville Public Schools in 1985, Lewis has served as teacher, coach, principal and director in the district’s elementary, middle and high schools. Lewis currently is preparing the Langston Campus for its transition to a comprehensive alternative education program in 2010.

“No one has the same academic needs, so we look at a variety of ways to make sure students receive some sort of credential,” Lewis says.

Today, the highly respected adminis-trator uses his life story and achievements as an example to his students that they too can achieve their dreams with enough determination and discipline. Lewis cofounded the Boys & Girls Club of Danville, started the city’s church-based tutorial program and has served on numerous nonprofit boards.

“I use my stature as a drawing card to tell teenagers, ‘If you can put your mind to it and use the gifts God’s given you, you can achieve your goals,’” Lewis says. – Melanie Hill

Follow This Guiding PrincipalFORMER PRO ATHLETE KENNY LEWIS INSPIRES STUDENTS TO ACHIEVE FULL POTENTIAL

Former New York Jets player Kenny Lewis returned home to Danville after completing his studies at Virginia Tech. He is the principal and director of alternative education at the George Washington-Langston Campus.

DANVILLE DANVILLEPITTSYLVANIACO.COM 41

Education

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Few places paint Danville’s colorful history like the Danville Museum of Fine Arts and History.

Located in the Sutherlin Mansion on Main Street’s Millionaires Row, the antebellum home originally served as the residence of tobacco entrepreneur and former Danville mayor Major William T. Sutherlin. In 1865, the house became the temporary residence of Confederate President Jefferson Davis. It was in this home that Davis would pen his last official proclamation as president of the Confederacy, shaping Danville’s legacy as the Last Capital of the Confederacy.

In 1928, Sutherlin Mansion was transformed into Danville’s public library and, for nearly 50 years, welcomed the county’s literary-minded men, women and children. Today the Italian Villa style structure greets a new generation of curious guests as the Danville Museum of Fine Arts and History. As a partner of the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts in Richmond, the museum offers a wide variety of exhibitions, classes, work-shops, camps and educational programs for the entire family.

“We’re the area’s only art and history museum and bring in exhibits that most people just wouldn’t have the opportunity to see otherwise,” says executive director Lynne Bjarnesen.

The museum houses many permanent exhibits, including “Between the Lines: Danville 1861-1865.” The collection offers a glimpse into the city’s historic past and is a popular draw for local and out-of-town Civil War enthusiasts. Visitors also find an eclectic mix of traveling exhibits featuring local, regional and national artists. Scheduled presentations for late 2008 and 2009 include colorful works by Virginia illustrator Adjoa Burrowes, as well as artifacts and images from The Wreck of the Old 97 – one of the most historic train tragedies in history, which occurred in Danville. The museum also will host the 13th annual juried art show by Danville’s Art League, as well as student shows by young artists from Averett University and Danville and Pittsylvania County Public Schools. Additional exhibits include glass art from South Carolina’s One Eared Cow Studios, the Modern Masters collection, pieces from Dallas-based painter Ron Clark and more.

Visitors also can take advantage of the museum’s numerous tours, art classes and educational programs for adults and kids. Educators provide in-school tours and also teach kids about local history through the museum’s annual Sutherlin Guard Civil War Camps. The five-day program features a Civil War reenactment and helps children ages 8 to 12 understand what life was like during Danville’s earliest days. Family fun

also can be found outdoors at Sutherlin Mansion, where events such as Art on the Lawn, History on the Lawn, Civil War Encampments and Mandolins & Magnolias take place.

“Visitors leave with a good feeling and hopefully have a better understanding and an added dimension to the Civil War and Danville’s role,” Bjarnesen says.

– Melanie Hill

Painting a Colorful HistoryDANVILLE MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS AND HISTORY SHOWCASES AREA’S CULTURE

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Visitors enjoy the Arts on the Lawn event at the Danville Museum of Art and History. Left: The museum is within the beautifully appointed and historic Sutherlin Mansion, also known as the Last Capitol of the Confederacy.

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Arts & Culture

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Looking for ways to save money

on gas and help the environment?

The EPA wants to share some

smart driving tips that could give

you more miles per gallon of gas

and reduce air pollution. Tips

like making sure your tires are

properly infl ated and replacing

your air fi lter regularly. And

where possible, accelerate and

brake slowly. Be aware of your

speed ... did you know that for

every 5 miles you go over 65 mph,

you’re spending about 20 cents

more per gallon of gas? If you’re

shopping for a new car, choose

the cleanest, most effi cient

vehicle that meets your needs. If

we each adopt just one of these

tips, we’d get more miles for our

money and it would be a little

easier to smell the fl owers. For

more tips and to compare cleaner,

more effi cient vehicles, visit

www.epa.gov/greenvehicles.

Save Money. Smell the Flowers.

www.urwfcu.org

Proudly supporting you & the community for a better tomorrow

539 Arnett Blvd.364 Lowes Dr., Suite H

Danville, VA 24540

(434) 793-1278Fax: (434) [email protected]

44 DANVILLEPITTSYLVANIACO.COM DANVILLE

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There are plenty of underage drivers at the VIRginia International Raceway these days, but nobody’s very worried about that fact.

The raceway now hosts two youth-oriented programs, Camp Motorsport and the Academy of Motorsports.

The camp, which began in summer 2007, gives students ages 10-16 the chance to spend a week at the track, sleeping in a converted garage. While there, they get involved in every aspect of the track’s operations.

The Academy, which launches during fall 2008, is a lengthier affair, covering an entire school year. Both join existing programs for students at the university level, and are key to the track’s goal of promoting youth activities and education, says Connie Nyholm, managing partner and member of the VIR ownership team.

“We promote education heavily, so we started from the top down,” Nyholm says. “We’ve got two initiatives already with Virginia Tech and Old Dominion University, working with doctorate and master’s students. Now we’re going down the ladder into the schools with the academy and camp. We hope that this experience will be great for them, and that they’ll grow up into young racers.”

Camp Motorsport’s pilot season was successful enough to earn it accreditation from the American Camp Association, and the feedback was great, says Diane Tyrrell, camp director.

“The universal response is that this is the coolest thing anyone’s ever heard of,” Tyrrell says. “All we got was encourage-ment, so we’re going to continue to grow it.”

In 2008 the camp will run for four weeks, expanding eventually to eight sessions. It can accommodate 80 campers at a time, who live in garages that have been converted to air-conditioned dorms for the duration. The activities will be a blend of track-specific events and traditional camp staples.

“One of the track’s owners, Harvey Siegel, had attended summer camp as a child, and this was a dream of his,” Tyrrell says. “This really is his Disneyland.”

The Academy of Motorsports is like a ramped-up version of Camp Motorsport. Students will spend the mornings attending classes at the Carlisle School, where they will live, and then spend the remainder of the day at the raceway, says Ken Martin, project manager.

“They’ll be attending an outstanding private school, and then have motor sports as their athletics selection, much like the way a golf or tennis academy operates,” Martin says. “There’s a wide assortment of things they’ll be doing: driving, simulator activities, going to race shops, seeing how cars are actually built and pit-crew type work.”

Students also will delve into the off-track side of the business, exploring everything from marketing to advertising and securing sponsorships. – Joe Morris

Camp Motorsport at VIRginia International Raceway combines traditional and non-traditional camping experiences.

For Youth Driven To SucceedVIR PROGRAMS PROVIDE YEAR-ROUND MOTOR SPORTS LEARNING OPPORTUNITIES

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Sports & Recreation

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©2002 American Cancer Society, Inc.

questions

answers

8 0 0 . A C S . 2 3 4 5 / c a n c e r . o r g

Spider Vein Treatment • Office Based Procedures • Cosmetic Procedures

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201 S. Main St., Ste. 3300Danville, VA 24541(434) 799-VEIN (8346)

THERE IS A SOLUTION to the discomfort, swelling and appearance of varicose veins

that doesn’t involve painful vein stripping.

Danville Surgical Center, Inc.General surgery • Thoracic surgery • Laparoscopic surgery • Pediatric surgery

201 S. Main St., Ste. 3300Danville, VA 24541

(434) 792-7874

Gary R. Lahti, D.O.Board Certified SurgeonNew patients welcome

46 DANVILLEPITTSYLVANIACO.COM DANVILLE

Health & Wellness

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Independent living and assisted livingDo you want an environment where life is vibrant, secure and offers the freedom to live independently? Then we invite you to Stratford House. Danville’s premier not-for-profit retirement community. Whether you need independent living or assisted living, Stratford House offers all the amenities and services you need at an affordable price.

Fine dining • 24-hour security • Housekeeping • Full activity calendar • Fitness center • Library Beauty shop • Transportation • Internet access • Emergency call system

Assisted living features all private rooms and club level apartments. All independent and assisted living services you need are provided to keep you as independent as possible!

Call us today to learn more about the lifestyle you deserve!1111 Main St. • Danville, VA • (434) 799-2266 • www.stratfordhouse.com

ARE YOU READY TO EXPERIENCE RETIREMENT LIVING AT ITS FINEST?Premier living. Premier services. Premier care.

DANVILLE DANVILLEPITTSYLVANIACO.COM 47

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If you bump into Danville Regional Medical Center CEO Jerel Humphrey and ask “What’s new?” be prepared

for a lengthy chat. He has good reason.Not only is Humphrey himself new

to Danville Regional, the hospital itself has been rolling out renovations and additional services at a dizzying pace. A renovated emergency department is just part of the $25 million the hospital has spent on improvements in the last couple of years, while at the same time expanding cutting-edge treatments and renewing relationships such as its cardiac surgery services agreement with

the Duke Private Diagnostic Clinic at Danville Regional.

All in all, it’s an exciting time at the hospital, Humphrey says.

“There are many positive accomplish-ments taking place now, and I believe the improvements will continue,” he says. “The continuation of our cardiac surgery services agreement with Duke Private Diagnostic Clinic following a stringent quality assessment by Duke is a very important accomplishment. Dr. Richard Embrey’s arrival as the new Duke cardiac surgeon for our program is a true blessing for anyone who needs

Danville Regional Medical Center recently opened its state-of-the-art cardiac-care unit on the sixth floor of its Landon R. Wyatt Jr. Tower.PHOTO BY TODD BENNETT

Experiencing Healthy GrowthDANVILLE REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER EXPANDS AND RENOVATES TO MEET EVOLVING NEEDS

open-heart surgery. His skills and talent are unprecedented in this region. And over the past year we’ve added several highly skilled physicians to our medical staff, as physician recruitment continues to be a major priority for us.”

The Duke agreement, which now will run through June 2010, was announced only after Duke Heart Center staff did a full assessment of the operation, including a review of medical records, charts and clinical processes, as well as meeting with cardiologists and others to evaluate how well the partnership between the two entities was working.

Danville Regional’s cardiac patients will also benefit from a new location on the sixth floor of the Landon R. Wyatt Jr. Tower. The 17,500-square-foot facility can serve 46 patients. The state-of-the-art cardiac operation is just the latest in technology improvements, which include the addition of a new linear accelerator, 64-slice and 4-slice CT scanning equipment and updated anesthesia machines. The hospital also has added a new acute-care nursing unit, an addition to the Center for Radiation Oncology to make room for the new accelerator and new rooms for the scanners.

It’s a long and comprehensive list, but the hospital is not done yet, or even close. For Humphrey, it’s about finding the right mix of services that will best suit the area’s needs, then making those happen.

“We’re always looking for ways to improve our services,” he says. “That’s what we are here for – to provide the best health care in the region. With the help of our dedicated physicians, nurses and health-care professionals, along with the community’s continued support and encouragement, Danville Regional will continue to provide the Dan River Region with exceptional health-care services and programs.” – Joe Morris

DANVILLE DANVILLEPITTSYLVANIACO.COM 49

Health & Wellness

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Take This Call!REVERSE 911 KEEPS

RESIDENTS IN LOOP

Whether it’s locating

a missing person or

evacuating a portion of the

city, Danville’s new Reverse

911 system can be a vital tool.

Purchased with Department

of Homeland Security grant

money, the system can be

used to dial every registered

telephone number within

city limits, giving the callers

information regarding any

public-safety issue. Calls may

also be placed to specific

neighborhoods.

Since becoming fully

operational, the system already

has been used to successfully

find a missing man, but it

won’t be put into service too

frequently, says Doug Young,

emergency services director.

“We will be using it for

emergencies, not general

notifications, because we want

to be selective,” Young says.

“We’ll probably use it mostly

in isolated areas, where you

highlight the area you want to

call. If we need to evacuate an

area we can record a message,

have those numbers called and

when they pick up, they’ll hear

what they need to do. If they

have voice mail, a message

will be left.”

In addition, the system

also can provide a number for

residents to call and receive

updates on whatever may be

happening, and if evacuated,

when they might expect to

return home. Other applications

include programming in

targeted businesses or groups,

such as pharmacies, if law

enforcement requests aid in

getting information out about

counterfeit prescriptions or

other citywide issues.

– Joe Morris

50 DANVILLEPITTSYLVANIACO.COM DANVILLE

Health & Wellness

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Main Street Bridge in Danville

DANVILLE DANVILLEPITTSYLVANIACO.COM 51

Image Gallery | PHOTO BY IAN CURCIO

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Image Gallery

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Danville’s historic Tobacco Warehouse District

DANVILLE DANVILLEPITTSYLVANIACO.COM 53

PHOTO BY TODD BENNETT

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The Perkinson Rose Garden at the Danville Museum of Art and History

54 DANVILLEPITTSYLVANIACO.COM DANVILLE

Image Gallery

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Wrought-iron fence along Millionaires Row

DANVILLE DANVILLEPITTSYLVANIACO.COM 55

PHOTOGRAPHY BY TODD BENNETT

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Serving Southside Virginia’s offi ce

products, business machines & furniture

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DANVILLE AND PITTSYLVANIA CO.

SNAPSHOTDanville and Pittsylvania County offer a host of simple pleasures

and cultural opportunities. Danville is a place where the city’s

“past decorates its neighborhoods and whose Main Street

mansions are a spectacular display of Victorian architecture.”

CLIMATE

Average January High

Temperature, 45.4 F

Average January Low

Temperature, 23.2 F

Average July High

Temperature, 89.2 F

Average July Low

Temperature, 65.7 F

Mean Annual

Temperature, 52.0 F

Average Annual

Rainfall, 34.7 inches

Average Annual

Snowfall, 3.30 inches

EDUCATION

Public Schools

Danville Public Schools

http//:web.dps.k12.va.us

799-6400

Pittsylvania County Schools

www.pcs.k12.va.us/public/

793-1624, 432-2761, 656-6248

Private Schools

Abundant Life Academy

www.alwoc.org, 799-8542

Carlisle School

www.carlisleschool.org

(276) 632-7288

Chatham Hall

www.chathamhall.org

432-2941

Faith Christian Academy

www.fcavirginia.com

324-8276

Hargrave Military Academy

www.hargrave.edu

432-2481

Sacred Heart School

www.sheartschool.com

793-2656

Seventh Day Adventist

Elementary, 822-0356

Sylvan Learning Center

www.educate.com/

centers/24540, 799-6900

Westover Christian Academy

www.westoverministries.org

822-0800

Woodlawn Academy

www.woodlawnacademy.net

432-9244

Higher EducationAverett University

www.averett.edu

791-5600

Danville Community College

www.dcc.vccs.edu

797-2222

DRMC School of Nursing

www.danvilleregional.org

799-4510

Institute for Advanced

Learning & Research

ww.ialr.org, 766-6700

National College

www.national-college.edu

793-6822

UTILITIES

Cable

Comcast, (888) 266-2278

Chatmoss Cablevision

685-1521

Electricity

American Electric Power

(800) 956-4237

City of Danville, 799-5155

Dominion Virginia Power

(888) 667-3000

Mecklenburg Electric

656-1288

Southside Electric

(800) 552-2118

Natural Gas

City of Danville, 799-5280

Columbia Gas of Virginia

(800) 543-8911

Telephone

EMBARQ, (276) 666-1200

Peoples Mutual Telephone

656-2291

Verizon, 954-6222

WaterCity of Danville, 799-5280

Pittsylvania County Service Authority, 836-7135

Town of Chatham, 432-8153

Industry Week magazine named Danville one of its Top 25 World-Class Communities out of 310 U.S. metropolitan

statistical areas based on its recent manufacturing prowess.

The area code for Danvi l le and Pit tsylvania County is 434 . DANVILLEPITTSYLVANIACO.COM 57

Community Profile

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1901 Goodyear Blvd. • Danville, VA 24541 • (800) GOODYEAR

Making quality aircraft and truck/bus tires since 1966

SIPS of America, Inc.Structural Insulated Panels for Building200 Learner Ln.Danville, VA 24527

Phone: (434) 836-2275Fax: (434) 836-2271

www.sipsofamerica.com

We’ve Come A Long Way!

“A New State of Banking”

Visit us online at www.efirststatebank.com

Safe, solid and secure for more than 85 years!

Online banking & bill pay • ATM card • VISA check card • Direct Deposit • Free checkingIndividual Retirement Accounts (IRAs) • Safe deposit boxes • Christmas & vacation clubs

First State TeleBanc (877) 884-8526 • Combined checking & savings statements • Overdraft PrivilegeMoney market accounts • Certificates of deposit • Statement savings • Super NOW Account

We also offer 15-year and 30-year mortgages, first-time home buyer programs and other consumer and commercial loans.

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COURTYARD CONFERENCE CENTERS

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58 DANVILLEPITTSYLVANIACO.COM DANVILLE

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Town of Gretna, 656-6572

Town of Hurt, 324-4411

MEDICAL FACILITY

Danville Regional

Medical Center

www.danvilleregional.org

799-2100

LIBRARIES

Danville Public Library

799-5195

Danville Law Library, 799-5118

Danville Library-Westover

799-5152

Pittsylvania County Library

432-3271

Pittsylvania Library – Gretna

656-2579

Pittsylvania Library –

Brosville-Cascade

685-1285

Pittsylvania Library –

Mount Hermon, 835-0326

MEDIA

Newspapers

Danville Register & Bee (daily)

www.registerbee.com

793-2311

The Star-Tribune (weekly)

www.chathamstartribune.com

432-2791

Television Stations

WDBJ 7

www.wdbj7.com

799-1700

WGSR – Star 39

791-3440

WSET-TV Virginia’s 13, ABC

www.wset.com, 797-9713

WSLS 10

www.wsls.com

(540) 981-9126

Radio Stations

News Radio 1330 WBTM

www.wbtm1330.com

793-4411

WAKG FM 103.3

www.wakg.com

797-4290

WILA Radio

792-2133

WDVA – Great Gospel

797-1250

WKBY

432-8108

WMNA

432-4730

GOLF

Ringgold Golf Club

State Road 734 off

U. S. 58 East, 822-8728

Caswell Pines Golf Club

County Home Road off

U.S. 86 South in Yanceyville,

N.C., (910) 694-2255

Cedars Country Club

Anderson Mill Road, Chatham

656-9909, open to the

public on weekends

ATTRACTIONS

American Armoured

Foundation Tank Museum

836-5323

Carrington Pavilion

797-8961

Cooper’s R/C Racecenter

724-7342

Danville Association of

Arts & Humanities

792-6965

Danville Braves

797-3792

Danville Concert Association,

792-9242

Danville Museum of Fine Arts

& History, 793-5644

Danville Parks, Recreation

& Tourism, 799-5200

Danville Pittsylvania County

Fair Association, 822-6850

Danville Science Center

791-5160

Danville Symphony

Orchestra, 799-0494

Danville Welcome Center

793-4636

Estelle H. Womack Museum

of Natural History, 791-5160

Gretna Theatre, 656-3377

The North Theatre, 792-2700

South Boston Speedway

572-4947

Tomahawk Mill

Winery, 432-1063

Veteran’s Memorial Wall &

Walkway, 793-0884

VIRginia International

Raceway, (888) RACE-099

Virginia Museum of Natural

History, (276) 634-4141

NUMBERS TO KNOW

City of Danville, 799-5100

Pittsylvania Co., 432-7700

Town of Chatham, 432-9515

Town of Gretna, 656-6572

Town of Hurt, 324-4411

Animal Information

Animal Control – Pittsylvania

County, 432-7937

Dog Licenses – Danville

799-5140

Humane Society, 799-0843

Building Codes/Permits

City of Danville, 799-5261

Pittsylvania County, 432-7755

Garbage Collection

City of Danville, 799-5245

First Piedmont Corp.

432-0211

Police (Non-Emergencies)

Chatham Police Department

432-9515

Danville Police Department

799-5111

Danville Sheriff’s Office

799-5135

Gretna Police Department

656-6123

Hurt Police Department

324-8511

Pittsylvania County Sheriff

432-7800

Virginia State Police

(800) 553-3144

Voter Registration

Danville, 799-6560

Pittsylvania County

432-7971

The area code for Danvi l le and Pit tsylvania County is 434 . DANVILLEPITTSYLVANIACO.COM 59

Community Profile

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CALENDAR OF EVENTS

August

1FRIDAY AT THE CROSSINGCarrington Pavilion at the

Crossing at the Dan, 793-4636

www.visitdanville.com

8, 9RODEO AT DANVILLE-PITTSYLVANIA COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS822-6850

www.dpcfairgrounds.com

September

3SHRIMP FESTDanville Community Market

836-6990

5FRIDAY AT THE CROSSINGCarrington Pavilion at the

Crossing at the Dan, 793-4636

www.visitdanville.com

13DANVILLE HALF MARATHON & RIVER CITY 5K RUN/WALK797-8470

www.danvillehalfmarathon.com

19-27FAIR AT DANVILLE PITTSYLVANIA COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS822-6850

www.dpcfairgrounds.com

27SORGHUM FESTIVAL AT CLIMAX432-9679

October

3FRIDAY AT THE CROSSINGCarrington Pavilion at the

Crossing at the Dan

793-4636

www.visitdanville.com

4CALLANDS AUTUMN POTPOURRI FESTIVAL

18GRETNA OLD TIMERS’ JUBILEE

18DANVILLE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAGeorge Washington High

School Auditorium

www.danvillesymphony.net

18GRETNA OLD TIMERS’ JUBILEE

18DANVILLE SYMPHONY

60 DANVILLEPITTSYLVANIACO.COM DANVILLE

Community Profile

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Can you imagine …a world without children?

We Can’t.Call 1-800-996-4100 to help.

www.stjude.org

18

BRIGHT LEAF BREW FESTDanville Community Market

793-4636

www.visitdanville.com

November

1

AAF TANK MUSEUM CAR SHOW836-5323

www.aaftankmuseum.com

December

5-6CHRISTMAS IN HISTORIC CHATHAM432-7721

6CHATHAM CHRISTMAS PARADE432-4221

13RIVERVIEW ROTARY’S CHRISTMAS PARADE793-4636

www.visitdanville.com

13

DANVILLE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAGeorge Washington High

School Auditorium

www.danvillesymphony.net

14GRETNA CHRISTMAS PARADE

5-6

The area code for Danvi l le and Pit tsylvania County is 434 . DANVILLEPITTSYLVANIACO.COM 61

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In 1982, Nancy Brinker promised her dying sister, Suzy, she’d find a

cure for breast cancer. That promise led to research and treatment

innovations, education and screening.

Join the effort at www.komen.org

or 1.800 I’M AWARE®.

This space provided as a public service. ©2004, The Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation.

A sister’s promise couldn’t save Suzy Komen from breast cancer.But one day it might save you.

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Abercrombie Oil Company Inc.

www.abercrombieoil.com

Allstate – R. David Wrenn

www.allstate.com/davidwrenn

American National Bank

& Trust Company

www.amnb.com

Bankers Insurance

Ben David Jewelers

www.bendavidjewelers.com

Coldwell Banker – Johnson Realty

of Virginia

www.cbjrealty.net

Daly Seven

www.dalysevenhotels.com

Danville Community College

www.dcc.vccs.edu

Danville Economic Development

www.discoverdanville.com

Danville Pittsylvania County

Chamber of Commerce

www.dpchamber.org

Danville Regional

Medical Center

www.danvilleregional.com

Danville Surgical Center Inc.

Dewberry

www.dewberry.com

Eagle Pointe Shores

www.eaglepointeshores.com

EV Enterprises

www.eve-inc.com

First State Bank

www.efi rststatebank.com

Goodyear

www.goodyear.com

Institute for Advanced

Learning & Research

www.ialr.org

Johnson CPA PLLC

www.cpa-johnson.com

Loyalton of Danville

www.emeritus.com/locations/

communities/default.aspx/loyalton

New College Institute

www.newcollegeinstitute.org

Offi ce Plus Business Centre

www.opbizz.com

Piedmont Health & Wellness

Pittsylvania County

Economic Development

www.pittced.com

Prudential Manasco Realty

www.manasco.com

ServiceMaster

Commercial Cleaning

www.4servicemaster.com/va/5325

SIPS of America Inc.

www.sipsofamerica.com

State Farm – Terry Blakely

www.terryblakely.net

Stratford Courtyard

Conference Centers

www.courtyardconference

centers.com

Stratford House

www.stratfordhouse.com

URW Community Federal

Credit Union

www.urwfcu.org

Virginia International Raceway

www.virclub.com

Virginia Museum of Natural History

www.vmnh.net

Virginia Uranium Inc.

www.virginiauranium.com

Wilkins & Company Realtors

www.wilkinsandco.com

Visit Our Advertisers

Sources:

www.dpchamber.org,www.visitdanville.com

FOR MORE INFORMATION

Danville Pittsylvania County Chamber of Commerce

8653 U.S. Highway 29

P.O. Box 99

Blairs, VA 24527

Phone: (434) 836-6990

Fax: (434) 836-6955

[email protected]

June

5

FRIDAY AT THE CROSSINGCarrington Pavilion at the

Crossing at the Dan

793-4636

www.visitdanville.com

July

3

FRIDAY AT THE CROSSINGCarrington Pavilion at the

Crossing at the Dan

793-4636

www.visitdanville.com

4

PATRIOT CHALLENGE 5K, 10K, WALK, KIDS FUN RUNAnglers’ Ridge

793-4636

www.visitdanville.com

4

4TH OF JULY CELEBRATIONCarrington Pavilion

The Crossing at the Dan

793-4636

www.visitdanville.com

The area code for Danvi l le and Pit tsylvania County is 434 . DANVILLEPITTSYLVANIACO.COM 63

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In Danville, Virginia We Have A Place For You …

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… To Work: Attracting over $800 million in investment from both foreign and domestic companies over the past four years, Danville, VA has announced 7,000 new jobs to the area. With a diverse economy that includes career opportunities in research, technology, advanced manufacturing, retail, health care and education, we have a place for you to work. In addition, for those who may be considering a new career path, there are numerous programs available for industry specifi c job training such as:

• Customized Pre-Employment Job Training through Danville Community College

• Screening and placement services through the Virginia Employment Commission Job Service Program

• On-the-job training/youth summer employment

… To Play: Danville is a great place to play and have fun getting away from the everyday hustle and bustle. Maybe you want to relax by fi shing in the Dan River or strolling down the Riverwalk Trail. If biking is your forte, we have seven and a half miles of multiuse trail and 15 miles of dirt, mountain bike trails that will surely impress you. Danville has a place for you to play including 10 recreation centers totaling 120,710 square feet, 24 playgrounds, 26 athletic fi elds and 475 park acres, and fi ve rugby fi elds, all beautifully maintained.

Danville Parks, Recreation and Tourism offers diverse programs for all ages from preschoolers to senior citizens, from basket weaving to belly dancing. Children of all ages will fi nd a summer camp designed especially for them. Everyone will enjoy our special events such as the Festival in the Park, the Summer Movies in the Park series and many more. However you like to play, you will fi nd it in Danville, VA.

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… To Learn: Danville Public Schools is preparing the youth of today for their entry into society. With a new emphasis on technology, we have a place for you to learn to be competitive in this new future, to develop and master literacy and numeracy skills, and become a life-long learner. Danville Public Schools is preparing future generations by focusing more on skill development and less on memorization of rote facts and by integrating technology and project-based learning into daily classroom instruction. Activities such as robotics, theater arts, chorus, band, athletics and fi ne arts contribute to student’s abilities to integrate knowledge. Community-based learning offers students the opportunity to grow into individuals who can work together for the greater good. You can even get an International Baccalaureate Degree at Galileo Magnet High School, voted among the top 5% of America’s public high schools by U.S. News & World Report.

… To Visit: Danville is known for its hospitality. In Danville, VA we have a place for you to visit, and you may fi nd you want to stay forever. The southern hospitality will capture your attention, but what will keep you wanting more is the vast history, beautiful architecture and variety of entertainment. Danville is the home of the last capitol of the Confederacy, the wreck of the Old 97 and many museums and attractions.

You will always discover something to do in Danville. Visit the Crossing at the Dan that encompasses the Carrington Pavilion, Farmers Market and Danville Science Museum. The Carrington Pavilion hosts nationally known artists for the Harvest Jubilee Concert Series and local bands at Fridays at the Crossing. The Farmers Market is open every Saturday morning from May through October to offer you the best and freshest local produce, as well as baked goods and unique gift items. Also, you will want to catch a Danville Braves game for great rookie league baseball action. Danville is sure to capture your attention from the beginning to the end, making you a fan for life. We have a place for you to visit – often!

… To Live: Nestled along the banks of the Dan River, the term “southern hospitality” has real meaning here. In Danville, VA you will discover a relaxed pace and very comfortable cost of living. Danville’s rich cultural heritage has fostered several museums, a symphony orchestra, and various performing and visual arts series, providing ample opportunities for cultural activities. The moderate climate with four distinct seasonal changes makes it easy to enjoy the many outdoor activities and venues. We have a place for you to live, whether you prefer a downtown loft apartment, a Guilded Age mansion, a home in the suburbs, on a golf course or an elegant retirement village.

Discover your place in Danville, Virginia!

The people whose job it is to know, know Danville, Virginia:

“Top fi ve micro cities.”

-fDi Magazine

“Top 10 metros

under 200,000.”

-Site Selection

“Top 15 for

corporate investment.”

-Trade &

Industry Development

“Top 25 world-

class communities.”

-Industry Week

“Best state for business”

-www.Forbes.com

“National fi nalist Excellence

in Innovation Award”

-US Dept. of

Commerce Economic

Development Administration

“Top 10 Comeback Kids”

-Southern Business Development

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www.wehaveaplaceforyou.com

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