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Richmond

805 Mosby St, Richmond City, VA 23223 | Single family homes

This newly renovated 1,598 SF home in Union Hill is conveniently located near MCV, VCU, Downtown, and all of the amenities Church Hill has to offer! This house with 2 bedrooms, 1 full and two half baths is perfect for an owner-occupier or as an investment. As you walk into the house, you’ll notice hardwood floors throughout the house and a floor-to-ceiling window that lets in lots of natural light in the living room. The character of the old days becomes apparent with the exposed bricks and the many decorative fireplaces in the house. The kitchen has been beautifully remodeled to incorporate new stainless steel appliances, all new cabinets, granite countertops, and new tile floors. Upstairs you will find two spacious bedrooms, one with new carpeting, the other with parquet floor and both with plenty of storage space. The renovated bathroom on the upper floor is adjoined by two separate guest toilets with pocket doors for privacy. Located directly across from the viaduct on Leigh St and the back entrance of the VCU Hospital MCV campus, you’ll love the walking distance to great parks, restaurants, and downtown Richmond. Come and check out this lovely renovation in an area that is constantly seeing new developments and opportunities.

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NOVA

Morning Notes | ALXnow – Alexandria Now

Board members who supported the sale of River Farm are stepping down – “Five American Horticultural Society (AHS) board members who supported the sale of the historic River Farm, including its chairman, have resigned, the organization said Thursday. Your departure from the equally split governing body will only leave members who have opposed the sale of the Potomac River property that was once part of George Washington’s Mount Vernon. ” [Washington Post]

Alexandria Love Your Pet Day Festival is on Sunday – “One week until the Alexandria Love Your Pet Day Festival! Come Sunday, October 3rd, 11am to 3pm at the lavish Oronoco Bay Park for this free event that has something for everyone – including well behaved, leashed pets! Enjoy fantastic performances, meet adoptable animals, visit fantastic vendors or have a drink in Port City’s beer garden! ” [Facebook]

The Alexandria Health Department is hosting a free flu vaccination clinic on Saturday – “The Alexandria Health Department will host a free flu vaccination clinic at Francis C. Hammond Middle School, 4646 Seminary Road, October 2nd from 9:30 am to 2:00 pm. Parking spaces will be available. Influenza vaccinations are provided free of charge, no proof of residence or insurance is required. The clinic is open to adults and children from 6 months. The Alexandria Health Department encourages all members of the community to be vaccinated against the flu. The higher-dose version of the senior flu shot will not be available at the clinic, but may be available through a pharmacy or healthcare provider. [City of Alexandria]

Today’s weather – “Mostly sunny. High 72F. Wind weak and changeable … A mostly clear sky (in the evening). Low 52F. Light and variable winch. ” [Weather.com]

New job: Deputy Sheriff – “Deputy sheriffs mainly work in an adult detention center under direct supervision, which houses around 350 adult inmates. Substitutes manage inmates’ housing units, take care of disciplining inmates, respond to inmate inquiries, supervise inmates, and solve problems. Other duties of a deputy sheriff outside the detention center include serving court documents; Arrest warrant, courthouse / courtroom security, prisoner Transportation, community engagement and general law enforcement obligations. ” [Governmentjobs.com]

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News

A Colorado Town Is About as Vaccinated as It Can Get. Covid Still Isn’t Over There.

San Juan County, Colorado, can boast that 99.9% of its eligible population has received at least one dose of covid-19 vaccine, putting it in the top 10 counties in the nation, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

If vaccines were the singular armor against covid’s spread, then on paper, San Juan County, with its 730 or so residents on file, would be one of the most bulletproof places in the nation.

Yet the past few months have shown the complexity of this phase of the pandemic. Even in an extremely vaccinated place, the shots alone aren’t enough because geographic boundaries are porous, vaccine effectiveness may be waning over time and the delta variant is highly contagious. Infectious-disease experts say masks are still necessary to control the spread of the virus.

The county logged its first hospitalizations of the pandemic in early August — this year, not 2020. Five summer residents were hospitalized. Three ended up on ventilators: Two recovered and the third, a 53-year-old woman, died at the end of August. All were believed to be unvaccinated.

Those cases and even the ones that didn’t need hospitalization raised the alarms for the county with a single incorporated town: Silverton. It’s a tightknit former mining community nestled in the mountains of southwestern Colorado, where snowstorms and avalanches often block the lone road that passes through.

“The pandemic is just still going on,” said DeAnne Gallegos, the county’s public information officer and director of the local chamber of commerce. “We kept thinking it was going to end before this summer. Then we were thinking in November. Now we’re like, ‘No, we don’t know when.’”

So the county decided to backtrack: “We went back to the tools that we knew we had,” Gallegos said. “Mask mandate indoors and then discouraging indoor events.” Outdoor events continued, such as a brass band concert on the courthouse steps, and the area’s signature Hardrockers Holidays mining competition, with its pneumatic mucking and spike driving.

On the whole, once the under-12 set is taken into account, 85% of the county’s total population is fully vaccinated. But in the summer, the population nearly doubles as seasonal residents roost in second homes and RV parks, some vacationing while others take up seasonal jobs. Then, there’s what Gallegos described as “the tsunami of tourism” — the daily influx of people arriving on the historical railroad from Durango and the dusty jeep trails through the mountains. Many of those visitors are of unknown vaccination status.

The county’s two-week incidence shot up in August to the highest rate in the state, and stayed there for most of the month. Even though that spike amounted to a grand total of about 40 known cases, it was nearly as many as the county had logged during the entirety of the pandemic — and cases spilled into the vaccinated as well.

Any number of cases would be a big deal in a small place without its own hospital. “We are all one-man bands just trying to make it happen,” Gallegos said. The county’s public health director, Becky Joyce, for example, does everything from contact tracing and covid testing to putting shots in arms. And when the county restarted its mask mandate, it was Gallegos who designed the signs and spent her weekend zip-tying them around town.

The biggest concentration of covid cases happened at an RV park and a music festival driven indoors by rain.

“It makes sense that coming out of three or four weeks of just jamming tourism, people were starting to get sick who work in the restaurants, at the RV parks,” Gallegos said. “And then you bring all the locals condensed together for a couple of nights of concerts and it was just the trifecta.”

Dana Chambers, who runs the hardware store in Silverton, was vaccinated as soon as possible. She said returning to a mask mandate felt in some ways like “a step back.” But, she said, businesses like hers need the summer tourism rush to survive the quiet winter, when just a few hundred tourists come, largely to jump out of helicopters onto ski terrain. “If we have to wear the mask, that’s what we’ll do.”

Julia Raifman, a Boston University School of Public Health epidemiologist who is following state pandemic policies, isn’t surprised covid can attack a place like San Juan County despite high vaccination rates.

Data shows the vaccines protect against death and hospitalization due to covid. But even effective vaccines are no match for the transmissibility of delta. “Even in the best-case scenario — if vaccines reduce transmission by 80% — you’re actually twice as likely to get covid now than you were in July,” Raifman said, due to the virus’s recent proliferation. “It’s impossible statistically to achieve herd immunity with the delta variant.”

Meanwhile, many local and national leaders, including in Colorado, continue to focus on the vaccines almost exclusively as the path forward.

Talia Quandelacy, an epidemiologist with the University of Colorado-Denver and the Colorado School of Public Health, said the concept of herd immunity in this pandemic has been oversimplified and over-relied-on. “It’s a useful guide to have some sort of target to aim for,” she said. “But usually, if we hit a certain metric, that doesn’t mean that transmission or the pandemic is just going to disappear.”

Many scientists agree that, especially with most of the world still unvaccinated, covid is likely here to stay, eventually morphing into something more like the common cold. “It’s probably going to be a matter of a couple of years,” Quandelacy said. “But that seems to be the trajectory that we are on.”

For that reason, the “finish line” language used by many politicians has frustrated Anne Sosin, a policy fellow at the Nelson A. Rockefeller Center for Public Policy at Dartmouth College studying covid and rural health. The vaccines are doing what they’re supposed to do — keeping people from getting really sick, not keeping them from ever getting infected — but that hasn’t been communicated well. “The messaging around this has not been very nuanced,” she said.

She pointed to the experience of an epidemiologist who wrote in August in The Baltimore Sun that he’d caught covid at a house party where all 14 guests and the host were vaccinated. The host had infected him and nine others. “As miraculous as they are in keeping people out of the hospital and alive, we can’t rely on them alone to prevent infection,” Sosin said of the vaccines.

And public health experts said San Juan County shows that measures such as masks, ventilation and distancing are also needed. They are circulating the “Swiss cheese” model of covid defense, in which each prevention measure (or layer of cheese) has holes in it, but when stacked together they create an effective defense. Sosin said rural places, in particular, may need those layers of defense because residents are often tightly connected, and disease travels quickly within social networks.

Joyce, the public health director, who declined an interview request, wrote on Facebook in August that the county’s recent experience proved “the vaccine creates a line of defense but does not make us invincible to this disease or the variants.”

Raifman views that realization — paired with San Juan’s ensuing indoor mask requirement — as a success at a pivotal moment. The month-long mandate was then lifted Sept. 10, as the county had dropped back to a low covid transmission rate. At the time, it was the only county in Colorado with such low transmission.

“This is the moment where we kind of define: How are we managing the virus over the longer term?” Raifman said. “So far, we’re defining that we don’t manage it; we let it manage us.”

Even after lifting its mask mandate, the Facebook page of the county’s public health department urges residents to wear masks and “pay attention to the covid-19 situation just as you pay attention to the weather.”

Rae Ellen Bichell:
rbichell@kff.org,
@raelnb

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Richmond

FBI statistics show an alarming rise in homicides

RICHMOND, Virginia – The FBI says the nation’s homicide rate increased 30% in 2020 compared to 2019.

Central Virginia is well on its way to cracking last year’s totals in some cities. In fact, Richmond already has.

Rishard Watkins, 38, and father of five, was a devoted family man. He was shot dead on Coalter Street on Sunday afternoon.

He was number 59 murder victim of the year.

“I tell these boys, ‘Put your guns down,'” said Denise Ferguson, whose son was not only shot but also run over. “Do you want to pick something up? Take a Bible! “

Watkins is the latest murder victim in a city besieged by gun violence.

CBS6 delved deeper into the subject and found that Richmond ranked two places in the top five nationwide for homicides. As of now, the city is in first place for 2021. Its second district, the Southside, ranks fifth with Henrico with 19 murders.

All of Richmond has nearly doubled the death toll in Norfolk, Virginia Beach and Newport News, totaling more than 50 homicides.

“Losing a child is the hardest pill to swallow,” said Ferguson. “No mother should have to bury her child. It should be the other way around. “

Crime insider sources tell me that detectives have doubts that he was the intended target.

Ferguson blames the town’s youth, and that is in line with FBI data showing the numbers of young offenders are rising too.

“Not only was I hurt, but whoever did this to my child is going to hurt their mother,” said Ferguson. “So two families are affected.”

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NOVA

Arlington, Southside restaurants of the past

This subscriber-only story is available to everyone this week during our free food content preview. Please consider signing up using the link at the top of the page. Thank you for supporting local journalism.

From Patti’s Italian & American Restaurant to Grannie Mac’s, here’s a look back at some of our favorite restaurants in Arlington and Southside.

Village bread market

This restaurant was located at 4460 Hendricks Ave in the Miramar Shopping Center. In this August 1993 photo, Chef Paul Hart (left) and restaurant owner Mike Stallings work on dishes to be served to customers.

Patti's Italian and American Restaurant (Jacksonville)

Patti’s Italian & American Restaurant

This restaurant has been a culinary landmark in Jacksonville for more than four decades. It was opened by Peter and Mary Patti on Beach Boulevard when the road was still unpaved.

Howard Johnsons (Jacksonville)

Howard Johnson’s

Howard Johnson’s Philips Highway, as pictured in this November 13, 1956 postcard. In addition to the Philips Highway, Howard Johnson’s was also located on Ramona Boulevard and Golfair Boulevard.

Grandma Macs (Jacksonville)

Grandma Macs

Owned by Greg Correia, this restaurant was located on 3002 Philips Highway, which is considered one of the poorer parts of the city. In this June 1992 photo, Carolyn Burns (left) and Tammie Webb serve customers at lunchtime.

Thunderbird Motorhotel (Jacksonville)

The Thunderbird Motor Hotel

Located northeast of the Arlington Expressway and University Boulevard North, it was a popular venue that booked well-known music groups and even had a dinner theater. The hotel has closed and the sign no longer exists. The Thunderbird is featured in Dorothy Fletcher’s book “Lost Restaurants of Jacksonville”.

Piccadilly Cafeteria (Jacksonville)

Piccadilly Cafeteria

This restaurant has closed its Regency Square location after 21 years in business. The restaurant used to be on Regency Square Mall but later moved to a separate building. Piccadilly had several restaurants in the Jacksonville area. Today there is still one on the university boulevard.

Houlihans (government)

Houlihans

This was part of a chain when it opened on Regency Square Mall in 1981. It was in May of Cohen’s. In this 1981 photo, Paul and Edna Robinson, who were responsible for decorating the restaurant in an English puppy decor, are shown in the latest Houlihans they had just decorated.

Steak and Beer (Jacksonville)

The steak and ale

Known for its well-stocked salad bar, apple dessert, Kensington Club steak, New York Strip, herb roast prime rib and much more. The restaurant on 8350 Arlington Expressway had been in operation for nearly 30 years when it closed in 2000. The Tudor-style building with rough stucco walls, rustic beams and cozy rooms now houses a liquor store. Other local steak and ales were available on Blandling Boulevard in Orange Park and the Dix Ellis Trail in the Baymeadows area. This photo shows the Steak & Ale at Baymeadows in August 1978.

Chicken Dinner on Beach Road (Jacksonville)

Chicken dinner on the beach

Open for 80 years, the classic chicken dinner restaurant was sold in June 2019 to the owners of the OP Fish House & Oyster Bar, who want to bring this concept to the Atlantic Boulevard restaurant. But the classic chicken meals are not going away, say the new owners. They will continue to be part of a revamped menu under the renamed restaurant.

More classic restaurants from Jacksonville’s past

Crab Pot, Chizu, Giovannis and more:Classic restaurants from Jacksonville’s Beach’s past

Wormans, Crawdaddys, The Embers:Classic restaurants from downtown Jacksonville’s past

The Schnitzel House, Bonnie’s III, India: ‘s Classic restaurants from Baymeadow and Mandarin’s past

Red Barn Bar-BQ to Mommy’s Kitchen:Classic restaurants of Jacksonville’s Northside, Westside

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Richmond

Man shot in the face, expected to survive after the Richmond shooting

RICHMOND, Va. (WWBT) – Richmond police investigate a gunfight that left a man with gunshot wounds to the face.

Police responded to reports of a shooting in Willow Street near First Avenue at around 11 p.m. Thursday night.

There they found a man with gunshot wounds on his face. His identity was not made public.

The victim was taken to hospital but is said to survive.

There is currently no suspicious information.

This is breaking news. Follow NBC12 for updates.

Copyright 2021 WWBT. All rights reserved.

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Categories
NOVA

Play, post and stay connected in style – the new HUAWEI nova 8i is

The new HUAWEI nova 8i is here. It has it all and is perfect for you to add to your mobile experience – whether you love games, post shareable social media content, or just want to stay connected to your networks in style.

Available in Moonlight Silver and Starry Black, this is the great companion for you. And the deal of owning it? Great too.

THE DEAL

Buy it now for R6 999 and get a R699 worth of bluetooth speaker as part of the offer for free.

The HUAWEI nova 8i has a ton of super features – aside from its supercharge, which ensures it won’t run out of juice even if you can never put it down again – it has a camera with loads of tricks to keep your social media happy Needs, as well as an understanding of players’ needs for uninterrupted play. And on top of that, it looks good, the HUAWEI nova 8i inherits the characteristic, stylish design of the nova series and has a slim and perfectly proportioned case that is slimmer and thinner.

THE CAMERA

HUAWEI nova 8i brings incredible camera capabilities through its 64MP quad camera coupled with smart features that are best for those who love creating remarkable social media content.

The quad camera setup includes a 64 MP main camera, an 8 MP ultra wide angle camera, a 2 MP depth camera and a 2 MP macro camera that you can use in different scenarios like night photography, still photos, macro photos, portraits with large aperture covers, wide-angle shots and more.

CHARGE AND BATTERY

HUAWEI nova 8i supports Huawei advanced fast charging, 66W HUAWEI SuperCharge, so it can be fully charged in just 38 minutes. What if you only have 20 minutes to spare during a coffee break? You will also get 60% battery back during this time.

The HUAWEI nova 8i now offers a long battery life. In addition to a built-in 4300 mAh (typical value) battery, Huawei’s energy-saving AI algorithms optimize battery management and offer you performance that lasts all day.

GAMES

Since users often hold a smartphone horizontally for games and video playback, the HUAWEI nova 8i has adopted the optimized full-scene antenna setup with seven antennas around the body. Therefore, HUAWEI nova 8i can maintain a strong network connection even if it is held horizontally. When the battery is almost empty, you can use the 66W HUAWEI SuperCharge to quickly refuel. Thanks to these two functions, you can play your favorite games without interruption.

And when the critical moment comes to break a tie, the last thing you want to see is the interruption of incoming calls or messages. The Game Assistant setup allows you to fully immerse yourself in the game. In addition, you can quickly tap and open the message in the floating window without leaving the game.

Categories
Richmond

Shamin Hotels Prevents Foreclosure Auction For Short Pump Hilton

The Hilton Richmond Hotel & Spa at 12042 W. Broad St. (BizSense file)

A last minute deal helped a local hotelier keep ownership of one of its flagship Richmond hotels.

Shamin Hotels confirmed Thursday that it had entered into an agreement with the lender through its Hilton Richmond Hotel & Spa at 12042 W. Broad St., Short Pump, that prevented a courthouse scheduled for Sept. 28 on the steps of Henrico County .

Neil Amin

“We are delighted to have reached an agreement with the lender last week,” Shamin CEO Neil Amin said in an email to BizSense. “It was not a financial decision, but one based on the personal connection we have with the community we live in and to ensure the hotel continues to be a world class facility for the Richmond area. Although the pandemic continues to challenge our industry, we will continue to invest in our people and hotels. “

Amin would not discuss the terms of the agreement.

Henry Brandenstein, attorney at the Venable law firm, which handled the foreclosure proceedings, also confirmed that the auction was canceled at the bondholder’s request.

In addition to the ability for Shamin to continue his ownership of the hotel, the deal provides for the company to resume the day-to-day operations of the property, which has been handled by a court-appointed insolvency administrator for the past 10 months.

The 254-room hotel went into bankruptcy in January after Shamin defaulted on a $ 45 million loan secured by the property.

Shamin defaulted on loan payments for the Short Pump Hilton from April 2020 as COVID-related closings and social distancing hit property hard – especially the events business.

Among the largest hoteliers in the region with more than 60 hotels, mainly in the Mid-Atlantic, Shamin built and opened the hotel in December 2009 as the anchor of the Towne Center West development. The distressed loan was borrowed from JP Morgan Chase in 2013 and then bundled into a package of commercial mortgage-backed securities, or CMBS.

The foreclosure group is a company that represents the holders of the CMBS loan. That group, which operated as 12042 West Broad Street Holdings LLC, filed a lawsuit in the Henrico County Circuit Court last December to have the court appoint a bankruptcy trustee to take over the hotel and keep it up and running.

The bankruptcy trustee, Northern Virginia-based Crescent Hotel Management Services, was finally appointed by the court in January. She will continue to operate the property until this new agreement is confirmed by the court.

The CMBS loan was $ 46 million prior to administration. The original loan was a no recourse loan, which means the bondholder will not be able to come to Shamin for the balance after the foreclosure.

The Hilton hotel is one of dozen of Henrico County hotels whose values ​​have plummeted due to lost revenue due to the pandemic. The county recently rated the hotel at $ 12 million, nearly two-thirds less than $ 35 million in 2020. Hotel reviews are based in part on their earnings.

Shamin stayed busy anyway. The company is nearing completion of construction of the nearby Home2Suites on 209 Towne Center West Blvd. There will also be a Home2Suites adjacent to the Embassy Suites property near the corner of West Broad Street and Glenside Drive and a Moxy Hotel by Marriott in the Built downtown on 501 E. Franklin St.

The company also acquired four existing hotels this year, including three on the Virginia Beach coast and one in Newport News.

Categories
NOVA

InFive: Gander Mountain Vaccine Clinic to Reopen Soon | Headlines

Top news and notes from Northern Virginia and beyond.

5. Incentives to vaccinate

Manassas City Council voted this week to grant a $ 300 incentive or a day of paid vacation to all city government employees who demonstrate a full COVID-19 vaccination by November 15.

4. Booster recordings

Prince William County’s health officials are due to reopen a mass vaccination clinic in the old Gander Mountain store in Woodbridge next week to provide free COVID-19 booster vaccinations.

3. Another sunny day

Another mostly sunny day is on tap with high temperatures around 72 degrees. Click here for a detailed forecast by postcode.

2. Indoor ski area

Plans for the world’s largest indoor ski area in Lorton are moving forward, and Fairfax regulators expect action next month.

1. Potomac Heritage Trail

Local and federal officials gathered on Sunday, National Public Lands Day, to officially open a 1 mile stretch of the Potomac Heritage National Scenic Trail in Belmont Bay that required decades of collaboration.

From the inside to the outside

The Manassas Fall Anniversary returns on Saturday from 10am to 5pm with more than 100 craft and community stalls filling the streets of Old Manassas for the 38th annual event. InsideNoVa staff will be on site, so come and visit us!

Categories
Richmond

Willard Foster Obituary (1929-2021) – Richmond, VA

FOSTER, Willard A. “Bill”, Jr., 91, of Richmond, Virginia, died peacefully on September 25, 2021 with his family after a brief illness.

Born on October 10, 1929, in Lynn, Massachusetts, to the late Dagmar Wahl Foster and Willard A. Foster Sr., he grew up in Clinton, Iowa. He attended Clinton High School and graduated from Iowa State University with a BS in industrial engineering in 1953. He was a proud member of the Alpha Tau Omega Fraternity. After college, he spent two years in the US Army Corps of Engineers, stationed in France, and retired as a first lieutenant.

In 1955, Bill began his nearly two-decade career with the Reynolds Metals Company in Illinois. He married his wife Martha in 1958 and they spent the first six months of their marriage to Reynolds in Wales, England. They returned to the United States and settled in Waynesboro, Virginia. While living in the valley, they had their three daughters and also met lifelong friends affectionately known as the Cape May Group. The group has been on vacation together for over 20 years and is still in contact today. Bill and his family moved to Richmond in 1964 and worked for the Reynolds Metals Company until 1972. They returned to Waynesboro so Bill could take on the role of CEO of Virginia Metal Crafters until 1975 when he moved the family back to Richmond and became CEO of Biggs Furniture. In 1979 he became President of Millhiser Incorporated and in 1981 became a co-owner. Bill and his partner sold Millhiser in 1999 and retired after a long, successful career.

Bill was a member of the Waynesboro and Bon Air Rotary Clubs, the Virginia Manufacturers Association, and the Richmond Jazz Association. His love for music began in elementary school and he played bass violin in jazz ensemble The Honeydrippers in high school and The Skyliners throughout college. He enjoyed making music with friends at small gatherings later in life. He was a member and active in the Bon Air Presbyterian Church.

He and Martha built a second home, Bayberry Breeze, in Kilmarnock, Virginia, where they enjoyed being on the bay and hosting friends and family. Bill’s greatest passion was designing and woodworking. Those he loved were lucky recipients of Cape Cod-style signs, annual screen-printed Valentine’s and Christmas cards, and hand-carved birds made in his “Some Place” store at his home. Other hobbies throughout his life included tennis, sailing, “working” on Sudoku puzzles, and bird watching.

He is survived by his loving wife Martha Paine Foster; three daughters, Susan Elizabeth Foster (July) from Glen Mills, Pennsylvania, Polly Ann Foster (Charles) from Richmond, Virginia, and Rebecca Foster Horgan (Tim) from Centerville, Virginia; his sisters Grace Foster Hamper (Sid) and Dagmar Foster, both from Chicago, Illinois. Bill enjoyed spending time with eight grandchildren, Sophie Elizabeth, Miles Quinn Foster-Larner, Joseph Wilson Agee (Amanda), Rebecca Elizabeth Agee (Jonathan), Teak Clay Edwards, Grace Ann, Sarah Elizabeth, and Alexander George Horgan; and two great-grandchildren, Grayson Agee and Nora Ann Eilertson.

A memorial service for Bill will be held at Bliley’s – Central, 3801 Augusta Ave., Richmond, Virginia 23230 on Saturday, October 9, 2021 at 12 noon. Masks are requested.

Please consider donating to a charity of your choice.

Published by the Richmond Times-Dispatch on October 1, 2021.