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Chesapeake

Chesapeake Bay Foundation’s Clean the Bay Day Collects 52,306 Pounds of Trash

(Courtesy of the Chesapeake Bay Foundation)

REGIONAL – Residents around the Chesapeake watershed donned gloves and packed rubbish for the Chesapeake Bay Foundation (CBF) annual Clean the Bay Day, an event dedicated to waste disposal.

Clean the Bay Day has been held every year since 1989, with the exception of 2020 when it was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

This year’s event was the first since it was transformed into a weeklong, self-directed event.

Participants were able to take action at any convenient location, in their own time and at their own pace, and then log their results online. Volunteers also planted 512 native plants and installed nine rain barrels.

RELATED STORY: Clean the Bay Day: The Chesapeake Bay Foundation is bringing back a day dedicated to cleaning the bay

More than 2,000 volunteers across Virginia collected 52,306 pounds of trash as part of the cleanup, according to a CBF press release.

“That was just amazing. Although they weren’t together, they all worked together for a healthy environment, ”said Kristin Webb, CBF Clean the Bay Day coordinator. “Everywhere in parks, creeks and beaches to streets and playgrounds, people have cleared away tens of thousands of pounds of rubbish. So many got involved, from families and friends to Governor Northam and members of Congress. What a wonderful week. “

Volunteers posted videos and photos on social media using the hashtag #CleanTheBayDay and entered to win prizes. Submissions are featured on CBF’s social media accounts and are also included in the compilation video here. More information about the event can be found at www.cbf.org/clean.

Virginia Governor Ralph Northam was cleaning up trash along the James River with members of his cabinet and Richmond Mayor Levar Stoney.

Northam also signed a proclamation declaring an extended Clean the Bay Day last week, inviting Virginians to help out in the effort. Many other officials attended, including United States Representatives Rob Wittman of Westmoreland State Park and Elaine Luria of the Cape Charles Rosenwald School Restoration Initiative, State Delegate Angelia Williams Graves, David L Lady Pamela Northam.

RELATED STORY: Virginia Commits to Reducing Polluted Runoff from State Lands to Help Restore Chesapeake Bay

Clean the Bay Day sponsors include Ulliman Schutte – Alberici Joint Venture, Anheuser-Busch, River Network, Port of Virginia, High Liner Foods, Avangrid Renewables, and Ball Corp. Clean the Bay Day also thanks REI, North End Bag Company, Virginia State Parks, Starbucks, Taste Unlimited, Rogue Oysters, and Chessie Seafood & Aquafarm for donating prizes.

For more information about the Chesapeake Bay Foundation, visit their website by clicking here.

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Chesapeake

Special Olympics ‘Flame of Hope’ makes its way through Chesapeake

CHESAPEAKE, Virginia (WAVY) – This week, the “Flame of Hope” is making its way through the Commonwealth to celebrate the return of the Virginia Special Olympics after COVID-19 put many of its events on hold last year Has.

Fifty-six people from the Chesapeake Sheriff’s Office joined 2,000 law enforcement officers from 200 agencies across the state this week to keep the “flame of hope” burning.

You will cover a total of 22,000 miles – one for each Special Olympics athlete. This includes Chesapeake’s own Chad Allen, who often carries the torch at this annual run.

“I take a rest and am ready to go again. I don’t want to give up, ”Allen told WAVY.com.

This attitude also helps him in competition, where he won many medals in swimming in bowling.

Chad and other Special Olympians knew the isolation long before COVID-19. Fundraising events like these are important in getting them back into play.

Maj. Chris Pascal organizes all Special Olympics events with the Chesapeake Sheriff’s Office.

“Once you get to know the athletes, there will always be a moment or encounter that touches your heart and when that happens you are addicted. You can’t escape it, you don’t want to get away from it. They are looking forward to the next event, ”he said.

Chesapeake raised around $ 5,000 and is slowly starting its local events like “Splash at the Lake” and “Dancing with the Athlete,” which Allen helped create.

Traditionally, the torch relay ends with the lighting of the cauldron in Richmond to begin the Summer Games.

This year, due to the pandemic, they are holding smaller regional events.

They will light the cauldron in Richmond tomorrow, Saturday, June 12th at 2pm during a virtual ceremony Facebook.

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Chesapeake

COMMENTARY: Sen. John Warner was a champion of Chesapeake Bay | Opinion

Perhaps that is why he raised $ 10 million to have the dam removed in 2004 as part of a military exercise. This act opened up well over 160 kilometers of spawning habitat for American allis shad, striped bass, American eel and other migratory fish species.

In the late 1990s, Sen. Warner campaigned for the newly established Rappahannock River Valley National Wildlife Refuge by helping secure its first-ever conservation grant from the Land and Water Conservation Fund.

The refuge’s scenic borderline was new for its time, as it spans seven counties and spans 60 miles of the banks of the Rappahannock River. Today, thanks to early advocates like Sen. Warner, visitors can hike trails, launch canoes and kayaks, fish and hunt, and enjoy the abundance of wildlife.

His love for the Rappahannock River and its eponymous refuge did not end there, but continued after he stepped down from the Senate.

He was fascinated by the convergence of bald eagles along the Rappahannock River, especially in places like the Fones Cliffs, a 4 mile long formation along the tidally freshened portion of the Rappahannock River in Richmond County. The forested cliffs reach heights of 80 to 100 feet above the river and are made of diatomite, which was formed millions of years ago.

Our bald eagles in Chesapeake Bay have a burgeoning breeding population along the Rappahannock, but what makes the area even more special is its attraction for southeast eagles moving north in the spring and New England and Canada eagles moving south Winter. It’s a unique phenomenon in Chesapeake Bay.

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Chesapeake

Henry Landon Derby of Captain’s Cove

Henry Landon Derby, 86, passed away at his home on Sunday June 6, 2021. He was born on May 8, 1935 in Accomac, VA, to Henry Wise Derby and Lillian Doughty Derby. He leaves behind his wife, Ann Carter Derby, and several cousins.

A graduate of Onancock High School in the 1953 class, he received his BA from the University of Richmond in 1957 and his M.Ed. from the University of Virginia.

Henry was an Eagle Scout and served as Scoutmaster for Troop 313 in Onancock, VA. He taught in Norfolk County for a year; returned to the east coast from 1958 to 1972 as director of the Chincoteague Elementary School; and was a former director of the Virginia Education Association.

As an antique dealer, he was a founding member and first president of the Delmarva Antique Dealers Association for 40 years. He was a former member of the Lee District Ruritan Club, Onancock Lions Club, Eastern Shore Yacht & Country Club, Onancock Town Council, and was a member of the Atlantic United Methodist Church.

A funeral service will be held at the grave at Belle Haven Cemetery in Belle Haven, VA, under the direction of Reverend Hodae Kim, at 11:00 a.m.

Instead of flowers, commemorative donations can be made to the Foodbank of the Eastern Shore, PO Box 518, Onley, VA 23418.

Commemorations can be shared with the family at www.williamsfuneralhomes.com.

Arrangements from the Williams-Parksley Funeral Home.

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Chesapeake

Henry Landon Derby – Eastern Shore Post

Mr Henry Landon Derby, 86, passed away at his home on Sunday June 6, 2021. He was born on May 8, 1935 in Accomac to Henry Wise Derby and Lillian Doughty Derby. He leaves behind his wife, Ann Carter Derby, and several cousins.

A graduate of Onancock High School in the 1953 class, he received his BA from the University of Richmond in 1957 and his M.Ed. from the University of Virginia.

Henry was an Eagle Scout and served as Scoutmaster for Troop 313 at Onancock. He taught in Norfolk County for a year; returned to the east coast from 1958 to 1972 as director of the Chincoteague Elementary School; and was a past director of the Virginia Education Association.

As an antique dealer, he was a founding member and first president of the Delmarva Antique Dealers Association for 40 years. He was a former member of the Lee District Ruritan Club, Onancock Lions Club, Eastern Shore Yacht & Country Club, Onancock Town Council, and was a member of the Atlantic United Methodist Church.

On Thursday, June 10, 2021, at 11 a.m., there will be a funeral service under Pastor Hodae Kim at Belle Haven Cemetery, Belle Haven.

Instead of flowers, commemorative donations can be made to the Foodbank of the Eastern Shore, PO Box 518, Onley, VA 23418.

Commemorations can be shared with the family at www.williamsfuneralhomes.com

The arrangements are from the Williams-Parksley Funeral Home.

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Chesapeake

Century-old school will soon anchor a Black history center | Associated Press

CHESAPEAKE, Virginia (AP) – On a piece of hard land just steps from an aging one-room schoolhouse, a white tombstone spells the name of the man who never left.

Randolph C. Snead Sr.

December 8, 1939

March 22, 2021

Decades before his death, Snead was studying math and other subjects at the 20 by 30 foot Cornland School. His aunt Ethel, buried in the family grave a few rows away from him, also attended. The sturdy building still stands on his family’s property.

For years, the school in front of Rosenwald, built for the education of African-Americans, stood empty, but an impetus from Snead’s wife, local historians, parishioners, a councilor, state delegates and congressmen breathed new life into the building.

This summer, the school will be uprooted from its historic location along Benefit Road, loaded onto a truck and towed about five miles to the edge of the Great Dismal Swamp. It will be a museum and the centerpiece of a $ 9 million historic center that will showcase exhibits about the subway and maroon communities, as well as an outdoor classroom.

The city council last week unanimously voted for a $ 3 million grant from the Virginia Department of Historic Resources to help build a visitor center, parking and exhibits. The city allocated $ 400,000 to relocate the school last year.

There’s no set schedule for when the village will be built, but the goal is to have portions of it open by spring 2023, said Mike Barber, director of Chesapeake Parks, Recreation and Tourism. The city is hoping for another $ 3 million grant from Congressman Donald McEachin, who announced a few weeks ago that the historic village was part of his application for funding for the coming fiscal year.

Efforts to preserve Cornland go back a dozen years. Randy Snead was frustrated at this time and wondered why it was taking so long. At some point he said he would like to tear it off completely. He was the type of person who liked getting things done. Snead’s wife convinced him otherwise.

“I told him we needed a reference to tell our kids how far we’ve come,” said Wanza Snead. She wanted to follow the mission of the nonprofit Cornland School Foundation: educate future generations about the early efforts to educate African American people.

In 2010, Preservation Virginia, a Richmond-based nonprofit, listed Cornland as one of the most endangered historic sites. The group said the school was the oldest African American school in Hampton Roads, built before the Rosenwald School Movement when philanthropist Julius Rosenwald was born in the early 20th century.

The Cornland School Foundation helped get the school listed on the National Registry of Historic Places and the Virginia Landmark Registry. Since its inception in 2011, the group, led by Councilor Ella Ward, has found around two dozen former Cornland students still living in Chesapeake. Researchers believe the school was built in 1903.

The oral records of the former students are striking testimony to an era of separate schools established after the Virginia Constitution of 1869 that required public education for all children but required white and black students, according to the Virginia Department of Historic Resources be taught separately. White students generally had access to more schools and teachers and a longer school year. Black schools received far fewer resources.

Years ago, passers-by on Benefit Road didn’t know the Cornland School was there – grapevines covered the facade and the grass grew tall. Volunteers helped remove asbestos from the interior walls, replace some exterior planks, and put sand under the building to absorb moisture.

One recent Monday, Ward, a former educator and chairman of the Cornland School Foundation, organized a group – including two former students – to tour the school and the proposed new location.

When it was a schoolhouse, Cornland had no running water or electricity. A wood stove in the middle of the room kept the students warm and was used to cook lunch. The students in grades 1 to 7 were taught by a teacher in daylight. Once the school has moved to its new home, the building will face the same north-south orientation. The city will also be reinstalling its original wooden floors, the boards of which are now piled high in one corner.

The school was built using natural materials from sawmills in the Great Dismal Swamp, said Patti McCambridge, a member of the foundation.

The exact date that Cornland was built is a matter of dispute. The building served as the reincarnation of a school believed to have been built by ex-slaves in 1885, according to Virginian Pilot’s archives. Others say there was at one point a Cornland School for white children, and the school for African American children took on several names: Cornland School for Colored Children, Cornland School No. 4, Benefit School.

What is clear is that Cornland is one of the few remaining post-Civil War schoolhouses built for African Americans in Norfolk County, now part of Chesapeake, according to a 2010 Department of Historic Resources report.

When the school closed in 1952, Cornland students were relocated to the newly built but racially segregated Southeastern Elementary School.

Emma Mitchell Nixon and Mildred Brown attended Cornland School and visited the building last week. They remember running 7 or 8 miles to and from school. White students on school buses sometimes threw stones at Cornland students or hurled racial slurs, the students remember. Brown said Cornland got a bus there for the last of their seven years – but it was so worn and used it broke every week.

Despite these challenges, they were determined to learn. In addition to learning math, writing and other core subjects, the teacher also showed the students how to knit, sew and work with wood.

“That was the only school I had to go to,” said Nixon.

Randy Snead attended school until about 1950, then moved to other separate schools. He later earned a bachelor’s degree in mathematics from Virginia Union University in Richmond and held an engineering position until he retired in 1998.

About seven years ago, Snead told a Virginian Pilot reporter that he never thought the school had any historical significance.

“I didn’t think anyone would be that interested,” he said.

But the Foundation believes his experience and that of many other Cornland students need to be shared.

The school – and the educational center it will belong to – will tell a story that hasn’t been told in the history books, Ward said.

Ward grew up in separate schools in Suffolk. In a recent interview, she recalled her time at math conferences where she found that other schools in Virginia offered trigonometry while hers didn’t. She decided to protest with other students at her school and urged the headmaster and headmaster to offer the class.

Ward shares this story to remind people of the struggles that have been waged for a more equitable education system. It is important to understand this story, she said.

And she said it was an opportunity to celebrate what people like Randy Snead have achieved in spite of everything that stood in their way.

Categories
Chesapeake

Century-Old School Will Soon Anchor a Black History Center – NBC4 Washington

On a piece of hard land just steps from an aging one-room schoolhouse, a white tombstone spells out the name of the man who never left.

Randolph C. Snead Sr.

December 8, 1939

March 22, 2021

Decades before his death, Snead was studying math and other subjects at the 20 by 30 foot Cornland School. His aunt Ethel, buried in the family grave a few rows away from him, also attended. The sturdy building still stands on his family’s property.

For years, the school in front of Rosenwald, built for the education of African-Americans, stood empty, but an impetus from Snead’s wife, local historians, parishioners, a councilor, state delegates and congressmen breathed new life into the building.

This summer, the school will be uprooted from its historic location along Benefit Road, loaded onto a truck and towed about five miles to the edge of the Great Dismal Swamp. It will be a museum and the centerpiece of a $ 9 million historic center that will showcase exhibits about the subway and maroon communities, as well as an outdoor classroom.

The city council last week unanimously voted for a $ 3 million grant from the Virginia Department of Historic Resources to help build a visitor center, parking and exhibits. The city allocated $ 400,000 to relocate the school last year.

There’s no set schedule for when the village will be built, but the goal is to have portions of it open by spring 2023, said Mike Barber, director of Chesapeake Parks, Recreation and Tourism. The city is hoping for another $ 3 million grant from Congressman Donald McEachin, who announced a few weeks ago that the historic village was part of his application for funding for the coming fiscal year.

Efforts to preserve Cornland go back a dozen years. Randy Snead was frustrated at this time and wondered why it was taking so long. At some point he said he would like to tear it off completely. He was the type of person who liked getting things done. Snead’s wife convinced him otherwise.

“I told him we needed a reference to tell our kids how far we’ve come,” said Wanza Snead. She wanted to follow the mission of the nonprofit Cornland School Foundation: to educate future generations about the early efforts to educate African American people.

In 2010, Preservation Virginia, a Richmond-based nonprofit, listed Cornland as one of the most endangered historic sites. The group said the school was the oldest African-American school in Hampton Roads, built before the Rosenwald school movement when philanthropist Julius Rosenwald began in the early 20th

The Cornland School Foundation helped get the school listed on the National Registry of Historic Places and the Virginia Landmark Registry. Since its inception in 2011, the group, led by Councilor Ella Ward, has found around two dozen former Cornland students still living in Chesapeake. Researchers believe the school was built in 1903.

The oral records of the former students are striking testimony to an era of separate schools established after the Virginia Constitution of 1869 that required public education for all children but required white and black students, according to the Virginia Department of Historic Resources be taught separately. White students generally had access to more schools and teachers and a longer school year. Black schools received far fewer resources.

Years ago, passers-by on Benefit Road didn’t know the Cornland School was there – grapevines covered the facade and the grass grew tall. Volunteers helped remove asbestos from the interior walls, replace some exterior planks, and put sand under the building to absorb moisture.

One recent Monday, Ward, a former educator and chairman of the Cornland School Foundation, organized a group – including two former students – to tour the school and the proposed new location.

When it was a schoolhouse, Cornland had no running water or electricity. A wood stove in the middle of the room kept the students warm and was used to cook lunch. The students in grades 1 to 7 were taught by a teacher in daylight. Once the school has moved to its new home, the building will face the same north-south orientation. The city will also be reinstalling its original wooden floors, the boards of which are now piled high in one corner.

The school was built using natural materials from sawmills in the Great Dismal Swamp, said Patti McCambridge, a member of the foundation.

The exact date that Cornland was built is a matter of dispute. The building served as the reincarnation of a school believed to have been built by ex-slaves in 1885, according to Virginian Pilot’s archives. Others say there was at one point a Cornland School for white children, and the school for African American children took on several names: Cornland School for Colored Children, Cornland School No. 4, Benefit School.

What is clear is that Cornland is one of the few remaining post-Civil War schoolhouses built for African Americans in Norfolk County, now part of Chesapeake, according to a 2010 Department of Historic Resources report.

When the school closed in 1952, Cornland students were relocated to the newly built but racially segregated Southeastern Elementary School.

Emma Mitchell Nixon and Mildred Brown attended Cornland School and visited the building last week. They remember running 7 or 8 miles to and from school. White students on school buses sometimes threw stones at Cornland students or hurled racial slurs, the students remember. Brown said Cornland got a bus there for the last of their seven years – but it was so worn and used it broke every week.

Despite these challenges, they were determined to learn. In addition to learning math, writing and other core subjects, the teacher also showed the students how to knit, sew and work with wood.

“That was the only school I had to go to,” said Nixon.

Randy Snead attended school until about 1950, then moved to other separate schools. He later earned a bachelor’s degree in mathematics from Virginia Union University in Richmond and held an engineering position until he retired in 1998.

About seven years ago, Snead told a Virginian Pilot reporter that he never thought the school had any historical significance.

“I didn’t think anyone would be that interested,” he said.

But the Foundation believes his experience and that of many other Cornland students need to be shared.

The school – and the educational center it will belong to – will tell a story that hasn’t been told in the history books, Ward said.

Ward grew up in separate schools in Suffolk. In a recent interview, she recalled her time at math conferences where she found that other schools in Virginia offered trigonometry while hers didn’t. She decided to protest with other students at her school and urged the headmaster and headmaster to offer the class.

Ward shares this story to remind people of the struggles that have been waged for a more equitable education system. It is important to understand this story, she said.

And she said it was an opportunity to celebrate what people like Randy Snead have achieved in spite of everything that stood in their way.

Categories
Chesapeake

Century-old school will soon anchor a Black history center | State and Regional News

There’s no set schedule for when the village will be built, but the goal is to have portions of it open by spring 2023, said Mike Barber, director of Chesapeake Parks, Recreation and Tourism. The city is hoping for another $ 3 million grant from Congressman Donald McEachin, who announced a few weeks ago that the historic village was part of his application for funding for the coming fiscal year.

Efforts to preserve Cornland go back a dozen years. Randy Snead was frustrated at this time and wondered why it was taking so long. At some point he said he would like to tear it off completely. He was the type of person who liked getting things done. Snead’s wife convinced him otherwise.

“I told him we needed a reference to tell our kids how far we’ve come,” said Wanza Snead. She wanted to follow the mission of the nonprofit Cornland School Foundation: to educate future generations about the early efforts to educate African American people.

In 2010, Preservation Virginia, a Richmond-based nonprofit, listed Cornland as one of the most endangered historic sites. The group said the school was the oldest African-American school in Hampton Roads, built before the Rosenwald school movement when philanthropist Julius Rosenwald began in the early 20th

The Cornland School Foundation helped get the school listed on the National Registry of Historic Places and the Virginia Landmark Registry. Since its inception in 2011, the group, led by Councilor Ella Ward, has found around two dozen former Cornland students still living in Chesapeake. Researchers believe the school was built in 1903.

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Chesapeake

Waterspout Wisdom | Chesapeake Bay Magazine

Photo: Shutterstock

By Ann Eichenmüller

The headboat anchored in the Newport News Middle Ground, eager fishermen with rods,
the first mate hobbled from the stern. He and the captain had their eyes fixed on the northwest sky and were focused
on a build-up of heavy, dark clouds. They watched in horror as a thin funnel descended and touched the surface, then turned toward them.

The captain, usually a sociable soul, ran wordlessly to the helm. He started the engine and put the boat into gear while the mate climbed to the bow. The young mate grabbed the anchor line and pulled with all his might as the boat catapulted forward. The anchor came loose and as he wrestled it aboard he turned to see the captain standing pale, hatchet in hand, ready to cut the line if necessary.

That first mate was my husband, and he realized that any weather phenomenon that can shake a seasoned headboat captain should be taken seriously. No wonder waterspouts are legends. Decades ago sightings were a rarity, but today Facebook and Instagram are flooded with photos of water eddies on the Chesapeake. What has changed? According to Channel 6 Richmond’s chief meteorologist Zach Daniels, it’s not necessarily the weather.

“Twenty years ago there were very few cell phones. If you were on a boat and saw a waterspout, maybe you would come home and call a friend. It would go that far. Now everyone wears a smartphone with a camera all the time. Nothing escapes the documentation. “

That doesn’t mean chasing waterspouts to get the perfect shot to share is a good idea. Waterspouts can be photogenic, but they’re also dangerous.

“We often talk about tornadic activity in connection with strong thunderstorms,” explains Daniels. “These super cells can produce waterspouts or form tornadoes over land, which then move across the water without losing much of their power.”

A particularly devastating example of the latter is the 2016 EF-3 tornado that ripped through Essex County, Virginia, then crossed a mile and a half wide section of the Rappahannock River before going ashore on the Northern Neck, causing widespread damage in its wake. And although storm-generated waterspouts that form over water tend to be weaker, they are often accompanied by strong winds, rough seas, rain, lightning, and even hail. They can reach speeds of up to 130 km / h and are from a foot in diameter to the size of a soccer field.

And as if that wasn’t enough, according to Daniels, even waterspouts can form without a storm. “We call these fair-weather waterspouts, similar to a ‘dust devil’ or a ‘leafnado’. Whenever you have cooler air over a warm, humid surface, you have what we call buoyancy. Situations like this can easily create waterspouts in calm conditions. “

Fair-weather waterspouts are usually short-lived, move very little, and fall apart when touching land – but that doesn’t mean they can’t capsize a small boat or damage a larger boat. Because of this, the National Weather Service warns boaters to take precautions if they encounter a waterspout, regardless of its origin:

  • If you spot a waterspout, seek a safe haven immediately.
  • Avoid the waterspout by driving at right angles to its apparent direction of movement.
  • If a collision is likely, remove the sails, secure loose items, close hatches and, if possible, go below deck.
  • Under no circumstances should a boater attempt to navigate through a waterspout.

And although legend has it that firing a cannon in the path of a waterspout will break it open, the myth is unfounded, so don’t fire your flare gun or throw your lounge chairs at one.

Regarding waterspout myths, several local aquarists say they heard it was “raining fish” that were soaked up with the water in a waterspout. Daniels points out that the funnel you see isn’t “sucked up” seawater, but rather a swirling mist of condensed water vapor. However, he agrees that an overwater tornado has enough suction to carry objects – including fish. In fact, according to New York meteorologist Bill Evans in his book It’s Raining Fish and Spiders, all types of creatures have been reported to rain during tornadic activity, including snakes, worms, and crabs, but fish and frogs are the most common. Worldwide, he writes, such events are reported about 40 times a year.

So next time you’re out on the boat and see a waterspout, keep your distance – and to be on the safe side, you may want to cover your head.

The first in Zach Daniels’ series of children’s weather books, Walter and the Terrible Twister, was published this month.

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Chesapeake

Husband of woman killed in Chesapeake heard struggle on phone before her abduction, court documents say

The day she disappeared, Laura Miles had been talking to her husband on the phone when he heard her scream.

The husband then heard a fight and the call was disconnected. When he tried repeatedly to reach her again, she didn’t answer.

Miles’ husband called the police and sparked a search for the 61-year-old and, ultimately, the discovery of her body in a wooded area in Western Branch.

19-year-old Raheem Lamont Cherry is now charged with murder, robbery, kidnapping and concealing a corpse in her death. He remains detained in Chesapeake City Jail, without any commitment.

Search warrant documents recently filed with the Circuit Court shed new light on Miles’ disappearance and death. As for the detectives’ findings, Cherry had lived in an apartment several hundred feet from Miles and his fingerprints were found on her pickup truck, police wrote on court documents.

Details from the warrants were first reported by WVEC on Tuesday.

On May 17, officers were called to Miles’ apartment on the 3500 block on Clover Road to seek a possible kidnapping. Miles’ husband told police that his wife received unusual text messages from her phone after failing to answer his repeated calls, police wrote in a search warrant affidavit.

He got a text “claimed she was okay,” but Miles “only writes okay when he uses that word,” police said. Miles would always end a conversation saying she loved her husband, but that day she didn’t write that.

The officers found Miles’ vehicle parked on the opposite side of the apartment complex. Drops of blood and smears were seen on the back of the tail bed, the police wrote in an affidavit to the search warrant.

Later that day, Miles was found dead with multiple stab wounds in a wooded area on the 4600 block of Taylor Road, less than half a mile from her home.

Police searched Miles’ Ford F-150 for forensic evidence. Her keys and her cell phone were not inside, but the police found Kirsch’s fingerprints on the vehicle, a detective wrote in a sworn declaration on the search warrant.

The story goes on

The detective checked the surveillance footage, which showed a man in a plaid shirt, camouflage headdress, and black slip-on shoes hijacked by air from an apartment building a few hundred feet from Miles, about 20 minutes before her disappearance. He had a cell phone in hand and was walking around the parking lot, the detective wrote.

Two other detectives got in touch with Cherry and interviewed him on the 3300 block off Pampus Lane – near Miles’s disappearance. Cherry said he had been in this apartment with his girlfriend for a few weeks.

The police received arrest warrants to search Miles and Cherry’s homes and obtain a swab of Kirsch’s DNA.

Cherry moved to the area from Richmond in March and, according to court records, had started a new job at McDonald’s three days before his arrest.

After his arrest, a judge had to determine if Cherry qualified on bail. The judge warned Cherry that anything he said could be used against him in court.

When asked if he had anything to say about bail, Cherry advised “he was involved in the alleged crimes,” according to court documents.

Cherry is due to appear for a preliminary hearing in court on Aug. 11.

Margaret Matray, 757-222-5216, margaret.matray@pilotonline.com