Jeannie Brown feels trapped in her own home.
People are also reading…
- New attorney is representing Wolfe as case moves forward
- Smyth supervisor seeks more communication from Thomas Bridge Water system
- Blacksburg elementary principal among 17 men arrested in prostitution case
- Atkins Elementary celebrates new community-engaged playground
- Chilhowie man faces multiple charges in domestic violence incident
- Top Smyth DAR essay wins state competition
- Meet Smyth County's Pet of the Week: Sable
- Marion council members debate apolitical status with redistricting, 2A requests
- Along the Yellow Brick Road
- Roanoke County family files lawsuit against VHSL, school board over homeschool sports rule
- Royal Oak DAR names 3 high school seniors as Good Citizens
- Smyth250 activities kick off Sunday with free movie
- Judge orders Trump to halt White House ballroom construction unless Congress OKs it
- Saltville begins preparations for pool season
- What we know about the quadruple amputee cornhole champ arrested for murder in Virginia
Jeannie Brown goes through documents from a lawsuit she's filed against the Hunting Hills Place Homeowners Association.
HEATHER ROUSSEAU, The Roanoke Times
Jeannie Brown and her husband, Tony Sheen enjoy their dog, Caymus in their townhouse in Hunting Hills Place. The couple decided they needed to move to a one-story house, as Brown's mobility deteriorated with her multiple sclerosis, making it challenging to move up and down the stairs. But that's become an issue after a situation evolved in Hunting Hills.
HEATHER ROUSSEAU, The Roanoke TimesSeveral longtime residents of an older townhouse community in North Stafford, Virginia, feel they’re being forced to comply with a homeowner’s association they don’t want any part of.
- Masaaki Okada
05-17-1975 (cutline): Busch League Racers Gov. Mills E. Godwin Jr. and Mrs. August Busch III start in the lead car around the LeMans track at the French Village of the Busch Gardens Old Country at Williamsburg. The governor, Busch executives, and government officials took part in the official dedication of the new park yesterday.
- Gary Burns
10-20-1974 (cutline): Several exterior sections were rushed to completion to be filmed. Commercials were done at site in mid-October. Busch Gardens Williamsburg received its first national advertising exposure on Thanksgiving evening on the NBC television network.
Busch Gardens from the archives
Busch Gardens opened in Williamsburg in May 1975. On May 16, 1975, more than 6,000 guests visitors led by Governor Mills E. Godwin Jr. and television personality Ed McMahon, dedicated and officially opened “The Old Country at Busch Gardens.”
The park held its weekend opening a week earlier on May 10 and 11, with 31,000 people in attendance. Busch Gardens’ officials waited a week to have the formal opening ceremonies to launch their third park in the U.S.
- Masaaki Okada
05-17-1975 (cutline): Busch League Racers Gov. Mills E. Godwin Jr. and Mrs. August Busch III start in the lead car around the LeMans track at the French Village of the Busch Gardens Old Country at Williamsburg. The governor, Busch executives, and government officials took part in the official dedication of the new park yesterday.
