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Seventeen-Year-Old Donna Dustin Murdered

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Memorial plaque in Bowie's Acorn Hill Park
November 17, 1973 (40 years ago today):  A seventeen-year-old Bowie girl was murdered.  Donna Dustin's body was discovered by a hunter that morning in Anne Arundel County not far from the Bowie Race Track.  Dustin's murder remains unsolved.

Pictured here is a memorial plaque that can be found in Bowie's Acorn Hill Park.

Much has been written about the Donna Dustin murder case.  This January, 2000, Washington Post article provides a fairly complete summary:  http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPcap/2000-01/16/076r-011600-idx.html

Although no one has been charged in Donna Dustin's murder, an attempt was made to link the Dustin murder to the 1987 murder of Jacqueline Roberson in Bowie.  Richard McLeod was convicted of the Roberson murder, but in an appeal, McLeod argued that someone else likely committed the Roberson murder.  He named several people that he suspected were involved.  One of the men that McLeod implicated, was, according to the motion filed by McLeod, likely present during the Dustin murder.  No one knows the whereabouts of the man that McLeod identified.  http://law.justia.com/cases/federal/appellate-courts/ca4/07-6551/076551.u-2011-03-15.html

Jeff Krulik created this video in remembrance of the 40th anniversary of Donna Dustin's death.




Bowie Race Track Ravaged by Blizzard and Fire

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January 31, 1966 (48 years ago today): An early morning fire at the Bowie Race Track destroyed five barns and resulted in the deaths of more than 40 horses.

The track had been closed as the region took shelter from an intense storm that would later be known as the Blizzard of '66.  Wind gusts in excess of 50 miles per hour fanned the flames, and caused the fire to spread quickly.

Firefighters took more than 30 minutes to navigate the snow covered roads along the way to the track.  According to Robert Nelson of the Bowie Volunteer Fire Department, crews from the station had to push a stranded car from the roadway and shovel their way through three separate snow drifts in order to get their apparatus to the track.

Arriving personnel found a chaotic scene.  Flames were shooting high into the air, and panicked horses and ice made for a hazardous situation.

Approximately 100 horses were let loose in an effort to save as many lives as possible.  Some horses were later found roaming at the Belair Shopping Center and Glenn Dale Hospital.

The Four Degrees of Separation between Philip Seymour Hoffman and the Belair Mansion

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Philip Seymour Hoffman played the part of Truman Capote in the 2005 movie “Capote.”

In 1975, Truman Capote wrote a short story called “La Côte Basque 1965” that appeared in Esquire magazine. Although the story was technically fiction, Capote let it be known that it was about high society socialite Ann Woodward. The pending publication of the story drove Ann Woodward to commit suicide.

Ann Woodward was married to Billy Woodward. She killed her husband in 1955 in an incident that Life magazine called “The Shooting of the Century.”

Billy Woodward became owner of the Belair Estate, including the Belair Mansion, in 1953 upon the death of his father, William Woodward, Sr.

Camel, Buffalo, Zebu and Llama Race in Bowie

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Walk a Mile
February 25, 1972 (42 years ago today): The Noah's Ark Animal Race was held at the Bowie Race Track, featuring a camel, buffalo, llama and a zebu (a single-humped cow from Asia).

Two camels were scheduled to race, but one of the camels died at the race track after traveling to Bowie from Missouri.

Walk A Mile, Llama Fleece and One Large Hump
The second camel had to be muzzled for the race after it injured a track worker earlier in the week.  The camel became aggressive in the starting gate during a practice run.  It bit the arm of Michael Pearson, an "exercise boy" at the track, and then shook Pearson's arm violently.  Pearson suffered a broken arm, and he required surgery for his injuries.

One Large Hump (the zebu) won the race, followed by Llama Fleece (the llama), and Walk A Mile (the camel) came in third.  Home on the Range (the buffalo) "wallowed in the mud," according to The Baltimore Sun, and it didn't finish the race.

Walk A Mile (the camel) was favored to win after easily winning two heats earlier in the week.  Walk A Mile, however, was forced to wear a muzzle during the last race after breaking Pearson's arm, and jockey Charley Cooke speculated that the muzzle caused the loss.







The "I" of the City: Where in Bowie were these pictures taken?

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The "I" of the city. Do you recognize these signs? Hint: each of the I's in these pictures is part of the word "Bowie." Answers below.



The "I" of the city. Do you recognize these signs? Hint: each of the I's in these pictures is part of the word "Bowie." Answers below.
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Bowie City Hall






Welcome sign on Chestnut Avenue in Old Town Bowie. Most of us might know this as "Old Bowie."




Bowie Golf Club sign on Route 197.




Bowie Florist in Whitehall Plaza on Route 197




The Bowie Town Center on Route 197




The Senior Center on Health Center Drive




The Bowie Community Center on Stonybrook Drive




The Old Town Bowie Welcome Center - next to the Old Bowie Town Grille.



Dedication Ceremony for Five Bowie Schools

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Dedication ceremony at Belair Junior High School
March 30, 1965, (49 years ago today): A dedication ceremony was held for five schools in the gymnasium of Belair Junior High School.  This picture appeared in "A Century of Public Education in Prince George's County, " a book published by the Prince George's County Board of Education.  The book contains the following description of the event.

"A joint program dedicating five new schools was held on Tuesday evening, March 30, 1965, at Belair Junior High School. Arrangements for this program were coordinated by the principals of five schools for the dedication of Belair Junior High School, Buckingham Elementary School, Kenilworth Elementary School, Meadow Brook Elementary School, and Tulip Grove Elementary School.  The dedication address was given by Superintendent of Schools William S. Schmidt, with W. Carroll Beatty, president of the Board of Education, making the presentation of the keys to the buildings.  Accepting the keys to the schools were Dale B. Woodburn, principal of Belair; Mrs. Maxine Cunningham, principal of Buckingham; E. Wendell Hosley, principal of Kenilworth; George L. Pasquella, principal of Meadow Brook; and Miss Hannah E. Long, principal of Tulip Grove."

City Considers New Fireworks "Venue"

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After mixed reactions to the 2013 Fourth of July celebration at Prince George's Stadium, the city is considering a bold change to this year's event in order to reduce traffic congestion and to bring the fireworks display to more residents.

A Colorado company, Creative Fireworks, LLC, has submitted a proposal to launch the fireworks over the city from drones.  "By using larger shells, and launching the shells higher in the sky, we are able to increase the viewing area ten-fold," said Earl F. Cracker, the CEO of Creative Fireworks.  According to Cracker, Bowie is one of a dozen cities that is considering drone technology to improve municipal firework displays.  At this point, the City of Topeka in Kansas has signed on, and Cracker is hoping that Bowie is next.

According to City Hall, a plan has been designed that centers the fireworks in a triangle formed by Allen Pond Park, Prince George's Stadium and the Belair Mansion.  Each of those sites was identified as favorable viewing areas by city residents. According to Creative Fireworks, the  launching area would be high in the sky above Route 50 between the Route 197 and Route 3 exits.

The Creative Fireworks proposal includes a low powered FM broadcast to provide audio for the event.  "It's not the Boston Pops, but residents will be able to hear favorites like the 1812 Overture and Stars and Stripes Forever over their radios or streamed on-line to their smart phones," said city spokesperson, Ashley Buckingham.  The fireworks will be synchronized to the music.

Residents' reactions to the proposal have been favorable.

"I would be able to see fireworks from my backyard," said Ken L. Worthe.  "No more sitting in traffic for two hours for me!"

"I think I would watch the fireworks from Foxhill Park, "said nineteen-year-old resident Summer Sett.  "I think the reflection of the fireworks off the lake would be awesome!"

According to Buckingham, the city will make a decision by the middle of April.  "At this point, the only two options being considered are a return to Prince George's Stadium and the Creative Fireworks proposal," she said.




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Feminist to take on Bowie City Hall



Tree Planted at Bowie City Hall to Honor Dr. King

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April 4, 1977 (37 years ago today):  A tree was planted at Bowie City Hall in honor and memory of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. on the ninth anniversary of his death.  Dr. King was killed in Memphis forty-six years ago today.

In 1977, Bowie City Hall was located in the Belair Mansion.  The King tree is located on the west side of the property - near the right corner of the mansion when facing the building from the driveway.

Grand Opening Ceremony Held at Bowie's Market Place

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April 6, 1983 (31 years ago today): A Grand Opening ceremony was held at the Market Place, a redesigned Bowie shopping destination that was formerly known as the Belair Shopping Center.  The Market Place was anchored by a new and modern Safeway grocery store.  The store was equipped with price scanners, and it was the third largest Safeway on the East Coast at the time.

Click here to see a set of newspaper advertisements that appeared in the Bowie Blade-News prior to the Grand Opening.  Special thanks to Megan Reilly who shared the advertisements with Bowie Living after discovering them in her shed when she moved into her Bowie home.

Gallant Fox wins the Triple Crown

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June 7, 1930 (84 years ago today):  Gallant Fox from the Belair Stud Farm won the Triple Crown.  The Fox of Belair, as he was known, later fathered Omaha, the second horse from Belair to win the Triple Crown.  To this date, Gallant Fox and Omaha represent the only father/son pair Triple Crown winners.  Both horses were a product of the team of William Woodward, Belair Stud's owner, and trainer Sunny Jim Fitzsimmons.

Nixon Leaves the White House. What's the Bowie Connection?

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August 9, 1974 (40 years ago today): Facing the possibility of impeachment, President Richard Nixon resigned in the wake of the Watergate scandal.  So what's the Bowie connection?

During the Watergate burglaries in 1972, two phones were bugged in the Democratic National Committee (DNC) offices.  Only one of those listening devices worked.  That bug was in the phone of R. Spencer Oliver.  At that time, Oliver lived in a Cape on Felter Lane in Bowie with his wife and family.

After the bugs were discovered, Oliver was investigated by the FBI.  The FBI hadn't found the bugs in a previous sweep of the office, so there was some suspicion that someone in the DNC had planted the bugs themselves.  In an interview given by journalist Robert Parry years later, Oliver said, "they tried to tie me to radical groups and asked questions of my neighbors and my friends about whether I had ever done anything wrong, whether I drank too much, whether I was an alcoholic, whether I had a broken marriage, whether I had had any affairs.  It was a very intrusive and obnoxious assault on my private life."

Oliver also faced scrutiny from some of his colleagues who didn't feel that he was important enough to have his phone bugged.  There was jealousy.  "Everybody wanted to be the celebrity victim," Oliver told Parry.

After a civil lawsuit was filed, lawyers for the Committee to Re-Elect the President (CREEP) deposed Oliver.  In an effort to discredit Oliver, they asked him if he was a member of the Communist Party or the Weather Underground.  They asked him if he had ever been arrested.

Oliver soon found himself at odds with DNC leadership.  The DNC wanted to put the Watergate break-in behind them, and they wanted to settle the civil suit.  Oliver felt it was important to continue the lawsuit because the related depositions provided the only opportunity to force the Republicans to answer questions about Watergate.  This was before the Senate Watergate Committee was formed.

Read more about R. Spencer Oliver's role in Watergate in the "Enduring Secrets of Watergate" special report by Robert Parry.

Popular Bowie Politician Dies

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August 9, 2014:  Mary Conroy, who represented the Bowie area as a Maryland State Senator and as a member of the Maryland House of Delegates, died Saturday at the age of 82.

Conroy was appointed to the Maryland Senate to fill the remaining term of her late husband, Senator Ed Conroy, upon his death in 1982.  Conroy was later appointed to the Maryland House of Delegates to fill the remaining term of Gerard Devlin after he became a Prince George's County District Court Judge.  Conroy served as a delegate for more than twenty years, and she had the distinction of being the Deputy Majority Leader for four of those years.

Conroy's time in Bowie dates back to the time when Levitt & Sons first started selling houses in the community.  Conroy and her husband were one of the first homebuyers in the Belair at Bowie development.  They purchased a Colonial on the corner of Stonybrook Drive and Shawmont Lane in a section of town that was once referred to as a "professional row," according to Conroy.  There was no office space in Bowie in the early 1960s, so it was common for doctors, dentists and other professionals to buy houses along Stonybrook Drive to serve as homes and offices.  Ed Conroy had a law office in the Conroy home on Shawmont Lane.

The Conroys called themselves Belair at Bowie's first residents.  They signed the development's very first property title on the morning of October 17, 1961, according to the Washington Star.

Mary Conroy on Wikipedia
Mary Controy's House of Delegates Profile







Thanksgiving Day in Bowie, 1936

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How are you spending your Thanksgiving day?  In 1936, there were no football games on television, but there was horse racing in Bowie.  This picture was taken at the Bowie Race Course on Thanksgiving day, 1936.





This picture was also taken on Thanksgiving day, 1936 at the Bowie Race Course.  Apprentice jockey Ira Hanford is sitting on Piccolo after winning the Thanksgiving Handicap.  The 18 year-old Hanford made history earlier that year by becoming the first apprentice jockey to ever win the Kentucky Derby.  Hanford won the "Run for the Roses" while riding a 20-1 long shot - Bold Venture.  Handford's Kentucky Derby win came one year after Belair Stable's Omaha won the Derby and the other two legs of the Triple Crown.






Bowie 2014 Year in Review

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News

  • Bowie City Council approves money for a new sports facility
  • Old caboose out at Railroad museum; new caboose to arrive in 2015
  • Solar panels grow in popularity in Bowie
  • Man murdered in parking lot of Belair Swim & Racquet Club
  • City of Bowie purchases its first electric car
  • Bowie Police Department purchases electric motorcycles



Development

  • Melford plans moving forward
  • Plans for new Walmart Supercenter on 301 moving forward
  • Close to a deal at Marketplace
  • WB&A spur hiker/biker trail construction began in 2014; scheduled to be complete in 2015
  • Bowie Heritage Trail construction to begin in 2015, including playground at Railroad Museum



Elected

  • Todd Turner (County Council)


Re-Elected

  • Geraldine Valentino-Smith (Maryland House of Delegates)
  • Marvin Holmes (Maryland House of Delegates)
  • Joe Vallario (Maryland House of Delegates)
  • Doug Peters (Maryland Senate)



No Longer With Us

  • Longtime Bowie politician Mary Conroy



Opened

  • Anthony's N.Y. Pizza and Pasta House (Free State)
  • Little Caesars (Bowie Plaza)
  • Smoothie King (Bowie Town Center)
  • Electric Charging Station (Bowie Town Center)
  • FastCare Clinic urgent care facility (Free State Giant)



Closed

  • Quizno's (Bowie Town Center)
  • Frozen Yo (Bowie Town Center)
  • Dairy Queen (Bowie Town Center)
  • Subway (Bowie Town Center)



Coming Soon

  • Chuck's Wagon Barbeque (Bowie Plaza)
  • Jimmy Johns (Bowie Town Center)
  • Speed Camera in front of Benjamin Tasker Middle School (January 5th)
  • Samosa Supreme (14207 Old Annapolis Road; format J-Mart location)
  • Wingzone (Bowie Town Center; former Quizno's location)


Bowie's 2nd Annual Soap Box Derby, 1972

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The 2nd annual Bowie Soap Box Derby took place on Sunday, July 8th, 1972.  The following article by Bob Reid was published in the July 13th edition of the Bowie Blade.

Bowie Entrants Far Back In 2nd Annual Soap Box Derby
By Rob Reid
Bowie Blade Editor
Thursday, July 13, 1972

Bowie youngsters were superior only in numbers for the running of the 2nd Annual Soap Box Derby here last Sunday, with the top four finisher hailing from out of town.

The winner, after some 80 heats, was Daryl Freeman, a freckled-face 11-year-old from Bladensburg, running in his first Soap Box Derby competition.

His needle-nosed, gold Takoma Transfer and Storage Special flashed over the finish line in the championship heat a bare quarter of a length ahead of Van Hanson, a 14-year-old from Takoma Park.

Hanson, from a family of Soap Box racing brothers, was awarded second place, while last year's runner-up, Everett Parson of Brandywine finished third, beating distaff racer, Cathy Leavy.

The races were run down a 900 foot stretch of Race Track Road, and consumed 5 1/2 hours, much of the time spent returning the cars from the finish line back to the starting ramps for further heats.

Five girls were among the 40 contestants, and one, Linda Winpigler, an 11-year-old blond with a flowing mane from Frederick finished fourth.

The favorite of the crowd was Cathy Leavy, 12, a student at St. Pius school, whose flower-embroidered car captured the fancy of the fans.

Cathy, the daughter of William Leavy, last year's derby director, was clearly the better of her family entry with brother Steve, 13, who was eliminated earlier.

Because of her flower-power car, the fans quickly nicknamed her "the flower girl," and Cathy, as cool as a veteran Indianapolis driver, kept them on tip-toe until the 71st heat when she was finally eliminated by Linda Winpigler.

Only a single accident marred the day's races when Nancy Perret, a 13-year older from Pius X school applied premature breaking at the finish line, and spun out into the woods.  The car suffered major damage, but Nancy was unhurt.

The derby, as it was last year, was sponsored by the Bowie Jaycees and Rogers Chevrolet. The winner, Darryl Freeman, received a $500 U.S. Savings Bond and the championship trophy, and earned himself a week-long trip to Akron, Ohio in August for the national finals.

George Sipe, zone public relations manager for the Chevrolet Motors Division, and Bill Rogers, owner of Rogers Chevrolet, were on hand to make the various presentations to the new champion, who confessed, "I never though I was going to win it."

Prior to the official racing, a pace race between last year's champion, Casey Muldoon, and Mayor Jim Conway in his bulky J.C. Supercar was run with Casey winning in 29.31 seconds.

By comparison, Freeman's winning time in the championship was 28.74 seconds, the second best time of the day. Earlier, Parson has posted 28.57 seconds in narrowly beating Cathy Leavy.

The Jaycees Marty Gear was this year's Soap Box Derby Director.  "I believe we ironed out a lot of the problems of the first year," he said after the races, "and all in all, we had a good day of it."

Innovations this year included sophisticated communications by citizen's band radio, intercommunication between starting ramps, finish line, and public announcement systems, and photographic finishes.

The Bowie Jaycees have the Soap Box Derby franchise for all of Prince George's County, and entrants came from Upper Marlboro, Forestville, Bladensburg, Brentwood, Crofton, Glenn Dale, Pasadena, Oxon Hill, Rockville, Brandywine, Laurel, Camp Springs, Accokeek, as well as the 18 from Bowie.

All contestants were required to personally construct their own cars, but adult advice was allowed.  No more than $50 could be spent, including the cost of standard racing wheels which must be purchased from Chevrolet, and the maximum allowable weight, driver and car, was 250 pounds.

For the first time this year in Bowie, many of the cars were of fiberglass construction.

The crowd peaked at about 2,000, but thinned as the long, hot, muggy afternoon wore on.  There was also better crowd control this year, with snow fencing erected along the west side of Race Track Road to prevent fans from running onto the raceway.

The Bowie Blade and Post Times, Thursday, July 13, 1972, photos by Ken Smallwood and Bob Reid



The News Express, July 12, 1972, photos by Bill Strassberger 



Bowie Mayor Jim Conway in his J.C. Supercar
The News Express, July 12, 1972, photos by Bill Strassberger


Cathy Leavy
The News Express, July 12, 1972, photos by Bill Strassberger


The Bowie Blade and Post Times, Thursday, July 13, 1972, photos by Ken Smallwood and Bob Reid

The Bowie Blade and Post Times, Thursday, July 13, 1972, photos by Ken Smallwood and Bob Reid

The Bowie Blade and Post Times, Thursday, July 13, 1972, photos by Ken Smallwood and Bob Reid

The Bowie Blade and Post Times, Thursday, July 13, 1972, photos by Ken Smallwood and Bob Reid

The Bowie Blade and Post Times, Thursday, July 13, 1972, photos by Ken Smallwood and Bob Reid

The Bowie Blade and Post Times, Thursday, July 13, 1972, photos by Ken Smallwood and Bob Reid

The Bowie Blade and Post Times, Thursday, July 13, 1972, photos by Ken Smallwood and Bob Reid

The Bowie Blade and Post Times, Thursday, July 13, 1972, photos by Ken Smallwood and Bob Reid


Rosa's Pizzeria

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#‎TBT‬ - Someone anonymously sent Bowie Living pictures from Rosa’s Pizzeria last week. Most of the pictures are of customers and staff, and they appear to have been taken in the early 1980s. This is what the contributor had to say:

Rosa and Adriano (Breschi) were wonderful people and provided scores of Bowie kids their first experience in the workforce. Both are deceased now, but I'm sure they and their delicious pizzas are remembered fondly by many Bowieites. Given the recent renovation of the store, which I gather erased all traces of the surviving Rosa's decor, it seems fitting that the great times and wonderful food many of us recall from those days should not be forgotten.


















Alert Bowie 2.0 - Getting that 3am Call

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 If you're like me, you received an automated phone call around 3:30 am this morning regarding a newly issued wind warning.  The call was part of the Alert Bowie 2.0 service available to all Bowie residents.  Although the wind warning goes into effect at 6pm today, the National Weather Service issued the warning shortly after 3:00 am this morning. The default behavior of the Alert Bowie 2.0 system is to send out alerts as they are issued, although those settings can be modified.

There are three possible changes to your settings that you can make to avoid alerts like this morning's wake-up call.

  1. Cancel the alerts all together, although this is like throwing the baby out with the bathwater.
  2. Remove the option to receive high wind alerts.
  3. Set an option to not receive alerts during certain hours of the day.  This setting applies to all alerts except for tornado warnings.  If a tornado is coming, expect a call!

All of this information is available on the Alert Bowie 2.0 web site, however, that leaves two unanswered questions, and I'll pose those questions the appropriate people.
  1. If you change your settings so that you do not receive alerts during certain times of day, what happens when that time period is up?  Do you receive the alerts at the end of the time period?
  2. For some warnings, text messages are sent. This morning people received both text messages and phone calls.  How does the alert system determine when a phone call is made as opposed to just sending a text?
I have included instructions below for adjusting your Alert Bowie 2.0 settings.

Step 1
Sign in to Alert Bowie 2.0 at the following web site.  There is an option for registering for the first time, and there is an option for you to reset your password if you've forgotten your password.  http://www.cityofbowie.org/index.aspx?nid=988



Step 2
Click on the "Edit" link in the top right corner of the screen.




Step 3
Click on the "+" icon to the left of the "Automated Weather Alerts" to see options related to your automated weather alerts.




Step 4
Click on the "Don't contact me between" checkbox, and specify the time of day when you don't wish to receive alerts.



Step 5
If you want to opt-out of wind alerts, click on the "+" icon to the left of the "Wind" option, and uncheck the checkbox.


Step 6
When you are finished with your changes, click on the "Save" button at the bottom of the screen.





#TBT - The tree-lined road leading to the Belair Mansion in 1936

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The Belair Mansion, 1936


There were originally 78 tulip poplar trees that lined the entrance to the mansion, and many of those ended up in the backyards of homes in the Tulip Grove neighborhood.  The trees were originally planted in the 1750s by Colonel Benjamin Tasker, thus making these trees more than 255 years old today. After James Woodward purchased the property in 1898, he hired tree specialists from New York to administer first aid to the ailing trees.  When Levitt purchased Belair nearly 60 years later, the trees were in rough shape once again.  The trees were nursed back to health, and each tree was fitted with a lightning rod.

The photographer of this picture was most likely standing in a spot that today would be in the backyard of a home on either Tarragon Lane or Tapered Lane.

When it snows, Bowie goes... sometimes

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The snow and the ice from the latest winter storm caused multiple closures in the Bowie area this weekend.  The Bowie Race Course, however, once prided itself on staying open despite harsh winter weather.  "When it snows, Bowie goes," was the catch phrase that was used to indicate that horse racing would still take place during bad weather.  The reluctance of track official to cancel races at the track once caused hundreds of fans to be stranded at the track overnight.

Despite the reputation, the track did close on occasion, including the days following the "Blizzard of '66," but the track was impacted by more than just the storm that day. An early morning fire destroyed five barns and resulted in the deaths of more than 40 horses.Wind gusts in excess of 50 miles per hour fanned the flames, and caused the fire to spread quickly.

Firefighters took more than 30 minutes to navigate the snow covered roads along the way to the track. According to Robert Nelson of the Bowie Volunteer Fire Department, crews from the station had to push a stranded car from the roadway and shovel their way through three separate snow drifts in order to get their apparatus to the track.

Arriving personnel found a chaotic scene. Flames were shooting high into the air, and panicked horses and ice made for a hazardous situation.

Approximately 100 horses were let loose in an effort to save as many lives as possible. Some horses were later found roaming at the Belair Shopping Center and Glenn Dale Hospital.

This picture was taken on February 4th, 1966 during the first day in operation after the storm.  Some fans stood among the snow piles watching the final stretch of the fifth race of the day.

Simply Southern American Grille Opens in Bowie's Hilltop Plaza

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February 27, 2015:  My family and I went to Simply Southern American Grille for dinner. Today was the first day the restaurant was open. Simply Southern is located in the Hilltop Shopping Center next to the Chesapeake Grille and Deli in the former Irie Café location (6840 Race Track Rd Bowie, MD 20715; (301) 262-4700).
Simply Southern is owned by Aaron and Uche Loney – the same people who own Irie Café. So it’s only natural to want to compare the two restaurants. Irie Café was very dark and uninviting. Simply Southern has a nice and bright décor. We saw a restaurant full of patrons before we even got to the front door – something we never saw with Irie Café.
Simply Southern American Grille is a sit-down restaurant with moderate prices. The wait staff is very friendly and attentive, and the restaurant is clean. The menu has a limited number of items. There’s no kids’ menu, but they will prepare things like grilled cheese and chicken nuggets on request. They have a bar area, and beer, wine and liquor are available. Entrees range in price from $14 to $21. Takeout orders are accepted.
The food was very good. I had the Jambalaya – and some of my son’s wings – and some of my daughter’s Pulled Pork Sliders – and some of my daughter’s fries. Don’t judge me. It was all good. We’ll be back for sure.

See menu below.





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