Chester CountyPRESS
www.chestercounty.com
Covering Avon Grove, Chadds Ford, Kennett Square, Oxford, & Unionville Areas
Volume 150, No. 1
60 Cents
Wednesday, January 6, 2016
INSIDE In one evening, five new
members join Kennett Square Borough Council
It’s 2016!
Cramer and Myers are tapped to fill vacancies on borough council, while Mallon, Doerfler, and Braffman join council after election wins Bog Turtle brew debuts in Oxford....................1B
Rustin freshman torches Blue Demons in Kennett’s 64-40 loss.......................2B
By Steven Hoffman Staff Writer Only a few minutes after the three new members of Kennett Square Borough Council—Wayne Braffman, Doug Doerfler, and Jamie Mallon—were officially sworn into office on Monday, Jan. 4, they and the other members of borough council were charged with filling two other vacancies on the seven-person council. By the end of the evening, there were five new faces on borough council. “That, my friends, is what we call a dramatic changeover,” said council president Dan Maffei, one of only two council veterans. Borough council unanimously selected LaToya Myers to fill a vacancy that was created last November when Patrick Taylor resigned his seat on council. Continued on Page 3A
Photo by Richard L. Gaw
The Gushurst family of West Chester pose beside a 500-pound, stainless steel mushroom, the symbol of the third annual “Midnight in the Square,” which was held Dec. 31 in Kennett Square. For more about the event, see Page 6A.
Photos by Steven Hoffman
Kennett Square Mayor Matt Fetick swore in LaToya Myers and Ethan Cramer after they were appointed to fill vacancies on Kennett Square Borough Council. Cramer and Myers will serve terms that extend to Jan. 1, 2018.
Kimmel is sworn in as member of East Marlborough Supervisors Teel honored for 16 years on Oxford Borough Council.....4A
By John Chambless Staff Writer The East Marlborough Township Board of Supervisors reorganized at their meeting on Jan. 4,
with a notable addition: The first woman to serve as a supervisor in township history. Christine Kimmel was sworn in at the opening of the meeting and took her
Hoffman sworn in as new supervisor
Township shares 2015 achievements, goals for new year
place at the table as the agenda focused on approving board and commission members for the upcoming year. Richard Hannum was nominated as the Continued on Page 3A
INDEX
Photo by Richard L. Gaw
Whitney Hoffman, joined by her husband Matt Hoffman, was sworn in as the newest supervisor for Kennett Township on Jan. 4 by District Judge Daniel Maisano.
Calendar of Events......3B
By Richard L. Gaw Staff Writer
Classified....................6B Obituaries...................4B
A mere moment after Whitney Hoffman was Police Blotter...............8A sworn in by District Judge Daniel Maisano to become the newest member of the Kennett Township Board of Supervisors on Jan. 4, she took her seat beside her new colleagues, Dr. Richard Leff and Board Chairman Scudder Stevens. Hoffman joined the board Photo by John Chambless Christine Kimmel is sworn in by Richard Hannum at the Board of Supervisors as a result of her narrow meeting on Jan. 4. defeat of Republican Ted
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Opinion........................7A
© 2007 The Chester County Press
Moxon in an election held on Nov. 3. She beat Moxon by only 146 votes in the township’s 328th precinct, defeating her challenger Moxon by a vote of 316 to 155, as well as in the 320th precinct, by a vote of 235 to 217. Moxon defeated Hoffman 275 to 261 in the 329th precinct and 261 to 242 in the 325th precinct. For some in the room full of volunteers and township leaders who had gathered to usher in a new year of Continued on Page 3A
Oxford Area Historical Association seeks home for collection By Steven Hoffman Staff Writer For the last 15 years, the Oxford Area Historical Association (OAHA) has been collecting materials— books, newspaper clippings, personal records, maps, audio recordings, and a variety of other artifacts that are important to the history of the Oxford area. Now, the organization is looking for a home for the collection so that it can be used as a resource for the community. “Our long-term goal is to have a place where we could have displays and where people can do research,” explained Gail Roberts, a member of the Oxford Area Historical Association.
Each Monday morning, Roberts and a small group of people meet in the old East Nottingham Township building to sort through and catalog items in the collection, assigning each one with a unique number so that it can be entered into a database. This collection includes everything from china from the local VFW to a framed picture of a Citizens Band in 1906 to a doctor’s black bag that was used by Dr. David Rothman when he was making house calls in the area in the 1940s. Vernon Ringler, the president of OAHA, is one of the people involved in the effort to preserve and protect items that illustrate the history of the area, and he believes that
the community would utilize the collection as a resource. “A lot of people are interested in the history of the town,” Ringler explained.
The origins of the Oxford Area Historical Association can be traced back to 2000, when the organization was formed to preserve
and promote the historical importance of the Oxford area. Dr. Faye Doyle was instrumental in the formation of OAHA. “A lot of this collection started with Faye Doyle,” explained Andy Nevrincean, an OAHA member who has Continued on Page 2A
No Uncle Irvin this week Photo by Steven Hoffman
The Oxford Area Historical Association’s president, Vernon Ringler, and vice president, Ken Woodward, with just a few of the items in the organization’s everexpanding collection.
Uncle Irvin is hibernating. His column will resume early in 2016.