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LORAIN COUNTY
AMHERST NEWS-TIMES • OBERLIN NEWS-TRIBUNE • WELLINGTON ENTERPRISE Thursday, Oct. 28, 2021
Spooky season means fall fun Dark is falling earlier, trees are shedding their leaves and kids are craving candy. You know what that means — Halloween is nearly here. Americans plan to spend a record $10.1 billion on the holiday this year, according to the National Retail Federation. That’s an increase of more than $2 billion over last year. Google Trends has released its 2021 “Frightgeist” list of the most popular costumes based on searches in the United States. At the top nationAngelo Angel wide is an all-time clasThe Grafton Halloween sic — the witch. Other Parade marched this popular entries in the top past Saturday. 10 are rabbit, dinosaur, Spider-Man, Cruella de Vil, fairt, Harley Quinn, cowboy, clown and Chucky. Local favorites are a bit different though, according to Google: dinosaur, Cruella de Vil, pirate, witch and the Joker top the list here. There are plenty of ways to celebrate the spookiest holiday with costumes and candy in Lorain County over the next couple of weeks:
Trick-or-treating
Communities across Lorain County have set trick-ortreat from 6-7:30 p.m. on Sunday, Oct. 31. The major exception is Elyria, where it will be held those same hours on Saturday, Oct. 30.
Trunk or Treat at The 1907
Enjoy trunk-or-treating at 6 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 28 at The 1907 at Central School, 474 Church St., Amherst. There will be music, games, snacks and pumpkin painting. A fall bake sale will also be held to benefit the Parkinson’s Foundation, and Muttley Crue Rescue will be on hand for pet adoptions. To take part, RSVP by calling (440) 984-6999.
Learn about scary history
Local tour guides and authors Sherry Spenzer and Eric Defibaugh will talk about some of the spookiest sites in the region during a presentation called “Scary Lorain County” at 7 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 28 at the Avon Lake Public Library’s Waugaman Gallery, 32649 Electric Blvd. There will be an opportunity to purchase their books HALLOWEEN PAGE A5
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By My Lantern’s Light
Photos by Jason Hawk | Amherst News-Times
Tom Jewell plays the part of Anton Stiwald, a Civil War soldier who was there when President Abraham Lincoln died and who went on to serve as mayor of Amherst for 19 years. The re-enactment was part of the Amherst Historical Society’s “By My Lantern’s Light” event Saturday at the Cleveland Avenue Cemetery.
Sunset cemetery tours tell tales of Amherst settlers
Copyright 2021 Lorain County Printing & Publishing Company
◄ Tim Branscum and Chara Jakubisin portray Richard and Anna Mischka, whose family operated butcher shops throughout Lorain County in the late 1800s.
JASON HAWK EDITOR
AMHERST — Wearing black hoods and flowing cloaks, Jessicka Castro and Lashane Hughley led the way Saturday night past gravestones where familiar names were etched. They were tour guides through Cleveland Avenue Cemetery, where many important people from Amherst’s past made their final resting place. As the setting sun cast long shadows over the graveyard, stories of early settlers such as Josiah Harris and Joseph Quigley were told by members of the Amherst Historical Society. “It’s a trip through history to hear stories of the people who helped develop Amherst and make it what it is today,” said President Sandy Kaiser, dressed in late-1800s garb.
The society’s “By My Lantern’s Light” has been a popular October attraction for years, often sharing spooky local legends and tall tales. Instead of a Halloween haunt, this year’s event featured re-enactors who described the lives of those who lend their names to Amherst’s city streets, school buildings and businesses.
Among them were Richard and Anna Mischka, interred on Cleveland Avenue nearly 100 years ago. In the 1870s, there was a terrible depression in Germany that caused mass migration to Lorain County — the Mischkas made their home where Hastee Tastee stands today next to the cemetery, and their living as butchers who fed immigrants at the Lorain steel mills and area sandstone quarries. Portrayed by Tim Branscum and Chara Jakubisin, the pair described how their descendants ran businesses that fed, clothed and entertained generations of Amherst families. A CEMETERY PAGE A3
Oberlin rejects JVS annexation attempt JASON HAWK EDITOR
OBERLIN — For now at least, the Lorain County JVS will not be allowed to become part of the city of Oberlin. In a 7-0 decision last week, a seemingly annoyed City Council rejected the vocational school’s bid to have its 98.37 acres be folded into the city limits. The vote marked the
“They would have saved money by annexing, and the taxpayers should know that.” Oberlin Councilman Kelley Singleton
end of a long and bizarre conflict between the two governmental bodies. Oberlin’s attorneys waged a five-year legal fight to try to force the JVS to annex from Pittsfield Township. But after the JVS filed a petition that would have given it lower
utility rates as part of the city while also barring Oberlin from collecting income taxes from its workers, Council cried foul. Frustrated, city Law Director Jon Clark pointed out the JVS itself would not have paid any taxes at all — in fact, it’s sanitary
sewer fees would have dropped considerably. “This would have cost them nothing,” he said. The JVS school board has a fiduciary responsibility to its taxpayers across the county, “and they have failed miserably,” said Councilman Kelley Singleton. He lambasted the JVS Board of Education and administration for allowing ANNEXATION PAGE A3
INSIDE THIS WEEK
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Volume 8, Issue 43
Amherst
Oberlin
Wellington
Kucirek’s administrative assistant blasts city • B1
Deal giving control of Prospect Elementary is still alive • B1
Roofing worker dies in a 60-70 foot fall • B1
OBITUARIES A2 • CLASSIFIEDS A4 • KID SCOOP A8 • CROSSWORD B2 • SUDOKU B2