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New 19-year-old WCPS teacher takes on 4th grade at A.S. Rhodes

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Welcome to the classroom of first-year teacher Alexis Stiles, a 19-year-old native of Front Royal. Photos by Kim Riley

FRONT ROYAL – First-year teacher Alexis Stiles, 19, on Monday successfully concluded her first day as a Warren County Public Schools (WCPS) educator and faces only 180 more days of instruction for the 2018-2019 school year.

The Front Royal native — who’s also taking graduate classes, coaching a competitive gymnastics team, ‘adventuring’ with friends during down time, and maintaining the Stephens City house she bought earlier this year — doesn’t appear fazed by the looming June 6, 2019 last-day-of-school date. She’s got this.

“I really liked how excited they are to have me this year as their teacher,” said Stiles about her 18 students at A.S. Rhodes Elementary School, many of whom she taught last year as an instructional assistant. “That like never happens to people.”

After graduating early from Skyline High School to attend Lord Fairfax Community College (LFCC), Stiles started working for WCPS as a substitute teacher two years ago before moving into a full-time position at Rhodes during the 2017-2018 school year.

“And this year I’m a full-time, fourth-grade teacher!” she said excitedly.

The breakneck speed at which Stiles simultaneously completed high school academics with a GPA above 3.8 continued at LFCC, where she earned an associate degree in business administration and education, and then at the online Western Governors University (WGU), graduating in June with a bachelor’s degree in educational studies.

“When I started WGU in July of 2017, I only had 37 percent of my degree done,” Stiles explained. “So, I took six classes from July to December 2017, and then from January to May this year, I completed 18 credits.

“And I was working 60 hours a week at Rhodes, and I was a gymnastics coach” for three different competition teams based in Winchester, “and doing crazy amounts of school.” Stiles said.

During her last semester at WGU, Stiles also had to complete 75 hours of classroom observation, which she squeezed in during lunch breaks while working at Rhodes. “I didn’t get enough sleep; maybe five hours a night. Sometimes less,” she said. “But I did it.”

Stiles currently is working toward a master’s degree in business administration at WGU. “I would like to be a gymnastics gym owner while teaching and then once my gym is up and running really well, then I want to become a principal,” said the former competitive gymnast who now coaches one 10-girl competitive gymnastics team three days a week at East Coast Gymnastics and Cheer in Winchester.

“I don’t see why I’d change my mind about taking the principal route, but I am still really young,” she said.

Her future also will entail obtaining a PhD in leadership administration, Stile said, “but you have to be teaching three to five years before you can start your doctorate.”

Her energy to excel isn’t lost on WCPS Superintendent Greg Drescher.

“Alexis is ready to be a teacher,” Drescher told the Royal Examiner on Tuesday. “I am impressed with her willingness to put in the effort that it takes to complete a task. She is definitely driven to get things done. I look forward to seeing her impart this attribute to the students she teaches.”

Drescher also doesn’t ignore the fact that Stiles is 19-years-old, technically considered a teenager before her next birthday on Aug. 26.
“Alexis is probably the youngest teacher I remember us hiring,” he wrote in an email. “Occasionally we will have a 21 or 22-year-old who graduated a year early from college, but most are 23-years-old by the time they graduate.”

In fact, during the recent WCPS teacher orientation trainings, Stiles said of the 76 new teachers in attendance, she was the only one under the age of 21.


“Alexis shows us that there are different paths to getting to the goal of being a teacher,” Drescher added. “There is nothing wrong with fast tracking schooling to meet a goal, just like there is nothing wrong with taking the more traditional route. I believe both routes can meet success.”

Successful first day of school year 2018-2019 for new WCPS teacher, 19-year-old Alexis Stiles.

Lori Layman, principal at A.S. Rhodes Elementary School, agreed, pointing out that when Stiles joined the Rhodes staff last year as an instructional assistant, “she quickly developed positive relationships with students and families.”

“She could be found every morning last year greeting students by name in our car drop-off lane,” Layman told the Royal Examiner. “Students and parents alike appreciated the positive energy she displayed every morning.”

Layman said Stiles worked with several veteran Rhodes’ teachers during school year 2017-18 and has adapted many of their strategies to create her own teaching style.

“She is motivated to do her best for herself, her students and our school,” the principal said. “I’m looking forward to helping her grow as a teacher.”

Stiles, who currently holds a Virginia provisional teaching license for a year while she completes state teacher certification exams, admitted that she is, has been, and always will be a perfectionist. “I always strive for more,” said Stiles, also a state-awarded college gymnast, as well as the recipient of several higher education academic awards and scholarships.

“I don’t go into things to just do them. I go into things to do them to the best of my ability,” she added.

It’s an attitude that Mandy Mcandrew-Van Fossen, owner of East Coast Gymnastics and Cheer, has seen Stiles perfect for years.

“I started coaching Alexis when she was in elementary school. She’s always came to practice with a smile on her face and ready to learn,” said Mcandrew-Van Fossen. “She worked really hard and tried her best at all times.”

In fact, she doesn’t think it’s surprising that Stiles “went above and beyond to graduate two years early and achieve a teaching career at an early age.”

Alexis Stiles, grade 4 teacher, A.S. Rhodes Elementary School. List of classroom expectations for students.

What does Stiles possess that sets her apart? When asked to pick five adjectives to describe herself, without hesitation the beauty pageant contender said: “ambitious, motivated, hardworking, and definitely positive and caring.”

Stiles attributes her work ethic to her dad, who manages Penske Truck Rental in Manassas, Va., while her caring and loving traits are due to her stay-at-home mom, a former registered nurse.

Those traits likely will serve Stiles well this school year.

Already she thinks that fourth graders are fun kids to be around. “They’re easy to talk to because they’re mature and I have a very mature group of kids I’m very excited about,” she said.

“I can conduct independent or full group work and they’re engaged, which is harder to do in lower grades” because younger students get more easily distracted, Stiles added. “And then when they get too old, they definitely don’t want to listen to you. Fourth grade is an amazing age.”

There are a couple of challenges she’s foresees this school year. “There’s a lot to cover in a short amount of time so I need to make sure I prepare my lessons as well as possible to make sure all of the curriculum is covered before the SOLs,” Stiles said, adding that Virginia students must take three Standards of Learning (SOL) tests in fourth grade — it’s a lot of work for them, she said.

Stiles also said she’ll be challenged to consistently think about how the students think as she devises those lesson plans. “I always performed extremely well in school so as I write these lesson plans, I am constantly thinking and reassessing what I have written to myself to double check, ‘will fourth graders understand this?’”

All of Stiles’ hard work and press to fast track her teaching career are due to her love for children.

“They’re why I do it,” she said. “For the longest time I’ve wanted to be a teacher. I want every kid to know that they’re important.”

Alexis Stiles with the classroom library she built with her own money, A.S. Rhodes Elementary School.

Chamber News

Front Royal Welcomes CBM Team of Supreme Lending with Enthusiasm and Optimism

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Front Royal, Virginia, celebrated a significant business merger that marks a promising future for local economic development. The CBM Team, a longstanding local business entity, has officially joined forces with Supreme Lending, expanding its reach and capacity to serve the community more effectively.

Nike Foster, Executive Director of the Front Royal/Warren County Chamber of Commerce, and Mayor Lori Cockrell welcomed the CBM Team to our community. The event underscored a vibrant community spirit and the potential for economic growth. Byron Biggs, Chairman of the Chamber, highlighted the merger as a symbol of positive evolution in the local business landscape. It is now poised to extend its influence beyond Virginia.

Mayor Cockrell shared personal anecdotes, reflecting on the profound local ties and the exceptional character of the individuals involved, particularly noting the entrepreneurial spirit of Cory Michael, a former student of hers and now a regional manager for Team CBM. Her words painted a picture of a community that values deep personal connections and collective growth.

The merger promises substantial benefits to Front Royal, bringing enhanced services and opportunities for home ownership that were previously out of reach for many residents. This union is a merger of two companies and a fusion of cultures and aspirations, aiming to enrich the local community while maintaining the cherished CBM brand identity.

Attendees left the event with a sense of excitement and anticipation for the future, confident in the continued prosperity and communal strength of Front Royal.

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Local News

Congratulations to Warren County High School Seniors – Class of 2024

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Royal Examiner presents the Warren County High School Class of 2024. Congratulations to these wonderful seniors on their hard work and deserved accomplishments! We wish you the best in your next big endeavors. Photos courtesy of Victor O’Neill Studios and Tolliver Studios, LLC.

If your Warren County senior is not listed, please send in their Name and Senior Picture to news@royalexaminer.com.

McKenna Adkins

Peyton Ahmed

Isaac Amor

Kristina Andrews

Seana Andrews

Diego Aponte

Dillon Arndt

Sydney Arndt

Dalton Ayers

Ebony Bailey

Marshall Barton

Shelby Bell

Kaydria Bennett

William Bergmann


Roberto Berrios

Hannah Bonner

Beatrix Boudreau

Arianna Bourgoin

Jeremiah Bright

Darnel Caison

Levi Campbell

Autumn Carofano

Joshua Carroll

Bradley Chaffin

Angel Chan

Jaclyn Clark

Jessie Clegg

Madison Clowser

Trenton Coffelt

Katherine Ramirez Colato

Nikolai Compton

David Miramontes Correa

Isaiah Cossio

Cash Cox

Joseph Cross

Landon Deese

Connor Deisch

Palmer Dellinger

Marcellis Diamond

Raymond Dingess

Eliza Dorsey

Christopher Doyle

Lillian Doyle

Aiden Dunnet

April Lopez Escobar

Catherine Farley

Benjamin Farris

Caroline Feldhauser

Gabriel Ferris

Alaysia Flora

Jasmin Portillo Flores

Christopher Flynn

Silas Foster

Calyssa Foxley

Elijah Frame

Isabella Freiland

Madison Funes

Aiden Gates

Austin Grady

Matthew Grant

Elizabeth Greenwell

Kayla Haase

Sarah Hardin

Alexandria Harris

Delaney Haw

Brayden Heflin

Andrea Hernandez

Sophia Hill

Keandre Hogue

Anastacia Hrbek

Collin Huston

Emily Jackson

Kaleb Jackson

Jadyn Jeffries

Colby Jenkins

Lillian Johns

Anna Johnson

Olivia Kelly

Avayda Kemp

Alice Kent

Sofia Kozhenevsky

Camren Kyle

Riana LaFrenierre

Olivia Lambert

Vincent Lamendola Jr.

Joselyn Leyva-Gamez

Sophia Logan

Emma Lord

Phillip Maddox III

Blaine Mansour

Mackenzie Mardeusz

Jacob Martin

Blake McCarty

Sophia McCurry

Cameron McGee

Shawn McGinness

Luke McIntire

Titus Messineo

Jossue Gonzalez Miramontes

William Moreno

Christian Morey

Keyshawn Morgan

Spencer Nelson

Charlize Noel

Christian O’Donnell

Emily Oldland

Joseph Ortman

Veronica Pak

Jonathan Panciera

Italia Panzica

Dragan Pead

Malachi Pinner

Steven Pugh

Blake Ramsey

Eric Rapp

Alaura Repass-Nardone

Brandon Reynolds

Lucas Riley

Xander Ring

Tyler Roan

Kierstin Robertson

Nicholas Robison

Samuel Rock

Caitlyn Rotenberry

Morgan Sajeski

Laney Schenher

Joshua Schneider

Kira Shaver

Bradan Shifflett

Molly Sims

Tristen Sine

Simon Skube

Destiny Smith

Marcus Smith

Brendan Snapp

Jacqueline St. Clair

Brady Strickler

Devin Swearingen

Morgan Sweeney

Robert Swisher

Kaley Tanner

Madelyn Tennant

Johnny Thomas

Aiden Thompson

Joseph Thompson

Eva Thornberg

Owen Thorpe

Jose Ulloa

Malcolm Vinson-Proctor

Alijah Waters

Dagan Wayland

Payton Weaver

Sharlit White

Aliyah Whitman

Taylor Wickham

Marcus Williams

John Williams III

Dejaun Winston

Hunter Winters

Grant Wolf

Militza Woloszyn

Sydney Woodward

Suleman Zewar

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Local News

Fairfax Police Officer, Son of WC Deputy Jim Williams One of This Year’s Fairfax Valor Awards Recipients

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At the Thursday, April 11 Fairfax County Valor Awards ceremony, Fairfax County Police Officer Cody Williams, son of Warren County Sheriff’s Office Deputy and Bailiff Jim Williams, and two colleagues were among the 2023 honorees. We asked proud father Jim about the incident late last year that led to his son and fellow officers’ recognition. This is what he told us:

“On December 25th, Christmas Day, at 9 p.m., members of the Fairfax County Police Department Reston District Station responded to a shot person call. According to his wife, the homeowner had accidentally shot himself while cleaning his handgun. Officers Cody Williams, Andrew Craven, and Anthony Galindo arrived on the scene to find the homeowner unresponsive. The gunshot wound was to the victim’s left calf, resulting in an extreme loss of blood. Williams and Craven applied two tourniquets, and Galindo performed CPR. The victim was transported to the local hospital. He was able to make a full recovery.”

Recipient and son of WCSO Deputy Jim Williams, Fairfax, Reston Division Police Officer Cody Williams. Below is Officer Andrew Craven (slightly out of focus). Apologies for not having access to a photo of Officer Anthony Galindo. Courtesy Photo(s) WC Deputy Jim Williams

We were also informed of comments by Fairfax Police Chief Kevin Davis, who made an analogy to his officers’ Christmas Day call and the 1947 Hollywood movie classic “It’s a Wonderful Life” starring Jimmy Stewart. As fans of that great and timeless film will recall, it had its own Christmas day event of a somewhat miraculous nature involving a Guardian Angel. And indeed, it will be “a Wonderful Life” for the injured man and his family moving forward due to the prompt actions of their “guardian angels” Officers Williams, Craven, and Galindo, among others at the scene.

We found this background on the Fairfax Valor Awards website:

“The Fairfax County Valor Awards recognize the remarkable achievements in service of our community’s dedicated first responders. Since 1979, members of our police, sheriff, fire and rescue, and public safety communications have been honored for exceeding the call of duty with their lifesaving acts. The Greater Reston Chamber of Commerce is proud to host this prestigious event.” In attempting to get photos of the Christmas Day “guardian angels” from even sponsor the Greater Reston Chamber of Commerce, we were informed individual shots were not taken due to the number of recipients from the past year. This year, a total of 240 awards were presented, including 84 Lifesaving Awards, 131 Certificates of Valor, 22 Bronze Medals of Valor, and 3 Silver Medals of Valor.

Congratulations to Officers Williams, Craven and Galindo for a Christmas Day first response well done, and one that at least two Reston residents may remember as their very own Christmas miracle, circa 2023.

And thanks to our own WCSO Deputy Jim Williams for alerting us to this nearby Happy Ending Christmas story. And also a nod toward our own first responders in Warren County and the Town of Front Royal for all they do daily for us. You’re ALL Valor Award winners to us!!!

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Community Events

Valley Chorale Announces Upcoming Spring Concerts in Middletown and Front Royal

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The Valley Chorale presents “Wishing On a Song – Music in the Key of Hope”, a spring concert exploring aspirations of love, home, spirituality and compassion that unite and uplift us all. With styles ranging from light classical and sacred to vocal jazz, spirituals and pop, The Valley Chorale strives to capture the hopes that unite us.

The Valley Chorale is known throughout the Shenandoah Valley for innovation and excellence, with piano, cello and percussion accompaniment, and their concerts are often a heart-warming experience for all. They welcome babies and tots, so no need to hire a babysitter.

Tickets can be purchased on their website TheValleyChorale.org — $15 for age 21+ (free under age 21) or at the door for $17.

SATURDAY, MAY 4, 3:00 4:15 PM
Belle Grove Plantation (Bank Barn), 336 Belle Grove Road, Middletown, VA

SUNDAY, MAY 5, 3:00 4:15 PM
First Baptist Church, 14 W. 1st Street, Front Royal, VA (Community Reception to follow)

For further information, visit the website: TheValleyChorale.org: follow them on Facebook; email them at TheValleyChorale@gmail.com or call at 540-635-4842.

Courtesy Royal Examiner File Photo of The Valley Chorale during the Christmas season. Get ready for their spring concerts ‘Wishing On a Song – Music in the Key of Hope’ the first week of May.


(From a Release by The Valley Chorale)

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Local News

Gifted and Exceptionally Motivated Former Students of Mountain Vista Governor’s School Inducted into Foundation Hall of Fame

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On the evening of Saturday, April 27, beginning at 5 p.m. in the cafeteria at Warren County High School, the Mountain Vista Governor’s School Foundation hosted a donor reception followed by an induction of two former MVGS students into their hall of fame. In the names of those former students, two scholarships will be awarded in the amount of two hundred dollars each to students in need.

Joanne Cherefko (L), president of the Mountain Vista Governor’s School Foundation, stands with Dr. Kristen Pence, Chairwoman of the Warren County School Board, at Saturday evening’s Foundation event at Warren County High School. Royal Examiner Photo Credits: Brenden McHugh.

One of nineteen regional governor’s schools in Virginia, Mountain Vista Governor’s School for Math, Science, and Technology, is present at two locations, on Laurel Ridge Community College’s Warrenton campus and the Middletown campus. MVGS draws and actively seeks out gifted, exceptionally motivated students from the thirteen base schools it serves in Clarke, Frederick, Warren, Culpeper, Fauquier, Rappahannock, and Winchester. Splitting their time between their base schools and MVGS, these students, in Middletown or Warrenton, depending on the counties in which their base schools are located, are given a chance to take advanced courses, including ones in humanities that, if they opt for dual enrollment, may help them skip the first two years of college. Government funding allows MVGS to welcome students into its tuition-free program. But if the students desire dual enrollment in connection with Laurel, wherein they receive college credit for their courses, then tuition becomes necessary. Attendance at MVGS involves an application, and there is a limit to the number of student places that can be filled in during any given school year.

Tamara Otten of Kettle Run High School stands in front of her project display on artificial intelligence, which she developed through the Mountain Vista Governor’s School. She will soon take her project to an international competition in Los Angeles.

Saturday evening was a showcase of rising talent in the MVGS system, as well as testimonies to the caliber of its program as two former students who benefited from MVGS and have gone on to have brilliant careers were given the opportunity to speak about how much they value their educational history at the governor’s school and how it uniquely prepared them to excel. The Foundation, separate from the school itself, is concerned with fundraising on behalf of the school so that students can be supplied with the tools and other resources they need to receive their education. Because of those assets made accessible by the Foundation, the two students who spoke were effusive about what a great foundation they had for future success. The rigor they underwent prepared them to maximize the challenges ahead.

Above: Lindsey Butler (Davis) and below: Camrynn “Cammie” Fausey (Genda) accept their induction into the MVGS Foundation Hall of Fame and talk about how much MVGS means to them.

A good example of the type of excellence students are encouraged to achieve in the program is the artificial intelligence project undertaken by Tamara Otten, which was displayed at the event. Tamara will soon take her project to an international competition in Los Angeles. She is exploring the possibility that AI could be trained to detect filtered images. This has ramifications for mental health as young people would then be able to discern that many of the images that they are being bombarded with on the Internet are not genuine. Therefore, they should not compare themselves to those unrealistic standards. In Tamara’s mind, this is just the beginning.

The evening also featured an auction of student-created artwork and a bag raffle. The members of what was an intimate gathering went home with leftovers of Devin Smith’s culinary art. Smith is an expert chef known for his involvement with Reaching Out Now, another organization reaching young people, specifically in Warren County.

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As Opening of Youth Center Draws Near, the Reaching Out Now Family Looks to the Past for Inspiration

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As Samantha Barber and Toby Hire sat, side by side, holding hands on April 26 in a yet-to-be-furnished room of the Raymond E. Santmyers Student Union and Activity Center in Front Royal, Virginia, there was a very real sense of water, which is stopped by nothing. “Water is my serenity,” Samantha said in this conversation with the Royal Examiner. It maneuvers its way around any obstacle in its path, if not eroding the obstacle altogether, and that is precisely what the Reaching Out Now (RON) family, of which Samantha is the president, has done in its endeavor to provide Front Royal and the wider Warren County region with a youth center, opening soon, where students can come to play, relax, have fun, develop strong bonds of friendship, and explore what they want to do with their futures.

Reaching Out Now president Samantha Barber sits down with close friend Toby Hire to tell the story of what inspires the youth center. Royal Examiner Photo Credits: Brenden McHugh.

The youth center is necessary, and the stakes are life and death. The brilliant lives and tragic early departures of Harlee Hire and Nathan Jenkins, the first to suicide and the second to a boating accident, inform the RON family of their mission to reach young people. There is this awareness that life is incredibly fragile, and the only way to face it is through community. It is as simple as asking: “Are you okay?” That is precisely what RON intends to do through the youth center so that young people in Harlee’s position do not fall through the cracks.

A stream runs by the youth center. As Barber says: “Water is my serenity.” Harlee Hire loved the water. And when Nathan Jenkins’ mother, Susan, blessed the youth center, it immediately began to rain.

Harlee loved water. And by all appearances, she could overcome any obstacle. Through tears, “She was a great friend,” her mother Toby said as Samantha gripped her hand. Harlee practiced radical encouragement. It was not uncommon to hear her yelling shameless compliments like: “Your butt is looking fine today!” And even in the early months of 2022, after her friend Nathan’s boating accident in January and before she attempted suicide on May 10 and officially passed on May 11 and the Honor Walk donation of her organs on May 13 at UVA, she clung tenaciously to life. “I am going to do this, Miss Sam,” she told Samantha at a fashion show RON was hosting. And she walked down the runway.

Above: Harlee Hire in 2022 at the first Safe at Home event, a week before she departed. Below: Nathan Jenkins, whose honor the Nate (DAWG) Game Room at the youth center will be named. Photos courtesy of Toby Hire and Susan Jenkins.

“It is a sacrificial gift,” Samantha said of the youth center. “Nathan would have loved this,” Susan Jenkins said, standing outside the Santmyers building in May of 2023, and as soon as she said it, it began to rain. Indeed, a little fall of rain can hardly hurt me now, to quote the musical production of Les Miserables. There is a very real sense that both Harlee and Nathan continue to live through the youth center as the RON family remembers them and strives to reach young people in their position. Especially Harlee’s. While it is impossible to predict an accident like the one that occurred for Nathan, Samantha, and Toby both feel strongly that intervention is possible in the case of young people who are struggling with mental health issues.

In fact, May will be Mental Health Awareness Month for RON as they host three different athletic events in memory of Harlee and Nathan through their Safe at Home program. On May 9, a varsity girls’ softball game will be held at Skyline High School at 6 p.m. They will host a community baseball day on May 11, between 10:30 a.m. and 5 p.m. at the Bing Crosby Stadium. And on May 25 at Skyline High School from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., they will host a community softball day. In order to get tickets, go to reachingoutnow.org

There is no need to be perfect. Samantha is frank about the impact this trauma has had on her health. “You have rheumatoid arthritis,” a doctor told her. He explained that she had internalized so much psychological pain that it had a very real manifestation in her physical health. But this is just one more obstacle that can be overcome through the support of friends offering real, physical comfort. You can be broken, Toby said. It is okay. It is the broken kids that RON wants to reach. If you are in trouble at school, we understand, Samantha emphasized. If you have weed in your backpack, we understand. This is not a matter of selecting the crème de la crème of students who are already gifted and exceptionally motivated. It is a matter of reaching all the kids and helping them understand their potential.

In the unfurnished room at the youth center, a room named in honor of Nathan and intended to be a game room, the Nate (DAWG) Game Room, Samantha, and Toby agree wholeheartedly that there is nothing wrong with just playing games if you are not playing them alone. Toby said this is the most connected yet disconnected age. The goal of the youth center is to help young people connect authentically.

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Thank You to our Local Business Participants:

@AHIER

Aders Insurance Agency, Inc (State Farm)

Aire Serv Heating and Air Conditioning

Apple Dumpling Learning Center

Apple House

Auto Care Clinic

Avery-Hess Realty, Marilyn King

Beaver Tree Services

Blake and Co. Hair Spa

Blue Mountain Creative Consulting

Blue Ridge Arts Council

Blue Ridge Education

BNI Shenandoah Valley

C&C's Ice Cream Shop

Card My Yard

CBM Mortgage, Michelle Napier

Christine Binnix - McEnearney Associates

Code Jamboree LLC

Code Ninjas Front Royal

Cool Techs Heating and Air

Down Home Comfort Bakery

Downtown Market

Dusty's Country Store

Edward Jones-Bret Hrbek

Explore Art & Clay

Family Preservation Services

First Baptist Church

Front Royal Independent Business Alliance

Front Royal/Warren County C-CAP

First Baptist Church

Front Royal Treatment Center

Front Royal Women's Resource Center

Front Royal-Warren County Chamber of Commerce

Fussell Florist

G&M Auto Sales Inc

Garcia & Gavino Family Bakery

Gourmet Delights Gifts & Framing

Green to Ground Electrical

Groups Recover Together

Habitat for Humanity

Groups Recover Together

House of Hope

I Want Candy

I'm Just Me Movement

Jean’s Jewelers

Jen Avery, REALTOR & Jenspiration, LLC

Key Move Properties, LLC

KW Solutions

Legal Services Plans of Northern Shenendoah

Main Street Travel

Makeover Marketing Systems

Marlow Automotive Group

Mary Carnahan Graphic Design

Merchants on Main Street

Mountain Trails

Mountain View Music

National Media Services

Natural Results Chiropractic Clinic

No Doubt Accounting

Northwestern Community Services Board

Ole Timers Antiques

Penny Lane Hair Co.

Philip Vaught Real Estate Management

Phoenix Project

Reaching Out Now

Rotary Club of Warren County

Royal Blends Nutrition

Royal Cinemas

Royal Examiner

Royal Family Bowling Center

Royal Oak Bookshop

Royal Oak Computers

Royal Oak Bookshop

Royal Spice

Ruby Yoga

Salvation Army

Samuels Public Library

SaVida Health

Skyline Insurance

Shenandoah Shores Management Group

St. Luke Community Clinic

Strites Doughnuts

Studio Verde

The Arc of Warren County

The Institute for Association & Nonprofit Research

The Studio-A Place for Learning

The Valley Today - The River 95.3

The Vine and Leaf

Valley Chorale

Vetbuilder.com

Warren Charge (Bennett's Chapel, Limeton, Asbury)

Warren Coalition

Warren County Democratic Committee

Warren County Department of Social Services

Warren County DSS Job Development

Warrior Psychotherapy Services, PLLC

WCPS Work-Based Learning

What Matters & Beth Medved Waller, Inc Real Estate

White Picket Fence

Woodward House on Manor Grade

King Cartoons

Front Royal, VA
81°
Sunny
6:11 am8:07 pm EDT
Feels like: 81°F
Wind: 7mph E
Humidity: 53%
Pressure: 29.99"Hg
UV index: 4
SatSunMon
57°F / 54°F
72°F / 59°F
81°F / 61°F

Upcoming Events

May
4
Sat
10:00 am A Bird’s World @ Sky Meadows State Park
A Bird’s World @ Sky Meadows State Park
May 4 @ 10:00 am – 11:00 am
A Bird's World @ Sky Meadows State Park
Picnic Area. Learn about birds of the woods and fields and how they utilize their habitat for survival and nesting. Join a Virginia Master Naturalist to discover our role and our impact on bird conservation.[...]
12:00 pm The Farmer’s Forge @ Sky Meadows State Park
The Farmer’s Forge @ Sky Meadows State Park
May 4 @ 12:00 pm – 3:00 pm
The Farmer’s Forge @ Sky Meadows State Park
Historic Area. The forge is fired up and the blacksmiths are hard at work showing off their skills. Members of the Blacksmiths’ Guild of the Potomac have set up shop in the forge, located behind[...]
12:00 pm The Settle’s Kettle @ Sky Meadows State Park
The Settle’s Kettle @ Sky Meadows State Park
May 4 @ 12:00 pm – 3:00 pm
The Settle's Kettle @ Sky Meadows State Park
Log Cabin in the Historic Area. Follow your nose to the Log Cabin to see what is cooking on the hearth. Explore history through food and how it connects us to past generations. Explore farming[...]
May
8
Wed
6:30 pm Front Royal Wednesday Night Bingo @ Front Royal Volunteer Fire Deptartment
Front Royal Wednesday Night Bingo @ Front Royal Volunteer Fire Deptartment
May 8 @ 6:30 pm – 9:30 pm
Front Royal Wednesday Night Bingo @ Front Royal Volunteer Fire Deptartment
Bingo to support the American Cancer Society mission, organized by Relay For Life of Front Royal. Every Wednesday evening Early Bird Bingo at 6:30 p.m. Regular Bingo from 7-9:30 p.m. Food and refreshments available More[...]
May
11
Sat
10:30 am Community Baseball Day @ Bing Crosby Stadium
Community Baseball Day @ Bing Crosby Stadium
May 11 @ 10:30 am – 5:00 pm
Community Baseball Day @ Bing Crosby Stadium
The Safe at Home Community Baseball Day will be held on May 11th @ Bing Crosby Stadium from 10:30AM – 5PM. This day-long event features Front Royal Little League, Skyline and Warren County Varsity Baseball[...]
11:30 am Step Into Spring: Fashion Show a... @ The Moose Banquet Hall
Step Into Spring: Fashion Show a... @ The Moose Banquet Hall
May 11 @ 11:30 am – 1:30 pm
Step Into Spring: Fashion Show and Luncheon @ The Moose Banquet Hall
A Spring Fashion Show and Luncheon, Sponsored by the Women of the Moose, Front Royal. There will be Door Prizes and raffle opportunities! Fashions are being provided by Front Royal Blue Ridge Hospice Thrift Store.[...]
8:00 pm Astronomy for Everyone @ Sky Meadows State Park
Astronomy for Everyone @ Sky Meadows State Park
May 11 @ 8:00 pm – 11:00 pm
Astronomy for Everyone @ Sky Meadows State Park
Historic Area. Discover our International Dark-Sky Park! Our evenings begin with a half-hour children’s “Junior Astronomer” program, followed by a discussion about the importance of dark skies and light conservation. Then join NASA’s Jet Propulsion[...]
May
15
Wed
6:30 pm Front Royal Wednesday Night Bingo @ Front Royal Volunteer Fire Deptartment
Front Royal Wednesday Night Bingo @ Front Royal Volunteer Fire Deptartment
May 15 @ 6:30 pm – 9:30 pm
Front Royal Wednesday Night Bingo @ Front Royal Volunteer Fire Deptartment
Bingo to support the American Cancer Society mission, organized by Relay For Life of Front Royal. Every Wednesday evening Early Bird Bingo at 6:30 p.m. Regular Bingo from 7-9:30 p.m. Food and refreshments available More[...]
May
18
Sat
10:00 am Annual Fort Loudoun Day @ Historic Fort Loudoun
Annual Fort Loudoun Day @ Historic Fort Loudoun
May 18 @ 10:00 am – 4:00 pm
Annual Fort Loudoun Day @ Historic Fort Loudoun
Visit the Site of Historic Fort Loudoun headquarters for Col. George Washington’s Virginia Regiment. Meet Living History Interpreters such as Col. James Wood, Founder of Winchester, Capt. George Mercer and his company of Col. George[...]
May
22
Wed
6:30 pm Front Royal Wednesday Night Bingo @ Front Royal Volunteer Fire Deptartment
Front Royal Wednesday Night Bingo @ Front Royal Volunteer Fire Deptartment
May 22 @ 6:30 pm – 9:30 pm
Front Royal Wednesday Night Bingo @ Front Royal Volunteer Fire Deptartment
Bingo to support the American Cancer Society mission, organized by Relay For Life of Front Royal. Every Wednesday evening Early Bird Bingo at 6:30 p.m. Regular Bingo from 7-9:30 p.m. Food and refreshments available More[...]
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