April 11, 2017

Rails become trails in DelCo

Delaware County opens a 2.8-mile-log trail along the Chester Creek.

Delaware County Council joined recreationists across the nation to kick off the spring trail season and Rails-to-Trails Conservancy’s Opening Day for Trails by officially opening the largest county-owned trail to date at a ribbon cutting ceremony last Saturday in Middletown Township.

After nearly 20 years of land acquisition and planning, and construction to transform abandoned rail lines into a scenic walking trail, Delaware County Council and the Friends of the Chester Creek Trail announced the official opening of the Chester Creek Trail near mile-marker 1.5, located adjacent to the Mills at Glen Riddle, one of Delaware County’s oldest mills that has been converted into office space.

Spanning 2.8-miles along the Chester Creek, from Lenni Road to Chester Creek Road through Middletown and Aston Townships, the tree-lined, fully-paved scenic trail offers elevated views of the creek for recreation and fitness and provides access to some of Delaware County’s earliest historical sites including mills of the Industrial Revolution era.

As part of Delaware County Council’s Open Space and Greenway Plan, the trail will serve as a catalyst for tourism and economic development, creating and maintaining new business opportunities.

In addition to several road crossings and a trailhead with parking, the many years of inactivity of the rail lines led to the need for reconstruction and major rehabilitation of four bridges, construction of multiple culverts, and comprehensive streambank stabilization along the length of the trail. Federal funding sources for the $6.6 million construction project were secured by Delaware County Council.

In a press release, Councilman Dave White, the council liaison to the county Parks & Recreation Department said, “As the result of many years of effort by Delaware County Council to preserve this stretch of green space, Delaware County walkers, hikers, bicyclists and runners are now able to enjoy this beautiful creek-side trail which has become one of the many gems of the county,” said.

White acknowledged the integral partnership and efforts of the Friends of Chester Creek Trail, a group founded by the late Mike Fusco in the early 1990s. “Over the years, we have been fortunate to have the support of the Friends, their board members and the leadership of current president

Barry Pinkowicz who made founding president Mike Fusco’s vision into a reality. As dedicated partners, the Friends have been faithful advocates for the building of the trail for all residents to enjoy,” said White.

In April 2015 Delaware County Council acquired the abandoned rail as a trail project as part of the county’s 30-year $22 million open space plan. In response to public interest in open space, County Council has taken a proactive approach in planning to identify needs and opportunities, as well as to address the challenges facing the county. The first major step in this process was the completion of the County’s comprehensive plan, which was adopted in the fall of 2013.

Along with providing a recreational outlet for residents that promotes health, fitness and well-being, the trail offers a first-hand encounter of some of Delaware County’s most historical sites including the civil-war era railway and landmarks to some of the county’s earliest settlements including the 1850 mill hamlets of Rockdale, Lenni, West Branch, Parkmount, Knowlton and Penn’s Grove.

Chester Creek Railroad began service in 1869 and it was eventually operated by Pennsylvania Railroad and Penn Central Railroad. It was constructed shortly after the Civil War in 1869 to run along Chester Creek, providing access the local mills and industry. During the Industrial Revolution, factories and warehouses operated adjacent to the rail line serving the communities that formed near rail depots.

With the advancement of the automobile and interstate highway system, rail service fell out of demand and many businesses relocated. The Chester Creek Branch sustained severe damage from the Chester Creek flood disaster of September 1971, which destroyed local mills and swept sections of the railway into the creek. Eventually the line was abandoned and acquired by SEPTA in the 1970s.

Delaware County adopted the project by entering a 30-year land-lease for the rail lines, with the Phase I Feasibility Study completed in 2002. Engineering for the trail project began in 2008 with construction starting in May 2015.

Delaware County Council is forging ahead with Phase II of the Chester Creek Trail and has secured funding for the engineering services for an extension of the trail into Aston Township.

“Moving forward, Council will continue to seek as much open space as possible, including parks and green space, and will continue to build the current trail systems throughout the county for residents to enjoy,” White said.

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Art Watch: Two mills on the Brandywine

Gloucester by Maurice Prendergast (1858-1924), Somerville Manning Gallery

American art is on exhibit at two mills along the Brandywine, Hoffman’s and Breck’s mill. The former mill became the Brandywine River Museum of Art, and the later became the home of Somerville Manning Gallery. The museum and gallery each have two exhibits running in April which compliment each other.

Somerville Manning Gallery is currently featuring “American Masters Art of the 19th–20th Centuries” and “Protected Land: Celebrating the 50th Anniversary of the Brandywine Conservancy and the land that they preserve” at their location in Wilmington Delaware. The exhibitions will be on view from April 11 to May 27, 2017. For almost thirty-five years, Somerville Manning Gallery has specialized in paintings by the Wyeth family. The exhibition, American Masters, continues to juxtapose the artworks of N.C., Andrew, and Jamie Wyeth with the artists of their respective eras.

Along with paintings by N.C. Wyeth Somerville Manning Gallery features works by American impressionists, Maurice Prendergast, Mary Cassatt, Childe Hassam, John Henry Twachtman and J. Alden Weir. A highlight of the exhibition is a stunning portrait by renowned Philadelphia painter, Thomas Eakins. Acclaimed artists, John Singer Sargent and Winslow Homer are on view along with a major work by American Modernist Jacob Lawrence. Paintings by the father of abstract expressionism, Hans Hofmann, coincide with the Post-War period in which Andrew Wyeth was exploring realism. Contemporary pieces by Jim Dine, Wolf Kahn, and Jamie Wyeth round out the 21st century are on display as well. The exhibition includes other works from many important American schools and traditions that run the gambit from realism to abstraction.

Angered Dandelions (Pissed Dandelions) by Jamie Wyeth, Somerville Manning Gallery

The Somerville Manning Gallery’s exhibition runs concurrently with two the Brandywine River Museum of Art’s exhibitions, “From Homer to Hopper: Experiment and Ingenuity on American Art and New Terrains.”   All shows feature original paintings by a similar list of artists, which explores over 100 years of Masters in the American art world.  This show is organized by the curators of The Phillips Collection in Washington DC and specifically concentrates on American artists from 1870 to 1950 who are considered “masters of the modern art movement in America.” The exhibit is now open and runs until May 21.

New Terrains presents over twenty-five important works of American art from Richard M. Scaife, a Pittsburgh philanthropist and former trustee of the Brandywine Conservancy & Museum of Art according to the museum website. The exhibit will run until May 30.

During these exhibitions, Somerville Manning Gallery is a sponsor of events at the Brandywine River Museum of Art to celebrate the 50th Anniversary of the Brandywine Conservancy. To honor the amazing work that is done by the Conservancy the gallery hangs paintings in the back gallery to showcase the stunning preserved landscape of the Brandywine Valley. The exhibition, “Protected Land,” was initiated by a quote from George A. “Frolic” Weymouth, Founder of the Brandywine Conservancy and Museum of Art; “Our aim was always to preserve the land that inspired so many artists.”

The exhibitions in the gallery are accentuated by the gallery’s

Chair with Flowers by Hans Hofmann (1880-1966), Somerville Manning Gallery

location in the historic Brecks ill on a Brandywine River waterfall next to Hagley Museum. Vickie Manning started Somerville Manning Gallery over 35 years ago in 1981. Her goal was to showcase the great art from here as well as bring art of national prominence to the area. Somerville Manning Gallery specializes in original fine art from the Wyeth Family, the Howard Pyle School of Illustration, and American contemporary painters and sculptors including many artists from the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Art. Vickie Manning’s vision was to feature great American art from the 20th and 21st century in a beautiful setting indicative of the area and its history.

Future shows include “Andrew Wyeth,” June 5 to July 29; “Under the Influence,” five contemporary artists and work by the Masters that inspired them, September 15 to October 6; Jon Redmond, October 13 to November 11; Greg and Jon Mort, November 17 to December 23.

Vickie Manning, owner of Somerville Manning Gallery and an expert on Andrew Wyeth and Tom Padon, director of the Brandywine River Museum of Art will be guests of Lele Galer’s show on Living History Art Watch radio WCHE 1520 AM June 7 1 to 1:30 p.m. to discuss the Andrew Wyeth cross over exhibits.

Lele Galer is away, and Vickie Manning is the guest author of this week’s column.

 

 

About Lele Galer

Lele Galer is an artist who has chaired numerous art shows, taught art history and studio art, public art and has chaired, written and taught the Art in Action Art Appreciation series for the UCFD schools for the past 12 years. She worked at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and wrote for the Associated Press in Rome. She has been dedicated to Art History and art education for most of her adult life. Lele and her husband Brad own Galer Estate Winery in Kennett Square.

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