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May 8, 2025

Chestertown Spy

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9 Brevities

Landline By Katherine Emery

April 15, 2025 by Kate Emery General Leave a Comment

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Last week, my students participated in activities and discussions about safety, at home, in school, and the community. From reviewing how to safely cross the street to understanding what to do in an emergency, the children gained valuable knowledge to help them stay safe and confident in various situations. This program is designed by the Talbot County Health Department and is an important and effective tool for helping children face serious situations.

This year, the program went a step farther than the usual “stranger danger” warnings. A new addition focused on internet safety, including the impact of online games, cellphones, and social media. Students learned about the importance of protecting personal information, recognizing unsafe online behavior, and knowing what to do if something makes them feel uncomfortable.

As part of the safety lesson, students were asked to raise their hands if they know a “trusted person’s” phone number. One child out of twenty six knew that important phone number. Forty years ago, memorizing important phone numbers was a rite of passage and a requirement for kindergarten readiness. I can still recite the phone number from my childhood home, it has stuck with me all these years.

By 1994, my two eldest children had began driving and my husband and I thought having a cell phone would be valuable. It was a Motorola “Brick” flip phone. Making phone calls was its only capability. The phone number that belonged to that original phone was transferred to subsequent phones until just recently and every family member had that number memorized.

There is something so comforting about the memory of landline phones. The familiar ring throughout the house, the long, coiled cord stretched around corners, and the way conversations felt more intentional. If you missed a call there wasn’t any caller ID, just a bit of mystery.

Back then, children were actually taught phone etiquette, as if answering a call was a sacred duty. The polite response went something like, “General residence, this is Jenny speaking,” delivered with all the formality of a receptionist at a law firm. The phone was strictly off-limits during dinner, heaven help the kid who dared to reach for it between bites of meatloaf. If the phone rang after 10:00 p.m., everyone froze. It could only mean one thing: an emergency. No one let it go to voicemail (which didn’t exist yet anyway), you always answered, heart pounding, prepared for anything.

It was an exciting day when our clunky old rotary phones were finally replaced with a sleek, futuristic push-button model. No more spinning that dial like we were cracking a safe just to call Grandma. No more misdialing on the last digit and having to start all over again. The push-button phone felt like something out of Star Trek, you just pressed the numbers and boom, connection! We strutted around like we were living in the space age. It was progress, one satisfying beep at a time.

Years later, we called it progress when we finally ditched our last landline phone. We convinced ourselves that we didn’t need it anymore now that we had a new family mobile plan. Everyone had their own cellphone and the old landline, the kitchen phone, once the heart of our household communication, was unceremoniously unplugged and tossed aside like a relic from another era.

According to CNN Business, In recent years, there’s been a quiet but growing trend of people returning to landline phones, drawn by their reliability and simplicity in a fast-paced digital world. As cell phones become increasingly cluttered with apps, notifications, and constant connectivity, many are seeking the calm and clarity of a dedicated phone line. Landlines offer a kind of peace—no updates, no distractions, just a steady dial tone and the joy of undisturbed conversation. For some, it’s a nostalgic return to the days when phone calls had a sense of presence and intention. For others, especially in rural areas or during emergencies, it’s about practicality, landlines still work when cell towers go down or power cuts out. Whether for nostalgia, security, or the desire to unplug, the humble landline is making a quiet comeback, especially in Gen Z homes who are drawn to landlines for their vintage aesthetic.

There is a certain love for a landline phone, a deep, unspoken affection for its steady presence, its familiar ring, and the way it connected us not just to voices, but to moments, memories, and the comforting rhythm of home.


Kate Emery General is a retired chef/restaurant owner who was born and raised in Casper, Wyoming. Kate loves her grandchildren, knitting, and watercolor painting. Kate and her husband, Matt are longtime residents of Cambridge’s West End where they enjoy swimming and bicycling. 

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 9 Brevities

Chesapeake Flashback: the Chestertown Chautauqua

April 11, 2025 by Historical Society of Kent County Leave a Comment

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Before the Tea Party Festival, Chestertown had the Chautauqua. In this undated photograph, a parade of children dressed in matching white follows a group of young men in military fatigues carrying a large American flag. The children carry a banner reading Chestertown MD. Chautauqua.

While we don’t know what year this photo was taken, we do know that the Chestertown Chautauqua was an week-long annual summer event in the early 20th century. The Saturday, August 15, 1925 edition of The Chestertown Transcript includes two separate items referring to that year’s Chautauqua. The first reads:

Sunday services will be held in the Chautauqua tent as usual, this year. Dr. Robert Mac Gowen, who will deliver “The Creed of Democracy” as the open lecture of Chautauqua on Saturday evening will also preach at the community Sunday service in the Chautauqua tent. Dr. Mac Gowen is pastor of the Bellevue Avenue Presbytreian [sic] Church of Pittsburgh. The Royal Welsh male quarette will sing also at the Sunday service.

The second, headlined “Chautauqua Begins Today” provides all the details and persuasive arguments needed to spark interest in attending the event:

The 1925 chautauqua said to be the best series of entertainments yet given here since it was organized, will begin this evening at 3 p.m. Everyone should see the Chautauqua. It is the biggest intellectual treat served here during the year. To duplicate it, as a whole, would require days of travel and much money. Tickets are $2.50 and $1.00. The price of each performance is 21 cents. Every lover of Chautauqua could buy their season ticket before the first entertainment begins. After that the proceeds go to the company, while the guarantors are compelled to make up any deficit.

In the September 6, 1919 edition of The Chestertown Transcript, an accounting of that year’s Chautauqua program includes speeches entitled The League of Nations, Sun-Crowned Manhood, Dollars and Sense for Your Town, and others. Entertainment included performances by the Overseas Quartet, “consisting of four young men who saw active service in Europe, assisted by Miss Alice Price;” The Victory Concert Party; popular drama Poly of the Circus, and the opera Robinhood, with “a full cast, chorus, and orchestra.”

On the final day of the 1919 Chautauqua, the Transcript touts a pageant presented by Junior Chautauqua, for which “the childern [sic] of Chestertown are being drilled … every morning by competent instructors and the event will be a big event this year as it always is.” It would seem to be a reasonable assumption that the parade in today’s photo is part of such a pageant. If you have any information about this photograph or about Chestertown’s Chautauqua traditions, we invite you to share it in the comments here, or by emailing [email protected].

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 9 Brevities

Lion’s Mane jellyfish a reminder of our cold winter

April 10, 2025 by Dennis Forney Leave a Comment

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The large, orangish and red jellyfish floating around the surface of our creeks and rivers are another remnant of the cold winter quickly becoming a memory.

Lion’s Mane jellyfish typically inhabit colder waters of the North Atlantic but, drifting with currents associated with colder than usual temperatures, they can make it into the brackish waters of the Chesapeake.

According to articles posted by the Chesapeake Bay Program and the Virginia Institute of Marine Science, Lion’s Mane jellyfish are the largest jellyfish on the planet. A winter jellyfish, they can grow in the wide ocean of the North Atlantic as large as, and even larger, than blue whales.  The size of their crowns has been measured up to six feet wide with tentacles greater than 100 feet long.

They show up in the Chesapeake, when conditions are right, in the late winter and early spring though they’re much smaller here than out in the ocean. Their sting is characterized as moderately painful, but are rarely reported because few people swim in local waters before they warm.

According to local watermen lore, the coloration has to do with their own version of spawning, after which they die and float to the bottom.  There, the spent jellyfish are occasionally brought up on oyster tongs late in the wild harvest season, or like now, on the bottom-lying baits of trotlines just being deployed with the April start of the crabbing season.

Dennis Forney has been a publisher, journalist and columnist on the Delmarva Peninsula since 1972.  He writes from his home on Grace Creek in Bozman.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 9 Brevities

F.E.A.R. by Katherine Emery

April 8, 2025 by Kate Emery General Leave a Comment

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In 1979, a group of Iranian militants stormed the U.S. Embassy in Tehran and took fifty two Americans hostage. It happened at a time of major upheaval in Iran after the Shah was overthrown and the new Islamic government took over. The hostages were held for 444 days which was a major source of tension between two countries that were once close allies. Despite efforts by President Jimmy Carter, the hostages were finally released in January 1981, just as Ronald Reagan was being sworn in as President.

The 1979 hostage crisis left a profound mark on me; for the first time, I felt a deep, personal anxiety about the state of the world and began to grasp how global events could ripple into my everyday life.

My father, a World War ll Navy veteran, often remarked in discussions about global affairs that he believed that a Third World country would be the catalyst for World War lll. I was a very young Navy wife with three tiny children, living in Coronado, California whose husband was deployed to the Persian Gulf. The Iranian Revolution, the hostage situation, and the oil crisis required increased U.S. military presence. I carried the weight of everyday life alone, as part of the sisterhood of Naval Officers Wives, we were constantly hoping and praying for the safe return of the men and women aboard the ships of the Seventh Fleet.

The fluctuation of gas prices and availability became (and still are) my barometer for the broader condition of the world. It is a fact that political instability in regions rich in oil resources can lead to concern about the security of oil supplies, triggering price increases. I passed my driving test in 1972 in Wyoming, very aware of the impact of gas prices. Wyoming is a significant oil producing state, ranking as the eighth largest crude oil producer in the United States. Living in an oil boom state felt like being swept up in a wave of prosperity. There was a sense of motion-new jobs and a buzz of opportunity in the air. Gas was cheap, 36 cents per gallon and people felt optimistic about the future. The economy seemed to be thriving and there was a great sense of possibility. It was a time when abundance seemed endless, and the energy of growth touched nearly every part of daily life.

To manage shortages during the gas crisis of 1979, California Governor, Jerry Brown implemented an odd-even rationing plan. Drivers with odd numbered plates could only “fill up” on odd numbered days and even numbered plates on even numbered days. What had once been a quick routine task turned into a lengthy ordeal. Fear hung in the air as we waited in endless lines, uncertain if there would be enough fuel to get through the week, or even the day.

I was in charge of writing the USS Ranger’s Officer’s Wives monthly newsletter. I would get first hand, de-classified information from the Captain’s wife about the movements of the ship and its crew. Learning about the six American diplomats that escaped capture and took refuge in the homes of Canadian Embassy officers made me very grateful for our close neighbors to the North. I was grateful that Canada took a huge risk by hiding the Americans in their homes and then granting Canadian passports to the Americans. The six Americans, posing as a Hollywood movie production crew scouting for a suitable filming location in Tehran, managed to flee Iran without a hitch. While the “Canadian Caper” improved Canada’s relations with the United States, it significantly strained Canada-Iran relations. The Canadian embassy staff were quickly evacuated from Iran, and the embassy was closed in 1980, due to fears of Iranian retaliation.

If history has taught us anything, true friends show up in a time of crisis. They don’t hesitate. They step up because it’s the right thing to do. Canada has been that friend to the United States for decades. Canada was the first country to send disaster relief to the U.S. after Hurricane Katrina and Canadian water planes have flown to California to help put out the wildfires.

Lately, I find myself feeling anxious about the state of the world. It seems like everyday brings new challenges; political unrest, economic uncertainty, and environmental crises. The constant barrage of bad news makes it hard to see a clear path forward. It’s as if the world is teetering on the edge. I am an optimistic person so is my f.e.a.r. (false emotion appearing real) just that, false?

I’ll continue to focus on positive thoughts, avoid the news, read great books, garden, walk my dog, ride my bike along the Choptank River, and increase my daily dose of Ashwagandha.


Kate Emery General is a retired chef/restaurant owner who was born and raised in Casper, Wyoming. Kate loves her grandchildren, knitting, and watercolor painting. Kate and her husband, Matt are longtime residents of Cambridge’s West End where they enjoy swimming and bicycling. 

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 9 Brevities

Agent 7 Review: Caroline’s Table in Denton worth the Drive

April 6, 2025 by Spy Agent 7 -- 00 Section Leave a Comment

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It was a nice day for a weekend drive to lunch. For many, Denton is a place they drive by, but it is increasingly a place to visit and explore. Sitting on the Choptank River; yes, I do mean the Choptank, the community provides a fine opportunity to explore food and beverages along with retail shops along Market Street.

We selected Caroline’s In Denton for lunch and were delighted with what we discovered.

First, the location in an older house, fully refurbished, gets your attention. The friendly, family feel hits any visitor immediately. The commitment to a “farm to table” approach is real and welcomed. And, the one restaurant offers two variations, “Caroline’s Table” for finer dining and “The Sidebar” for a more casual meal.

We began our dining experience with two cups of Crab Bisque that was wonderful

The Denton Double caught my eye with everything packed into the smashed burger coming from local sources

You can find a wide variety of offerings by chef Ken Zellers, beautifully photographed on the website for Caroline’s. It’s a place we certainly will visit again soon!

Only a short drive from Easton, the journey is well worth the drive!

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 9 Brevities

The Spy and Avalon Launch New Series with Craig Fuller: Good Dog with Meg Daley Olmert

April 5, 2025 by The Spy Leave a Comment

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The Spy and the Avalon Foundation are teaming up this year to present a new live interview series featuring Spy columnist Craig Fuller in conversation with some of the Mid-Shore’s most interesting and thought-provoking individuals.

The series will debut with a timely discussion between Fuller and Meg Daley Olmert, acclaimed author of Made for Each Other: The Biology of the Human-Animal Bond. Together, they’ll explore one of the Eastern Shore’s favorite topics—dogs—and their extraordinary role in healing, especially for those coping with PTSD.

Here is a short one-minute clip of Meg for a future Spy interview talking about her work.

In a first for the Avalon Theatre, well-behaved dogs and their human companions are welcome to attend the event together in the main theatre. See below for details

This unique evening promises to be enjoyable for humans and canines alike. It celebrates that special bond that brings comfort, connection, and recovery to so many.

Join us for what promises to be a fascinating and heartwarming kickoff to the new series.

Tickets are $25, and they can be purchased here or by calling the Avalon at 410.822.7299. Proceeds of the event will support the Spy and Avalon with their public affairs programming. Meg will be selling and signing her book after the event 

Dogs are welcome

Guests are welcome to bring their dogs to the Avalon. The conversation will be held in the main theatre, with appropriate spacing for dogs to find a peaceful place to settle down. Prior to the beginning of the program, the Avalon will show dog-friendly video clips on the big screen for their audience, and free Milk Bones will be handed out. 

We expect adults who bring their pets to always have the dog on a leash. The dog owner also assumes responsibility for their pet’s behavior.

 

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The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 9 Brevities

Chestertown Flashback: Safety first!

April 4, 2025 by Historical Society of Kent County Leave a Comment

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We’re putting safety first in this week’s Friday Flashback photo, with an undated photograph showing the Betterton School fire escape. In the event of a fire, students could swish swiftly from the second floor to solid ground. One can only imagine that fire drills were a lot of fun, except perhaps on sunny late spring days when the metal tube must have heated up pretty efficiently in the Eastern Shore sun. Anyone who remembers this fire escape is invited to share your memories with us by emailing [email protected].

Visit the Bordley History Center between 5pm and 7pm on First Friday to view the current exhibit, What Can You Find at the Historical Society? Light refreshments will be available. Image courtesy of the Historical Society of Kent County.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 9 Brevities

Lyrids and morning planets April 2025 sky-watch by Dennis Herrmann

March 29, 2025 by Dennis Herrman Leave a Comment

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The annual Lyrid meteor shower, which peaks the night of April 22nd, is one of the main April highlights for sky-watchers.  This meteor shower, caused by debris left behind from a Comet with a 416 year orbit, will be best seen from 2 to 4 am looking East.  With 20 to 25 meteors per hour be likely, it is worth going out early to see them.
Brilliant Venus also graces the early morning eastern sky all month, and will guide the way to seeing dimmer Mercury and Saturn, standing side by side just below it.  Look for the this “planet triangle” on the morning of April 12th, 30 minutes before sunrise.
Jupiter is still a bright planet in the southwest, but the observing window for it closes dramatically.  Jupiter sets around 1 am on April 1st; but before 11 pm on April 30th.  A thin crescent Moon will be seen just above Jupiter on April 2nd; and again on April 30th.
 On April 1st the crescent Moon will be just to the left of M 45; the well-known Pleiades star cluster.  With binoculars, this will be a truly beautiful sight.
Saturn is a very dim object in the eastern sky; and very low to the horizon.  But on April 24th with a waning crescent Moon hanging just above the ringed planet, it may be easier to spot.
Mars is the only planet that will be well up above the horizon for any length of time this month.  It is now to the left and slightly above Castor and Pollux, the two first magnitude “head” stars of the Gemini twins constellation.  Mars won’t set until 3:00 am this month.  But before that we can see it gradually move into Cancer the crab and approach M 44, the “Beehive” Cluster of stars.  By April 30th Mars will appear just above and right of the cluster, and will make another beautiful sight through binoculars or a low power telescope.
Full Moon for April is on the 12th.

Dennis Herrmann developed a life-long interest in astronomy at an early age and got his first telescope at the age of 12. Through his 43 years of teaching at Kent County High School he taught Astronomy and Earth/Space Science and coached track and field and cross country. He led and participated in numerous workshops on astronomy at the Air and Space Museum (DC), the Maryland Science Center, and the Mid-Atlantic Planetarium Society. He loves sharing and explaining the night sky to increase understanding and enjoyment of it to folks of all ages.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 9 Brevities

Chestertown Flashback: Delia Ringgold Caulk

March 28, 2025 by Historical Society of Kent County 2 Comments

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On this last Friday of Women’s History Month we share a 1988 portrait by Tyler Campbell of Delia Ringgold Caulk, who was born in Big Woods in 1910 and called Kent County home all her life. According to a passage about Mrs. Caulk from Here on the Chester, Washington College Remembers Old Chestertown by John Lang (© 2006, Washington College),

As a young girl, Delia Ringgold Caulk worked in the fields, did domestic work, and worked for several canneries. At hog butchering time, she went from farm to farm, where she helped cut up meat, made scrapple, and put up lard in 50-pound cans. She later worked at the Rigbie Hotel in Betterton, where as a “pantry girl” she washed and sorted the silver for each waitress. She worked at the Chestertown Cannery and the Vita Foods plant. At one time, she was the only black woman who worked at the old Acme store, where she dressed chickens.

Yet apart from her lifetime of labor, Mrs. Caulk served the Lord and her community. She was the first president of the No. 2 Kent and Queen Anne’s Hospital Auxiliary (No. 2 indicating the black membership), and at one time she was chaplain of the Kent County PTA. Her life centered around Fountain Methodist Church on Big Woods Road, where the pastor and parishioners called her “Old Faithful” and “Rock of Gibraltar” because they could always count on her to help. She taught Sunday school, and was president of what is now the Methodist Women. At one time she was in a “praying band,” part of a troupe of musicians with only their voices for instruments.

The first exhibit of 2025 at the Bordley History Center includes several oral histories from the Historical Society’s collection. Delia Caulk’s is among them, and all are encouraged to stop in and listen to Mrs. Caulk’s story in her own voice, and to the others that are also available. The Bordley History Center is open Thursdays and Fridays from 11 am – 2 pm, Saturdays from 10 am – 1 pm. Image courtesy of Tyler Campbell.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 9 Brevities, Archives

The Search for Rational Intelligence

March 26, 2025 by Spy Desk Leave a Comment

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We now have a gang who cannot spy straight

They webcast together through signals too late

They are newly empaneled yet not strange to the scene

And they struggle to say just what they mean

We wonder what could possibly come next

But how would we know

They won’t show us the text.

~Super Sleuth

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 9 Brevities

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