Monday, August 24, 2020

WHITE'S FERRY, MARYLAND


A HIDDEN GEM
Dangerous deadly pandemic notwithstanding, I needed to get out of the house and so I decided to go on a road trip. Janet is away this week so sitting home alone was not an option. So, I settled on a distant destination she would not approve of and took the slowest route possible. With several bottles of water and a vat of iced-coffee, I drove from our middle-class garret in Collegeville, PA all the way to White’s Ferry on the Potomac River in Maryland. It’s about 160 miles just one way, and took me four hours to reach this last remaining working ferry on the Potomac. Janet would have been so pissed.


LAST OF ITS KIND
At one time there were 100 ferries servicing traffic between Maryland and Virginia. This last surviving ferry operates between Montgomery County, Maryland and Loudon County, Virginia, just north of Leesburg and has been in operation since the 1780’s, or before the United States won its independence from England.  It was called Conrad’s Ferry then and Virginia farmers used it to transport their produce and livestock to the markets of Washington D.C., about 35 miles southeast. After the Civil War a Confederate Colonel, Elijah V. White purchased the ferry and named his one ferry boat after his commanding General, Jubal Anderson Early.
 
WHITE'S FERRY WITH OLD NAME

Today White’s Ferry makes the 300-yard crossing of the Potomac catering mostly to cars. Many are commuters hoping to avoid thick traffic on the Capital Beltway, or going north to cross the Potomac at the Point of Rocks Bridge. It’s definitely a commuter route, because in the nearby town of Poolesville there were traffic cameras taking pictures of speeders. It costs $5.00 cash to cross with your car, $8.00 roundtrip. Motorcycles are $3.00. Bicyclists are charged $2.00 and pedestrians a buck. The ferry is capable of transporting up to 24 cars at a time and operates from 5 a.m. to 11 p.m. 365 days a year, unless the river’s too high or filled with too much debris.
 
ONE OF SEVERAL HORSE FARMS
IN THIS PART OF MARYLAND
This area of Montgomery County Maryland is idyllic. The approach to White’s Ferry passes several horse farms and the 185-mile C&O canal goes past the area and the towpath is a welcoming hike and bike trail that goes all the way to the capital. There is amble parking for the canal and also White’s Ferry Store & Grill which serves great food at reasonable prices. There’s an outdoor seating area at the restaurant as well as a vast open area with more picnic tables for the general public. There is also a boat ramp alongside the ferry ramp for personal watercraft. When I visited the area on a blisteringly hot day there was a family picnicking in the shade of trees while several kids flounced in the Potomac as the ferry plied the waters back and forth, all of which seemed pastoral and pleasant and not at all overly dramatic despite recent events, which was the real reason I went on this ridiculously long car ride.

CHESAPEAKE & OHIO CANAL
FERRY WITH NEW NAME

CANCEL CULTURE v THE LOST CAUSE
White’s Ferry has been owned by the Brown family since the mid-40’s and they are quite proud of maintaining this slice of American history, but recently remembrance of that history had to be altered. When Elijah White purchased the ferry after the Civil War, he named the boat after his commanding General and from then up until June of this year the ferry carried the name of his beloved leader and avowed white supremacist Gen. Jubal A. Early on a banner stretched over the top of the ferry.

Early was a successful Confederate officer, but after the Army of Northern Virginia surrendered to the Union, he fled to Texas hoping to continue the war with whatever Confederate Army he could muster, with no success. He took pride in being an “unreconstructed rebel” even after being pardoned by President Andrew Johnson and was quite vocal in justifying the Confederate cause for secession from the Union. His attitude and others furthered the idea that the Confederate cause was heroic and noble, that slavery was just and moral because it led to economic prosperity and the men of the south were chivalrous and the northern aggressors were destroying a southern way of living.
PEDESTAL IN THE BACKGROUND

It has come to be known as “the Lost Cause.” In a sense, it is as if history was being written not by the winners, but the losers..

In June of this year the name “Gen. Jubal A. Early” was removed at White’s Ferry with a similar looking banner that reads, “Historic White’s Ferry,” instead. 

REMAINING PEDESTAL

The Lost Cause movement also inspired the construction of many Southern memorials. These statues and edifices also served as reminders of the horrors African Americans suffered from years of slavery and Jim Crow laws. One such reminder was recently torn down at White’s Ferry.

In 2017 a statue of a young Confederate soldier that had stood outside the court house in Rockville, Maryland for decades was defaced with “BLM” graffiti and was subsequently removed to the private land of White’s Ferry. The statue had been commissioned by the United Daughters of the Confederacy in 1913 and meant to commemorate Confederate soldiers from Montgomery County, Maryland, was given to the patriarch of the White’s Ferry, R. Edwin Brown.

Maryland never seceded from the Union, although it was a slave holding state until 1864, Soldiers from Maryland fought for both sides, a fact I had not known previously. 

The statue stood on a pedestal that read: “To our heroes of Montgomery Co., Maryland, That We Through Life May Not Forget To Love The Thin Gray Line.” The statue was a symbol of history, and of hatred, of sacrifice, and of slavery, and with the current growing backlash against such reminders of man’s racist cruelty, it was defaced again and toppled on June 16. Edwin Brown died this past January and the family had the statue removed to storage, although the pedestal remains, fenced off from further damage.

When the statue arrived in 2017 the Brown family was negotiating with local historians to create interpretive panels about the history of White’s Ferry and how statues of the Confederate soldier were sometimes erected with the explicit purpose of to intimidate and reinforce white supremacist ideas. Now, with just the pedestal remaining the future of the historic panels is in question.  

In the blistering heat of mid-day, it was easy to see the swirl of history and hatred. It was good to know the story behind this place and to realize how there can be underlying even glaring animosity in the symbolism. It is a complicated history.  
  
Here is a good recent article about The Lost Cause.

COME FOR…
Whether you’re coming to White’s Ferry to experience a bit of history, or take the ferry like a mini-amusement ride, or to hike the C&O Canal, or eat a great lunch at White’s Grill, or flounce a bit in the Potomac, this is a great destination, even if it’s a long long drive.
VIEW OF SUGARLOAF MT, MD

…SUGARLOAF MOUNTAIN
But, wait, there’s more!
A short drive from the ferry is Sugarloaf Mountain, a privately owned scenic park designated as a National Natural Landmark. Reminding early settlers of the shape of loaf of sugar rising from the surrounding farmlands, this popular tourist attraction has great hiking and seasonal horseback and biking trails. It’s free, but the park is on privately held land and a donation is encouraged.

But, given the distance I had already traveled, I had no time to explore Sugarloaf Mountain, but was able to stop by Sugarloaf Mountain Winery. The winery has several respectable wines and a pastoral setting to sit and enjoy. I dared not linger over a glass and instead purchased a bottle for home.

ASK A STUPID QUESTION
Okay, so far reader right about now you’re asking me how does it take four hours to drive 160 miles?

I took back roads and county roads from Collegeville to White’s Ferry. I took County Route 372 to cross over the mighty Susquehanna River and picked my way along tertiary roads and finally crossed the Mason Dixon Line in appropriately named Lineboro, Maryland and finally got on Route 27 for a good way until directions had me weaving along local roads before I found White’s Ferry… 

Yep, Janet would have been pissed.