06/06/2026
Having recently experienced a fifty-year high school reunion, and I will say that it was an amazingly enjoyable experience that inspired MUCH nostalgia and to my classmates who read this, we are now officially a part of Berkeley County’s history.
I grew up in the area near Darkesville and Vanville, between Middle Creek and the Opequon on the map. I was recently sitting on what we call our sun deck with a cup of coffee and a pair of binoculars for bird watching. I heard a mockingbird nearby, over and over, and the soulful mourning dove’s cry. Wow! This is exactly what I was awakened by every summer morning when I was growing up.
As many of you, during the summer months, probably slept with windows open and metal screens to keep out unwanted “things.” I did as well. In the early morning hours, I would awaken to the very same sounds. Something that I had forgotten about entirely. The reason I remembered it was pure déjà vu.
It was a memory inspired by a sensory event which awakened a personal historical event. I think that makes sense. There are other sensory memories of Berkeley County, such as the smell of bread on Wi******er Avenue in Martinsburg. The smell of apples at Inwood, or practically anywhere in that general area. The sound of the trains throughout Berkeley County, and even in my area, we could hear them coming to Martinsburg from Harpers Ferry, particularly at night, the distant sound along with the occasional lonely whistle.
When I think of Hedgesville, I think of the town spring, something unique to Hedgesville in Berkeley County. When I think of the Falling Waters area, I think of the beautiful falls. Back Creek Valley holds a VERY personal memory because I went there many times. On Buck Hill Road, there used to be a place where water came down the mountain from a spring in a pipe, and you could drink, fill your vessels, whatever. My grandparents went there for years to get their drinking water, many memories.
Where we live reflects largely on who we are, particularly when you’re fifty years past high school graduation and never strayed far from home. Berkeley County holds many hidden treasures, all of them worth exploring.