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Naperville
Friday, April 19, 2024

Summer road trip shows what communities have in common

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Above / Other than much larger trees, the Penicks’ first house in Chatham, New Jersey, looks pretty much as it did when left and we moved to Naperville in 1993.

Below / This month I’ve posted my Daily Herald column here with pictures from our recent trip to augment my word-count that is limited for the printed page in the Neighbor section. As for digital, it’s also challenging for some of us to keep up in a 140-character communication world. 

When I was in grade school, classes began after Labor Day when the weather was cooler.

My back-to-school wardrobe always included a new lightweight jacket to wear while I waited for the school bus.

These days, seasons seem to have shifted. From my observance at local bus stops, casual clothing doesn’t appear any newer than the old. And I’m reminiscing about skirts to my knees — no shorts or slacks for girls back then.

I’m also remembering a special writing assignment that first week of school.

“What did you do over summer vacation?” was the topic I covered on several pages in one of those black-and-white marbled composition books.

Considering the timing, here’s what I could write this year…

In August, our daughter Ashley and I took a trip on the road not taken since we’d moved to Naperville in 1993.

After visiting my folks in Muncie, Indiana, we headed east through Ohio, West Virginia and Pennsylvania, ending up in Chatham, New Jersey, where we stayed with our former next door neighbors, Diane and Jack. They now live across the street from our first Penick family home, where we lived for nearly 12 years.

I’ve flown back East a bunch of times since 1993, but this return trip was Ashley’s first.

sunflowers-in-PA
Above / When we got off the Pennsylvania Turnpike to fill up the gas tank, we came upon a field with more sunflowers than we’d ever seen.

And what did I learn?

Ashley is a good driver on the interstate.

The transponder known as I-PASS in Illinois works like a charm on every tollway from here to New Jersey.

A well-marked exit to Washington, Pennsylvania — a city south of Pittsburgh near the Monongahela River where we used to spend the night during road trips with our three young kids — led us to overnight accommodations this time, too.

As we checked into the motel, the desk clerk recommended Angello’s, a family-owned independent Italian bistro that had been in business since 1939, where we enjoyed a delicious dinner and their brand of gelato.

While in Chatham, a borough with about 9,000 residents, we visited former neighbors and the two Sept. 11 Memorials dedicated to 13 residents and first responders in the community who were killed in the terrorist attacks in 2001.

chatham-9-11
Above / Located behind the Library of the Chathams, the September 11 Memorial pictured above is a tribute to 13 borough and township residents who were killed on Sept. 11, 2001.
chatham-9-11--2
Above / A second September 11 Memorial is situated in the Firehouse Plaza in Chatham Borough, near the Police Station and a short walk from the Train Station.

Following our quest for local history, we revisited George Washington’s Headquarters as well as museums new to us in Morris County. Diane was a wonderful tour guide.

And even after 22 years in Naperville, local politics attracted our attention one evening when the council agenda included a discussion about cutting down a 175-year-old scarlet oak tree.

landmark-oak-tree
Above / The lives of a 175-year old scarlet oak tree and the Chatham Shade Tree Commission were threatened until residents stood up to insist more information and time were needed in order to make the right decision.

Watching the Borough Council meeting live on cable TV with Diane, who had previously served on the Chatham Shade Tree Commission, I was impressed. More residents had packed the meeting to save the landmark tree than had come before the Naperville City Council to comment regarding the first proposed Home Rule Sales Tax and the fee increase of weekly trash collection.

Ashley and I took the train into New York City twice. We spent one emotionally charged afternoon at One World Trade Center, where we toured the National Sept. 11 Memorial and its large reflecting pools in the plaza.

nyc-wtc
Above/ One World Trade Center provides a show of resilience and the American spirit.

Another day we enjoyed lunch with longtime friends Mark, Jackie and Frank. I’d met them while living in New York City and working in the creative department for adman Jerry Della Femina, back in the 1970s when the Twin Towers first opened.

We rekindled youthful memories and Ashley laughed along with us. Now she knows why I loved working with them.

During our 14-hour road trip home, we listened to news radio. That’s when I heard a sound bite from New Hampshire where candidates are campaigning for the 2016 presidential primary. Hopefuls on the national scene seemed surprised how often they’d been asked about local heroin problems.

Coincidentally, a couple weeks after we returned to Naperville, a news story caught my eye about heroin addiction in Washington, Pennsylvania. Just as in Naperville and surrounding towns, that city also is trying to rein in the epidemic that is poisoning local communities.

What else did I learn on my summer vacation? When you pay attention, many of the local issues and patriotic remembrances that we find in Naperville are on the minds of Americans everywhere.

And more than ever, I’m remembering that when you make friends for a lifetime, you can go home again.

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PN Editor
PN Editor
An editor is someone who prepares content for publishing. It entered English, the American Language, via French. Its modern sense for newspapers has been around since about 1800.
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