« V QUIMANS EEKLY IO 4» “i CSS UI 3 sg “News from Next Door” SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2023 $1.50 M M S 1X1 W SCAN ME PAGE 2 HGS students perform Black His tory Month tribute PAGE 5 Hartman: Christians need to look for ways to sow seeds of love PAGE 7 Tobias: Jimmy Carter kind of president our nation needs now Durants Neck fire stations nearing completion New Station 1 about 3 times size of station built in 1980 BY TYLER NEWMAN Staff Writer With each new nail ham mered, stud installed, bar becue plate sold and dona tion from the community, Durants Neck Volunteer Fire Department’s two new stations inch closer to real ity. Fire Chief Robert Eure recently led a tour of the VFD’s soon-to-be main sta tion located at the comer of New Hope and Cove roads. Standing at around 9,500 square feet, the new main station is substantially larger than the old station built in 1980. That station is around 3,500 square feet. Eure said the Durants Neck department realized it needed a new station “about 20 years ago,” when the VFD had to special order a fire truck to fit its existing building. “We only have about a foot to walk around the trucks,” Eure said of the current station, located at the intersection of New Hope and Woodville roads. After taking the reins as Durants Neck fire chief in 2014, Eure said he started looking into a new station almost immediately. “We really started push ing about six or seven years ago,” he explained “So far, we’ve raised around $450,000 from the commu nity” to build it. While Durants Neck receives building fund do nations all of the time, the department also hosts some larger annual events that help drive contributions: a sportsman’s raffle, yearly' fund drives and a barbecue pork supper. “Everything currently standing is paid for,” Eure said, pointing throughout the interior of the new sta tion. While still empty, the fu ture main station is expan sive and cavernous. The garage doors have already been installed and studs are up, sectioning off the meet ing room and kitchen. The second floor above the main bay will be stor age space, while the lean-to TYLER NEWMAN/THE PERQUIMANS WEEKLY Construction continues on Durants Neck Volunteer Fire Department’s new Station 1 at the corner of New Hope and Cove roads. See DURANTS, A3 CONFERENCE CHAMPS Hodges critical of HT communication on dinner vessel PHOTOS BY DAVID GOUGH/THE DAILY ADVANCE Perquimans’ Crishya Sellers (center) makes a shot during the Lady Pirates' 61-38 Four Rivers Conference tournament championship win over Gates, Friday Feb. 17, at Perquimans County High School. HERTFORD — A Hert ford town official ex pressed frustration last week that the Harbor Towns Inc. dinner boat cruises won’t be able to visit downtown Hertford. Town Councilman Ash ley Hodges also was criti cal of Harbor Towns Inc., the private nonprofit that is developing fast ferry and dinner boat service in sup port of economic develop ment efforts in the Albe- Hertford official also questions nonprofit board’s makeup BY REGGIE PONDER Staff Writer HODGES marle. Harbor Towns officials have ac knowl edged that the 140-pas- s e n g e r Eagle 1 dinner boat the nonprofit recently purchased can’t dock at the Hertford wa terfront. The Eagle 1 has a 6-foot draft, which also happens to be the depth of the Perquimans River at the town’s waterfront. Hertford Town Manager See HODGES, A3 Lady Pirates run past Gates for FRC title Winfall OKs town PCHS last won conference, tourney titles in same year in “98 BY DAVID GOUGH The Daily Advance The' Perquimans girls basketball team achieved something Friday night the program had not done in 25 years. With a 61-38 win over Gates County in a packed gym at Perquimans County High School, the Lady Pi rates won regular-season conference and conference tournament titles in the same year for the first time since 1998. “The girls deserve it,” Per quimans head coach Aar on Burke said. “It’s been 25 years since it’s been done. I think that’s a big step for this program.” Perquimans, 21-2 and un beaten in the Four Rivers Conference, faced a No. 2 Lady Red Barons (13-11) team that had given them a good game in their first matchup. Perquimans won 39-35 at Gates in January before the Lady Pirates won the second matchup at home, 64-28,10 days later. Early on in the FRC championship game, it looked like Friday’s game was going to mirror the teams’ first matchup more than the second. Gates scored first — in the middle of six turnovers See HOOPS, A2 The Perquimans girls basketball team poses after defeating the Gates County High School Lady Red Barons 61- 38 in the Four Rivers Conference tournament championship game, Friday, Feb. 17, at Perquimans County High School. hall repairs despite pushback Town Council approves $31K contract with Chesson tor work BY TYLER NEWMAN Staff Writer WINFALL WinfaU Town Council has agreed to spend more than $30,000 to renovate its aging town hall despite pushback from the town’s mayor. The council voted 2-1 Feb. 13 to accept A.R. Chesson’s approximate ly $31,000 bid to perform restorative work at the — town’s munici pal cen ter that includes replacing some rot ted wood decking. YATES Coun cilwoman Carol Cooper told council that A.R. Chesson submit ted the lone bid for the work. She said she spoke with five other contractors, See WINFALL, A3 Wallace new golf pro at Sound Links at Albemarle Plantation Wallace hopes to start Operation 36 Academy at Sound Links BY TYLER NEWMAN Staff Writer Anyone needing golf lessons at the Sound Golf Links at Albemarle Planta tion need look no further 6 ■ 89076 47144 " Vol. 88, No. 08 WWW.PerquimansWeekly.com @2021 Perquimans Weekly All Rights Reserved than the course’s youthful new addition, PGA Teach ing Professional Mary Eliza beth Wallace. Wallace, a Camden Coun ty native, developed a pas sion for golf when she was around 12 years old. She noted that her father was an avid golfer at the time and she took lessons at The 2 Pines of Elizabeth City under the tute lage of the late Jim Gilbert. Wallace said she had tried her hand at other sports but noth ing else interested her. “I tried soccer and cheer and dance and other ‘female sports,’ but nothing really stuck,” Wallace said. “So we went out to my grandpa’s yard to hit golf balls one day and I hit one the first time. My dad said there was ‘something there’ and asked if I wanted to wear pink and skirts all the time. I said, ‘ab solutely.’” That first swing snow balled into a long-term love for Wallace. “I loved playing so much, I decided to get my first job at The Pines as a part-time intern helping David Mas- citti, PGA (head pro) with summer camps,” Wallace said. She’s now worked in the golf industry for nine years, learning under some of the best junior instructors in the game, including Michelle Holmes, an LPGA teaching professional and top 50 U.S kids instructor, during high school and PGA tour in- structors Butch Liebler and David Orr. Wallace graduated from Campbell University in . De cember 2020 with a bach elor’s degree in business administration and PGA TYLER NEWMAN/THE PERQUIMANS WEEKLY PGA Teaching Pro Mary Elizabeth Wallace (left) gives a friend a quick lesson on the driving range at the Sound Golf Links at Albemarle Plantation. See GOLF, A3