He Paved Over a 1902 Farm Road. The Deed Changed Everything.-Ginny

Charlene Hollister did not think of Hollow Creek Lane as a road with a memory.

To her, it was an ugly strip of old farm access that dropped leaves on her pickleball court and made the eastern edge of Apple Knoll Estates feel less like a polished retirement community than the working valley it had replaced.

To me, it was the road my great-grandfather built with his hands in 1902.

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My name is Bart Mosley, and I was 54 years old when the HOA decided my family history could be improved with chainsaws, hot mix asphalt, and a clipboard.

I live in Frederick County, Virginia, ten miles north of Winchester, on 320 acres of apple ground my great-grandfather, John Calvin Mosley, first walked in 1898 with a Commonwealth land grant in his coat pocket and a railroad surveyor’s pencil behind his ear.

We grow Yorks, Staymans, and Newtown Pippins on land that smells like cold limestone water in the morning and fermenting apples in October.

My wife, Alma, teaches choral music at Frederick County High and has a soprano clear enough to make a church basement go silent.

Our older son, Nate, runs Mosley Heritage Cidery in the timber-frame building he raised on the property in 2018.

Our younger son, Wyatt, had just finished his master’s in agricultural and applied economics at Virginia Tech, and Alma and I had driven eight hours to Blacksburg to watch him receive his hood.

That was the weekend Charlene made her move.

She had bought the corner lot in Apple Knoll Estates in 2021, moved in with a white Range Rover and a habit of treating rural land as scenery, and climbed onto the HOA board within six months.

By spring of 2024, she was president.

The first time she spoke to me at the Frederick County Fair, she told me my 1968 John Deere made too much noise on weekends.

I told her the tractor had been waking up the valley longer than her subdivision had existed in anybody’s imagination.

She blinked twice, smiled like a person humoring a service worker, and called me the cranky old farmer next door.

That was the shape of our relationship.

She complained.

I kept farming.

Then, on a Friday in May, while Alma and I were gone for Wyatt’s graduation, Charlene hired a paving crew.

Three men arrived with chainsaws, a paver, reflective markers, and enough confidence to destroy something they had never bothered to understand.

They cut down twelve sugar maples along Hollow Creek Lane.

They tore out the original limestone wheel ruts my great-grandfather had quarried by hand from a creek bed.

They poured 0.4 miles of hot mix asphalt over the lane, painted a yellow center line, and installed a sign that read Hollow Creek Drive, Apple Knoll Estates Common Area.

The invoice was $47,000.

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