P L E N T Y SUMMER 2019 Plenty Summer 2019-joomag copy | Page 36

R U S T I C R O A D S & W AT E R W AY S EVERY ROAD HAS A STORY BY GINNY BARNES I t all starts with the word rustic: an adjective that evokes country life, a simpler time in a rural landscape, a time when agriculture and the movement of agricultural products defined road systems that gave passage from farm to nearby mill, then on to market or river for trans- port to larger towns or cities. Montgomery County has a rich farming history which was still lively and widespread into the middle of the 20th century. Orchards and farms still operated in between post World War II housing tracts just beyond the bound- aries of Washington, DC. That farming history and 36 PLENTY I SUMMER GROWING 2019 Berryville Road is designated as an Exceptional Rustic Road. its vibrant present is now concentrated in the pro- tected 93,000-acre Agricultural Reserve. By the 1960's, paving, widening and altering of existing roads to accommodate development had alerted residents to the impending loss of something that bound them to history, or took them past a local stream where a grain mill or one-room schoolhouse once stood. The practice reached epic proportions when, in the 1980's, approved housing developments even included requirements to upgrade roads miles from the project itself. The rapidity of changes aroused community concerns about a loss of scenic beauty, of special en- vironmental features and a heritage we’d only begun to document. Several near losses of one-lane bridges and uniquely picturesque roads led to citizen leaders speaking out. As a result, the Montgomery County Council created a Task Force in 1989 to study a Ru- ral/Rustic Roads Program. In 1990, it recommended creation of such a program noting that there are roads throughout the County which reflect our