Carrying glowing lanterns through the dusk, more than a dozen Hearthstone School students marked the Winter Solstice with their annual lantern walk through the Town of Washington on Dec. 18, led by teacher Kitty Keyser.
“Special thanks to The Inn at Little Washington, R.H. Ballard Shop & Gallery and Trinity Episcopal Church for yet another year of graciously welcoming our students and sharing in the light and joy of the season,” Hearthstone School said in a Facebook post on Friday.
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Hearthstone School students carried lanterns through the Town of Washington on Dec. 18 to commemorate the Winter Solstice.(Photo/Ireland Hayes)
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Hearthstone School students carried lanterns through the Town of Washington on Dec. 18 to commemorate the Winter Solstice. (Photo/Ireland Hayes)
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Hearthstone School students carried lanterns through the Town of Washington on Dec. 18 to commemorate the Winter Solstice. (Photo/Ireland Hayes)
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Hearthstone School students carrying lanterns and caroling stopped at The Inn at Little Washington. Pictured is Inn at Little Washington proprietor and chef Patrick O’Connell. (Photo/Ireland Hayes)
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Hearthstone School students carried lanterns through the Town of Washington on Dec. 18 to commemorate the Winter Solstice. (Photo/Ireland Hayes)
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Hearthstone School students carried lanterns through the Town of Washington on Dec. 18 to commemorate the Winter Solstice. (Photo/Ireland Hayes)
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Hearthstone School students carried lanterns through the Town of Washington on Dec. 18 to commemorate the Winter Solstice. (Photo/Ireland Hayes)
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Julia Shanahan began working at the Rappahannock News and Foothills Forum in 2021 as a corps member with Report for America, assigned to cover the growing needs of public services in the county. She worked as a corps member for three years, winning two individual awards for feature and breaking news stories and served as a member of the advisory committee.
Julia has been working as editor of the Rappahannock News since spring 2023 covering a wide span of issues, including rural broadband access, zoning and other happenings in local government. She graduated from the University of Iowa in 2021 with bachelor's degrees in journalism and political science, and she served as politics editor of The Daily Iowan, the independent student newspaper. She also interned with the Pennsylvania Legislative Correspondents' Association, where she covered state government in Harrisonburg, Pa.
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Ireland joined Foothills Forum as a full-time reporter in 2023 after graduating from the University of Georgia’s Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication with a degree in journalism and minor in music. As a student, she gained valuable experience in reporter and editor positions at The Red & Black, an award-winning student newspaper, and contributed to Grady Newsource and the Athens Banner-Herald. She spent three years as an editorial assistant at Georgia Magazine, UGA’s quarterly alumni publication, and interned with The Bitter Southerner.
Growing up in a small town in Southeast Georgia, Ireland developed a deep appreciation for rural communities and the unique stories they have to tell. She completed undergraduate research on news deserts, ghost papers and the ways rural communities in Georgia are being forced to adapt to a lack of local news. This research further sparked her interest in a career contributing to the preservation of local and rural news.