Local

Peck High School classes 1957 to 1969 combined class reunion. Submitted photo

Peck High School classes 1957 to 1969 combined class reunion. Submitted photo

Peck High School reunion celebrates the ‘Peck experience’

Peck High School celebrated it’s eighth school reunion on June 24 at North Hampton Golf Club. Neil Frink, class of 1959, was the toastmaster for the reunion. The speaker was Patricia Hunt Ford, class of 1966. Ford gave an inspiring speech reminding classmates of “the Peck experience.

Whale Ambassadors join coalition opposing right whale bill

The Amelia Island Whale Ambassadors has joined a coalition to formally oppose the Protecting Whales, Human Safety, and Economy Act, which, if passed, would prohibit the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration from implementing proposed speed zones to protect North Atlantic right whales.
NCSO Marine Unit rescues a man of a sinking vessel over the weekend. Submitted photo

NCSO Marine Unit rescues a man of a sinking vessel over the weekend. Submitted photo

Beach emergency responders stay busy over holiday weekend

The Independence Day weekend was a busy one for local emergency responders on the beaches of Amelia Island, with more than two dozen rescues of swimmers by lifeguards. Lt. Haynes Cavender oversees the Fernandina Beach Fire Department’s Ocean Rescue Division.
Ron Sapp

Ron Sapp

Legendary local: Ron Sapp

Any time a political columnist writes for a newspaper for twenty years is a miracle. One of our favorite miracle workers, Ron Sapp, is a treasured columnist, teacher, city commissioner, and mayor. Sapp graduated from Fernandina Beach High School in 1965.
Many of the horses on Cumberland Island (such as those pictured here) flock to the green grasses surrounding the Dungeness mansion ruins. Local resident and activist Carol Ruckdeschel expressed concern about the bones visible jutting out from under the horses' skin, a sign they may be starving. Photo by Holly Dorman/News-Leader

Many of the horses on Cumberland Island (such as those pictured here) flock to the green grasses surrounding the Dungeness mansion ruins. Local resident and activist Carol Ruckdeschel expressed concern about the bones visible jutting out from under the horses' skin, a sign they may be starving. Photo by Holly Dorman/News-Leader

The fight to save Cumberland Island’s horses

As the legal battle to regime Cumberland Island’s feral horse population rolls forward, plaintiff and Cumberland Island resident Carol Ruckdeschel is making sure the island’s visitors know all about it.