Why I Love Watergate Salad
Is it the marshmallows or the memories?
The red brick church sat facing the winding road, a steeple and white cross on top.
If you are standing on the road, looking at the church entrance, you see a small pond to the left and as your eyes go up the steep hill, you see an old stone building.
That building: The original church — a couple hundred years old. Holds maybe 50 people on wooden benches. When it was THE church in this tiny community, the winter services were heated by two fireplaces on either side of the pulpit.
In summer, the windows might have been cracked and you just had to sit there and sweat.
The centerpiece now, though, was the red brick “modern” church at the top of the hill — to the right of the old stone building.
Leading up the hill was a gravel driveway that led to a circle of gravel just in front of the stairs leading to the church doors.
Parishioners parked on well-worn grass around the circle.
On the first Sunday of every month, all the parking spaces at the top of the hill were taken and late comers would have to park on the incline and walk in the grass to reach the top of the hill.