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Fairfield Focus September/October 2020

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SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2020

PLUS...

Teacher Spotlight 5 Fairfield Athletes Juliette’s Hope... and more!

BERD’s Bar & GRILL

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BADIN HIGH Opens School In-Person Page 10

An Exclusive Magazine for Fairfield & Fairfield Township Residents & Businesses


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MAY 2020

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SEPTEMBER 2020

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BADIN HIGH OPENS TEACHER SPOTLIGHT SCHOOL IN-PERSON Missy muller

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berd’s bar and grill

Fairfield Five: Athletes.....................................................................................................................................................06 Badin High Works Hard To Open School In-Person.........................................................................................................10 Teacher Spotlight: Missy Muller, Fairfield West Elementary...........................................................................................12 History: Bullets Over River Road.....................................................................................................................................16 COVER: Berd’s Bar & Grill...............................................................................................................................................18 Juliette’s Hope: Transforming Lives of Women in Crisis.................................................................................................20

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SEPTEMBER 2020

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The Fairfield Community Foundation is pleased to announce their 5th annual Grant Challenge. Non-Profit organizations that serve the Greater Fairfield area are invited to submit a creative idea that will address a need in our community. This year the judging is on-line, and you can help choose the winner. You can vote between October 16–October 23. Just go to our website at www.fairfieldcommunityfoundation.org, view the 3–5 minute videos of the finalist or LIKE the Fairfield Community Foundation on Facebook and view the videos. You will be able to vote for your favorite. Help support those who help make Greater Fairfield the best it can be by participating. That way we ALL win.

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SEPTEMBER 2020

1. JAYDAN MAYES Ever since Jason Krause took the reins of the football program, the Fairfield Indians have been a football powerhouse in southwest Ohio. Last year they won ten games before losing to Greater Miami Conference rival, Colerain. Though the Indians lost quite a bit due to the graduation, one staple from last year’s starstudded team that will be returning is cornerback and offensive swiss army knife, Jaydan Mayes. Last fall Mayes had two interceptions, one of which he returned back for a touchdown. On offense he rushed for 416 yards and had 269 receiving yards. The senior is a three star recruit, who has talked to several Ohio based MAC schools.

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2. ETHAN TYLA

3. LOGAN MURPHY

6’4, 270 pounds and an absolute brick wall to get around. Tyla, who is committed to Southern Illinois, will anchor the Indian’s offensive line. After losing SEC bound running back, Jutahn McClain, Fairfield’s o-line will be all the more important. As a junior, Tyla was selected to be honored on the all-conference team in the GMC. This fall, on the abbreviated season, he will look to add to his accolades.

The multi-sport athlete will look to dominate on the links again this fall. In a sport that is dominated by golfers from Mason and Lakota East, Murphy shined for the Indians averaging a 39.95 score per nine holes. His play earned him recognition throughout the league, as he was awarded second team all-GMC. Last month he started his senior season and is already improving on his impressive score from last fall.


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SEPTEMBER 2020

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4. KYLIE O’LEARY

5. EMMA MILLER

A soccer team is only as good as their keeper, and the Indians have one of the best in Cincinnati. As a junior, Kylie O’Leary fielded four shutouts and had north of 100 saves. That all star performance in the net was enough to earn the respect of coaches in the GMC. Fairfield took the GMC crown three seasons ago, in 2020 they will look to do it again by knocking off reigning state champions, Lakota West.

No matter the sport, the GMC is one of the best conferences in Ohio. So the fact that Emma Miller had 231 kills last season, good for the fourth most in the league is absolutely impressive. Miller will lead the striking force of a Fairfield team that was 12-12 last season. 2020 seems like the perfect year to build on the success from last year, and Miller will be leading the charge.

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MAY 2020

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SEPTEMBER 2020

Patrick Keating, assistant principal at Badin High School, referred to the Gospel of Luke as he discussed the complexities of opening the 600-student high school on Aug. 24. In Luke, he told a faculty meeting on Aug. 13, a paralyzed man on a stretcher was hoping to see Jesus Christ – but there was no way to get through a crowd of people to where Jesus was speaking. A group of pilgrims considered the problem – and ended up lowering the man through a hole in a roof so that he could get to the front of the crowd. Opening Badin for the 2020-21 school year in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic, Keating noted, was similar to considering how to get that man to the front of the crowd. But, as principal Brian Pendergest pointed out, the overwhelming response from Badin students and families was, in fact, to open school in-person, every day. “We were very pleased to be able to open for all of our students,” Pendergest said. “We worked very hard all summer on plans to make that a reality.” Students are in masks, appropriately distanced through guidelines from the City of Hamilton Health Department, and having to follow important protocols in order maintain in-person school at the four

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grade Catholic high school on New London Road in Hamilton. “Obviously, it’s a change from what we are used to,” Pendergest said. “It will require responsible behavior from all involved. We feel like people will follow the protocols because failure to do so might put in-person school in jeopardy. We all want to be in school.” Pendergest underlined that while there were still questions to be answered, Badin faculty committees had also crafted a number of hybrid contingencies to deal with what might happen down the road in this uncertain environment. This represents Badin’s 55th school year, and students walking down from the rear parking lot will enter the building through Badin’s new Student Development Center, a $2 million addition that has been five years in the making with fundraising and construction. “This is going to be a tremendous enhancement to Badin High School,” Pendergest said. “You’re constantly looking to provide ‘added value’ to the student experience, and this will definitely do that.” The SDC will include offices for guidance counselors and the Hamilton Community Foundation College and Career Center. The directors of Campus Ministry and


SEPTEMBER 2020

Christian Service will be there, along with the Athletic Office and the Advancement Office, which includes Admissions, Marketing, Alumni and Development. The SDC is also the site of the new Student Commons area, which will offer meeting areas for students and a dedicated space for students to work before and after school as they await potential club meetings, athletic practices or their ride home. “We expect this to be a new hub of the school,” Pendergest said. “When you think of all the key people who are in there – counselors, campus ministry, athletics and so on – it’s going to be a major destination location for our students.” The SDC connects the main building with the Pfirman Family Activity Center, which adds security to the school as it means that students will never need to go outside during the school day. The Student Development Center enabled Badin to reclaim two classrooms in the main building as 12 new faculty members came on board for this school year – including an additional guidance counselor, an additional art teacher, and two fulltime building substitutes. “Change is a constant,” Pendergest said. “You lose talented faculty members every year, but you bring people on board who will themselves become

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memorable members of the Badin Family to the next cycle of students who come through the door.” By the way – that hole in the roof that Patrick Keating spoke of? When the paralyzed man met Jesus, he later got up, picked up the stretcher, and walked away. When Badin opened school on Aug. 24, Keating called that Badin’s version of getting up and walking. It was quite an accomplishment.

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JULY 2020

By Mandy Gambrell

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SEPTEMBER 2020

The principal at Fairfield West Elementary has a love for science and reading, among other school subjects. Missy Muller has served at the school for four years, but prior to that she was a sixth-grade science teacher at Fairfield Intermediate School. “Dr. Gayle Niehaus at Fairfield Intermediate School hired me to teach science on the Sea Otters team to replace the beloved and cool Dr. Dirt. He was an amazing science teacher whom the families loved, so I was very intimidated by trying to fill his shoes,” Muller said. “Fortunately, before school started, I attended a High Aims science conference and met our science department leader, Tim Adams, and another first-year science teacher, Allison Cline, and we spent the entire week together talking and learning,” she said. Muller has been with the Fairfield City Schools District since 2006. One of the subjects she has taught is reading. “A few years into teaching science, our school reorganized our team system and I volunteered to move to fifth-grade reading, my passion. I was asked to be department leader of language arts and on the building leadership team which gave me experience in leading where I discovered I really enjoyed the leadership and service roles I experienced,” she said. Her teammate Sandi Stegman and her husband, Keith, encouraged her to pursue a principal license and become even more of a leader. “In 2013, the head principal and both assistant principal positions were vacant. Ironically, Allison Cline, whom I started the first year in science with, and I were both promoted to assistant principal positions together. I was assistant principal at the intermediate school for 4 years, and when we redistricted, I was blessed with the opportunity to move to Fairfield West to be their principal. I love West because it has an amazing staff and community,” Muller said. “We are family and you feel it when you come to our school. If you ask our students about West, they will make a ‘W’ with their hands and say, ‘West is the best!’” The COVID-19 pandemic has been a strange journey for all who work in education. Muller says it has been interesting. “In all my years in education, I have never experienced such an unsettling time. School and families are my passion, so when we were unable to go, I felt like the wind was taken from my sail. When I first found out, I was praying for it to be just for a short time. Quickly, I realized we were in for the long

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haul and that I needed to ‘rally the troops’,” she said. “The West staff got together and worked hard to try to reach every family and child to help them learn and figure out how to deal with the stress of our new world.” “It was extremely challenging for everyone to find new ways to teach and learn and work around the many challenges of technology and working from home. We are all excited to see the students this year, even if it is only a few days a week. My advice for families is to take a deep breath, realize we are all in this together as a team and want the best for all of our children. Make a schedule at home that best suits your family and their needs.” Communication has always been key, but it is more imperative now, Muller said. The Fairfield West principal is busy in her personal life too — she has three adult children and has been married for 28 years. And the couple still goes on dates, Muller said. “We spend weekends golfing, playing cards with the family and hanging out in the pool. I am blessed to have my best friend in my house every day and cannot imagine facing the challenges we have had in our life without him!”

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MAY 2020


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MAY 2020

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SEPTEMBER 2020

Fairfield History

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ne of the earliest families in what is now Fairfield gave rise to one of city’s most dedicated founding fathers and also one of its greatest murder mysteries. In 1877, Fred Groh and his wife Barbara purchased 50 acres of land on the east side of Winton Road from the estate of Barbara’s father, Joseph Schmouker. Schmouker’s will expressed a desire that one of his three daughters take over the farm, so the Grohs bought out the shares left to Barbara’s sisters Magdalena and Catherine. The land remained in the Groh family until 1918. Fred had been born in Bavaria in 1845, but came to Ohio as an infant, and his baby brother George was born in Delhi in 1848. In 1895, George Groh and his German-born wife Katharina Schwartz bought over 130 acres on the south side of River Road and kept buying until he owned over 600 acres of land in Fairfield and Ross townships. The Marsh Fishing Lake, the city’s wastewater treatment plant, and the youth baseball complex are all former parts of the massive Groh estate. George’s six children all purchased parts of the farm. One of the six children was George Groh Jr., who was the father of Ben Groh, who served on the Fairfield Township council prior to the city’s incorporation, and on the first Fairfield City Council. His terms totalled 22

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years. He worked for the Fisher Body plant for 24 years, retiring in 1970 and died in 1996. He and his brother Carl were members of the first volunteer fire department. In guest columns in the Hamilton Journal-News, Ben Groh said he got involved in local politics because he knew the area was ripe for growth, but that it needed to be done in a careful, thoughtful way--”planning and progress” were his key words. He said he thought it was important that the people have a voice in local government and was known to always vote no whenever he felt a project was being rushed or if council wanted to pass emergency measures without the required readings, whatever the subject. He also never shied from a controversial position and wasn’t afraid to ruffle some feathers to get his point across. “We all have good reasons to resist new taxes,” he wrote, “so the citizens of Fairfield should have a voice in their government. Any major projects coming before council should be brought to a vote by the people.” Around 8 p.m., April 25, 1953, Carl Groh was working on one of the family farms on River Road, helping his uncle Clarence Schiering remove a disabled tractor from a field. He was driving one tractor down a dark gravel lane leading away from the river, towing the broken tractor that had a farm implement dealer named Frank Sloneker at the wheel.


SEPTEMBER 2020 Sloneker said that Groh was standing at the wheel of his machine when a single shot rang out from the direction of the river and whistled past Sloneker’s ear. Dogs barked as the tractor traveled another 75 feet before Groh fell from his perch and toppled to the ground. A .22 calibre bullet struck him in the back between the shoulder blades. He was instantly paralyzed. Carl Groh was 30 years old, a family man with a pregnant wife and a three year old son. Schiering drove in his car to his house a mile away and called for help. Three deputy sheriffs arrived at the scene some thirty minutes later and were met by an angry mob of neighbors and relatives. They insisted that deputies go to the home of an elderly man near the river who was known to frequently shoot a rifle. When the deputies got to the four-room shack, the man was in bed. He said he had been using the gun earlier in the evening to kill starlings, but had gone to bed an hour before the shooting. They took him into protective custody to protect him from the victim’s friends and family. “This was the work of a twisted mind or a brain soaked in alcohol,” one anonymous River Road resident quipped. “Residents in the community are at a loss to understand why a stray bullet would be fired one hour and 10 minutes after sundown,” the newspaper reported. Butler County Sheriff Charles Walke listed the cause of the shooting as a stray bullet, but the event caused much consternation among neighbors. Although no one could name a person who had a grudge or any reason to kill Carl Groh, many believed that it was not accidental, despite the sheriff’s ruling. Fifty families on or near River Road raised a $1,500 reward and the Fairfield Grange petitioned Ohio Governor Frank Lausche for assistance, but he replied that the state had no agency to handle such a case. Two families on the reward committee reported that they had received anonymous telephone threats telling them to “lay off”

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the investigation of the Groh shooting, further inflaming public opinion. At the insistence of the neighbors, the elderly man who lived near the river was taken to Cincinnati for a lie detector test, which proved that he was telling the truth about going to bed at 7 p.m. on the night of the tragedy.

“This was the work of a twisted mind or a brain soaked in alcohol,” one anonymous River Road resident quipped. The investigation uncovered other incidents of stray bullets wreaking havoc in the area. Across the river on Hine Road in Ross Township, a homeowner said that sometime that spring a bullet broke a glass in a bedroom window, penetrated a bedroom wall and lodged in a mirror frame in the adjoining living room. A River Road neighbor said that he saw men target practicing near his home when he was taking garbage to a dumping area. He was with his two children and chased them away. Butler County Prosecutor Jackson Bosch said he would charge the culprit with shooting with intent to kill if anyone would be arrested. “It’s a serious crime,” he assured the neighbors, but no one was ever arrested. Groh lived 17 years after the incident, paralyzed and with the bullet still in his spine. He also had recurrent health issues and spent much time in the hospital with kidney problems. After his death in December 1970, Coroner Garret J. Boone removed the bullet from his spine, confirmed it was a .22 calibre, and ruled his death a homicide.

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JULY 2020

By Reid Maus After years of envisioning it, business partners Matt Berding and Robert MacKendrick opened up Berd’s Bar and Grill on June 9th, 2019. “It’s always been a dream of mine and my business partner, Bob,” said Berding. “We are high school friends. We always talked about opening a bar and restaurant. It’s something that has always been in the back of our mind.” Nestled away in the Village Green strip mall is one of the best eats in all of southwest Ohio. Offering delicious food, cheap beer and a familyfriendly atmosphere, Berd’s is quickly becoming a community staple.

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“We just wanted to be a family-friendly sports bar,” said Berding on the idea behind the restaurant. “We wanted to create a comfortable place for friends and family, that provides good food. Just wanted to create a fun place to come, hang out and watch the game.” MacKendrick takes the role of general manager and chef at Berd’s. He has amassed several years of experience in the restaurant industry. He brings that expertise to the menu which is why you’ll find yourself continuously coming back to Berd’s for the food. It’s obvious that Berding and MacKendrick have


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succeeded in creating their envisionment of what a bar and grill should be. But the road got rocky in 2020, as COVID-19 has rocked the industry-especially during the government-mandated shut down back in March. Just like most restaurants, they had to find ways to keep business moving while following the guidelines laid out by the state. “When we were forced to shut down we ramped up our carryout,” said Berding. “We did that all the way through the quarantine period.” Then in late May, they were able to open up shop once again-- but not at full capacity. “When we reopened we socially distanced our tables. We had to remove some tables and build barriers between the tables. We also have the patio, which has really helped us out. When everything reopened people were more inclined to eat if they could sit outside. Our patio is very nice.” said Berding. “We tried to create a safe place for

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everybody to come.” When COVID-19 rocked the economy, one thing that was encouraging to see was how communities came together to help their neighbors out. Luckily for Berd’s, they built a good enough reputation that their neighbors flocked to come and support. “We did very well with carryout during quarantine,” said Berding. “A lot of people were repeat customers. They would tell us when they came in, ‘hang in there, we are trying to support you.” “We definitely felt the support of the local community,” he said. In these times, if you want to grow a community you have to support local businesses. Berd’s Bar and Grill is locally owned by two guys that have dreamed about opening a bar and grill for years. If you’re looking for a place to hang out and watch the Reds or Bengals-- you’ve officially found your new watering hole.

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SEPTEMBER 2020

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By Mandy Gambrell Women fighting the evils of drug and alcohol addiction have a place in Hamilton to turn to for help reinventing themselves: residential life skills community, Juliette’s Hope. The Rev. Kimberleigh Russo is the founding executive director whose mother lost her lifelong battle with drugs and alcohol at the age of 46. The goal, she says, is to help the women at Juliette’s Hope learn what is needed to work and to live a clean life, transforming their character and enabling them to live crime- and drug-free. “We are a two-year residential life-skills community that reinvents lives broken from addiction, domestic violence, and human trafficking by teaching honesty, accountability and integrity. Our women are highly motivated to change their negative attitudes and behaviors,” Russo said. “Juliette’s Hope assists by promoting personal development through a highly structured environment that focuses on behavioral modification and character development.” Key elements of the programming include vocational training, education, communication, peer groups, leadership training, job readiness

and continuing care services. Juliette’s Hope has successfully reunified more than a hundred children back with their mothers, Russo said. They have helped the mothers with finding jobs, buying vehicles and renting homes. One woman who has changed her life since her time at the home says it helped her find peace. And now, she works there. “I have discovered my identity during my stay at Juliette’s Hope,” said Shauna Snyder, the outreach coordinator. “I have found love, happiness, comfort, strength, respect, acceptance, joy, and peace in who I am. I am secure and confident, and I trust the Lord with all my heart and seek His direction over my life,” she said. Russo stresses that the Juliette’s Hope Recovery Community is not a “rehab.” “Our focus is not on getting clean and sober but on becoming honest and accountable while living a valuable life of integrity. Transformation happens here,” she said. Those who would like to support the mission of Juliette’s Hope may donate items, money or their time. More information is available online at www.julietteshope.com.

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