Nov. 6: Hull’s Drive In, Lexington VA

It’s Day 310 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. Thanks to the miracle of interstate highways, it took me less than an hour and a half to drive from the Goochland Drive-In Theater in Hadensville VA, over the Blue Ridge Mountains, to Hull’s Drive In in Lexington VA.

The story of Hull’s is an uplifting story about how a community came together to save its beloved drive-in theater. I’ll get to that shortly, but first I wanted to take it all the way back to the beginning.

This drive-in opened as the Lee in 1950, built and owned by Waddy and Virginia Atkins of Roanoke on land leased by “the Hostetter family,” probably farmer Mason Hostetter who owned adjacent land. The Hull’s history page on Weebly said that the couple would “drive back and forth from Roanoke every night.”

Meanwhile, Sebert Hull and a partner had built the Mountain View Drive-In in Buena Vista VA in 1950 and sold it in July 1957. Reminiscing in an article in The News Leader of Staunton VA, Hull remembered that five weeks later, “There was a movie my wife wanted to see … I hadn’t been on the field 20 minutes when the owner came up and started propositioning me. He’d been commuting from Roanoke, and wanted someone local to take it over for him. How he knew I was there I still don’t know.” (My wife figures that Hull’s wife set him up.)

That’s when Mr. & Mrs. Atkins sold the drive-in, which immediately became Hull’s. In 1958, the Lee’s former owners purchased the Riverside Drive-In in their hometown of Roanoke.

That 1994 News Leader article asked Hull, then 70, when he would retire. “The only thing I’ve ever said is that at my age, I never really know what my health will be, so I’m just going to play it year by year.”

When Hull passed away before the 1998 season, his widow sold the drive-in to W.D. Goad, who owned the adjacent body shop. Goad ran it for one season then saw the drive-in needed technical improvements and began looking for a buyer. Hull’s was mostly dark for 1999.

In June 1999, two months after the drive-in failed to open; Eric and Elise Sheffield convened a public meeting with more than 50 concerned fans. They formed Hull’s Angels, a non-profit group dedicated to re-opening the drive-in. Within three months, Hull’s Angels had sponsored a two-night benefit at the drive-in, grown to 500 members, and raised $10,000. After researching other options, Hull’s Angels decided it should try to buy Hull’s.

The group’s first lease-purchase agreement was in April 2000, and the IRS approved Hull’s Angels as a 501(c)(3) non-profit that December, making it the first tax-exempt drive-in. In May 2001, Hull’s Angels exercised its option and purchased the business and land lease.

As you can see in the embedded YouTube video of the day, Jeremy Reter is the current executive director of Hull’s Angels. Another YouTube interview calls him the manager and projectionist, so it’s safe to say he runs the place. “Being the first non-profit, community-owned drive-in theatre in the country made us unique,” Reter told The News Virginian this year. “Since then we have been the model for other communities to save their drive-ins. It is a special thing to be non-profit because it allows people to realize that this is something that they can get behind and be part of in keeping alive.”

Hull’s had its last weekend of the season at the end of October, but it promises to be open bright and early in 2018.

Miles Today / Total: 94 / 35053 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: dark / 188

Nearby Restaurant: It’s getting to be that time of year when I look for good soup. Good soup plus pastry would be even better, and that’s Sweet Treats Bakery. The blackened chicken noodle soup was comforting and interesting at the same time, and the cheesecake brownie was two more great tastes rolled into one. Mmm, comfort food!

Where I Virtually Stayed: Lexington has what is typically an oxymoron – an unusual Hampton Inn. It’s the manor house of the historic Col Alto mansion (which has its own Wikipedia page), which is why I stayed in a queen bed “historic” room with a fireplace but no mini-fridge. Breakfast was the Hampton standard, although its setting was much nicer than most. This place is definitely something to experience.

Only in Lexington: Confederate general Stonewall Jackson’s favorite horse, now stuffed, is on display at the Virginia Military Institute Museum in Lexington. According to the VMI web site, Little Sorrel is one of two Civil War horses to be mounted at death. Atlas Oscura wrote, “Originally named Fancy, the Confederate general bought the horse for his wife as a gift in 1861, but soon decided, in a Homer-buys-Marge-a-bowling-ball-esque move, that he would keep the beast for himself”.

Next stop: Meadow Bridge Drive-In, Meadow Bridge WV.

Nov. 5: Goochland Drive-In Theater, Hadensville VA

It’s Day 309 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. There aren’t that many drive-ins still showing movies on Sunday nights at this time of year, so I needed another fairly long drive. It took me about 3½ hours to drive from Middle River MD, around Washington DC, then on to the Goochland Drive-In Theater in Hadensville VA.

Although it’s next to an exit on I-64, the Goochland is tucked away in the middle of a forest, which must have been cleared away by John Heidel. He’s the guy who bought this piece of land and built the drive-in, which had its grand opening on Aug. 28, 2009. By all accounts, it’s been hugely popular ever since.

Heidel tells the story that he built the Goochland because he wanted to take his kids to a drive-in. He told the Virginia Credit Union, “I have always loved movies, but when we had small kids, and wanted to take a 1½-year-old and a three-year-old to the movies, we knew that going to a conventional theater just wouldn’t work.”

Since Day One, the signature dish of the open-air Goochland concession stand has been the Gooch dog, a beef hot dog topped with macaroni and cheese. Which reminds me of the drive-in’s only small misstep. In early 2014, the drive-in had become so popular, particularly at the concession stand, that Heidel launched a Kickstarter campaign to raise money to expand the facility to shorten the lines of patrons buying Gooch dogs and other snacks.

Heidel wrote, “The Goochland Drive-In Theater is a truly unique entity that offers more than just the act of watching a movie…it brings family and friends together. And for a few hours, people can escape to a simpler time of old-fashioned fun…without spending a fortune. That was our mission from the start – and it is quite rewarding to see it happen every time we open.” But the Kickstarter campaign raised less than a third of its goal, and he asked contributors to back a local muscular dystrophy patient instead.

Most recently, the drive-in saw overflow crowds wanting to watch the latest Stephen King thriller It. Heidel told WWBT, Richmond’s News Leader, “If we would’ve had 2,000, 3,000 car spaces, we wouldn’t have been able to fit everybody in. We had folks lined up at 2 to 2:30 for a 5:45 p.m. gate opening.”

On this night, the Goochland was finishing a long weekend of showing Thor: Ragnarok. I didn’t mind watching it a second time, because it really is a fun, humorous, often dazzling movie.

Miles Today / Total: 172 / 34959 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: Thor: Ragnarok / 188

Nearby Restaurant: The closest restaurant that wasn’t a Dairy Queen or closed on Sunday appeared to be Satterwhite’s Restaurant in Manakin VA. It was still open for lunch by the time I arrived, which was good, and it was still serving breakfast, which is even better. I love great biscuits, and the small biscuits that came with my omelette tasted homemade. Nothing like comfort food after a long drive.

Where I Virtually Stayed: Google Maps says that there are no hotels anywhere near the Goochland. The best-looking alternatives looked to be along I-64 in the northwest suburbs of Richmond, and I picked the Hilton Richmond Hotel near Short Pump. This one had an executive lounge for dinner snacks, drinks, and breakfast for certain guests. My executive floor king room had everything, including a price tag that reminded me why I don’t do this every night.

Only in Hadensville: Little Hadensville is in Goochland County, the source of the drive-in’s name. In turn, the county was named for Sir William Gooch, the Royal Lieutenant Governor (and de facto governor in place of its England-based nominal governor) of Virginia from 1727 through 1749. Gooch honored himself with the naming of Goochland County in 1727.

Next stop: Hull’s Drive In, Lexington VA.

Nov. 4: Bengies Drive-In Theatre, Middle River MD

It’s Day 308 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. With pretty clear sailing on a rainy Saturday, it took me only two hours to drive from the Delsea Drive-In in Vineland NJ to Bengies Drive-In Theatre in Middle River MD, just east of Baltimore.

Bengies is the last drive-in theater in Maryland, and is frequently packed in the summer. According to the Washington Post, it was built in 1955-56 by brothers Jack, Paul, and Hank Vogel. The area had been named for former president Benjamin Harrison, and the drive-in took that name, opening as Bengie’s (with an apostrophe) on June 6, 1956. The drive-in dropped the apostrophe when it changed its marquee in the early 1970s.

The screen at Bengies is huge – 120 feet by 52 feet, and can support over 1000 cars although its normal capacity is 750. The drive-in has a separate web page dedicated to its assertion that it’s “the biggest continuously operated drive-in screen in the USA.” (Bengies also has a separate web page devoted to its unhappiness with The Baltimore Sun’s words and actions in 2000. But I digress.) I’ll beat back one more contender – the web site for Coldwater MI’s Capri Drive-In Theater claims its main screen is 150 feet wide, but when I asked, they agreed it was just 115 feet.

This drive-in was built and designed by architectural engineer Jack Vogel. (Some of his later architectural plans for Bengies are in the Library of Congress.) According to Constructing Image, Identity, and Place, issue IX (April 2003), “Vogel was so concerned with efficiency that he even designed the women’s rest rooms with ladies’ urinals, which are still functioning”.

Kerry Segrave wrote in his book Drive-In Theaters that in 1976 Bengies narrowly fought off a proposal to prohibit showing movies where they could be seen by motorists. “This ozoner used to screen X-rated movies but discontinued them on May 4, 1976, after numerous complaints, before the proposed bill was introduced.”

Current owner D. Edward Vogel has been working at Bengies since he was nine years old, according to a 2009 CNN article. That would have been about when his mother married Jack Vogel in the Post’s timeline. Capital News Service wrote that he formally purchased the drive-in in 2007.

In recent years, Bengies has tangled with Royal Farms, which opened a convenience store across the street. The drive-in sued in 2010, claiming that the light from the store was interfering with the drive-in. In June 2012, a jury agreed to the tune of $838,000, according to The Baltimore Sun, but the judge later threw out the verdict. The Maryland Daily Record reported in November 2014 that an appeals court let that decision stand.

“I believe every drive-in theater takes on the personality of the owner,” Vogel said in the Capital News Service segment that is the YouTube video of the day. Watch it and you’ll see the apostrophe in Bengie’s on the side of the concession stand, which roughly matched the way the marquee used to look. If you want some irony, also check out a YouTube video about Bengies shot from that Royal Farms convenience store across the street.

This drizzly evening was a retro triple feature marking the close of Bengies’ regular season, although it posted on its Facebook page that “We have a few off season events in the works for Black Friday and a Holiday DouBBle feature in early December. If the right right movie (and weather) comes along in the mean time we may open as well.”

Miles Today / Total: 102 / 34787 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: The Sandlot / 187

Nearby Restaurant: When I’m in the Baltimore area, I need to find a restaurant that sells crabs. Schultz’s Crab House is one of the closest candidates to Bengies, and it might be the best. It’s been around longer than the drive-in serving up lots of seafood. I had the backfin crab cake and fried shrimp platter with some cold beer on the side. Food like this in such a comfortable atmosphere makes it easy to see why Schultz’s has lasted.

Where I Virtually Stayed: One of the closest cluster of hotels to Bengies is by the White Marsh area near Baltimore. One of those hotels is a Hampton Inn, so that’s the end of that search. After such a rainy day, I wanted the hotel equivalent of comfort food, and the familiar features of a Hampton always do the trick. My room didn’t have a fridge or microwave, but at least there were cookies to greet me at check-in and the standard Hampton breakfast in the morning. Ready for another drive!

Only in Middle River: Next door, Rosedale MD is the home of Cateraptasaurus, a 12-foot, 9-inch sculpture made entirely from used tractor parts. Built by Derek Arnold, it’s stationed outside the offices of Alban Cat, a Caterpillar equipment dealership.

Next stop: Goochland Drive-In Theater, Hadensville VA.