Echoes of Newtown. Blake Fite
All rights reserved.
Nobody Knows the Trouble I’ve Seen, African spiritual. Use by public domain. All rights reserved.
America the Beautiful, Katharine Lee Bates. Use by public domain. All rights reserved.
Louada’s message inspired by Chasing After the Spiritual, Louis Ada Dorman, 1998.
ISBN 978-1-63195-007-0 paperback
ISBN 978-1-63195-008-7 eBook
Library of Congress Control Number: 2020901179
Cover Design by: Rachel Lopez,www.r2cdesign.comEdited by S. Kate FehlauerInterior designs by Audrey DormanEducational Consultant, R. Janzen | Student consultants on character-development:Emma as AnneSamuel as BillyRoss as RascalRachel as LizzyOlivia as JoseyAmelia as Rosie |
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This book is dedicated to the fatherless wanderers of the world.
May God bless your journey home.
Table of Contents
Chapter One The Birth of An Adventure: Ladd, Virginia
Chapter Two Staunton, Virginia, or Bust: Preparation for the Journey
Chapter Three Parts Unknown: Leaping Past the Hardwood
Chapter Four Verona, Virginia: Anne of Berryhill
Chapter Five Fort Defiance, Virginia: Confrontation with General Hunt
Chapter Six Mt. Sidney, Virginia: Can I Change My Name?
Chapter Seven Weyer’s Cave, VA: Lizzy Finds Her Voice
Chapter Eight North River, Virginia: Reverend Timothy and the Inexplicable Vine
Chapter Nine Pleasant Valley, Virginia: The Cryptic Piano
Chapter Ten Harrisonburg, Virginia: The Mystery of Aunt Sunny
Chapter Eleven Newtown, Virginia: A Baby Shall Lead Us
Chapter Twelve From Far and Wide: The Grand Celebration
Two Ways to Support Hearts of the Father Outreach
A Note from the Author
Dear readers,
The idea of Echoes of Newtown and the Carriage Kids Book Series began back in 2007 in Virginia when our son was only two years old. The original title was Adventures of Henry Washita. Henry is our son’s middle name and Washita is the county I grew up in Oklahoma until I went to college.
During the initial writing of the manuscript I was working for National Fatherhood Initiative. Between my wife, Laura, and I having our first child and me commuting back and forth between Washington D.C. and Chesapeake, Virginia, life was very busy. On our weekends before our son was born, we hiked in the Shenandoah Valley trails. It was on these hikes and learning about the history of the U.S. when we visited Williamsburg, which inspired the initial manuscript.
I wrote the outline, working title, and some of the initial story, then tucked it away thinking I would someday pick it up again. When our son was nearly three, my wife became pregnant with our daughter, so instead of writing, I was moving the family to Tulsa to be near my relatives. That’s where I found and joined Change a Life Foundation, developing orphanages in Africa.
On one business trip with Change a Life, I visited the Christian Alliance for Orphans (CAFO) Conference in Nashville, Tenn., where I met founder of Hearts of the Father Outreach, John Moritz—a friend who would forever change my life. We instantly connected on our mutual interest in Ghana, Africa, where we both had helped develop orphanages. We decided I would check up on the little ones at the orphanages both John and I helped develop to see if I could find ways to maximize our time and resources.
When I got to Ghana a few months later, I was cheerfully greeted by the chairman of the board at the time by the name of David Kwadwo Ofosuhene. The development was close to the ocean in Southern Ghana. There were rocks everywhere on the ground and poverty all around, but the beauty of the ocean and the children imprinted my mind.
The sign on the main building read, “JoshKrisDan Home for Children.” I thought to myself Who came up with this name and why? I later found out this orphanage was the main orphanage of Hearts of the Father Outreach. Land had been purchased in 1998 and completed in 2000.
John explained over the phone that the name comes from the combined names of himself, his wife, Libby, and their three children who had tragically perished in a car accident in 1982: Joshua, Kristen and Dan.
After the phone call, I wept for their loss. I knew I couldn’t remove the pain (only God can do that), but I wanted to help further their ministry. A few years after this trip, I picked up that old book manuscript I started writing so many years ago. The time was right.
Echoes of Newtown follows seven orphans in the book and later on in the process of writing it three of them were named after the Moritz kids in honor of their lives, brief and precious.
Throughout the writing process, John and his wife Libby have been so helpful and gracious to answer all my questions about their kids. Please see the back of the book for two ways you can help support Hearts of the Father ministries.
Let me close with this. When it rains in Africa, it pours so hard it sounds like millions of people clapping. It dawned on me one day that every time it rains