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Legendary Dove Family Retires from Old Town Farmers Market

Family tradition of selling flowers at the market since the 1800s comes to an end.

Members of the Dove Family show the City Proclamation along with the sign for the coffee stand run by Sharon Dove. (Photo: Lucelle O’Flaherty)

ALEXANDRIA, VA – When members of the Dove family first started bringing their produce and flowers to Alexandria’s Market Square at 301 King Street, the clippity clop of their horses’ hooves provided the soundtrack on the trip to and fro.

In all, 21 family members—aunts, uncles, brothers, sisters, cousins—have sold at the Old Town market. Senior family members today are Mrs. Doris Dove Cassedy and her brother Lenard (Lenny) Dove. Doris and Lenard are helped at market by Doris’s youngest daughter Stacey (Missy) Petitt, and grandsons Robbie and Charlie Petitt. But the first Dove on scene was Doris and Lenny’s great-grandfather, Will Kitson, in the late 1800s.

Lenny Dove and his niece Janet Cassedy, already market veterans in 1964. (Photo: Dove Family Collection)

The family once owned 35 acres on upper Van Dorn Street (then called Oakwood Road) in Franconia. Will Kitson and his daughter Norma (Nanny) Talbert raised vegetables, flowers, and chickens, and made butter and crafts that they took to market by horse and buggy. Later, Nanny and her niece Virginia continued to sell flowers, foods, and crafts. Nanny bought a Ford Model A, although she never had a license, so that Virginia could drive them to market with their goods. Virginia married Vernon Dove in 1932. They had ten children, of whom Doris is second oldest and Lenny the youngest.

After reading it aloud, Mayoral aide Mark McHugh hands the City Proclamation to Lenny and Doris Dove. (Photo:Cassie Greene)

Saturday, December 21, 2019 was the end of the era. The Dove Family retired, selling their last boxwood tree and bits of seasonal holly at the Old Town Farmers Market on a sunny morning with temperatures hitting the needle at about 30 degrees. Friends and family gathered as Mayor Justin Wilson’s aide, Mark McHugh, read a City Proclamation honoring the Dove Family’s nearly 200 years of entrepreneurship, which read in part:

See “Keeping Tradition Alive at the Old Town Farmers Market” for More Dove Family History

Doris Cassedy picking flowers at the Spotsylvania farm in 2010. (Photo: The Dove Family Collection)

“Whereas since the late 1800s to today, Dove family members and their forebears have managed this thriving business adjacent to City Hall’s front doors on Saturday mornings, selling their locally grown blooms, yarrow, zinnias, peonies, Queen Anne’s lace, and sunflowers…the City of Alexandria takes this moment to honor the Dove family and their late grandfather, Will Kitson, whose farm established in the late 19th century supplied flowers to the first iteration of this business.”

Stacey Cassedy Petitt (Missy) with a customer on the Dove family’s last Market day. (Photo: Lucelle O’Flaherty)

Some people have bought the Doves’ flowers for so long that even when Doris and Lenny don’t know their names, they do know what will be ordered. “The customer walks up and these two just look and say, ‘Oh you want your 25 wreaths and your six bunches of this and that,’ and they remember these orders. And I don’t know how they do it,” says Missy. Do they keep a log? “Nope,” says Doris, “we just know it.”

The Old Town Farmers’ Market is the oldest farmers’ market in the country held continuously at the same site. George Washington sent his produce from Mount Vernon to be sold at our Farmers’ Market.  Today, the market offers residents of and visitors to Alexandria a way to reconnect to the past while participating in an ongoing local and national tradition.  During the peak season, there are more than 70 vendors offering fruits and vegetables, meat, poultry, cheeses, breads, pastries, fresh pasta, pickled vegetables, cut flowers, potted plants, soaps, jewelry, and art.

 

Mary Wadland

Mary Wadland is the Publisher and Editor in Chief of The Zebra Press, the award-winning Alexandria news publication she founded in 2010 with a mission of celebrating community, culture, and all the good news happening across the city. A longtime community advocate and storyteller, Mary was selected for the Alexandria Chamber of Commerce inaugural 40 Under 40 class and has served as President of Living Legends of Alexandria since 2022. Known for her deep local roots, sharp editorial instincts, and passion for connecting people through journalism, she has spent decades chronicling the personalities, businesses, events, and civic life that make Alexandria unique. Originally from Delray Beach, Florida, Mary is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Hollins College in Roanoke, Virginia, and has been part of Alexandria’s publishing and media community since 1987.

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