九色视频 鈥 Talbot County Economic Development and Tourism handed out five Community Impact Awards on Thursday morning, recognizing organizations, nonprofits and community members that make a difference. This year鈥檚 awards were presented to: DHW Holdings, F3 Tech Biomanufacturing Facility, the Talbot County Free Library, The Market at Dover Station and Scott Warner of the Mid-Shore Regional Council.
Built on drive
Most business success stories sound polished in hindsight, as if the ending was inevitable from the beginning. Dave Wilson鈥檚 story does not.
What began as a summer job at a car dealership in Federalsburg eventually became DHW Holdings, one of the Eastern Shore鈥檚 most recognizable business enterprises, with more than 1,100 employees and operations spanning automotive dealerships, real estate, digital marketing, security, music production and medicine.
Wilson, who serves as chairman, never speaks about that growth as if it simply happened naturally.
Instead, he credits relentless drive, quick decision-making, and a willingness to trust his instincts long before success was guaranteed.
鈥淧eople see the success,鈥 Wilson says. 鈥淭hey don鈥檛 see the decisions we make, and we make them quick. The biggest thing is recognizing when you鈥檙e going to fail and pulling the plug quickly.鈥
But numbers alone do not explain DHW Holdings. Wilson speaks far more passionately about people than profits. Customers are referred to as guests. Employees are treated like family. Community involvement is not viewed as public relations, but as responsibility, a value rooted deeply in the example set by his parents, who spent decades serving their community through public health, scouting, churches and civic organizations.
鈥淚 really love what I do,鈥 Wilson says. 鈥淎nd that鈥檚 being able to support the community.鈥
That mindset helped transform a small-town dealership into an enterprise whose influence now stretches across Delmarva while remaining firmly grounded in the values of the Eastern Shore.
A bold bet on biotech
Inside a 6,000-square-foot facility in Easton, scientists and entrepreneurs are working on problems that begin in nature and may end in the marketplace. One company is studying a fungus found in the Chesapeake Bay that could help protect agricultural crops. Another is working with a protein extracted from bovine milk with potential vaccine applications.
Mike Thielke, executive director of F3 Tech, says the goal is to give the Eastern Shore its own lane in biotechnology, one that builds on agriculture, aquaculture, natural resources, and plant and animal cell technologies instead of trying to copy Maryland鈥檚 I-270 biopharma corridor.
鈥淭he reason we created the F3 Tech Biomanufacturing Facility here in Easton was to serve as an economic engine for the region,鈥 Thielke says. 鈥淚t serves to attract new, high-growth, innovative, and scalable types of businesses to the region, and along with them, the workforce and the investment that comes with that.鈥
The idea is both ambitious and practical. Talbot County has land, water, farms, talent, proximity to federal agencies, and a long tradition of people who know how to solve problems. F3 Tech connects those assets to a fast-growing field that could shape the future of agriculture, environmental management, manufacturing and health.
Talbot County does not have to become something else to compete in biotechnology. F3 Tech builds on what is already here and gives the Eastern Shore a chance to define a bio-industrial lane of its own, rooted in nature, production, entrepreneurship, and the belief that rural places can help solve big problems.
More than books
The Talbot County Free Library has been part of community life for more than 100 years, but its power has never rested solely in its shelves. It rests in the people who walk through its doors.
Today, in a county of roughly 37,000 people, the library counts about 29,000 cardholders, including Talbot County Public Schools students. That reach tells its own story.
The library is one of the rare places where nearly everyone belongs: children at story time, families tracing their roots in the Maryland Room, job seekers writing resumes, entrepreneurs researching business plans, students discovering new ideas, and long-time residents returning to a place that has shaped their lives for generations.
鈥淚t鈥檚 one of the only local organizations where we see everybody coming through our doors,鈥 says Dana Newman, director of Talbot County Free Library. 鈥淚t鈥檚 open to everybody in the community. It鈥檚 free, and we have the word free in our name.鈥
That word still matters. Free means access. Free means welcome. Free means a child can discover the wonder of books, a small business owner can find a path forward, a student can explore STEM in the new St. Michaels makerspace, and a family can uncover its own history without a barrier at the door.
鈥淵ou find your library joy when you come through the doors,鈥 Newman says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 different for everybody who comes in here, but joy is what makes people come back.鈥
An old building finds new life
More than a century after trains delivered flour, grain, and goods to Easton鈥檚 East End, Dover Station is once again bustling with commerce and community. Today, the sprawling brick warehouse at 500 Dover Road houses more than 100 local small businesses, along with art galleries, event space, handmade goods, live gatherings, and a steady stream of visitors who come to shop, connect, and linger.
Owners Keri and Sevan Topjian purchased the long-vacant historic property and reimagined it as a place where local entrepreneurship and community life could thrive together again. What many developers viewed as a teardown, the Topjians saw as an opportunity.
鈥淚 have a real passion for these old buildings,鈥 says Sevan Topjian. 鈥淭hey have a story to tell.鈥
That story began in 1912, when the building served as Easton Wholesale Grocery, a commercial hub positioned beside the railroad line that supplied towns across the Eastern Shore. Today, the building has found a new purpose as The Market at Dover Station, a space filled with local artists, makers, florists, boutiques, food vendors, and community events. Upstairs, The Loft at Dover Station hosts weddings, celebrations, corporate gatherings, and community events beneath soaring historic beams.
For the Topjians, the project has always been about more than restoring a building. It has been about creating a place where people feel welcome. 鈥淚t鈥檚 become like a second home to us,鈥 Keri says. And in many ways, that may be Dover Station鈥檚 greatest success: not simply bringing new life to an old building, but bringing people together again.
Quiet work behind building a stronger region
Economic development can feel abstract until it touches your life. A stronger internet connection reaches a rural home. A small business expands rather than closes. A teenager discovers engineering through robotics and coding. A regional medical center rises from a field outside Easton.
For more than 20 years, Scott Warner has quietly worked behind those kinds of projects as executive director of the Mid-Shore Regional Council, a federally recognized Economic Development District serving Caroline, Dorchester, and Talbot counties. The organization helps rural communities compete for federal and state resources supporting broadband, infrastructure, workforce development, entrepreneurship, and long-range planning.
Under Warner鈥檚 leadership, the Mid-Shore Regional Council helped support the Maryland Broadband Cooperative, assisted with projects tied to the new Regional Medical Center, and helped foster initiatives like the Eastern Shore Entrepreneurship Center and F3 Tech鈥檚 emerging bio-manufacturing work in Easton.
鈥淓conomic development is bringing the resources to help people and businesses grow,鈥 Warner says. 鈥淓conomic development is everything from supporting our agriculture businesses and farms to the small businesses that employ five or ten people.鈥
Warner believes the Mid-Shore succeeds when the region works together. 鈥淧eople don鈥檛 see boundaries,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hey go from where they live to where they鈥檙e employed and back.鈥

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