Friday, December 20, 2024

Fear and Loathing in Claiborne: Part Two

I shoved the yellowed envelope into my shirt pocket and scanned the dark newsroom. The overhead fluorescents were off, but dim light shown through the windows along both sides of the long room, illuminating the ten desks that would be occupied by the dayshift in a few hours. The only motion that caught my eye was the slow turn of a metal desk fan that someone had left on at the end of the work day.

Over the sound of the relentless rain on the windows, I heard the faint ding of an elevator chime from two floors down. I ran towards the closed elevator doors at the end of the newsroom and saw that the ground-floor light was illuminated. Someone - no doubt the person who'd left the envelope - was exiting the elevator in the building's lobby.

I ran to the window and looked down into the cobblestoned street, expecting to see the person step out onto the sidewalk. I watched for what seemed like a long time and no one appeared. I stood there as long as I could stand it, then bolted for the stairs.

I burst through the stairwell door and bolted down the dark wooden stairs. The only light in the empty stairwell this time of night was the faint red glow of emergency lights over the fire alarm pull stations. Near the bottom of the last flight of stairs, I tripped over my feet and fell into the crash bar of the lobby door.

I plunged loudly into the lobby, causing Flynn Ewell, the nightwatchman, to jump behind the "Vampires Everywhere" comic book he was reading. "What the hell!" he cried as I ran across the room and to the main doors. Without answering, I attempted to shove my way out the heavy door, only to find that it was locked.

I spun on my heels and faced Ewell. "Who just came through here?" The white-bearded octogenarian was at a loss for words.

"What are you talking about?" he asked as he stepped from behind the desk that he'd occupied every night since Big Jim Folsom's last term in office. "Aside from the weather, the building's been as quiet as a church all night. Even the cleaning lady's got the night off."

Minutes later, I stood behind Ewell, watching as he rewound the footage from the lobby surveillance camera. Small drops of blood dripped from the gash in my forearm caused by my fall in the stairwell. On the monitor, I could see Ewell seated and reading moments before I burst into the lobby in pursuit of the person from upstairs.

"There, right there, stop the tape," I said, pointing at the screen.

Ewell had his cheaters on and leaned in with his nose almost touching the screen. "What do you see?" he said. "There's nothing there."

"Rewind it a few seconds then play it," I said, leaning in so close that I caught a whiff of Ewell's uniform, a smell akin to garlic. He hit play and I pointed in the background, where you could clearly see the first-floor light of the elevator wink on a second before the doors slide open and then closed. No one got off, and Ewell was obviously so hard of hearing that he hadn't heard the elevator.

As the footage continued to play, a few seconds passed before I could be seen running across the lobby and into the front door. Ewell turned in his chair. "See, wise guy, no one got off the elevator."

"No one that can be seen on camera anyway," I replied.

Ewell gave me a puzzled look. "Son, maybe you should take the night off. You're obviously overworked."

Ewell saw my bleeding arm, opened a desk drawer and produced a roll of paper towels. "Here, you're making a damn mess," he said. "You better be glad the cleaning lady didn't come in tonight."

Ewell tore off a paper towel and made to pass it to me. "I see you got your envelope," he said, his eyes focused on the old yellowed envelope I'd jammed into my shirt pocket. As I looked down into his face, it took me a few seconds to make sense of his words.

Ewell explained that when he'd begun his shift the envelope had been sitting on top of his desk. The words "For Eli McMorn" were scrawled across the front, so after he'd made his first round, checking to make sure that all ground level doors were locked, he'd gone upstairs and slipped the envelope under the McMorn's locked office door. "But that was hours ago, probably around eight o'clock," the old man said.

My forearm had nearly stopped bleeding, but I held the paper towel tight against the small wound to make sure it didn't get going again. "You gonna open it?" Ewell said. "Might be some money in there."

In all my running around the building, I hadn't thought to see what was inside the envelope. Ewell rummaged around on his desk and then handed me an antique letter opener. In faded white letters across its black handle were the words, “Claiborne Bible Society.”

I stuck the tip of the opener under one corner of the sealed envelope, careful not to damage anything inside. The opener was surprisingly sharp, slitting the envelope with the quickness. "Jesus Christ!" Ewell yelled as a black widow spider crawled out of the envelope and onto my hand.

Acting on instinct, I shook the spider off my hand and watched its malefic shape drop to the floor. Before it could skitter away, I slammed my boot down on it. I raised my foot to make sure I hadn't missed and saw its milky remains smeared on the floor.

I let out a sharp breath and turned to Ewell. In the excitement, I'd dropped the envelope, the contents of which had spilled out at Ewell's feet. He stooped to pick up the envelope and the single sheet of paper it contained.

"Can you read that?" he asked as he handed it back.

I looked at the paper and saw that it was covered in words written in an unfamiliar alphabet. "Looks like some kind of code to me," I said. "Can you read it?"

Ewell shook his head. "No, but I've seen it before."

I looked at the paper more closely. "Where?"

Ewell glanced out into the rainy night with the look of a man who was unsure of what to say. "I think I saw it on the cover of a book in my niece's store."

(All rights reserved. This story is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents either are products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons living or dead is entirely coincidental.)

Wednesday, December 18, 2024

The Evergreen Courant's News Flashback for Dec. 18, 2024

24 YEARS AGO

Jeff Sessions

DEC. 21, 2000

Local weather reporter Harry Ellis reported .05 inches of rain on Dec. 11, 2000, 1.40 inches on Dec. 13, .22 inches on Dec. 14, .32 inches on Dec. 15 and .22 inches on Dec. 16. He reported a high temperature of 77 degrees on Dec. 16 and low of 22 degrees on Dec. 17.

Saturday’s high winds destroy Christmas in the Park displays: Mother Nature took a hand in Evergreen’s annual Christmas in the Park this year, destroying most of the displays with high winds late Saturday afternoon.
The weather didn’t cooperate at all, beginning Friday afternoon with heavy showers, which continued into the night. Luckily, judges were able to choose the winners of this year’s event before the weather turned nasty.

Senator Jeff Sessions visited Evergreen this past Friday afternoon to discuss several important issues with local residents.

Joseph A. Bratton, Chairman and President of Regions Bank Covington-Conecuh, along with Pam Hammonds, Senior Vice President and Branch Manager, announce the retirement of Janella R. Baggett, effective Dec. 31, 2000, and the promotion of Carol H. Cook to Vice President and Branch Operations Officer.

BellSouth Pioneers donated bluebird houses to the Conecuh County Board of Education in an effort to help raise public awareness about the decline in the bluebird population over the last five decades.

39 YEARS AGO
DEC. 19, 1985

Local weather reporter Earl Windham reported 2.49 inches of rain on Dec. 11, 1985 and 1.60 inches of rain on Dec. 12. He reported a high of 79 on Dec. 12 and a low of 28 on Dec. 14.

The Greening Masonic Lodge on South Main Street was slightly damaged by a fire discovered at 6 p.m. Monday. The Evergreen Volunteer Fire Department was able to quickly put out the blaze.

The City of Evergreen recently improved the services of its Sanitation Department with the purchase of this new trash truck with knuckle boom loader. The approximate cost was $26,000.

Captain and Mrs. Ellis W. Golson (nee Rachel Ellis) of Killeen, Texas proudly announce the birth of a daughter, Amber Lynn, weight eight pounds, nine ounces born Dec. 15.

The Evergreen Industrial Park continues to expand. Work is progressing rapidly on this building for Interspec.

The FFA’s champion corn grower for the Southwest District is Maurice Lee of the Evergreen FFA Chapter.

This, the home of Randy and Rita Baggett, 103 South Main St., winners of first place in the Chamber of Commerce’s Spirit of Christmas Entrance Decorations Contest. They received a prize donated by Cassady Insurance Agency.

54 YEARS AGO
DEC. 17, 1970

Book published by Miss Riley: Miss Elizabeth d’Autrey Riley has published some of her memories in a book that will be of great interest to people throughout the country who enjoy a well told tale from local history.
The Evergreen Old Historical Cemetery as written by Miss Riley will lead one down each lane of this hallowed spot, and her comments concerning those buried there will bring before the reader a past that has faded away except as it lives in the memory of older citizens.
Miss Riley is well qualified for her role as historian being descended as she is from the representative pioneer families of South Alabama. She is a native of Monroe County, having been born in the ancestral mansion at Flat Creek Plantation, the daughter of Enoch George Riley and his wife, the former Narcissa Davidson. Her uncle, Dr. B.F. Riley, was an author and historian of note and a president of Howard College.
Miss Riley has already appeared in print, having written an account of an antebellum Christmas in South Alabama for the magazine of the National Society, Daughters of the American Revolution. She is a charter member of Conecuh Chapter of this organization.
The Evergreen Old Historical Cemetery, Miss Riley’s latest work, will enrich those who share with her these memories and will add luster to her reputation as an historian.

69 YEARS AGO
DEC. 15, 1955

SELECTED SOLDIER OF THE MONTH: Army PFC Clayton C. Hale of Repton, Ala. receives congratulations from Lt. Col. Clyde Kennington, Battalion Commander of the Army Medical Service of the Army Medical Service School, after being selected Soldier of the Month for the enlisted student section at Fort Sam Houston, Texas. A dental laboratory technician at the school’s Medical Center, Private First Class Hale was selected for his soldierly appearance, knowledge of duties and military courtesy. He entered the Army in January 1955 and is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Willie L. Hale of Rt. 1, Repton.

Robert Boone, administrator at the Conecuh County Hospital, was elected president of the Evergreen Junior Chamber of Commerce Monday night. He will serve a six-month term of office until the first of July 1956 and succeeds Bill Gaines.

Wayne Hutcheson, manager of the Cotton Tractor Co., Ford tractor and implement dealer of Evergreen, returned Sunday from a four-day visit to Havana, Cuba via Delta Air Lines.
This all-expense-paid trip was given to 42 Ford tractor and implement dealers in Alabama and Georgia by Southeast Ford Tractor Co. of Decatur, Ga. as a reward for excellent performance in a nationwide sales contest sponsored jointly by the Tractor and Implement Division of Ford Motor Co. and Southeast Ford Tractor Co. during August and September of this year.

Bermuda Community, representing Conecuh County in the State Community Improvement Contest, was visited by state judging team on Thurs., Dec. 8.

84 YEARS AGO
DEC. 19, 1940

Rat Extermination Campaign To Start This Week: On account of the general complaint of rat infestation the Mayor and Council have asked the Health Department to put on a campaign for the extermination of these pests and carriers of diseases, especially Typhus fever.
The P.W.A. crew will begin poisoning Thursday or Friday morning of this week, and we hope everybody will cooperate 100 percent since it is for the common good of all. This work will be supervised by Mr. Spann, county sanitation officer, and Mr. Kyle of the State Health Department. (Signed) E.L. Kelly, County Health Officer.

Former Resident Dies In Plane Crash: Funeral services will be held in Montgomery tomorrow afternoon at three o’clock for Clarence M. Dannelly Jr., son of Dr. and Mrs. Clarence M. Dannelly of Montgomery, formerly of Evergreen.
According to reports from the Naval Air Station in Pensacola, the 24-year-old ensign and a student pilot, Max Lettau of Manchester, Mass., were killed Tuesday morning about nine a.m. when the plane in which they were practicing water landings dived into the bay and sank. The bodies of Dannelly and Lattau were not recovered from the sunken ship until late Wednesday afternoon.
Ensign Dannelly was graduated from the University of Alabama in 1937, majoring in aeronautical engineering. Shortly after receiving his B.S. degree, he entered the Navy and received his training at the Pensacola Air Station, graduating about two years ago.
For two years, he was assigned to duty in the Panama Canal Zone and while there Ensign Dannelly was selected for special coastal survey work in Colombia and Ecuador. He remained in South America two months and shortly after his return to the United States was stationed at Charleston, S.C. Last September, he was sent to Pensacola as a flight instructor.
Surviving are his parents, Dr. and Mrs. C.M. Dannelly; two sisters, Hermione and Mary; one brother, Frank Perry, all of Montgomery; his grandmothers, Mrs. A.B. Farnham, Evergreen, and Mrs. J.M. Dannelly, Selma; four aunts, Miss Aline and Augusta Farnham, Evergreen, Mrs. George Hobbs, Selma, and Mrs. George Clinkscale, Spartanburg, S.C.; two uncles, Milton Dannelly, Birmingham, and G.R. Farnham, Auburn.

Masonic lodge in Camden to celebrate 197 years

Dale Masonic Lodge
Tomorrow – Dec. 20 – will mark the 197th anniversary of the founding one of the longest lasting institutions in Wilcox County history – Dale Masonic Lodge No. 25.

According to the Grand Lodge of Free & Accepted Masons of Alabama, Dale Masonic Lodge No. 25 was founded on Dec. 20, 1827 in what was then called Dale Town, a community that later became known as Prairie Bluff. Dale Town, which was located on a high bluff on the west side of the Alabama River north of the present-day Miller’s Ferry Bridge, was named after early Alabama pioneer Samuel Dale. Known as the “Daniel Boone of Alabama,” Dale died in May 1841 in Mississippi.

Records reflect that Thomas Bivin Creagh, a prominent early Alabama Freemason, was elected to serve as the first Worshipful Master of Dale Lodge when it was officially organized in 1827. From there, Creagh went on to serve as the Grand Master of the Alabama Grand Lodge in 1828, 1829 and 1830, and it’s said that he is the only Grand Master to serve in that position for three consecutive years. Creagh passed away at the age of 73 in March 1842 and was buried in the Creagh-Glover Cemetery near Catherine.

Dale Town (sometimes spelled as “Daletown”) started to decline in the 1840s, not long after the county seat was moved from Canton Bend to Barboursville, which was renamed Camden in 1841. During the 1840s, the members of Dale Lodge voted to move their lodge to Camden, where the lodge remains today at the intersection of Broad Street and Clifton Street. Sources say that the cornerstone of this majestic building was laid in November 1848, which was about a decade before the Wilcox County Courthouse was built.

Another story that’s commonly told about the Masonic lodge in Camden is that Union troops camped at the lodge while passing through Camden in April 1865. For many years, I have tried to pinpoint the exact date that Union troops moved through Wilcox County, but have not had much luck. Presumably, these troops were part of what’s known as Wilson’s Raid, a cavalry operation across Alabama that took place in March and April of 1865. It would be interesting to know which Union units were involved, who their commanders were and if there were any famous soldiers among their number.

Also, while doing research on Dale Lodge, I ran across a reference to a book called “History of the Dale Lodge, Camden,” which was published by the lodge in 1909. I suspect that this book would shed more light on the lodge’s early history, but, to date, I have been unable to put my hands on a copy of this book. If anyone in the reading audience has a copy that I could view, please let me know.

In the end, let me be among the first to wish the Masonic lodge in Camden a happy 197th birthday. It’s often said that the object of Masonry is “to make good men better,” and there is no doubt that the members of Dale Lodge have successfully carried on this tradition for nearly two centuries in Wilcox County. It is my fraternal hope that they continue to do so for many, many more years to come.

Monday, December 16, 2024

The Monroe Journal's News Flashback for Dec. 16, 2024

Lavaughn Hanks
FOUR YEARS AGO
DEC. 17, 2020

Longtime Monroe County physician Jack Meadow Whetstone passed away at his home on Sun., Dec. 13, following a long, well-lived life and a year-long battle with cancer. He was 89.
Dr. Whetstone came to Monroeville in August 1961 to practice family medicine and general surgery with Dr. Francis Nicholas. Their partnership lasted 35 years and their friendship, a lifetime. Dr. Hardy Downing and Dr. Charles Eddins became partners and friends as well.
Dr. Whetstone is survived by the love of his life, his wife of 66 years, Mary Elise Jones Whetstone.

MCHS blasts Blacksher: Monroe County High School (MCHS) went 2-2 last week, defeating J.U. Blacksher High School (JUB) 79-37 in Uriah and going 1-2 in the Andalusia High School Invitational Basketball Tournament.
In the victory over JUB…T.J. Wiggins led the team with 26 points and two rebounds. Akel Gibbs had 23 points and a rebound.
(Other top MCHS players in that game included Jekelvon Booker, Nick Childs, Devonte Diggs, Javis Dortch, Justin Hollinger, Arthur Johnson, Conor McPhearson, Admyian Parker and Amadeus Rivers.)

Outlet’s last day is Dec. 24: Vanity Fair (VF) Outlet in Monroeville will close Dec. 24, according to flyers posted at the store on Mayfield Street and on social media.
VF Outlet is owned by Kontoor Brands of Greensboro, N.C., which specializes in the Wrangler and Lee brands. The Monroeville store is managed by Kathy Johnson.

29 YEARS AGO
DEC. 21, 1995

Kenny Cross named EMT of the Year: Kenny Cross, 31, of Excel has been named Emergency Medical Technician of the Year.
The Excel man is employed by Simmons Ambulance Service. He received his 1995 award from Southwest Alabama Emergency Medical Service System, Inc. during a Dec. 8 symposium in Mobile.

Blacksher girls unbeaten: J.U. Blacksher High School’s varsity girls remained unbeaten and took an early lead in the 1A Area 1 standings last week when the Bulldogs defeated Frisco City and Fruitdale high schools.
After trailing through the first half, Blacksher rallied Tuesday of last week at Uriah to pound Frisco’s Whippets 55-33. The Bulldogs followed it with a 57-38 victory over Fruitdale’s Pirates Friday in Fruitdale.
(Top Blacksher players in those games included Latoya Chilsom, Tanjai English, Kristy Flowers, Roxanne Gregson, Summer Harrison, Jennifer Johnson, Katrinka Johnson, Latasha King and Melissa White. Eugene Garrett was Blacksher’s head coach.)

Claiborne focus of museum magazine: Monroe County Heritage Museums bi-annual magazine, “Legacy,” focuses on historic Claiborne in its current edition.
The 30-page magazine features photographs, drawings and articles about various aspects of the 19th century boom town. Museums director Kathy McCoy describes Claiborne as “one of the most important cities in Alabama at one time” and “an important outpost during frontier days.”

54 YEARS AGO
DEC. 17, 1970

Patsy Mattmuller Named 1971 County Junior Miss: Seventeen-year-old Miss Patsy Mattmuller, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John R. Mattmuller, is Monroe County’s Junior Miss for 1971.
Selection of the pretty member of the senior class at Monroe County High School came last Saturday night at the annual pageant held at Greer Auditorium here under the sponsorship of the Monroeville Jaycees.
Crowned by Miss Debra Wiggins, 1970 Junior Miss, Miss Mattmuller also won awards for poise and appearance and for physical fitness.

Tigers Defend Crown: The MCHS Basketball Tigers are hosts and defending champions in the annual area Christmas basketball tournament. The first game will be played at 6:30 tonight (Thursday) when Georgiana meets MCHS. All tournament games will be played in the Monroeville Coliseum on Drewry Road.
(Players for MCHS that season included Mark Adams, Pete Black, Randy Booker, Curtis Hill, Leon Hollinger, Kenneth Kidd, Robert Rankin, J.W. Rowell, Philip Shirley, Larry Snowden, David Stallworth and Joe Whatley.)

Stewart Becomes Editor of U. of Georgia Paper: Steve Stewart of Monroeville has been chosen editor of the University of Georgia’s bi-weekly student newspaper, the Red and Black, for the winter quarter.
A senior journalism major, Stewart previously served as managing editor. He is currently campus correspondent for the Associated Press and has worked as a reporter for the Augusta Herald and interned with the public relations office of Southern Bell Telephone Co.
He is a member of the University Leadership Board and Sigma Delta Chi professional journalism society.

79 YEARS AGO
DEC. 20, 1945

Capt. Edwin C. Lee reached home last Thursday after spending more than two years in the European Theater of Operations. He has been returned to inactive status.

Jesse R. Harrison, radio technician, first class, of Frisco City, is getting ready to rejoin the ranks of civilians, together with thousands of others going through the Naval staging center at Pearl Harbor, according to news received from the fleet hometown news center.

MONROEVILLE DEFEATS FRISCO CITY 20 TO 11: Monroeville played their second basketball game Friday night, Dec. 14, in the High School Auditorium. Bubber and Skipper were high point men, Bubber making 10 points and Skipper making six points. The boys played a good game and at the end the score was 20 to 11.

Nolvin Andrews is at home with his family at Drewry, having recently been discharged from the Army. Most of his service was in the South Pacific.

Phillip Turberville of Uriah has been discharged from the Army after serving three years. He wears the good conduct medal and American theater ribbon.

Edison Jay returned from the Pacific last week and received his discharge from the Navy after three years of service. For the present, he is visiting relatives at Tunnel Springs and Uriah.

Mr. Lavaughn Hanks of Frisco City has accepted the position of sixth grade teacher in the Monroeville Middle School.

104 YEARS AGO
DEC. 16, 1920

LOST – Dec. 6, one pointer bird dog, two and one-half years old, liver and white color, compactly made, rather large heavy neck, named Joe. Communicate with J.U. Blacksher, Uriah, Ala.

Potato Growers Meeting: A special meeting of the Potato Growers Association is hereby called for 10 o’clock Saturday morning, Dec. 18, at the courthouse in Monroeville. All who have indicated that they wish to plant Irish and Sweet Potatoes should be present, as matters will be finally closed at this meeting. – L.J. Bugg, President; Q. Salter, Secretary-Treasurer.

Mr. and Mrs. R.D. Hendrix were called to New Orleans Saturday on account of a serious injury sustained by their son Robert in an accident on the Texas & Pacific Railroad on Tuesday. The young man was thrown from a moving train and one leg so badly crushed as to necessitate amputation. He was removed to one of the city hospitals, where the operation was successfully performed.

DESTRUCTIVE FIRE AT JONES MILL FRIDAY: A destructive fire occurred at Jones Mill at an early hour on Friday morning of last week, which for a time threatened the entire business district, but was finally brought under control after four business houses were abandoned to the flames. The fire broke out in the millinery establishment of Mrs. Lambert and spread rapidly to the adjacent buildings. Owing to the early hour, the fire had gained considerable headway before it was discovered and little could be done beyond confining it to the doomed area.

Friday, December 13, 2024

George Singleton tells of the bygone days of picking cotton by hand

George Buster Singleton
(For decades, local historian and paranormal investigator George “Buster” Singleton published a weekly newspaper column called “Somewhere in Time.” The column below, which was titled “Remembering the hard work and fun from the cotton fields,” was originally published in the Sept. 24, 1998 edition of The Monroe Journal in Monroeville, Ala.)

As the autumn season slowly makes its way across the land, memories of many wonderful times fill my mind. Thinking back to my experiences as a young boy, in the country, I almost feel sorry for our youth of today because of the many good times they have missed.

A few days back, the ninth of September, my wife and I made our way down through the southern part of our county. As we passed cotton fields, becoming snow white with the open cotton glowing in the cool afternoon air, it was almost like going back in time. The long rows of cotton brought back memories of gathering the fluffy cotton by hand while dragging a long cotton sack.

Our youth of today know absolutely nothing about a long hot day in the cotton fields. They could not describe a day of bending over and picking cotton from dawn to dusk. Looking back, I remember how I used to hate that long cotton sack and that 12-hour work day. But, as I traveled the opened cotton fields near Uriah, I almost wished I had the chance to pick more cotton the old fashioned way. Remember, I said I almost wished.

As we rode along down Highway 59, I asked my wife if she had anything I could cover my head with. I told her I had a severe pain in my back. Believing that I was having back pains, she couldn’t understand why I needed to cover my head. I told her that seeing all that cotton, and the memories of having to pick the white stuff caused the pains in my back. Needless to say, she didn’t think that very funny.

If I had to select the one of the fondest memories, one would be when the cotton pickers stopped for lunch. Lunch was sent from the house in several large pans. Near the field we called the “Lewis” field, was a large creek. Under the shade of several oak trees on the high bank of the creek was where dinner would be served. After the blessing by Uncle Tony, an old black man my family cared for, the fun time got under way. Words can hardly describe the excitement experienced by a small country boy there under the large oaks. Tall tales, told by the older workers were almost breathtaking.

When the work day was done, this tired, small boy would lay awake and re-live the stories he had heard.

Almost every farmer had a “cotton house.” This was where freshly picked cotton was stored until enough had been picked to carry to the cotton gin. My fondest memory is being allowed by my darling mother to spend Friday and Saturday nights, sleeping on the fluffy cotton in the cotton house. I don’t believe a bed exists that is as comfortable as that large fluffy pile of cotton was to this small country boy. My bed partner was always a very large cur dog we owned named “Jack.”

Jack would curl up against my back and sleep the entire night, unless something moved or made a noise of some kind.

Jack was good natured, but everyone knew that when he growled, Jack meant business. Always after I had gone to sleep, my guardian angel Uncle Tony would come to the cotton house and lay down nearby. If the air was chilly, he would cover me with an old quilt or put cotton over me to keep me warm.

But cotton picking was not the only thing going on at this time of year. This was also the time for cooking lye hominy.

Fresh shelled corn would be placed in a large wash pot and cooked over an open fire for several hours. The good times was getting to be around the cooking fire as the hominy was cooking. There was always the chance to get a tea cake or large piece of peanut candy from my dear friend, Aunt Lellia.

This wonderful old black lady had no family, so she depended on my family. Since Aunt Lellia had delivered me when I was born, I was very special to this dear and wonderful lady. She always saw to it that I got special pieces of candy or any samples of pie or cake that might need to be tasted.

Aunt Lellia was the absolute authority in the community on cooking lye hominy. She was always sought out by various families when there was hominy to be cooked. No one dared question this dear lady about her cooking knowledge. But everyone knew that when she said it was ready, the hominy was ready.

A hominy supper would most times be held on Friday or Saturday night. Several families would get together for a wonderful time of fellowship and hominy. Other food, such as cakes and pies, would be brought along. Those who have never attended a lye hominy supper in a country community have missed a great event. The fun and games and the fellowship was something to be remembered.

If you have never tried to eat two or three half-ripe persimmons, then tried to whistle, you wouldn’t have been a good contestant in the around-the-fire games. Always someone would show up with a small paper sack full of half-ripe persimmons. After the meal, it was time for the persimmon and whistle contest. Take it from me, it’s not an easy thing to do. Nevertheless, the fun and good times was worth the drawn-up mouth.

These good times that some of us experienced as children played a very important part in the molding of our lives. I will be the first to admit that times have changed since those days of the middle 1930s. But as I see the careless, don’t care attitude of some of our youth, we might need to go back to the long cotton rows and the heavy cotton sacks. As for now, we can only hope. Only time will tell what awaits on the horizon.

(Singleton, the author of the 1991 book “Of Foxfire and Phantom Soldiers,” passed away at the age of 79 on July 19, 2007. A longtime resident of Monroeville, he was born to Vincent William Singleton and Frances Cornelia Faile Singleton, during a late-night thunderstorm, on Dec. 14, 1927 in Marengo County, graduated from Sweet Water High School in 1946, served as a U.S. Marine paratrooper in the Korean War, worked as a riverboat deckhand, lived for a time among Apache Indians, was bitten at least twice by venomous snakes, moved to Monroe County on June 28, 1964 and served as the administrator of the Monroeville National Guard unit from June 28, 1964 to Dec. 14, 1987. He was promoted from the enlisted ranks to warrant officer in May 1972. For years, Singleton’s columns, titled “Monroe County history – Did you know?” and “Somewhere in Time” appeared in The Monroe Journal, and he wrote a lengthy series of articles about Monroe County that appeared in Alabama Life magazine. It’s believed that his first column appeared in the March 25, 1971 edition of The Monroe Journal. He also helped organize the Monroe County Museum and Historical Society and was also a past president of that organization. He is buried in Pineville Cemetery in Monroeville. The column above and all of Singleton’s other columns are available to the public through the microfilm records at the Monroe County Public Library in Monroeville. Singleton’s columns are presented here each week for research and scholarship purposes and as part of an effort to keep his work and memory alive.)

Thursday, December 12, 2024

How did the Mineola community in Monroe County get its name?

George Turberville headstone.
Buffy Tucker from Uriah stopped by The Journal on Monday to conduct some business, and before she left we got into a discussion on the history of the Mineola community. Through the woods, I grew up about a dozen miles from Mineola, but as Mrs. Tucker and I talked, I realized how little I really knew about the Mineola community. After she left, I got the itch to delve into the subject a little deeper.

I first turned to one of my favorite reference books, “Place Names in Alabama” by Virginia O. Foscue. My hope was that this book would tell me how the community got its name and other facts. Unfortunately, between the entries for Mims Creek and Minter, there was no entry for Mineola to be found.

I then turned to sources provided by the University of Alabama’s Department of Geography, which said that the Mineola Post Office was in operation for a grand total of seven years. It opened in 1898 and closed in 1905. Back in those days, community post offices were almost always located inside the local country store with the store owner serving the dual role of postmaster.

Next, I turned to the trusty maps in my National Geographic Atlas to get a good fix on exactly where “downtown” Mineola is located. According to that source, “downtown” Mineola is located on County Road 2, between the Mineola Church Road and Manack Bridge Road intersections. This location is due north of Little River, a short distance through the woods from the Baldwin County line.

Prominent landmarks in the community today include the Mineola Methodist Church and the Mineola Baptist Church, which are across the road from each other on Mineola Church Road. Interestingly, these churches share the same cemetery, which is located beside the Methodist church. I have been to this large cemetery many times, and I would guess that it contains nearly 600 graves.

The oldest marked grave that I’ve found there belongs to an infant named George Lesesne Turberville. The son of Zachariah and Callie Turberville, George was born on March 16, 1901 and he died the next day. “Asleep in Jesus,” his small headstone reads.

Turning to old editions of The Monroe Journal, the oldest reference to the Mineola community that I could find was in a legal notice that was published in the Jan. 11, 1900 edition of the newspaper. That notice was a land claim filed by settler William M. Harris in the Montgomery Land Office. Witnesses to the fact that he had continuously lived and farmed on the land he was wanted to claim were George W. Melvin Jr., Alex A. Sizemore, Robert Melvin and George Nolen, all of Mineola.

In the old days, the bulk of the news in The Journal came from community columnists, who were often the owners of community stores as well as local postmasters. The first Mineola community news column I could find was published in the April 12, 1900 edition of the newspaper. Among other news, that unnamed columnist reported that Miss Cora Ferrell “was in our midst one day this week endeavoring to organize a school,” and that the “veteran turkey hunter Mr. Chas. Weatherford brought in a fine gobbler a few weeks ago.”

In the end, I am certain that there are readers in the audience who know far more about Mineola’s history than me. If anyone would like to send me more information about the community’s history, please don’t hesitate to do so. Send it to news@monroejournal.com, and I will be sure to pass it along at a later date.

Friday, December 6, 2024

George Singleton: The business of banking sure has changed

George Buster Singleton
(For decades, local historian and paranormal investigator George “Buster” Singleton published a weekly newspaper column called “Somewhere in Time.” The column below, which was titled “The business of banking sure has changed,” was originally published in the Aug. 27, 1992 edition of The Monroe Journal in Monroeville, Ala.)

I often think about how much things today have changed. We take so much for granted in this day and age; it causes me to wonder just how we made it through the rough days of the Great Depression.

Today, we do our banking mostly from the window of our automobiles. Or if we should, by chance, need a certain amount of cash, we can just go by the Connexion and insert our card – the money we want falls out in our hands.

And this can be done any time of the day or night. We deposit our salaries into our bank accounts without ever seeing them. Money can be sent around the world on a moment’s notice. Truly, the age of the computer has done wonders for all mankind.

In the area where I grew up, there was only one bank. Sweet Water State Bank was the largest and the smallest bank around. It was also the only bank around.

Small country banks

Farmers used this small country bank for their money needs in the farming communities of the surrounding countryside. Getting the chance to go in the small bank was almost like going into another world for a small country boy like myself. But the time was soon to come when I was to make the trip to the bank for the first time – all by myself.

It was cotton-picking time around the countryside; almost all the local farmers had made a good cotton crop, and the fields were white with opened cotton. This was before the time of cotton-picking machinery that could go down two or three rows and pick everything at once. All the cotton was picked by hand. One could pass the snow-white fields and see pickers pulling cotton and putting it in long sacks that hung from their shoulders by long straps. Take it from me, this was work in its most primitive form.

One morning as my family sat at the breakfast table, it was announced that I was going to be sent to the bank at Sweet Water. I was almost seven at the time; I thought I could handle anything along about this time in life, but I was not ready for this. My older brothers had work to do, and they had to stay close by to help handle the cotton that was being picked.

Each sack, when filled, had to be weighed and the correct pounds credited to the right picker. At this time, I was the only one available for the journey to the bank because I was too small to do much work.

Catch the horse

When breakfast was over, I was ordered to catch the horse I claimed as mine and get ready for the trip. My father told me to go to the bank at Sweet Water and see Mr. Vice, the president of the bank.

I was to tell Mr. Vice that my father needed some money to pay the cotton pickers. He wanted $150: $50 in five-dollar bills, $50 in one-dollar bills and $50 in halves and quarters. I was to tell Mr. Vice that when my father came to town, and he didn’t say when, he would come by and settle up with him.

A very nervous and uneasy young boy rode the five or so miles to the town of Sweet Water. As I tied my mount to a fence near the bank, I was frightened like I had never been before. Almost unable to speak, I slowly made my way into the small bank building. As I approached the cashier, I managed to get the words out that I wanted to see the bank president, Mr. Vice. A smiling lady stepped to a nearby door and spoke something to someone inside an adjoining small room. Out stepped the bank president.

“What can I do for you, young man?” spoke the president of Sweet Water State Bank. After much stammering and studdering, I answered, frightened and shaking, and gave him the message my father had instructed me to give him.

Reaching into his pocket, the bank president pulled out a nickel and handed it to me. “Take this and go down to Lewis Bros. Store and get you a stick of candy. When you come back, I will have the money ready for you,” Mr. Vice said.

Stick of candy

A much-relieved young boy dashed to the door of the bank. Upon reaching the store down the street, I purchased a long stick of candy that had peanut butter blended in the candy stick.

When I returned to the bank, Mr. Vice was waiting with the money. He had placed it in two heavy paper bags. I had never seen so much money before. I walked outside and jumped aboard my waiting steed.

The smiling bank president handed up the paper sacks with the money inside. No note was signed; the money was not counted. It was given only on the word of a man who had always placed honor and trust foremost in all his dealings. No date was mentioned when this country farmer from a nearby community would come in and settle the transaction. Only the honor of these two men was the binder in this agreement.

Happy and excited, I made the return trip home, daring to peep from time to time into the heavy paper sacks that contained more money than I could imagine existed.

Between peeps, I licked the most wonderful-tasting candy stick that could have been found on this planet anywhere. A busy day of serious banking business can play havoc on the nerves of an almost seven-year-old boy. That bank president certainly knew what he was doing when he prescribed a stick of peanut-butter candy to calm my system and settle my nerves.

(Singleton, the author of the 1991 book “Of Foxfire and Phantom Soldiers,” passed away at the age of 79 on July 19, 2007. A longtime resident of Monroeville, he was born to Vincent William Singleton and Frances Cornelia Faile Singleton, during a late-night thunderstorm, on Dec. 14, 1927 in Marengo County, graduated from Sweet Water High School in 1946, served as a U.S. Marine paratrooper in the Korean War, worked as a riverboat deckhand, lived for a time among Apache Indians, was bitten at least twice by venomous snakes, moved to Monroe County on June 28, 1964 and served as the administrator of the Monroeville National Guard unit from June 28, 1964 to Dec. 14, 1987. He was promoted from the enlisted ranks to warrant officer in May 1972. For years, Singleton’s columns, titled “Monroe County history – Did you know?” and “Somewhere in Time” appeared in The Monroe Journal, and he wrote a lengthy series of articles about Monroe County that appeared in Alabama Life magazine. It’s believed that his first column appeared in the March 25, 1971 edition of The Monroe Journal. He also helped organize the Monroe County Museum and Historical Society and was also a past president of that organization. He is buried in Pineville Cemetery in Monroeville. The column above and all of Singleton’s other columns are available to the public through the microfilm records at the Monroe County Public Library in Monroeville. Singleton’s columns are presented here each week for research and scholarship purposes and as part of an effort to keep his work and memory alive.)

Thursday, December 5, 2024

How did Haines Island get its name?

My son James got the itch to put his boat in the Alabama River on Sunday afternoon, so I put on a light jacket and hopped in the truck with him for a short run up to Haines Island. He didn’t plan to hunt or fish. He just wanted to scout out some places for future trips with his buddies.

We headed up County Road 17 through Finchburg and Wainwright before turning onto Ferry Road. We then negotiated Nancy Mountain before arriving at the Davis Ferry. A few minutes later, the boat was in the water, and we were headed south down the river.

At Haines Island, James guided us into the channel that runs around the south side of the island, where the waters are still – almost stagnant – and heavily shaded. I hadn’t been around that side of the island in years, but it looked about the same. Eventually we reached the far end of the island and reentered the river, where the sun was shining brightly from clear blue skies.

On the way home, I could not help but think about the part of the river we’d been in. The names – Haines Island, Davis Ferry and Nancy Mountain – are in such common usage by local folks that most of us, myself included, don’t give their origins much thought. Who were they named after and when?

Back at the office on Monday, I did some research, and the earliest reference to Haines Island that I could find in old newspapers was in the Dec. 20, 1889 edition of The Monroe Journal. In that week’s paper, a brief paragraph talked about the removal of logs and snags from the Alabama River, including around Haines Island. Much of this work depended on the depth of the water.

Dickey Andress recently showed me a really cool mapping website called caltopo.com. Using this website on Monday, I was able to determine that Haines Island is about 1.1 miles long and that the channel around it is about 100 feet wide. Of course, these measurements are at the mercy of the river’s depth, and I imagine that there have been times when the island has been mostly under water.

The earliest newspaper reference to the Davis Ferry that I could find was in the Jan. 24, 1901 edition of The Journal. Readers that week learned that Drew Massey had repaired and erected a “very attractive” rail fence on the Davis Ferry road. I believe this was noteworthy because much of Alabama was still “free range” for livestock at that time.

Prior to 1963, I could find no reference to Nancy Mountain anywhere in back issues of The Journal. Former Monroe Journal columnist George Singleton, who passed away in 2007, often said that this high point was named after “Crazy Nancy” or “Aunt Nancy,” who supposedly still haunts this area today. Much has been made of this local ghost story, but that is a tale for another day.

Even though I didn’t have much luck finding these names in old Monroe Journals, I know that these place names are old, and it would be interesting to learn where they came from. There is no entry for Haines Island, Davis Ferry or Nancy Mountain in Virginia O. Foscue’s authoritative book, “Place Names in Alabama.” Sources do say that Davis Ferry can be found on old maps as far back as 1837.

In the end, if anyone in the reading audience can shed more light on these places names, please let me know. You can reach me by email at news@monroejournal.com.

Wednesday, November 27, 2024

Wilcox County, Alabama poet passed away in California in 1938

The Wilcox Progressive Era has some of the best and smartest readers of any newspaper in Alabama. If you want to know the answer to a question, just ask, and chances are someone in the reading audience will know the answer.

Back in early October in this space, I asked about the ultimate fate of Wilcox County poet, Sara Elizabeth King. A couple of readers were able to shed some light on the subject, but I’ll get to that a little farther down the page.

For those of you who missed the story in October, I began pondering King and her poetic exploits after reading a front-page story about her in the Oct. 8, 1936 edition of The Progressive Ear. Under the headline, “Recognition For Poetry Of Sara King,” the newspaper reported that she was the author of several poems that had been “complimented” by the Alabama Poetry Society. Another of her poems had been selected for inclusion in an anthology called “1936 Contemporary Women Poets of America.”

The newspaper printed two of her poems. The first was titled “Ubiguity” and read as follows:

God walks in forests where pine needles grew,
And in the tumult and motor cars meet.
He breathes thru a still world that’s wrapt in snow;
Then brings spring with its white blossoming sloe.
In the midst of the waving tall grass sweet,
In laughing curves of the ripe golden wheat,
The heart alone attuned to God can know.
Perhaps in starlit lonely mountain ways,
Or in the friendly city near a mart
In a cathedral’s light of candle rays;
Or where fantastic shadowy waves start
To break on grim shores, can the same soul praise Jehovah.
He walks in the human heart.

The other poem of King’s printed by The Progressive Era was called “Spiritual Old Age” and read as follows:

I saw you once
In the face of
An old preacher.
He needed to
Say no word.
He was a sermon.
Thru him you speak
Of turning death
Into morning.

The newspaper article also noted that King graduated from Judson College in 1911 and in October 1936 was living at 347 Magnolia Ave. in Auburn. She was a relative of one of the Judson College’s founders, General Edwin D. King.

She was also the daughter of Paul and Clementine DeLoach King and was the granddaughter of William Douglas and Rebecca Singleton King. She was also the great-granddaughter of James Asbury and Elizabeth Caroline Goode Tait and the great-great-granddaughter of Judge Charles Tait, who was the first federal judge of Alabama.

Despite my best efforts, I was unable to find out what became of Sara King, but a couple of newspaper readers came to my rescue. According to their information, King passed away at the age of 46 on May 17, 1938 in Sawtelle, California. Her obituary said that she had been ill for several years.

Her obituary noted that she was a native of Lower Peach Tree and after graduating from Judson, she went on to graduate from Touro Infirmary in New Orleans. During World War I, she served as a Red Cross nurse at Camp Beauregarde, La. and overseas. She had also taught school at Rock West, Canton Bend and near Vredenburgh. She was buried in the Los Angeles National Cemetery, and her headstone denotes that she was an Army nurse.

Tuesday, November 26, 2024

The Evergreen Courant's News Flashback for Nov. 26, 2024

16 YEARS AGO
NOV. 27, 2008

Joe Faulk, the Chairman of the Elmore County Commission and the President of the Association of County Commissions of Alabama, visited the Conecuh County Commission Monday morning. Faulk succeeded Conecuh County Commissioner Jerold Dean as the ACCA’s president in August.

Evergreen Mayor Larry Fluker signed a proclamation last Thursday morning making the month of November “American Music Month” in the City of Evergreen.”

Conecuh County firefighters from departments across the county spent much of the last week dealing with a rash of brush and woods fires in a variety of locations.

Conecuh County’s E911 dispatchers are set to receive additional training after the first of the year, according to a report given by County E911 Director Johnny Brock on Monday.

Five motorists were injured in three separate automobile accidents during the past week on area roadways.

The Conecuh County Board of Education recognized three individuals and two media outlets for their contributions to local schools during a meeting last week.
During a school board meeting last Thursday in Evergreen, the board recognized long-time school supporter Willie Crutchfield, WPPG 101.1 FM station manager Gary Downs and Evergreen Courant reporter Lee Peacock.

31 YEARS AGO
NOV. 25, 1993

Brigadier General John Watkins was honored for his accomplishments last Saturday night during the NAACP’s 17th Annual Freedom Awards dinner at Hillcrest High School. Gen. Watkins, a native of Conecuh County, is pictured with Bill Bundy of the Alabama National Guard and Freddie Stallworth, Conecuh County Commissioner.

A decision was made by the Conecuh County Board of Education, which along with the juvenile court, hopes to seek assistance for a 14-year-old local youth who admitted making false reports for bombs at two area schools.

Annie Jo Baggett, custodian of school funds for the Conecuh County Public School System for 24 years, was recently honored by fellow workers and school administrators with a reception.

The “anti-business” climate of California has economic developers watering at the mouth over the possibility of a mass exodus of industries to other parts of the nation and world, bringing more jobs to starving work forces. Rosalyn Skipper, economic development director for Conecuh County, recently returned from a trip to the west coast in an attempt to lure these companies to Alabama. She said her trip may prove successful.

Workers at Poole Truck Line stand by as Mike McKenzie ties a ribbon on a company truck in support of Poole’s joining the Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD) campaign for a safer holiday season on the nation’s roads and highways.

46 YEARS AGO
NOV. 23, 1978

Earl Windham, bent-but-not-broke by earlier predictions of rain, reports no rainfall during the week and his weak comment was: “Sorry, Old Bob, we did not have any rain. Maybe next time.”

Staff Sgt. Frank Murphy was promoted to his present rank on Oct. 14. He is stationed at Fort Benning, Ga., but is being reassigned to the Panama Canal Zone.

State Representative James E. “Jimmy” Warren was administered the oath of office for another term by Judge of Probate Frank T. Salter recently. Looking on were Rep. Warren’s wife, Betty, and children, Sharon and Keith. The Castleberry legislator was re-elected to a third term of office on Nov. 7. He won the Democratic nomination in September and in so doing also received the highest number of votes ever given an Alabama State Representative since the Legislature was re-districted.

Cathy Johnston, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne E. Johnston, was named Miss Congeniality at Sparta Academy’s Miss Alpha Contest held Thursday night in the school gymnatorium.

Mayor O.B. “Bert” Tuggle was among those paying tribute to Evergreen native Joe Louis Reed at the Joe Louis Reed Jubilee Day Celebration held here Saturday under sponsorship of the Conecuh County Branch NAACP.

61 YEARS AGO
NOV. 28, 1963

Thousands jam city for Christmas parade: Queen Joy Margaret Hagood of Evergreen High School reigned over the 1963 Conecuh County Christmas Carnival here Wednesday. Already the Evergreen Chamber of Commerce production is being hailed as the biggest and best in history.
A tremendous crowd estimated to be several thousand strong thronged the downtown streets. The parade was long, beautiful and entertaining.
A brief program at the bandstand emceed by Chamber of Commerce President Blake Campbell featured the introduction of the queen, princess and honor court, presentation of the key to the city to Santa Claus by Mayor Pro Tem Henry Sessions and Santa’s proclamation that the holiday season was now open in Conecuh County to last through Jan. 1.
Immediately after the program, the city’s decorative lights were turned on to burn through the season.

From one truck to major industry: When Walter Poole drove off with his first flatbed trailer-load of cotton, hauling for Kendall & Kendall, in 1946 neither he nor anyone else even dreamed that one of Evergreen and Conecuh County’s major industries had been born.
Poole had just that trailer and just the truck pulling it, no money and a lot of courage and faith.
Today, he owns and operates Poole Truck Line, employer of 65 persons with an annual payroll of over $300,000.

76 YEARS AGO
NOV. 25, 1948

Conecuh Reports No Polio During 1948: During approximately the first 10 and one-half months of this year (through Nov. 13) 193 Alabama cases of Poliomylitis (infantile paralysis) were reported to the State Health Department’s Bureau of Preventable Diseases. This total included none occurring in Conecuh County, the department announced today.

On Tuesday afternoon from four to six the Evergreen Study Club entertained at a tea. The occasion was a double celebration, this being the 25th anniversary of the club and the opening of the library.

From “The Week’s Wash” by Bob Bozeman – The boss and I attended what Dr. W.R. Carter called a “shindig” at Repton High School last Thursday night. The “shindig,” and I believe that’s a good name, was held in Repton High’s beautiful auditorium-gymnasium, and the purpose was to raise funds so that a new curtain might be placed on the stage of the auditorium.

W.E. Brooks Jr., Editor of the Brewton Standard, was the guest speaker at the regular meeting of the Evergreen Junior Chamber of Commerce Monday night. Mr. Brooks spoke on “Two Party Politics In The South.”

The Maggie Dunn Sewing Circle will meet Friday afternoon at three o’clock with Mrs. Percy Brantley with Mrs. B.A. Herbert co-hostess.

Monday, November 25, 2024

Eli McMorn and the Mystery of the Lone Letter: Part One

In my dream there is a big black goat standing on a rotten cypress stump. The goat's giant rough horns curl around the side of its head, and its black eyes stare deep into my face. It belches a long, deep bleat that causes me to jump awake with the memory of a fading riddle, from a place between ever and never.

I'd fallen asleep in my old office chair with my fingers laced across my chest. The lights were off and my worn boots were propped on the corner of my antique wooden desk. All was silent as a church on the third floor of The Claiborne Herald.

As the newspaper's lone nightshift reporter, I was tasked with holding down the fort. As long as I churned out three decent stories a week and kept one ear on the police scanner, nothing else was required. Fact was, I loved the job that no one else wanted.

Not moving a muscle, I listened intently, but heard nothing out of the ordinary. My desk clock said in red numbers that it was 3:19 in the morning. The newsroom's morning shift wouldn't trickle in until eight o'clock.

Not for the first time, I wondered if the office was haunted. Much of the building was antebellum old and no doubt housed an apparition or two. I sat up, and the chair's mainspring creaked loudly.

I opened the top drawer of my desk, reached inside and pulled out a small plastic bottle of caffeine pills. I screwed off the childproof cap and shook the last two pills into the palm of my shadowed hand. Without water, I popped the pills into my mouth and sat in the darkness, letting them dissolve bitterly under my tongue.

This was a habit I'd picked up in the Army. Late night sentry duty led many soldiers to procure caffeine pills from the well-stocked supply at the post exchange. It was quicker than drinking black coffee.

I snapped on my green-shaded desk lamp, and it cast its yellow light on a map of Arkham, a city in Massachusetts about 1,400 road miles from Old Claiborne. The map had been mailed to me in a sealed envelope that included a dog-eared paperback copy of "Nameless Cults" by Von Juntz. One of The Herald's readers - who went by the moniker of Indrid Cold - included a short note saying that he'd found coded references in the book. 

I get weird stuff like this in the mail all the time, and you never know what to take seriously. Mr. Cold said that the paperback contained hidden references to Claiborne residents who fled the river city during the witch trials of the 1840s. These ciphered names matched the names of old Arkham streets that converge on the city's central cemetery.

As I pondered the meaning of this, I heard the rumble of thunder in the distance. A few seconds later, a low moan sounded from overhead as the wind blew across the open mouth of an iron rain spout. Another peal of thunder, closer this time, let loose as raindrops began to tap against the window, soft at first before erupting into an outright downpour.

I rose from my chair, stood at the window and watched it rain. Long tendrils of Spanish moss, hanging from the large oaks across Legrasse Street, swayed in the wind. For what seemed like a long time, I watched a rain-drenched homeless man push a metal grocery buggy down the sidewalk, changing his tack only once when a stray black cat darted across his path.

The cat disappeared into a shadowed alley, and the man paused under a street lamp to watch. The man's hooded jacket hid most of his face, all except for what looked like a long grey beard. Rain poured down on the man, and I watched for many long seconds until I realized the man was staring up at me.

Suddenly and without warning, white blinding light cast everything into negative as a bolt of lightning hit one of the massive live oaks in the square across the street. An instant later, sparks showered from an electrical transformer sitting atop a utility pole a short distance away. I recovered my senses a few seconds later only to realize that the homeless man had disappeared.

I froze, locked in place, as the sound of something in the darkness behind me reached my ears. It was the sound of loud breathing coming from the brown leather chair in an opposite corner of the room. In one smooth motion, I spun, grabbed for the holstered Beretta on top of my desk and raised my arm to fire when I froze in place, stunned by the shocking sight that met my eyes.

There in the darkness, perched on the leather chair and illuminated by the faint light of my desk lamp, was a large, black goat. The beast sat perfectly still except for its flaring nostrils, its only challenge to the raised gun. The creature's black eyes, shiny like those of a spider, flashed as my finger tightened on the handgun's trigger.

In the next instant, the animal's barnyard smell reached my nostrils, damp hay with a hint of warm manure. And there was a faint hint of something else, a mix of brimstone and rancid ash that conjured up thoughts of a pot-bellied stove tended by the devil. I sensed that I was in the same room with the Lord of the Flies.

In the light of the desk lamp, I saw leaves and bits of straw tangled in the goat's thick black coat. I imagined running my fingers through that matted mess of hair, my hand coming away damp and slick as if I'd picked up a dead rat from a fast-food grease trap. I eased off the trigger when I realized that this skull-faced goat was the black goat from my nightmare.

The goat shifted its weight in the chair, causing the Victorian leather to squawk under its nasty cloven hooves. One of the beast's horns snagged on a framed picture of my father and grandfather hanging on the wall behind the chair. I heard glass crack a moment before the picture came crashing to the hardwood floor with a bang. The goat let loose with an unnerving bleat that sent a chill raking down my spine like skeletal fingers on a chalkboard.

The rain fell harder outside, hitting the window behind me with the force of a hurricane. Another flash of lightning filled the room with white light, blinding me for a second as my eyes adjusted to the painful glare. Reflexively I raise the handgun in the direction of the goat and when I sighted down along the length of the barrel, I realized the goat was gone.

Motion to my left caught my eye, and I spun to see the office door swing open slowly. I dashed around the desk, bumping my left hip hard as I rounded the corner. I raised my gun and looked out into the empty newsroom. Not a creature was stirring, not sign of the spectral goat.

Something at my feet caught my eye. I stepped back and saw an old yellowed envelope. I stooped to pick it up. In cragged script, scrawled across the front, were the words "For Eli McMorn."

(All rights reserved. This story is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents either are products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons living or dead is entirely coincidental.)

The Monroe Journal's News Flashback for Nov. 25, 2024

15 YEARS AGO
NOV. 26, 2009

Cemetery books: Faron and Sharon McKinley of Franklin presented the Monroe County Public Library with a copy of their recently completed book on the history of the Corinth-Deer Cemetery on Alabama Highway 41 at Franklin. The book – which has been placed in the library’s genealogy room – contains obituaries for all of those buried in the cemetery as well as photos of many of them.

Volunteers would not be denied: TROY – “This one is for the seniors, come and get it!” shouted Monroe Academy head coach Mitchell Turberville, holding the state championship trophy high above his head.
In what should be remembered as one of the most dramatic finishes to an MA football game in recent history, the Volunteers engineered a game-winning drive in the last 98 seconds to defeat Edgewood Academy 30-29 at Troy University’s Movie Gallery Stadium Friday night.
In a game filled with as many twists and turns as a TV soap opera, freshman Craig Bryan kicked the game-winning 39-yard field goal with three seconds left.
It was the second state title for the Vols since 2001 and the school’s seventh overall in the 39-year history of the Alabama Independent School Association. The Vols won the Class AA title Friday night and in 2001 they defeated Bessemer Academy to win the Class AAA crown.
(Other top MA players in that game included Gabe Dees, Keeland Dees, Dustin Ellison, Grant Norris, Graham Smith, Logan Smith, Tanner Smith, Sam Vermilyea, Buchannan Watson and Willis Webb.)

40 YEARS AGO
NOV. 22, 1984

Surgeon participates in conference: Dr. Grayson Simmons, a local surgeon, recently attended the annual American College of Surgeons meeting in San Francisco, Calif.
In addition to attending several lectures concerning updates on various surgical topics, he attended a continuing education course on diseases of the colon and rectum.
Simmons is a board-certified general surgeon and has been in practice here since completing his surgical training at Carraway Methodist Medical Center in Birmingham in 1970.

Repton wins first game 74-67: Repton’s varsity basketball team launched its 1984-85 season Friday when it dumped visiting 3A Wilcox County High 74-67.
The Bulldogs were paced by 6-foot-4 senior James North’s 24 points. Junior Tommy Dukes, at six-foot-seven, added 22 points to the Bulldogs’ offense and pulled 17 rebounds off the backboard.
(Other top Repton players in that game included Tim Berry, Carlos Grace, Kevin Mixon, Chester Rudolph and Tony Taylor. Hugh Wilson was head coach.)

Dwight Harrigan, Alabama forest products executive and member of a family of lumbermen, was elected vice chairman of the Southern Forest Products Association at its 70th annual meeting held recently in Orlando, Fla.
Harrigan is president and owner of Harrigan Lumber Co. in Monroeville and executive vice president and owner of Scotch Lumber Co. in Fulton.
Harrigan, whose father, W.D. Harrigan, served as president of the Southern Pine Association (now SFPA) in 1964-65, is active in industry, youth and civic affairs.

65 YEARS AGO
NOV. 26, 1959

Chairmen Re-Elected To Education Board: Walter C. Nicholas of Excel was re-elected chairman of the Monroe County Board of Education at a recent meeting.
Mr. Nicholas will enter his sixth year in the position. Tom W. Weatherford of Uriah was re-elected as vice-chairman of the group.
Other board members are Dr. John L. Abbott of Monroeville, James C. Brooks of Megargel and S. Miller Fore of Beatrice.

MCHS, Frisco City Fight To 20-20 Tie: In a tightly-fought grid contest, traditional rivals, the Monroe County High School Tigers and the Frisco City High School Whippets, battled to a 20-20 tie in Frisco City Friday night. Both teams were undefeated in county and conference games.
A recovery paid off for Monroeville in the final few minutes of the game. Fullback Eddie Sosebee grabbed the ball on the FCHS 35 and ran all the way to paydirt. Jim Lazenby made the extra point.
(Other FCHS players in that game included Johnny Dorough and Vance McCrory. Other MCHS players were Jimmy Andress and Branchard Tucker.)

Bobby Grissett Named Band, Music Director At Two County Schools: Bobby Grissett, 26, native of Uriah, has been elected as band and music director for the schools at Uriah and Excel.
Mr. Grissett replaces Mrs. Dubose Harris, who resigns effective Nov. 30.
Mr. Grissett is a senior at Troy State College, Troy, where he is a music major. He is a graduate of J.U. Blacksher High School, Uriah.
His wife is the former Marlene Brantley of Excel. They have a son, Butch, 2, and a daughter, Susan, 4.

90 YEARS AGO
NOV. 22, 1934

Remainder Of Square To Be Paved: The east and north sides of the Monroeville square will be paved if the plans of the local town council and the County Board of Revenue materialize. Plans have been furnished for this project by the State Highway Department. The paving of the remainder of the square will greatly add to the appearance of the town.

Veteran Dies At Mexia Home: D.L. Friddle, 93-year-old veteran of the War Between the States, died at his home at Mexia on Fri., Nov. 9, following a lengthy illness. For four years, Mr. Friddle served in the armies of the South, taking part in more than one hundred battles. He was wounded several times in service. He was a Mason and a member of the Baptist church.

NOTICE: Notice is hereby given that an application for the parole of Alton Bell, convicted and sentenced by the Circuit Court of Monroe County, Ala. on the 12th day of October 1922 for murder in the first degree to hard labor for life in the penitentiary of said State from Monroe County, will be made to the Governor and Board of Pardons of Alabama.

EXCEL-MONROEVILLE PLAY 0-0 GAME: The Monroe County High School Tigers went to Excel last Friday to play the strong Excel high school eleven. The game, hard fought throughout the entire four quarters, resulted in a scoreless tie.

CAR STOLEN HERE SUNDAY AFTERNOON: An automobile owned by Mr. J.R. Griffin of Excel was stolen here late Sunday afternoon from the R.L. Jones house. It was recovered Monday morning near Excel, apparently where the thief had run out of gas.

115 YEARS AGO
NOV. 25, 1909

The dwelling of Mr. J.L. Dees was destroyed by fire near Peterman on Tuesday evening together with all his household goods. His neighbors are rallying nobly to his relief. Contributions aggregating considerable value were donated by citizens of Monroeville yesterday.

The Sowell Mercantile company have moved their stock of goods into their new brick store on east side where they will be glad to welcome their many friends and customers.

NOTICE: We have received notice from the High Prince of Pleasure (Santa Claus) that he has carefully looked into the qualifications of the mercantile world in this section and has decided to make the Lone Star Store his headquarters for X-mas and New Year goods, and in obedience to his Majesty’s call we will take pleasure in supplying anything you want in eating, wearing and pleasure line. We must hold the confidence imposed in us by his Majesty. – A.E. PETERMAN & CO., The Lone Star Store, Repton, Ala.

One of the prettiest home weddings that has occurred in Monroeville in many years took place at the home on Hon. N.J. Stallworth on Wednesday morning at 10 o’clock when Miss Mary Stallworth became the bride of Mr. Francis W. Hare. The parlor was beautifully decorated for the occasion and a large number of friends of the young couple were present to wish them joy. The impressive ceremony was pronounced by Rev. W.R. Bickerstaff and the bridal party left immediately for New Orleans and other points.

Friday, November 22, 2024

Long rows of white cotton bring back memories for George Singleton

George Buster Singleton
(For decades, local historian and paranormal investigator George “Buster” Singleton published a weekly newspaper column called “Somewhere in Time.” The column below, which was titled “Long rows bring back memories,” was originally published in the Sept. 2, 2004 edition of The Monroe Journal in Monroeville, Ala.)

As the autumn season slowly begins to make its way across the land, memories of many wonderful times begin to fill my mind. Thinking back to the times that I experienced as a young boy, growing up in the country, I almost feel sorry for our youth of today because of the many happenings and good times they have missed.

This past Friday, my wife and I made our way down through the southern part of our county. As we passed the vast cotton fields, slowly becoming snow white in color, with the opening cotton blowing in afternoon air, it was almost like going back in time. The long rows of opening cotton brought back many memories of gathering the fluffy cotton by hand while dragging a long cotton sack along the row.

Our youth of today know absolutely nothing about a long, hot day in the cotton fields. They could not in any way describe a day of bending over and picking cotton from dawn to dust.

In looking back, I remember how I used to hate that long cotton sack and that 12-hour work day in the cotton field. But, as I traveled through the opening cotton fields near Uriah, I almost wished that I had the chance to pick some more cotton the old-fashioned way. Remember, I said that I almost wished.

As we rode along down Highway 59, I asked my wife if she had anything that I could cover up my head with. I related to her that I had a severe pain in my back. Believing that I was having back pains, she couldn’t understand why I needed to cover my head if my back was hurting. I told her that seeing that open cotton, and the memories of having to pick the white stuff caused the pains in my back. Needless to say, she didn’t think that very funny.

If I had to select the one of the fondest memories of cotton-picking time, one would be when the cotton pickers would stop their work for the lunch meal. Lunch would be sent from the house, packed in several large dish pans.

Near the large field that we called the “Lewis field,” there was a large creek nearby. Under the shade of several large oak trees that grew on the high bank of the creek, this was where dinner would be served. After the blessing was said by Uncle Tony, an old black man that my family cared for, the fun time got under way.

Words can hardly describe the excitement experienced by a small country boy there under the large oaks. Tall tales told by the older workers of the group were almost breathtaking. And, when the work day was done, this tired small boy would lay awake for some time and re-live the stories that he had heard earlier.

Almost every farmer in the area had a “cotton house.” This was where the freshly picked cotton was stored until enough had been picked to carry to the cotton gin. Some of my fondest memories were being allowed by my darling mother to spend Friday and Saturday nights sleeping on the fluffy cotton, there in the cotton house.

I don’t believe that a bed exists today that would be as comfortable as that large fluffy pile of cotton was to this small country boy. My bed partner was always a very large cur dog that we owned named “Jack.”

Jack would curl up against my back and sleep there the entire night, unless something moved or made a noise of some kind and disturbed his sleep. Jack was a good-natured dog, but everyone knew that when he growled, Jack meant business.

Always after I had gone to sleep, my guardian angel, “Uncle Tony,” would come over to the cotton house and lay down nearby. If the air was chilly, he would cover me with an old quilt or put cotton over me to keep me warm.

But cotton picking was not the only thing going on around the farm at this time of year. This was also the time for cooking lye hominy by the home folks. Fresh shelled corn would be placed in a large wash pot and this would be cooked over an open fire for several hours. The good times were getting to be around the cooking fire as the hominy was cooking. There was always a chance of being given a tea cake or a large piece of peanut candy by my dear friend, Aunt Lellia.

This wonderful old black lady looked to my family for her well-being and all her needs. She had no family to care for her, so she depended on my family for her, so she depended on my family for her survival. Since Aunt Lellia had delivered me when I was born, I was very special to this dear and wonderful old lady. She always saw to it that I got the special pieces of candy or any of the samples of pie or cake that might need to be tasted.

Aunt Lellia was the absolute authority in the community on cooking lye hominy. She was always sought out by various families when there was hominy to be cooked. No one dared to question this dear old lady about her cooking knowledge. But everyone knew for sure that when she said that it was ready, the hominy was ready to eat.

A hominy supper would most times be held on a Friday or Saturday night. Several families would get together for a wonderful time of fellowship and hominy eating. Other food, such as cakes, pies and many other goodies, would be brought along by those attending the supper.

Those of my readers that has not ever attended a lye hominy supper in a country community has missed a great event in life. The fun and games and the fellowship among those present was something to be remembered.

If you have never tried to eat two or three half rip persimmons and they try to whistle, they you wouldn’t have been a good contestant in the around the fire games. Always someone would show up with a small paper sack full of half ripe persimmons. After the meal, then it was time for the persimmon and whistle contest. Take it from me, it’s not an easy thing to do, to try and whistle after eating three or four half ripe persimmons. Nevertheless, the fun and good times was worth the drawn-up mouth.

These good times that some of us experienced as a child, growing up on the farm played a very part in the molding of our lives. I will be the first to admit that times have changed since those days of the middle and late 30s.

But as I see the carelessness and “don’t care” attitude of some of our youth of today, we might need to go back to the long cotton rows and the heavy cotton sacs. As for now, we can only hope. Only time will tell what awaits on the horizon.

(Singleton, the author of the 1991 book “Of Foxfire and Phantom Soldiers,” passed away at the age of 79 on July 19, 2007. A longtime resident of Monroeville, he was born to Vincent William Singleton and Frances Cornelia Faile Singleton, during a late-night thunderstorm, on Dec. 14, 1927 in Marengo County, graduated from Sweet Water High School in 1946, served as a U.S. Marine paratrooper in the Korean War, worked as a riverboat deckhand, lived for a time among Apache Indians, was bitten at least twice by venomous snakes, moved to Monroe County on June 28, 1964 and served as the administrator of the Monroeville National Guard unit from June 28, 1964 to Dec. 14, 1987. He was promoted from the enlisted ranks to warrant officer in May 1972. For years, Singleton’s columns, titled “Monroe County history – Did you know?” and “Somewhere in Time” appeared in The Monroe Journal, and he wrote a lengthy series of articles about Monroe County that appeared in Alabama Life magazine. It’s believed that his first column appeared in the March 25, 1971 edition of The Monroe Journal. He also helped organize the Monroe County Museum and Historical Society and was also a past president of that organization. He is buried in Pineville Cemetery in Monroeville. The column above and all of Singleton’s other columns are available to the public through the microfilm records at the Monroe County Public Library in Monroeville. Singleton’s columns are presented here each week for research and scholarship purposes and as part of an effort to keep his work and memory alive.)

Thursday, November 21, 2024

Where exactly was the William Weatherford Road in Monroe County, Alabama?

William Weatherford, aka, 'Red Eagle'
On the front page of the Nov. 21, 1957 edition of The Monroe Journal, the newspaper carried a story that bore the headline, “Newly-Surfaced Road In County To Bear Name Of Indian Chief.” That story went on to say that 15 miles of highway in Monroe County being hard surfaced was to be named for the famous Creek Indian chief, William Weatherford.

Probate Judge E.T. Millsap told the Journal on Nov. 20 of that year that Alabama Governor James “Big Jim” Folsom suggested that the road from Jeddo to Eliska to Chrysler be designated as the “William Weatherford Road.” The Journal noted that the construction of the road was being jointly financed by the state and county.

“Many of the descendants of the Creek Indian chief, also known as ‘Red Eagle,’ lived in the vicinity where the road is being asphalted,” according to that week’s Journal.

On the surface, this story appears to be straight forward, but a deep look into the facts leads to some interesting questions. First off, when you check the county’s present-day highway map, you’ll see that there is no William Weatherford Road. However, there is a Weatherford Road in that part of the county, but it’s only about 3-1/2 miles long, not 15 miles long as described in the story above.

A little over a year after the first “William Weatherford Road” story was published, The Journal ran another front-page story about it in the Jan. 15, 1959 edition of the paper, under the headline “State Lets Contract For County Bridges.” That story told readers that the state had let a contract on bridges on Shomo Creek and Waller’s Creek on the Chief William Weatherford Road near Eliska.

Maps show that there are no bridges on modern-day Weatherford Road, and while this road crosses over a branch stemming from Shomo Creek, the road definitely does not travel over Waller’s Creek. With that said, there are bridges over Shomo Creek on County Road 8 and over Waller’s Creek on County Road 1.

The only other mention of the “William Weatherford Road” that I could find was on the front page of the Oct. 27, 1960 edition of The Journal. That week’s paper reported that 14 miles on the William Weatherford Road at Eliska was among seven recently-completed highway projects that resulted in “extensive hard-surfacing” of 40-1/2 miles of roads in Monroe County.

In the end, if I had to make an educated guess, I would say that the old William Weatherford Road began at what is now the intersection of the Jeddo Road and the Tower Road, east of Poplar Springs Baptist Church at Jeddo. The old William Weatherford Road then ran west along modern-day Tower Road to County Road 1 at Eliska, where it crossed the bridge over Waller’s Creek before turning into what we now call County Road 8. The old William Weatherford Road then followed County Road 8 generally south, where it crossed the bridge over Shomo Creek and then ended at modern-day State Highway 59 at Chrysler. This route is about 14 to 15 miles long, travels from Jeddo to Chrysler, and crosses both bridges mentioned in the newspaper.

In the end, one is left to wonder why the William Weatherford Road name didn’t stick. At what point did the road’s name fade from use, only to be replaced by modern names like Tower Road, County Road 1 and County Road 8? Perhaps someone in the reading audience will be able to shed more light on the subject. If so, please email me at news@monroejournal.com.

Tuesday, November 19, 2024

The Evergreen Courant's News Flashback for Nov. 19, 2024

Luman W. Savage
68 YEARS AGO
NOV. 15, 1956

The Evergreen Garment Co. will go back into operation on Monday or Tuesday of next week,” Vernon "Millsap, vice president and manager, said today.
Fire raged through the company’s building on Pecan Street Saturday night, Nov. 3, causing a loss of about $300,000.
“We are actually already in production,” he said, “with cutting operations being performed at the Steven-Robert Corporation. Sewing operations will begin on a partial basis at the new location in the Recreation Center early next week, and by the following week we hope to be in full operation, with everyone back on the job.”

At a recent meeting of the Evergreen Kiwanis Club, T.O. Langham, popular local businessman, was elected president, and will take office in January. Other officers chosen were Dr. John Crook, vice president; Ivey Booker, secretary; and John Gibson, treasurer.

Jay Villa Plantation of Evergreen has placed one horned Hereford bull and one polled Hereford bull on performance test at the North Auburn Beef Cattle Research Unit of the API Agricultural Experiment Station.
The animals are included among 55 bulls on a 140-day test to determine weight-gaining abilities. The performance program will be climaxed next spring with a field day and sale of bulls calved between Sept. 1, 1955 and Feb. 29, 1956.

83 YEARS AGO
NOV. 20, 1941

31st Division Moves To ‘Battle’ Position: WITH THE 31ST (DIXIE) DIVISION ON CAROLINE MANEUVERS: Men from Evergreen with Battery C, 117th Field Artillery, members of the 31st Dixie Division enter the last and major phase of Carolina mock warfare early this week when their outfits began pulling out of base camp Sunday night and moving toward their “battle” positions.
Dixie troops are getting their “college course” in modern warfare. Troops will be back in Blanding early in December.

Wilkerson Gets Two-Year Sentence: After about one hour deliberation Tuesday night, the jury which tried Alvin Wilkerson charged with first-degree murder in the killing of Mrs. Josephine Zellers, found him guilty of manslaughter in the first degree and sentenced him to two years. Judge Hare pronounced the sentence on Wilkerson early Wednesday morning and suspended same for a period of six months or until spring term of court next May.
Wilkerson’s trial consumed all of Tuesday and was not concluded until about eight o’clock Tuesday night. This being the last case on docket, court adjourned following the sentencing of Wilkerson Wednesday morning.

C.D. Mixon, 87, well known and respected citizen of Burnt Corn, was found dead in bed Saturday morning by members of his family. During his active years, he was one of that section’s most successful and substantial farmers. He was married three times.

98 YEARS AGO
NOV. 18, 1926

R. Gaston Bozeman was called to his old home near Gantt Tuesday to attend the funeral of his maternal grandmother, Mrs. L.T. Wells.

CONECUH GIN REPORT: There were 10,713 bales of cotton ginned in Conecuh County from the crop of 1926 prior to Nov. 1 as compared with 14,162 bales ginned to Nov. 1, 1925. This report was furnished by the Bureau of Census through W.T. Hagood, reporter for the county.

ARMISTICE DAY QUIETLY OBSERVED: Armistice Day was observed in a very quiet manner by the citizens of Evergreen. No formal services were held during the day, but the holiday was observed in whole-hearted manner by practically all business and professional people, in closing their offices and places of business for the day. This was done in spite of the fact that an unusually large crowd of people was in town to attend the Presley trial, and no doubt it would have been a profitable day with the stores had they remained open, but patriotism came first with Evergreen business houses.

Conecuh County Circuit Court, which was in session during the past two weeks, came to close Saturday night when the jury selected to sit in the case of Dan Presley, rendered a verdict which found the defendant guilty of murder in the second degree and fixed his sentence at 10 years. Curt Coleman, who is indicted under the same charges as Presley, was not arraigned at this term of court, and he was released under bond until the next term.

113 YEARS AGO
NOV. 15, 1911

Luman W. Savage, for 40 years a prominent citizen and businessman of Evergreen, died on Saturday night, Nov. 11, after a brief illness.
Mr. Savage was born at Camden about 64 years ago. From there he removed to Scotland and later to Claiborne, coming to Evergreen about 1872. He spent most of life in the mercantile business and was widely known in the commercial world.
The funeral occurred on Sunday afternoon from the Episcopal church of which he had long been a communicant, the service being conducted by the rector, Rev. Mr. Zachary. The body was laid to rest with the beautiful and impressive rites of the Masonic order of which deceased had long been a faithful member.

The veterans from this county who attended the State reunion in Montgomery last week say that it was one of the best they have ever attended barring the rain and disagreeable weather on Wednesday which interfered greatly with the program. They are lavish in their praise of the entertainment and attentions shown them by the citizens of Montgomery, especially the ladies. The keys of the city were turned over to them.

E. Garvin, residing 11 miles east of Evergreen, says he produced seven 500-pound bales of cotton off of six acres. He says at one time he thought he would get nine bales but drought and worms cut it off.

128 YEARS AGO
NOV. 19, 1896
THE CONECUH RECORD

Just before the close of the late war, two southerners were captured and taken as prisoners to Fort Delaware near the city of Philadelphia. They were strangers then, but both from Alabama – one Mr. D.T. Slay from Demopolis and the other Mr. W.H. Betts of Burnt Corn. In a long confinement of almost two years, they became fast friends. Since those stormy days, these old comrades have renewed their friendship, now extending over 30 years, and correspond regularly. Mr. Slay resides in Texas and on Monday Mr. Betts came in to renew the subscription to The Record which has been sent to “Tom” for the past several years. In their friendship, one is “Tom” and the other “Bill.” They are now old men and both await the summons to retire from a conflict almost reaching the three score years and ten.

Miss Lovelace, the music teacher at the Southwest Alabama Agricultural School was called on Thursday to Atlanta on account of the serious illness on one of her sister’s family.

A letter received by Mr. Joseph Comb, one of the best additions to the citizens of Evergreen, announces that his kinsman Messrs. J.W. Clarke and W.B. Clarke of Hamilton, Ohio with their families, will arrive in Evergreen about the middle of December to reside here in the future.

That wave of prosperity hasn’t reached Evergreen yet. Farmers are now regretting that they didn’t sell their cotton before the election.