Monday, October 29, 2012
Winds from Hell - Conclusion
The neighbors continued on with the house.
A group of Mennonites came down from up north somewhere, and they
helped finish it. How they ever talked the dad into letting them,
I'll never know. Just as they had put on the finishing touches, The
city decided to use that land for the new City Hall. So it was torn
down again. But I guess the old man, (who reminded me of my Dad) his
hard working son, wife and kids, came out better financially. When
the city takes land, I've heard they pay by the square foot, which
also means through the nose. I never did know their names, or what
became of them. But I still think of them occasionally, with a lot of
respect.
Much of this next segment is based
of fact, as I remember it. The rest is based on the scuttlebutt around
town about what was going on at City Hall. Scuttlebutt is not
necessarily true, but it sure began to seem to me like it was. Some
said City Hall was being transformed. Since so many were rebuilding,
It was a really good time to toughen up the city building standards.
The new City Manager seemed to me to be a bit of a gunslinger, and,
as he came from Cut and Shoot, Texas, maybe he was
.
.
Our Clay street house was rebuilt,
for about what the house cost me in the first place. This was the
first rebuilt house to be finished since the tornado, I was told, and
the scuttlebutt was, it was destined to become the test house for the
new building policy.
The current City Inspector left
about that time. Scuttlebutt had it he couldn't stomach what was
about to happen to these poor people trying to rebuild. Three or so
new, temporary, building inspectors were brought in, from different
parts of the country. I won't go so far as to say they were extreme
hard cases, but in my dealings with them, I had every reason to
believe they were.
When the contractor finished with
the house, they would not approve it. They had me doing more and more
little changes, call them to inspect it, then they would add another
list of things. The house sat empty, for days and days. There was no
shortage of people wanting to rent it, because there were tons of
people without a house. I spent days sitting in city hall, waiting
for an inspector to go look at the last batch of improvements I had
been required to do.
A man from Catholic Relief
Services came by. He had a family, he said, huddled in what was a
piece of a house. A bulldozer sat in the front yard, ready to tear it
down. They had no place to go. He wanted to rent my house. I told him
I could not rent it to him, City Hall was not happy with it yet. He
just said, "Let's go to City Hall." Well, when he got down
there in front of those inspectors, I finally learned what a true
hard case looked and sounded like.
The city eased up a little. An
inspector came out. He finally said, "If you will build a wooden
box around the breaker box on the front porch, I'll release the
house." I reminded him the breakers were already enclosed in a
metal box. He looked at me hard awhile, then pointed to the front
steps. "You know," he said, there really needs to be a rail
there." I shut up and started building a box.
Remember, that was 1997. this is
2012. Today, we have a local guy as City Manager, who turned out to
be, in my opinion, our best. And, our new inspector, he's a firm but
fair man. He still calls me to task, on occasion, and he holds my
feet to the fire. But only when I deserve it. As a landlord, I have
every reason to suck up to those guys. But what I have just said is
true, never the less.
That was our last year in
business. The tornado did not drive us out, we already had that
planned. Our family was very lucky, all in all. But I sure would not
want to go through it again.
Hundreds, and I mean Hundreds, of
volunteers stepped in and helped our recovery. I can't say enough
about the University students. Kinley had stored what we salvaged in
our garage, and a team of OBU students came out one day, went through
each of the hundreds ot tiny things, and cleaned each one. They
really came through for Arkadelphia when the chips were down.
During the time when the National
Guard was deployed in Arkadelphia, two of them had planned on getting
married. So, Arkadelphia threw them a free wedding. Business people
chipped in to help out in their specialty areas. Barbara and I made
the wedding pictures. It turned out to be a fun wedding for
Arkadelphia, and them too, I think. It was a pleasant little respite
during very hard days.
We lost some of our best people.
We all grieve for those families. They will never be forgotten. A
lot of people lost a great deal. Arkadelphia has recovered, and the
physical reminders of those dark days are gone, except for a blank
space here and there. But March 1, 1997 will always be in the minds
and hearts of all of us who were there that day.
Nowadays, our family tells Kinley
when a storm comes up, "Kinley, think about it! Nobody, but
nobody, ever gets hit by a tornado – twice!" It dosen't help
her attitude about it much that she has twice had to be moved out
into the hallway of a hospital when she was in labor, because a
tornado was heading that way. So, don't expect to find Kinley when
the dark clouds roll in. She will be in her hidey-hole. I will
probably be there with her.
Thanks for reading!
Thanks for reading!
Thursday, October 25, 2012
President Clinton, Montel Williams, and Dateline
President Clinton came to town. He
was walking up the street toward our business, and a Secret Service
dude was ranging out in front. I told him, "You better keep him
away from my building. That front wall is going to come down."
He looked at me. "today?" he asked. "Well, I hope
not!" He looked me over good, then started going through my tool
bag around my waist.
Our building would be unusable for
a long time, but our equipment was intact. We were in the running for
the job of photographing the Arkadelphia Prom. We needed that money
badly to help stay afloat. They decided to use the big city photog'
from Little Rock. I try not to hold grudges for a long time, but I
have to admit that bothered me for some time.
Dateline NBC was coming to our
house that night to interview Barbara, Kinley, Mickey and I for their
segment. Barbara always keeps her house very neat, and takes a lot of
pride in it. It was spotless. Well, the Dateline crew descended on
our living room, and just changed everything around completely. They
moved a couch, and there was a big pile of stuff under it. Mostly
shoved there by me, I would imagine. Barbara was horrified! Oh well,
at least the cameras weren't rolling yet. That pile got gone quickly.
The lights were on, cameras ready
to roll, and Fredrica Whitfield was sitting there, smiling, her
notebook in hand. Now, me, I'm not always a good spontaneous speaker.
Never, I would guess, with a national audience. I could not think of
a single intellegent thing to say, the best being a few "uhs"
and maybe "duh." I just knew I was about to become a major
fool, on national TV. Fortunately, Barbara interviewed first, and
that gave me a chance to settle down some. Barbara did great, as we
all knew she would. But every word she said wound up on the cutting
room floor, because she was not actually "in" the tornado.
I did not say anything profound, but I got through it. At least, the
whole town was not laughing at me the next day, not to my face,
anyway. Kinley interviewed well, as always, a little gift handed down
to her from Barbara. Mickey told of being busy hauling injured people
out on doors, etc. while knowing his house had been hit, not able to
go there. Also, about the total loss of their house, the loss of a
very large number of family antiques. But he jerked a lot of tears
with his declaration, "But I got what I most wanted from that
house!" Tears on his cheek really set it off, and he was
instantly every woman's hero. After the Dateline show aired, they
also got a trip to New York to be on the Montel William's show, where
they got a new living room and bedroom suite out of the deal.
Kinley's back was still bad, so Montel even upgraded them to a first
class flight.
Insurance appraisers descended
upon the town in droves one day. Before I knew they had even seen the
house, they came to see me, bringing me a check for the total loss of
the Crittenden street house. I told them, "The contractor said
he could repair it." But for the amount of the policy?" he
asked. "Well, I don't know, I haven't got a bid on it yet."
Finally realizing I was talking against myself, which is not uncommon
for me, I shut up, thanked him, and gracefully accepted the check. I decided to repair it myself, I
did, and three weeks later, it was leased again.
One day, as I sat on top of that
house putting shingles on, I sat a while just looking over all that
destruction with a bird's eye view. It still had a pink cast to it,
from all the insulation lying around. FEMA was doing a great job,
hauling off the waste. I had heard this town was the first one in
which they went onto private property, instead of requiring the
landowners to haul it to the curb. This was back in the days when
FEMA was still run by a good ole' Arkansas boy from Danville, and it
was getting done right. Volunteers from everywhere were all over down
there, chain saws going. I looked down at the nice little lady,
trudging along the street, pulling her little red wagon filled with
cold water for the workers. She had been doing that for days and days
now. I didn't know her, but I wished I did. I just lost it, and sat
on that roof bawling like a baby for my town.
The neighbor across eighth street
were not as lucky as I. His house was just a pile of rubble, along
with two other small houses his dad owned. That was to be his
inheritance, he said. His dad came to town, and they set in to
rebuild it themselves. They worked endlessly, day after day—Even
the young children. Every plank was pulled out, the nails removed,
stacked neatly. When I had finished my house, I asked the dad, a
tough old man from the old school, if I could help. He thanked me,
then said, "As sure as I do start letting people help, someone
will get hurt, then they'll be sueing me, sure as the world."
They finally got ready to put the
top on, but there was just no plywood to be had in town. They were
stalled. Then I remembered. I had some plywood in a storage building,
and I knew it would just about be the right amount for that small
house. I told him I would give it to him if he would let me help. The
Dad was in a bind. No top for his house, and it was supposed to rain
in a day or two, or risk getting sued. I told him, "Now look!
I've built three houses, almost completely by myself. I've worked on
these rent houses of mine for years. I don't get hurt, and I wouldn't
sue you if I did."
He just looked me over good for a
long time, started shaking his head, grudgingly agreed, and walked
off, muttering about getting his pants sued off. I got up on the house, drove a
nail, then took a step. My right foot slipped off a 2x4 down to
another, 3 inches or so, and my sometimes trick knee gave out, and
something went bad wrong with my foot. Good grief! What could I tell
that dad? So I didn't tell him. Just said I had to run an errand, but
he knew by the way I was hobbling what the problem was. I knew he
thought I was headed for my lawyer's office. But, I drove to the
emergency room. Seems my big toe had popped out of place.
The doc came in, gave me pain
shots.But I had been wearing the same pair of tennis shoes every day
since the tornado, three weeks, and my bare foot smelled really ripe.
Rather that endure all that waiting for the pain shots to kick in, he
just grabbed my toe and yanked it back into place. I thought about
screaming, but decided against it.
When I got back out to the house,
I was not going to be able to climb for a while, so I just had to
fess' up to the old man, who was eyeing me hard. I again gave him
another promise not to sue him. Continued Thanks for reading!
Sunday, October 21, 2012
Arkadelphia Tornado - Part three
A renter, in one of my duplexes a
mile away, called me. The front half of the building had been smashed
to the floor. His mama was having a heart attack, and the lady from
next door was out in the street, looking for help. I told him I was
afoot, and could not get there. Call 911.
Finally, it seemed to me, rescue
people began to arrive, and take over. I realize now, they got there
very quickly, everything considered. But it seemed like forever at
the time. I had no idea of the scope of this thing. Help was needed
all over.
The police moved in, full force,
and secured the buildings. I talked an officer into letting me go
into our building and get our cameras and money, while he watched me
like a hawk. About that time, Barbara and son Corey were arriving.
They told me Kinley had been moved to Hot Springs. Her back was
injured. Since she was sitting cross legged, Indian style, the doc
said if she had been pushed down another couple of inches, it would
have done her in. The large chunk of chimney, holding the walls up a
little, saved her. The monster F-4 had to be at least a half mile
wide. We went to where Kinley was.
The next day, it was raining. Mrs.
Lois Barksdale, Mickey's Grandmother, along with my family, had
mobilized a crew to help salvage what was left at their house. The
town was shut down, tighter than a drum. We need in, but only rescue
persons were allowed. I found an old Red Cross shirt, and led our
caravan to the roadblock. "They're with me," I told the
cop. He looked at my Red Cross shirt, and waved us in. Sometimes, you
just do what you gotta do. Kinley and Mickey's house was a mess, what
was left of it. While the others salvaged what larger items they
could, I looked for little things. Kinley had always collected, and
dearly loved, hundreds of little things. We were soon forced out of
downtown by a gas leak.
I wish I could wrap my mind around
the scale of this thing and tell you all of it. There were hundreds
of stories in the making there, alongside mine. Many had a much worse
ending. I just can't. All I can hope to do is tell you my family's
story. Just one tiny ant in a very large anthill.
The next day, thank goodness, the
rain stopped. My car was still trapped. I needed wheels. Officials
were coming down the street, checking each building. Danger zones
were being roped off. I knew my car would soon be inside a no-go
zone, and I could forget about it for days. Trying to move it would
tear it up worse, but I had to have it. I got in, started it up, and
gunned it. With much scratching and screeching, it came out.
As soon as I could, I went up on
the roof of our building. The roofing was mostly still there, but it
was all torn loose. I looked up and down the street. Every building
that was still there had people on top that day.
Most of the old brick buildings,
except one, were still standing, although badly damanged. Those old
walls in the brick buildings were mostly three bricks thick. Almost
all of the wooden buildings in the main path of the storm were just
gone. If you ever have an F-4 swooping down on you, look for a brick
hidey-hole. Not brick veneer, but the old fashioned type, three or
four bricks thick. Or, concrete block with brick outside. Almost all
of those buildings remained standing, some just barely.
The streets were littered with
roofing nails. I got a lifetime supply of flats in the next two
weeks. I have a confession to make.The
days after the tornado are sort of blurred together in my mind. Some
of this story may very well be out of order. But it all happened.
I was in our building one morning,
still checking the damage. Fortunately, our business equipment was
still intact. The front wall had been pushed out six inches at the
top, and would have to be replaced. The side walls were questionable.
Heavy cables would have to be strung from one side to the other, then
tightened, to hold it together.
A girl with a notepad wandered in.
I warned her the building was still dangerous to be in at this point,
but she didn't care .She was looking for a story for Dateline. My son,
Corey, a good writer in his own right, and a good a salesman to boot,
came in. He started telling her about Kinley's experience, and about
Mickey, her husband, a paramedic. Mickey, though he knew his
neighborhood was hit, he was unable to check on Kinley because he was
too busy pulling survivors out of the remains of a trailer park
across town. Corey told her about Kinley, and about she and I finding
each other afterwards. She wanted to meet her. He took her to Kinley
at our house. She talked with her, then called her boss. "Yes," she told him. "She's very well spoken, and she's totally beautiful." A story was
in the works.
I went to check the damaged rent
houses. The nearest one, on Crittenden Street, was on the very edge
of the tornado's path. It was still standing. Everything across the
street was rubble. In seconds, it went from being the worst house in
the immediate neighborhood to being one of the best. Some roofing was
off, small trees were laying on it, the windows were all broken, the
electrical service was torn off. Except for that, it seemed to be
intact. It was vacant when the tornado hit.
I went to the Clay Street
house.While it was out of the main path, the associated high winds
had blown a huge oak tree across the street down and crushed the
front one third of the house down to the floor. It also crushed a
tenant's car in front. The lady who owned the car had already
salvaged her things and moved out. The tenants of the other apartment
consisted of an elderly lady and her son. She had suffered a heart
attack during the storm, but was recovering. The son was still there
salvaging when I arrived. He told me, "The living room furniture
is brand new. We just paid $2,000. for it." It was totally
intact, not even wet, though I don't know how. The store they had
bought it from, not a downtown business, had offered to buy it back
for $300. They were to pick it up the next day, he told me. I told
him, "You can get a lot more for it than that. Why sell? We can
move it back into the protected part of the house and run it in the
paper." He answered, "We are living in Little Rock, and we
need the money now." They were in a bad situation. "All
right," I said. "I will buy it from you right now for $300.
I'll run it in the paper, and call you when it sells. Whatever I can
get is yours." He agreed. Two days later, it sold for $1200. I
called him, and two hours later, he was there to pick up the $900.
I didn't see the lady from the
other apartment in that house again, until later, I ran across her up
town. I apologized for not being able to get there when she needed
me, and gave her what money I had on me, $100. Continued on Thursday. Thanks for your time, and your attention.
Wednesday, October 17, 2012
Winds from Hell - Part two
I waited a few moments to make
sure this was all over with, then I headed for the phone to call
Kinley. I was relieved for her. The tornado was moving across the
street, I got hit full force, so I felt like there was no way it
could have hit her, also, DOWN the street half a mile away. Little did I know. Just as
I picked it up, it rang. It was my brother, Harry, saying he had just
heard that downtown Arkadelphia was just blown off the map. I
told him I was OK, but now I had to call Kinley. He hung up, and I
was thinking, we're OK, but he won't be OK. Harry was worrying about
me, and he was dying of Cancer. Before our lives normalized and our business
was put back together from this, he would be dead. I tried a couple
of times to reach Kinley, but I got a busy signal. I headed that way.
When I got to the door, I saw a bright, sunny day outside. But
Arkadelphia was pink. The town was covered with pink insulation. The
trailer was also on my car out front, and the front door was a hard
squeeze. A car in the street had a ton of bricks on top of it, but I
could see nobody inside. I just cannot describe the town, and do it
justice. Buildings everywhere were in rubble. Dazed, silent people
were beginning to emerge. Screams from trapped individuals were
coming from all directions. A couple of hundred yards down the
street, the large brick shoestore was just a pile of rubble in the
street, and amazingly, people were beginning to emerge from the
rubble. I headed down the street toward Kinley's house.
Half a mile down the street when
the tornado hit, Kinley was still in her closet, sitting cross legged
on the floor, Spankey in her lap, a pillow on her head. Only that
small portion of her wooden house she was in remained on the site.
The rest, except for scraps here and there, was blown to who knows
where. As the old, very heavy wooden walls began to collapsed on Kinley, and
old chimney that we knew nothing about that was in that wall fell
apart, bricks raining on her head, which was covered by her pillow. A
large chunk of the chimney fell beside her, and as the walls fell on
her, forcing her face into the dirt, that chunk of the brick chimney
held a small portion of the walls up slightly, just enough. As her adrenalin rush
hit, she was able to push the walls up slightly. A woman she didn't know helped
dig her out.. She headed up to the studio, accompanied
by the woman who helped her, and Spankey. The first thing she saw lying by the street was our business sign, Barbara's Photography.
When I got a couple of blocks down the
street, I saw her. She was coming up the street, Spanky in her arms,
being escorted by and Angel. No, I'm not speaking figuratively, I'm
dead serious. This woman beside her had, I later found out, helped
dig her out. She had told Kinley she lived across the street, but
neither of us had ever seen her before. As Kinley and I ran to each
other, hugged and cried, the Angel was smiling. We looked around, and
she was gone. We've never seen her again. To Kinley and me, she will
forever be "her Angel."
Kinley seemed to be all right, and
so was Spanky. I led her to a clear space in the street, and told her
to not dare move from that spot. I had to try and help some of the
screaming, trapped people.
I found a wrecked building with a
woman inside. I talked to her. Yes, she was OK, but could not get
out. I heard a scream near by, different from the others. It was
filled with total agony. I found out later it came from a young man
who had just found his mother's body.
As I started moving boards, to try
to help this trapped woman, a strange thing happened. A squad of
fully dressed National Guardsmen, complete with camo on their faces,
moved into my area. How could they be here already? We were 10
minutes into this thing, yet here they were. I later learned they
were returning from a drill, and had to take cover on the edge of the
tornado, just as it hit. Anyway, their leader told me to step aside,
they would get the woman out. They formed a line, and started moving
the boards, one by one. Later, I never had a chance to tell the
trapped woman that I didn't just desert her. I've always felt bad
about that. As I worked my way back toward Kinley, I saw a man. A
merchant. He had cleared out a little spot beside his door, and was
standing fast. He was later declared one of the heroes of the
tornado, and maybe he was. I only saw him for a moment, and no
telling how many people he rescued before or later. But when I saw
him, at that moment he was just guarding his stuff.
The alarms were going off at all
the banks. I never knew if any unofficial withdrawals were made that
day, but I do know of a hundred dollar bill being found nearby.
When I got back to Kinley, the
excitement was beginning to wear off, and she was not feeling good. I
had to find help. I saw a police car in the distance, finally got him
as close to Kinley as I could, and loaded her aboard. He said he
would take her to the hospital. She was finally moved on to Hot
Springs, because our hospital was overflowing. I later caught it,
full force, from wife Barbara, for not going with her. I should have.
But I reasoned at the time I was needed more here.
Walking up the street, I saw a
strange thing. A unit of national guardsmen were marching down the
street, in perfect formation. At each intersection, the leader halted
them, one went forward into the intersection, and held up his hand,
first up the street, then down, to halt traffic. Well, the streets
were full of wreckage, and there would be no traffic on them that
day. Oh well, I guess if you ain't got discipline, you ain't got nothin'.
Continued in four days. Thanks for reading!
Saturday, October 13, 2012
Weather Straight From Hell
The big day for the OBU Father-Son
Golf Tournament had arrived. Corey, my son, the OBU grad, the skilled
golfer, and I, the novice, were entered as a team. Not "novice,"
as in beginner, but the eternal type, as in no good
We struggled through a dark, rainy
morning. Fortunately, everyone else struggled too.It was March 1,
1997. A date seared into my brain forever. Not because it was the
date I finally amazed everyone by suddenly becoming a good golfer.
That didn't happen. Not by a long shot. Or by a short chip shot, or
even by a putt. Not because Corey once again played well, which he
did, Well enough to carry me to something close enough to victory to
win us both a large umbrella. It is because weather straight from
hell was on the way, weather that these umbrellas could not touch.
After lunch, bad weather
predictions were coming in. I went down to our photography studio in
downtown Arkadelphia. The tornado sirens started going off. I called
daughter Kinley. She was in her house, half a mile down Main street,
already taking cover. Kinley has always had an unnatural fear of
tornadoes. It had became a family joke. We said, "Kinley, think
about it. How many people ever get hit by a tornado? What are the
odds?" Still, she was always in a hidey hole at the first hint
of a bad storm. She told me she already had it
figured out. In an interior closet, on the floor, her little dog
Spanky in her lap, a pillow over her head. I told her that seemed
about as good as any place.
I went outside. The sirens had
stopped, then they started again, along with the report that a large
tornado was on the way, scheduled to hit Arkadelphia at 2:20 PM. It
was now 2:10. The electricity went off. I wondered for years if it
went off because the coming storm hit a line somewhere, or because
someone, somewhere, threw a switch, knowing what was about to happen
to Arkadelphia, and what hot power lines could mean in the aftermath.
Jim Burns, our Emergency Services Director, recently filled me in.
The lines went down west of town, probably about the time he was
getting help from Gurdon firemen clearing out his truck from downed
trees so he could rush to town.
I went in and got our best camera,
a Hasselblad. I loaded it, because if a tornado was about to hit, I
wanted a good picture of it. I was standing on the sidewalk next to
my door, and a man from the Honeycomb restaurant next door was beside
me. At 2:15 we beagn to hear a loud roar in the west. "Sounds
like a train." he said. "No tracks over there," I
replied. The noise increased, and he went inside. I readied my
camera. Then a very strange thing happened. Clouds, from all over the
sky, started rushing toward a single point, the point of the sound. I
decided this thing might be about to form up right on top of me, and
it was time to go inside. I was playing chicken with an F-4, and I
blinked. I could not see anything that looked like a tornado, but I
snapped a picture any way, and went inside. That would be my last
picture for weeks. Afterwards, I could never justify to myself
worrying about pictures, when so many people needed help. I don't
have a single picture from that time.
The dressing room, in the middle
of the building, looked like the best place. Just as I started in,
the wind really picked up. "Aw, man, my awning is blowing away."
Then a house trailer, or what was left of it, mostly the frame, came
through the front picture window. The back windows of the building
were sucked in, the suspended ceiling around me was sucked down to
the floor, and the two swinging doors behind me slammed with a loud
bang. I went in the dressing room, lay the camera on the floor, and
covered it with my body. My thought processes ran something like,
"We've got to have something left
to make a living with when this is all over." I heard the most
awful groaning sound I have ever heard, as my front brick wall, three
bricks thick, moved farward a few inches at the top. Continued Wednesday, Oct. 17. Thanks for reading!
Friday, October 5, 2012
Farewell to my Hero
JR Turner was a man who lived at Wing
who I dearly loved as I grew up.. He traveled the world, and told me
many stories about his adventures, fueling that wanderlust desire in
me. Without his stories, our world travels might never have happened
at all. I wrote this story to be read at his Memorial service, when
he passed away this year, at 102.
When I was a young boy growing up
in Wing, The Great Depression and World War Two were fresh on
everybody's mind. Many of the adults I grew up around were tired,
and somewhat beaten down by the hardships of life. But one man I knew
in Wing was never beaten down. Never tired. I knew I could always
count on him for a new, wonderful story about his latest adventure
when he was in town. He always had new treasures in hand, such as
nuggets of gold, found "1000 miles from the blacktop," And,
he had a small eagle quill feather, shaped to be used by the Indians
of Mexico to pick up gold dust.
My Dad went to the Post Office
each morning. If he happened to mention that JR Turner was back, I
always quickly found a good reason to walk to Turner's store, knowing
he would have another great adventure to tell me about, making this a
big day in my life. I loved JR Turner.
Over the years, tales from JR's
wanderlust began to build a strong resolution in me. Someday, I would
go to far away places. See new, exciting things and people. Just like
JR Turner.
When my wife and I sold our
business 14 years ago, I was overjoyed to find that my wife Barbara
had the same wanderlust that JR planted in me many years ago. The
first thing we did was lease our home out for a year, and start
living out those dreams
Visiting with JR when he was
pushing 100, I knew his memories were fading fast. But when I
mentioned King Leo, the prize Black Mammoth jack that was at the
heart of the Gillum/Turner/ Compton super mule breeding enterprise in
the early 1900's, his eyes lit up, and he began to excitedly tell me
all about King Leo.
I mentioned the Lost Silver Mine
story, supposedly right across the Fourche La Fave River from the Big
Rock. His eyes lit up once again, and he became transformed; he
excitedly told me of mobilizing 100 men, all walking the near side of
Fourche Mountain, arm to arm, looking for it. He told me he's
convinced it's right across the river from the Nancy Turner place. I
truly believe, if his knees would but have allowed it, he and I would
have quickly been on our way. One last, great search for the lost
silver mine.
Knowing full well that some of the
Old Gillums were solemn, serious men, I asked JR, "What did you
think about the Old Gillums?" That question troubled JR. He
thought about it a long time. Finally, he said, "Well, the
Gillums were not like other people." I knew instantly. JR had
just named my book about the Gillums.
JR Turner was a true Icon of Wing.
He never lost his sense of humor, or his love of adventure and
excitement. I think this, along with Effie Turner's genetics, helped
to carry him beyond the century mark, which very few of us can ever
hope to attain. Maybe we could all learn a thing or two from JR
Turner's life.
This world is just not the same
without JR Turner in it. I will never forget him. He will always
remain one of my heroes.
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Barbara and I are about to hit the road again, with her sister Frances and her husband Bill. We discovered a little, narrow strip of land up through Tennessee, Kentucky, Indiana and Ohio that we had not really seen and explored yet, so we just have to go check it out. Should be back in about 1-2 weeks. This is my last post until we get back. By the way, my reading of The Summer of 1956 can be seen by going to talesfromthesouth.com. click the first choice, then scroll down until you find my story.
Thanks for reading!
Monday, October 1, 2012
Conclusion: Denmark, then Home!
I will be reading my story, The Summer of 1956, on KUAR 89.1 FM this Thursday, Oct. 4, at 7 PM. Later. It will then go out on National Public Radio world wide on Tales From the South. This blog is mentioned in my bio on the show, and the last time I read one, I noticed a spike of 51 blog readers in an hour or so, from Singapore, then a week or so later the same thing happened in Japan. I'm anxious to see if it affects the blog read this time. After that, it should be on U Tube awhile. So far, I have had blog readers from 49 countries, Russia and Germany being the most for a foreign country. For all my readers, a big thank you. I appreciate your time, and your attention, a very valuable thing.
______________________________________________________
My book, Spreading Wing, should be available on Amazon in November or December. The cover will have a pic of Grandpa John Wesley Gillum's family, taken in 1910 at the old Gillum homeplace in Wing.
Denmark
We talked to a young man at a gas station. Said he had never seen American money. I showed him some.
His dream was to come to America, and already had his path laid out. I taught him to say, “Now ya'll come back now, ya' hear?” When we drove off, he was still practicing it.
______________________________________________________
My book, Spreading Wing, should be available on Amazon in November or December. The cover will have a pic of Grandpa John Wesley Gillum's family, taken in 1910 at the old Gillum homeplace in Wing.
Denmark
We talked to a young man at a gas station. Said he had never seen American money. I showed him some.
His dream was to come to America, and already had his path laid out. I taught him to say, “Now ya'll come back now, ya' hear?” When we drove off, he was still practicing it.
Our next B&B was nice, but
Barbara was immediately intimidated by her huge watchdog. He turned
out to be well behaved and quiet. A couple of men came by to repair
our TV, and one of them said he had been to America several times,
“To help them out with some technical problems.” When we tiptoed
out early the next morning, the lady was not up yet. We left her a
note.
We were in close to Copenhagen
now, and out plane would fly out in a few days. One Sunday we decided
to drive in and walk the city. We made a dry run to the airport
first. I was not really clear about the highway mechanics of that big
place, and I knew if I did not take the right exit to the airport,
one would be destined to drive that long bridge to Sweden once more,
at $60 a pop, there and back. I hit the right exit, but I soon went
too far, and found myself on a one way lane into the Hire Car Return.
I had to back out, jump some barriers, and just generally make an
absolute, utter fool of myself to get back out. Well, I knew the
right exit well now, but I still passed the car return on our real
entry later, and got into a mess too complicated to tell you about. I
know most other people just get it right the first time. I'm a smooth
world traveler now, why can't I do that? Surely not because I'm a
clueless hillbilly.
We drove into City Centre, and
walked most of the day in the drizzling rain. We then backtracked and
found our next B&B, but it was too early, so we drove down to the
sea and took a walk. Out near the beach, we ran onto small children,
playing alone, with nary an adult anywhere about. That was common in
my childhood, in Wing, but something one seldom sees in America now.
Our host spoke three languages,
but English was a far distant third. In spite of the fact that she
chattered constantly, we actually understood very little. This was
the 10th anniversary of 9/11, and it totally dominated
CNN.
We moved on through scattered
towns. They were interesting but more of the same, so I won't gripe
anymore about their high prices.
Our last stay was a 100 year old
house, up steep stairs in the attic. We needed to repack our
suitcases for the fly out, but it was to steep and complicated to
carry it all into our attic, so we just packed in the car, in the
drizzle. Some things just would not go, so we gave those things to
the host.
We sure hated giving up our cute
little diesel VW Polo Car. I would just love to take it home with me.
The best I could easily figure, with all those liters and such, it
got about 50 MPG.on fuel, and cars about the same size advertised 28
MPG at home. Now, why is that? We all know. It was still pretty, in
spite of my hundreds of creative driving moves. The U turn had became
a way of life.
We learned a lot, saw thousands of new
sights, and Barbara left behind hundreds, if not thousands, of new
friends. But we were not sad to leave behind the $250 hotels, $20
hamburgers, 40 cent squeeze packages of mayonaise at McDonald's, and
we were anxious to get back to McDonald's dollar burger at home. As we flew out, we knew we would
never see Europe again. We don't backtrack. There's far too much of
this world left to see.
When we got home, we found we were
right on budget, thanks to so many creative stays, and eating out of
so many grocery stores and peanut butter jars. These wonderful people must be the
most honest, trusting, truly civilized people in the world.
Goodbye, Sweden, Norway, and
Denmark. You have been good to us in every possible way, except,
maybe, at the cash register.
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