
By Dot Jackson
The Charlotte Observer, April 2, 1982
When I hear the kids talking nothing but video games,
and the commentators deploring city violent, and the traffic gluts
the streets, and the sirens scream in the middle of the night. I wonder
what has happened to us.
Is this the Good Life? Is this what comes of progress
and advancement? And then, I get to spend a day in a place like Mooresville,
or Bryson City, or, as we talked about recently, the remnants of Cliffside.
Not
that onerous things haven't found their way to small-town South; of
course they have. But there always seems to be a saving grace, with
is exactly that: Grace.
A friend was describing a visit the other day to
some people who live in a well-heeled subdivision of an otherwise
fine little town.
“It was horribly nice,” he said.
“Decorator furniture. Manicured lawn. The one good thing about
it, there was this dirty snaky pond down in the weeds. The kids were
all down there playing and having a wonderful time.”
I was marveling that kids had been seen playing
instead of sitting glued to some electric wetnurse, getting
weak and withered in the limbs.
And then this letter came from Marc Dedmond, in
Ellenboro.
Marc Dedmond is 34, a certified public accountant.
In his letter, he was remembering being a little boy, in Cliffside:
“I remember the alligator pits wherein
(I was often told) alligators once lived, although I have yet to see
one there. These were located behind the Towel Town Cafe, although
no one ever called it that. To all the locals, it was the bowling
alley, since the bowling lanes once were located there. It seems that
much nourishment was provided my older brother and sister there, in
the 'hot dog slaw and grape soda' they served.
“Underneath was the local garage and
Esso station, which my grandfather once ran. Across the street was
the Dixie Home Store, Jackson's Department Store, the mill outlet
store and the drug store, which were all thriving businesses, patronized
by the community.
“Many hours were whiled away in the
booths of the drugstore, sampling the output from the soda fountain
in the front. As a youth, I registered constantly for the electric
train they gave away every year, but never did win it at the Christmas
Eve drawing.
“On the steps leading to the dentist's
office upstairs, there was a sign proclaiming that anyone caught spitting
on them would be punished which prompted everyone, including
me to spit just to show that we could get away with it.
“On the next block was the Memorial
Building, with its massive town clock on top that provided assurance
that 'all's well' with its chiming every quarter-hour, until temporarily
stopped by some friends of mine who broke its face by throwing green
peaches at it.
“The barber shop and the beauty shop
were downstairs beside the gym, which was later to become the skating
rink, where I often swept the concrete floor (with the clothes I was
wearing). On the main floor was the town library, where one would
find the local characters playing checkers, especially around shift-changing
time at the mill, under watchful eye of the large stuffed hawk (or
was it an owl?) on its perch.
“Next to the library was the Cliffside
Theater, where all the local kids discovered movies, and I discovered
girls although the girls did not discover me there. I remember
when we planted cherry bombs timed with cigarettes around the theater,
and then went back to have a talk with the theater manager. As the
bombs exploded, we agreed with the manager, as he complained about
hoodlums lighting fireworks.
“Behind the Memorial Building was the
cannery, where I blistered my foot severely by testing how hot a steam
pipe really was. Next door was the washerette, where the drunks often
took a ride in the dryer. Ana behind both of these was the ice plant,
which my father ran, and his uncle before him. A short way up the
railroad track was the red train shed, which some called the round
house, although it looked square to me.
“Beside the main office of the mill
was a fountain, which I think I can remember as once being full of
fish, and was brightly decorated each Christmas...
“My father took us to the sulfur well
often. Though the water tasted like rotten eggs, I remember telling
him how 'good' it was. There was also a well on South Main next to
the railroad, which would not be remembered except that it's where
my father caught me in my preteens gambling for baseball cards.
“And there was a large magnolia next
to the 'alligator pits' whose branches provided a needed refuge to
kids playing 'Fox and Dogs.' Main Street was lit by old-timey street
lights, many of which didn't burn due to little boys with rubber bands
and paper clips...
“I lived the first 17 years of my life
in Cliffside. After spending the next four at UNC and three in Charlotte,
I discovered the 'big city' wasn't for me. I moved back, only to discover
that Cliffside had moved away from me. Practically everything I had
talked about was gone, a victim of the bulldozer and 'progress.'
“I am just thankful that bulldozers
and progress can't destroy the memories...”
And I wonder what the next generation will remember?
Reprinted with permission from The Charlotte
Observer. Copyright owned by The Charlotte Observer.