
By Wake Bridges
Record Associate Editor
The Hickory (N.C.) Daily Record, circa 1980
“Attending election returns events
is not the fun I found in my first such experience,” I said
to Dan Goosefellow.
“Why not?”
“Now I have to work, though I
still find such events a certain amount of fun.
“After I got interested in newspaper
work as a youth, I talked Dad into taking me and a neighbor boy to
attend election returns at the old Shelby Star in Shelby.
Byron Bailey 1929
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“Late in the night Dad decided
it was time to return home and hit the sack, but I was so fascinated
and thrilled I talked him in letting me remain, and the neighbor boy,
Byron Bailey, agreed to stay with me.
“We figured the paper would remain
open all night, but unfortunately for us, the last returns were received
in early morning and the doors of the Star were closed.
“Byron and I didn't have a dime
between us and no place to stay.
“Somebody, upon learning of our
plight, told us the police station was open 24 hours a day, so we
went there and asked permission to hang around until daybreak, which
was not nearly as much fun as watching the late Lee Weathers and the
late Renn Drum of the Star, race around helping tabulate the election
returns.
“It was particularly boring for
Bailey, who had no interest in the newspaper field.
“Bailey and I ran into more bad
luck when daylight came. A hard rain had started falling and the only
way we knew to get back to our homes was to try and hitchhike, which
we had never done before.
“We were soon as wet as drowned
rats and nobody wanted two rain-soaked youths in his car.
“Fortunately, after we had walked
several miles Dad appeared in the family Ford to pick us up.
“'You can have your election
returns thing from now on,' Bailey said.
“Before too many years I began
helping with election returns as a reporter for the Record, still
finding it fun and fascinating which has never completely worn off.
“While helping compile returns
in Morganton of the recent primary election, a man walked up to me
and asked if I knew him.
“I didn't at first, then recognized
him as Yates Bailey, a younger brother of Bryon.
“He said Byron had died in recent
times of a heart attack, which tended to sadden me in that he had
shared with me my first election returns experience.”
Reprinted with permission from The
Hickory Daily Record. Copyright owned by The Hickory Daily
Record.
Wake Bridges was the son of Roscoe
Bridges of the Trinity Community. He was a brother of Wade Bridges,
a mail carrier known to many in Cliffside, and a cousin of Reno Bridges,
after whom your webmaster was named.