RGee's
Corner

My folks lived and I was born in the first house on
the right on Shelby Highway (and past the road down to the old trash
pile). Then my folks moved to Church Street about 4 or 5 houses on
the left as you go north. It was right up the rise above a rocked
in spring by the creek running through there. Later they moved to
North Main, first house north of Mr. Charlie's. While there [my sister]
Virginia was born. One morning when Virginia was just a young baby,
she smothered in a pillow. My mother found her and was screaming and
carrying on. Would you believe, my father's youngest brother, Craig,
just happened to be walking downtown and was passing the house. He
ran in and started breathing into the baby's mouth. It worked. She
is still with us. I had diptheria there. Dr. Bobo Scruggs would visit
and give me a shot in the abdomen every morning. I had everything
kids had before I started school. As a result, I never missed a school
day due to sickness.
There was a tree in the front yard. One morning playing
there, I stumbled on a tree root and came up crying. Mr. Wilson was
passing and asked me, "What is the matter. did the ground fly
up and hit you?" Well that was too much. I was so mad I stopped
crying. Had I been big enough, I would have stuck out at him. The
way of kids! Mr. Wilson lived two houses down the street where later
B.B.Goode lived and at that early time there was a well in the front
yard.
This would have been in 1925: one day a monster of
a machine came trundling up the street. It was all black, had an open
fire burning in it. There was a pipe running cross ways below and
behind it with nozzles squirting hot coal tar on the street. That
was the new "pavement." It was a hot summer and that tar
would bubble up in the sun. Kids would walk along the edge, look for
blisters and go out on that hot pavement to bust the blisters with
their big toes. SOME FUN!
Just before Christmas, I found a rubber ball maybe
5 or 6 inches in size and it had little rubber "bumps" all
over it. OOPS! I had discovered my Christmas present. But come Christmas,
Santa did not bring me a ball. He did leave a ball just like the one
I found at the Worth Womack house across the street.
Then the folks moved to the northeast corner of Reservoir
Street and Mud Cut, kitty corner across from the "teachers' home."
Bill Crawley lived in front of the teachers' home. He had a son, Guy,
and a daughter Mildred. Behind us on Mud Cut lived Earl Brooks and
in front of him was Bob Sparks. Bob had some rabbits in a cage. One
day, Carl Sparks and I decided we would try out something we had heard.
We had been told that to kill a rabbit you hold him up by his ears
and give him a blow behind his neck with the edge of the palm of the
other hand. As I recall, the old buck was so heavy Carl could hardly
hold it up with one hand (remember we were just young). When the rabbit
was struck he started scratching Carl's arm causing him to lose hold,
and the rabbit ran off. We like to have never caught that thing. We
both got a whipping for that little episode.
There was a path from the Sparks' back yard leading
down into the valley below, where there was a rock spring house. There
was a "shelf" inside and just beneath it the spring water
ran through. It was a rock box-like a structure where people would
keep milk bottles. Not everybody had an icebox back then and even
if you did, you might not have money to buy ice. And there was a very
pleasant little glade there, a nice place for kids to play and boys
to catch spring lizards and crawdaddys.
In '33 I believe it was, my dad took a job as overseer
in the Blair Mill at Belton, S.C. and I attended grades 6 and 7 there.
The high school (8-11) was at a different location, and of the 35
or 40 kids who finished the 7th grade, only 4 or 5 of us were fortunate
enough to go on to high school. The grammar school had a graduation
cermony like it was college. Everyone wore clean overalls, slicked
down their hair and those who had shoes, wore them.
Fred Roberson had a Model A and one Sunday morning Fred, George ("Diver")
White, and I took a trip to the mountains. Went up through Lake Lure,
and as we started down the other side of the mountains, through the
"loops," Fred kept saying that he could hardly turn the
steering wheel. About half way down he stopped and I took the wheel.
Sure enough, it took all my strength to turn the wheel. We crept into
Asheville and stopped at a service station. The attendant found that
the worm gear at the lower end of the steering column was bone dry!
We went on up into the mountains, where I don't recall. Fred crawled
into the back seat and I was at the wheel when we came to a sharp
90 degree turn that led onto a bridge. I had to slap the brakes and
when I did something hit the back of my seat. It was Fred, asleep
on the back seat. He had slid into the floor. Now I don't know if
it was just his good nature or if the sudden jar of sliding off into
the floor was such a shock he couldn't think, anyway he did not complain.
He also did not go back to sleep.