RGee's
Corner

Before
we moved to Belton, S.C. in the early thirties, we lived on Reservoir
Street at the corner of “Mud Cut.” Across Reservoir, Bill
Crawley lived with his wife, their son Guy and daughter Mildred. In
front of the Crawley’s on Mud Cut was the Teacher's Home. South
of us on Reservoir lived Charlie Keeter (the watch repair man). There
was a spigot between (and behind) these two houses. We carried water
to the house in buckets. Now, Bill Crawley was particular and would
not drink water from the pipes. He made his son Guy walk all the way
over to Main Street to a well located in the yard of the house where
later Mr. Elmore, the school teacher, lived. I went over there with
Guy many times. Although my family would drink piped water, I would
always bring back a bucket of well water for us.
There was a closer well just down the street in the yard of Dewey
McDaniel, but Bill didn't like that water either. It seems odd that
I don’t recall the location of any other wells except the one
on Highland where we were after returning to Cliffside a few years
later. That Highland well seemed to be a mile deep when you started
turning the windlass to bring the bucket up, but of course it wasn't.
The wells always had a leather strap you could pull on to make it
rub on the drum where the chain was wound. This was the way you controlled
the speed of descent. You never wanted to stir up the water at the
bottom when the bucket splashed down. I suppose I don't remember the
other wells because I didn’t have to draw water from them very
often, if ever.
We did
have another source of water: springs. The only three I recall were
in the valley between Church treet and Reservoir Street. A beautiful
one with excellent water was north of Mud Cut. Another was about half
way between Mud Cut and the creek at the south end of Church Street.
The other one I recall was south of the bridge that crossed from Church
Street to near the Methodist church. At that time there was a footpath
from Church Street right near the bridge that went down the hill almost
to the level of the creek. The path led to a footbridge across the
creek just before the creek entered the river. Later the bridge that
crossed near the church was converted to a footbridge only. The Shelby
Highway bridge had been opened and traffic could cross it and go straight
up Highway Street. (Before, you had to cross the old bridge near the
church, make a right turn and travel south to Highway Street.)
And then
there was the sulfur well on Goforth Flat. It was an artesian well,
always flowing. I wonder if it still does after all this time. Does
anyone know?