The “Jim” of Jim's
Cabin was Jim Padgett, or more precisely, James Young Padgett.
His little cabin was about a mile down the trail on the east
side of the river, southeast of town. It was somewhere near the
site of the current water treatment plant. Many remember when
Jim, something of a hermit, but who had a family in
town, lived in this quaint little abode which he himself
had built. In the late '40s when the place had been abandoned,
boys often camped out in or around this old building and told
ghost stories around the campfire.
R. G. Watkins remembers seeing some of cabin's construction
in the mid-thirties. “Men were on the inside using blow
torches to 'burn' the inside walls to give them a brown and black
appearance.”
He also recalls that somewhere nearby was Condrey's shingle
factory. “He dammed a creek, built a water wheel
for power and sawed shingles from logs that had been cut to the
proper length.”
Not too far from the cabin near the old trash pile
a steel cable was strung across the river. Under-slung
on the cable—always locked down—was an open
wooden (later metal) box or “cart.” Agents from the
US Geologic Survey would ride that cart out over the middle
of the stream and monitor the depth of the river and take water
samples.
For more about Jim Padgett and his family, read his descendents
list compiled by Mr. and Mrs. Judson O. Crowe.
Information supplied by R. G. Watkins, Ginny Ann Reid, Phillip White, Jack Biggerstaff and Bud Crowe.
Update: I was excited to see the entry for grandpa Jim, but would like to clear up some misconseptions. Jim died 21 March 1945. He was not a hermit by choice. He was diagnosed with TB and told he needed to get out of all the "dirty air in town" because it was aggravating his condition. He and his second wife (my great grandmother) Mary Ella Bright are buried in Cliffside Cemetery along with Jim's first wife (Mary's younger sister, who I have yet to identify by name) and child. This first wife died in childbirth. Also buried in this plot is Jim's father and mother, Robert Padgett and Rosalin Ruthie Earls Padgett.
My dad was Oren "Bud" Koeyu Padgett, my mother was Margaret Rozelia Jolley Padgett, the daughter of Theron Jolley and Melita Earley Jolley.
— Jeri Padgett Connor |