
Our Cleveland County Correspondents,
Buzzy Biggerstaff and Sam Davis, went over to Cliffside awhile back
on another mission for the web site, and happened upon an artifact
that has been out of public view for decades. That artifact
is the stuffed eagle that sat for at least half a century in our
town library. We would have bet it had gone the way of the Memorial
Building itself—to
the salvage yard. They not only found the eagle
but uncovered, as they say in museums, its provenance (that
is, where it came from).
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| Photos by Sam Davis |
The eagle now occupies a spot in the conference room at the new
mill at Cliffside. The needlepoint shown, a 1991 collaboration by
George Haynes and Judy Godfrey, hangs below it. It reads:
| Golden Eagle |
This eagle was killed in 1920 at Cliffside's Lakeview
Dairy near the Roller Mill by Mr. John Camp. The eagle
soared down into the pig lot and picked up a small pig
in its claws. As he was flying off with his prey, he
was shot with a rifle by Mr. Camp.
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One more coincidence, just a month ago we posted a 1920s photograph
of Charles F.
Moore posing with a stuffed bird, which came from the
collection of Mrs. Blanche Edwards Campbell, for years our librarian.
Our crack photographic analysis team whipped out his magnifying
glass and determined it is the same bird! Was Mr. Moore the taxidermist?
Two years later, in 1922, the eagle referred
to here got a companion when another
large bird was shot during a hunting trip to the
mountains. This one was, they said, was trying to steal someone's
rooster.