Robert
Lee Sparks &
Ebber Sloan Bostic
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| Robert Lee
Sparks |
Robert Lee Sparks was
born 4 April 1889 in the Shiloh community of Rutherford
County, NC. He was the sixth of eight surviving children
of James Lewis Sparks (16 June 1861 - 28 January
1938) and Cassa Dorinda Clementine Spake (25 March
1854-16 March 1911). Six other children were born
to his parents but, because Clementine was a carrier
for hemophilia, many died at an early age.
Ebber Sloan Bostic was born 10 January 1901 in the
Gosher community of Cherokee County, SC. She was
the fourth of ten children born to Boswell Josiah
Clinton Bostic, Sr. (6 May 1874 - 26 April 1915)
and Julia Elizabeth McDaniel (10 November 1874-12
March 1923). When Ebber Bostic's father died of pneumonia
in 1915, the family was living in Trough Shoals,
SC, in Spartanburg County. Clint, Sr. had left farming
in the Gosher community of Cherokee County and had
accepted employment in the mills at Trough Shoals
(changed to Pacolet Mills in 1930). Shortly after
her husband's death, Julia Bostic moved with her
family of ten children (daughter Annie was only one
month old when Clint, Sr. died) to Mill Springs,
NC. Julie's father, Thomas Clingman McDaniel, was
living there at the time. After a few months in Mill
Springs, the Bostic family moved to Cliffside, NC,
in Rutherford County.
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| Ebber Bostic Sparks |
It was at Cliffside that Robert Lee Sparks and Ebber
Sloan Bostic met, fell in love, and were married.
He was thirty-one and she was nineteen. They were
married on 26 December 1920, at the home of Rev.
W. T. Tate in Caroleen, NC. Rev. Will Tate was the
husband of Dovie Melissa Sparks, Robert's sister.
Rev. Tate performed the ceremony and witnesses were
E. L. Burgess, Henry Roberts, and Marvin Sparks.
After their marriage, Robert and Ebber continued
to live in Cliffside, where eleven children were
born to them.
Robert worked as a loom fixer and a part-time barber.
He later opened his own barber shop where he worked
until two days prior to his death in 1952, never
missing a day of work for any reason. He was very
active in Cliffside Baptist Church for many years,
serving as a Sunday School teacher and deacon. He
often attended classes at Gardner-Webb College to
increase his knowledge of the bible. Many people
have commented that he was the finest bible teacher
they ever heard teach. Pastors have commented that
often they would drop by his shop to receive insight
for sermon preparation. Small in stature (5' 5" with
dark brown eyes and black curly hair), Robert never
met a stranger. He was as comfortable talking to
a bank president as he was talking to a close friend.
Never at a loss for words, he instilled honesty and
integrity in his children. Always hospitable to strangers,
his home was always open to individuals with no place
to sleep at night. A "home away from home" for
them was 24 Reservoir Street.
Unfortunately, Robert developed a problem with alcohol,
which caused him to drop out of his church activities
for many years. One year before his death from cancer
in 1952, he made a recommitment to the Lord and Cliffside
Baptist Church. Knowing that he had cancer, he did
not reveal this to his family. He continued to work
full-time at his shop until two days before his death
at Rutherford County Hospital. He is buried beside
his wife and first-born child, George Houston, in
the Sparks burial plot at Cliffside.
Ebber Bostic Sparks was a housewife and mother,
devoted to her family. She labored without complaining
and always put her husband, children, and friends
before herself. One friend quoted Robert, in response
to the question of how he was able to make a living
for such a large family, "I make the money and
take it home to Ebber. She makes the living." Ebber
took great pride in her yard and flowers and won
the award one year for having the most beautiful
yard in Cliffside. She ministered to the sick in
the community and often provided daily meals for
individuals over extended periods of time. After
her youngest was in school, she accepted employment
with the Haynes Mills and continued to work there
after Robert's death until her retirement. She learned
to drive and bought her own car after age sixty.
When Ebber"s daughter, Julia
Clementine, married
in 1961 Ebber was left alone for the first time in
the residence at 24 Reservoir Street. She had given
birth to eleven children, had buried George
Houston,
her first-born, at age three, and had buried her
husband. She had always had someone to serve and
she had a difficult time coping. As depression set
in she went to live for a short time with her daughter, Barbara
Mills, in Mt. Airy, North Carolina. Barbara
arranged for her to have consultation with a doctor
at Baptist Hospital in Winston-Salem. The doctor's
expertise restored her confidence. She returned to
her house at 24 Reservoir Street in Cliffside, which
had been home for so many years. Her daughter, Mavorine
Jenkins, and her husband moved in with her for a
while.
Then Ebber closed the doors at 24 Reservoir Street
for the last time, closing in years of memories of
laughter, tears, struggles, victories which come
with rearing ten children. She visited in the homes
of different children for a while before settling
in Charlotte, North Carolina, first with daughter, Virginia
Godfrey, and her family; then with daughter, Elizabeth
Earls, and her family. During the course
of her life, Ebber suffered two heart attacks in
mid-life from which she recovered. She carefully
watched her diet and exercised regularly.
While she always acknowledged Christ and lived an
exemplary life, she experienced Him with added vigor
during her early seventies. She attended services
regularly in Charlotte until an inherited deafness
prevented her from being able to take part. This
deafness was a real concern to her and would sometimes
cause her to withdraw rather than admit she could
not hear.
When she was unable to be active physically, Ebber
used her hands to crochet afghans for everyone who
would accept one. Hundreds of her afghans can be
found today in the possession of family members,
doctors, and acquaintances.
In 1992 Ebber was visiting her daughter, Mavorine
Jenkins, in Spindale, North Carolina, when she had
to be hospitalized with heart failure. She recovered
and remained with Mavorine where her children, whom
she had cared for so faithfully, were given the opportunity
to care for her. She never became old enough to use
a cane, never became too old to be concerned about
her appearance, and never lost her sense of humor.
On 6 December 1994, Ebber Bostic Sparks died peacefully
at age ninety-three at Rutherford County Hospital.
She had suffered a stroke a week earlier from which
she did not regain consciousness. She was buried
at the Cliffside cemetery beside her husband, Robert
Lee, and her son, George Houston.
From “Some of the Ancestors
and Descendents of Robert Lee Sparks and Ebber
Sloan Bostic” by Jimmy Louis Sparks, 1999
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