RGee's
Corner

There
used to be a Mr. Gold, I believe his first name was Broadus, who was
the overseer of what was called the outside gang. This was a group
of men who were used for any and everything needed in matters of upkeep
around the village. It must have been around 1940 when Gold had his
gang out picking up flattish rocks to be used building rock walls
around the village. Several of the men were needed to pick up a large
rock and when they got it up off the ground Mr. Gold stepped under
it to kill a snake he saw under there. He made the mistake of yelling,
“Hold it! There’s a snake!” Well, don’t you
know, when he said that, the men turned loose and ran? The rock fell
on his foot, messing up his foot and ankle. I don’t remember
if he ever got over that or not. If you walked out towards the graveyard
from Main Street, Mr. Gold lived in the first house on the left on
Church Street.
Did you ever know
that we once had a laundry located almost under the river street bridge,
on the road leading down to the boiler room? It was opposite the wood
shop.
One cold
morning I was in the old Whippet truck used by the telephone company.
I started down the hill between the cotton gin and the warehouse,
and before I knew it I hit black ice. That old Whippet went round
and round as it slid down the hill. No way to stop it. All I could
think of was sliding off the road at the bottom and going over the
side. Lucky it stopped in the middle of the road. Some would tell
you Whippet never made a truck. They didn’t, but a place in
Charlotte bought the chassis and built the cab and truck bed. They
used all wood and going around a curve you could see and hear the
wooden cab lean to the sides. It had a hook on the right front fender
and one on the back of the bed. We could pull up along side the pole
pile and lift one end of a pole on to the hanger, then lift the other
end on board. We drove that old truck everywhere…over ditches,
gullies, and open fields. We would hand-dig a hole to plant a pole,
drive the truck up close so we could lift the butt off the truck,
let it drop at the edge of the hole, then by brute strength and awkwardness
raise the top end of the pole in the air. Lots of hard labor back
then, not much in the way of mechanical help. Had it existed then,
OSHA would have had a fit the way we did things. But we lived through
it. It was the same in all work then. We wouldn’t have thought
of asking for overtime or hazard pay. We wouldn’t have had a
job the next day.
Would you believe—Annabelle Logan taught my mother (I believe
she said in the first grade) and she also taught me in the fourth
grade? She had a wicked 12-inch ruler made of wood. The ruler didn't
hurt too bad, it was the fact that she would grab your fingers, turn
your hand palm up and apply the ruler while at the same time bending
the hand backwards at the wrist and the fingers downward. Now that
hurt!
Gerard Davidson
was a high school grad at age 12, as I recall. He went to Spartanburg
to Wofford College, graduated and returned to Cliffside as a teacher.
Now, he was only a year (maybe two) older than I, but he was my teacher!
He took a group to Chapel Hill once to some public speaking affair.
Before we went I took my “Sunday suit” to the dry cleaners.
When I picked it up, I just packed it in my suitcase without looking
too closely at it. Just before time for me to appear on stage I changed
clothes. Lo and behold, I had a coat, a vest and no pants. Fessor
(Gerard’s nickname) had to loan me a pair to go on stage.
Another time we
went to Central High at Rutherfordton to speak. When I took the stage
my mind was only on what I was doing. I don't know how we fared that
day in the speaking engagement but afterwards the central speaking
coach came to me and congratulated me for having the presence of mind
to continue my speech-making when the fire engines roared up. She
said that had I hesitated it might have caused panic among the students.
I was so intent on what I was doing I didn't even know the fire engines
had rolled up to put out a grass fire on the school grounds.
And at another
time we went to Kings Mountain to speak. Afterwards the local coach
cornered me and congratulated me for my deep-throated voice that carried
so well in the auditorium. That day I was so hoarse I could hardly
speak! I had to force myself.
I believe
it was on the way back from Chapel Hill that Fessor was driving us
in his father’s [Barney L. Davidson] '37 Pontiac. Fessor said
he would bet that the sign on top of the next hill, some mile or so
ahead, was a stop sign. I didn't see how he could read that far away
(I couldn't). In a few moments, as we approached the sign, he pointed
out that it was an octagon shaped sign. That's how he knew! Now I
had been driving a couple of years—with no license or training—but
had never known that the shape of a sign signaled its type. We learn
in varied ways.