RGee's
Corner

That
rock wall [in the photo] was the lowest level of the office building.
The door shown was just underneath Mr. Charlie’s office in the
northeast corner. And that’s the way we used to refer to that
office. We'd never say Mr. Charlie's office; it was always “the
northeast corner.” Anyway, beyond that door behind R. B. Watkins
(my grandfather) was a little room that served as his “office.”
Among other things, he kept the telephone company books there. Back
then the rest of that lower level of the building was not used; it
was a dungeon-like place. Later it was refurbished and used as office
space. The payroll office used to be there. In the late forties I
ordered a sewing machine from the Spiegel catalog, which was shipped
by freight. It came in on the Cliffside Railroad and I was notified
of the arrival. I picked it up from that same little room, which was
then used as a freight storage room.
On one
of the web pages you ask for info on the Duke steam station. I can
date that construction for you. It was while I was working the telephones.
It had to be 1939 or 1940. They had just finished building the homes
in Duke village. I was by myself (it must have been while Guy Frye
was out with back problems). We needed to run a telephone line into
the village. I started where you turned off at the country store to
go down to the village. All morning I would climb a pole (with leg
spurs—no cherry picker baskets then). About 18 feet up I would
nail a wood bracket on the side of the pole, screw on a glass insulator
and climb back down, go to the next pole and repeat the process, climb
up, nail a bracket, screw on an insulator and climb down. When all
the poles were so equipped, I would string out a roll of iron telephone
wire on the ground then tie one end to the insulator on the first
pole. Then I’d walk to the next pole, take the wire up, lay
it on the bracket behind the insulator, climb down, walk to the next
pole and repeat. When all wires were up, the next thing was to stretch
the wires from pole to pole and tie them down to the insulator. You
can just imagine how this was a slow, time-consuming process.
One warm
morning there was a crew of landscapers working 3 or 4 houses down
the street when I climbed a pole to attach the wire. It was close
to lunchtime and I was just worn out. When I climbed up I found the
pole was larger than usual. My belt would not reach around the pole,
which it needed to do if I was to use both hands to do my work. Exhausted,
I looked down that pole—it seemed a long way—the recently
graded yard below looked soft. So instead of climbing down I just
leaned back and let myself drop to the ground. I lay there on my back
with my eyes closed. All of a sudden there was a commotion. Someone
in the landscaping crew had witnessed my drop and thought I had fallen.
Four or five of them came running to see if I was dead. Instead of
dying, I lived to a ripe old age.
I cheated
death another time. The telephone cable ended on a pole at the very
edge of a pretty good cut in the bank. From there the telephone lines
went into the wires mounted on cross arms. On a dead end of lines
like that, there were always double arms, one on each side of the
pole. Now, there was also a street light on that pole, mounted just
above the cross arms. We had a long wooden pole with a wire basket
to grip a street light bulb and pull it down out of the fixture. There
was a button fuse on the porcelain socket that would rupture and short
out the fixture if the street bulb burned out. That was necessary
to keep the line intact for this was a constant current lighting system.
But this
was so high up on the bank our wooden pole tool would not reach the
bulb. I climbed the pole, straddled the two cross arms and had to
lean way out to remove the socket. My sweaty hands kept sliding off
the bulb and I ran my hand up higher on the glass bulb to get a better
grip on it. When I did I got higher than I should have. With my legs
touching the telephone wires I made a circuit, and was shocked by
that high voltage, and knocked out. This made me go limp and my hand
came down with the socket, which broke the bulb when it hit the phone
line insulators.
I was
knocked out, lying on the wires. When I came to I looked off to the
north and saw the schoolhouse. It started dancing a jig. I felt weak,
and lay forward on the cross arms and wires and closed my eyes. I
guess I fainted. Next thing I knew Guy had started up the hill to
see about me. I called down that I was ok.
When
I reached around to get my pliers from my tool belt, my right arm
just would not reach it. I had to put the socket in my right hand
and reach my left hand all the way around my back to get the pliers.
Finally I got the bulb reinserted and it came on. When I started down
the pole I was sore and stiff all over from that high voltage shock.
At the bottom I just sat down and leaned against the pole for a while.
Guy came up the hill. After a bit I felt strong enough to go down
the hill, but I was soaking wet with sweat, felt lousy, and was not
worth much for the rest of the day. Again, I lived to love another
day. And that was not the only time I had a brush with high voltage.