| Photo
of the Month - May 2003 |
“Horseless Carriage” |
Contributor:
Dena Watkins Chandler
|
Horseless
Carriage - 1911
|
“Raleigh Haynes had the first car in Cliffside and
my grandfather, Robert Broadus Watkins, had the second. This 1911 photograph
shows R. B. (in the drivers seat) with some of his family. Left to right,
son James Craig Watkins [Dena's father], age 3; son Bob Watkins, Jr.,
age 5; brother Joe Watkins; father Romulus Watkins [in front passenger
seat]; and wife Ida Craig Watkins. R. B.'s and Ida's house is to the
left. Although my grandmother is striking a saucy pose, she was not
happy. She had spent months saving money earned by feeding the black
men who were building the mill lunches of pinto beans and cornbread
at 10¢ a bowl. With her savings she planned to buy a house and
land but grandfather spent it on this car.
“Grandfather was president of the Cliffside Phone
Company; a magistrate (his title was Esquire) who performed weddings;
a member of the school board; and the cotton buyer for Cliffside Mills.
He was mathematically gifted. The story I heard is that he could add
figures in his head so fast that he was once sportingly pitted against
an adding machine and won.”
Another son of R. B. Watkins was Clarence Watkins
(not shown), father of Glenn, Doris, Virginia, Grace, Carolyn, Martha
and Joe Watkins.