Ivy and I were cut from different cloth. She was
lithe, able to turn one cartwheel
after another. I
was tubby, unable to complete one cartwheel. She took
lessons as
tasks to be done as quickly as possible
so she could play with others. I played
with words
and numbers so I could avoid playing with
others.
Hence the predicament she created for
herself. It was arithmetic time - multiplication
for
me- division for Ivy. But Ivy was not dividing. She was
playing tick/tack/toe with
Cordell Davenport, who was
in the third grade for his third time.
Miz Harrison
pounced like a hungry eagle on a rabbit. In one fluid
speechless movement she
motioned Ivy and Cordell to
the blackboard. She drew two circles-- nose high for
each.
"Nose in circle", she said
Ivy
and Cordell stood for what likely to them seemed an
eternity. Back in their seats they
practiced
'dividing' under the admiring eyes of classmates and the
watchful eyes of Miz Harrison.
Wednesday, December 31, 2014
Tuesday, December 30, 2014
The Talents Of Miz Harrison
24. A book – nay- several books-
could be written about Miz Harrison and her impact on our family—and every
family in the community. The first is as our teacher. For Ivy and me she was a
godsend after our introduction to our new school via the Oakes young man. In so many other ways Miz Harrison was to
become central to our lives.
The following stories are not
necessarily in chronological order. I
write them as they surface in my memory. My first story is of THE
GREAT SNOWMAN WAR.
It was one of the snowiest winters
our neck of Tennessee had recorded in more than a decade. School did not close.
When students and teacher walk to school snow accumulation is irrelevant.
For days we devoted our recess time
to making a giant snowman. We rolled and rolled and rolled a big snowball for
the base. Believe me when I say it was big. On its top we piled four smaller—yet
not tiny—snow balls which we patched into one with added and patted snow
mortar. The head—so high that to place it we had to drag a ladder out of Willie
Davenport’s shed, just across the road from the school. Coal from the school
yard supply made remarkable eyes and a charming smiling mouth.
Three days of recess time.
A spectacular snowman.
Then the squabble.
One of the Davenport boys – exactly which
one was known to all the boys but kept secret from the girls- hid Jeannette’s
gloves and would not return them.
Next day’s recess began the SNOWMAN
WAR.
We girls with the ability of a well
trained army attacked the snowman. With the adrenaline fix of severe anger we
threw coal missiles at the snowman’s face. Piece of coal after piece of coal
flew until the poor Snowman’s face looked a horrid victim of leprosy. The boys
became wild men, vowing to kill us girls, chasing us as we entered the school
and the protection of Miz Harrison. Whispered, mouthed threats flew like darts
in a pub. Cordell Davenport swore they would kill is once school was out.
Miz Harrison, with calm and
demeanor, conducted her afternoon classes. At 2:30 she said, “Now Girls. Get on
your coats, get your lunch pails and go directly home. If I hear that any of
you lingered I’ll speak to your parents.” That meant we went straight home.
She held the boys until 3:00. The
GREAT SNOWMAN WAR was averted.
Sunday, December 28, 2014
A Brand New School With A Brand New Teacher.
23. We were in our new house.
Confined for the meantime to the bottom floor with its three big rooms, each with a heat source.
Daddy explained to Ivy and me that come Monday we would go our new school. It
was not, he said, as big as our old school. It had only one room. But the
teacher was very good and very nice. He and Mommie had met Miz Harrison. She
lived down a side road behind our property and said we were close enough to
come to her house if we needed help.
Monday Daddy drove us to the school in
the Model A. He left us to go into the school alone. Carrying our lunch pails, we entered the
school with a mixture of fear and anticipation to find the chaotic activity of
about 20 students running around the room, throwing paper balls and worse paper
wads. At the desk in the front of the room, the teacher, a young man in dungarees and a chambray shirt, sat looking on the frenzied activity but saying nothing. Pure chaos reigned that
whole day. Then without having opened a book, or written on the blackboard we
were dismissed and sent home.
So much for an elderly Miz Harrison
who would help us if we needed it.
What a relief when we discovered
that Miz Harrison was sick and the young man was Mr. Oakes, who had several
years before been one of her students and lived just down from the school. Miz
Harrison would be there tomorrow.
Monday, December 22, 2014
Exceptional Stock.
I have been remiss in writing. But in my defense I have had dual problems. Not only am I getting myself and my beloved dog Madigan adapted to an equally beloved dog, Nora, but a dear couple with whom I have been friends for more years than I can remember is in crash mode. I have tried to be of help.
That being offered as as excuse for not keeping up with my blog, I now return.
I have decided it is time to take stock of my family's strength. Survey of birth records of my grandparents has been eye opening. Survey with me those records and I assure you, you will impressed with their reproductive health.
My Grandma Neely gave birth to nine children between 1905 and 1924 (one every 2.1 years). A tenth came along in 1930 (what was called then a change of life baby).
And Granny Cardwell gave 6 live births from 1910 to 1924. Calculate that activity, and you will be impressed.
That's pretty damn good stock-- but it's only half of the story. Of those 16 births not one had physical or mental handicaps. We pass over that some of them have minds of their own and they do not always agree with each other. But facts are facts. They were remarkable. No wonder the Neely-Cardwell alliance was dominant in that small rural community near Tazewell Tennessee.
That being offered as as excuse for not keeping up with my blog, I now return.
I have decided it is time to take stock of my family's strength. Survey of birth records of my grandparents has been eye opening. Survey with me those records and I assure you, you will impressed with their reproductive health.
My Grandma Neely gave birth to nine children between 1905 and 1924 (one every 2.1 years). A tenth came along in 1930 (what was called then a change of life baby).
And Granny Cardwell gave 6 live births from 1910 to 1924. Calculate that activity, and you will be impressed.
That's pretty damn good stock-- but it's only half of the story. Of those 16 births not one had physical or mental handicaps. We pass over that some of them have minds of their own and they do not always agree with each other. But facts are facts. They were remarkable. No wonder the Neely-Cardwell alliance was dominant in that small rural community near Tazewell Tennessee.
Wednesday, December 10, 2014
A Brand New House In A Brand New Place
21. I can’t remember whether Ivy and I knew what “We might
move” meant. Until we moved. Mommy and Daddy left in the Model A with Arville
and Diane. Ivy and I stayed with Granny because as Daddy explained “You have to
go to school.”
Two weeks later Daddy returned—not with Mommie—not with the
Model A—but with Uncle Lawrence and his three quarter
truck. We were moving. Not just down the road or over the hill but far away to
a place called Crab Orchard.
Ivy and I returned from our last day at school in Tazewell
to Granny’s house to the truck loaded with all our worldly goods, which were
not that many.
Long after dark and a long ride we arrived at the house. A mansion. It was the most fantastic house I had ever
seen. A large white two story house with shutters and a porch along the whole
front. I was so glad we had moved. Ivy and I agreed that it was a good thing to move.
But this was not our house. This house
belonged to Uncle Lawrence.
The next morning we saw our house—not too shabby compared to
the little house in the Basin, but nothing as grand as Uncle Lawrence’s and Aunt
Mirtie’s house
Tuesday, December 2, 2014
My Grandmother Cardwell (Granny) Was Remarkable
21. It is time I get back to Granny. She was a remarkable
woman who lived a hard and at the same time a happy life. I saw a picture of her when she was young. She was tall with upswept hair framing her big
eyes, small nose and full lips. Long before my time—learned from tales of
family members-- I recount.
At a young age Granny – whose name was Symintha (commonly called Mint by friends and family)—married
Sam Davis. By that marriage she had a daughter, Lily. As the story goes Sam came to a bad end.
Sam was on his way to the store to buy nails for a project
he was working on. On his way he met Fain Minton who invited him to his
house. For some reason never explained to me they had a
heated argument. When the argument came to blows Sam left the house. But he tripped going down the steps and fell.
Fain running after him saw his advantage. He picked up the ax near the porch and struck
Sam several times. The hit to the neck,
nearly severing Sam’s head caused death.
Fail Minton was arrested and sent to jail where he served
time until 1917. Granny then married James Anderson Cardwell, who was my
grandfather. That story I will continue
next.
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