Keep Those Who Survived The Tragedy
Of April 16, 2007 And Returned To Virginia Tech This Fall In Your Thoughts
Alec Calhoun, Katelyn Carney, Garrett
Evans, Kevin Sterne, Sean McQuade, Elilta Habtu, Derek O'Dell, Jamal Carver,
Chang Min Park, John W. Grant, Caroline Merrey, Heidi Miller, Kristine Heeger,
Guillermo Colman, Matt Webster,
Hilary Strollo, Allison Cook, Emily
Haas and Justin Klein.
The
Free State Of Patrick Is A Sponsor Of The Star Theatre
The Free State Of
Patrick Supports The Patrick County High
School Alumni Association
VISIT THE FREE STATE OF PATRICK BOOTH AT
THE PATRICK COUNTY AGRICULTURAL FAIR SEPTEMBER 18-22
ARTICLE: Summer Of Love
“It was twenty I mean forty years ago
today…”
Early on July 8, 1967, Laurence Olivier stood over the bed of the woman he been
married to for twenty years. The life had left the fragile figure before him.
She was British, brunette and beautiful. He wrote about the scene, “Looking for
the last time at that beautiful dead face, I discerned a drawn look in her
expression that I knew to be one of faint disgust.” Vivien Leigh had not died
without a fight. She had two Oscars one from 1951 for her performance as Blanche
DuBois in Tennessee Williams’ A Street Car Named Desire and the other for
her memorable portrayal of Scarlet O’Hara in Gone With The Wind. Olivier
wrote in his autobiography, “I stood and prayed for forgiveness for all the
evils that had sprung up between us.”
Vivien Leigh and Laurence Oliver in 1937's Fire Over England
It was the
summer of 1967. Hippies were making a big noise on the corner of Haight and
Ashbury streets in San Francisco. A month before Vivien Leigh’s death The
Beatles had released (June 1, 1967)one of the great rock and roll albums of all
time Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hears Club Band. That summer the “Fab Four” recorded
“All You Need Is Love on June 25. “Love, Love, Love, Love Is All You Need.” The
summer of 1967 was the “Summer of Love.”
Album Cover
of The Beatles Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
In the summer of
1967, President Lyndon B. Johnson mired in war in a place called Vietnam was a
year away from deciding not to run for another term as President of the United
States. His wife “Lady Bird” died this year. She was the only first lady I ever
saw. I visited the LBJ Ranch several years ago and Mrs. Johnson was sitting in
the yard with one of her daughters, Lucy I believe.
Marshall Accepting Johnson's Nomination To Supreme Court
Between the time
The Beatles released Sgt. Pepper and the theme song for the summer Johnson
appointed the first African-American to the Supreme Court of the United States
on June 13. Johnson appointed Thurgood Marshall, saying,
"the right thing to do, the right time to do it, the right man
and the right place.” Marshall had worked tirelessly as the attorney for the
NAACP overturning school segregation in Brown v. Topeka in 1954 and winning 29
of 32 cases before the Supreme Court.
In Ararat,
Virginia, I was starting the first grade at Blue Ridge High School. It did not
become just an elementary school until I was in the seventh grade. Miss Estelle
King now Terry was Miss Blue Ridge while her future husband Anthony Terry was
racing cars on dirt tracks in the area. My father was principal at Red Bank
Elementary School and my mother had started working at Quality Mills shipping
golf shirts for the next thirty plus years.
It was not
unusual to begin the first grade, but now I believe we the Class of 1979 were
the first integrated class in Patrick County history. I think that 1966 it was
voluntary, but in 1967 it was mandatory for Black and White students to be
integrated together in the public schools. I have no recollection of the
momentous summer events. Race was not an issue in our house. To this day I have
never heard either of my parent’s utter a racial epithet or treat anyone
different. In fact, one sure way to make my father angry was to make a racial
slur. I am not sure if that was because he was working in the school system or
because he just didn’t like the ignorance of such thinking, but I never heard.
Patrick County High School
Class of 1979, the first integrated class to graduate after twelve years.
So, I was
insulated from the problems of race. In Ararat, that summer I am certain I
probably shared a tobacco field with Winston and Champ Reynolds, who are Black
and lived between the Guynns where I spent many a summer day in field of green
tobacco and my own house. We grew up together. We played together. We still
speak when we see each other and we usually laugh. I knew guys I went to high
school with from Meadows of Dan who never went to school with someone of a
different race until they reached Patrick County High School and most had never
seen an African-American before they were teenagers.
We never had
problems over integration in Patrick County I think due to the work of School
Superintendent Dorn Spangler, who was a great politician from everything I have
learned of him since. I met him several times as a young man and my father
reveres his memory. The Black High School, Patrick Central High School, is now a
shop for eighteen wheel trucks and most students at Patrick County High School I
doubt ever give a thought to the fact that Black and White went to schools that
were “separate, but equal.”
Dorn Spangler is the third
from the left at the Mayberry School with teacher Bertie Shelor.
During the “Summer of Love”
Dorn Spangler and others who loved Patrick County worked to make the change from
segregation as smooth as possible and that “The Free State Of Patrick” was no
longer separate and unequal.
Images of America: Patrick County Virginia
On Sale October 29, 2007
Book Description:
Formed in 1790, Patrick County is named for the Commonwealth of Virginia’s first
governor, Patrick Henry, who lived in neighboring Henry County. Located along
the border of North Carolina where the Blue Ridge Mountains of the Appalachian
Range cross the state line, the “Free State of Patrick” is half piedmont and
half mountain plateau. This dividing geographic feature is reflected in the
mountain people of Scots-Irish and German descent along with English living
below the mountain heights. This divergent population produced tobacco magnate
R. J. Reynolds; Civil War general J. E. B. Stuart and World Series pitcher Brad
Clontz.
Author Bio: Thomas D. Perry grew up in Patrick County’s most historic community
of Ararat. He attended Patrick County High School and, in 1983, graduated from
Virginia Tech. Perry founded the J. E. B. Stuart Birthplace Preservation Trust,
Inc., in 1990. The nonprofit organization has preserved 75 acres of the Stuart
property, including the house site where James Ewell Brown Stuart was born on
February 6, 1833. Tom is the author of Ascent to Glory: The Genealogy of J. E.
B. Stuart; The Free State of Patrick: Patrick County, Virginia, in the Civil
War; and Stuart’s Birthplace: The History of the Laurel Hill Farm. Perry
produces a monthly e-mail newsletter about regional history from his Web site,
www.freestateofpatrick.com.
PURCHASE TOM PERRY'S LATEST TWO BOOKS FOR $40.
A SAVINGS OF $15. INCLUDES TAX AND SHIPPING. SEND A CHECK TO P. O. BOX 50 ARARAT
VA 24053.
OFFER GOOD UNTIL SEPTEMBER 30, 2007
NEW J. E. B. Stuart Program
Coming To Star Theatre On Veteran's Day
Tom Perry and the Star Theatre
will be holding a program on Sunday, November 11, at 3 p.m. entitled "From
Laurel Hill To Yellow Tavern: The Life Of J. E. B. Stuart." This PowerPoint
slide program will include images and music from the Civil War era while
telling the life story of Patrick County's most famous solider James Ewell
Brown "Jeb" Stuart on Veterans Day in the historic Star Theatre in Stuart,
Virginia.
http://www.historicstartheatre.com
The
Star Theatre of Stuart, Virginia, and The Free State Of Patrick Internet History
Group (www.freestateofpatrick.com)
are pleased to announce a Veterans Day program to be held on November 11, 2007,
at 3 p.m. at the Star Theatre in Stuart, Virginia. The program will feature
Patrick County Historian Tom Perry presenting a visual slide program entitled
“From Laurel Hill To Yellow Tavern: The Life of J. E. B. Stuart."
Admission
will be $3 per person.
This
program will focus on the entire life in a new program based on Perry’s years of
research on James Ewell Brown “Jeb” Stuart, Patrick County’s most famous
soldier, who served as Robert E. Lee’s cavalry commander in the Army of Northern
Virginia in the War Between The States. Perry, the founder of the J. E. B.
Stuart Birthplace, preserved 75 acres of the original 1500 acres where Stuart
was born on February 6, 1883. Perry holds a B. A. in History from Virginia Tech,
where he studied under nationally recognized Civil War Historian James I.
Robertson, Jr.
J. E. B. Stuart attended Emory and Henry College before going to the United
States Military Academy at West Point, New York. Stuart graduated in 1854 and
spent the next seven years in the United States Army, mainly in the First U. S.
Cavalry primarily in Kansas. Stuart resigned in May 1861 after the firing on
Fort Sumter and offered his sword to the South. He rose in rank to Major General
serving as Robert E. Lee’s cavalry general at battles such as
Antietam/Sharpsburg, Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, Brandy Station,
Gettysburg, Wilderness, Spotsylvania Courthouse and Yellow Tavern, where he was
mortally wounded. Stuart died the next day May 12, 1864, in Richmond, where he
is buried in Hollywood Cemetery.
Stuart spent his first twelve years in
Patrick County’s most historic community, a place that not only produced Stuart,
but Reverend Bob Childress and midwife Orlean Hawks Puckett. Stuart often wrote
of his feelings for what he called “the dear old hills of Patrick.” The
preservation of Stuart’s Birthplace began in 1990 when Perry and a local group
began raising money to save the site, which is open every day dawn to dusk for a
self-guided tour that includes over a dozen interpretive signs.
The program will also include an
exhibit about Patrick County in the Vietnam Conflict focusing on the seven men
from Patrick County who lost their lives in the 1960s. Perry will have his
shadowbox of rubbings from the Vietnam War Memorial and an accompanying book
about the seven men who lost their lives. They were Roger D. Bowman, Frederick
C. Bullington, Bobby L. Corns, Israel L. Ingram, John M. James, Bernard A.
Sowder and Larry J. Talley. Visit
www.freestateofpatrick.com/vietnam for more information on these men.
The Star Theatre 318
Patrick Ave. Stuart, VA PO Box 414 ,
Stuart, VA 24171 (276) -694-7064
NEW J. E. B. Stuart Exhibit
"Stuart of Laurel Hill"
September
18-22, Patrick County Agricultural Fair at Rotary Field, Stuart, VA.
October 13,
Botetourt Heritage Festival, Buchanan VA.
WORLD WAR TWO
DOCUMENTARY TO AIR IN SEPTEMBER
Love him or leave
him Ken Burns will bring out his 15 and 1/2 hour documentary
on World War Two beginning on September 23 on PBS. His
documentary on the Civil War released in 1990 was one of the
most watched events in television history and helped to
spring board interest in the War Between The States that
helped us save J. E. B. Stuart's Birthplace. Although
criticized by many, Burns gets people interested in history
on a massive scale.
Seven Episodes:
Episode One: A Necessary War, Episode Two: When Things Get
Tough, Episode Three: A Deadly Calling, Episode Four: Pride
Of Our Nation, Episode Five: Fubar, Episode Six: The Ghost
Front. Episode Seven: A World Without War
The documentary THE WAR
explores the history and horror of World War II from an American perspective by
following the fortunes of so-called ordinary men and women who became caught up
in one of the greatest cataclysms in human history. This epic film focuses on
the stories of citizens from four American towns taking the viewer through their
personal and harrowing journeys, painting vivid portraits of how the war
dramatically altered their lives
Article on William
Jackson Palmer In Civil War Times Illustrated
William Jackson Palmer
"The Man Who Didn't Burn Martinsville, Virginia" is featured this month in Civil
War Times Illustrated. Palmer born a Quaker in Delaware, worked on railroads
before the Civil War erupted in 1861. He left the Friends and joined the Union
army. He rose to the rank of Brevet Brigadier General riding with George
Stoneman when he came through Patrick and Henry counties in March and April
1865. Palmer received the Medal of Honor for his service in the war. He moved
west to Colorado, where he founded the city of Colorado Springs and built narrow
gauge railroads and becoming a philanthropist leaving millions of dollars.
http://www.historynet.com/magazines/civil_war_times/8871752.html
The Third Annual Saltville Civil War Symposium
will be held on October 6 in the meeting room of the Museum of Middle
Appalachians starting at 9:30 a.m. features William C. Davis, Randall Osborne,
Tom Perry, Jeff Weaver and Roger Allison. Cost is $30 before September 24, $35
at the door. Visit www.sbrl.org for more
information.
Friday Nights In
Ararat
Willis Gap Community Center
Willis Gap Community Center
144 The Hollow Road
Ararat, VA 24053
Willis Gap Community Center holds an open jam session on every Friday night.
(7:00 PM-10:00 PM). The Center has been doing jam sessions successfully for over
5 years. Jammers of all skill levels are invited to attend. Mostly Bluegrass is
played during the jam, the Center also loves Gospel, Country, and Oldies.
Hotdogs, chips, snacks, and drinks are available for purchase. All proceeds of
the Jam Session go to the Willis Gap Community Center. The WGCC is available to
rent for family, community, and church functions. Come out and visit the Willis
Gap Community Center for good friends, good food, and good fun.
Welcome To The New
Sponsor Of The Free State Of Patrick Rolling Thunder Raceway
For Immediate Release: August 21, 2007, Ararat,
Virginia
Rolling Thunder Raceway held its grand opening on August 17 in Ararat, Virginia
with over 2,000 people present and 100 drivers racing in seven different
classes. People from Kentucky, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, North Carolina and
Washington, D. C. attended the grand opening.
Racing
celebrities including Richard Childress’s grandson Austin Dillon and NASCAR
driver Kevin Harvick have expressed interest in the racetrack. There has been
some interest in local real estate from people outside the area after attending
the race on Friday night. Rolling Thunder Raceway employs 27 part-timers and 2
full time employees. There were three Patrick County Sheriff Deputies present
during the event and no alcoholic consumption is allowed inside the raceway. The
Ararat Volunteer Fire Department and Rescue Squad were present. The Nesters hope
both organizations will be able to raise monies from their time at the
racetrack. Patrick County’s Dan River Supervisor Jonathan Large said, “I think
that Rolling Thunder Raceway is providing entertainment for our community and
generating revenue at our local business. I think that once the problems get
ironed out that this will be a big boost to the economy of the Dan River
District. The Nesters have followed all the rules in building this facility.
They are employing over 25 people at the track and also donating money to our
local fire and rescue squads. The security is provided by our local off duty
police officers. They only problem that were addressed to me were the late hour
of operation. If we can get the word out that the track hopes to be done by mid
night I think that will help greatly.” Several local business people have
expressed support including Mike Leech of M&M Grocery and Boyd’s Restaurant in
Ararat who said, “I think this is a good thing. It gives people something to do
on Friday nights especially the kids in the community. I believe it will help
business and bring people to Ararat.” Cathy Knowles, mother of one of the
drivers said, "The race Friday was like a giant backyard barbeque. There was so
much excitement, everyone lounging back in their chairs, kids running around
playing in the dirt, no beer, and no vulgar language. It was really fun, new and
different for the area. I think we had about 25 people in our little group, and
it was catching up on old times, laughing, joking, and just good fellowship. I
think a place that offers that should be showcased!" As this was the first time
for racing some problems were encountered including going longer into the
evening than the Nesters wanted. “We hope our local people will be patient as we
iron out the issues.” Gary and Alesia would like
everyone to know that, “We are an organization comprised of folks who love
racing. Our desire is to provide an environment for all kinds of racing that is
safe and enjoyable for the whole family. Kick back, enjoy a hot dog and a Coke
from our concession stand, and have the time of your life!" Patrick County
Historian Tom Perry of Ararat said, “Racing has a long history in Patrick County
from the days of bootleggers through the Wood Brothers and the efforts today to
build the Virginia Motorsports Museum and Hall of Fame. I welcome the family
atmosphere the Nesters are trying to build and the people they will bring to
historic Ararat. We have the history of Reverend Bob Childress, Aunt Orlean
Puckett and our county’s most famous son J. E. B. Stuart. The Rolling Thunder
Raceway is located on the historic Ararat River just down the road from The
Hollow History Center. I am glad to see people trying to do something positive
in our community.”
Gates open at 5 p.m. with heat races beginning at 6:45
p.m.
Driving
Directions to Rolling Thunder Raceway. From Mount Airy North Carolina (about ten
miles), take Riverside Drive, North Carolina Highway 104 (Ararat Highway,
Virginia Route 773) to Blue Ridge Elementary School. From Stuart Virginia (about
21 miles) take Route 8 South, Salem Highway turn right onto Virginia Highway 103
to Claudville, Virginia, turn right onto Virginia Route 773, Ararat Highway to
Blue Ridge Elementary School.
From Blue Ridge
Elementary School in Ararat, Virginia, on the Ararat Highway (VA Route 773/NC
Hwy 104 Riverside Drive from Mount Airy, NC) turn onto Friends Mission Road (VA
Route 675) beside the Fellowship Church and travel until you cross the bridge
over the Ararat River. Entrance to the racetrack will be on the left as you
start up the hill.
The
former Hokie among 20 enshrined in the College Football Hall of Fame.
From 1983-84 it was my
great pleasure on Saturday afternoons to watch Bruce Smith chase quarterbacks of
the opposing teams around the field at Lane Stadium. While Michael Vick might
have been the best offensive player in VA TECH history, Smith was the greatest
defensive player and maybe the greatest player. He now holds the NFL career
records for sacking quarterbacks with 200.
Joe Montana called him
"the best player he ever saw at that position." Bruce Smith was 6-foot-4,
265-pound defensive end, his stats were phenomenal - 277 games, 909 tackles, 316
assisted tackles and 200 quarterback sacks. I had the pleasure once of guarding
Bruce in a pickup basketball game while in college. He was hilarious, talking
and joking, the whole time. He did not have to push people around. He was so
good an athlete you were lucky to keep up with him. I never saw a man so big, so
fast and so light on his feet. It was a pleasure to have a Hall of Famer kick my
butt on the basketball court.
Bruce Smith
spent most of his career with the Buffalo Bills, but the last four were with the
Redskins.
"SOUTH BEND, Ind.
-- Former Virginia Tech defensive tackle Bruce Smith was never prouder to be a
Hokie than in April. A memorial service for 32 people killed on campus by a
gunman who also killed himself ended with a spontaneous school chant by students
of "Let's go, Hokies!" "They were absolutely remarkable. They made me so proud
to be an alumnus of Virginia Tech," Smith said. "In the midst of crying I had my
chest stuck out because I was so proud of being a part of the Virginia Tech
family. I still get chills any time I talk about it." Smith gave many Hokie fans
chills for the way he made big plays. He also sent chills through opposing
quarterbacks fearful of being tackled by the 6-foot-3, 275-pound lineman. He is
among 20 greats who will be enshrined in the College Football Hall of Fame this
weekend. The Division I-A honorees were inducted by the National Football
Foundation in New York in December and will be formally enshrined during a
banquet today. Others being honored include Florida State coach Bobby Bowden,
former Florida running back Emmitt Smith, Minnesota tackle Carl Eller and
Heisman Trophy winners Charlie Ward of Florida State and Mike Rozier of
Nebraska. "It's an honor to be recognized as one of the greatest college players
to ever put on the uniform. It's certainly a blessing," Smith said. "It's just a
remarkable class." Speed, quickness and strength were the tools Smith used to
earn his way in. He won the Outland Trophy in 1984 as the nation's premier
interior lineman. He had 46 career sacks, including 22 as a junior, and 71
career tackles for losses, totaling 504 yards lost. The play he remembers most
from his college days was a hit on West Virginia quarterback Jeff Hostetler. "I
broke through an offensive tackle and got a clean shot going full speed at Jeff
Hostetler and hit him in the chest. I knew I nailed him. He took a second to get
up. He got up and took a step and collapsed," Smith said, chuckling. "They had
to come and take him off the field. But he came back in the game a few plays
later." Smith hopes the one thing people remember about him is "he gave it his
all on and off of the field." The first player taken in the 1985 NFL draft
became the league's career sacks leader, was an 11-time Pro Bowler and was twice
named The AP's top defensive player. He also was named to the NFL's 1980s and
1990s All-Decade teams. Smith, who is now involved real estate development in
Hampton Roads, Va., is eligible for the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2009. He
said the only time he thinks about it is when others bring it up. "I don't dwell
on it," he said. Smith is especially proud to be representing Virginia Tech at
this time as it works to recover from the worst mass shooting in modern U.S.
history. "I think the fact that I am being inducted into the College Football
Hall of Fame, I'm representing my university. We have nothing to be ashamed of.
This is a proud university, a very strong university full of creative minds and
wonderful people," he said. "It has taken decades upon decades to build this
university up to where it is today and we're not going to let one sick
individual bring this university down." "
ARTICLE: Jerks, Dignity
and Redemption: Some Thoughts On Sports And History
Henry Aaron
sends 715 out of Atlanta Fulton County Stadium On April 8, 1974.
“I would like to
offer my congratulations to Barry
Bonds on becoming baseball's career home run leader. It is a great
accomplishment which requires skill, longevity, and determination. Throughout
the past century, the home run has held a special place in baseball, and I have
been privileged to hold this record for 33 of those years. I move over now and
offer my best wishes to Barry and his family on this historical achievement. My
hope today, as it was on that April evening in 1974, is that the achievement of
this record will inspire others to chase their own dream.” – Henry Aaron
I am an Atlanta
Braves baseball fan. I am because my paternal grandmother Idell Bates Perry was
a Braves baseball fan. I was her oldest grandchild and there were many summer
days I spent eating fried potatoes drowned with ketchup sipping Coca-Cola on ice
watching the team from Atlanta on WTBS usually after another exciting episode of
Perry Mason (That would be Law and Order in black and white for the
uninitiated).
When I was a kid
Henry Aaron played for the Braves and we watched “The Hammer” play game after
game. Recently Barry Bonds broke Aaron’s all time home run record. Barry Bonds
came face to face with “Hank” on the giant jumbotron screen in the outfield with
the words that started this article. These are the words of a man of dignity who
fought for civil rights, who lived through death threats when he approached the
most revered record in sports Babe Ruth’s 714 home runs and a man when he was
passed by Bonds showed a degree of class and dignity that made me proud to be a
Braves fan.
I was 13 when
Aaron broke Ruth’s record. I never knew about the hate mail, death threats, etc.
then. I knew he was the best player on my favorite team and his color made no
difference to me or my Alabama born (just like Aaron born February 5, 1934, in
Mobile) grandmother. Aaron’s career is historic for many reasons. He was the
last Negro League player in Major League Baseball playing for the Milwaukee
Braves 1954-1965, Atlanta Braves 1966-1974 and the Milwaukee Brewers 1975-1976.
During his career ten times he led a statistical category in MLB. He hit 755
homeruns, but 47 in 1971 was the most in one season. When he finished playing he
was third in games with 3298, second in at bats with 12364, third in runs with
2174, third in hits with 3771, first in total bases with 6,856 and first in runs
batted in 2297. He stole 240 bases, won three gold gloves, finished with a .305
batting average and was the 1957 most valuable player winning the World Series
with Milwaukee. Aaron played in 21 consecutive all-star games.
I have never met
Henry Aaron, but I bet he does not talk about that. He probably talks about
civil rights, the lack of African-Americans in baseball’s leadership roles.
Aaron likes to say things about his career such as consistency and that he did
it “every single year.” One sports reporter said he was the “ultimate consistent
player” echoing Joe DiMaggio who when asked why he played so hard every day
replied because someone in the crowd might not have ever seen him play before.
The term “Hero” is
used lightly these days, but on April 8, 1974, Henry Aaron was mine because that
night with the stress of death threats and hate aimed at him he hit a home run
in Atlanta Fulton County Stadium. Today the spot the ball left the field is
noted in parking lot for nearby Turner Field, where the Braves play today.
Something else you
might not know about Aaron was his role as player development man for the
Braves. The recent run of fifteen years in the playoffs for the Braves was due a
lot to Aaron’s working with young players such as John Smoltz and Chipper Jones,
who still play in Atlanta.
My friend and
historian Robert K. Krick is a huge San Francisco Giants fan. Once when I asked
him about Barry Bonds he said, “Well Hokie Tom he is a jerk, but he is my jerk.”
Bonds is suspected of having used steroids to enhance his size and strength to
hit more home runs. Bonds was a great player, arguably the best of his
generation, but his records will forever be tainted in many people’s eyes
because of that also because he is not a warm fuzzy guy.
With recent events
in sports I felt the need to comment on some comments and actions I have
observed relating to sports and the sorry state of the behavior. I use to go to
all the Virginia Tech home football games and I am proud of the success that
Frank Beamer has brought to our alma mater. I wonder about the cost paid by us
all for that success. One reason I do not go to games is the behavior of the
fans who sat around me. Alcohol with raised adrenalin and testosterone levels
reminded me of the “Bread and Circuses” of the Roman Empire when the Christians
were killed by lions and people cheered. The language and the fair weather fans
who think Beamer and his players work for them and more importantly that they
know more about it the coaches and players do. Another thing that really bothers
me is the behavior of the football players on the field with personal fouls and
putting their personal actions above the team not to mention the off the field
arrests magnified in the press. Before the fans from Chapel Hill or
Charlottesville starting casting stones, I would point out that both wanted
Mike Vick really, really bad to play for them.
Michael Vick has
proven himself to be a jerk, but like Bob Krick says of Bonds, he is my jerk. I
watched Michael Vick play nearly home game of his short two years starting at
Virginia Tech. He was 22-1 as a starter losing only the national championship
game to Florida State in a pre-Katrina New Orleans. He was the greatest
offensive football player I ever saw in person, but Michael will now pay for his
actions. There is no condoning his post-Hokie actions with relation to killing
dogs, but he has done good work with the Boys and Girls Clubs. I sincerely hope
he is able to turn his life around. I believe he should start by doing something
sincere and positive to help animals with the SPCA or some other related
organization.
I am also a
Washington Redskins fan. I am often reminded of the axiom that you should never
trust people who change allegiance to their teams especially through expansion
(Yes I am talking about you former Redskin fans who now pull for the team in
Charlotte). I recently was amazed by Michael Irvin’s comments on his induction
into the NFL Hall of Fame, which follow. Nothing gives a Redskin fan more angst
than a Dallas Cowboy going into anything except jail, which Irvin has done. To
make it worse Irvin played for the Miami Hurricanes and although Frank Beamer
owns the Hurricanes, Irvin’s spouting about “The U” is annoying at best. Irvin
gave a speech on his induction into the Hall of Fame that I believe was sincere
and shows that people change and maybe they see their actions were not what they
should have been and that anyone change and seek redemption.
Here is part of Michael Irvin’s speech, which he began with a prayer: “Thank
you. Father, I'd like to thank you for allowing us all to travel here safely,
thank you in advance for the same in allowing us to travel home. Father, thank
you for the man that you sent me to help me in Bishop T. D. Jakes, my spiritual
father. I ask you now to put your arms around my Hall of Fame classmate Gene
Hickerson and his family. Father, hold them tight and love them right. In Jesus'
name, I pray, amen.
I want to send a special love to all
the people in Dallas, Texas, special love to all the Dallas Cowboy fans all over
the world. Special love goes to my hometown of South Florida and all the Miami
Hurricane fans, St. Thomas Aquinas fans…
You know the Bible speaks of a
healing place. It's called a threshing floor. The threshing floor is where you
take your greatest fear and you pray for help from your great God. I want to
share something with you today. I have two sons. Michael, he's 10, and Elijah,
he's 8. Michael and Elijah, could you guys stand up for me. That's my heart
right there. That's my heart. When I am on that threshing floor, I pray. I say,
God, I have my struggles and I made some bad decisions, but whatever you do,
whatever you do, don't let me mess this up.
I say, Please, help me raise them for
some young lady so that they can be a better husband than I. Help me raise them
for their kids so that they could be a better father than I. And I tell you guys
to always do the right thing so you can be a better role model than dad. I sat
right here where you are last year and I watched the Class of 2006: Troy Aikman,
Warren Moon, Harry Carson, Rayfield Wright, John Madden, and the late great
Reggie White represented by his wife Sara White. And I said, Wow, that's what a
Hall of Famer is.
Certainly I am not that. I doubted I
would ever have the chance to stand before you today. So when I returned home, I
spoke with Michael and Elijah. I said, that’s how you do it, son. You do it like
they did it. Michael asked, he said, Dad, do you ever think we will be there?
And I didn't know how to answer that. And it returned me to that threshing
floor. This time I was voiceless, but my heart cried out. God, why must I go
through so many peaks and valleys?
I wanted to stand in front of my boys
and say, Do it like your dad, like any proud dad would want to. Why must I go
through so much?
At that moment a voice came over me
and said, look up, get up, and don't ever give up. You tell everyone or anyone
that has ever doubted, thought they did not measure up or wanted to quit, you
tell them to look up, get up and don't ever give up.
Thank you and may God bless you.”
Michael Vick
and Barry Bonds might learn something from Michael Irvin, but all three can
learn something from Henry Aaron. Hank Aaron might not be the best baseball
player. Some would argue that Ty Cobb of the dead ball era with tremendous
average and run producing ability is. Others still see Babe Ruth with his
pitching credentials and incredible power numbers as the best. Others might go
with Aaron’s contemporary and Bond’s god-father Willie Mays who had 660 homeruns
while serving two years in his prime in the U. S. Army. One thing I do not see
anyone arguing with is the dignity and the way Aaron has carried himself when he
broke Ruth’s record in 1974 and the class he showed when he Bond’s broke the
record of 755 this year.
When I heard
Irvin’s comments I thought about Michael Vick and Barry Bonds. I wondered if
Hank Aaron might not be the exception to the rule that maybe jerks can learn
from the bible verse Mark 8:36. “For what shall it
profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?” I do not
know him, but I am not concerned about Henry Aaron’s soul because of his dignity
and class in an age of jerks who continually ask for redemption.
Henry Aaron receiving Presidential Medal of
Freedom in 2002
Booth #110 recently opened in the Just Plain Country Store in Stuart, Virginia,
is the place to purchase Tom Perry's books along with other books including hard
cover fiction, history, civil war and paperback books at reasonable prices.
Also, included is an exhibit about the seven men from Patrick County who lost
their lives in Vietnam. Click here to learn more about the Just Plain Country
Store Antiques and Crafters Mall
http://www.justplaincountrystore.com, which is located at 301 South Main
Street Suite A, Stuart, Virginia, (276)694-5556.
Perry Donates Photo Collection To Regional
Repositories
For Release August 1, 2007, Ararat, Virginia
Patrick County Historian Tom Perry is pleased to
announce a donation of over 14,000 photos and images to two regional libraries
including the Bassett Historical Center of the Blue Ridge Regional Library,
Mount Airy (North Carolina) Museum of History. The main collection is housed in
the Special Collections Department of the Carol M. Newman Library at Virginia
Tech, Perry’s alma mater, in Blacksburg, Virginia.
Patricia Ross, Director of the Bassett
Historical Center comments: "Tom Perry has completed quite a lengthy project and
one so important for anyone who has a Patrick County connection. These 14,000
plus photographs are an integral part of our area history and such a treasure.
We at the Bassett Historical Center are so fortunate to be one of the facilities
with whom Tom has shared his work, and will be sharing this wonderful project.
Thank you, Tom, for being the historian that you are and for always sharing
your research and exciting projects with others."
Linda Blue Stanfield, Director of the Mount Airy Museum comments: “The Museum is
very fortunate to be the recipient of such a massive collection of photographs
and images documenting the rich heritage of this region. We are indebted to Mr.
Perry for preserving a wealth of information for future generations and for
considering the Mount Airy Museum of History as a repository for his
collection.”
Perry said, “As I have no children of my own to pass
this down too, I began this collection of material over twenty years ago and
recently began to preserve the many years I have worked to preserve and promote
Patrick County history. I do not feel there is anywhere in the county that has
staff, facilities or the proper vision to preserve this material. I am sure
there are many people and groups who love to horde such material, bury it in
their own collections or use it for their own financial gain, but I believe it
should be available to the public and more importantly to people and groups who
are serious about working together to promote or region through our vast and
varied histories.”
The material includes over thirty compact disks with
over 14,000 images scanned or photographed by Perry. Include are topics such as
the Mount Airy and Eastern Railroad “The Dinky,” Patrick County topics such as
covered bridges, places on the national and state registers of history and
Perry’s soon to be released photo book and his writings on Patrick County in the
Civil War. There are Surry County North Carolina topics and several historical
related topics that cross the state line such as George Stoneman’s 1865 raid
through the area and history collected along the Ararat River, which flows from
Patrick into Surry County. All materials from Perry’s webpage
www.freestateofpatrick.com are included. The majority of the material
includes Perry’s twenty years working to preserve J. E. B. Stuart’s Birthplace,
Laurel Hill, in Patrick County’s most historic community of Ararat, Virginia.
Also included are materials relating to Perry’s travels and research all over
the country on Civil War General James Ewell Brown “Jeb” Stuart.
Access to the material will be restricted and
researchers will have to have Tom Perry’s permission to publish or use the
materials.
Beginning this
fall Tom Perry will be exhibiting photos and other materials around the region.
First, a revolving exhibit will be at Perry's booth #110 in the Just Plain Country
Store in Stuart, Virginia, where Perry's books will be on sale beginning in
August. Each year an exhibit is carried around to local festivals. In 2007, an
exhibit on "The Dinky" Mount Airy and Eastern Railroad is being carried around.
This includes photos of the train when it ran and photos of the discovery of the
rails recently along with two topographical taps showing the route of the railroad. It
will be on display in the booth beginning in November. In August through
September an exhibit on Patrick County in the Vietnam Conflict will be on
display in the booth (www.freestateofpatrick.com/vietnam.htm).
It includes a shadowbox of rubbings taken from the Vietnam Memorial in
Washington, D. C. from the seven men from Patrick County who gave their lives in
Vietnam. Also, included will be material on one man who came back from Vietnam
to make a difference. This exhibit will be on display at the Patrick County
Branch of the Blue Ridge Regional Library in October for Veteran's Day and at
the Bassett Historical Center in December and January.
Patrick County In The Vietnam Conflict: Seven Men Who
Gave All and One Who Came Home
August-September and November 2007, Just Plain Country Store, Free State
of Patrick Booth #110.
October 2007, Patrick County Branch, Blue Ridge Regional
Library, Stuart, VA.
November 11, 3 p.m. J. E. B. Stuart Program at Star
Theatre.
December 2007-January 2008, Bassett Historical Center,
Bassett, VA.
Two of the rubbings from Vietnam shadowbox to be displayed
this fall.
Display About The Dinky Railroad
December-January 2008, Just Plain Country Store, Free
State Of Patrick Booth #110.
Read About The Dinky On Page Three Of The
Surry Messenger
ARARAT, Va. — While
hundreds of cars travel on Riverside Drive between Cross Creek and Patrick
County, few realize that they are following the bed of a long-dead railroad.
Right before the turn of the 20th Century, there was a railroad chartered that
would haul freight to and from Mount Airy up the mountain into Patrick County
and into Kibler Valley. It was a narrow-gauge railroad, one that few people know
existed and which enthusiasts are having a hard time finding. Tom Perry
spends a lot of his time looking for pieces and clues about the railroad,
nicknamed "the Dinky.” “It’s main purpose was hauling lumber, Perry said last
week. “It was a narrow-gauge — only three feet wide — and it ran about 19.5
miles.” Perry, a native of Ararat, and his friend Kenney Kirkman, from
Collinsville, like to spend weekends over the winter exploring trails where they
believe the railroad used to run, looking for tracks and spikes. “Kenney
discovered some rails and that’s what got us started looking for more,” Perry
said. “It’s hard to track in developed areas because buildings and roads have
been put where the railroad used to be. We’re doing a lot of research to find
where it was. In a couple of cases we’ve actually found 90-year-olds who rode
it.” Perry believes that the railroad started with a wye — a triangle shaped
section of track where a train can complete a turnaround — that paralleled the
standard gauge railroad next to what is now Cross Creek Apparel on Riverside
Drive in Mount Airy. Since it was parallel to the standard, which runs to this
day, it was easy to move cargo from one
train to another, car
to car. Between 1870 and 1885, “narrow gauge fever” swept the country under the
belief that the equipment was cheaper, construction was faster, and it was
easier to finance. - the Dinky was built as part of that epidemic sweeping the
transportation industry. “Various owners operated the track along the Ararat
River, Clark’s Creek, Fall Creek and the Dan River, into the Kibler Valley,”
Perry said. “I think it kept getting into financial trouble and kept being sold.
Eventually, just financially they couldn’t make it and they ended up shutting
down. Occasionally on the train, there would be Sunday excursions where the
train actually carried people on it. - the rest of the time it hauled lumber and
wasn’t terribly interesting.” Because it was a steam train, the Dinky’s path
kept it close to water. Staying near rivers and creeks also made the going a
little easier for the engine and for the workers who laid tracks. However, it
was the close proximity to floodplains that also spelled the train’s doom after
less than 30 years of operation. “It wouldn’t have been able to go up some of
the hills that our roads do,” said Perry. “So it would have followed the water
and taken the easier route.” One major stop for the Dinky was the White Sulphur
Springs. “In the 1900s, people went to water rehabilitation clinics,” Perry
said. “Back then there was a massive hotel and from after the Civil War until
the 1950s, people would come to Mount Airy and ride the railroad out to the
hotel for their hydrotherapy.” -the grounds around the hotel were also the
popular spot for young couples to come for picnics while they were courting.
Following the Ararat River, the railroad continued up from Mount Airy into
Patrick County from the springs. It was in front of the Sparger House, built in
1865, just north of Mount Airy, that rails were recently found. Craig and Jane
Tesh, owners, found 30-foot sections of the rails on their property while a
field was being cleared. “- the Ararat River flooded in 1979 and we think it
washed several pieces out from along the river banks and made it easier for
people to find them,” Perry said. From the Sparger House, the Dinky continued
to follow rivers up into Patrick County. While Anthony Terry, of Ararat, was
clearing land for a fence line near his creek, he found a lengthy stretch of
track from the Dinky and called Perry and Kirkman to come and check it out. Some
of that stretch was excavated and moved to the Hollow History Center to be
rebuilt and preserved for visitors.-the railroad ran down into Kibler Valley to
serve the lumber mill operated by Kibler and Kay. “- the lumber company cut all
the trees for the Dinky to haul them out. We think that Kibler came from West
Virginia and before the lumber company moved on they had probably clear-cut all
the hills surrounding the valley,” Perry said. - the lumber cut there was the
lumber that made the ride down to Mount Airy and from there was put onto the
standard gauge railroad or used in local lumber mills. In Kibler Valley, where
the railroad ended its route, there is a church that was built out of materials
given by the railroad. - the Danube Presbyterian Church was built to provide for
those who visited the area on the train. “We think they built a splash dam on
the Dan River and pushed the logs down hills into the river and they floated
down to the meadow,” he said. “One hundred years ago this hay field would have
been bustling with activity.” - the best stories that Perry has found have been
passed on from those who once rode the train themselves. “They would bring
Sunday excursions on trains up from Mount Airy,” he said. “And one day they
brought the circus to Kibler Valley on the Dinky.” Laughing, Perry told of the
tall tales locals would tell about the elephant that escaped from the circus and
killed people. “Some people can exaggerate, but I believe that an elephant was
brought and that the circus did come. It was probably just a baby though, and I
don’t think it killed anyone.” On another occasion, Perry said there was a Romeo
and Juliet story that took place on the Dinky. A young girl ran away with a boy
who worked on the train and the two moved up North to start a family, despite
her family’s disapproval. Also, two 16-year-old boys in Ararat once hijacked a
couple of cars that were parked full of lumber. - the boys released the brake
and after the train picked up speed, they bailed out because they couldn’t stop
it. “I can just imagine the whole valley filled with lumber, because apparently
the cars jumped the track and dumped all their lumber in the bottom,” said
Perry. Although later history of the railroad becomes obscure, Perry said that
operations of the Dinky stopped around 1925. “In 1916, the Dan River flooded,”
Perry said. “Flood control wasn’t even a dream then and it kind of wiped out the
Dinky railroad at this end. But they didn’t quit. - the idea was going to be to
connect it to the railroad in Stuart and then they built the second version
of the Dinky and got away from the river some.” Perry learned most of the
Dinky’s history from interviewing locals and through the oral traditions that
have been handed down in Patrick County. He said that while many areas near the
train’s stops were once thriving economic centers, now there are only collapsing
buildings and empty fields. “When the railroad goes, everything goes,” he said.
One day, Perry hopes to have an exhibit set up in the Mount Airy Museum of
Regional History. He has built 12 webpages about the train, including
www.freestateofpatrick.com.
“I’ve tried to show people that Surry County and Patrick are connected,” Perry
said. “- There’s a lot of history along the Ararat
River and I think too many times
the state line is sort of a Berlin Wall, and people don’t think about the areas
being connected. -The Dinky connected Patrick County and Mount Airy and the
people in them.”
Bassett Historical Center Building Fund $176,554.15 raised
of $800,000.00
Henry County
Civil War Roster Available at Bassett Historical Center
Henry
County in the Civil War, 1861-1865 is on sale by the
Bassett Historical Center Building Committee as a
fund-raiser.
Half the profits from this book go to the fund, to build
an addition to their great library. This book contains
the military records of Henry County Soldiers as well as
some letters and other articles of interest. If you
would like to
send a donation to
them, or buy a book to help them, you can contact Pat
Ross at
baslib@hotmail.com for more information.
"Always give your best, never get
discouraged, never be petty; always remember, others may hate
you,
but those who hate you don't win unless you hate them, and
then you destroy yourself." --Richard Nixon
"If Thee
Must Fight, Then Fight Well" The Life of Brevet Brigadier General William
Jackson Palmer
This talk
will focus on Medal of Honor recipient and Delaware native William J.
Palmer, who rode with
George
Stoneman on his 1865 raid through our area. Palmer, a railroad engineer
before the Civil War
went on to
found the city of Colorado Springs, Colorado, and built railroads amassing a
fortune after the war.
He retired
and left his estate to educational and service organizations.
November 7,
Civil War Round Table of Wilmington, Delaware.
J. E. B. Stuart’s Long Ride From Laurel
Hill To Yellow Tavern
A slide
program begun in 2004 commemorating the 140th Anniversary of the battle that
took Stuart’s life.
Presented
by Tom Perry, Founder of the J. E. B. Stuart Birthplace Preservation Trust,
Inc. This
program given over a hundred times all over the country is used as a vehicle
to promote Patrick
County history and tourism. It covers James Ewell Brown's entire life from
birth in Patrick County on February
6, 1833, until his death in Richmond on May 12, 1864.
September 25, Kansas City, Missouri, Civil War Round
Table.
September 26, St Louis, Missouri, Civil War Round
Table.
September 27, Topeka, Kansas, Civil War Round Table.
October 6, Museum of Middle Appalachia, Saltville,
Virginia.
November 5, Montgomery County Pennsylvania Civil War
Round Table.
March 1, 2008, Bassett Historical Center Symposium
Virginia Museum and Fayette Area Historical
Initiative Partner For Archaeological Dig
The Virginia Museum of Natural
History and the Fayette Area Historical Initiative have teamed up for an
archaeological dig in an effort to learn more about the social lives of
African Americans in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the museum said
Wednesday in a news release.
The dig is taking place at the site
of a planned civic center at the corner of Fayette and Market streets, with
the permission of the city of Martinsville, the release said.
“Archaeology is about filling in
the gaps in history,” Dr. Elizabeth Moore, curator of archaeology at VMNH,
stated in the release. “This is especially important in minority
communities, where important information is often left out of the history
books.”
Moore said she hopes to find
artifacts from a dance hall, hospital and pharmacy that once stood on the
site. Initial findings include broken glass, coal and factory debris.
The Fayette area was once the
center of the black community in Martinsville. Major events took place from
the 1930s through the 1960s, such as the June German Ball. Big name stars,
such as James Brown and Tina Turner, also performed in the area.
“The partnership between FAHI and
VMNH on the archaeological dig at the corner of Fayette and Market streets
will bring a spark of excitement and mystery into the community,” Linda
Dillard, founder and program coordinator at FAHI, said in the release. “This
spark will create more interest in people, especially those that shopped,
worked, worshiped, received medical care and partied (June German Ball) on
Fayette Street. I also feel it will stimulate interest in individuals to
participate with the dig, tell their stories, share artifacts and photos.”
The dig began Aug. 17 and is
scheduled to go on until December. Volunteers are needed for a variety of
jobs, including digging, sifting debris and general assistance, the release
said. There is something for people with all levels of mobility, from
digging to sitting in a chair screening dirt.
In addition, the public can visit
either the dig site or the FAHI Museum and bring historical photos to be
scanned. FAHI Museum officials also will be recording oral histories.
Visitors who wish to have a oral history recorded can visit either the dig
site or the FAHI Museum. For more information about the dig schedule and how
to get involved, contact Janet Roetken at 634-4171 or
janet.roetken@vmnh.virginia.gov
The house where the last owner
of J. E. B. Stuart's Birthplace, Icy Bowman Brown, grew up is available.
Check the link below for more information. The property includes The Hollow
Post Office.