Tuesday, August 22, 2017

2017 Aug 22 - Eclipse - March 7th, 1970 & Aug 21, 2017

We moved back to Rocky Mount NC in the summer of 1969. I wanted to cry as I loved living in Suffolk Virginia. To come back to this God forsaken bass ackwards hell of a town was hearbreaking. I always told my parents they brought me from an enlightened school system with children who were friendly and kind, to a 3rd world country where children were cruel, heartless and cliquish as hell.

I started school the Fall of 1970 at Williford School. I don't remember my teachers name, but I'm pretty sure her last name was Hitler. She was so strict and allowed no one to speak. I can remember how tiring it was to try to be at attention every minute of the day. I could cry from relief when leaving school for the day. Well, I did cry just about every day because we had moved to this hell hole. I was told years later, that first year I cried every single day I went to school.

The children were a special kind of sick. I realize in today's time, that I was probably bullied as much as any of the whacked out serial killers of today are. I'm amazed that I'm slightly normal. We are having our 40th school reunion in the next year and honestly I could hardly believe when one of the ladies I went to school with told the current president of our reunion group that she probably wouldn't go, as her High School experience wasn't the happiest. She seemed normal. My life was one pit fall after another. Trying to stay invisible at best. Never comfortable in my own skin. If I ever did believe in my self, my looks, there was always someone in the next period to bring me down a notch. Oh well - their loss.

I digress.

The Eclipse of 3/7/1970.

I remember the eclipse. We'd taken time to create a shoe box viewer to save our eyesight. You would look in this box with your back to the son to be able to see the eclipse without damaging your eyesight. It was a Saturday. I remember it getting darker and darker and the birds singing their night songs as they prepared to roost. It was an eerie feeling as it got darker in the middle of the day. When at it's darkest I went inside and spent the rest of the time watching the eclipse on TV. :) Walter Cronkite was my favorite newsman. GAWD I miss him with the mess of 'media' personalities that we have now. Feelings reign and laws are being overthrown, along with our rights. Again, I digress.


I was lucky enough to enjoy another eclipse yesterday 8/21/2017. I was at work and had made 4 of the cereal viewing boxes for me and my peers. They didn't work so well, but ok.... One of my friends had glasses and we shared them. Shereadder took the glasses and placed them over her phone and then took video. It looked good. Reminds me, I'd like to have a copy of that. I love being able to have media (pictures, video) as digital (in some aspects). There are some evils with social media and digital technology, but there are some good things also. Here are some of my favorite pictures taken (some look like they could have been photo shopped) of the eclipse on 7/21/2017.

Eclipse at the Beach:


Eclipse at Nashville TN:


Eclipse - Fort Bragg Soldiers Jumping:

Monday, August 14, 2017

Edgecombe County NC - Varnell Family - Rosa Annie Webb Varnell

Rosa Annie Webb was born in 1905 in Macclesfield, North Carolina. The 2nd child of Big Tom Ruffin and Martha "Weedie" Varnell Webb. Weedie Webb's Mom is the daugher of Bolin and "Puss" Edwards Varnell.



















Rosa was born on the Bolin Varnell Farm (then owned by Tom Webb) on what is now Webb Lake Rd near the intersection of Hwy 124 West Macclesfield, NC. This small farmhouse was a 2 room house, and was originally owned by Rosa's Grandparents, Bolen and "Puss' Edwards Varnell.














Children of Big Tom and Martha "Puss" Edwards:
Left to Right:

Jesse Webb (wife of Henry),  Webster Williams (husband of Nora), Nora Webb Williams, Henry Webb, Rosa Webb Varnell (wife of Oscar Varnell), Mamie 'Splinter" Lewis, (wife of Wiley Bud Webb), and Effie Webb Bridgers (wife of Jodie Bridgers, dec'd).


Effie Webb - md Joseph "Jodie" Bridgers
Rosa Webb - md Oscar Bolden Varnell
Nora Webb - md Webster Williams
Wiley Gray Webb - md "Splinter" Lewis
Henry Webb md Jesse Webb



Rosa went to school at the St. Lewis School (number 9 Township). In the school picture, she is located behind the teacher, last little girl to the right.









Children of Oscar and Rosa Annie Webb:
Robert Perry Varnell md Ursula R - they met in Germany during WWII.
Allen Barber "Doc" Varnell - never married.
Joe Clyde Varnell - md Alice "Peajack" Johnson
Nellie Gray "Nell" Varnell - md David Hagans
Clayton Thomas "Mooch" Varnell md Rebell "Skip" Puckett (divorced) and Susan Vick.
Sidney Paul Varnell - md Nellie Faye Wiggins (daughter of Roy and Nettie Adams Wiggins from Pitt County)

Stories of Rosa Annie Webb:


Walks at night:
Grandma would use a flashlight at night when she was walking through the house. I think she did this always. It was easier to walk around a house with lots of others sleeping and not turn on lights. She had a 3 cell flashlight. Since she lived in the country and had outdoor plumbing (Outhouse), Grandma would carry her 'piss pot" and her 'flashlight at night. Allen "Doc", Clayton "Mooch" and Joe Clyde, would joke and call it her piss-light and flash-pot.

Dinnertime:
Order when eating - everyone had their place:
Dinner at Oscar and Rosa's (Kingsboro) Grandma at end of table , Paul on her right, Joe Clyde (middle), and Mooch on end.
On other side of table, Papa (Oscar) sat to the left of Grandma, then Doc in the middle and Nell on the end.

Papa was curious sometimes.  If he walked in and anyone was at his place at the table, he would refuse to eat, or even stay in the room.  He would go outside and wait for them to leave.

Going to the field:
Grandma would walk down beside the railroad to the back field to get corn. She would be wearing mens boots that were way too big, to protect from snake bites, a straw hat, mens pants under her 'uniform' dress. She'd come back with a huge wheelbarrow full of corn and cook it for dinner. She would process the corn, by shucking it, cleaning out the silks, rinse, then blanching it in hot boiling water for 3 minutes. Then, cooling it off with cold water. Then, she would cut it off the cob, and cook it in a huge pot with some butter and a little flour and some water. She would cook a huge pot of fresh creamed corn. Once cooked, she would place it in the fridge with a lid on the pot. If the pot was stirred, the corn would spoil. I think Aunt Nell opened it up and ate out of it twice; causing the huge pot of corn to spoil, twice.

Visiting:

Grandma Rosa loved to visit. She and Papa both loved living in Kingsboro probably better than anywhere else. In Macclesfield and other areas of Edgecombe County, transportation wasn't as readily available. Papa and Grandma could jump on the train and go to Rocky Mount or Tarboro. They could ride a bus back and forth. Grandma would go visiting at neighboring houses. She'd ride the train to Tarboro and visit her daughter Nell. She'd get a ride and go visit Aunt Nora in Old Sparta. I remember in the 1970s, she would go to visit Nell and live with her for a month or more. While on the Cox farm, Grandma would visit Lina Harrell (Golden Webb's sister). She would also visit with Don Proctor's wife, and Jim Proctor's wife. She would visit Dora Lee Bridgers Hulon - Grandma's niece. She would come to to Macclesfield to visit Uncle Jim Varnell and his sister Sallie "Sack" Varnell - who both lived at the Varnell homeplace that we restored, on NC 124 Highway.

Crafts:
I'm pretty sure I got my love of crafting gene from Grandma. She could sew quilts (by hand), and quilt them, crochet - she made a beautiful red and white bedspread that fit over her huge feather bed out of tobacco twine. I used to give her my left over fabric from sewing projects. I must have purchased all 1970s polyester as she made quilt toppers, bottoms out of that. LOL.


Grandma Rosa could be less than gracious about Christmas Gifts and she was near impossible to buy for. I know my favorites were to buy her linen ladies handkerchiefs, or a container of powder. She would always say "You didn't have to do that, I don't need that". Looking back, I wish I'd gone and picked her up (when I learned to drive) and we'd gone visiting. She would have liked that. She was a country woman with few needs in life.

The first appliance that Grandma ever bought was a 1949 Kenmore Refrigerator. That same refrigerator is located in the shed at the farmhouse. We'll probably never get rid of it. I remember when the compressor would shut off, Grandma would state "There goes that snake falling in the back of the fridge again".

Grandma had a beautiful old antique 4 poster bed. We went to her house one day and she had cut the posters off the bed. Cringe! She was older and it was easier for her to make her feather bed, yes, she had a handmade feather bed. I slept on it once when I spent the night with her. I moved around too much and she stated "I wish I could pull that snake out of your butt, you wiggling all around". Grandma had false teeth, and the always sat in a glass of water on the night table.


Grandma had some lovely things. She had an antique clock in her bedroom that I just loved. It is a metal horse with a horseshoe behind it. Inside the horseshoe is a clock. She had a beautiful vanity with 3 mirrors on the top. She had a wardrobe also. That wardrobe is at the Macclesfield farmhouse, with her dresses still inside.


Grandma had not one, two, but three antique kitchen safes/Hoosier cabinets. One of them she kept her glassware in, with the roll-top up. The glasses sat upside down on a clean kitchen cloth. I inherited all of the dishes when Uncle Doc died. Sheila asked for the glasses with the swirls on them. I gave them to her. Only fair that Grandma's stuff would be shared.

We lived in rental houses until I was 15 years old, when my parents bought their first house at 223 Avent Circle. They bought this over 100 year old farmhouse that the city of Rocky Mount grew around it. It was owned by an elderly brother and sister who lived in Virginia and they basically offloaded it for 2 grand. My parents gobbled that up. The next house they purchased was brand new house in 1977 on West Mount Drive. When they told Grandma they were purchasing the house she stated "The house you had was good enough, You didn't need a new house". Again, country.

Homes she lived at:
1) Born at Webb Lake Rd (Home of Tom and Martha "Weedie" Varnell Webb; previous home of her Grandparents Bolin and "Puss" Edwards Varnell).
2) Stallings Rd Farmhouse Macclesfield NC
3) Berjum Rd Farmhouse,  Macclesfield NC
4) Hwy 124 Farmhouse (just down from William Varnell Farmhouse, little house other side of road.)
5) Halifax Rd Farmhouse, Rocky Mount NC near Little Easonburg
6) Candlewood Farmhouse - sat at the now entry of Candlewood (Ritzy neighborhood built in the 1970's 80s. near Little Easonburg.
7) Hwy 64 Little Easonburg Crossroads (Hwy 64 between Rocky Mount and Nashville NC)
8) House off Old Bailey Rd (parallel to Oak Level Rd), Nashville NC. Grandma died while living at this house in 1988.

2017 Aug 14 - Roosters, Roosters and Chickens.....

Both of my parents grew up on the Cox Farm, on Hwy 64 between Rocky Mount and Tarboro, at a small community named Kingsboro, NC. Mom's parents and family moved to the Cox Farm in 1949 when Mom was 7 years old. Dad was born in 1939, in a small house beside the railroad tracks.



Mom and the mean rooster:
Not sure how many folks know about roosters. They are very territorial over the hens and will sometimes act aggressively toward humans. When Mom was very young, she was told by her parents to not go out around the rooster they had. He was mean and would spur you. Roosters lets have sharp spurs that could put your eye out, or slice you. Mom had to go to the outhouse, and the rooster ended up in her path. She tried to get away from him, but he chased her and jumped on her, spurring her. She was lucky she didn't lose an eye. Instead the spurs cut her on her right eyebrow. The hair never grew back.




Grandma and the aggressive rooster:

Grandma Rose and Papa had an aggressive rooster that lived on their farm on Kingsboro Rd. Evidently, the rooster made the mistake of being aggressive with Grandma Rosa on more than one occasion. On the last time she and the rooster met, she told him, "You come near me and I'll cook you for dinner". He didn't listen. Grandma had gone after a hen, but the rooster ended up making a huge bowl of chicken salad. You don't cross Grandma Rosa.



When Papa and Grandma Rosa were young, there was a full eclipse, that must have occurred mid day, like the one that is scheduled to occur on August 21st (2017). Dad said as it got dark, the chickens were running toward their roosting area. The eclipse only last a couple of hours. The chickens were so confused for the sun to come up so early. Dad thought that was comical. He cracks me up when he is laughing at these things that have happened.

2017 Aug 14 - Eight er.... Nine Famous People from Rocky Mount NC

https://rockymountreview.com/Home/entryid/95/eight-famous-people-from-rocky-mount-north-carolina

Eight Famous People From Rocky Mount, North Carolina

3/9/2015 12:52 PM

8 famous people from Rocky Mount North Carolina has produced its share of famous individuals. But did you know that several of them have come from our very own Rocky Mount? These men and women have made significant contributions to American culture and education.

Earle Hyman, who played Russell Huxtable on The Cosby Show, was born in Rocky Mount. Hyman is a distinguished African American actor with a 46-year-long career on Broadway. He was only eleven years older than Bill Cosby, despite playing Cosby’s television father.




















Although Entertainment Tonight host, Terrance J., was not born in Rocky Mount, he did spend his early years here. He attended Northern Nash High and worked at Soul 92 Jams.


















Buck Leonard, one of the greatest baseball players of all time, was born in Rocky Mount. Leonard played with the Homestead Grays of Negro Baseball League, where he earned a reputation as the "Black Lou Gehrig."


















A lesser known, but highly influential contributor to the state of North Carolina is Elias Carr, who was born in Edgecombe County in 1839. Carr was instrumental in creating NC State University and was elected Governor of North Carolina in 1892. A building on the UNC Chapel Hill campus is named after him.



















Allan Gurganus was born in Rocky Mount. This award-winning novelist, short story writer and essayist has been deemed the “Mark Twain of our time.” He still lives in North Carolina, and his is work is often influenced by and set in the state.


















American actress, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, was born in Rocky Mount. She is probably best known for her roles in horror films: Final Destination 3, Black Christmas, The Ring 2, and Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter. But prior to launching her film career, Mary attended the Joffrey Academy of Dance at the age of 11. She later performed opposite of Donny Osmond on Broadway. She’s also a distant cousin of Ava Gardner.



















Thelonius Monk
, a renowned jazz pianist and composer, was born in Rocky Mount and spent the first five years of his life here. His parents later moved the family to Manhattan. He is the second-most recorded jazz composer after Duke Ellington and one of only five jazz musicians to have been featured on the cover of Time Magazine. Monk was posthumously awarded the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award.




















Professional boxer, Sugar Ray Leonard, was born in Rocky Mount, North Carolina. He won the gold medal in boxing at the 1976 Olympic Games and turned pro the following year. His well-known defeat of "Marvelous" Marvin Hagler is considered one of the greatest professional boxing matches of all time. He retired in 1997 and was inducted into the Boxing Hall of Fame.



















***Added by me 8/14/2017
Charles Linwood "Buck" Williams American retired professional basketball player and former assistant coach for the Portland Trail Blazers. (I graduated with him from Rocky Mount Senior High in 1978.