Opening Day

A while back Amy and I began a ritual of taking a three-mile evening stroll near her house. On one of these strolls near the end of May we were heading across the campus of North Georgia Tech right at dusk. Out of the corner of my eye, I saw it… A faint green winking light. My heart raced. The first lightnin’ bug sighting of the year. I took off across the grass trying to catch it while Amy stared at me like I was a complete nut. She didn’t realize that hunting season had just begun.

I started thinking about my lifelong obsession with lightnin’ bugs. I guess every kid has it, but most grow out of it before their teenage years. Not me. I’m well on my way to being an old fart, and I still look forward to seeing them every year. When I was a kid, my friends and I chased them all over mama’s yard. Sometimes for hours on end. We’d do it all summer, but there was always something special about seeing the first one of the year. Everyone who knows me understands that I practically live for Autumn. Nevertheless, it was always bittersweet as Summer turned into Fall and the winking of the Lightnin’ bugs became less frequent before ending as the cooler nights gave way to Autumn’s chill.

Most guys I know start getting crazy with buck fever when deer season begins. Not me. It’s lightnin’ bug season. Gotta go now. There’s still time for another hunt before bedtime…

My Life in Motorcycles, Part One

I’ve had a lifelong love of motorcycles.  I bought my first mini bike when I was four years old. I bought it myself, with my own money. I had received money for my birthday and had saved chore money. Yes, four years old I already had chores to do. We weren’t special snowflakes back then.

When I was little, Mama, Daddy, and I would go on weekend drives. We never had much money, but we always went loafing on weekends on the backroads around home. One Sunday afternoon we were riding some dirt roads between Highway 76 and Germany Mountain and came across a yard sale. Sitting among glassware, clothes, and castoff furniture was a little red mini bike. Not a real motorcycle per se, but one of those funny looking things that was popular in the 1970s. They generally came from places like Sears or Western Auto, had rigid frames, a rectangle-shaped seat, and used the same engines, wheels, and tires as the go-carts of the era. I believe the bike I bought had a whopping three horsepower Briggs and Stratton engine.

I quickly learned that three horsepower was enough to get me hurt. The first time I got on the mini bike, Daddy pulled the cord to start it and showed me how to work the throttle. I revved it up and took off. Unfortunately he had started me from the upper back yard with the bike aimed straight towards a forty foot deep ravine. Not great planning on his part. Not to mention that I zoomed away before he showed me how to apply the brakes.  Luckily those old Sears bikes had foot pegs that were really wide and close to the ground.

It was early in the morning when I made my motorcycling debut and the grass was wet with dew. When I saw the ravine coming up, I tried to turn the bike at full speed. The bike slid on the wet grass. One of the foot pegs caught the ground and I was catapulted off the bike into the yard. Disaster averted, and I didn’t even have to go to the ER.  After making sure I wasn’t dead, Daddy just stepped back and waited. He figured I was going to start crying and run to Mama. Instead, I sat there until I caught my breath, stood the mini bike up, and started pulling the cord. I looked at Daddy and told him to aim me away from the giant ravine the next time.

I rode the wheels off that little bike until I was eight or nine. Then I moved up to a real motorcycle. Daddy bought me a used Honda XL75 that had belonged to Jack Carpenter’s daughter Lisa. It was a fun, reliable little bike and was a huge leap forward from the mini bike. With that bike came my first taste of freedom and independence. Daddy would load the bike up on weekends and we’d go to our property on Plum Orchard. We’d spend the weekends camping on the property and I spent the whole time riding every dirt road and trail in Persimmon.

As I got a little older I’d take the XL on my own little camping trips with my buddies who rode with me. We’d go camp all over the Popcorn Creek area, free from parents. We thought we were pretty big stuff. Looking back, we were very responsible, never did anything stupid, and all managed to stay in one piece. Parents nowadays would never turn their kids loose like that. It was a great time and place to grow up.

Still Hunting with Daddy: Glassy Mountain

As Daddy gets older, I have a sense of urgency to collect as many of his stories and memories as possible. He recently told me a story about one of his old liquor stills that he had never mentioned before. A few weekends ago we went out looking for the site. I enjoy historical outings, as I can turn them into educational experiences on the sly, so I had Brittney tag along.

The still site is located in the Bridge Creek community at the foot of Glassy Mountain. It is only a mile away from Daddy’s old home place. We found it quickly despite the almost sixty years that have passed since Daddy was there.

The first thing that I noticed was that the still site is pretty much right on the side of Bridge Creek Road. Although the road would have been graveled back in 1960-61, it was nevertheless a well-traveled road.

By 1960, the traditional copper pot still had been largely replaced with more modern and efficient stills. The still Daddy took us to was a type known as a steamer. More efficient than a copper pot still, the alcohol could be distilled at a faster rate, and the boiler for Daddy’s still was fired with coke. Coke is essentially refined coal. To heat a steamer, Daddy and his brother Poke initially built a wood fire which in turn ignited and heated the coke. Once the coke was burning, the furnace gave off zero smoke, which made it more difficult for the revenuers to spot.

Daddy and Poke bought their coke in bulk from Toccoa Coal Company and hauled it into this particular site on their backs in sacks weighing fifty to one hundred-pounds. They carried all the materials on their backs, including parts for the boilers and the sixty-pound sacks, or bales as they were known, of sugar. When initially constructed, the still had five mash boxes, but they planned to add at least another three.

By their standards, it was a small operation. Daddy had been cut down several times just prior to setting up the still at the foot of Glassy Mountain and the brothers were short of cash. The revenuers had been particularly hot on them, and an informer in the area wasn’t making things easier. The brothers hoped to get by for just a couple of months at the site to build up funds for a larger outfit.

Daddy and Poke finished one run of liquor at the still and forty cases of liquor were stacked nearby. They carried in a second load of sugar and jars during the following night. Unfortunately for them, an unrelated forest fire broke out on Glassy during the night. The next morning the still was found by wildland firefighters from the U.S. Forest Service searching for hot spots. They called the revenuers, who quickly came to the still site.

Rather than haul the still and materials out of the woods for destruction, the revenuers simply dynamited the entire site, right down to the cases of new jars and sacks of sugar. As we searched the site we found remnants of the boiler blown almost one hundred feet from the original location.

Undeterred by the loss of the still, Daddy and Poke quickly relocated to a new location on Seed Lake. When the law got hot on them at the new site, Daddy “left the country,” as he called it, and made liquor over in Fannin and Gilmer Counties for a couple of years, but that’s a story for another day.

Higher Learning, Winn-Dixie Style

Funk & Wagnall’s New Encyclopedia.  Not World Book or Encyclopedia Britannica; we couldn’t afford those. We bought ours in the late 1970s or early 1980s with points, stamps, or some such thing from shopping at Winn Dixie. It took us two or three years to get the whole set. I was constantly afraid that they would stop the promotion before we got them all. Each time we had enough points to get a new volume, Daddy and I would sit and read it cover to cover. That was what passed for entertainment when I was growing up. Apparently, Daddy and I were really bored, so we started quizzing each other about information in each volume just to see if the other had really read it all the way through.

In addition to the Funk and Wagnalls collection, we acquired a world atlas at some point during my childhood. Ever since then I’ve been fascinated with maps. As a kid I would often trace the roads of the U.S., dreaming of road trips far away from Rabun County.

Now, what with the Internet and Wikipedia and all, hard cover print encyclopedias have gone the way of the wood console television. Our set of encyclopedias  are still at Mama’s house in the specially built bookcase that Daddy made just to showcase our 1980s wealth of knowledge. I’m remodeling her house right now, and I’m trying to decide whether to pack them away. So far, I can’t bring myself to do it. A lot of work went into licking all those stamps. Maybe they’ll make a comeback one day. And I think we still have a console television somewhere. A black and white television at that. After all, we were the last family in America to get a color television, but that’s another story.

Woodworking: A Long Time Ago in a Galaxy Far Away

I owe my woodworking life to George Lucas. Yes, George Lucas. Or more specifically, I owe it to seeing the original Star Wars movie in 1977. While I look a boyish twenty-nine, I was actually five years old when the epic space opera hit the big screen. As an only child, I had enough toys to play with, and I had several Star Wars action figures bought at Harper’s Five and Dime. However, I really wanted a Star Wars playset. Specifically, I coveted the playset of the cantina in which Han Solo had the shoot-out. But, I grew up in Rabun County in the 1970s and 1980s. We were poor. Daddy has been a lifelong woodworker and I was always in the shop underfoot from the time I could walk. He did what any responsible parent back then would have done. He pointed at the scrap wood heap in the corner, handed me razor sharp hand tools and an electric jig saw and told me to build my own. Did I mention that I was five? Now we don’t let our kids outside without hand sanitizer and bubble wrap. Despite setting the stage for a trip to the emergency room, I made it through the project without any blood or smashed fingers.

I spent weeks working on that playset and ended up making a second one immediately afterword. I still have both. All of my friends who had the real store-bought one thought mine was the coolest thing ever. I believe they were just jealous that Daddy turned me loose with power tools while we were in kindergarten. It was like having Tim “The Tool Man” Taylor for a dad.

That early woodworking project planted the seed for a lifelong love of wood. A year or so later, I decided that I wanted to be a rock star and needed a guitar. Or at least a ukulele. Me and Daddy sat down and looked through the Sears and Roebuck catalog, and of course, he decided we couldn’t afford one. You guessed it… Build it yourself. I believe we got a book from the library and got ideas on proportions and made a Frankenstein ukulele type thing. Daddy used to make recurve hunting bows, and he braided different thickness pieces of bow string for the instrument strings. He helped me out and we had lots of fun building it. Too bad that I have the distinction of being the only person on his side of the family who has zero musical talent.

I have gone through a whole lifetime of trying new hobbies, but always kept woodworking. My skills progressed from the playset and ukulele to the point that I became a semi-professional woodworker and luthier. I’ve made too much furniture to count, and as a luthier I’ve made guitars, dulcimers, ukuleles, mandolins, banjos, and even a violin. Daddy is seventy-five years old and still in the shop with me when his legs let him stand for that long, and we have a whole list of projects we hope to build.  May the Force be with us.

Greasin’ Boots

I was up at five o’clock this morning to haul The Girl to basketball practice and had some time to kill before starting work. It was pouring rain. I saw two pairs of work boots sitting on the back porch that looked horrible. My first thought was: I hope Daddy didn’t see these yesterday. Daddy has always been one for taking care of his boots, especially his work boots. When I was a kid, even really young, he always saw to it that I had a good pair of boots every autumn, never mind that I would outgrow them in less than a year. I mean really good boots. Red Wing good. But he taught me to take care of them too. It was A Thing in our household. The roof might have leaked, there might not have been sheetrock on some of the walls, but boots were always looked after.

I never saw snow in real life until I was four. I thought it only happened on television. As soon as Daddy saw we were possibly, maybe having snow coming, out came the boot oil and rags. “It’s time to grease some boots,” he would say. We would spend twenty minutes or so rubbing mink oil into the leather, then we’d put them near the wood heater for the boot grease, as he called it, to melt in. In learning this boot greasing ritual, Daddy would tell me repeatedly just how close to put them to the fireplace. Close, but not too close.

After the oil melted into the boots until they glistened, the real work began. Using clean rags to buff the boots until the excess oil was all either rubbed in or buffed off. Then the boots looked like new, and it was time to go play in the snow.

Several decades have passed, but I still keep my boots oiled. I have my Grandpa Ern’s shoe shine box from well before I was born. And today I double checked to make sure they weren’t too close to the fireplace in case Daddy comes by.

Autumn is Finally Here

My favorite season is finally here, but it’s a mixed bag so far. I spend the whole year looking forward to Autumn. When asked what my favorite holiday is, I usually say “Autumn,” and then I’m told that it isn’t a holiday. I then tell them “October,” just to keep them guessing. So far this year is a bust for leaf lookers, as the leaves are running way behind, I suppose in part due to the almost ninety inches of rain we’ve had this year. Not to mention the warm weather.

Looks like that has finally changed. I broke out a hoodie yesterday morning, and last night I built the First Fire of the Year in the wood heater. Yesterday was warm, but after running The Girl to a basketball team thing, and then going back to my office to work, it was eleven o’clock when I got home. It was a chilly fifty-nine degrees in the house as I refuse to turn on the central heat this early in the season. And I have three cords of wood already split by hand with a go devil. No sissy log splitter for me. Of course I have a pile of almost fifty logs waiting to be cut and split. The log splitter moratorium might be lifted.

Every year I start getting antsy along about mid-September trying to guess when the First Fire will be. It seems like no matter the weather throughout the year, it’s always around the third week in October. And last night was the night. I purchased a fancy modern wood heater a couple of years ago to replace the aging Buck stove my parents purchased in the late ‘70s. The new Quadra Fire heater is ridiculously efficient, using only one-third of the firewood the old Buck consumed.

Speaking of bucks, this coming Saturday is also opening day of deer season for firearms. While I mostly gave up deer hunting well over twenty years ago, Daddy has been out in the woods (as best as he can) as much as possible since early September looking for sign. I’m happy that he’s excited and has something to stave of boredom, but lord help us if he kills anything. He’s seventy-five, has emphysema, has undergone a quintuple bypass and an aneurism repair, both in the last two years. Hopefully he won’t go too far from the truck.

 

And pumpkin flavored and scented items. Yep, I’m that guy. I eat everything pumpkin that I can get my hands on. I’d use pumpkin toothpaste if they made it. Do they make it…?  I love all things pumpkin. Luckily, I also love to be outdoors in the fall, trail running, hiking, and mountain biking, so I don’t get fluffier than I already am. I would stay outside all day, every day, soaking in the weather and the beauty, especially once the leaves begin their glorious show. I take a camera everywhere and try my pathetic best to capture the season through the lens.

Hopefully this Autumn will have some camping trips in store. I used to spend every second possible camping this time of year, camping on my motorcycle or mountain bike, or going with Daddy to deer camp. Life got in the way for the past several years, but maybe this will be the year. I keep my gear packed and have a brand new roof top tent ready to go. Daddy is begging to go on a trip, so maybe I’ll take him camping somewhere and pretend to deer hunt with him.

While many see Autumn as the end of the year, a time for things dying and all that, I simply use it as a time for quiet reflection on all the fine things I have, and for experiences I want to savor. It’s a great time to stock up on memories of family, friends, and the beautiful outdoors before Winter sets in.

Paul Posey: Legendary Moonshine Hauler

Today marks the 60th anniversary of the fatal car crash of infamous North Georgia liquor transporter Paul Posey. I began hearing stories of Posey’s exploits many, many years ago when interviewing old liquor men about their time making illegal alcohol. Almost every one of them brought up Posey during their interviews.

Paul Eugene Posey was born in 1930 and might have grown up in the Defiance, Ohio area. He somehow made his way to Georgia around or before 1950. He had two sisters living in Athens, Georgia at the time of his death. He married Lucy Whitmire of Rabun County, Georgia. By the mid-1950s he had gained notoriety as a liquor transporter. It appears that he did not work at any stills manufacturing liquor, but contracted as a moonshine hauler, tripper, or transporter, as the terms were used, to haul loads around the Southeast for Rabun County moonshiners.

He was known to be fearless, or crazy depending on whom you asked, as a driver, running wide open all the time, regardless of whether the law was chasing him. One article in The Clayton Tribune had local law enforcement officers chasing him for miles as he outran them with multiple tires shot down.

John Dixon, of Rabun Gap, Georgia, is Posey’s nephew by marriage. The lead photograph for this article is of Posey and Dixon shortly before Posey’s 1958 death. I interviewed him for this story at his home. He and Posey were especially close. Dixon remembers being around Posey as a boy, and has many recollections about him, along with some photographs and memorabilia that he shared for this post.  He recounted being in the car with Posey for a Sunday drive. Posey was unable to go around a slow driver and passed the car in the dirt on the shoulder while never slowing down.

I grew up riding down Highway 441 from Baldwin south through Homer and on down to Commerce. There was one right-hand hairpin curve along the road just north  of Homer, Georgia. Every time we went through it, Daddy would comment that it was the curve where Posey died. The story as told by other old-timers varied. Sometimes the stories had him unloaded and crashing while just acting afool. When told by others, he was loaded with liquor and running from the law.

As the years and interviews piled up, I heard other completely different stories about the crash. In an interview with Harold Dixon, a former moonshiner, he stated that the crash happened in Richland, South Carolina, roughly 70 miles from the other reputed crash site. In 1999, it finally dawned on me to contact Lloyd Hunter for information about Posey’s death. Hunter owns a funeral home in Rabun County and was the county coroner for decades. Now around 90 years old, he remains a kind, quick-witted gentleman with a great memory. Hunter laughed when I told him of the discrepancies as to the location of the crash. As the county coroner and funeral home operator, he had been summoned to retrieve the body after the crash. He stated that the wreck had actually occurred six miles west of Elberton, Georgia, on the Athens Highway at a place already known as the “Death Curve” at the time of Posey’s crash. This location is roughly forty miles from the alleged Homer site, and sixty miles from the Richland site.

More years passed by, and I voiced my frustration about the conflicting stories to Daddy. He looked at me for a second, threw down a tool and said, “Hell, go ask your Uncle Rip about it if you want the real story.” I asked him why he thought Rip would know anything. His reply was simple… “He was in the car with him when it happened.” Seriously. I had obsessed about the subject for over twenty years at that point, had talked to Daddy about it at least a dozen times, and he finally mentioned this to me. I immediately got ahold of Uncle Rip and sat down with him one afternoon in his wife’s restaurant. The lunch crowd made it too noisy to tape record the interview, but I was able to make voluminous notes and got the story…

Autumn 1958 had been a hard time for Rabun County moonshiners. The revenuers were hot on them in the woods, and the roads were crawling with the law. Posey had been particularly hard, hit losing two or three cars in less than three months. When there was no escape from pursuing law enforcement, liquor transporters were sometimes forced to jump out of the cars, abandon them, and flee on foot. Many liquor transporters were driving specially prepped, souped-up transport cars. Daddy told me of how much money he had in one of his cars around 1960. I ran the amount through some inflation formulas. That car would have cost almost seventy thousand dollars in 2018 dollars. It wouldn’t take many captured cars to put a transporter out of business. Posey and many other transporters including Daddy, started going up North and buying good running, but rusty cars for cheap. On the night of October 6, 1958, Posey was running such a car. He was known for some hot rod 1940 Ford coupes, but that night he was driving a 1951 Ford four door. It was so rusty that the middle door pillars were held together with wire and a log binder running across the width of the car.

At around midnight, Posey and Uncle Rip loaded their cars with liquor. They were hauling for Corbitt Dixon and another man. As was Posey’s habit, once out of sight of the stash house, he pulled over, got his own empty jar from the car, walked to the trunk and skimmed a bit of liquor from each jar until he filled his  jar. Then he would begin his trip while drinking the liquor as he went.  The two cars headed into South Carolina and made their way south along the Georgia-South Carolina border, switch from side to side to avoid the likely spots for traps laid by the revenuers. At some point during the trip they picked up another passenger, James Sewell of Athens. After unloading Posey’s load, but before unloading Uncle Rip’s car, Rip ran out of gas near Elberton. The three men pushed the car behind a barn, piled into Posey’s car and drove back toward Athens looking for gas. They procured a can of gas, sat it in the floor behind the front seat and headed back towards Elberton. According to Uncle Rip, Posey was driving wide open as always, throwing the car through the curves. At 6:30 in the morning at a location about seven miles west of Elberton, near where the highway crossed Dove Creek, the gas can started to turn over and Posey reached back to steady it. The crash made the headline of the October 7, 1958 issue of The Elberton Star. According to the Star, the car skidded 300 feet before it left the roadway, then traveled over 117 feet once off the pavement. Posey was thrown from the car, his face was crushed, and he received fatal internal injuries. The other two men only received minor injuries. They left the scene before the investigating officer could question them too closely.

It only took three decades of research, but I finally managed to get the real story of Posey’s death. It was a good thing, as now Uncle Rip has passed on, and without his interview the story would have been lost with him.

Special thanks to John Dixon and his family for sharing their stories and memorabilia, as well as letting me use the above photo.

Painted Into a Corner: Workin’ With T. Weller and Uncle Buck

Daddy has been a lifelong carpenter, and I basically grew up in the business, with him dragging me to the jobsites on school vacations and weekends beginning when I was around nine or ten. I started out just picking up scrap lumber and cleaning up around the site, but by age twelve he had me doing “a man’s work” with him. Luckily, he also paid me wages accordingly, so I had plenty of spending money.

Many, many characters worked with Daddy through the years. For a while Daddy worked with a legendary (and infamous) mountain man named Larry Whitmire. Larry was a true character, quick to laugh and one of the best pranksters who ever lived. We deer hunted with Larry and his buddies, and it was definitely an experience. A big guy with a long beard and shoulder length hair, Larry looked the part of a mountain man, and usually kept a Ruger .44 Magnum revolver within reach. I remember him once shooting his television with it due to a poor reception. Of course, he also once used the front bumper winch of his truck to winch the truck up into a tree just to see if it could be done, so the television incident was fairly tame.

Another guy who worked with Daddy and Larry was a character named Rodney Henslee. He looked like a Lynyrd Skynyrd roadie and drove a vomit green AMC Gremlin, but he had a heart of gold, occasionally taking me on motorcycle rides at breakneck speeds on gravel roads on his CB750.

Continue reading “Painted Into a Corner: Workin’ With T. Weller and Uncle Buck”

Howdy!

I was born and reared in Southern Appalachia. Specifically in Rabun County, Georgia. My Daddy’s side of the family has been in Rabun County since at least 1830, and one branch of Mama’s family has been in the area prior to the formation of the county.

I grew up during the 1970s and ‘80s, a period when many of the “old timers” were still around and remembered their childhoods. I have an interview with Paw Paw (Daddy’s father), in which he reminisced about seeing the first automobile to ever come through Tiger, Georgia.

I’ve always had a love of reading, learning, and history. I suppose I officially became a historian (Yes, “a” historian. I’m neither British, nor a self-important elitist.) in second grade. The Foxfire program was at its peak during that time. Students from the program came to our class, put on a presentation regarding the importance of preserving our oral history, and sent us home to record an interview. I interviewed Paw Paw in Spring 1980. I’ve never stopped. Since then I’ve interviewed every old-timer I could find in the area. Most of them were never interviewed by the Foxfire students. Most of them are gone now, and many of their stories are gone with them.

I am a lifelong writer. While reading Revenuers and Moonshiners by Wilbur Miller   during my graduate school years I stumbled on secondary source references to letters compiled by the Internal Revenue Commissioner from the late 1870s and early 1880s. Since I wanted to use information from these in my Master’s thesis, I tracked down copies of the original letters. What a treasure trove of information! A full blown war against the moonshiners was waged in North Georgia and the Carolinas by the federal government. Some of the accounts by the deputy collectors in the field are amazing. I’ve decided to write a trilogy of action/historical novels about the fight. —– I plan to release chapters from the first book here, as well as recount anecdotes from the historical letters.

Daddy is also still with us. At 75 years old, he is now the old timer of moonshining lore, sad as it is to think about his mortality. While he has lived a mostly respectable life, he was an infamous moonshiner back in the day. Most of his family is another story. To call them rogues and criminals would be an understatement. I’ve recorded close to a dozen interviews with him through the decades. That said, every week he tells me a new story that I’ve never heard before. Thanks to modern technology, I’m going to start video recording new interviews with him, especially trying to get new stories unrecorded elsewhere. The videos will be posted on my YouTube channel, with links to them on this blog. Daddy is pretty weak, so each installment will be fairly short.

This blog isn’t going to be simply a collection of oral histories, but will chronicle modern Appalchian life. There will be essays regarding growing up in the area, stories and recollections of the older generation, as well as some travel writing about the area. You might see articles about mountain biking, trail running, or Jeep explorations in Southern Appalachia. Possibly even farming, gardening, and woodworking stories. Generally whatever strikes my fancy and shares my love of all things from life in Southern Appalachia.