Carmel, NY,
1965. Rodney Petty showing Janie Petty
Hunter and Bonnie Hunter's his baby sister's grave.
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Friday, February 27, 2015
CATCH 22 IDIOTS!
IDIOTS!
I just got
an automated phone call from the company that handles our phone system. The computer called and said it would like
for me to discuss our account, for me to press a number that meant OK, or a
number that meant the person it needed to talk to is not there at moment. I pressed the number that the person it
needed to talk to was not there at the moment, Anna takes care of the details
on the internet/phone/cell phone billings.
So, in so many words it said OK and left a number to be called. After hanging up I decided I could talk to
them and maybe it was something I could solve so I returned the call. The computer said it could see I was calling from a certain
number and was that the number I was calling about. I said Yes.
It said that I have any technical problems and I said No. It said my account is up to date, I don't owe
them any money so they it thanked me for calling and hung up.
I called
back.
Again I went
through the questions and when it got to asking me why I was calling, my
account or technical problems I said,
"Returning your call."
I had to
hold for the next available person.
Then I
explained to the lady why I was calling.
She said to make sure I was talking to really me she asked me for my secret pass word. I said I didn't know. Then she asked who my favorite singer was.
I said I
don't know, it was according what state of mind I was in when I was asked that,
but I named off a few which were wrong.
Then she said she was going to call the number I was calling about and see if they will give
me permission to talk about the account.
I said,
"Well, in that case you will call this number and get me on the line and is that ethical, for me to tell you that I
am OK? "
She said for
me to not hang up and she would call the number I "claimed" I was
at. She put me on hold and called.
I could hear
a beep like somebody was calling. She
told me not to hang up so I did not interrupt the call I was on.
After a
short period, she came back on and said she could locate the person of that
number.
That is
because you were calling me, I heard the beeps, but you told me not to hang up
from this call.
She said,
"Well, I cannot authorize you to talk about an account until the owner
gives you permission".
I said,
"Which is me."
She said,
"Sir, I suggest you look for that pass word and call back."
Me: "Nope,
I don't owe you money, I am not
having technical problems, y'all will call me back if y'all think it is
important enough."
Cliick!
Billy Joe Royal and Mr. Caudell
Billy Joe Royal and his family lived in the Clay Homes overlooking the west court. Back then a court in the Clay Homes was a spacious green between apartment buildings. I’m sure they were not nearly as big as I remember. A green court had about the same proportions as a football field.
I lived in the Clay Homes before the Royal family and the court in front of the Royal apartment is where somebody brought their 16MM movie projector and showed movies on warm Sunday nights. I remember lying in the grass watching TOM SAWYER.
We moved from the Clay Homes to Manget Street across from Larry Bell Park. It was in the same school district, I went to the same school, but with different neighbors. My sister Frances and I kept up a relationship with Clay Homes chums but also developed friendships with our new neighbors.
Although during the Billy Joe and Jack Royal era of the Clay Homes I wasn’t a neighbor, just a frequent visitor.
I remember we liked to sit out in the dark on the green grass of the court after dark and talk. I don’t think we talked loudly, we just talked and laughed a lot.
Mr. Caudell, across the court felt differently. Just our presence, sitting in the dark talking and laughing irritated the hell out of him.
I remember he was always smoking. On the porch in front of his apartment you could not see him in the dark shadow, only the red glow of his cigarette. The madder he got the more the little red light would bounce or shake.
Then, it would only be a matter of time that you would see the red light take flight – down the few steps and across the court towards us. He would always first politely tell us to hold the noise down. And we politely told him we would.
Not long afterwards, after forgetting to hold down our ruckus, you could see that little red hot dot come bouncing towards us again. The next time he was more demanding and rude.
After his 3rd or 4th trip he was always spitting mad.
I don’t remember us ever working it out. It was just a confrontation we could count on.
I don’t know how I know this, but I do. Mr. Caudell was the father of a cashier at the Big Apple where I later worked. One time a customer hit the roof when she told him how much his groceries were and said he demanded for them to be added up again. With the manager, L.L. Thurmond, standing over her to read off each price – that was before bar codes – she recalculated it and came up with the exact same total. She won my respect for being efficient.
Thursday, February 26, 2015
Tuba Skinny: GIMME SOME!
Apparently this is Tuba Skinny music, but I don't see them. It must be on a their CD. That is an interesting title isn't it? How more romantic could one get?
I love to see people dance and jiggle.
Wednesday, February 25, 2015
Almost 2 Years Living Grandpa Frank Paris Hunter(1879-1950)
My grandmother Minnie Tyson Hunter died 21 July 1948 at age 69. Before school started in the next 5 or 6 weeks we moved in with Grandpa Hunter, Minnie's widower.
One of the Christmases probably
the first Christmas there, Santa Clause brought my sister Frances and I bicycles . I had no idea how to ride one. I could see it was a keeping your balance
thing.
Grandpa taught me how to ride it. there is a slight hill from the corner of
East Dixie Avenue to our house. The street was not paved then. We would push the bike up to the corner, then
I would get on it and coast down the hill.
Grandpa ran along behind me holding my seat to keep me
balanced. It took about two times and I
got the hang of it enough to ride a bike. If I remember correctly, that same Christmas morning my sister and I rode our bikes to the Clay Homes, about a mile away to show off our bikes to our ex-neighbors.
I was thinking recently
I remember Grandpa as an old man then.
It must have been physically
challenging to him to run behind a bike going down a hill. He died about 1.5 years later at age 70. That is not
too bad, I keep telling myself.
Grandpa Hunter and I became good friends. He kept his moonshine and wine under wood
under the house. He would crawl under
the house and crawl back and make a large breath sound when he straightened up,
I don't know if it was the booze that pumped that deep breath out of him or
standing up in an upright condition.
He and his son W.C. ran around with some seedy looking
characters. I think they were just
jobless and hung out together and passed around the bottle in the paper sack a
lot. I think they worked off and on at a
mattress factory at the corner of Butler Street and East Dixie Avenue. One day it burned down and his friends
scattered. I did not see them after that
except for W.C.
Grandpa had a black cat named Tom that would come and go,
sometimes months at a time. Once he just
did not come back.
His yard on Manget Street had apple, pear, peach, and black
walnut trees. He may have had a pecan
tree. One time he had chickens. There was a chicken coop in the back part of
the yard, which I sometimes used as a club house and other times pretended it
was a battle ship that I was captain of.
One time when he had a few drinks Grandpa told me that our
name was not really Hunter, he said he did not know our real name. His father William Hunter, he said, was
adopted. He wept as he told me.
That was what got me interested into family research. Not when he told me but when my oldest son
was born I remembered what he told me and went on a quest to look for our real
name. I
found out. It is Hunter, but for
a while William was William Trammell (his mother's maiden name) but he changed
to his real father's name... long story.
Another time he wept was when we were sitting in the front
yard and a truck pulled up. A woman got
out and asked him was he Frank Paris Hunter.
He said he was and she introduced
herself to him as his daughter. That
really gave him an unexpected blow. He
knew of her but never met her.
After Frank had married Minnie Tyson, he had an affair with
a McClure girl in the Woodstock area and got her pregnant. William Hunter ; Minnie's father; and the
McClure family gave the pregnant girl
money to go to Texas to have her baby.
The baby, when grown, paid a visit.
I don't know what they discussed but they talked a lot. Then the woman got into her truck and drove
away, that was the last time I know of she made an appearance. Grandpa was emotionally shook up.
Later, when doing family research I discovered that Frank ,
Minnie, and then their only child Herbert moved for a couple of years to
Texas. They lived in Hunt County, Texas,
where their only daughter Beatrice "Bee" was born in 1903. They were back in Cherokee County in 1906
when their next son, Robert "Bus" was born. I don't know if their residence in Texas had
anything to do with the McClure girl or not.
Routinely, Frank would get up before anyone else, start the
fire in the fireplace and buttered the toast.
I always have been an early riser, I would be the second one up. I would back up to the fire to enjoy its
warmth. I think we burned coals instead
of wood. One morning while backed up to
the fireplace a cinder popped out of the fire and immediately caught my pajamas
on fire. Grandpa grabbed me and threw
me down and rolled me. He saved my life.
The skin on my legs were covered with blisters and I was in
agony. With Daddy's knowledge of
homemade remedies he doctored me and I was back to normal in no time.
Sometime later Grandpa had a stroke. He was in the old hospital. I remember the room location. It was on the top floor, on the south end
over looking Victory Cab or Guest Motors, whichever was there at the time. I was too young to visit him so I had to slip
up the exit stair case. I opened the door
and grandpa was trying to get out of
bed. He was delirious. My uncle Herbert and some other brothers, I
don't remember who, was trying to hold him down. It was the last time I saw my grandfather
alive. He died 20 March 1950, at age 70.
You Can't Carry It With You
Now, Jim is
never more.
Jim was
addicted to yard sales. He was always
going to garage sales buying a nice combustion engine or something for a couple
of dollars and show off all the expensive tools he bought that way. Now, look where they are (above).
Jim was born
in Marietta many years ago. He and his
two brothers grew up around Powder Springs and Reynolds Streets. After his WWII time he moved to Miami and
started a small engine repair business.
He married
Louise, also from Marietta. They never had
any children.
After they
retired they moved back to Marietta and bought the house next to us.
I admit that
Jim, sometimes, was a pain the ass.
He just wanted to be helpful which sometimes messed up my yard plans,
because of his aggressive suggestions.
But I still miss him.
But I still miss him.
I had a
Snapper Self-Propelled, a Snapper riding lawnmower, and a powered water
pressure machine.
Anytime one sputtered
Jim came running with his tool kit and more often than not messed it up. One time I had my sons help me load the
riding mower into my pickup truck when they were over on a Sunday. The starter would not work. I had plans to take it to the Snapper shop
the following morning.
That morning Jim's wife Louise called and said Jim saw my lawnmower on the back of
my truck, I wasn't going to take it to pay somebody to fix it was I? I admitted I was and he was over in just a
couple of minutes. He fixed it. He fixed it that I could start it by
bypassing the start button and line up a screw driver between the battery and
live wire to start it. I had several
screw drivers to curl up while trying to start it. Another time he tried to fix my water pressure
machine and could not adjust the thing the piston or whatever, and it warped
the shaft, or it was the shaft, whatever.
It got to
the point that when either lawnmower or water pressure machine needed work done
I would load it onto my truck at night in the dark and backed up into the
carport. I knew Jim normally woke up
about 8:30am. I would leave the house
with the equipment before 7am.
One time Jim
saw a truck that looked like mine that one of the headlights wasn't
working. He came over with his equipment
to take out the bad headlight and either
fix it or replace it. I told him it was
working fine. He told me he saw it not
working. I told him there were two or
three others trucks in the subdivision
that looked just like mine, and one of them was the one with the bad
headlight. He didn't believe and wanted
to drill a hole through the body someplace to give it the so-called bad light
additional electrical support.
One time Jim
told me he had brake problems and to save money he paid Bob, the useless man
across the street to fix it. He chuckled
and said he cheated Bob, he could have charged him much more, but he only charged him $20. A few weeks after that Jim had a heart
attack. Instead of paying an ambulance
he drove to the hospital. The cardiologists
put in a pacemaker and he had to be the hospital a few days. I volunteered to take his car home. He reluctantly told me OK.
I did not
know it until I had to use the brakes there were no brakes. Luckily, I had a Volvo in the Navy that the
brakes were shot and I learned to gear down....gear down easily.
I got the
car home and the next time I saw Jim I kidded him about he didn't get the best
of Bob, Bob got the best of him.... he just gave Bob $20 for no services
rendered.
Jim died and
a few years later, last year, his wife Louise died.
I thought
Jim, the way he squeezed a dollar and did without a lot, they lived from social
security check to social security check.
But apparently I was wrong, he
had hundreds of thousands of dollars squirreled away, which distant relatives will probably fight over and all his prized collections are in the dumpster above.
Tuesday, February 24, 2015
It Is What It Is
This morning
Willow and I walked in the slushy snow and ice.
It was not too bad, it was like waking on a slushy drink.
A neighbor is
a nurse at the VA Hospital in Decatur.
She backed out of her driveway , rolled down her window and said good
morning. When she sees us walking in the
mornings she always says good morning.
She said she
was leaving late to avoid the traffic.
I said it
may be just as bad because everybody might be doing the same thing.
I said I
hope she wasn't having problems with all the
investigations that the VA
Hospital is receiving right now.
She swatted
in thin air, like swatting a fly, in her Jamaican accent said, "It is what
it is."
I told her I
like that expression, "It is what it is." I said it was profound.
She cackled
laughing as she drove off.
From Tree to Tree
Across the street from us in Larry Bell Park was a ravine
that was about the length of a football
field that stopped at Manget Creek, just below the softball field. The ravine was a long deep ditch line with
trees. As a kid I like to go in it when
I wanted to be alone and think. It was
also a good place to play. Over a period
of time I learned of one slim tree there I could climb up near the top, get it
weaving back and forth with shifting my weight and with enough swinging it
leaned over to a similar shape tree and I grab onto that tree straighten
my legs out and the tree I was in would spring back in shape and I from the top
of the second tree shimmy down, mission accomplished.
Of course approval or showing off was always a priority and
I wanted to show my friends Gene Sanges and Tony Hester. One day while playing in the ravine with Gene and Tony I did my
old trick, I climbed up the tree I was well acquainted with the intentions of
swinging over to the neighboring tree. I
didn't make it to the second tree. When
I got the first tree weaving back and forth with my weight the tree snapped and
down I fell.
It knocked me out cold.
Tony and Gene thought I was just playing possum. Tony went and got his wagon and they carried
me to his back yard. They told me if I
did not get up they were going to take all my clothes off in front of Tony's
sisters Peggy and Lula.
I did not get up and they took my clothes off.
Then they thought I was dead.
They loaded me back in the wagon and carried me to my
house. It must have been on a weekend,
my parents and sister were not there.
They carried me into my bedroom and put me in my bed, threw
my clothes on the bed too, and left.
When my family came home there I was out cold, naked in bed.
I'm sure that was a shock to them.
Ironically, I did not know it at the time, but with my
uncle, Daddy's brother W.C. was young he did the same trick on the same
property, and was knocked out. He was in
a coma for weeks.
Several years ago Tony's mother died. I went to the funeral home to pay my
respect. Tony was not there yet but his
two sisters Peggy and Lula were. The
whole time we talked I wonder if they were thinking the same thing I was,
seeing me in the buff. That subject
went unsaid as we talked about old times.
Monday, February 23, 2015
Australian Bakery and Bluegrass
Australian Bakery on South Park Square in Downtown Marietta.
For the past several years on Tuesday evenings in Front of
the Australian Bakery bluegrass players have been showing up jamming.
There is no schedule or plans. Ever who shows up with their instrument
finds a group jamming that they will be comfortable in and jump in and start
plucking away. We have not been there in a while, I don't know if it is
still going on or not. If you are interested in watching or playing you
might call the Australian Bakery.
I am been known to pick up a guitar and play there . My, My,
what do we have here? It is a video of me* playing the ole'
guitar. Awww Shucks!
*If you believe I was actually playing that thing I have
some property down near the Okefenokee Swamp I'll like to
talk to you about.
Sunday, February 22, 2015
Pete Seeger, LITTLE BOXES
On my walk/run this morning I listened to LITTLE BOXES by the late Pete Seeger,
Here, lets listen to it again:
One of my Forrest Gump's Moments
Fifty years ago yesterday, February 21, 1965, we went to New
York City. It was only about 60 miles
away from our base. We read a mass order
from the Fleet Commander that there would be an anti-Vietnam War protest of Arm
Services people in their uniforms at
Union Square in New York City, and under
no circumstances active servicemen to
attend . Anybody in uniform would be
arrested by Military Police.
We went, but didn't wear our uniforms. We
wanted to take pictures.
We found Union Square but there was no protest going on.
Maybe we were early, maybe we were late, or maybe the location was
changed at the last minute.
Just killing time, we rode around looking at the big
city. We rode up 5th Avenue and passed
the Guggenheim Museum on the right, and up a few blocks the Metropolitan Museum
on the left and Central Park. Then several more blocks and Central Park on
the left ended.
Seeing the pedestrians we realize we were in Harlem.
WHAM!
Somebody hit my Volvo
with some kind rock or brick. Some
people shouted at us.
We got the heck out of there.
Later, on the news we learned that Malcom X had been assassinated
in New York City. Maybe the reason we were hollered at was
because I had Georgia License Plate on
the car.
Saturday, February 21, 2015
Elvis Presley died almost 40 years ago and he just won't
fade away. His songs are still played,
they are still Elvis imitators,... just the other day I saw a picture of Elvis in all his finery wishing a friend's mother a happy birthday at a
nursing home.
For sure, it is not too late for me to get on the bandwagon,
with a Elvis cartoon that was originally printed in the first issue of TRUMP
magazine in the '50s. Text by editor
Harvey Kurtzman and art by Wally Wood.
click on image to enlarge to make it readable.
Emi Sunshine Horrible Highway
Folks, She is real and she is good and not pretentious, in her own way. But she knows how to put on a good show!
Friday, February 20, 2015
Is a Picture Worth a thousand Words?
I have
always respected Jimmy Carter. I think he tries to do the right thing, bring peace, be
truthful and make the world a better place to live.
But no
matter how good a person is - if there enough pictures of him or her, you will
be able to find some not so complementary.
For instance, the picture above,
Carter looks like an insane disturbed individual on the verge of drooling.
Instead of "Would you buy a used car from this man?" for this picture, "Would you bend over in front of this man?"
Instead of "Would you buy a used car from this man?" for this picture, "Would you bend over in front of this man?"
I think
there is a demand for someone with the knack of finding this type of picture to
be used in every political race. And
they are so easy to find. It would be an
easy job.
Playing at Construction Sites When We Were Young
Playing around construction sites is what we kids did. And getting seriously hurt at these sites was
part of it. Also, next door to the bus
station and next door to the Clay Homes the federal government had a school
built to teach men returning from WWII a trade.
After the workers left for the day we would go over to the site
and play. There was a stack of wired
fence in cylinder shape. We found it was
fun to get a cylinder shape wire roll out in the open, turn it on its side and
walk on it. It is a tricky thing to do
and could easily get your mind confused, sort of like blowing bubble gum and
dong a task at the time - you mind could only take on one task at a time at
that age. My sister Frances was walking
a bale of wire and something went wrong and the fell.
Her arm was twisted.
I ran home to tell my folks.
I told Daddy: "Frances fell off a roll of wire and hurt
herself. Her arm has a big dent in
it!" Daddy jumped a foot up in the
air from the chair and ran down to check.
It was more than a dent, her bone was protruding.
The doctors she would
never use that arm again. But Daddy had different ideas. He got her a rubber ball and had her to continuously
squeeze it with her bad arm. It time, it
paid off. In a few years it was good as
new.
Ex Soldiers Never Die, They Just Fade Away
After the veteran trade school was built it next to the bus station in Marietta itwas a busy
place. It was located at the edge of the Clay Homes.
A man started coming everyday who on a motor scooter. He was never lost for words,. He was clever, a good speaker with a country
accent, and from his tales he told us kids he was a war hero. He was one of those people that made you
wonder why they needed the other soldiers for?
I grew up to be a young man and the whole time, up until I
went on active duty I think occasionally I would see Gene over on the side of
road sitting on his motor scooter with a bunch of adolescents around him as he spun them another war story.
Gene never held a job after he left WWII. Gene was a casualty of WWII, he was shell
shocked.
He reminds me of Luke Wilson playing Dink Jenkins in the movie MY DOG SKIP.
Also, while on the subject of the veterans trade school and
hanging out in the parking lot what Cherry Bombs are. Once some students let the fuse of a cherry
bomb, put a can upside down on top of it and ran. It exploded and the can went flying straight
up in the air.
And another, more daring
student, blew up one in the front entrance hall and we all ran.
Thursday, February 19, 2015
Dali: Eccentric or Smart Nut?
Savaldor
Dali (1904-1989) was a strange bird. He
was a Spanish surrealist painter. I
first saw samples of his surrealist art at the New York Metropolitan Museum
when I was in the Navy and next, still in the Navy the Philadelphia Art
Museum. Then in later life I saw some of
his stuff in Chicago and also the Atlanta's High Museum in a traveling
exhibition.
There is a
Salvador Dali Art Museum in Saint Petersburg, Florida, which is on my bucket
list.
I found his
eccentric surrealist art, well, interesting and worth studying the symbolism
and also the slaps in the face art.
Not only was
his art work eccentric, so was his life, or at least any time he was in a
camera's viewfinder - it was good for business.
click on images to make them make more sense, well, maybe not.
I think the above one and below one is what is most known for.
A portrait of his wife Gla
Wednesday, February 18, 2015
HAPPY CHINESE NEW YEARS!!
Today is Chinese New Years. It is the year of the Goat and Sheep.
Have you ever heard a goat scream?
It sounds like a horrified
elderly lady.
Several years ago we read an ad saying a Chinese Restaurant
in Cherokee County at Highway 92 and Bells Ferry Road was having a Chinese New
Year Party. The ad had an artist
rendition of people having a good time with a Chinese Dragon, a Champaign
bottle spewing over, streamers, noisemakers, and so on.
It looked like the place to be.
Also, they had a coupon by one meal and get one free.
We went, wild-eyed, ready to party down.... maybe they might
let us get in the big dragon train.
Man! Fun City! And one of the meals will be free, the
cheapest one, of course.
I imagined a Chinese band playing Chinese music, people
jokingly shootings fire crackers, a lot of corks popping off Champaign bottles,
laughter, whoopee! etc.
We were the only customers there.
A little Asian toddler kept peeping at us through the
door. I guess we looked kind of unique.
No singing, no fire crackers, no bursts of laughter, no fire
crackers.... just a dinner.
A few weeks after that a drug deal went wrong and somebody
got shot and killed there, we read in the paper. If that had happen while we were there
expecting fire crackers, after we heard the gunshots we might have got up and
danced.
Tuesday, February 17, 2015
Edgar Bell Foster's Family
This is
Anna's mother Marie's uncle (her father's brother) Edgar Bell Foster (1884 - 1932), his wife
Sophie Lackie (1886 - 1965), and their son Charles Loy Foster (1909 - 1964).
The goat wagon driver is Charles Loy, again,
several years later.
Charles
married Lucille Hanson (1909-1952) and
they had two children.
Charles V.
Foster
Billy T. Foster
They lived
in the Roswell, Crabapple, Georgia, area.
USS JK TAUSSIG On Dry Land
At Charleston Naval Transient Center at Charleston Naval Yard when you receive your
orders you have been waiting for, sometimes you are expected to leave within
the hour. That happened to me.
From the base movie theater I was working (ahem) my leader,
the CPO, told me to report to the Transient Office. He shook my hand and told me he enjoy working
(ahem!) with me. I went to the transient
window and a yeoman told gave me my
orders to report to the ship USS J..K. TAUSSIG at Lakehurst, New Jersey. He gave me an airline ticket to Philadelphia
and a bus chit from Philadelphia to the Naval base at Lakehurst, New Jersey. He said the tickets were only good for town
to town, as far as getting a cab from the Philadelphia Airport to the bus station in downtown I would
have to make do, the travel expenses did not cover that.
I had no choice but to go,
I had to pack and be at the
Charleston Air Port in a very short time.
They had shuttles going back and forth to the Charleston Airport. I made it in time. and off I flew.
The commercial airline plane, probably Delta or Eastern
landed in Philadelphia. I got off the
plane, claimed my duffle bag and then I was on my own to get to the bus station
in downtown Philadelphia.
Here I begin to feel the crunch of just how poor I was. The cheapest way to the bus station was my a shuttle that
cost, if I remember correctly about $8
and I had about $9 and I don't think credit cards had been invented yet. By the time I got to the Philadelphia Bus
Station I only had change left.
I enjoyed looking at the New Jersey countryside on the way
- A lot of it reminded me of Norman
Rockwell art. Old Antique American!
We arrived at the base just after dark. The bus left me standing looking at the gate
with guards and the duty house next to the gate, where I was to report.
I walked in and to my left was a counter with three people:
a chief, an officer of the day, and a
duty driver. I handed the chief my
orders. He looked at them, raised his
eyebrows, like he was amused and handed the papers to the duty officer. He took a good look at me and looked at the
orders. He said, "USS J.K. TAUSSIG?"
We are fifteen miles from the
ocean."
I forgot which one, but either the officer or Chief or both
started trying to make phone calls to offices that would probably know how to
correct the error.
Did I tell you this was Friday evening? No one would in the know that would know
what was going on and how to correct it would not be until Monday morning.
They told me to spend the night in the base main barracks and be
the base's weekend guest and report to the personnel office Monday
morning. They gave me a chow pass.
The duty driver carried me and my duffle bag to the main base barracks. By now, it was pass 10:00pm
and the barracks bay was pitched black, with only a red exit sign above a door.
I found an empty unclaimed rack and stripped down to my skivvies
and crawled into bed and immediately went to sleep, I had a tiring day.
About 1:00am I was dreaming I was sleeping in the Charleston
Naval Transient Barracks and suddenly we were being bombed by the
Russians! They were bombing barracks and
flying around in machine gunning down people running around. I
started running for my life. I
was still dreaming but this time I was on my feet bent over to dodge the bombs
and bullets.
I ran out the red exit door and into a hallway... or passage
way, as they would say in the Navy.
Two men in civilian clothes were coming in from the
outside. One was a tall dark headed man
with a relaxed southern accent and the other one was a short blond headed guy with a
Brooklyn accent. I ran up to them and
asked were they still bombing outside?
They looked at me like, "What the hell?"
I explained to them the Russians were attacking us.
Both of them picked up on what my state of mind was and patiently
told me I had a bad dream and right now I was confused. I woke up and felt very embarrassed and they were
very understanding.
When I returned to the big room of racks (beds) I had no
idea how to find where I was sleeping, in the dark..... but somehow I did.
The next morning in
the chow hall I saw the two men that caught me in a frantic state of mind just
several hours earlier. They spoke and
were nice and wanted to know if I was OK.
Yep, OK for a crazy man.
I was a little embarrassed with the two men looking my way and talking. I felt my ears should be burning as they analyzed me. But, I would just have to live through my embarrassing moment, as I have many other times.
The reason I remember one was tall and dark headed and one was short and blond and their accents - about six or eight weeks later I would ride to North Carolina with them.
Yep, OK for a crazy man.
I was a little embarrassed with the two men looking my way and talking. I felt my ears should be burning as they analyzed me. But, I would just have to live through my embarrassing moment, as I have many other times.
The reason I remember one was tall and dark headed and one was short and blond and their accents - about six or eight weeks later I would ride to North Carolina with them.
Catholics Spying on Protestatnts
When my family lived on Manget Street across from Larry Bell Park,
down the street almost at the corner of Glover Street was a small church called Mary Memorial Church.
I drove by there recently and it
is still there, I was surprised how small the parking lot and church are. I was friends with two brothers George and
Mike Hobby, both have died. They were
Catholic. During this time of our lives they lived with
their parents on Glover Street. They
sometimes had a horse and had a barn for the horse behind their house. The barn was right behind the Mary Memorial
Church.
One Sunday night we three were climbing on their barn and
climbed up on the roof. We discovered we
could sit on the barn roof and look into the window of the church having its
Sunday night service. They did a lot of
shouting, crying, screaming, and raw religious music.
My uncle Tom Petty and his wife Mary Jo Johns were members
there and also belonged to a gospel
singing group. It would have been very
interesting to watch them sing. Tom did
not look like the singing type. They
never performed the nights we were there.
The two Catholic siblings enjoyed perching on top of the
barn and watching the Pentecostal or
Primitive Baptist Church.... it was far removed from what they were used to: confessional booths, Priests with
robes, Crosses, Marys, and all that.
I don't think any of the congregation ever saw us gawking at them. But again, maybe they did and preferred not
to cause a ruckus.
Monday, February 16, 2015
HAPPY PRESIDENTS' DAY!!
One thing I like about Presidents' Day is how non materialistic and non-commercial; not like Christmas and some other holidays.
Sunday, February 15, 2015
Speaking of Presidents -
Or, my first 30 Days on Active Duty.
Well, well, today is President's Day. So, if you came home to get away from the Presidents' Day Sale, you can read a little about the a president, Franklin D. Roosevelt's flag boat embedded someplace in the below ramblings.
Well, well, today is President's Day. So, if you came home to get away from the Presidents' Day Sale, you can read a little about the a president, Franklin D. Roosevelt's flag boat embedded someplace in the below ramblings.
When I first went on active duty in the Navy I was sent to
Charleston Naval Yards, in Charleston, South Carolina. I spent about 30 days there.
The Naval Yard was a huge Navy Base on the Cooper River,
near a big bridge. The big bridge
always seemed to be looming saliently in the background.
The Naval Yard was a Transient center. There were may six to ten barracks for
transients. In the mornings we stood on
an assigned number on the pavement so they could do a muster check. Then, after
were assigned jobs for the day.
For a few days I was picked for cleanup details. A group of us would report to places like the
EM Club, Marines Club, CPO Club, and so on and clean up from the night
before. Also, one day I had to help
clean up the chow hall.
Interesting in cleaning up the different clubs I found
instead of placing bottles into a container, it was quicker and more efficient,
really, to throw the beer bottles into the container, breaking them to
pieces - that way breaking into pieces
you could put more bottles into the container to be dumped. Just don't go skin diving in the dumpster.
Once I was assigned
to paint a historical boat. It
was the flag ship that President Franklin Roosevelt used from time to
time. It was docked at a dock. We painted the deck gray. While I was painting a wave knocked the boat
a wallop and knocked me onto the fresh paint I just put down. It mostly got on the front of my hands.
I don't remember what I did with my clothes with paint all on them, I probably bought new denim
chambray shirt and pant replacements. It was only slightly larger than a cabin cruiser you would see on a lake. FDR might have preferred small things. His Little White House in Warm Springs, Georgia, is a small house.
Finally I was picked for permanent job for as long as I was
there to the base theater. Another
transient and I had the daily job of
cleaning out the theater and other rooms, which all in all took about 90
minutes. Then we would watch the latest movie with the Chief Petty Officer
in-charge of us. I became friends with
the other transient and one weekend we hitchhiked together back home to
Georgia. He lived south of Atlanta and I
lived north of Atlanta. More about that
later.
The base was so big there was a bus service. The bus was Navy gray. One night I went to a movie and taking a bus
back to the barracks, miles away, I rode the bus. I remember one person getting on did
something that did not sit well with the driver. They had words and the driver ordered him off
and he refused. He was really a high
ranking officer and he was on the bus because he heard the bus driver was crude
and rude. The driver proved the rumor true. After the officer's secret identity was known there was a deathly quietness.
One evening my new friend and I ventured off the base at the
main gate. Just outside the main gate
was a busy street that was lined with bars on both sides. They were all trying to lure the sailors
inside. We went to a few bars looking
for something interesting (and cheap).
One bar seemed overly crowded and we went in to see why so many sailors
were drawn there. It was the
barmaid. If the barmaid served you a
drink, she charged something like $5 more than if you bought the drink
yourself from the bartender. The reason was the stirred the drink a
special way. First she drove her finger
"inside" herself and used her finger as a stirrer. We left.
They even charged just to watch her mix drinks her special way. Those sailors had probably been at sea a long
long time.
Somehow my friend's mother and my mother became
friends. I don't know how Mama did it,
but she knew how to relate to people and find out what there was we had in common... which this was
a piece of cake for her. As I mentioned
earlier one weekend we hitchhiked back
to Georgia. It took several rides to
get there. He got off south of Atlanta and about that same area I
had to stand by myself with my thumb out in the middle of the morning for a
couple of hours.
My last ride a guy picked me up someplace in Atlanta. He asked where was I going and I said
Marietta and he said he was too. About
the time we were going over the Chattahoochee River he reached over and touched
my thigh. I started cursing him and
demanded to be let out or I would jump
out. He said he was only joking
and would not do it again. I sat uptight
the rest of the way home. He let me out
in front of our house and I ran in without even thanking him. He rode back and forth on our street for a
few times before he probably determinate I really did go into a house.
I spent about a day at home and hitchhiked back to
Charleston. The only thing I remember
about the return trip a drunk man driving and his wife and several kids picked
me up. He stayed sped through Georgia and South Carolina
during over 100mph most the time. And oh
yeah, his car was junky inside too... trash all over the seats and floorboards.
Tuba Skinny: WILL YOU REMEMBER ME?
Being a bluegrass fan I have heard the song WILL YOU MISS ME WHEN I'M GONE? many times. This isn't it. That one had words.
Are We Party Animals or What?
Every weekend lately or near weekend something worth
celebrating or being festive about was/will be going on: There was Super Bowl Sunday; yesterday was Valentines,; there was the Grammys; tomorrow a lot of
sales-savvy people will have hand to hand combat a the President's Day Sales;
and last but not least tonight on TV is
looking back at the best of SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE!
SUNDAY FUNNIES! WONDER WART HOG in DRAG CARTOONS Mag
CLICK ON IMAGE TO ENLARGE TO MAKE BIGGER TO BE ABLE READ IT.
Before
Gilbert Shelton became well known for being the artist for the FABULOUS FURRY FREAK BROTHERS he drew WONDER WART HOG for DRAG CARTOONS MAGAZINE and also HELP! Magazine.
I knew about
WONDER WART HOG being in HELP! but I did
not know about WWH being in DRAG CARTOONS Magazine until I read my friend Pappy's
blog about Golden Age Comics at http://pappysgoldenage.blogspot.com/.
This may
appear that I am swiping Pappy's blog material and making it my own. Harvey Kurtzman, creator and first editor of
MAD said "imitation is the most sincerest form of flattery." Therefore, if imitation is a very sincere
form of flattery, then plain-out using
the same material is a step above the sincerest.... like more sincerest!
Saturday, February 14, 2015
A Valentines Story, Sort of
The next town north of where our Navy base was in Lakehurst, New Jersey, is Lakewood. It had a theater we went to and a bookstore, and several bars. It was less than ten miles away.
Off the main street, down a couple of blocks was a bad
neighborhood. It looked like it may
have been a high crime area. There on
one side of the street was a bar we named BAR X. BAR X was a seedy looking bar, that all the
patrons looked like they were up to no good.
Across the street from BAR X was another seedy looking Bar,
which we named BAR Z. If we were just
visiting it in today's time, we would probably name it BAR XXX. The place had a few prostitutes hanging out
and at the door was a big black woman that always seemed to be at the entrance
who always tried to impress new comers with her song she made up "Play
with my Box and I'll suck your Cock!"
I don't know how she did it, but Box and Cock rhymed.
Another bar in the Lakewood area we found interesting was a
few miles south of town. It was a rural
bar that mostly farmers hung out at.
Video juke boxes were just becoming popular in bars, they were cheaper-than-live-music entertainment.
One evening I drove into Lakewood by myself to go to a
movie. My friends had duty. After the movie on the way back to the base I
stopped by the rural bar to have a drink.
The joint was
crowded. The only seat available was at
the bar by a woman that was sitting by a
man, who I found out soon enough the man was her husband.
She whined to me that her husband would not dance with
her. He was a chicken farmer and
believed in working all the time. It was
their 25th anniversary and he was not going "get out there and make of
fool out myself" he said.
I jokingly said,
"Aww come on! Twenty five
years, celebrate! dance with her!"
He never smiled. He
turned around and looked me up and down and said, "You dance with her
Butter Ball!"
I laugh jokingly.
He said, "I mean it, you want to see her dance you
dance with her now!"
I nervously laughed again.
He said, "Now Butter Ball!! I mean it!"
I said, "Let me go to the head first..." And walked towards the John.
And pass the MEN sign and walked right out the door, hopped
into my PV544 Volvo and hauled ass.
Friday, February 13, 2015
When we lived on Manget Street, across from Larry Bell Park, one time I heard a car horn outside. I looked out and there was a taxi. I ran out and told him no one hear called a
taxi.
As he drove off another one was driving up and another one
was coming down the road. I think every
cab company in Marietta came on a call that afternoon. after that the drug store delivery people
starting delving sundies, milkshakes, Cokes, hot food from their lunch counter and so on
and on.
My mother was at her wits end.
Then Jimmy Pat Presley called and my mother answered. He said, "Hi Mrs. Hunter, what's
new?"
She started off by saying, "Jimmy Pat, you know good
and well what is new!" and she
continued to bless him out.
She was mad at him that day, but she didn't realize it but
he had just given her something to talk about to her dying days.
Thursday, February 12, 2015
William Jason Hunter
One of these men is
William A, Hunter/Trammell's son Jason William Hunter (1875-1896). It looks like a formal portrait made in a
studio. He lived only 21 years. The picture was taken within a year or two of
his death.
Jason married Fannie
Emaline Medley. Fannie was luckier than
Jason on living a long time. She lived
within three months of 102 years.
Jason and Medley had two daughters.: Lois and Jacie.
Jacie Hunter married Vernon Tip Ingram. They had three children. Their son Hunter Davenport Ingram became a
councilman of Woodstock, then Mayor.
Lois married a Carraway but it did not last long. They had no children. Lois worked for Western Union in Atlanta.
Lois or Jacie never knew their father. Lois was a baby and Jacie was not born yet.
William A. Hunter/Trammell and Emeline Ray Hunter took the
two girls and their daughter-in-law in after Jason's death and their welfare
was became the grandparents responsibility.
William A. Hunter/Trammell was the only father they knew.
Lois ended up with the house that her grandfather had built.
Then, in the 1980s I came along doing genealogy
research. Lois showed me around the
house and pointed out things of historical interest and old family pictures . She also showed me the
barn William fell out of and broke his leg which put his health on the
incline. I also waw grapes on a vine on a little fence by the
barn that William had planted. I shooed them away the wasps and picked some grapes for Lois and I to
enjoy.
We were buddies.
During my visits I asked her did she know about William
being adopted? She said she didn't. I asked her about the story that William
killed a man in Franklin, North
Carolina. She said she didn't know
anything about that but it was probably untrue.
As research time went on I found out more of the details of
killing and the adoption.
William was the bastard son of Jason Henderson Hunter, so the
court of Macon County, declared, and his mother Rebecca Trammell died before
1850 and he was raised by his grandparents, Jacob and Polly Hogshead
Trammell. He did not murder someone
but his uncle Van Trammell did, over an argument about the Civil War and
William provided Van with a false alibi, which was proven wrong so a warrant
went out for his arrest for being an accessory to murder, so he skipped town
and changed his name to his paternal name.
I typed up a letter and sent all my uncles and other
interested parties, including Louis Hunter Carraway, my findings.
Lois called me up so mad she was sputtering. She told me she knew all that and that was
the only father she knew and she wanted
to carry that trashy information to the grave with her to protect his good
name. She said she had a some
correspondence between Jason and William recognizing their father son
relationship. I first instinct was that
wanted to see those letters but I let her rant and rave. And knew she hated me at the moment so much I
was not going to see those letters.
That is the trouble when doing family research: Not every family member is highly successful
and some of those who are did it my unscrupulous means.
Like her mother, Lois lived a long time, over 102 years. She is buried at Bascomb Methodist Church Cemetery,
near Woodstock.