About ten miles north of Dahlonega on Hwy 19 is a fork in
the road. With a big pile of rocks or stones. The body of Indian Princess Trahyla is under
those rocks. She lived nearby. She heard if she drunk a certain potion it
was give her eternal life. Well, the
proof is in the pudding. She is dead
under a pile of rocks.
Also, Princess Trahyla started a fad. A new superstition that travelers traveling
by, if they would throw a stone or pebble on the Princess’s grave they will
eternal youth. Again?
If you stayed on Hwy 19 you would enter Union County and go
over blood Mountain. On the way down you
would cross over The Appalachian Trail, see Volge State Park, and finally reach
Blairsville,.
If you took the left Fork you would be on Hwy 60. There you would so through the little town
Suches, and next a bigger town, Morganton.
In 1960 I got drunk, or tipsy, with Billy and Buddy. And ended up spending the
night at Buddy’s house, who lived on Page Street. I suppose I made arrangements with Larry to
pick me up at their house. Larry and
friends came and picked me up before midnight.
We had a plan.
Larry drove us through Dahlonega and turned left at Princess
Trahlyla’s stone grave, went a couple more miles and pulled over.
On one side of us was a mountain and the other side was a
cliff.
The bottom of the cliff was the root of our plan. Larry heard that at the bottom of that cliff
were many smashed cars. He heard the
locals would push their cars off the cliff at that point and then collect from
their insurance policy. Larry figured
there were probably some good auto parts we could salvage.
However, at that moment it was pitched black over the
cliff. We would have to wait for
daylight to come.
Anytime we had idle
time Larry would build a fire. We looked
around the edge of the woods and found kindling wood, logs, and all we needed. We built a big fire in the middle or the
road. We figured no fool would be driving
on it in he middle of the night.
We were sitting around the roaring fire talking and laughing
when I thought I heard the distant noise of a truck engine. I called my friends attention to the
noise. It was getting louder. Then we cold see two headlights going around
curves not far away.
We decided the only thing we could do is run!
A big truck was upon us as we scattered. The driver did not even apply his brakes, he
might have even stepped on the gas and plowed right through it. With burning logs rolling and red sparks
flying up in the black air.
I don’t know why we didn’t get the heck out of there. But we didn’t.
When daylight came Larry pulled out long ropes and cables
out of his trunk and we began to lower ourselves down on the ropes.
As I said, only a few hours before I was drunk. Now, I was dangling on a waving rope in
midair. I got sick, my head started
spinning and all I could do was hold on for dear life. I vomited.
Jenky was below me hanging on the same rope. My puke splattered on him. He hollered, but hung on. He did not see the humor in at that moment but
later he did.
At the bottom of the cliff there were a few cars turned all
which ways. But all he parts have been
stripped. A bunch of crooks beat us to our
plan.
Jenky died in a drag race a couple months later.
It also reminded me of an Atlanta Postal Maintenance guy named Mr. Wellborn. Mr. Wellborn worked at the Federal Annex in
Atlanta. He was an air conditioner
specialist. I was a clerk in the
maintenance department for a few months.
I was a clerk there when astronauts first made “One Step for Mankind” because
we were all kidding saying such an elaborate present for my birthday.
Anyway, back to Mr. Welborn.
He was from Blairsville and went there often to see his property. He also worked on my home air conditioner for
several years I remember he was easy
going and deeply religious.
One time on the way to see his property he pulled ovrer to
admire the valley. He stood on the edge
of a cliff admiring the view, God’s gift, when a car sped around the corner and
couldn’t make the curve and hit Mr. Wellborn’s car, which hit Mr. Wellborn and
off he cliff he fell. He lived, but
narrowly. He retired after that.
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