This is my humble attempt to preserve the memories of my family's history as passed down from my mom, Laverne Powers Cagle. Hopefully I will be given more stories by all my extended family who grew up in Chandler Springs.
Wednesday, December 25, 2013
School Programs
During the school year of 39-40, Mom was in a program at Talladega High (7th grade) and she was jumping rope and tap dancing with Eileen Miller. she forgot her jump rope because she was staying with Hop and Hellen. The PE and Science teacher ( Miss Bean) would not let her be in the program so Eileen had to perform alone. They had bought dresses alike. Mom's cost $.87 and they performed to "A Little Old Lady Passing By". Eileen's parents taught singing school at Chandler Springs church.
Tuesday, December 24, 2013
Riding the Rails
Mom's dad, Robert E. L. Powers, worked on the bridge crew for ABC Railroad, which is currently CSX. Because of his employment, his family had passes to ride the rails anywhere ABC traveled. The train was the primary transportation to town and points beyond. When mom was about 14 (1942) her sister Emma and husband Beck Beckwith lived in Americus Georgia. Another sister Grace and her husband Bill Camp lived near Brunswick, Ga. Bill was working as an electrician. They had come home to Chandler Springs to get their furniture. Mom returned with them to Brunswick. Bill and Grace lived upstairs in an oyster house. Grace sent Emma a post card saying that Mom was coming from Brunswick on her way home and to pick her up in Oglethorpe, Ga on a particular summer day. (Oglethorpe was the closest ABC station to Americus.) Mom arrived in Oglethorpe late (about midnight) to find no one was there to pick her up. The only other person in the station was the Station Master. About 2 AM, the Station Master concluded that no one was coming to pick her up, so he arranged with another line to transfer her to Americus. The train made an unplanned stop to pick her up. She only had a nickel, so Mom isn't sure how the ride was paid. When she arrived at Americus early the next morning, she made a call to Emma with her nickel. Mom had never used a phone before, much less a pay phone. She put the nickel in the phone and the operator came on and told her she should have waited until the party answered. Fortunately, Emma answered and came to pick her up. Later that day in the mail delivery, the post card announcing her travels arrived a day late. Now that really was snail mail!
Monday, August 26, 2013
Momo Powers
On August 8, 1889, one hundred and twenty four years ago, my grandmother, Annie Lola Horn Powers, was born. I am remembering my "Momo" days of walks on the mountain, gathering moss for the big tree by her back door, digging worms for fishing, and most of all her cinnamon toast. I am thankful for the rich inheritance of caring for others, strength in adversity, and faith in Christ which Momo entrusted to me and all of her family.
fishing at Horn's Lake early 1960's
Momo and Grandpa early 1940's
Momo Knew trees and plants because her aunt married Dr Jordan who took her with him and taught her herbs and trees. Folks used to call her for baby delivery in case the dr didn't get there.
Molly Kirk was her favorite aunt.
Used to pick "squirrel ears" for salve
Sunday, August 25, 2013
Country Store
Robert and Annie Powers owned the country store at Chandler Springs beginning in the early 1939's until it burned from an electrical fire in 1944. They sold gas and groceries. Mom said you could get back and forth to town and all around for a quarters' worth. Most of the cars that shopped there were A models and T models. You had to put the gas in the front. They sold cow, mule and dog feed. Also all types of groceries like flour, meal and hoop cheese. After the fire, the store was rebuilt. The store was rebuilt and operated by Emma (daughter) and Beck Beckwith first and then by Hop (son) and Helen Powers. They got electricity after 1947. Then they had a meat counter. The store was sold in the 1960's and eventually burned down, cause unknown.
Dale, Glenn, Kaye, Jean and Sue in front of the original store. We think this is Hop's 42 Ford.
Dale, Glenn, Kaye, Jean and Sue in front of the original store. We think this is Hop's 42 Ford.
Rebuilt Store
The Siblings
Mom was the youngest of six. They were in order of birth:
Walter (Hop)
Lucille
Grace
Emma
Raymond (Pete)
Laverne
Walter (Hop)
Lucille
Grace
Emma
Raymond (Pete)
Laverne
with Momo
The Climber
One day, mom missed me and couldn't find me. I was crawling, so I was less than a year old. She looked everywhere. She would call me and I would grunt, so she knew I was somewhere. She walked into the living room and looked up and I was sitting on top of the upright piano. She had no idea how I got up there. It's a wonder that I hadn't fallen! However, my love of climbing continued. When I was about 3, Daddy was fixing the roof of the house. I called his name and he looked around and saw me at the top of the ladder. Mom said it nearly scared him to death! Being a country girl, climbing must have been in my blood. My favorite memory of a young girl in Chandler Springs was climbing our plum tree and eating plums to my heart's content. I also liked to climb the chinaberry tree next to it. My climbing continued to Coleman Drive where I spent many days at the top of the pine tree in our back yard and in the mimosa in the front!
School
Mom started to school at Chandler Springs School where she attending the 3 room school for First through the 6th Grade. When she started school, they went to Mr Langley's store to buy paper and pencils. Mr Langley gave her a little pair of scissors. She thought she was rich! (Mr. Langley's store was on the Ashland Hwy just before the turn to Clairmont Springs). For the 7th grade, the Chandler Springs kids were bussed to Millerville. A few weeks after she started 7th grade, her dad had his appendix out. He started thinking about how far it was to Millerville and wanted her to stay with Hop and Helen and Grace and Bill in Talladega and attend school there. She would swap out who she stayed with, 3 nights with Grace and Bill, 2 with Hop and Helen, and vice versa and go home on the weekends. Grace and Bill lived on the highway near Bemiston and Hop and Helen lived in Bemiston where they all worked in the cotton mills. She rode the bus to school. The bus made 2 trips each morning and evening, taking only boys the first trip and only girls the second. She returned to Millerville for the 8th grade and then went to Little Heflin for 9th and Clay County High for 10th through 12th. She graduated in 1946.
Grace and Bill's house in Talladega. left to right - Gail Camp, Laverne Powers (about 14 yrs), Dale Jacobs in front, Bill Camp and Lucille Jacobs.
Laverne
Summers
There wasn't much to do as teenagers in the country, so a group of them (about 15) would climb the mountains for entertainment. When Mom was about 14, a group of them climbed up to the Pinacle and walk towards Horns Mountain fire tower. Their usual route would bring them down the mountain behind the store and they would stop by the spring for water. When they got to the spring, Marvin Brewer and Turner Sims had gotten there first and were cooling their feet in the spring! YUK! So they had to get their water from the branch.
The Pinacle
The Pinacle
Swimming and Falling
Twice, when she was little, Mom almost drowned. The first time was when she was about 2 years old and she was swimming with her siblings who were much older then her. They had put her up on a rock and would tell her to jump into the water with them catching her. She climbed up on the rock and jumped but she didn't realize they were not watching her. Emma and Lucille got to her first. They noticed her white hair floating when she was underwater and grabbed her as she went under.
The second time was before she started to school. Mom woke up from her nap and called for Mama. No one answered. She thought they might be at the spring, so she went to the creek and hollered for her. Getting no answer, she proceeded across the creek on a foot bridge. It had been raining and the creek was up. She made it to the spring, but no one was there so she started back across the foot bridge. She got dizzy and fell in. Momo and the kids heard her scream. It was said that Hop jumped a 5 strand barbed wire fence to get to her. He saw her floating down stream and told her to hold onto a bush on the edge of the water. She grabbed and held until he could get to her.
The second time was before she started to school. Mom woke up from her nap and called for Mama. No one answered. She thought they might be at the spring, so she went to the creek and hollered for her. Getting no answer, she proceeded across the creek on a foot bridge. It had been raining and the creek was up. She made it to the spring, but no one was there so she started back across the foot bridge. She got dizzy and fell in. Momo and the kids heard her scream. It was said that Hop jumped a 5 strand barbed wire fence to get to her. He saw her floating down stream and told her to hold onto a bush on the edge of the water. She grabbed and held until he could get to her.
Mom and Annie Jo
Mom was surrounded by family growing up, immediate and extended. She and her distant cousin, Annie Jo Wesley, were good friends and when they were 14 or 15 they took the bus to Op (or Enterprise) to visit family. They thought they were very grown up as they were wearing stockings for the first time. On their way home, they had a layover in Montgomery and decided to walk to the capital. However, it was raining and the rain and mud were making their stockings dirty so they decided to stay at the station. Mom says it was hard to keep them up, walking so much. They were rayon, not nylon.
Mom and Annie Jo used to sing together. At the store, there was a swing in the front and they would sit and sing. Mr. Ben Sawyer who delivered the gas, liked to hear them sing. One delivery he said, " I'm gonna get a Coke, y'all sing - I'm tired!" This was before the store burned on June 26, 1944 on Archie's birthday.
Thursday, July 11, 2013
Christmas
Mother said it was near Christmas when she was 4 or 5 (during the depression) and she was playing outside near the shed. She wandered into the shed and found a tricycle! She climbed aboard and came riding it out of the shed - proud as she could be. Momo told her that Santa Claus was hiding that tricycle in there and she better take it back quick before he found out! She immediately rode it back into the shed. The next day, she looked for it in the shed, but it wasn't there. At Christmas - she received that tricycle! She later learned that her oldest brother Hop had taken pieces of broken tricycles he found and had put them together and painted it to make it good as new for her. What love he had for her!
Wednesday, July 10, 2013
Tidbits
Tidbits from my mother-
My grandmother, Annie Lola Horn Powers, had her kidney injured in the 19teens when a train she was boarding lunged forward and slammed her into the door way. She received $25 for her injuries. This injury later led to her kidney removal in the 1930s. It was one of the first surgeries of its kind at the Citizens Hospital. She lived until the age of 81 (1889 - 1970).
Gail and Kaye had the hooping cough at the same time and stayed with Momo. They were both little. Kaye was about over it and Gail was still sick.
Grace and Bill lived across from the store when Gail was little. They both worked at the cotton mill. Gail would wake up in the mornings and come out on the porch and call. Mom would go over and get her. Once Mom was carrying Gail into the store and her foot got hung on some wire. She slung her foot, but it wouldn't come off. She slung again, and it hit the wall. It wasn't wire, but a rat snake which bit her. It didn't get infected, but later got dew poison which made it hard to walk when school started.
My grandmother, Annie Lola Horn Powers, had her kidney injured in the 19teens when a train she was boarding lunged forward and slammed her into the door way. She received $25 for her injuries. This injury later led to her kidney removal in the 1930s. It was one of the first surgeries of its kind at the Citizens Hospital. She lived until the age of 81 (1889 - 1970).
Gail and Kaye had the hooping cough at the same time and stayed with Momo. They were both little. Kaye was about over it and Gail was still sick.
Grace and Bill lived across from the store when Gail was little. They both worked at the cotton mill. Gail would wake up in the mornings and come out on the porch and call. Mom would go over and get her. Once Mom was carrying Gail into the store and her foot got hung on some wire. She slung her foot, but it wouldn't come off. She slung again, and it hit the wall. It wasn't wire, but a rat snake which bit her. It didn't get infected, but later got dew poison which made it hard to walk when school started.
Mom, Annie Jo Wesley and 2 of her brothers and Archie used to go fishing. They fished in every branch around. They caught a bunch of minnows, but never anything big rnough to take home and cook. But they always had fun.
Mom got her love of fishing from her mom. They always carried a line and Momo cut a pole from a bush. After every rain shower, Momo would always say - "you dug the worms- I'll get the line."
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