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                    <text>•

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THE WEEKLY OBSERVER
Established Au9ust 30, 1973
, Published Every Thursday
.
N.MainSt .
· Hemingway, S. c. 29554
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Car;olyn Smith ............. Publi sher
Gai
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W
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Johnson
.............
Editor
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Mildred Huqhes ....... News Editor
Cherri II Powell ..... ·.·: .. Advertisi ng

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The crowning was the
cul•r1i11ation of the annual
y
Day - Parents' Day activitie~
Id on the Converse· ca•npus.
Miss
Richardson
was
escort
by her co , .con- of students represent'
ea
of the four classes. · She
was crowned by her father.·
T
May ueen is
osen
anr1ually by the student b , for

' .

Director
Subscription Rates

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In Florence, Georgetown &amp;
W1lliamsburq Counties

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One Year ...................... S. so
Two Years ...................... 9.oo
Sex Months .... ·................ ~ 3 . SO
Outside F1or:ence, Geor9etown &amp;
Williamsburg Counties

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One Y ear . . . . . . . . . . .-. . . . . . . . . . 1o.oo

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Two V ears ..... _.............. 17 .00
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S•x Months . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 .00
All Subscripti ons Payable

tn Advance
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college and student b y.
·
ar on.is a senior at
C!or1verse major·
in E · h.
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Second Class Postage Paid At The

Post Ott ice In Hemin9way, S. c.
29554

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The queen and her court in Johnsonville High School's
''Miss Gold and Black''_ pageant held Tuesday night,
November 12, are (left to right): Sharon Hucks, fourth
runner-up; Gail Batchelor, second runner-up; Frankie
Miller, Miss Gold and Black, Renee Willis, fir~t runne1·up; and Cerise Eaddy, third. runner-up. Sharon is the

daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ladson Hucks; Gail is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thurmon Batchelor; Frankie
is the daughte1· of Mrs. Almetta Miller of Marion; Renee
is the daughter of M1·. and Mrs. Randolph Willis; and
Ce1·ise is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Mervin
Eaddy .
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                    <text>•

The Johnsonville Woman's Club has done 't heir part to
assist the JUMP Beautification Committee, of which
Billy Mace i .chairman, with their project of the year by
establishinll a mini park on the comer of Broadway
Street and Highway 41. The park was created under tile
direction of Helen Chapman, Conservation Chairman,
and Ann Sutcliffe, Co-Chairman and is planted witll
daylilies, Pampus grass, and Yucca witll gravel walks,
and features a concrete table and two benches, which
were donat d by Badger Hazen. The club has spent
approximately 200 on the project, and it is their wish
that, be ide being an attractive addition to the area
where once the old Methodist Church s
, citizens ...
might find it a lovely spot to set in the sun and relax or
travelers might stop to enjoy a bite of lunch. Left to right
are Mace, Mrs. Chapman, Barbara Miles, president of
the Johnsonville Woman's Club, and Mrs. Sutcliffe.
•

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                    <text>•

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singi11g blu&lt;'g1·ass 111usic t)IJ tit&lt;" weekt&gt;11&lt;ls.
II&lt;' 's bt•t•11 1·u1111i11g l\&gt;lid\vay Clea11t&gt;1·s i11 Jol111so11\•ille si11ce late
last su111111C"1'. 111 ()ctobe1·, It&lt;' added a lau11d1·0111a t 11ext &lt;lt,01· witl1
se,·e11spa1·kli11g11ew Speed Quee11 D1·ye1·s a11d 14 wasl1i11g 1nachi11es.
1·11&lt;' lau11d1·0111at is opei1 seve11 days a week a11d tl1e clea11e1·s six
da)'S a ,,·eek, but 011 a lot of tl1e weeke11µs, Ji1n111y is likely to he off
sc,111&lt;•wl1e1·e 1&gt;layi11g bueg1·ass 111usic with a gi·oup · called The
St,utl1la11d Bt&gt;ys. His lo\·e f01· blueg1·ass takes l1i1n all ove1· tl1e
l'()U11t1·y to festivals f1·0111 Flo1·ida to a place called Bea11 Blosso111,
Si11ct&gt; Ji1n111y got i11to tl1e lau1ld1·y a11d d1·y clea11ing busi11ess i11
J&lt;,l111so11\•ille.• J1e's bee11 co11ce11t1·ati11g 011 getti11g the wo1·d out to
folks that lie l1as so111e 11ew clea11i11g se1·vices available that \ve1·e11't
a,·ailable bt&gt;foi·e.

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tl1t• tla)·. Tl1e \Vasl1&lt;'1·ette is t&gt;l&gt;t.&gt;11 f1·t,111 7 a. 111. u11til 11p.111. daily. He
l1:1s t'\'t•1·ytl1i11g l'Usto111('1·s 11eecl, f1·c&gt;111 bleacl1 a11d dete1·ge11t to
s11a(.·ks c1f c1·acke1·s a 11d sc&gt;ft d1·i11ks.
1\11&lt;1 t)ccasio11ally, Ji1n111y will th1·0\v i11 a day of fi·ee d1·ying fo1·
&lt;tll t'l1stc,111C'1·s. Tl1l' 11ext f1·e&lt;' d1·yi11g day is l\1a1·cl1 23.
Wl1ile f &lt;&gt;lks a1·e doi11g tl1ei1· lau11d1·y, 01· \vl1ile they're di·oppi11g it
c1ff l&lt;&gt; l1a\'l' it dc&gt;11e, tl1ey 111igl1l 11otice that Jim1ny has tape by two
l&gt;lut•g1·ass big 11a111t"s, Flatt a11d Sc1·uggs. If you show any inte1·est i11
.Ji111111)·'s seco11d lo\·e, J1is 111usic. l1e 111ight eve11 show you the 11ewest
alhlt111 1·erc•1·d(•d b)' the Soutl1la11d Boys. He'll be glad to tell you all
abc,ut tl1t• 11C'xt feslival ltt•'s goi11g to, a11d lie n1ight eve11 pull out
sc1111c• blueg1·ass 111agazi11es f1·c,111 u11de1· the cou11te1· a11d point out
sc1111t• cir tl1l' big 11a111e blueg1·ass sta1-s 11e has played with in the past.

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•

Mayor Signs Proclamation
\

Mayor Connie DeCainps stopped by the Johnsonville Fire Department Monday to
sign a proclamation delcaring Fire Prevention Week Oct. 3-9, and is flanked by
Fire Chief Irby Stone, left, and Assistant Fire Chief Fred Weaver.

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In corporation with the l;leautification Committee of JUMP and the ''Pitch In.'~
Committee of the Johnsonville Woman's Club, Mayor E. L. Cox signed a
proclamation last Thursday proclaiming 1976 as Beautification Year in the City of
Johnsonville, and March 27, 1976 as ''Pitch In - Clean Up Day'' in the City of
Johnsonville, asking that all citizens become concerned with the preservation and
enhancement of the natural beauty and scenic qualities of the Greater
Johnsonville , Community. Noting that cleanliness is vital to the beauty and
appearance of the community, Mayor Cox asks that all citizens support this most
wor't hy and worthwhile cause. Looking on at the signing of the Proclamation are;
left to right, Connie Decamps, president of JUMP; William .L. Mace, chairman ~
J.U MP Beautification Committee; Barbara Miles, p'esident of .~ohqson
Woman's"Club '• and Ann Sutcliffe, Pitch In chairman for the Woman'sClab.

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                    <text>•

---- - - --

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Cookout Honors

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Miss Joyce Lea McElrath
and Franklin E. Hanna, Jr. ,
whose wedding will be a social·
event of Friday, September 21.
were honored with a cook out
on Saturday. September 8,
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jack
L. Marsh, Jr. Associate hosts
. were Mr . and Mrs. Jack
Patterson and Mr. and Mrs.

Mrs. Mary Jane McAlister,

one of the pioneer citizens of
the Hemingway area, will
celebrate her nintieth birthday
on Sunday, September 30.
Mrs. McAlister was b orn
Mary Jane Hanna, on

at

September 30, 1883, the oldest

of seven children, to the late
Benjamin and Elizabeth
Parsons Hanna, in pretty much
the same community wherE
she lives today. She is the Qnl)
living child of that union. Her
father was married twice
following her mother's death
and there were seven half
•brothers and sisters.
Mrs . McAlister receiveel her
education in a small one room
school house in the same
community, ~eferred to as the
Matthews School.
In 1900 she was married to J.
C. &lt;Clirtt &gt; McAlister. They had
a large family of nine children:
Lillie M. Thompson, Winnie B.

Aque Harrelson.
Guests were served a supper
of hamburgets, hot dogs,
potato chi~ , cake and cokes.
The party was attended by
twenty couples.
The honoree bride and
groom-elect were presented
with a platter in their casual

.•

members.

commodities freely, and
assisted in cburdl suppers and
other projects to 1et the church
organized and the first
all
b•ildi"I constructed,
.
M s.
Tbomp on
a
Widowed In 19SS, but CODtin
tn 1iva tn
hlch sbe
husband from 1927
death. H BOD,
, llv
with her. Her daughter, I JJJte,
~au1e hnmP Alf!Ven years 10
when •t becam Im
tlve
that Mrs. McA ater have

orse

somone to care for her. The
County Health Nurse visits her
at least once a month and-it is

not necessary that she leave
home anymore, even for a
doctor's visit.
Although aged and frail, a
good part of ner day is spent up
and aoout in the house. Her
biggest pleasure these days is
. watching television, and she
perfers the soap operas to the
Watergate investigation. She
enjoys
company
and
appreciates anyone wyo drops
in to spend some time with her.

While

money was not plentiful, the
McAllsters gave of their far111

china.

•

MRS. MARY JANE
. McALISTER

Thompson, Janie Mae Scott,
Hazel Witt, Briscoe, Thomas,
and Albert McAlister. Two.
sons, Furman and Hillie
McAlister, are both deceased.
She also boasts of 21
grandchildren, 23 great
grandchildren, and 3 greatgreat grandchildren.
Mrs. McAlister
.. and her late
husband farmed in the same
comm unity near Brunson
Crossroads
west
of
Hemingway ~I their married
lives. They were ardent church
workers as long as age and
health
permitted.
They
assisted in the founding of the
First Baptist Church in -the
4
then young and growing
l 1h cups
4
settlement of Hemingway, and
t/ tsp.
1/8 tsp.
records show they were both~~~.., 2 cups

charter

•

3/4. cup

Serves 6
Eggs
Milk

Salt
White pepper
Gratea ~msiein
cheeae
Critp bacon piecet
(fried and

crumbled)
1 9·incb Pie abell(unba eel)

1 cup RUFFLES brmad
potato chips (
t
m•••ted
etlwhlq)

-·
--·

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Beat-.
Ucbtly.
l
.._

lh IL Top l&amp;h
RUFFL brand ~to
k• at 350d...- •
mlnu

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On Saturday, September 29,
at 9 a.m. there will be a

registered Appaloosa Horse
Show
at
the
Eastern
Agriculture l4~air GrolDlds in

Florence.
This is a point show for the

South Carolina Appaloosa
Association and also a point
show for the South Eastern
Appaloosa Regional
Association.
The Appaloo~ is the oldest
ttaceabl~ breed of horse on
earth and is also noted as being
the most colorful of all horses.
· Horses will be at this show
from at least four states.
Admission to this show. is free.

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                    <text>Our Human Heritage

•

'

By WILLIAM H. CHANDLER

ditor's Note: The third and final
gment about the Prospect area will be
ted in The Weekly Observer in early
· . Publication of the third inment was postponed in order to
blish this week's article which
esponds with Bicentennial events
arring at this time.
The year 1780 was probably the most

tful one in the struggle for inndence in South Carolina.
In early September, 1780, British
es were actively moving into the

•

•

•

'

•

loyalist militia commanded by Col. John
Coming Ball and Col. Joseph Wigfal had
also been called in to Georgetown. And,
in a final attempt to purge the area .. of
insurrection, Major James Wemyss w.a s
ordered · to lead the Sixty-Third
Regiment, reinforced by Lt. Col. John
Hamilton's loyalist
militia,
into
Williamsburg.
Following Cornwallis' order ••to put
a good face on · things," Wemyss
desolated the country between Black
River and Lynches River, an area
seventy miles long and as much as fifteen m'iles wide. Homes were plundered
and burned, livestock was killed and
•

to the Great White Marsh on the Waccamaw River in North Carolina.
Marion's men did not fare well.
About ten days had passed by the time
Major James arrived at the Great White
Marsh to find many of his compatriots
suffering from malaria. This situation
was compounded by the news he brought
of the destruction wrought by Wemyss .
However , Major James also
reported that the ''wantonness and
cruelty' ' of Wemyss and his command
had so enraged the population that many
men were ready to take the field. Marion

•

The militia
came .and
went based on
.
..
.
the
dictates
of
their
family
and
economic
.
situations, their inclinations, and thei~ consciences.
,

,.

•

msburg area. This activity was
y due to the fact that Lord Cornis was preparing for a major effort
e British operations in North and
th Carolina, and the forces of
cis Marion posed a definite threat
the British stronghold at Georgetown.
Col. Balfour, commander of English
es at Charleston ordered Major
es Moncrieff and a battalion of the
Regiment of Georgetown. The

provisions were destroyed.
It was during this invasion that the
church at Indiantown was burned as a
''se~ition shop.'' Marion's amazing
intelligence network reported that
resistance was hopeless---it was obvious
that his forces were far outnumbered.
Allowing most of his militia to return to
their homes and leaving Major James
and ten hand-picked men to gather
information, Marion fled with a few men

,.
{

('ontinued to Page 7

,

go

decided to make his move. On. September 24, 1780, Marion broke camp.
Early in the evening on September
28, his troop had reached Witherspoon's
Ferry on Lynches River where they
were joined by Capt. James and his ten
men, Capt. Henry Mouzon, Lt. Joseph
Scott and some of the militia. Some of
Marion's group were near exhaustion
but ''finding his men unanimous for
battle, he gratified their wishes,'' They
headed for Black Mingo.
Col. John Coming Ball with approximately 50 men had moved from
Georgetown and camped at the Red
House, the tavern of Patrick Dollard. At
this strategic point near Shepherd's
Ferry on Black Mingo, the tories could
control traffic on the creek as well as the
post road which passed nearby. Ball was
alSD close enough to Kingstree and Indiantown to move his troops if the need
arose .
It was nearly midnight when Marion
arrived at Black Mingo where he approached the bridge at Willtown.
Historians have widely speculated on
Marion's inability to swim; however, it
is doubtful that this condition affected
his decision to cross the bridge over
Black Mingo. Marion had successfully
forded many streams on horseback.
Nevertheless, the approach to the bridge

•

.
.
THE WEEKLY OBSERVER, fteinlngway, S. C., Thursday, March 25, 1976 Pat
CoaUnued from Page I
,
.
.
---- -- -------~---~--------~----~-----~-------------~------~~~~---~

was a muddy causeway and the bridge
itself was of loose planks. '!'he sound of
the cavalary crossing the bridge was
heard in Ball's camp and a warning shot
was fired. At the sound of the shot,
Marionadvancedhistroopatfullgallup.
About three hundred yards from the
ferry, most of the troop dismounted.
Cai&gt;t. Thomas Waties led the ''corps of
supernumerary' officers·'' to attack the
Red Ho••se, two companies under Col.
Hugh Horry charged to the right, and the
small cavalry supported the attack from
the left.
Dorry's men were the first to see
action. The cunning Col. Ball had no
intention of being trapped in the Red
House. He had deployed his men near an
open field between the tavern and the
$\Vamp, leaving open an avenue of
escape.
The tories, in fo1·111ation with guns
primed, waited until Horry's infantry
waswithincloserange. Their first volley
killed Capt. Logan who had ridden that
day all the way for the Great White
Marsh to join Marion; Capt. Mouzon and
Lt. Scott were so badly wounded that
they saw no further service during the
war.
·
. Horry's men falling back in con- ,
fusing were rallied by the gallant Capt.

James. But hi~ ti!11e.' Waties had come
claimed the spirited sorrel gelding
coun~~ was suffer,ing . from th
up on the Tories right flank and the
which had belonged to the Tory com· ·· .
atroc1t1es of Wemyss raid .. And .s
Tories fl~d in dism·ay for the shelter of
r,nander:.
,,
· Marion all?":'ed ..them leave,' 1mplor1
Black Mingo swamp. ~~ter Horry later
· The an~mal was named ''Ball and
them to reJo~n him at Snow s Island
commented that the f1r1ng was at such
served · Marion well through . the
·soon ~s possible. . .
.
close range that ''wads fell on either
remaining years of the war. · Parso~
· ·.
lt1sextremelyd1ff1~ult1n~~seda
side.''
Weems states in a rare note of humor
.of a structured profession.al military t
The victory for .the Americans was
that ." After this ,event Marion adopte~
unders~and . the exploits of o
cos~ly, ~ut according to Horry, the
the precaution, w~eneve~ about the
revolut1~nary fore~athers.
.
Tories did n~~ stop when they ~eached
cross ~ bridge by night, with an. enemy .
Marion .h~~ little legal author1
Geor~etown though twenty mil~s for
near, to ·cover the planks with . the ·
over the m1l1~a men ":ho com
the. fiel~ of battle; ~ut. they continued
blankets· of his men. But he generally
almost the entirety of his fo~e. Th
their .flight, not th1nk1ng themselves
preferred fords; where they could . . · came and went based on the dictates
safe, until they got the Santee River
possibly be had, to bridges.'' History
their family and economic situat·o~
between him and them.'' William
leaves no doubt, however, as to ''Ball's'.'
their inclina'tions, and their conscience;
Doxei~ James wrote that ''t~ los~ on
ability to swim.
It is to these detern1ined men th·
both sides was nearly on~ thi~d, kill~d
Five of the prisoners taken at Black
we owe our freedom. In recording
a!1d wounded.'' Recent hisl?rians in·
Mingo joined Marion's Brigade and
events of the skirmish at Black Ming
d!cate that ~wo of the Americans were
. ''behaved 'Yell afterwards'' and the
we pay tribute· to Francis Marion wli
killed and eight others were .wounded. · · others appear to have been· humanely
maraculously organized a band of loc
Ball left three dead a~d thirteen had
· . treat.ed. After the encounter, Marion • fa,r1ners into an effective attack fore
been woun?ed or taken prisoner. several
probably planned to attack Col. Wigfall
The same Marion could so quickly find
others died on the retreat to
who was camped nearby at Black River
in his heart to forgive his Tory prisone
Georgetown.
.
.
.Church.
TheS.e are the memories · which ha
~~ Tories had outnumbered
· . I.Ii~ °:l~n were anxiou~ ~o return ·to
kept alove .the legend of the ''Swa
Marion s men, ,yet there were. less ~an
their·families al)d homes since the whole
Fox.••
fifty of them and the entire skirmish
. . ··
,
· ·
lasted approximately fifteen .minutes . .
. .
The American8 collected muskets
and ammunition abandoned by· the
Tories in ,their flight. Several hor~s
were also taken. Among these Marion

0
•

e

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                    <text>l'oullnulld lronl 1•11ge a

ols
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ref~e 1:5 b:!&lt;:=e•'llJlh; """''"- E:dt

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know how long h will bo ubl to
cur for hhna If . bul h will
111ult1ttd11 his homo u long 1 ~ h
" ho s hou lth und pr aonc of
mind onoush lo do It ." II
do sn 'l wunt to b 11 burd n to
unyono. ond If h doo n't cull on
th m tis long us h con h Ip It.
h re ls their 1&gt;utl oc with him
might lust loogor . Noting that

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Wll6 young. h
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so1n ono g ta sick. th r Is no II rnln swny on duy . nnd
Lilli lo luko ·ur ~ of t.11 n1; so huvhig 01n Um to spur h
lh
hospll11l1 11•tl . "Whon I w nltoul wy 's offlc n11ctgot
wus c11111lt)IJ up, " ho suitl . "wh n him lo mok him two pop rs.
son'I •on got lck th hous wus on for l\ornp ind on for
full of frl nds nnd neighbors. Donni . On day ho show d
und thoy dltln 't com
1upty I\ 1np his. nod oft r r odlng It.
hund d Ith r. 'l'h y bi·ought h hond d It b!1 k to hhn und
so1u thing with which to sold . " Put Uils up ond k p It."
nourish you. But oil that hns When I onnl wns hom n xt. he

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•

'

No Fuel Shortage Here

The barn yard at t.he hon1e or Let&gt; \Vlllian1s ls a1uply stocked "ith fire \VOod aud
p~lts of fat lighlwoud stun\ps to be used for khtdling.

.

..,

Want Ads

NOW IS THE
E
DESIGNATE Y . UR

Grist-1\fill
t.1•1· Willia 111s flash1·s a g1·11th• s111ih• as ht• 1ll'StTib1'8 lhf· op&lt;•rallon of his corn in ill.
onr of a h·11 lo ht· found in lh1• a1'1'11.

showed h r Ill on ll hod fixed
for h r. Sh 1· nd It. hClnd d It
bo k to hhn ond eold, · · ~' Ind you
11 good womon to oro for you
ond th llous und n1ok you
hoppy . nnd I'll be glnd to glv
h r U1ls." II puts h re up. loo •
ond It still put up! II pr r r·il
living 111011 • II says h g ls up
anywh r from 2 lo n::io n. m ..
ond o to bod wh n ho g ts
sl py . II tur11s on th
television ond build o fire. or
docs o thousond other thing
wh n It suits him ond there Is no
on to comploln. II hoot Ills
horne with on open flrcplao
bcctiuso ho cnn't tidjusl to dry
hoot. nnd draws his wotor f1·om
on open w II. lie sold h und his
wife hod planned to put In wotor
works whon they gathored the
crop th year she died. but she
w11sn't there to enjoy that with
him. so ho never bothered .
Born Februory 15. IUU5.
Williams hos seen a lot of
changes In his day . !lo
remembers when tobacco was
first Introduced to this part of
the country . and farming
practices were a lot different
then than they are today. When
tobacco was first i;-lanted
locnlly . U1ere were 1lot dibeuses
and such to deal with. and It wos
not necessary to even poison tlle
plants. Before tobacco came tu
be planted. farmers planted a
little corn nnd cotton. and that
wus about the extent of their
crops . Ile has turned the
farming operation over to his
son. but continues to work
almost every day helping him in
one wny or another.
.
Ile still gets a lot of pleasure
out of grinding corn for people
with his little electric mill. lie
has no schedule. but grinds
anytime anyone brings corn to
hiln, weekdays or Saturdays.
By grinding in the week. he does
not have such a heavy load on
the weekend. You don't have to
make an appointment to see
him either. as he is always
some where 'arowid the place.'
Ile doesn't grind an awful lot
like he used to do. as his electric
bill. for which he hns a seperate
meter. seldom rwis over $3 a
month . Williams ls not
particular about his pay. either.
lie will take money or will toke
corn In exchange for his
service. just whichever suits his
custo1ncr. He is not doinl! It for
u living. but more a~ an
uccomodnllon.
lie doesn't travel n1uch. lie
goes to ltemingwuy with Kemp
ubout once n week to get u llltle
groceric~ . &amp;lid he h11s11 't been
lo• :corg&lt;'I0\\'11 in "hout u )Cur .
.. , n1ostly st11~ around the pince
\ \ ' !l

\ ,1•1•' . • \11 • :-;;1i 1l ,

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                    <text>Page 2-THE WEEKLY OBSERVER, Hemingway, S. C., Tbunday, January 29, 1976

•

•

•

ore
order, on the northern route.
Cargoes were picked up on the
return trip from Cheraw.
Lawrimore recalled that a
Capt . D. R. ''Ed'' Smith opened a
saw mill at Smith's Mill, from
whence it derived its name , where
he also operated a store and post
office . He had about 300 employees
and a regular town. It was
scattered over a large area and
was not as big as Hemingway .
Capt. Smith sawed only cypress
timber and shipped the lumber to
Richmond, Virginia for sale. The
lumber was shipped to Georgetown
by schooner . He brought in Yankee
Negroes to load the schooner, a
task which took two to three weeks,
and sometimes• a month. The
hatches of the schooner were
loaded first to prevent the boat
from turning over. The last
schooner up the river was a fourpoint vessel, and it took a long time
to load this boat.
At Georgetwon, the schooner
was pulled out into Winyah Bay by
a tug boat. There the tug cut loose
and the schooner depended on the
wind to carry it into New York
where it would unload its cargo of
shingles and lumber.
Capt. Smith's son was the tug
boat captain, hauling cypress logs
from Cheraw.
Lawrimore recalled that he
butchered and sold beef at Smith's
Store, which was operated by Ed
Grizzle, where turpentine and
cross ties were also bought. He
recalled killing a steer and taking
it to the store on one of his rounds.
While there, Capt. Smith said,
''Miley, one thing I want you to
make sure of is that you never
bring me any ''bwl'' beef.'' He
''indicated'' that he wQuldn't, only
to be told the next week that that
was the ''best beef I have ever
eaten.''

By MILDRED B. HUGHES

When Miley K . Lawrimore of
Hemingway reaches back into his
mind's eye to weave a colorful
tapestry of the bygone era, he spins
quite a yarn and keeps his listeners .
captivated with tales of first hand
knowledge.
Lawrimore
is
one
of
Georgetown
County's
senior
citizens , having been born May 26,
1885 at the Lawrimore Plantation
about three miles from Pee Dee
River.
Some of his first memories are
that of hearing the old steamboats
blow their loud horns as they
plowed back and forth, up and
down the Pee Dee River. He said
recently that he remembered
hearing the shrill blast one day as a
little tyke, and not knowing what it
was, he inquired of his father as to
the source of the noise.
His father told him of the two
big
riverboats,
Ethel
and
Merchant, which were the means
of transportation between Cheraw
and Charleston.
.As he grew older, he learned
that these boats would pass each
other at the widest part of the
river. The Merchant was piloted by
Captain Hawkins, and the Ethel's
captain was Lawton Poston. The
boat headed up the river would
begin sounding its horn about Pitch
Landing and continue until they
met. The boat without any cargo
would slow down and let the loaded
boat pass.
The old steamboats burned
lightwood, Lawrimore recalls. He
said after he became a yoqng man
he contracted to furnish the wood
needed at the Pine Bluff stop, while
other men, including ''Uncle''
Rollin Pope, Adkissen Bruroton,
and others would put it at other
landings. He recalled that he would
have three ''hands'' in the woods
cutting the wood while he hauled.
They would· supply eight stacks in
four foot cords at a cost of $2.50 or
$3.00 a cord for the trip up the river
and for the return trip. That was
enough wood to take the boat into
Charleston.
The boats' cargo, Lawrimore
said, was fertilizer and they ran
both day and night. The run up the
river was made t.wlce a "week
during the busy season and once a
week when things were slack.
Yuahanna was the main stop
for these boats, but they also made
stops at Peters Field, Pitch
Landing,
Ports Hill,
Ray's
Landing, Pine Bluff, Brower
Landing, Smith Mill, Ellison
Ferry, Stone's Landing, and
Godfrey's Ferry Bluff, in that

•

•

'

Capt. Smith never paid his
laborers in money, Lawrimore
said, only in tickets which couldn' t
be spent anywhere but in his store.
Capt. Smith had his men build
an ''ice pit'' up under a hill in the
bank of the river. He then had
some ''hands'' go up the river
where the ice had frozen to a
thickness of four inches. When the
boats would break up the ic~, the
hBna would cull it out, bnng it
bacK, -and store·it in the pit for use
the next summer. Lawrimore said
remains of the pit can be seen
today.
·
He recalled that Capt. Smith
had an argument with a man over
some timber and both men pulled
guns. When the shooting was over,
the other man lay dead. There ·was
a trial in Marion and Smith was

•
•

acquitted , but this ended the
Capt . Poston was staying at the
lumber business
for
Smith
hotel to arrange for him to haul the
~ although he stayed on for several
timber. Capt. Poston was anxious
years . When Capt. Smith went
to make the haul , but it would take
broke, Capt . Thompson continued
, three cords of wood to get the boat
to keep the post office open at
from Pine Bluff into Georgetown.
Smith's Mill and the steamboats
Also, there was a wedding about to
take place of a prominent ·young
continue to run up and down the
river.
woman of the Poston Community
- After
Gapt.
T~ompson ,
that night, and Capt. Poston
returned to his home in Marion, Ed
wished to be present for the
Grizzle became post master, a job
ceremony. It was agreed that he
he held until the post office moved
would stay over ;inother night for
to Hemingway.
the
wedding,
thus
giving
Lawrimore also
talked of
Lawrimore time to get home and
Tanyard, a taning place when his
get the wood cut and to the landing
father was little, at the mouth of
by the next day, when Capt. Poston
Little Pee Dee. The central
was to meet him at Pine Bluff.
building was a hotel where people
That was the last time the old
ate as they came down the river . .
steamboat ever plowed the waters
Turpentine was the chief crop in
of the Pee Dee.
that day and area as tobacco is
Today, Lawrimore owns Pine
today. People also carried cow
Bluff, while International Paper
hides to Tanyard to be tanned and
Company owns Smith's Mill.
shipped them from there to
Lawrimore, a man with
markets where they were made
extensive farming interests, was a
into shoes.
mail carrier for Smith's Mill in the
He recalled that his father was
old days . He would travel a star
a soldier in the Confederate A1·111y.
route to Ard's Crossroads, where
While be · was away fighting,
Seph Venters would meet him and
General Sherman's boats would
carry it on to Prospect Church
. come up the river where they
where he \Vas met by the next man.
stopped at all landings to get the
He retired from farming last
honey and meat. Lawrimore said
year at the age of 90 after suffering
his grandfather would take their
a light stroke in May 1975, and a
meat and carry it into the woods to
slight one before that.
hide it from the Union Ar1ny .
He is married to the ·ror1ner
The last trip the steam boats
Ellen Matthews. They are the
made up the river was March 24 ,
parents of four children, W. J.
1915. The trains were now running
&lt;Dubl Lawrimore, Mrs. Luther
into He i gway from Ha let!•'N'._~· ..- - - 'l ary lCa rY,n&gt; Daniel, both o(
• C: to . Georgetow"n and us ff_ie
· 11einiflgway,
Mrs.
Raymond
riverbb&lt;i'ts were'"'no longer needeO.
(Janicel Duke of Columbia, and
Lawrimore recalled that he
Mrs. Freddie CEllenl Young of
had 50,000 feet of timber cut at Pine
Myrtle
Beach,
all
college
Bluff and needed to get it to
graduates with Dub funishing
Georgetown shortly after that
Presbyterian College at Newberry
date . The Ethel was tied up at .
and the girls finishing Coker at
Ellison Ferry waiting to get a load
Hartsville. Also to add much joy to
of cargo, so as to make the trip
his life at 91, and the most avid
back into Georgetown profitable.
listeners as he weaves his yarns.
He made the trip to Poston where
are his 14 delightful grandchildren .

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                    <text>•
•

•

•
•

Two John~onville CJirea
students
received
their
Bachelor of Arts Degree during
Commencement exercises held
. recently at Converse College.
They are: Mona S. Burris,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W.E.
Burris, of Route 2; and
Frances Diane Howard,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Duane Howard, both graduates
of Jolmsonville High School.
Mona maiored in English
with a related field in Art.
'
While at Converse, she was
active as Business Manager of
the Conversationalist (the
campus newspaper ), on Snow
Court, on the Montgomery
Board, in Palmetto Players, on
the May Court, and as Senior
Representative to the Sudentf·,aculty Relations Board.
Diane,
A
Psychology
•1·1ajor, was active at Converse
as President of Cudd Dormitory, and as a member of the
Athletic Association, and the
House Board.
Dr . Robert T. Coleman, Jr.,
President of Converse presided
at
the
Commencement,
marking the close of the
college's 90th academic
session. The Honorable Ernest
F. Hollings , United States
Senator from South Carolina,
delivered the Co1111nencement
Address.
•

Converse College is an indepehdent, liberal arts college
for women, with a professional .
school of music.

Mona S . Burris

Frances Diane Howard
•

,

•

•

m
•

•

Captain Henry E. Pasley, of the U.S. Air Force, 'recently
flew into Stuckey Airport to visit his parents Mr. and
Mrs. James L. Pasley, Sr. and his many friends in the
Donnelly Community. Captain Pasley is a Specialized
Missile Controller stationed at Tinker Air Force Base,
Oklahoma. He is cuITently on temporary duty in Japan.

_ _. . . ._ ~---~---rt
___,n.._,.._.._.~'-"'n....

n°1•u

I.ft

tn~tnwn

nf

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                    <text>•

•

• •

HEMINGWA ·

Johnsonville Cub Scouts
:\le111bers of Jol111so11,·ille C11b Scout Pack ,121 asse111ble i\lo11da)' are (back ro\v,
left to rigl1t &gt;: \\'ill llaselde11. To11y Ha1111a. Pl1il La11gle)' . \Valt Pa1·ke1·. a11d Ti111111y
Baxie)·; (fro11t ro\\' ): Gal')' Coope1·. Lee PO\\•ell. l\Iike Lac)'. Billy C11sl1111a11. a11d
Be11jie i'\lcCall.

Hemingway Boy Scouts

Johnsonville Boy Scouts

•

See11 decorati11g tl1e f1·011l wi11dow of the OBSERVJ&lt;:R office duri11g Boy Scout
\\'eek are He111i11g1vay Troop :1s.i 111e111bers (left to rie:ht&gt;: Al G1·ie1·, Ricky Fosl1ee,
Joey Lewis, Joey Parso11s. Josepl1 Ja111es. George Huggins, A11dy Newell, Ja111es
Dukes, Kelly G1'ier, Ja111es Pa1·so11s, Scotty Joye, Cliff Harmo11, a11d Nor1na11
Stickey.

•

So111e of the 111e111bers of Joh11so11ville Boy Scout Troop 421 got togeth'
l&gt;ictu1·e last 11·eek. Tl1ey are (fro11t 1·ow. left to right): David ~1ace. 1!J
l,a 11gley, Dua11e llicks. Jaso11 Stuart, Jody Hardee and Robert \\'hil!;
ro11· &gt;: i\litcl1 Baker, Ver111111 Bartlett, Jeffrey Booker. and David Cushm11
•

•

Discover Prull

..Jcouts

Scout Skaters
He111i11g\vay Cub Scouts Er\\'i11 Ne\1·ell. Do1111ie Dre\ver, Je1·ry Matthews. Da.rryl
Foshee. Jeri')' Po\vell. Jol111 Ta1111er, Fl)•1111 l\IcCutcheo11, Jeffre)' Rogers. R1c~y
Bass. and SJ1a1111011 Da11iel. a11d \\'eblos Ti111111)' Huggi11s, Robbie Po\vell, Fra11k1e
Hu11le1-. Do1111ie Bre\1·e1', Joey Ne\vell, a11d Luke Roge1·s all 1ve11t 1·oller skati11g as
pa11. of their Scout \\'eek acti1•ities.

Continued from Page I
montl1 if· the weather permits.
1'hey also attend summer camp
for a week each year at Camp
Coker. and they are planning a
~O-mile canoe trip this Spring.
And like the Johnsonville troop.
they are active in community
and Scouting affairs. and plan
an exhibit at ''Expo ·75•• in
l\1arch.
~'oshee said that he has six
boys 1vho will be eligible for
election to the &lt;&gt;rder of the
Arro1v this year. though only
t1vo can be chosen.
lleming1vay also has a ne1v
Cub Scout Pack. with 10 Cubs
&lt;8-9 years oidl and 8Weblos&lt;10
year old l in Pack 3~8 .
1'he Cubs. led by Den Mothers
Jimmie Ne1\iell and Judy

Brewer and Den Chief Joseph
!!ones &lt;a Boy Scout who h,elps
withthe Cubsl. are all ready to
receive their Bobcat pins. their
first step in Cub Scouting.
1'hey have so far participated
in the Hemingway Christmas
Parade. ·and visited the fire
station. the police station. and a
local egg-processing plant.
''We've been going so much we
haven't had much time to \York
on projects." said one of the
Den Mothers. but they are
planning several things-.
including a Pinewood Derby
hand-build model car race in
April and their Blue and Gold
Banquet in March. where they
will receive the awards they
have earned over the year . In

rate

addition. the leaders plan to
have some kind of project every
month .
The Webios. under leaders
David Stuckey, Chuck Hunter,
Bobby Powell. and Jerry
Har1veil. met t1vice each month
with active fathers in the Scout
Room of · the Hemingway
Methodist Church . As they are
preparing to enter Boy Scouts
1vhen they reach the age of 11 .
they 1York mainly on Scouting
skills and earn badges. such as
music. 1Yhich they all recently
passed. and engineering \Yhich
they are now ail working on . In
addition. they are planning a
camp-out this Spring. with all
the boys' fathers invited .
Johnsonville 's Cub Scout

I

Time Capsul1

•

I I

Pack ~21 has 18 boys enrolled in
three dens: Den one. led by
l\1rs. George Baxley and Mrs.
Doretha Haselden. assistant ;
Den 2. led by Mrs. Ella Cooper
and Gary Cooper. assistant ;
and Den 3. led by Mrs. Davis
Langley and Mrs . Mary
Langley . assistant . David
Langley is the Cubmaster.
Some of the activities the
Cubs have been involved in are
a cooking contest. 1vhere each
boy prepares a cake. cookies. or
some other desert with help
only
from
his
father.
participation in ·'Expo ' 7~.
where the dens made replicas of
Snow's Island and Stumphouse
l\1ountain and gathered a rock
collection from ail over the

state &lt;this . their first entry. won
a top award last yearl. and
outdoor picnic with softball and
hot dogs ; and a
Camp Coker
father-son day .
According to Langley the
Cubs are looking forward to the
sam kind of activities this year.
including Expo '75 and another
cooking contest .
Langley was quick to give
credit 1vhere it is deserved.
''We've fortunate to have some
real fine Den Mothers,' ' he
said. ''There's just no way it
can work without them ."
The Cub Scout Packs and the
Boy Scout Troops in both
llemingway and Johsnonville
are sponsored and supported by
the Lions Clubs of the two
towns .

l

WITHOUT~

CRASH DIETS
OR PAY NOTH!

Haw you can belp Jll1
111 wllh an• of ~· Ill,
available wilho•lf.':
The remarkable ,_..
Diet Plan makeS l&lt;l ·
continuous actioo ~
their special farnt~l ~
release doses.
plan thal !els ~o 11
3 delightful snaclSdi
pounds and incil!S

and::;

-strenuous exercises.
4
I nl'C 10

20,i

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                    <text>•

•

- ···

. •• ..
.,_

..

'

•
•

'

•

...
•

.'·'

' .~·

•

•

•

•

•

•

1

1'111·ee lle111i11g\\·.a y a1·ea Guardsmen, I to r, Specialist Fourth Class Charles R.
(),\·e11s. SCiT I\le1·ridan P. ('ar·ter, and SP4 Lester B. Stone, Jr., completed a
1·egio11(ll 1·ec1·u·ite1· school held at the Sumter National Guard Armory recently ..
l{ec1·uite1·s Badges " ·e1·e presented by LTC John M. Hilliard, Commander, 151
:\1·tille1·y Ci1·oup upo11 co111pletion of the course, Sunday, February 13. Recruiters
a1·e. a1&gt;1&gt;oii1ted by l\Iajo1· General R. L. Mccrady, the Adjutant General of South
('a1·oli11a. f.,01·111e1· Guard and pri~r service personnel, as well as individuals
\\·itl1out 1&gt;1·io1' se1·vice a1·e being contacted by the new recruiters as part of a
state\\·ide 1·ec1·uiting campaign being conducted by the National
Guard.
For
in,
fo1·111atio11 about ) our local National Guard Unit, call your local arm·ory and ask
fo1· ''11e of tl1ese ''ho111etown Guard recruiters'' or ask the fulltime Guardsman on
dut.}' about the 111a11y benefits available as a member of the National Guard.
1

'

•

•

••

~

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                    <text>Donald Ray Gaskins , better made of three or the victims . He
known locally as Junior Parrott Is specifically charged with the
of Prospect, was charged murder of Johnny Sellers, 38,. of
Monday with three coWJls of North Charleston on or about
murder In the bizarre lncldent June 22, 1974, John Henry
where six bodies were found Knight, 15, and Dennis Bellany,
burled In three shallow groves 28. Knight and Bellamy, half
In the Prospect community last brothers ~hose address was
Thursday
and
Friday . listed as 1us Emden Street In
According to the latest reports North Charleston, have been
two additional bodies were missing from their home since
discovered Tuesday morning October 10. 1975.
within a mile of the first burial
Also charged with the three
site.
counts of murder ware Walter
Gaskins, In his forties, was In Leroy Neely, 30 of North
the Central Correctional Charleston. who had been held
Institute CCCI&gt; in Columbia in the Florence Detention
where he had been placed Center as a material witness,
following his arrest In Sumter and who Is believed to be the
County late Irr November on Clll' informer who led officers to the
theft charges and contributing wooded area about a mile south
to the delinquency of a minor . of highway 341 on the outskirts
He had been listed as a "prime of a corn field where the three
suspect" by authorities since shallow 1 unmarked graves
the bodies were unearthed and yielded the six bod!~.
had been questioned at length
Also charged with the murder
by North Charleston detectives, of Sellers Is James Koney Judy,
State
Law
Enforcement 23. of 2224 Parsonage Road,
Department &lt;SLED&gt; officials Charleston, who was arrested
at the residence of his mother
and others.
The charges came after Saturday night by North
positive identification had been Charleston Police on a warrant

Scene Of Crime
lrom Olanta. Hernlngway od the Prospect community gather at the
Ii two victims who were apparently executed and burled In the
tommunlty. At last reports a total of eight bodies had been discovered,
discovered Tuesday morning.

Issi oner,
m that the
bj
highway

I

~ont'!!_ued from Page 1

Knight and Bellamy was made
through medical and dental
records, according to North
Charleston Police Chief L. B.
1
Simmons. Coroner Eaddy said
1
1 positive identification of the
other bodies could take several
days because they were so
• badly decomposed.
According to reports, it is
1
expected that at least two other
1
sites in Florence County will be
searched for additional bodies.
1
,
Published reports Monday
j .stated that four of the six people
. found in the shallow WJmarked
. graves were shot to death in
· apparent ''execution-style '•
.
.I sJ ay1ngs
and two others may
: have had their throats cut . The
· reports said there is also
evidence of sexual attack on at
~ least one of the female victims .
·•
F our bullets of unde· term ined
were
•· removed fromcaliber
one of the bodies
1
a nd forwarded to SLED
1
headquarte r s in Columbia
. Sunda y. a ccording to reports ,
· which say several different
• wea pons were used in the
. slayings, the first of which
· occurr ed in 1974.
;
Law enforcement officers ,
. according to the r eport, say the
' victims were probably alive
1
when brought to the site down
&gt; the narrow , winding dirt road.
I
, The three graves from which
the bodies were removed are
•
· located within a few feet of each
1
other in the remote area .
I
No motives hav e been
esta blished for the killings , but
officers speculate they may be
1 connected to an auto theft ring. 1
~ The shaky theory that auto
; thefts may be linked to the
! slayings is a pparent!)' based on
! the arrest of P arrott on car
l
theft charges a nd the later
&gt; charges
of
murder
in
1 connection with the case.
I
Gaskins, who has been in
· trouble with the law off and on
~ most of his adult life. was
employed in the
North

1

signed by Florence County have been cooperating In the
Sherrlr\Vllllam C. Barnes. He Investigation.
waa taken to Florence where he
Neely led Williamsburg
remains in the custody of County Deputy Glenn Ard to
Florence County offlclal1.
two sites In that county several
Nothing has touched off as weeks after police had been
much Interest and concern In tipped about a "private
this rural area In several graveyard ." Diggings were
decades, if ever, a1 the made at the Snow farm In Black
discovery of the bodies. Those Mingo Swamp near the
of four males and two females, community of Henry and In the
all believed to be from the Roper Crossroads section of
Charleston area. were located Williamsburg County. After a
down a narrow, twisting field search of these areas failed to
road, accesaable by car and produce any bodies, Neely then
according to residents, often led Ard to the Prospect site.
used as a lover's
lane, When dlgglnp there yielded a
approximately a mile behind body, Florence County Sheriff
the old home place of Parrott. William C. B'arnes and Florence
The diggings In that area County Coroner William T.
started Thursday afternoon cBilly&gt; Eaddy were called to the
diggings
following an Investigation scene . Further
which had begun about a month Thursday afternoon located
earlier,
following
the another grave and two
disappearance of a 13-year-old additional bodies.
North
Charleston
girl .
The bodies were not removed
According to reports, officials Thursday night, but were !en
of the North Charleston Police covered with several Inches of
Department, Williamsburg dirt a waiting the arrival early
County Sheriff's Department, Friday of Dr. Joel Sexton,
Florence County Sheriff's forensic pathologist at the
Department and SLED officials Medical University of South

Carolina In Charleston.
Florence County Chief
Deputy Franklin McAll1ter, In
charge or the Investigation,
ordered a 24·hour guard of the
graves and cordoned off the
area aa far as a mile from the
bodies.
A special pelce of vapor
equipment, a • sophlatocated
Instrument developed to ,a11llt
In locating missing aer vice men
in Viet Nam. was flown la hum
Tallahassee, Florida to be ••'Id
In the search for addltim•I
bodies.
After two days of l'rultl. .
digging Saturday and Sundry,
the hunt was called ott n&amp; the
Prospect site, at lea1t
temporarily . Sheriff Barna
said In.a brief neWI Cllllfienmea
late Sunday arternoon, '''111 re
i1 nothing more we caa du ~
at thl1 time, There II aJwayi tbe
pPulbillty that we ma, have
overlooked 1ometbln1.'' la
respon1eto a reporters qulltlon
aa to whether or ant they wauld
return to that IHe at a latw
.date .
The crowd of
curloua
7

11&gt;•ctator1 1welled S•d•J
lft•r- 1mW lbs HIP•llJ
Patrol wu called out te
help wttb tbe direction of
trafftc . Tbl11atllend . . . .
the road llloclil wlme ~

_.. waltt'W, IH+llll to pm
101ae new turuc ....uaa • Ille
lituatlm lllme . . . ID Ill*
&amp;1ad1y ftalry. otlMrl . . .
cu•t•Uy di 1111d •

tlllf lllml

1111uud. Muy broulbt Ill*
w1- aud abOdrm. rt wu a
dUferen1 S1111day artaw
at11IOltlhsM t"PD In die~

of Ulla rural me•••-n, . ...,
wwe awaJtllll lbs ........S tf
tbl nad blaetr ID Ibey GOllld
a ftnt ha"" Yin of ...
..aveallel. Altboalb dark
blluD to abut 111. ..., an
chve dowa UM lwiMllll
road aud 1pectalerl . . . . .
tbl wODdad .... al ........

w

Swlmpwlth~

Aacard'nl to npna.
w11 ldentlfted by

Pll*'I f'MtM ID U. ..._.
1be
Ill .....

thr••
........
body tf
I

...... wap

""""' . Polltl II
C1ndrlnll .. Pqe I

•

I

Charleston area as a sheet
metal worker. and had
formerly been associated with a
well digging firm in the
Prospect area. He had his first
brush with the law in 1950,
according to official reports. He
has previously been convicted
of assault and battery of a high
and aggravated nature In 1952 ;
accessory after the fact of
murder in 1957 ; a national
motor vehicle theft act in 1959 ;
and rape in 1964. He has served
time on each conviction.
A visit to Prospect Monday
afternoon showed few residents
were willing to discuss the
situation. One man . who asked
not to be identified said, " l just
don 't believe that is JWJior's
work . He is too slick. JWJior
might have been an accessory
after the fact . but he didn't do
the killings ." He continued that
it was possible that Parrott may
have been in a position where he
had to help dispose of some
bodies. but he dldn 't believe
even that. He a dded that in his
opinion , Judy was responsible
for the whole deal , and sa id,
"Wouldn 't it be just like a m an
to dispose of bodies in the area
of a nother noted criminal a nd
let him CParrott l take the r ap.
Why. one grave was r ight in a
foot pa th which .JWJior knew
everybody around here used
when they go coon hunting in
those woods. No sir. I just don 't
believe Junior did it." He
answered in the affir mative
when asked if Judy ha d been
aro und in t he Pros pec t
community .
An older gentleman. seated
by
the
store's
heater ,
concluded, " I believe you are
wrong. I think you will find he
(Parrott ) was r esponsible for
everything."
Several people who said they
knew Parrott said he didn 't
show the side that woul d
indicate he was " that kind of
person at all ." One Johnsonville
man said he might well have a
split personality . Another sa id,
" If he liked you, he would do
anything in the world for you,
and if he didn 't like you , you had
better look out."
"- -

---

···"--

-..l-- ·--:'--~

'

t

'

One •'tnan who describe d
Pljtrott as " one of the b.est
fr iends 1 have " said he might
weigh 90 pounds, and was the
next thing to a midget . He
related that Parrott had hid out
in that same swamp while
officers sought him on the
assault and battery charges in
1952 . He said he lived in the
swamp for ten days on a two
poW!d bag of sugar and berries,
finally corning out on his own
and asking a Prospect man to
take him to Florence to give
himself up.
One gentleman said, " This
thing has got my nerves all
upset. and I didn't even have
anything to do with it."
Mrs. Maydell Lyerly said
Parrott was a fine man, and
came from a fine. very will
liked family. She described him
as bring smart and Intelligent,
but said he bad always needed
love, and hadn't had what he
needed most.
The Investigation into the
murders is expected by law
enforcement officials to be a
loog and tedious process at
best. North Charleston Chief
Simmons told the Observer that
bis department Is swamped
with book work. but added.
"Don't feel sorry for us. we're
just doing our job.''
Two Prospect · women. Ms.

Qierry Albnan and Ms. Marie
Marlow. have been arrested In

connection with the car tbelt
''ring'' and relea1ed on boip,d,
accordiq to qilet Sfmmo ,
st

sr
w
h'.
H
rE

lE
IT

H

a
VI

u

'· 15

Hemingway, S. C., 29554

Thursday, December 11, 1975

12 Pages

~=================================:.J

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•
••

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•
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...

ers

Mrs. Lilla Rogers of Hemingway celebrated her
80th birthday on Thursday, September 9th with a
delightful dinner party at which time approximately 200
of her friends and relatives gathered to pay honor to his
lovely Christian woman who has given many years of
service to the community and to the education of the area
youth.
,
•

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ofiore

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•
erv1ce

Rufus Lawrimore, ''Mr. Tobacco'' in Hemingway, receives the Distinguished
Service Award from outgoing Williamsburg Farm Bureau president Laurie L.
Lane. Lawrimore was given the award for his many outstanding contributions to
the tobacco industry, and to agriculture in general, in Williamsburg County.
'

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                    <text>Mm9c----- Our Huma~ Heritage
•
ree
1vers

and fortune . Hut overall, there that "above one hundred ·and
Anglicans as records indicate
tfi!DLER
was an amazing divergence sixty souls were settled on the that there was a dissenting
of our among the first group of settlers said river , .. ," By 1726, con- · congregation located in the
special that resulted in distinct com- struction of the church had same area in the 1720's. These
iocy of the mw_iiti~s separated by religion, begun on Black River about a dissenters, mostly Calvinists ,
in the preJudices, peculiar speech and mile east of the present Brown's erected a Meeting House on
roughly other
characteristics,
that Ferry bridge, This church later Church
Creek
on
the
River to survive to this day. The became the seat of Prince Williamsburg
Georgetown
ver to the character of the people can best Frederick's Parish when it was County line which is known to
y to the be understood as we consider formed in 1734 .
history as the Beach Mingo
BrOIJlers'l to the ourselves creatures of our
Obviously the area had at- Church, the Black
River
of this area historic past . Change seems to tracted
more
than
just Meeting House, the "Wyneau
old Williamsburg approach more rapidly in the
dbeen carved 1970's as industry, businesses,
County. As a and educational institutions
Ibis section of sprout among the old farm land.
i.t a part of And yet, even in the changes we
live divisions-- discern evidences of the past.
, Prince George ' Our very emotions and ideals
ce Frederick's are shaped by an environment
wn District. ' which had its origin in the days
p
County, when our forefathers ventured
It District and into a
bush
wilderness,
'8msburg County. uninhabited save for hordes of
tbistoey transpired roving Indians . We build on
~ Of Black River, these ancient foundations .
~ Cedar Swamp,
fer, Muddy Creek The ·first permanent settlers
(Dee.. There are of this area followed navigable
lleaa in our nation streams into the interior. They
colorful gradually slipped beyond the
wealthy narrow coastal strip up
a..rury after Black River and Balck Mingo.
les Town, 'In 1722 legislation created the
bitants lived parish of Prince George. There
t
from was some contention as to
Clrt. Few whether the parish Anglican
Double chimneys and a high foundation are among
willing church should be built at
frhlBe Winyah &lt;now Georgetown&gt; or
distinctive features of the Samuel Itly Wilson House, a
iand the further up on Black River &lt;near
Greek Revival structure of handsome proportions built
btthat the present Brown's Ferry) . A
around 1850. Also called ''The Oaks.'' this house, which
the year later a petition ad!lressed
has been in continuous ownership of the family line, is
Jiardy to the commons House from ·
now the home of Mrs. George H. Varn, Sr.
settlers on Black River stated

;n

,._more

Samuel Itly Wilson House

om

-- ---

Land
Congregation", or the Birch were terrifi.edby the howling Of
r.tcCutcheD.
Church. The Reverend John wolves and "feared being
~Scott, McBaxter, a prominent early devoured by wild beasts having
(,1111
McGill.
Presbyterian ministeir, served neither gun or dog, nol" any door
·
Sc:ott.
this church during its early to our house." In the spring the
~·oantel.
and
9.....
days. There was a prosperous Indians came to hunt "in great
settlement on Black Mingo numbers in all places like the
Creek sometimes referred to as Egyptian Locusts but they were
gst obscure
111
"Will town", though popularly not hurtful." The Williamsburg
111' 11 rea were the
tJie 1755. bad been
called "Black Mingo". By the Church was soon established
ifl!O• !::eir hornes In
time of the Revolution, the town and served a widely settled
Nova Scotia&gt; by
was well settled and enjoyed the congregation including most of
r11ies. These
benefit of a bridge over the theinhabitantsofCedarSwamp
0
,utb were deported
creek, though one traveler later and Boggy Swamp. Many of the
tboUCSthrOughout the
described it as "a small set- second generation joined by
ereli to the south.
tlement of about a dozen in more recent immigrants from
foioPI~ to reach
different wooden houses built Ireland soo,n settled beyond the
~~ana where their
mostly on one street .... " Some, reaches of the original township
J,oui'8 re knows as
ti August t756. rnore
no doubt, had high hopes of its and in 1757 a Presbyterian
" 111 diallS were sent
future. including John Baxter Church was established on the
ACaton to p r1nc
. e
and Charles Woodmason who headwaters of Black Mingo
rles parish
a nd
were partners in the " Black Creek near the old Mingo Indian
'5
the pe0ple of
008
Mingo Corporation ." The Black Village. Soon the congregation
alll
soon died In
some
Mingo
families
included of this church included people
. vJrons. and sorne
Whitely Dozier, Commander from as far south as Cedar
en. but
some
Brockington, Hughes, Nesmith, Swamp and as far north as
Oil · managed
to
Thompson. Snow, and Lane.
Lynches River. From its in!Y the Englishw1th
Governor Robert Johnson's ception the community at Inprotestants . Ch apung 's Exile Without
township plan spurred set- diantown has been composed of'
I that among the
tlement in the back country and a homogeneious group ~th the
~families of the
in 1732, Roger Gordon led a church as their strongest tie.
J,BP1bert. Durant. and
small band of Scotch-Irish to Commenting on the control of
the King's Tree in Williamsburg the church over the community,
fthe inhabi tants of the
Township which became the )v. W.· Boddie wrote: ''No o country
a round
most successful of all the $andedrim at Jerusalem DCIJ:
and Charleston.
township endeavors. These first College of CIU'dinalJ at ~
d:1rist Church Parish
Scotch settlers were all kin- in its time and ~qe,it~~ wee Bay , moved into
settling along the P~
smen and were soon joined by exercised
more
e Lynches and their
others of their relatives and control than did the Ses
Among thern were
countrymen. The Witherspoons Elders at Indiantown.
es.
H
,
es Britton.
ugg1ns .
had left the old country because · (irst settlers inqu~
and Simmons . Some of
of "great distress to the per- names · as · Jam~.
· ers who drifted into the
cequted church." They settled
were ol Huguenot exnear the King's Tree where they
Thes.e
French
'
'
~nts
thrived
in
ton and on the Santee
·r influence is still ,felt
Anyone who en1oys
"pileau" owes a debt to
Huguenots. The Durants.
and Duboses have
'01origins . The Lynches
area also supported
who had migrated from
oothern provinces . The
scamefrom the Jame
in Virginia ; the Hannas
Haseldens came from
vania. These settlers
blished territory with a

eo

e '111 ree Rivers·

i! itne
adnrtis
befOre ~
mdividu

Eadd:l

llstrict

li!eri CQ
board

principi

review
are is
memlM
It wi
Tanne1
at the
nounc'
F1oren
questi•
pay, s
and 1

necesi
•

the cl;
King
and t
electe

China Grove

One of the earliest hou ses of the area. "China Grove:· the eighteenth century
structt1re restored by and now the hon1e of Mr. and i\'lrs. B. !VI. Chandler, is a
typica I ex:i111p le of the sturdy, unadorned houses built by early planters.

c
desire for new lands and a
chance at prosperity . Many
were successful.
1'here were two distinct
groups
among
the early
Anglicans and Scotch-Irish
settlers
Anglicans and
Dissenters .
1'he
Reverend
William Screven of Kittery.
Maine had settled near Winyah
Bay by 1710 and his son , Elisha .
laid
out
the
plan
for
Georgetown .
Among
his
descendants there was no doubt
an inclination toward the
Baptist dortrine. However . the
large Baptist population in the
Hemingway area
probably
owes its origins to later
evangelists .
The entire area was a hot bed
during
the
American
Revolution . The church at
Indiantown \vas termed as a
" sedition
shop"
and
a
remarkable
skirmish
was
fought near Shepherd 's Ferry
Oil Black Mingo . No family

curt
the I
M1
Tale
We

escaped
commitment
and
The years following the
General Marion drew heavily Revolution were prosperous
011 the men of this section for
years . The economic situation
support. Indeed. they composed was
encouraging .
The
the nucleas of his brigade. The inhibitants raised flax and re~
women of the era provided livestock .
The indigo from
had
Marion with valuable in- Williamsburg was the finest in for
formation on the movement of the province and brought a good tenc
British regulars and Tories and price at Georgetown and
to t
these
remarkable
ladies Char Ies ton . And then rice the
somehow managed to keep became the most important the
families and plantations func - crop . soon to be replaced by
1
tioning. Major John James ' "King &lt;;otton ."
Cit
encounter with Capt. Ardesif at
Education in the early days
197
Georgetown no doubt ·'hastened was largely a function of the
the rise of Marion·s brigade ," famil y and particularly the
Certainly the James family church. By the mid i800 's there
contributed as much as any were several " old field schools"
patriot in America to the cause and Indiantown Academy was
of independence . But there advertising its location " in a
were others who felt just as healthy and moral neighstrongly their allegance to the borhood" where " Good boar- ovt
King . Among these Tories were ding in respectable families can cit~
John
Brockington.
James be obtained at the exceeding buc
Cassels. Amos Gaskins . John moderate price of three or four Mr
Hamilton , and several others. dollars a month .... all the cit
of
an
English bu,
Jacob Bartell also served with branches
the British . And no doubt some education together with a del
inhabitants saw service on both knowledge of the Latin and ~h1
Greek language are carefully inc
sides .
fir
The activities of General taught."
The town of Hemingway and cu
Francis l\1arion. The " Swamp
J-' ox ." had made the area the surrounding communities st•
famous in the Revolutionary give every evidence of corl.- fa
history of South Carolina .. It was tinuing gro\vth and develoµ.
on Snow's Island that rvtarion's ment. Lord Macaulay wrote in tt
men had their most permanent the History of England that B·
camp. One writer of· the Vic- "Those who compare the age in P
torian age referred to the which their lot has fallen with a tt
location
of
Marion's golden age which exists only in J1
c·
headquarters as " the most imigination . may talk of F
classic land in the Western degeneracy and decay ; but no
world ." A poem entitled " Pee man \vho is correctly informed ~
Dee. Scene-Snow 's Island" . the as to the past will be disposed to
author designating himself take a morose or desponding P
"Phillippon." a ppeared in The view of the present. ,. Such is ~
0
Sumter Watchman in 1855 ;
our lot.

On the same isle. brave
Marion made a sta nd .
Well for their country fought
his Spartan band,
A l\ t1': 1':TING OF THE ''CITI:
As all were then of home and 1-:1.1-:CT JAl\'t1':S l\'l('CALL'' wi
gear bereft.
at !VlcCall's Supply on Thursda
1'heir country's cause was all at 7: 30 p, n1 . This is a public mi
the foe had left ;
'Twas
proud
oppression no special invitation is req
attendance.
armed them for the fight,
While justice whispered that
their cause was right .
· . Tli1':R1': WILL BE A GOSPEL
featuring the Hopper Brot
...
Here exiled liberty her refuge
gained.
·
And well her glorious cause
was here sustained.
L~We-~·
~

\ l l \ l l l\l \ \ \l\ l l l \ \1 1 1 1 1 1\ l\~l l l
.

I

I

111 1111

111~11

1

I

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                    <text>..... -

----- ----

- - ---- - - - - -

-

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um,an,,.,.

•

erzta

•

1

•

1

•

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I

'

•

and fortune. Hut overall, there that ''above one hundred ·and Anglicans as records indicate
was an amazing divergence sixty souls were settled on the that there was a dissenting
ff. CHANDU:R
celebration of our among the first group of settlers said river .... " By 1726, con- congregation located in the
we focus special that resulted in distinct com- struction of the church had same area in the 1720's. These
the history of the munities separated by religion, begun on Black River about a dissenters. mostly Calvinists,
lived in the prejudices, peculiar speech and mile east of the present Brown's erected a Meeting House on
that Ferry bridge, This church later Church
region roughly other characteristics.
Creek
on
the
y Lynches River to survive to this day. The became the seat of Prince Williamsburg - Georgetown
Black River to the character of the people can best Frederick's Parish when it was County line which is known to
's Ferry to the be understood as we consider formed in 1734.
history as the Beach Mingo
Brothers'
&gt; to the ourselves creatures of our
Obviously the area had at- Church, the Black River
••
all of this area historic past. Change seems to tracted
more
than
just Meeting House, the ' 'Wyneau
of old Williamsburg approach more rapidly in the
·ch had been carved 1970's as industry. businesses,
'
en County. As a and educational institutions
;-:tJJ •, ,
~·"
.
fact, this section of sprout among the old farm land.
bas been a part of And yet, even in the changes we
· ative divisions- discern evidences of the past.
ty, Prince George Our very emotions and ideals
Prince Frederick's are shaped by an environment
Georgetown . District. which had its origin in the days
County, when our forefathers ventured
wilderness,
District and into - - a . bush
IJJlamsburg County. uninhabited save for hordes of
history transpired roving Indians. We build on
of Black River, these ancient foundations.
o, Cedar Swamp,
The first permanent settlers
River, Muddy Creek
Dee.. There are of this area followed navigable
areas in our nation streams into the interior. They
boast a more colorful gradually slipped beyond the
wealthy narrow coastal strip up
half a century after Black River and Balck Mingo.
t at Charles Town, In 1722 legjslation created the
,
lal inhabitants lived parish of Prince George. There
,
coast
from was some contention as to
to Beaufort. Few whether the parish Anglican
souls were willing church should be built at
Double chimneys and a high foundation are among
ond this thin fringe Winy ah &lt;now Georgetown&gt; or
distinctive features of the Samuel Itly Wilson House, a
the Indians and the further up on Black River &lt;near
Greek Revival structure of handsome proportions built
els no doubt that the present Brown's Ferry&gt;. A
around 1850. Also called ''The Oaks,'' this house, which
settlers of the year later a petition addressed
area were a hardy, to the Commons House from . has been in continuous ownership of the family line, is
now the home of Mrs. George H. Varn, Sr.
lot seeking freedom settlers on Black River stated
y CAPT.

•

•

,•.

Samuel Itly Wilson House

I

Congregation''. or the Birch were terrified by the howling of
I
Church. The Reverend John wolves and ''feared being
l
Baxter. a prominent early devoured by wild beasts having
I•
Presbyterian minister. served neither gun or dog. nor any door
this church during its early to our house.'' In the spring the
days. There was a prosperous Indians came to hunt ''in great
settlement on Black Mingo numbers in all places like the
Creek sometimes ref erred to as Egyptian Locusts but they were
' 'Willtown'' . though popularly not hurtful.'' The Williamsburg
called '' Black Mingo' '. By the Church was soon established
time of the Revolution, the town and served a widely settled
was well settled and enjoyed the congregation including most of
benefit of a bridge over the the inhabitants of Cedar Swamp
creek. though one traveler later and Boggy Swamp. Many of the
described it as ''a small set- second generation joined by
tlement of about a dozen in more recent immigrants from
different wooden houses built Ireland soon settled beyond the
mostly on one street .... ' ' Some, reaches of the original township
no doubt, had high hopes of its and in 1757 a Presbyterian
future. including John Baxter Church was established on the
and Charles Woodmason who headwaters of Black Mingo
were partners in the ' 'Black Creek near the old Mingo Indian
Mingo Corporation .'' The Black Village. Soon the congregation
Mingo
families
included of this church included people
Whitely Dozier. Commander from as far sQuth as Cedar
Brockington, Hughes. Nesmith, Swamp and as far north as
Thompson , Snow. and Lane.
Lynches River. From its inGovernor Robert Johnson's ception the community at Intownship plan spurred set- diantown has been composed of
tlement in the back country and a homogeneious group with the
in 1732, Roger Gordon led a church as their strongest tie.
small band of Scotch-Irish to Commenting on the control of
the King's Tree in Williamsburg the church over the community,
Township which became the
. W. Boddie wrote: ''No
most successful of all the
ndedrim at Jerusalem nor
township endeavors. These first College of Cardinals at Rome,
Scotch settlers were all kin- in its time and place, ever
smen and were soon joined by exercised
more
complete
others of their relatives and control than did the Session of
countrymen. The Witherspoons Elders at Indiantown.'' 'lbe
had left the old country because . first settlers included such.
of ''great distress to the per- names as James, W
cequted church.'' They settled
near the King's Tree where they
l'ontlnued to hp 6

�La11d

e

ee

euoPEr. McCutcben.
Gimble. Scott. Mc-

c:COttrY.
•

McGill,

Ervin·
Scott.
sarr. Daniel. and

the most obscure
Y the area were the
bO in 1755. had been
" · their homes in
' : : Nova Scotia &gt; by
c authorities . These
catholics were deported

ttered throughout the

colOOies to the south.
anaged to reach

°tows1ana where their
ts are

knows as
,. 10 August 1756. more
· y Acadiam were sent
fbarleston to Prince
•
Parish
and
5
ted arnong the people of
Some soon died in
·environs. and some
oo ; but
some
ouslY
managed
to
with the EnglishProtestants ChapJ,filling's Exile \\'lthout
fcates that among the
were ramilies of the
Lambert. Durant. a nd
of the inhabitants of the
country
a round
wn and Charleston.
Christ Church Par ish
wee Bay . moved into
settling along the Pee
~ Lynches a nd their
·es Among them wer e
es Britton. Huggins .
and Simmons . Som e of
ers who drifted into the
ere oi Hug uenot ex
.
Th~e
F r e nch
tants
thrived
in
ton and on the antee
·r influence is still felt
Anyone " ho enjoys
··pileau · o"'es a debt to
uguenots The Durants.
and Duboses have
•
ot origin5 The Lynches
area also supported
who ha d m igrated from
thern provinces . The
ers came f r om the Jame
in Virginia ; the Hannas
aseldens came from
lvania T hese settlers
blisbed territor) with a

_.&lt;- _ __

•

China Grove

•
I

011e of tl1e earlie t hou e of the area. ••China Grove.•• the e ig hteenth century
truc ture re tored b}' and no\\- the home of l\lr. and ~Ir . B. i\I . "handler. is a
t) pica I exa an pie of the sturdy . unadorned house built b.) early planter .

desi re for new lands a nd a escaped
c ommitment
a nd
The year s following the
chance at p ros per it y. l\1a ny Genera l l\1ar ion drew heavily Revolu tion wer e prosperous
\\.ere successful
on the men of this s ection for year s T he econom ic s itua tion
Ther e \\.ere two distinct support Indeed . they composed was
encour aging.
The
groups
among
the
early the nucleas of his brigad e The inhibita nts r aised flax a nd
Anglicans and Scotch-Irish \\-Om en of the er a provided livestock.
The indigo from
settlers
Anglicans and r\1arion with valua ble in- \\'illiamsburg was the fi nest in
D1ssen ters
The
Reverend for m a tion on the movement of the province a nd brought a good
\\ illiam
creven of Kittery
British r egular s a nd Tories a nd price at Georgetown a nd
"1a1ne had s ettled near \\'inyah these
r em arka ble
ladies Charleston . And then rice
Ba} b y 1710 and his son. Elisha
somehow mana ged to keep becam e the m ost important
laid
out
the
plan
for families and pla ntations f unc - crop soon to be r eplaced by
(,eorgetown
l\mong
his tioning l\1aJOr John Ja m es
·King ot ton ··
Education in the early days
descendants there "'as no doubt encounter \\.1th Capt Ardesif at
an incl1nat1on toward the c;eorgetown no doubt . 'haste ned was largely a function of the
famil&gt;· and particuJarl)' the
Baptist dortrine. liowever the the rise of ;\larion s brigade
the m id 18&lt;Xfs ther e
large Baptist population in the Certainly the James fami ly church Bv
•
Heming\\.·ay a rea
probably contributed as much as any \vere se\·eral ··old field schools ··
O\\.'es its origins to later patriot in America to the cause a nd lndianto"·n Academy \\as
of independence But ther e advertising its location .. in a
evangelists .
The entire area \\.'as a hot bed \\.'ere others "ho felt Just as healthy and moral neighduring
the
Amer ican strongl}' their allegance to the borhood · '~here ··Good boar - &lt;
Revolution. The church at King. Among these Tories ''ere ding in respectable families can c
Brockington .
James be obtained at the exceeding t
Indianto\\.·n " ·as termed as a J ohn
:1
··sedition
shop··
and
a Cassels. \mos Gaskins John moderate price of three or four
remarkable
skirmish
\\.'as Jlam ilton . a nd several others. dollars a month ... all the &lt;
of
an
English t
fought near ~ hepherd ·s f''erry Jacob Bartell also served \\-ith branches
oo Black l\1irigo. No family the British l\nd no doubt some education together '''ith a c
inhabitants sa\\. ser vice on both kno\\.·ledge of the Latin and t
(,reek language are carefull)' i
sides.
I
The activities of c;ener al taught ..
f rancis larion T he ·· \\.a mp
The lO\\.'n of Hemi n~\'a)· a nd &lt;
F'ox... had made the area the surrounding communities ~
famous in the Revolu tionary give ever y evidence of cod- I
histor}' of South (,ar ol1na It \\'as tinuing gro\vth and developon ' no"·'s lsland that :.tarion'
ment Lord i\l acaulay ,..·rote in I
men had their most permanent the Iii tor) of 1-: n gland that I
camp. l&gt;ne \v riter of the \ ic- ·· Tho e \\. ho compa r e the a ge in I
toria n age r eferred to the \\'hich their lot ha fallen \\.'ith a I
location
of
\1ar ion·s golden age \v hich exists only in
head c1uarter s as '' the m ost imigina tion
may
ta lk of ~
classic land in the \\·estern degene r acy a nd decay : but no I
world " A poem entitled " P ee m an ,.. ho is correctly informed
Dee. ~ene-SnO\\. 's Isl and ·. the as to the past "ill be d isposed to •
a uthor d esigna t ing him self ta ke a morose or desponding
"Phillippon." a ppea r ed in The vie\\ or the present ... uch is
Sumter \\'atchman in 1855 ;
our lot .

...

On the sam e isle . brave
l\tarion made a stand .
\\"ell for their country fought
his Spartan band .
As all were then of home and
gear bereft
Their country 's cause was all
the foe had left:
' Twas
proud
oppression
armed them for the fight .
\Vhile justice whispered that
their cause was right.
·

PRE
1\ :\114.. I-: TIN(; ()14' Tiii': ··CITI
i.: 1. f :( ' T J r\~Jt.: s l\l('( ':\l.. L'' \\•i
a t ~l cCa ll ' s ~ upply on Thursda

at 7; 30 p. n1. This is a public m
no pecial invitation is req
attendance.
Tll f;R ..: \\.I l~L 81-: 1\ GO P•:L

featuring the Hopper Bro

••••

Here exiled liberty her refuge
gained.
·
And well her glorious cause
was here sustained.

II

1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111

L~We.L.

1111111

Weellly

ck Mingo Baptist Church

o Ba itst Church, buUt in 1843 by the wealthy
t ~lelan'd Belin, stands today a gem of Georgian
ta
Its Palladlan windows, pardcalarly the on
th~e. chancel (pie&amp;ared&gt;, are of exceptional

17.uA
~
fltOID

.All.

11

1 IWI

11

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                <text>Land of 3 Rivers - China Grove, 4-22-1976</text>
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                    <text>•
ucator, .

'

·o sradley will finally

ie

Bf
tiJile to do the
Bfl1~ikes which he con11~ 8 r~cent inte_rview,
Ill' Jeeping late m the
eS sin addition to travel.
11gs,
administrative
dleY~f the Johnsonville
tools, Flore~ce Co.ll!lty
scgistrict 5, is retirmg
fter devoting his life to
~:n. Bradley has give~ 42
U the field of education,
were in the Johne area.
.
in J{ingstree m, 1909, he
ed grammar and high
at Tomlinson H~gh
1
in l{ingstree '· completmg
1·or and senior year at
university in Columbia.
is a graduate of Allen .
sitY and did graduate
LAMAR BRADLEY
at Columbia University,
York City and South
mittee
and
the
Senior
Citizens
a State College.
Committee
of
·School
District
en he served as editorFive.
He
is
vice-president
and
ef of the
college
director
of
loans
of
the
PDEA
aper and president of the
Federal Credit Union which
ague.
eight years after serves teachers and educators
of
Florence
County.
ation he served as viceHaving traveled over much of
en t of the Allen
the United States on chartered
sity National Alumni.
bas been a teacher at bus tours in connection with
High
School, educational conventions, he
tree,
Booker
T. expects some of his travel will
ngton High in Colwnbia, be repeats. He plans to visit
rincipal of the kitrell relatives in North Carolina
e High School at Kitrell, Pennsylvania, and New York:
He has also been an He expects to visit Dinsey
tary and high school World and to attend ball games.
pal at Lake City and His mode of travel, as he sees it
now, will be by bus and train.
nville.
969 Bradley was notified He thinks this way he will be
e had been chosen to able to see more of the country
r in the 1969 edition of side. and he is reluctant to fly.
''A ~erson can always change
unity
Leaders
of
their .' mind, '' Bradley safd,
ca. The letter stated that
choice
was
made ' : 'But at this tiine I don't have
use of your service to an overwhelming desire to go
mmunity and because of any place I would have to go by
activities and con- plan~ or boat.'' He expects
·ons to your community to tour Canada and Mexico
orthy of note to other among his travels, since these
are accessible by land .
''

:ltlch

his
professional
'zations he has served as
dent of the Pee Dee
tion Association for four
, and as a member of the
,, Delegate Assembly and N.
Representative Assembly
ny
years. He also served
•
airman of the Welfare
ittee of the FCEA.
has served as District
~ School Superintendent
istrict A. C. E. League
,, dent of the Kingstree
ct of the A. M. E. Church.
rformed an outstanding
to his local church lVhen
ved as head trustee and

D
c
p
Par
the
Won

Dee1

nea1
Ern1
MaJ

Gra
Tho
Alli
Full
Wil
She
Mil
Sha
Sha

A:
Cyn
Rob

Re11
Mic
Ch J
Chr
Ave

Lor
Ti

Cho
blu•
wor
hat:

fro1
dire
Gal

I

Area Students
Awarded
J)egrees

A total of 585 Winthrop
1·
College . students received
g
diplon;ias at commencement
t
exercises on Sunday, May 5, in
c
Byrnes Auditoriwn. Winthrop
E
awarded 547 undergraduate and
38 graduate degrees.
E
Preceding the awarding of the · ~
v
degrees, Dr. Charles B. Wail
was installed as the sixth
&lt;1
· an of the building president of Winthrop College.
~
ttee when greater St.
,
(
A.M.E. church at Lake
Gov. John C. West, whose
as built.
wife is a Winthrop Alumna,
ey is now serving as delivered the commencement
entarian and Chairman address.
E
Legislative Committees
Local students who received
•
I
he State Laymen's diplomas were Loretta Hanna
zation of the A. M. E. of Johnsonville who received a
. He is also a member of A.S.B. degree from the School
nnectional Laymen's of Business Administration;
ative Committee. In his Katherine Marie Brockington of
Church, he serves as a Hemingway who received a
eader and trustee.
B.S. degree from the School of
is a member or the Home Economics; and Iva
Y OEO Board and Genelle Brow11 of Nesmith who
&lt;
ial secretary of the received a B.S. degree from the
A.. _! _,._

~--- --- -' • -

-.

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The building housing Jowers.
,e Furniture
Company
in
Hemingway
was
destroyed
by
.e
d · fire early Friday morning, May
31, along with its contents.
Murray Jowers, owner, said
0
g he was able to salvage only a
few air-conditioners and they
are water damaged.
:t
The fire .which 1started in the '
r early niorning- hours
was
.
believed to be the work of an
arsonist. According to repo~ts,
)f

up a temporary offit!e in the

to attend to getting the insurance.''
Jowers was cleaning out the
only portion , of the store
building, the' two story section,
that was left standing Tuesday
morning. He said if he does not
have to tear down the walls he
will be back in business within
30 days.

.

residence beside
the
remains
of
•
th building, and is accepting
payments on accounts and
transacting other business
there.
In 1956, Jowers built the brick
building on George street, ·
which was .d estroyed in the
blaze, and moved his business

· ·

there.

In the meantime, he has set

-

•

the back door was found open

when fire men arrived, and the.
fire apparently started in the
· area of the office. The John-.
son ville
Volunteer
Fire
Department was called for
assistance in combating the
blaze ·and both .departments
remained on the scene for
several house .
SLED agents were called to
the scene, and an i~vestigation
is under way.
.

•

•

.... .
. ... .......

•

I

•

•

•

Jowers said the building, not
the contents, wa insQred. On the
scene Frid~y afternoon he saia, .
''I guess this makes me look Ii e
..
'
'
a poor businessman. I had been
•
intending for three months to ··
em a ins
take out insurance, but just had
..
not been able to get to it. I · Tl1e 1·e1nai11s of Jowers Furniture Company in
figured I had been riding my
He1ni11gway a1·e show11 he1·e after fire completely
luck long enough, and it was
dest1·oyed
the
building
in
a11
ea1·ly
1norning
blaze
last
time I did something about it,
F1·iday.
The
building
a11d
co11te~ts
were
a
total
loss.
but just had not found the ti1ne
•

•

•

•

•

•

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We're not fussy. We realize that you don't have all day to spend
on banl&lt;ing. And many times you don't have the time to hire a
sitter or put on your best dress. So for your convenience, we offer
drive -in banl&lt;ing. just drive up .. . or wall&lt; up . . . to our window,
and we 'll process your deposit or withdrawal as quicl&lt; as a winl&lt;!
No more standing on lines when you're pressed for time. You
don't even have to step one foot inside the bani&lt;! So next time
you want to save time, come as you are, to our drive-in window!
•

MAIN STREET, JOHNSONVILLE

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                    <text>•

•
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~

•
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•
•
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•
•
•
IN
•
•
AND
•
JOHNSONVILLE

4

•

•

WORKING FOR
A BEnER
BUSINESS
COMMUNITY
J ohnsonv ille porting Good• carries a wide variety of sporting
equipm ent a nd clothing as well a s school s upplies, ladles blouses a nd
je \\ elry . i\1rs. Ruth E va T a nner, proprietor or the s hop, ha s been In
busin ess In the am e location on Broadway treet In Johns onville for the
pa t t Z yearo during which time s he has endeavored to meet the needs of
her c u to1ne r fo r high quality s porting equipment , l.ncludlng s hoes ror all
sports. \Yhelhcr your Interest Is baseba ll, te nnis. basketball or some

The merchants advertising
their weekly specials on this
page and the next two pages
are 11niting to work against
inflation
and
promote
prosperity in the Johnsonville - Hemingway area
by giving you the best buys,
selections
and
service
possible, every day.
Read
these
pages
carefully each week for the
best buys in the area.
- Patronize the merchants
advertising here and help
them promote a better local
economy.

other acl lvlly, Johnson ville SporUn g Good bas the equipment y ou need .
And Ir It I ti m e 10 prese n t an awa rd l\1rs. Tanner can also offer a seleclion or t rophies nd pla ques " 'lib con1ple 1e e ngraving service. Al o select
rron1 a la rge supply or la dles blouse a nd lops. lettered ports wear, mens
te nnis a nd gym shorts. notebook paper, pencils nd ot her needs ror back
to school.

HEMINGWAY-JOHNSONVILLE MERCHANTS MAKE AN ALL OUT EFFORT
TO ATTRACT SHOPPERS

Hemingway - Johnsonville merchants named in this
article have joined together to make this week a great
selling event. You can read of and listen to the big city sales
attractions, but none of them will compare with the values
to be found in Hemingway and Johnsonville this week.
No one merchant would or could undertake such a sales
event as the Johnsonville - Hemingway merchants are
undertaking. Check the merchants advertising in The
Weekly Observer and you will find the many useful items
that you need and would like to have.
ITEMS FOR ALL OCCASIONS ...

These merchants are offering you outstanding values on
home, automobile, and for personal use. Shop their stores
for all your family needs.
S1'RETCH YOUR FAMILY BUDGET

You stretch your budget by shopping in Hemingway and
Johnsonville each week. Take advantage of these values. If
you don't have the ready cash to buy the items you want,
use your charge accounts or their easy lay-away plan.
It will pay you to shop in Johnsonville and Hemingway
chan ·

·

arantppd _a

·

I

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Some uf the m e mbers of the Johnsonville Rescue Squad
•
who can be counted on ID the time of need will be
•
so liciting donations to their organiza.tion this week ID
a ddition to the barbecue dinner·they are sponsoring on
~king,
Saturday • Left to right they are Edgar
Elbert.Joye, Jeanette McCracking~ Mrs. Ora Lee Hanna,
a
'
Scott, Katie Av-a~t, David Lawrence and Simon McN
When they ca 11 on you, please contribute,.
•

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                <text>L to R: Edgar McCracking, Elbert Joey, Jeanette McCracking, Oral Lee Hanna, Jimmy Royal, Jack Springs, Annette Eaddy, Charlene Scott, Katie Avant, David Lawrence, and Simon McNeil.</text>
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·r111·: \Vl•:t•:KI, Y &lt;&gt;l~s1-:1tv11: 1t, llemingway, S. &lt;.:., '

•
l

Gosnell, of Spartanburg~ are
spending some ti1ne with Mrs.
Tanner, wl10 is M1·s. Cosnell 's
mother.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnell Tanner,
Lynn, and Janet, Mr. and Mrs.
Tommy Cook and Patrick, Mrs.
Adelene Richardson and
Randy, and Grady Roberts
have returned from a trip to the
mountains of Nor th Carolina,
Tennessee, and Virginia. They
stopped to tour many attractions while on their trip, and
especially enjoyed the Land of
Oz.

The
Johnsonville
Hemingway Area swimming
pool will soon be without all the
shouts of fun and laughter that
has made it such a delightful
place for kids to gather during
the long and hot days of
vacation.
At 5 p.m. on Labor Day,
September 2, the pool will officially close for this season.
Harry J. Altman who has
managed the pool for many

•

ear

uccess

lll
ye&lt;1rs, said this has been a
successful year, and their had
been no injuries or mishaps of
any extent that he is aware of.
The pool was constructed in
1959 with funds which were

r·aised through the joint efforts
of the citizens of Johnsonville
and Hemingway, and outlying
communities, and has provided
an excellent source of summer
recreation since then.

,

()

Diving Expertise

)

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Is

Down She Goes!

J

This unidentified youth demonstrates his diving style
Sunday afternoon just before the dark . Overhanging
clouds brought undesired thundering and lightning with
undesired showers at the Johnsonville-Hemingway
area pool Sunday afternoon.

_,.

Please Don't Talk To
'Ibe Life Guards!

This young lady is not aware of the meaning of the title
to this once popular tune, or else she just finds the life
guards at the Johnsonville-Hemingway Area swimming
pool too irresistible.

This sliding board, which has brought delight and
pleasure to many youngsters this suniiner at the area
swim ming pool, will soon find itself deserted as school
l« bells ring this week to begin another school year.

I

CLASSES STARTING SEI

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• TAP
• JAZZ

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She's Not Heavy

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It

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Wlio's 1'u•·n Next?

ate

st
rhi'
fg
st

ug
Perry
plunges
into
the
pool
from
the
small
diving
0
b:ard as other youngsters anxiously await their time to

dive.

~

~

Don Dennis, life guard at the Johnsonville-Hemingway
area swimming pool, carries an unidentified gi1·l who
had slipped and fallen Sunday afternoon to the cantee11
where he can check to see if she is injured. Tlte
swimming pool has had excellent life guards since it first
opened.

•

LIMITED OPENINGS
IN SEVERAL CLASSES
-

FOR MORE INFORMA 110'

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                  <text>Local Newspaper covering the Johnsonville and Hemingway communities.</text>
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                    <text>ERVER, Hemingway, South

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The Joh11so11ville Police Departm nt and Flo1. ence ounty heriff's Deputi•
were 011 ha11d i11 Joh11sonville for the rece11t Bice11tennial celebration, more to
of assista11ce tha11 to actually patrol, since they didn't really anticipate a
problems du1. i11g thi p cial event. Left to right are Deputy Buz Phillips a d
\\'. D. Crawley of th h riff's Depa1. tment a11d Billy Browder of the Johnso
Police Departm 11t, who i p1. e e11tly acting chief, as they ca ually ob e
da11c in the high chool gy1n11a ium 011 aturday night.
•

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                    <text>•

'

•
nsonv1

ans
'

Bob Cushman, chairman of
the Johnsonville Bicentennial
Cominittee, announced Monday
further plans for ·the city's
Bicentennial Week, May 8-15,
1976.
The kickoff will be on
Saturday, May 8, at a Bicentennial Costume Ball, sponsored by the Pee Dee Junior
Woman's Club.
On Sunday evening, May 9, an
ecumenical church service will
be hel4.
'

•

or
'

,

•

Other events scheduled ·inThe highlight of the week will
clude a band concert by the be an Arts and Crafts Fair on
Johnsonville High School Band Saturday, May 15. This will be
on Tuesay, May 11, and a an open air ·festival located in
special party honoring Senior the main business district of
Citizens will be the event of J ohnsort ville. The fair will
Thursday, M ay 11, and a special feature artists and craftsmen
party honoring Senior Citizens from the local 'area as well as
will be the event of Thursday, _out of tow11. The hours will be
May 13. Details of these events from 10 a. m. until 4 p. m. Other
to be sponsored by the John- activities for the day will ~
sonville Woman's Club and the elude games, . informati
Pee Dee Junior Woman's Club displays and demonstratio
Continued to Page 3
will be revealed at a later date.

I

...........~()uf Huma11 Herit

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BARR HOME
. . . On Hanna Land
I

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· le Pla11s

Continued from Page 1

telephone 386-3959, is respon- or some other refreshments for
It is the intention of the
traditional crafts. Among the sible for this project and all the convenience of visitors to
committee to turn over any
displays will be a represen- interested parties should the fair. Any individual or group
monies realized from this week
t.a tion of Masonic History from contact her.
wishing to sponsor an Arts or
of celebrat1·on to JUMP with the
Revolutionary times 'sponsored
A main event of the day for Crafts Booth should contact
by the Masonic Lodge of the younger set will be a puppet Mrs. Jack Whiteside, telephone
understanding it will be used in
Johnsonville. Masons have a show presented by Howard and 386-2348, or Mrs. Edwin Sutfurther
community
imrich heritage in our nation Henrietta Moore of Hartsville, clif f e, telephone 386-3076.
provement projects. ''JUMP
dating from pre-revolutionary S. C. Mrs. Moore is the former Anyone interested in another
has shown itself to be an eftimes and this display should be Henrietta Moore, daughter of type of booth, for example a
fective
organization for
of interest to all.
Mr. and Mrs. Jimmie Chapman food concession or an exhibition
progress in Johnsonville and we
The Johnsonville Woman's of Johnsonville. Mr. and Mrs. of interesting artifacts, should
hope
the
Bicentennial
Club will operate an Old Moore are well known pup- contact
Bob
Cushman,
Celebration can be an incentive
Fashioned Country Store during peteers in the state giving telephone 386-3364, or Mrs. Jim to greater accompllsbm~tS,''
the Arts and Crafts fair. They performances throughout the Everett, telephone 386-3359. Cushman said.
will accept items for sale from area. In addition, there will be a Anyone who has suggestions for
Following the fair on
anyone on a consigrunent basis. demonstration of clogging by a activities should contact a
Items for sale will include dance group from Hartsville. member of the Bicentennial Saturday evening there will be a
street dance sponsored by the
Anyone who is interested is Committee.
needlework, crafts, and baked
The Johnsonville Bicen- Johnsonville Lions Club.
and canned goods. Anyone who encouarged to have a booth in
Committee
is Everyone is encouraged to
has items for sale and does not the fair. Booths may be spon- tennial
have a sufficient amount to sored by individuals or groups. representative of most of the spend the day at the fair and
operate a booth of their own is Churches are especially urged civic organizations in town and stay for the dance.
welcome and encouraged to put to participate. It is hoped that consists of the following people:
Present plans are that supper
their wares in the country store. several groups will be in- Bob Cuslunan, chair1nan, Lions will be available for thoSe who
Mrs.
Walter
Robinson, terested in selling box lunches Club; Wilson Hardee, Lions and .....,.,." to remain for th., evening
Masons; Mrs. Walter Robinson, ww•
JUMP and Johnsonville _ m
_ea
_ l._________
Woman's Club; Mrs. Edwin
Sutcliffe, Johnsonville Woman's
Club; Mrs. Jim Everett and
Mrs. Jack Whiteside, Pee Dee
Continued from Page 1
Junior
Woman's
Club;
Dairen
center for the past two years,
He pointed out that in case of
Jacobs,
Jaycees;
and
Jim
and they voted to give a con- need, anyone may contact the
Everett,
JUMP
Beautific-ation
tribution in that amount again. Williamsburg County Sheriff's
The mayor discussed the need office and the call will be Committee. - -

Attorney

•

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•

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                    <text>~

Johnsonville
landmark in

prescription ne s in John- ·
sonville, John Allen has been
available to meet the ·needs of
his customers whenever they
called.
uality prescription
service is the most im rtant
aspect of
e pharmacy, but
m · ical and health supplies of
all ki.n ds are readily available
in addition to many su·n ies,
cosmetics, and
·1ts. The.
Jo sonville ·Pharmacy is an

''

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                    <text>•
'
qualifying to keep livestock under these
conditions may keep horses and ponies
as long as they have no more than a
total of seven.
The coWlcil in its last meeting also
voted to up the business license fees for
insurance companies dealing with life,
health, ac&lt;;ident, and industrial
insurance .

It's official,
The people living in Johnsonville no
longer live in a town. They are city '
residents 11ow. ·
The Johnsonville Town Council
became the city council at its last
meeting in August by passing an
ordinance making Jonnsonville a city.
. Mayor E. L. Cox and the council
also made plans to expanti the city
officials by purchasing two vacant
buildings next to the present city hall. ·
The buildings, to be used as a new
city hall and for storage after they are

I

•
•

•

remodeled, were purchased from a
Hemingway businessman, Merritt E. ·
Morris, for $5,000. Revenue · sharing
money will be used for the purchase.
The city officials are now accepting
aids on the remodeling· project.
LIVESTOCK
·
The council adopted an ordinance
forbidding citizens from · keeping '
livestock within- the city limits. The
ordinance prohibits anyone except
livestock dealers to keep hogs, cows,
horses, mules, ponies and chickens
anywhere in the city. The only
. exception is for people who own , a .
minimum of five acres or more within
the corporate limits of the city. Those
•

•

I

•

...

•

•

Whereas resident agents in the past
have paid $25 and non-resident agents
$50 for their licenses, the new
regulations will increase the fees .
Resident agents, who have gross
premiums Qf less than $1,000 will pay
$35.·
Resident agents whose business
ranges from $1,000 to $20,000 will pay
one per cent of the premiums. From
$20,000 up, they will pay one half per
cent $1,000. For non-tesident agents, all
fees are doubled.
The new ·r ates .apply on gross
premiums collected through offices or
agents located in the town regardle.ss of
where the property is located and o the
gross permium is located .
Couneil also voted to add one street
·light in the Holly Hill subdivision on a
motion by Councilman Kerry Tanner.

•
•

New City 0

e Buildings

The two buildings adjoining the Johnsonville town hall .are being r~~odeled to
urchased rrom a Hemingway businessman after tlie sale was approve
~ohnsonville Mayor and thf.' council members. &lt;Staff Photo)

Y

e

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                    <text>y. August 18, 1977

urs

-THE WEEKLY OBSERVER. Hemln
•

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Tl1e Jol111so11ville Public Library, presently housed in its second location since it
\\'as founded so1ne 14 years ago, is badly in ne
of additional s ace if it is to
•
•

lib1·a1·y, which has been the project of the Johnsonvil e
fi1·st 01·ganized.
•

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oman's

ub since it was

�</text>
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.....
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Needing More Space

Tt1e Jol1nsonville Public Library, presently housed in its sec d I
·
·
·
\\'as founded so1ne 14 years ago, ls badly in need of addi . on ocat10? ~·n~e it
adequately se1·ve the patrons of the Johnsonville area ~;n.al ~pac; if it is to
housing. will soon be found that will accommod
.
is ope that new

~~~:•;.:g~::~~d~as been the project of the Johns~n~!:ieth~o:::~ste~uf:;:~~ ~: ~~=

Johnsonville Public J,ibra1·y Must Have
Space To Expand Its Facilities
The hbra.ry ii now opel'l five
wed at UtLs lllne. Throuth the limewtte tbeSunday NewYoril hours a day f or five days a
The John1onvllle Public effort.a of KnoUer, the bul.ldlnc Times and the Flosence Mor- week. The ICbedule is Monday,
Ubrary, U.ke au many other was moved to lta prCM!t site, ninl News.
It was noted that there was 1111 Wednesday, and Prlday, 1-6
projecta, dld not Just happen. It wblch bad been purchased by
p.m. : Tuesday and 1bunday,
bl• taken a lot of plannl ng 1111d donaUons ra1aed In tbe com- urgent need for a beater, and
also needed was better Ugbtlng, 10 a.m. • 1 p.m. and 34 p.m.
Itron on the part of a great munity, In 1969.
Mrs. Lura Poston, 11.brariln ,
many people to provide thLs
The establl1bment of the maga:&amp;lne and newspaper
t.adlity for the people of lbe Unified County Ubrary Syatem racka. chairs, stools and a table. saya that in this schedule they
serve at least 200 peraons per
Johnsonville area.
gave the local libnry many
A May, 1961J report shows that week and more, depending on
Back In 11182 and 11.3 a IJ'OUP of advantages.. Not only was the
Jotui.onville ruldents eagerly librarian's 11 tary paid, but the library b now open 25 hours the sea"'n. Sbe noted that in
allr8Ued the arrival each month funda were availlble for ber to a week. Tlrough the usodatlon spite of the fa.rt that the schools
ol the Florence County Cir- wie to take Ubrary Sdmce with the Florence County have good libraries, the scbool
culating Ubraey Book...nobtle. courses, u well as pay her and Ubrary 11stem at thls time the children st.III U3e the public
It wu on ooe such day, while her substitute while she was library was receiving a library a great deal during the
waiting, that Mrs. Evie away doing this. Tbe librarian telephone, typewriter. two sets 9dlool year. She noted that It
Rowntree and Mr1 . Peggy can abo attend State Ubracy of Eocyclopediu, Dictionaries. would be an excellent Idea to
A I m a n a cs , have the library open on
Altman were dl.lcu.ulng the Convention meetings . The A t 1 a s ,
ofter of Crawford Gillette to services of the Reference blOt1rapllical dictionaries and Satul"dll)', but that cannot be
give approximately 450 boob to Librarian In Florence are numerous other books and arranged al the present.
The latest contribution from
aid s.
AU
the Circulating Llbrary. The available to the local clthms, avallable
thinking of these ladles wu, as well as the South Carolina miscellaneous office supplies the Johnsonville Woman's Club,
" Why lhould these booka leave State Inter-Library Loan wtte furnisbed, ,ilus a atock of who has sponsored tbel!brary
our town ? lln't there aome way Program.
5,000 books whlcb are ex- from the very beginning, was
A report of October S, 1963 changed regularly, including shelving for the Easy Books.
to keep them here? Could they
Tbe most urgent need at tb1s
!&gt;091ibly be used to start a shows that on September 10, large print books and framed
publlc Ubraey?"
1964, the Johnsonville Public prints. The library was al.so time is additional space. The
Gillette wu wUllng for them Ubrary doubled its schedule s upplied with standard catalogs fadllty ls lllO overcrowded that i.t
to be used this .,,.Y, and the and would then be open 12 hours li .ting children and adult books Is literally bulging at the seams.
Johnaonvllle Women 's Club a week. The extended hours recommended
for
small There aooo must be largtt
voted to sponsor the John- were Monday and Thursday, 2-5 libraries.
quarters made 1vallable U the
IOllVille Public Ubrary. Mrs. p.m.; Friday, 9:3G-ll a .m . and
By this time the Ust of library ls to continue its steady
Rowntree was appointed 2-6 p.m.; and Saturday, 9:30-11 magazines bad lncre1-' and growth.
Project Chairman and WU soon a.m.
Mrs. Poston said in a
the library was receiving
very busy chosslng a com·
It alllo showed that through NaUooal Geographic, J1ck &amp; teleph.one Interview Friday
mlttee, writing letters and the association with the Jlll, Popular Mechanics, afternoon, " It is very Inaeeldna Information.
Florence County Library Popular Science, Consumer teresting to note that Pamplico,
A room near the Town Hall System, the facility would Report, Sandlapper, Sports Timmonsville and Lake City,
wu - . i secured and the Town receive a typewriter, telephone, Illustrate, Saturd117 Review and also branch libraries, have
Council agreed to pay the rent Encyclopedia,
Dictionary, Changing Times. The Ust of larger buildings and better
fw the facility. The Lions Club Atlas, World Almanac and newspapers included the {adlities that Johnsonville, but
wu receptive to the Idea and Biographical Dictionary, plus Swlday New York Times, Lake attendance at the llbraey and
agreed to pay for heat and aU miscellaneous office sup- City News Post , Florence the circulation Is much greater
Ughtl . Lumber, nalla and plies needed In the libraey.
Morning News and the Weekly In Johnsonville."
varnJ.sb were donated by In·
In addition, a stock of 500 Observer.
.
dlviduala, while the Jaycee books would be supplied, these
The Johnsonville Woman's
member's built the shelves. to be exchanged from Ume to Club and the Pee Dee Junior
Members of tbe American lime. Standard catalogs listing Woman's Club bad provided a
S1a11/ey Sporlcin, task
I..eslon, P. T.A., Girl Scouts llJld chlldren and adult books · checkout desk and chair, film
force chief, Federal
llllUI,)' others helped In ways to recommended
for
small strip slide projector , card
Energy Administranumerous to mention.
libraries would be provided. catalog, record player, table
tion. on pricing rules:
In January, 1964, Mrs. National Geographic, American and small chairs, and an air"Unfortunately to date
Rowntree and two Johnsonville Girl, Changing Times, Boy's conditioner.
the FEA 's efforts to
Woman's Club members at- Ufe, Jack &amp; Jill magazines
Through other contributors
secure compliance from
tended a County Delegation would be supplied plus women's tbe building, lot, shelving,
our nation's major remeeting ln Florence and magazines and news magazme., beater, shrubbery and plwn·
finers have been a failreiluested an Act of the General to be selected later. The bing, plus additional belps had
ure ~''
A·embl,y to establish a unified newspapers supplied at this been provided.
county library system, tbe
establishment of a Branch
Ubrary In Johnsonville, plus
supplies. At this time the
Florence Library was in
oper•tlon and the Florence
County Circulating Library
operated separately, serving
the dlatrict schools and
operatina the Bookmobile.
Within a few weeks, Mrs.
·. ,
Rowntree and Mrs. Altmen, a
Ubrary Coounlttee memblr,
visited Mr. W.C. Poston,
Florence County Superln·
J. {,:. B. .4 .i1lfl)/()
tendent of Education, who
supported their plans, gave
them supplies to start
proceulng the books, and
qreed to have the County
Bookmobile visit the library in
'2.00 Deposit
Johnsonville each month to
briDI and exchange books.
'S.95 Balance
In February, 1964, tbe
When Pict ures Are
Johnaonvllle Public Library
Delivered
Board met for the purpose of
arpnizlng. Propoaed by-laws
\
were read and adopted. A nine2-1 x lO's
Board of Directors. was
I
elected and the motion made
x
I I1 . \
and adopted to proceed with all
f •' . '
10 - Billfolds
other nece1sary legal stepa and
proceedings to complete the
crpnlz•tion of the Jolnaooville
Pabllc Library. Peter Knoller
lo A11 Li mi Is
. . . . elected chairman, and
lo Umils To A FamilJ
• lbree per90!U! offered their time
: to wCJC'k In the library.
II EITll CllllE Fii lltlPS
- Oo March 4, 1964, the JolinFAMILY GROUPS WELCOME
• aaavllle Public Library opened
Complete
aod wltbin a few daya the
" d1~1lon wu made by the
Florence Cmmty Deleeatloo to
111tablllb the Unified County
8yltem In Flor#!Ce County.
Mrs. Pa11Y Altman accepted
the pomlUon of Ubrarta:n, and
om1Clmded u a ll'lonmce County
BJ MU.OREO 8 . HUGHES

----

A PICTURE IS WORTH A
THOUSAND WORDS •••

LOYED ONES : ~ ·

''.l'
COLOR PORTRAIT
PACKAGE

- ••ber

'., ...

2 - 5 7's

,

$

August 25-26
Friday, Saturday 11-6 10-5

Ubrar)'-nployee for tm )'earl.
Tiie Grlaiaal room waa !IOGQ
-•own. .JGlm G. Wellman

PROSSER'S DEPT. STORE

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j

•

•
I

e
a

,

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                    <text>•

•

-

•

•

•

Mr . and Mrs. ·William L. Mrs. Carroll Greenwood, who tulations .
Mrs . Carl Elliott, the former
Mace . Mrs . Percy D. Poston, will celebrate a wedding anMrs . William G. Bullock . and niversary on Friday, March 18. Debbie Wise, who with her
Mrs . Wallace Altman traveled
Mrs . Price Hughes visited husband lives in Rock Hill
to Columbia recently to attend with an old classmate, Mrs. where she is a student at
the La wrence Welk Concert at Lavern Miles . at her home in . Wintbr9p College, visited ·her
the Columbia Coliseum . They F'lorence last week . The two paren.ts. Mr . and Mrs~ Harry
were joined for dinner before had not seen each other since Wise. during her spring break
the performance by Mrs . Alt- · they were
juniors in high · last week .
man's son, William Altman, school . and,, it was only two
and Mrs . Altman. who also years ago that the classmates . Maisie Ballou ·is having a
enjoyed the concert. .
· learned the whereabouts of birthday on Wednesday, March
Lewis Bell will celebrate a l\1rs . Miles. the former Beatrice 2:~ . lier many friends· wish her a
birthday on St. Patrick''s Day, Parrott.
·
·
happy birthday.
.
Thursday. March 17. Happy
Best wishes to Bobbie Hanna
birthday, Lewis.
·
and Stephen Knight. Sr .. who
Congratulations
to
Mr.
and
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin .Bishop will . celebrate · birthdays ·on
Mrs
.
Glen
Hanna
,
who
will
were in Columbia . recently Saturday. March 19.
celebrate
a
wedding
an·
where Mr. Bishop was to report
Gail Batchelor. a student at
.
mversary
on
.
Wednesday,
to the Veteran's Hospital for a Queen's College in Charlotte,
March
23.
·
complete physical. The results
North
C,arolina.
was
the
receQt
•
,
were so good that the doctors guest of her p·a rents, Mr. and
•
told him not to come back for ·Mrs. 1'hurman B,atchelor.
three years u~less . something
Celebrating· birthdays on
developed. While in Columbia Sunday. March 20 Wrill be David
they visited Mrs. Bishop's Bray. R.G. DastoQ. Ruby Lee
.daughter, Mrs. M.L. Br·own, Chandler. Barbara Cain, and
and Mr. Brown. They later \\'.ent Adrian Jacobs. Happy birto Chapin .to visit anotlier thday. .
.
daughter ..Mrs. Albert Cox, and
Mr. and Mrs. Tony Hanna, of
Rev. Cox. While there they Monrg~ ~ N;!&gt;f.th &lt;[;a rolioa, wer~
joined the choir of the Chapin th~. , ·~.~~n ·~R~t~ ,of.... their
United Methodist
Church on the · respective··
parents,
l,\1r. . and·.
.
...
.
.
,.
church bus for a trip to New Mrs. Buster Hanna and Mrs .
Hope · Methodist · Church near 1'heola ·Ammons. . .
Greenville. They enjoyed the
Happy birthday to Stephen H. .
ride on the· bus with their Mudge, who. will celebrate a
•
friends, which Mrs.
Bishop · birthday on Monday, March 21.
described as being a lot of fun, · Mr . and Mrs. Bill Grugan, of
as well as the service a·t the Dillon, were the recent guests of
•
church with ref reshments af- her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
•
terwards . Enroute home they Homer Altman. Mrs. Grugan is
visited the Browns in Columbia the former Cindy 1'.ltman.
again.
Best wishes to Jim King and
Happy birthday to Travis Debbie Lane, who will celebrate .
Poston of Colutnbia, C. G. birthdays on Tuesday, March
•
Buckey, Mrs. Maggie Howell ' 22.
and Jerry Singletary, who will
Celebrating a wedding anceleb:rate the occ.a sion on niversary on Tuesday, March 22
Friday, March 18.
will be . Mr. and Mrs. E.
· Congratulations to Mr. and Langston
Cox.
Congra•

•

'

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

1

•

•

•

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,

•

•

•

I

•

•

e Grand o ·p ening was held
Friday and Saturday,
. 12 and 13, for the
sonville Hardware· and
ance Company.
is was preceded by a
n cutting ceremony in
David L. Marsh, Sr.,
r member of the firm,
ssisted by his son and cor, David L. Marsh, Jr.,
his grandson, David

aun Marsh.
participating in the ..
am were Mayor E·. L. Cox
ev. Nevelle Lambert. , .
number ;of
floral
gements were received
'
messages
. of
attilation.
·
.
nsonville Hardware and
iance Compa·n y was
lished on January 1, 1949,
avid Marsh, Sr., and his
brother-in-law, Grady C.
. They experienced a
ant success f roDl the
ning which has grown

feet. It has a lovely step-up
off ice and plenty of space in the
rear with a paved, off-street
parking · area and side
entrance.
Their business consists
mostly . of a general hardware
line and they also . carry
housewares, paints, floor
coverings and lawn mowers.
They handle a lot of steel and.
do custom work in pipe c.utting
and threading.
.
•

:~.--'

.

~

(

Also present for the grand
opening were Bob Couch ,
Di-strict
Sales Manager
Hardware, Monroe, N. C.;
Harold Clemmons of Myrtle
Beach, a repr~sentative of
Dixie O'Brien Paint Company
and Bob Carter of Sumter, with
Jolly Roger ~tuclios.
Hundreds of balloons and
miniature paint cans filled
with candy were given away
·during the grand opening.
~

. ..

·~~~·~?t:'·~.
. :·.r.,&gt;.
~.
.
·) ·( ~
·~ ::~~
.

•• •

. ·-··

• • ••

.. . .•

""

time.
May, 1963, Jones passed
. The business continued
partnership with his
w, Mrs. Ruth M. Jones, as
er until early 1973. At this
David

Marsh,

•

Jr.

·red her interest.
til recently they had
ted in ·a rented building. ·
ver, early this year they
into their beautiful

•

ous and modern building

oadway Street, and were
ration there on February

Xima

'

.,

David L

ua~r~e~~~=-==:_:_~_:__---~~--~~~--_.__-------~U--~---~~~~

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                    <text>•

nsonvi
Johnsonville Rescue Squad
Queen, Ernestine Jowers, cut
the ribbon to the door of the
new quarters in Johnsonville in
dedication ceremonies held
recently.
Chief Hilburn Stone said
during the service, ''In cutting
of these ribbons we are
officially opening the doors of
these recently completed
facilities to the sick and
suffering of the community."
Chief Stone welcomtld guests
and J . W. Jowers opened the
event with prayer. Kenneth H.
Stone recognized guests
including Mayor E. L. Cox and
members of the Town Council,
Rep. Odell Venters, Fire Chief
Irby Stone and members of his
department , and Charles
Godwin of Lake City. Harry
Francis Powell gave the
history of the rescue squad
after which Rev. Paul Reid,
Chaplain was joined by the
ministers of the churches of the
community in the dedicatory
prayer.
·
Mrs.
Albert
Powell,
President of the Women's
Auxilliary of the' · Rescue
Squad, gave a wife's view on
having her husband serve as a
member of the rescue squad.
She told of the hours spent
alone, in her case, while her
husband trains to become
better qualified to serve the
suffering to the community, of
the family's plans that may be
changed in a minute when the
phone rings and the husband is
needed to make a call. There
are also the hours of anxi!'!fy
for the patient and the safety of
the husband when he must
leave in such haste sometimes

that he does not even have time
to say who the patient is or in
what direction he will be going.
In spite of all this, she said, the
women gladly sacrifice the
time that could be spent with
their husbands to have them
train and serve by putting their
knowledge into practice.
It is by so doing that the
community can know that
there is someone able to assist
and care for those in need in a
natural disaster such as was
experimented this past winter
or int he event of a national
emergency.
Albert Powell presented
Rev . Reid with a gift as a token
of appreciaton for his years of
service with the squad as he
was leaving to accept a new
pastorate in Bratt, Florida.
Mrs.
Art
Brookens
remembered Mrs. Reid with a
gift of a silver tray for her
devotion to • the newly
organized women's auxiliary.
Others who participated on
the program were Rev. and
Mrs. Paul Howell and son,
Bronson, Norman Edgeworth,
Mrs. Dike Powell, Mrs. Katie
;\vant, Mrs. Veretha Cribb and
Miss Marsha Avant.
The original rescue squad
organization was formed back
in March, 1965 and was named
the Tri-County Rescue Squad.
After about a year, the
organization became a loosely
run outfit.
•
Finally, in late February it
was reorganized in 1969. The
first officers were Thomas E.
Redmond, chief; Kenneth
Lyerly, assistant chief; Louie
Poston, secretary-treasurer,
and board members Wilson
Hardy, Jimmy Chapman, Bob
'

•

icates
Ramage, Elbert C. Baxley and
Irby Stone .
On May 26, 1971 , ground was
broken for the present building
with Mayor E . L. Cox,
Representative Odell Venters,
Squad 'Chief Thomas E .
Redmond
and
several
members present. Relying on
volunteer help , both in
manpower and financing , the
Johnsonville Volunteer Rescue
Squad facility on Broad Street
is completed.
The new building is 42 by 40
feet and has.a truck or vehicle
section, a meeting hall and
office, bath and bedroom and
kitchen. It is valued at $15,000
with an outstanding balance of
only $3,000. The squad owns
three vehicles.
''We
did
the
labor
ourselves,"
said
Henry
Francis Powell, referring to
members of the squad and
many other interested persons
who have lent their support.
J . W. Jowers, who teaches
masonry at the High School,
had his students helping out.
''They laid the block for the
building, the brick around the
front, and poured the floor,
Powell said.
The rescue squad receives
$250 a month from Florence
County and the remaining
funds are raised through
dinners ,
the
sale
of
merchandise, etc. ''Fifty per
cent of the people we care for
give us donations," said
Powell. ''That is how we
operate."
The rescue squad members
have been working on three
Saturday nights a month (two
per night&gt;
at McLeod
Memorial
Hospital's
emergency room in Flornece
for first-aid training. They
have iilso attended FlorenceD a rl in gt on Technical
Education Center and courses
elsewhere for additional
instruction. A firts-aid course
has just been completed at the
Johsonville facility, taught by
W. M. Tisdale
of Pamplico.
•
Ten persons completed this
course. A course in Emergency
Medical Technology is to begin
at the squad building on
Thursday, September 20. This
course will be taught by Robert
Sullivan of Lake City. There
are still several openings
available for the course and
anyone who is interested is

••

'

I

'

••

•

Rescue Squad €hief Hilburn Stone look• on as Queen
~nesUne Jowers cuts &amp;be ribbon to &amp;be newly comple&amp;ed
J•hns•ville Rescue Squad faellity.
•

•n.c:ieut times only

welcome to attend .
Officers of the rescue squad
are: Hilburn Stone, chief ;
Albert Powell, First assistant
chief ; J . W. Jowers, second
Assistant chief; Simon McNeil,
captain ;
Ralph
Poston,
r:i ntain: Kenneth H. Stone,
captaih ; Deltnus Burns
'

FURNITURE-APP

Queen Cuti Ribbon
•

es cue
.

captain;
Jimmy
Royal ,
captain Rev . S. Paul Howell,
chaplain and Harry Francis
Powell ,
secretary
and
treasurer.
Other members of the squad
are Art Brookens, Lee
Johnson, Roy Beavers, Alle.n
Howard, Johnnie Timmons,

CES-TELEVISION

Johnsonville, South Carolina
Telephone 386-2442
•

aece
200 kinda of

John Cribb , John Cox, Nickie
Cribb, Gerald Hanna, David
Brown, Charles '' Bo'' Marlowe
and Douglas Lacy . Junior
squad members are Michael
Stone, Gera ld Hanna, Charles
Draughan Harry F . Powell ,
Jr ., Ronald D'ouglas and
Donald Douglas.

4-Piece Modern

o

Vinyl

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                    <text>________..,...___~---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------(

,
J

,
'

•. ;12 I······

Johnsonville Carnival
The Johnsonville Rescue Squad earned about $200 on
their Campbell Brothers carnival held in Johnsonville
November 4 through 9. Rescue Squad secretary Harry
Powell said that the cold weather and Friday's football

game held the crowds down, and that he expects
attendance to be better next year. He pointed out that
this was the first time for the carnival, and that it will be
held in September next year, in the same location.

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                    <text>•

Vol. 2 No. 9

'

•

Hemingway, S. C., 29554 Thursday, October 24, 1974

•

•

•

10 Pages

•

•

•

''
•
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•

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••••••

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1~11~!

Students and teachers at a cost of approximately
;::::: Johnsonville High School finally $735,000, plus the land and the
r;::::: got the treat they have been ' furnishings, by the Wise Conwaiting a long time for. They struction Company of Florence.
moved into their new building It is a modern one-story
Friday.
building of block and brick
constuction.
School Principal Charles
Graham told the OBSERVER
Typical classrooms in the new
that they held classes on an school
building
feature
''abbreviated schedule'' on teachers' cabinets which may
Friday, and began their be locked, and contain file
regular,
full-time
class cabinets, storage shelves, and
schedule in the new building coat racks. The 26 exterior
Monday.
windows are designed as
The new building was built at ''escape units," and are made

of Lexan, a new, unbreakable time that ''I like the concept
substance with glare-reducing here. It really looks good."
The science preparation
properties. The lights in the
rooms can be set at two dif- center provides each student
ferent levels, and each room is with an individual locked
equipped with a pull-down drawer where he may keep his
supplies, which he checks out
screen.
The science suite is modern in for individual use. Perry
every respect. William J. remarked that this student key
Perry, building consultant with system is ''unique'' in his exthe Office of School Planning per1ence.
The chemistry laboratory
and Building in the State
Department of Education, who contains an exhaust fan to vent
toured the building several any ha11r1ful fumes, ·and a
weeks ago with other school complete ''safety unit'' conofficials, commented . at the sisting of an emergency shower
to be used in the event a student
splashes chemicals on himself,
O,___~ and an eye and face washing
•

•

•

basin.
The new school library
provides a combination office,
work room, and magazine
storage room. There is also a
conference
room,
where
students and teachers may tape
programs, and outlets installed
by the Educational Television
System. An audio visual storage
room houses projectors, tape
players, and other material.
Each room throughout the
•

•

building is equipped with individual thermostats for
heating and cooling. The exterior doors have automatic
closw·es to conserve heat or
cool air.
Designed with future needs
for expansion in mind, the
building can grow in three
different directions, and
provision has been made for
more electrical and sound
outlets .

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                    <text>•

T ll E WF.EKLY OBSER\' ER , Jle mingway , S. C., Thursday, De«mber 18, 197J-Page ;

Our Human Heritage
•

By E. Y. EADDY
sefore the railroad appeared in
1912 and a bridge spanned Lynches
f?iver about two years later, most
roads led to a ferry .
A strategic ferry in the
northeastern area of Williamsburg
was Witherspoon's , vested in John
Witherspoon in 1801 and remaining
in his charge until his death in 1815.
According to the terms of John
Witherspoon 's will, the ferry was
then vested in J . D. Witherspoon,
executor, for a term of 14 years,
"in trust for and having the sole
enefit of the incorporated
Presbyterian Church at Aimwell
on the Pee Dee River. "
William Johnson, Jr., born
1787 succeeded J. D. Witherspoon
at the ferry on a plantation
purchased in 1825 from the
Witherspoon estate. The 1850
census of Williamsburg County
shows William Johnson, a man of
considerable wealth for his time
and place, living just below where
e American Legion home now
ands in Johnsonville.
Enumerated in the household
are his wife the former Sarah
Crosby; son ' James H., age 23 ;
daughter Sarah , 21 ; and the
following
lodgers:
Joseph
Costellen, a fisherman from Italy ;
John C. Dye, a merchant from
North Carolin who witnessed
William Johnson's will; and
Herman Zadix, a merchant from
Austria.
Johnson's Ferry was the point
at which the stage coach driver
stopped to change horses. As the
stage coach passed east over
Lynches River on the ferry, a
Johnson slave in charge of the
erry mules
announced the
mber of passengers with blasts
Ill a fox horn--one blast for each
ssenger, thus informing Mrs.
ohnson of the number of places
at should be set for dinner . The
ssengers ate during the change
~orses, and then proceeded to
nion for the next stop.
The
Johnsons'
closest
"ghbors were their ·daughter
argaret and son-in-law Thomas
thmahler Grier, and Henry
ddy, a large land owner who
~ 110 opera tea a cotton gin near the

erry.

Joh -

.

. •• •

•

•

nsonv1lle had received its

name about six years earlier· in
1843, from the action of the above
named Capt. Johnson who had
settled at Witherspoon's Ferry,
which soon took the name
Johnson 's Ferry . Dr. Samuel
McGill wrote of the event in
Reminiscences of Williamsburg
County.
''At the solicitation of Capt.
William Johnson and A. W. Dozier
of Pee Dee River, Dr. McGill
settled at the Ferry House.
''For the first few months
Capt. Johnson and family resided
in the old ferry house situated on
the bluff of Lynches River , but
soon we all moved down into his
new house situated at the junction
of the Indiantown and Stage Coach
Road. The family was very kind
and Mrs . Johnson the most
motherly of women. Thomas R.
Grier, who had married their
eldest daughter, was living with
them at the time. Their eldest son·
Nicholas F. Johnson lived at the
Captain's new house which was
lat~r owned by Mr. Grier. He was
the farming boy and a great
confort to the young doctor.
''About this time Old Mr.
Henry Eaddy (1778-1855) was
settling the place where his son,
·Hon. H. E . Eaddy (1839-1912),
now resides, and he and Capt.
Johnson requested the young
doctor to assist in writing a petition
to the Post-Master General at
Washington for a post office to be
established here, and Mr. John
Gerard appointed its postmaster.
The petition was granted and its
name became Johnsonville. Mr.
Eaddy and Dr. McGill were
securities to the bond of Mr.
Gerard.
Soon this section of the country
took the name Johnsonville, after
the man who was responsible for
securing a post office at this place.
The stage coach stopped at
Capt. Johnson's house. All the mail
for the surrounding communities
was left in Capt. Johnson's care.
This provided excellent reasons for
him. to request a post office be
granted.''
In more than 200 years'·
association with the Johnsonville
and later the Hemingway area,.the
Johnson family has not only given
its name to a town, but land on

which an early church was built,
and a number of doctors.
William Johnson, Sr., father of
William Johnson of the ferry , was
born 1760 and died March 16, 1825:
He married Celia, last name
unknown , born 1765, died Sept. 16,
1825. They are buried on a bluff on
the north side of Lynches River
about
three
miles
from
Johnsonville on the Johnson
plantation. It was later owned by a
grandson, William J. Johnson, who
gave four acres of land from this
plantation for Trinity Methodist
Church.
The tract is described in the
deed as ''situate and lying in
Marion District ... on the Southwest
side of the Great Pee Dee one mile
from Johnson's Ferry
on the
Lynches Creek on the Stage Road
leading from Georgetown , to
Cheraw.''
Trinity Methodist Church was
built on this site. Remodeled and
modernized several items, this
church still occupies its original
building.
The
beautiful
chancel
furniture that graces the sanctuary
was made by Brig. Gen. John
Henry Woodberry, great-grandson
of Henry Eaddy and son of
Johnsonville's only woman mayor,
Bell (Eaddy&gt; Woodberry Bickson.
Almost moribund after the
Civil War, Johnsonvill~ was kept
alive by the turpentine business,
and about the only people who
· accumulated any property were
those who worked in pine timber
and related industry.
The early turpentine dealers
and workers migrated into
Williamsburg before the War
began. Amon the dealers in naval
stores and pine products who made
fortunes in this part of the country
were J. F. Carraway, R. H.
Kimball, and F. Rhem and Sons.
Johnsonville and the ferry were
busy places for a season.
Despite their inborn aversion
to working for anyone except
themselves, many young farmers
engaged
in
part-time

'

'

''turpentining'' or cut and floated
their 9wn timber to market, riding
the logs down Lynches and Pee
Dee River to Georgetown, walking
the long distance back home.
•
By theiturn of the century, this
industry had begun to decline here,
and tobacco was introduced as a
money crop.
Brig .
Gen .
Woodberry
described the Johnsonville of that
period.
''Johnsonville, where I was
born and lived in my youth , had a
post office, a general store, and not
much more . The settlement
centered around the crossroads
that went west to Lake City and
Florence. The nearest railroad was
23 miles away (at Lake City) and
roads leading thereto were sandy
and rutty. Mail came in by road
cart, usually daily. The Lynches
River, two miles away, was used
for floating timber to market, but
.was not suitable for power boats.
The Great Pee Dee River , into
which the Lynches flows nearby,
boasted at that time a weekly
steamboat (The Fa1·n1er and later
The Merchant ) that brought bulk
supplies from Georgetown. The
nearest landing was Allison, some
five miles across the Lynches
River. Neither rivers had bridges
at that time. Hand propelled flats
were used for crossing.
''Outside of the general store,
there was a cotton gin, a grits mill,
and a blacksmith shop. The old
turpentine still and the rice hulling
mill, along with the barrel factory
and the stage stables were visible
but abandoned structures.
The general. store was not only
the grocery store, but the supplier
of credit for fertilizer, labor costs,
and far111 suppli'es of every nature.
In my early days it was operated
by Gerogetown people, who
controlled the steamboat. 'H.
Kaminski, King of the Jews,
humpback britches and brogan
shoes' was a popular ditty back
then.
''Meat, other than butts meat,
was largely from hogs raised

locally , and in our case, in the Pee
Dee swamp, !'liarion County side.
The rivers supplied ftSh and the
swamps wildlife. Hog meat was
cured by immersing in brine or
smoking in the family s111okehouse,
or both.
''Fresh
beef
came
in
occasionally, when a Mr. Britton
came around in his wagon, hauling
a freshly killed cow resting
sanitarily on a bed of fresh pine
needles. When his delivered price
went up from five cents to six cents
a pound, there was a general bowl,
but it was the only beef that could
be bought. There being no ice

available except occasionally in
the winter months, the aver.ige
fa1111er hesitated to kill his ow11
cov.·s.
''Schools operated when
youngsters were not required for
fa1111 work, usually from October
to ~arch . Kids walked from two to
five miles daily.
Books were what
•
one could get. There were no
classes or grades. In about 1903, a
graded school COid Johnsrn:Jville&gt;
V.'as established at Ard 's Cross
Roads , three miles from both
Johnsonville and Heming~'lly."
That is another story, to be
continued.

••
i'

..

•

•

OPEN All

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                    <text>•
•

•

•

•

•

•

•

• •

,-

•

•

•

JOHNSONVILLE FLASHES
'

JOHNSONVILLE FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
•
DATE
September 3
September 10
September 17
September 24
October l
October a
October 15
October 22
October 29
November 5

OPPONENT

PLACE

Sumter
Aynor
Hannah-Pamplico
Loris
Latta
North Myrtle Beach
Choppee
Hemingway
Pleasant Hill
Lake View

•

Away
Home
Away
Home
Home
Away
Home
Away
Homecoming
Away

SCORE

0-6
27-0
39-6

•

2-30
8-31
•
12-6
•

•
•

. I~

:;,&lt;;.(;

•

COACHES BENNY CARTER &amp; BOB RANKIN

JOHNSONVILLE CHEERLEADERS

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.....

.-.. _...,_..., •-·--•-,·r-----~~

Called 'Sedition Shop' In Revolution

res

•
er1an

(Picture is courtesy of Williamsburg Cou11ty Historical Society)

•.

Indiantown Presbyterian Church in Year 1900
r's Note: This is the first of a two
series on the Indiantown
terian Church and its place in
• The first part focuses on the
Ing of the church and its part in
volutlon.
second part, next week, will
trate on its revival after the
Ion and its continued growth.

¥ CARL ELLIOTI', JR.
• town Presbyterian Church,
ed structure, stands at the
way 261 as you round a
· es from Hemingway.
pee stands in the center
lirdl'a view as you approach.
t. )'l!U glimpse a wide, homey
supported by white columns
tall brick steps. Tbe side of
J to the highway reveals

simple windows with green shudders
and one stained glass toward the back .
It is one of the longest surviving
churches in an old district. The first
church in the district, Williamsburg
Presbyterian , was founded in 1736 and
Indiantown is acknowledged as its first
daughter church, founded in 1757 . The
present structure was constructed in
1830 after the Bristish burned the
original building to the ground.
The name Indiantown (which has
always intrigued me ) is derived from
the Mingo Indian Village, which stood in
the fork of the Mingo and Indiantown
Swamp, where the church now stands.
When roads were nonexistent the
area, Black Mingo Creek was the most
important stream inside 'Williamsburg
district. It was navigable almost all the
way up to Indiantown at one time. The

church was built one and a half miles
from the head of naviga tion on Black
Mingo Creek. With the coming of roads,
its importance as a means of transport
diminished.
Indians still lived in the area when
the Scotch and Irish imigrants settled
there , but they were mostly migratory
and not hostile . In the spring they would
come in great numbers to hunt in the
rich woodlands and swam plands fat with
game.
There is no known record of the
founding of Indiantown Presbyterian
Church. The year of the church's
founding is based largely on a letter by
Dr . J . R. Witherspoon, written in 1849
and recorded in Howe's "History of the
Presbyterian Church
in South
Carolina," in which Witherspoon
recollects events 20 years before his

urc
birth, known to him only through
heresay.
Wi lherspoon was born near
Kingstree in 1774 and was a member of
the Williamsburg Church.
Another letter dated June 28, 1757,
refers to, in addition lo Williamsburg
Church , two churches in the area being
buil l the prev ious year. Since
Indiantown
is
regarded
as
Williamsburg's earliest offspring, it is
certai n that it was one of the two
churches referred lo. Therefore the date
1757 is probably very nearly correct.
Colonists who were members of
dissenting denominations were at a
disadvantage since churches of the
established Church of England were
built at government expense, paying
their clergy through the state.
Presbyterian congregations, such as
Indiantown , were forced to raise their
own buildings, pay their pastors and
transact their business through trustees.
The indigo trade accounted for a
moderate prosperity in the Indiantown
area . This trade soon led to the
introduction of black laborers .
Among the first elders of the church
was Major John
James , the
Revolutionary hero. Through he had
acquired little education during his
early life, Jam es became an expert
horseman and a skilled woodsman . He
was a lso among those \vho by a loan
1nade possible the erection of the first
house of worship.
1'he Wil lian1 sb ur g district was
largely unaffected by the early part of
the Revolution . Their moderate
prosperity and freedom from oppression
makes it understandable that they had
little enthusiasn1 for the Revolutionary
cause in the beginning .
Nol until the fall of Charleston in
May , 1780, did the Williamsburger's
become concerned about the British
troops who had sudd enly turned their
military campaign toward the South.
With the defeat of Charleston, it
appeared that South Carolina lay al the
mercy of English conquerors. For a
short time the people of Williamsburg
still did not wish to do battle, for
England at first offered generous terms.
The militia were paroled to their homes
and civilians were invited to renew their

loyalty to the crown . '
Within a few weeks however,
another proclamation superceeded the
original conditions. It demanded that
those declaring their allegiance actively
help in restoring English rule to the
land.
Ci tizens of Williamsburg called a
meeting to consider the situation and
Major James, who had previously
commanded his neighbors in the field
and was later to represent them in the
legislature was selected to go down to
Georgetown and talk to the English
commander there, Captain Ardesoif. He
was to ask what the new proclamation
meant to the people of the district.
James rode to Georgetown dressed
as an ordinary planter and upon
reaching the town was escorted to
Ardesoif's lodgings.
James asked the captain if the
people of Williamsburg might not be
allowed to remain on their plantations in
peace and quiet as was originally
offered .
Andesoif replied, " although you
have rebelled against his majesty, he
offers you a free pardon, of which you
are underserving , for you ought all to be
hanged; but as he offers you a free
pardon,' you must take up arms in
support of his cause."
James said that the people he came
to represent would not submit to such
terms.
This angered Ardesoif, especially
the idea that James came representing a
group of people, a revolutionary
sentiment to the captain. He said, ''you
damned rebel, if you speak in such
language, I will immediately order you
to be hanged up to the yard-arm."
The major was unused to being
assaulted with such harsh language and
seeing that Andesoif wore a sword and
he had none, James grabbed a chair and
bandished in the face of the captain. He
then retreated through the back of the
house, mounted his horse and made his
escape through the country.
When James got back to
Williamsburg and recounted his story to
his countrymen, they became extremely
angry and decided to fight to the death if
need be.
James was asked to lead four

companies of 200 men under captain&amp;
William McCottry, John McCauley.
Henry Mouzon and John James of th
Lake, cousin of the major.
James refused to take command
because of a speech impediment. This
led the group to request the American
General Gates, · who was heading
southward to fight Cornwallis at
Camden, to appoint them a commande?.
Lt. Col. Francis Marion agreed to
lead the group which was the beginning
of the famous Marion brigade.
James also had two sons who fought
with Marion, Capt. John James and 17·
year old William James, who later wrote
a "Life of Brig. General Francis
Marion."
The British calvary officer,
Banastre Tarleton was then dispatched
with about 100 dragoons to qu.ell the
uprising in Kingstree under James. But
reaching the city and hearing through a
female informant of an American
Continued to Page 9

Continued from page 1

nee under McCottry whose
rs were greatly exaggerated,
on decamped in the night and
ted.
owever the Bristish sent another
tlate in August of that year (1780)
Maj. Wemyss. Wemyss led a
h through the area around
msburg stretching 70 miles long
5 miles wide, from Salem the
h of the county, between Lynches
·and the Black.
:very house on most of the
!ltions was burned to the ground,
!gro servants were carried off, the
1itants plundered, the stock
ially sheep killed and all provisions
could be come by destroyed.
was during this sweep that
'SS burned Indiantown Church,

because he said, ''It was a sediti
shop."
Maj. James' home was also burn~
after his family was barbarous1
treated. His son, Capt. John James, o
parole after being captured . 1
Charleston was· threatened . wi
hanging.
Wemyss tried to induce the serva
to testify that he had broken his pato
thus giving excuse to hang him. Nos
evidence was received, however and
was released.
Following the disaster of 1780,
public worship at Indiantown came to
end. The church had been burned,
men of the congregation were w
Marion; mere survival was '
preoccupation of the day with familie
home.

••

Revolutionary Hero

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                <text>Indiantown founded 1757 WO 9-18-75</text>
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                    <text>••
res

•
er1

ros
•

s Note; 'Ibis is the conclusion to
)nu1 Serles on the history of the
Presbyterian Church. The
cancemrated on the beginnings
charch and its role in the
ean Revolution.
part wDI focus on the church's
after the Revolution &lt;when it
as a ''sedition shop'') and its
ued growth, though tempered with
1'1ld prosperity, spanning a
of some 218 years.
e material for this article is from
Historical Sketch of Indiantown
terian Churhc'' by James Fowler
, .courtesy of the Williamsburg
y Historical Society.

r.

:Y Cl\RL ELLIOTI', JR.

ter Indiantown Church was
by the British in 1780, all public
p at Indiantown came to an end.
en of the church were with Marion
mere
survival
was
the
ation of the day with families at

ere was now no minister and
assembly was an invitation for
attack.
t by 1783 Indiantown again had a
e pastor, the Rev. Thomas Hill.
suggests that a new church
had been rebuilt and that by
e the Indiantown Presbyterian
had been successftilly revived.
1788 the church petitioned the
~lina General Assembly for
tlon. The members of the
silned a confession of faith
as follows:
Congregation
of

subscribe,

8'ereis one God and a

e of Rewards of

the

Christian
true Religion.
floly Scriptures
Testament are

of divine Inspiration, and are the
Rule of Faith and Practice.
Fifth, That it is lawful, and the
Duty of every Man, being
thereunto called those that
govern to bear witness to Truth.
Also in 1788, Rev. James White
Stephenson came to Indiantown, first as
a supply (substitute minister ) and
subsequently as full·time minister. His
services were shared between
Indiantown and the newly for111ed
congregation at Bethel in Kingstree.
Stephenson served these congregations
'
for 18 years.
His influence in the church was said
to have been great and it was under his
ministry that the church began to
actively campaign against such
traditional practices in the district as
drinking, dancing and horse racing for
church members.
Rev. Stephenson also worked to get
more black members into the
congregation.
··
He married Elizabeth James ,
daughter of Maj. John James, who died
in 1791 at the age of 59. The marriage
proved to be shortlived because in 1793
Elizabeth James Stephenson died and
was buried in Indiantown Cemetery
near her father .
The loss of the indigo trade in
Williamsburg was soon replaced by
cotton. The cotton gin brought increased
prosperity to the South, including
Indiantown.
After Stephenson's departure from
the district in 1808, te Session of elders in
the church began to take more stingent
measures against church members for
what were deemed immoral practices.
In 1811 , for example, the Session_ of
the Bethel and Indiantown, acting
jointly, found a member of Bethel guilty
of ''incest'' because he had married his
deeeased wife's sister.
But the most celebrated case of the
church's disciplinary days came in 1831
against Samuel McGill, a devoted
member of Indiantown.
It should be noted that only

- - -···

Indiantown Presbyterian Church Today
communicants of the church were
disciplined and this was entirely in
keeping with a policy la id down by the
state General Assembly.
McGill's offense was that of having ,
''recently taken an active part in a
dancing party ."
At the time McGill was contracting
to build a new church , a project which
was said to have been difficult and
, without any profit.
The Session endeavored to get
McGill to confess his guilt and repent his
misdoing. He was known to be a lover of
dancing and pleasure.
But after reviewing him the Session
was dissatisfied at his response to their
accusations and so ordered him not to
commune the next day.
He was later charged, and tried
before the Session, for obstinacy

disrespec t a nd of, '' slandering an
individual of this Session."
The tr ial caused much excitement in
the congregation.
McGill was found guilty of the first
two charges but aquitted of the slander
cha rge. A sentence of rebuke and
admonition was administered.
Finally on Nov. 4, 1832, McGill came
before the Session made his peace,
confessed his offense and was restored
to the church.
His son, Dr . Samuel D. McGill, the
author
of
''Reminiscences
of
Williamsburg County," wrote: ''There
were no more dancing parties given at
his house during the remainder of his
life."
Nevertheless the controversy over
dancing dragged' on until on April 28 ,
1834 , the whole Session confronted the
congregation with its resignation,

saying among other things : '' ... we
believe it hopeless to proceed farther
against such determined opposition, and
as we cannot conscientously serve the
church as ruling elders, seeing the
practice of dancing, excessive drinking
and their accompanying evils cannot be
suppressed by us , and judging from the
efforts already made that our influence
is insufficent for this or to promote the
purity and edification of this church ... "
Their statement was signed by S.
James Wilson, George Barr, George
Mccutchen and David D. Wilson. The
Rev . J . M, minister at the time, also
severed his connections from the church
and returned to his home state of North
Carolina.
From that point, it appears that a
more positive approach of encouraging
goodness was taken toward the
members of the church .
In 1830 Samuel McGill and D. D.
Wilson contracted to build a new church
building for $1,700. The job proved to be
tedious and unprofitable because all the
lumber had to be gotten from Lawren's
water mill on Lynche's Creek, 10 miles
above the present town of Scranton.
In 1832 Indiantown Academy was
built at the head of Samuel McGill's
avenue not far from the church. In 1848 it
became a parochial school under the
leadership of Dr. Samuel McGill. The
pastor at Indiantown was requested to
visit it often to catechize and instruct the
students.
With cotton prosperity Indiantown
had achieved a high level of prosperity
by this time and had gained a respect for
knowledge and refinement. Pioneer .
houses of ·logs had given way to the
weatherboarded two-story house, which
'was tall and spare. Generous porches
and shutters made summers cool and
huge brick chimneys kept out the winter
cold.
Deacons were elected for the first
time in 1849.
In its centennial year &lt;1857)
Indiantown reported 379 members, 282
of which were black.

Though the Civil War did tkW!
actually touch Indiantown as did the
Revolution, the sparceness of church'
records indicate the disruption caused'.
by four years of civil strife.
Six members of the congregation,,.;
were killed in the Civil War.
After the war's end, prompted by
the Fre~an's Bureau, almost all
black members left to fonn their own.
churches or to join those already
organized.
Total
membership suddenly
· dropped to 82.
In
the
darkest
days
of
Reconstruction, Indiantown was again
without a pastor.
A. R. Kennedy became pastor of
both Indiantown and Whiteoak churches
in 1872. Mrs. Kennedy was the sister ol
Woodrow Wilson. One of the couples
young daughters is buried in .•&lt;1
Indiantown.
In 1910 the front porch of the churcti
was added.
The boom days of WWI broi1gJ&gt;t-i.'..
increased prosperity to the district. 'l'be
demand for cotton and foodstuffs gave
Williamsburg .
a
Jong-delayed ".'·'
opportunity. Soon automobiles became
commonplace,
demanding
an
improvement of the public road gystem.
The church was in bad need of
Sunday School rooms, so the church
building was raised and a basement
containing classrooms was placed
beneath.
·
In 1918, 2.5 acres of cemetery wer.e
added and in 1920 a new manse
built.
..,.
But prosperity vanished with tli'f!
coming of the boll-weevil in the 1920 •
Long before the country experienced
great depression of the 80
Williamsburg had become a
to belt-tightening.
Tobacco replaced cotton
money crop.
The church's fellowship
was erected in 1948. lJi l~
retired 46 non-residen
VoatlDued to pa
- -~

------------~~...

~

..

Indiantown Presbyterian Church
Continued from page 1
,

members but the role still showed 326
communicants.
In 1957 the chruch celebrated its
.~bicenten~~l: . As~~· bicenten11la l project,
Y he Session ~ Indian town vo ted

0

unanimously to support the founding of a
new church in Hemingway.
Today St. Paul Presbyterian
Church, a fine brick structure between
Hemingway· and Johnsonville' prospers "
as .a strong healthy offspring of the '-'
Fnd1antown Presbyterian Ghurch". -•· · • ~

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........ __ ....... - ...".,, -•

Human Heritage

•

•
za
By CAPT. WM. B. CHANDLER, USAF

·d Edward · Wilson
rn on March 27, 1819,
Wilson Plantation
hat is now Henry, S.
came from an infamily, one of
children of the
le Col. David D.
' and his first wife,
Wilson. Both of
g Wilson's grands, David and John
n, had served under
ncis Marion in the
olution and his father,
• D. D. Wilson had
· y made his mark on
burg society.
I. Wilson was a ruling
at Indiatown Church
those days when the
ce carried considerable
rity in both religious
civil matters. He was
leader of the staunch
byterians who viewed
ing as one of the great
evils of the day
gh he did enjoy
ys.'' Col. Wilson was
influential in politics
represented
·amsburg in the state
of Representatives
in the state Senate. He
a colonel in the state
tia and a pa tron of
ation and still had
to play an active role
the Temperance
ety activities. All in

all, he was a kind and at-

tentive father and encouraged his children in
their education.
Probably largely through
his father's efforts, ''Ned'',
as David Edward Wilson
was called throughout his
life, developed ''studious
and sober habits.'' His
parents taught him at
home and also made
certain that their children
''enjoyed the mentally
stimulating sermons
delivered at the church at
Indiantown. Ned's formal
education began under a
Mr. McGuire who was
hired by Col. Wilson and
Samuel McGill to teach in
the old Col. David Gorden
r~idence near Indiantow11.
By 1829, Ned was attending
school in the Indiantown
Session House where Mr.
Durand grained some
notoriety as an instructor
of the ''most straightest
sect.''
Dr. McGill in his
Reminiscences describes
this school most vividly.
There was only one window
which served to anchor one
end of the long pine board
which served as a writing
table. The boys and girls
sat on opposite sides on
hard, high benches. They
would swing their legs

-

•
orza

•
•
. ''thus giving circulation to
our almost senseless limbs,
caused by long sitting in
one place.~' The boys soon
learned that no ''interview'' with the girls was
admissa ble. Yet, Dr.
McGill comments that
when their eyes met ''their
affectionate meeting did ·
mollify, in some measure,
the hard fate of all.'' They
used goose quills and
dipped homemade ink from
broken wine glasses. There
were long hours of
monotonous copy work.
In 1832, Ned attended the
new Indiantown Academy
noted as an institution
where ''all the branches of
an English education
together with a knowledge
of the Latin and Greek
language'' were carefully
taught. After an appropriate period of study,
Col. Wilson sent Ned, accompanied by his life-lpng
friend Sam McGill, to
Bethany Academy in
Iredell County, N.C., '' a
thrifty Presbyterian neighborhood.'' The 200-mile
journey took the companions seven days. The
new environment was not
exactly comfortable.
McGill
comments that
their studies ''could only be
made in the house around
the hearth in a heated and

stifled room, by the light of

tallow candles, snibbed by

•

· our moistened fingers with
our sp1•tt1e.... ''
•

INDIANTOWN'S DR. WILSON

In 1836, Ned was a
student at Mount Zion
College, a renowned
preparatory school in
Winnsboro, S. C. he~ded by
J. W. Hudson. After the
completion of his studies at
Mount Zion, Ned actively
began the study
of
medicine and entered the
South Carolina Medical
College in 1839. In 1841, Dr.
Wilson graduated 19th in a
class of 51. His diploma in
its original metal case is in
the possession of a
descendant and namesake,
Ned Wilson of Indiantown.
Dr. Wilson's gr-aduating
class included Dr. Samuel
D. McGill and Dr. Samuel
J. Singletary both also of
Williamsburg. So it was
that three new doctors
moved into northern
Williamsburg in one year.
Dr. McGill summarized the
situation this way: ''For
the distribution of their
services
and
their
proximity to each other the
following plan of division of
territory, after some
discussion and a little
dissatisfaction, was ultimately agreed upon. Dr.
Wilson's preference for the
Indiantown practice was
freely accorded to him, for
who of us at that time
would interfere with Ned
Wilson's option; Dr.

••

is
Singletary selected Muddy
Creek, while Dr. McGill
was given the Black Mingo
field .... '' Ned Wilson went
into partnership with old
Dr. James Bradley of
Kingstree and opened an
office at Col. William
Cooper's near Indiantown.
He was .qUickly doing a
good business. And Dr.
McGill, though he may
have envied Wilson's
location, admitted that
(Wilson) ''by his urbanity
and unstudied address ever
in the even tenor of his
ways, he was soon deeply
ingratiated in the hearts of
all the people, and they
were proud of his
professional skill. Of
modest
ways,
no
i&gt;resumptuous caste of
mind and of no distinctive
feature recognized by him
between the high and the
low, the rich and the poor,
he was the idol of all his
acquaintances.'' Surely,
this was the most beautiful
compliment that could be
paid to a doctor of that day
or any day.
Dr. Wilson's career was
henderecl in 1842 when he
developed a severe case of
measles. As a result of this
disease, even though attended by his friend Dr.
McGill, Dr. Wilson's eyes
-1

Continued to Page 12

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Because Government Is Too Expensive.
It's alarming to see that in the last ten
years the number of state employees in South
Carolina has increased by 78% - while our
population has only grown by 8%.
Hugh Leatherman believes that government must work harder to be more efficient.
We as taxpayers are paying for all that growth,
and we just can't afford it.
Hugh Leatherman has the expertise it
takes to run a business efficiently. He wants to
put that expertise to work in carrying out the
people's business.
••••

-

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ause Government Is Everyone's Business

Florence • Marion • Horry • Williamsburg C.o unties

Paid for by the Leatherman for the Senate Committee.

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                    <text>........
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The F • E • Huggins Hardware on Broad Street ID
Hemingway which has been a familar landmark for
years in the history of the town lost its old name about
•
mid-afternoon Monday when the new sign ''A &amp; F
Hardware'' was erected over the front door. However,
•
•
above that sign IS the notation ''Formerly Huggins
Hardware, '' just so as people won't forget. The store
recently changed owners and the new proprieter,
Frankie Poston, right, stands on the old steps with the
former owner, Edwin Huggins, Sr.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

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                    <text>011r Human Heritage

Our Human Heritage

A New Town ls Born

A

e w Town Is Born
t 'ontlnued rrom Page I

I

New Store
One of th e earliest businesses in Hemingway was the Eaddy and Creel Brothers,
In c. s tore which was located a t the site of the present Town Hall. and was quite
new when the above picture was made. The business handled general
1ner c handise. but in addition they imported m any luxury items which had not
been available locally before, which made it quite excitin g. Pictured above. left to
rig ht , are Chares and l\1arlon Eaddy. sons or J .M.G.Eaddy. one of the owners:
\\'hite Johnson : Clarence Creel and Kenneth E . Creel , both owners: Miss Cleo
Clyburn. milliner , who later marri ed Fitzhugh Eaddy: and J.M .G Eaddy. owner.

expected to fill the pulpit when
need arose.
A "fringe" benefit to the
community was the number of
marriages that took place between
the local young men and the
teachers who came here from
other places.
Social life centered on the
school. The teachers arrived by
train at Lake City on Friday or
Saturday before the Monday school
was to open and went to church on
Sunday to be inspected by the
public. Elizabeth Eaddy says that
"The Saturday after the first week
of school, a picnic was held. Every
patron of the school came bearing
baskets of food. Barbecues were
prepared, washpots of rice cooked,
in addition to barrelfulls of
lemonade made. Here the teachers
met the people whom they were to
serve." The literary societies,
socials and fund-raising activities
brought
out
the
entire
entertainment
starved
community.
The more prosperous families
made biennial shopping trips to
Charleston. They usually left home
after the midday meal, driving a
buggy to Lake City where they
stabled the horses and spent the
night , leaving by train the next
morning for Charleston, where
they remained for a week. The
flour, rice, coffee, sugar, and such
dry goods as bolts of homespun and
bleach ; as well as the standard
medicines--castoroil, Epsom salt,
quinine, paregoric, laudanwn, and
Sloan's liniment-·were bought and
shipped by water to Smith's Mill.
Old Johnsonville seemed to
have all the requisites for
development when a quirk of fate
cut short its growth and
precipifated
Lambert
and
Johnsonville onto stage.
In 1911 the Seaboard Airline
Co. projected a railroad f oom
Mullins to Andrews, which was to
run through this section of country.
With a growing church and school
at Old Johnsonville, as well as
several businesses, it was expected
that the depot would be built there

By E. Y. EADDY
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The Methodist Church of 1872,
followed by the area's first
"graded" school, which was
completed in 1903, assured Old
Johnsonville of a heyday that
lasted a ·decade.
A parsonage was completed
about the same year that the school
was moved from Belin 's Store to its
own new two-story building, and
Old Johnsonville became the
center of a Methodist Church
circuit that also included Ebenezer
al Muddy Creek, Good Hope, and
Prospect. The parsonage stood at
the approximate site of the later J .
D. Brown home and was built on
land given by N. M. Venters.
The ox cart and wagon, in
these first two or three years of the
twentieth century, were being
replaced by baggies and carriages.
The most common type was the
••top·· buggy with s teel rimmed
wheels. The rubber tired buggy
··was the height of extragavance."
wrote Elizabeth W. Eaddy, "and
the object of much envy." It was
more to be desired than an
automobile, which was totally out
of reach for most people and
impractical for the poor roads and
unbridged streams. A rubber-tired
buggy, however, might someday
be obtained.
The Old Johnsonville school
grew so rapidly that soon there
were six teachers employed and a
music teacher was
added.
Inadequate as it might seem to us
today. it was a "far cry" from the
one room, one teacher school that
operated for one three months
term each year. Elizabeth Eaddy
writes, '"A great deal was expected
of the teachers in the community
as well as in the classroom. The
trustees were conscientious in
their selection i&gt;f principal and his
teachers. All teachers were
expected
to attend church
regularly and a teacher who was
unwilling to teach a Sunday SchOQl
class need not expect to be
reelected." Teachers were paid
$40.00 a month and paid $12.50 for
room and board. The principal was

,

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Continued to Page 6

•

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Lamberts Store
One of the earllnt 1toret In &amp;he history of Hem~. lormerl,y kaowo ••
1.ambert, was &amp;h• old LamHr&amp; Store which atood at &amp;be intenecdon of 1U1bway
Zll and 41, where &amp;be Sonoco 1ervlee nation now atandl. The • Id store bu a
h.lttorlcal background II. E. Eaddy purchued It from w. c. Hemm1wa1 ...
operated a bualneu U.erela for. appro:slmately 25 yea.ra. The wlllp were later
removed, and It wa1 ren&amp;ed lo a Ion&amp; Ila&amp;of tenan&amp;a, lbe la1t ol whom • • bellefe,d
lo~ Jowers Used Furniture, before It wa1 torn doWQ to anake way JOI' th lllad'!a•
building wblcb now tt1nda in Its plaee.

and that the community would
continue its growth.
The major landowners at Old
Johnsonville were N. M . Venters ,
L . L . Ard, Mrs. M. V. Cox, Mrs .
Judith Grier Eaddy, and her son ,
Henry Edward Eaddy, who owned
and operated the general store and
lien business. A law suit and land
entailment
delayed
the
arrangements for giving a clear
title to part of the land needed by
the railroad, and the neighboring
Johnsonville and Lambert seized
their chance.
S. B. Poston, who held titled to
or mortgages on much of the
property at Johnsonville, had a
town surveyed and held public
auctions to sell lots in 1912. The
· town was incorporated May 24 ,
1913. At Lambert the Hemingway
family were Poston 's counterpart.
Court House records indicate that
the
Lambert
Land
and
Development Co. was organized
for the purpose of developing the
area
that
later
became
Hemingway.
The origin of Lambert is
somewhat obscure. B. G. Lambert
had acquired large amounts of
land here by 1880 and owned and
operated a general store at th~
junction of the Stage Coach and
Kingstree roads, now Main and
Broad. A post office was .
established in the store in 1900. ~
The Hemingway family, with
their roots in Georgetown County,
had become wealthy as cotton
farmers and merchants and
succeeded Lambert as the major
land owner in the area.
An entire deed book in the
Williamsburg County Court House
is devoted to recording the lots sold
Farmers flocked into
• here.
Lambert to attend the publi~
auctions, either to enjoy the
excite~ent or to think long and
earnestly about the wisdom of
investing in non-farm property.
Sales began Oct. 2, 1911. The

following grantors are recorded in
1911·12: A. B. Poston, B. A. Grier,

W. A. Lawrimore, R, B.
Lawrimore, A. F. Prinsler J-. H.

and Lambert with the outside
world, Old Johnsonville soon
ceased to be the community focus.
Henry Edison Eaddy wrote from
Johnsonville to his grandaughter
on June 2, 1912. "'We have
passenger train every day at 12. It
passes about a quarter of a mile
west of the P. 0 . No depot bldg. as
yet. It would be several years,
however ,
before
either
Johnsonville or Lambert, which
became Hemingway , would enjoy
the advantages of church and
school that still existed at Old
Johnsonville.
One of the early businesses to
get underway brought color and
pleasure into the lives of the area's
women. This was the Eaddy-Creel
Bros . Merchandise chartered April
19, 1912. Among its services was
that of a milliner. Having a hat
made had involved an arduous trip
to Lake City. Miss Birney and tater
Miss Cleo Blyburn created the ha ts
worn by well-bred women.
The Bank of Hemingway was
chartered May 13, 1912, with Dr. W.
C. Hemingway, H. L. Baker, H. E .
Eaddy, N. M. Venters, J . E .
Hemingway, W. C. Rollins, F. E .
Huggins, J . M. G. Eaddy and John
Richardson Jr., as directors. It
began with a capital stock of
$15,000 and paid regular dividends
annually to stock holders until 1920,
when the capital stock was
increased from $15,000 to $50,000
and the old stock holders that year
received 50 per cent stock dividend
and a cash dividend of 26 per cent.
The Huggins-Eaddy Hardware
was chartered to F . E . Huggins
and H. E. Eaddy Nov . 13, 1913t with
· these brothers-in-law riding daily
Ardts Cross Roads to
1 from
\ supervise building. Eaddy soon
bought the Hemingway Mercantile
businea at the northeastern
comer of Main and Broad and the
partnership was dissolved. Tile
Huggins Hardware is the oldest
continuously operating businea in
Hemingway. The tremendous
wooden building that housed the
Eaddy store became a landmark,
standing for years aft
Ea~

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                    <text>f

•

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•

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r

s
The old Anderson Theater in
· way still blinks three
lights on and off at night and
nes a single spotlight on the
that says, ''Save Gas See A
ovie,'' but the theater's
fnel', Harry Anderson said he
ught the movie's better days

were gone.

The Anderson Theater has

me distinction, however, that
Hemingway may boast of: it is
the only movie theater
remaining in Williamsburg
County. ·
It opened, says Anderson, in
939 with ''Gone With The
.md.,,

•

.

in the pictu1·e or someone they continously until 9:45 p.m.,

knew.
Movies that made it big in the
cities, Anderson said, often
proved disappointing in small
towns. He said, ''The Sound of
Music'' was a big flop in
Hemingway, playing only three
days to small crowds. Anderson
said the movie was ''too highfalutin'' for Hemingway then.
Ordinarly, he said Saturday
was the theater's biggest day,
when all the kids from miles
around would flock to town to
see the double feature.
The double feature, which
started at 2 p.m. and played
'

usually consisted of a western
and ''an action movie,'' Anderson said.
He said the Saturday movies
were, ''the cheape$t baby sitting service i'n town.''
He charged nine cents for
children up to eight years old;
20 cents for kids eight to 12; 30
cents for adolescents, 12 to 15
and 40 cents for adults.
Anderson said the only exception to Saturday being the
biggest day, was when he had
''cash night'' on Wednesdays.
Every Wednesday the theater
would hold a drawing and if the

person was there when his
name was called he would win a
$10 pot. In no one won, Anderson
said he added $5 to the pot and
continued it until next week.
He said that once the pot built
up to $400, the biggest he could
remember . and a man by the
name of Hazard Williams, who
came every Wednesday, won it.
The best movies he could get,
he said, were shown on Monday
and Tuesday or Thursday and
Friday for two days at a time.
Even big hits such as ''Parent
Trap'' played for only three
days, he said.
Continued to Page 4

He said his uncle, Hyman
derson had · been in ''the
ow business'' in Dillon and
this father, B. B. Anderson
rested in it. Anderson's
'ther, Hubert Anderson, built
Hemingway version of the
derson Theater, while
r other Anderson Theater,
d by the same family was
t in Kingstree. It burned
in 1966.

'

Harry Anderson began to
nage the theater in
ingway in 1942 until 1968
n he leased it to Osbey L.
gs the present manager of

theater.

Arnerson said the big boom

sman town movies came

ter WWII, between 1945
before everyone had
•

when movies in
were big aterson said it was
ovie played for a
lhO\'Je
eption to this was
, ''Thunder Over
'' lVhich was filmed in
•

d a lot of people that
to see themselves

An ersoit

ea

r

ar quee

The old Anderson Theater Marquee probably looks about the .sa~e as.it.did when
it was built in 1939. The Anderson is the last theater to survive 1n W1ll1amsburg
County.

ti
t
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i

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•

~R. AND MR~. VANDER HANNA

·e

•
•

•

Mr. arid Mrs. Vander Hanna arrangement
of
white
were honored when their carnations softened by a ruffle
children, Mr. and Mrs. Franklin of silver net, resting in a footed
Hanna of Camden. Miss Debbie crystal container and centered
Manna and Timmie Hanna, with a candle . The tiered
entertained for them at their wedding cake wa~ se~rated by
home in He~ingway on Sunday columns adorned with white
afternoon, May 5. The ·&lt;X!casion love bir~, and the top tier held
marked their 25th wedding silveir numerals denoting the
•
occasion. Mrs. Lavern Owens
anniversary.
'
The Rev. and Mrs. Hiram sister of Mrs. Hanna, served the
•
McElrath, greeted the guests, cake. She was assisted ID
by Mrs. Meddie B.
and after they signed the
register, presented them to the
lovely
receiving line composed of the
length
honored couple and their
children.
Refreshments were served en
buffet from the lovely appointed
dining table which was overlaid
in white lace, and edged with a
ruffle of silver net. In addition
ta the lovely trays of party
delicacies and the punch
service. the table held an
•

•

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                    <text>•
'l'l1L' l,.irst 11:1111ist ( 'l1t1rcl1 &lt;If
ll&lt; 'llli l l j.!\\ ;1~· 11 ;1s illl' SCC'lll' &lt;I f
1l1l' 11&gt;\'l•I\'• Ii l'.1\1 . \l'l•dflir1g
~1l 1 1 &lt;.:l 1 1111i ll'&lt;I l\li ss .l&lt;&gt; YC
~IL· l·: lr :1l l1 :1r1d J\ lr. ~· r·:111k l~.
11:11111:1 . .J1'. ir1 111:11rir11&lt;ir1y &lt;JO
l,. ricl:1~" SL•ptl'Ollll'r 21 .
'1'11 &lt;· 11uptical V&lt;JWS \1•ere
1,lcdgl'd bl•fo1·e :1 backgrour1d
1&gt;f 1l1rce large baskets h1&gt;lding
:1rr:111gemcr11s 1if \\'l1ite glads.
l:1rge 11rur11s. sn1all porn ponis
;111d c:11·11at ions. :1r1d potted
11:1 lr11s . 1'hc Bible was
:1L·ccr1tuated 11·ith an arch and a
t1&gt;r11i11ua1 ion &lt;If lighted tapers.
'l'lic k11ecli11g bcncl1 was
:1t:centu:1tcd \l'itl111011·crs and a
s:1t i11 k11eeling cushion .
(&gt;fficial i11g 1l1e double ring
L't're111&lt;&gt;11y 11·:1s the Reverend
llir:1111 r:. Mcr:lrath. father of
till' IJ1·idc. assisted by the
l{t•\•cre11d l'aul Sn1ith. pastor
&lt;•f tl1e l'leasa11t Hill Baptist
( '11 Ul'C 11 .
1\ p1·ogra111 1&gt;f 11·edding n1usic
11·:1s p1·ese11t ed by Miss
Ba1·ba1·a Pl1agar &lt;if Leesville.
s1il1iist. a11d Mrs. Louie
l.:111·rin111re 11f Hen1ingway.
1&gt;rga11ist . Selections played and
su11g 11·cre ··011e Hand-··.

·· \1·1·1t1lir1 g lll'lll' dict i11r1 ·· .
··i'icture 11f :111 t·:xl1ibition ··.
:1111"1 ··.Jt•sus 111&gt;111 1.J11y1'' .
'l'IJl' l&gt;ridt• &lt;lcsigr1ccJ :111d
111:11IL· l1t•r g1&gt;11•1111f t1v11l:1ycrs 11f
1&gt;rg:111?.a 11ver :1 skirt 11f pe:1u de
si1iu \1·i111 :1 b11dicd l&gt;f lace 1&gt;vcr
pl':1u de siou. 'l'lie skirt tra iled
1&gt;ff i11 t1&gt; ;111 :1isle trai11. Sl1e
t::11·1·ied :1 Pra •ver l~oo k covered
i11 \1·l1itc lace ~·ith sat in
st 1·ea n1 ers . I l&gt;pped 1vi th wl1i te
11111vers an d cent ered with a
pi11k cyn1bidiu111 11rchid which
sl1e removed a11d used with her
g11 i11g a11·ay oul fit .
l\1rs . Susa11 Yarbourgh . of
Batesburg. served her sister as
111&lt;.11 ron 1&gt;f honor &lt;.1nd Miss
l)cbbie
McElrath.
of
Colu111bia. was maid of honor
f1i1· lier sister. 'l'he bridesmaids
11·e1·e 1\1 iss Debby Han11a . sister
111' tl1 e groom. Pain Hyatt and
l)&lt;1t tie l)a vis 11f Hemingway.
l\Jisses Alasl1a Corder of
B&lt;.1t es burg a11d ('. arlile Wilson
•&gt;f Abbeville. 1'he attendants
11'!1re floor length gowns of
1111ral print chiffon with an
l'n1pire desig11 and long full
sleeves ~· ith cuffs. collar. and a
sasl1 that accentuated the

11·:1ist li11e &lt;&gt;f l111t pi11k velvet .
'l'ltl'Y 11·&lt;1l'l' 11·l1i1 e picturl' l1:1ts
11·itl1 l1:111ds 111' l111t pi11k •;civet .
'!'Irey l'&lt;.1cl1 c&lt;.1rried '-' si 11gle
1ii 11k crys:111tl1em u111 t icd with
111t1l1 i-c11l11red ribb&lt;111s &lt;1n '-'
li:1ckgr&lt;1u11d 11f leath er leaf
ft•r11 .
l\1r . ll&lt;.11111:1served his son as
licst 111&lt;.1 11 . Llshers were 1'im
11:11111:1. lirother of the groorn.
l{ick \ ' &lt;.1rbough. brother-in-law
11f lhe bride 11f Bates burg .
f,ava 11 ()\vcns. cousin of the
gr1&gt;on1 . &lt;.111d Juliar. Wilson .
1''11r lier daught er 's wedding.
l\1rs . Mci':lrath ch1&gt;se a formal
g11w11 11f deep pink chiffon with
full . l11ng sheer sleeves and a
full skirt. A corsage of while
p11111 p1Jn1s con1pleled her
e11sem ble.
Mrs . Ha11na wore an A-line
1101ir lengtl1 gow11 of mini green
IJ&lt;ilyesler crepe with long full
sleeves , 'l'he neck 1vas
:1ccen1uated with sequin trim.
Sl1c 1v&lt;1re a corsage of white
IJ&lt;llll P&lt;&gt;OlS .
'l'l1e bride is the daughter of
I lie Reverend and Mrs. Hiram
I.. McElrath of Hemingway .
Sl1e
graduated
from

,

•

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,
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l·

Five Generations
l&lt;'i\·e ge11~1·atio11s of the Mc~lister family gathered at the family home recently,
the occa!l1~11 bel~1g the OOth birthday of Mrs. Mary Jane McAlister, oldest member
o~ tl1e fa~11ly. Pictured above are seated, Mrs. McAlister, back row, from left to
1·1gl1l: l~1l111a Re~1·don, her granddaughter, Mrs. Win1ile B. Thompson her
dal1gbte1, Mrs. Miriam Burgess, her great-granddaugl1ter, and the young man is

ialtlle Bur&amp;e •· Mrs. ~cA ·

' gre.t.-&amp;re t-grandson.

l ~;tli • sburg - 1, eesvillc

lligh
sc1 11111 1 :111d atten&lt;led Winthr11p
&lt;·, 111egc &lt;.1 rld l,.r&lt;.111cis M&lt;.1ri&lt;Jn
&lt;'1&gt;llcgc .
.
·1·11e gr&lt;&gt;&lt;Jm is the son &lt;&gt;I Mr .
;iiid Mrs . 1,.1·a11klin I&lt;: vander
11:11111&lt;.1 . Sr·. t&gt;f Jlemingway . lie
gr·&lt;.1du:ited fr1im Jlemingway.
lligl1 Scl1&lt;11il &lt;.111d &lt;.1tlended the
l l11ivcrsity &lt;1f S&lt;1ulh l:arol1na
;111d (; L~&gt; rgia 'l'ech where he
111:1j1ired in eng ineering. He is
1111 w &lt;.1t tending 1'' lorencel) ,11. I i n gt 1, n 'I' e c h n i c ~ I
l•:duc&lt;.1li on Center and 1s
l'nipliiycd &lt;JS pl&lt;.1nt engineer for
l\1islee. l11c . of Hemingway .
1''11llowing a wedding trip to
111e beach &lt;.1nd through the
S11111ky Mountains. the couple
is :11 l111n1e on Marion Street in
.J11l111sonv ilie.
ln1111cdia1cly following the
ccrem&lt;Jny the young couple
\1·ere l11inored with a reception
i11 the social hall of the church .
M1·. a11d Mrs. Jack L' Marsh.
.Jr. greeted the guests and
i11lroduced then1 to the
1·eceiving composed of the
li1·idal couple nnd their
parents.
Mr . a11d Mrs. Ken Taylor.
&lt;JUlll &lt;.111d u11cle of the bride. of
Spa1·tanburg. kept the bride's
1·egister.
1'11e bride's table was round,
a11d d1·aped in white satin with
a11 11verlay of lace. It held a
f11u1· tiered wedding cake.
~·l1ich was n1ade by Mrs.
Elbert Davis. The confection
11·&lt;1s embossed in white frosting
a11d the lower' tiers were
delicately l1ighlighted with
1ialc pink roses and green
leaves. 1't1e cake was topped
\l'ith a gold Cristogram symbol
&lt;.111d two bells two white doves
l111ldi11g gold wedding rings in
tl1eir niouths.
1'11e refreshn1ent table was
c&lt;&gt;ve1·ed
with
Belgian
l1a11dwork lace table cloths and
l1cld a five -tiered silver
ca11dlabra centered. with an
&lt;.11•ra11gement of white snaps.
gypsopl1olia.
[renched
ca1·nations and tips of leather
leaf fern . Each candle was
sitting in a nest of tulle and
softened ·with white satin bows
a11d love knots. Streamers ran
fr11n1 the base of each candle
a11d the cent er piece and were
sp1·ead a11d softened on the
h&lt;.111quet table. The table held
a11 array of party foods which
included. an1ong other things
chicken salad in pastry shells:
cheese wafers. strawberries. a
crean1 cheese niold holding
gi·een pepper jelly. served with
salted crackei•s, and a punch

1~·"· 1

fr&lt;1r11 11·l1icl1 ;1 1l1·ligh1lul
S1·1i11•r11 lier 1 I bit
r&lt;&gt; SC 11ur1 cl1 1\·a s served .
ll1e service ' ~lelen
,\11&lt;1l l1er r&gt;ur1ch IJ1 1w rested 11n
ll yu 11 . ~1 r~ ~ t h~
.J uck I . ·ii.1 &gt;1rlh
:111 i11&lt;lividt1 ;1l l&lt;tlJle nearby.
'· ~la~her
l11 111 1cdi&lt;.1lely f&lt;1ll&lt;1wing lhc
.J a11 1cs ('
~ i1
rel1L·:1rsal &lt;1f lhl· !!&lt;.1nn I.·'•shce' undUy~I ;re
:1·
l\11:l·:lr&lt;1lh "·edding. Mr . &lt;.1nd
l'r••
,,,~n 1·ing I~~ ese1'
l\lr·s . ll ;11111a l:11tertained with'-'
l~:ik cr l .awri~ 11·ifl
1&gt;&lt;.1rty l111n&lt;1ring their s1in and
l&gt;urwa rd l .e~~ \Vho1
l1i s fi;1nce in the soci&lt;.11 hall &lt;&gt;f 11 1 Ihe &lt;&gt;Vtran xp e1
ll1c r' irsl l~ &lt;Jpt isl (:hurch . 'l'he
&lt;l11 ~· rid ;iy y
rcfresl1n1e11t tables were
7. 1\1iss Mt ~: lra&lt; r
c&lt;1vered with white linen and
l11J1111r at a Ile . I
l1eld
'-'
five -branched
Sh(l\l'Cr Which IS er
ca11delabra with burning while
SIJCi&lt;JI hall ol - 1apcrs. and a11 a rrangem ent of
(:l1urch . flost
l11vely party le L
ve il&lt;&gt;~' &lt;.111d ~· hite ga lds with
•
ferns . 'J'l1c table was laden with
l'crcy 1.awr·drs"
1
:1 v&lt;.1 r·ict y 1if party foods.
.J11ye . l)11n ~·cn~Y ·
(Jdun1 . '!'he rel ays
i11cluding chicken salad in
'd
m1
pas[ry shells. ca ke squares and
I
\l'Crc a1 in 't r'o
sa11d11•ichcs. 1'he round punch
&lt;Jr ra 11gcmentmca d,
table ~1 as covered with while
f)&lt;&gt;WCrS .
ni t
lacc a11d held a ni iniature bride
1iresen ted the ary
&lt;t11d gt·oom .
l11vely corsagilgw&lt;
Assisting in entertaining
11·l1ite carnali •e ft
11·erc Mesdames Joe Dukes,
lier light blue
l,avern 0~1 e ns and Mettie B .
Miss ~1cEh·L­
l\1iller .
lla11 11a were
l\1iss McElrath was honored
p;rtio party aill,ulat
1111 August 27 when Mrs. . and Mrs. Jack L.
.Jua11ita Cantey entertained for
Oakland StreEI
~· ere Mr. ariU'Y
lier \\'ith a n1iscellaneous dropin at lier home. On arrival.
Harrel Ison and ·
Jack Pa tterSOI~
!Vliss McElrath was presented
11·110 \Vere s
a L'Orsage of white carnations
11
lo con1 plen1enl her street
tables covered W '
length dress of orange and
and centered at
11•l1ite stripes. The hostess
enjoyed ham
served delicious refreshments
d&lt;&gt;gs from the ilioi
1if b1·ida I cakes. nuts. chips and
cakes and sol~
punch .
hostesses P
honored couple
011 Saturday. August 29 Mrs.
in their cha
13en11et l 1''enters and Miss Pam
llyatt entertained for Miss
casual china.
The emploY ·
McElrath with a miscellaneous
I11c .
entert Pi•
shower at the home of Mrs.
McElrath with
1''e11ters .
The
hostesses
plant cafeter1
presented the honoree with a
yellow carnaticn corsage,
September I.
Miss l'ilcElr
\1•hich complemented her red
guests in an
pants
suit .
Delicious
swiss street l
refreshments of a strawberry
gelatin mold on lettuce , refreshment la
in a delicate
crackers. nuts. cake and iced
trimmed in Ii
tea " 'ere served .
'
an assortmenl
The Won1en 's Missionary
including sa
l l11ion of the First Baptist
11uts. cakes a
Cl1urch of Hemingway honored
l1ostesses pr
Miss Joye McElrath and
elect with a
r'rankie Hanna with a White
Bible Service on Thursday,
tray.
1

0

• ·

'

NOTHING
HIGHER
THAN
•

98 .

..

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Ground Breaking ceremonies were helil last week in Johnsonville at the site of the
new' dentist's..office on Broadway St. adjacent to the health department. Shown
tossing a few spadefuls of dirt· are left to right Johnsonville Mayor Connie S.
Decamps
Wil
r
Br.ockw,
e
ll,
and
Dr.
Charles
Maxwell.
P.artially
hidden
•
'
behilld M rs •, DeCa~ps is Rep • Odell Venters, who directed the ceremony. Maxwell, a graduate of th e Medical Upiversity of S.C~ t expects to have bis offices
c onipleted by September 1 w
•
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