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                    <text>·.·•· ,~..&lt;-X:·
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REGISTER FOR OVER
FREE PRIZES TO BE GIVEN AWAY!

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DRAWINGS WILL BE HELD ·
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY AT 5 PM!

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ON ALL CASH SALES FOR
THE 2 DAYS!
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FREE
- -BALLOONS AND
CANDY FOR THE KIDS!
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Come Visit Our New Mo ern Store Sti
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MAIN STREET NEXT TO FAIRLANE FlNANCE
•

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                  <text>The ancestors who called this part of the Pee Dee home.</text>
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                <text>Grave of John Witherspoon (1742-1802), located at the old Aimwell Presbyterian Church burial grounds, Old River Road at McWhite Road.&#13;
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John took control of Witherspoon's Ferry (now Venters Landing at Johnsonville) after his older brother Robert Witherspoon died with no issue in 1787. Witherspoon's Ferry had already been in use during the Revolution, and this spot served as the backdrop for General Francis Marion's commission to lead the militia.&#13;
&#13;
John and Robert were both sons of Gavin Witherspoon and Jane James, who came from Knockbracken, Ireland to Williamsburg. John was a patriot during the American Revolution, serving as a private with Marion's Brigade in the Britton's Neck Regiment for 244 days in 1780 and 1781.&#13;
&#13;
In 1801 it was ordered that a Ferry should be re-established and vested in John's care. John married Mary Conn and had one child, Elizabeth, who later married David Rogerson Williams, Governor of South Carolina from 1814-1816.&#13;
&#13;
John Witherspoon died in 1802, and according to the terms of his will, the ferry was re-established and vested in John D. Witherspoon, executor and friend, for a term of 14 years beginning in 1815, “in trust for and having the sole benefit of the incorporated Presbyterian Church at Aimwell on the Pee Dee River." John's will also stipulated that William J. Johnson be given rights to the Ferry site under condition:&#13;
&#13;
"It is my will and desire that the trustees aforesaid or their successors shall give William Johnson the present use of the lands aforesaid the exclusive privilege of leasing the lands aforesaid for a term of 12 years provided the said William Johnson on the wisdom of the said trustees aforesaid shall conduct himself with propriety."&#13;
&#13;
It was John Witherspoon who vested the ferry lands in William Johnson, who later established the post office at Johnsonville which became the town we know today.</text>
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                <text> Lydia Morgan Timmons White (1784-1834) was born in the Darlington area and was the daughter of Thomas Morgan (b. 1755) and Sarah Brian (1761-1828). &#13;
She married William Henry Timmons (1770-1802) and had 2 sons:&#13;
Reverend John Morgan Timmons (1800-1863)&#13;
William James Timmons II (1802-1846)</text>
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                    <text>•

The GREAT Towns program
..". tlnut-s to develop in Jotm·
nville and community leaders
~XDt~ess hope that the program
ill become a reality soon and
town become eligible for the
ernor's trophy and evenw ...... ly the
real prize of new
ndustry, jobs for local
~es dents and a stimulus to the
...g.l economy.
John Mullins and Rene
swald,
com munity
, ..onaration coordinators for
State Development Board
r.rl-'re in town last week to adthe quarterly meeting of
UMP (Johnsonville United
earns
Progress).
They
tUned the GREAT town
rogram to the group exthe requirements for
icipation and the ad ..
antages to be gained by
,.._.,. •

oo hand for the meeting were
Bill Deaton, executive director
of the Florence County
Development Board and Mrs.
Gail Ward Johnson, recently
named coordinator of the
Johnsonville Great Town
program. Mrs. Ruth Robinson,
president of JUMP, presided.
GREAT Town is a program
initiated
by
the
State
Development Board to improve
the economy of small towns
through more industrial activity. Its program is designed
to prepare local leadership to
successfully promote economic
development, provide public
recognition to those towns
which achieve GREAT Town
status, to provide the state with
an inventory of towns ready to
deal with prospects, and to
promote community spirit and

The program as developed by
the State Development Board
centers around a coordinator
and a six member committee,
which will meet with prospects
to discuss the prospect's needs
and the assets of the
town. Each
•
member of the committee is to
be knowledgeable in one area of
concern to any prospective
industry considering relocation.
These areas are sites, hwnan
resources
(labor),
transportation and market services,
livability, finance, and local
goverrunent and tax structure.
Each of these subjects is of
concern to any businessman
considering locating in a
community and it is essential
that any group promoting their
town be completely informed
and able to answer any
questions the prospect may

•

Requirementg of the program
are that a non profit development corporation be forn1ed,
which is authorized to accept
and disburse funds, buy land
and purchase options, and
engage in other activities
essential to the program.
Second, a community information brochure must be
printed listing pertinent information about the town and a
slide tape presentation must be
developed. Community information such as taxes,
utilities, education, transportation existing industry,
fuel labor supply, site
availability, etc, should be
included.
Third, a minimwn of four
industrial sites of at least 10
acres must be obtained either
by purchase or optiqn. It is
that at least lwo sites

,

0
"It is essential
population - up 351, including f11 • as many
famili·es· schooLenrollment- up the program
'
ceed '' she
79
'
Johnson told Tbe ObMrs. J
terver that the next
in the anycme
program is to secure
, for the
areas and to begin
&lt;'ontinued from Page 1

Mrs.

•

work She ua
surveys at the
help . ,determine wh~re
dividual tntereats lie, and
plana to distribute
aune1 s at various

tha
int...aed

•

ftn

¥~/Y:,?~
-be on the railroad with highway The Great Towa
open only to towDs with •
access and available utilities.
Fourth, working contacts population of Ia. ..
with existing industries should

S&lt;me 252 town

S.C.
for 1• ol

U.
be established, the program eligible,
must be promoted in the media, these to
a positive community at- the
are .,.
mosphere must be developed.
Lastly, the town should work stage of tbt
at community improvement Bennettsv •••
bave
and beautification. In the words
of one person, ''A town doesn't as Great
What em
get a second chance to make a
good first impression." The W&amp;COIDD
town should have a sbort and statistiea
long term plan for im- dev ~&amp;v
illuab"ate
prove~nents to its appearance
elllployi.ng 100
and quality of life.
Developfneot Board officials meaa ,
stress that S.C. is a prime sonal
location for prosepctive in- more retail
dustry. "They (industry) will retail sales
come where they are wanted tear;bank
and where the, people are non-maDufacturing
( tbuaed te Pai•
prepared for them."

; oae

•

tilt~

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---,..-.__,_

,-,-.--~·

Cl I

1-7-1•-r------------1-THB WEEKLY OBSERVER. Hemlapay, So•tll Caroll•a, '111anday, Seplember Z7, 1171

.

J'Ville GREAT Town Status Is

rea
flok· Thi• Is the second In a two-

beautification on Johnsonville United
Means Progress (JUMP( and chairman of the quality of life committee on
the GREAT Towns sales team
r.e~rted that the community is con'.
tinwng to work on beautification and

_..tes.)
die recent review of the status of
of Johnsonville as a GREAT
Mayor Connie S. Decamps said,
111Johnsonville are grateful for the
I Towns program. We had some
lives underway, and this program
given us the impetus to conclude
and go on to others. We are ex eJy glad that somewhere in South
·
someone cares about the
In executive session Monday night
communities."
Mace,
chairman
of the Johnsonville Board of Trustees

quality of life. He told the review team,
composed of two representatives from
the State Development Board and a
representative of Carolina Power and
Light Company, of the annual "Spring
Clean", which has been on-going for the

past six years, noting that the 1979
event involved for the most part the
Jaycees, Lions and two woman's clubs.
In the Spring Clean, efforts are made to
collect large items that the average
household cannot dispose of and

'vi

NOTICE
tbe foot~ll game ~tween the Johnsonville Flashes and North Myrtle
Beach, which was or1gmally set for Friday night at North Myrtle Beach has
been rescheduled for Thursday night at Seahawk Stadium in Myrtle B.;.ch
J[ici-off time will be 8 p.m.
·
·

ew
voted to employ Mrs. Nell Eaddy to
teach in the area of Special Education
thus bringing Mrs. Eaddy, who retired
last year, out of retirement and back
into the classroom .
They also voted to employ Bennett
Ray Baxley as a math instructor in the
Language Arts department at Johnsonville Middle School.
In other action in executive session
the Board approved one student to
attend adult education. A student under

•

ers

18 - years of age must have an approval

by the Board before attending adult
education .
They also voted to accept three
students from another district who
have releases from their respective
districts .
In open session, District Superintendent Chester Floyd reminded
members of the School Board Convention scheduled for October 11 - 13 at
the Myrtle Beach Hilton. He said he had
•

•
•

•

Downtown Parking
Part of Johasonville's Revitllazation Program must have
•ltll the paving of sidewalks and additional parking
I

Con&amp;lnued from Page I
demoed. but had been sold and
generally "spruce up the town with an
renovated rather than demoliahed.
overall good cleaning". In this effort a
Mace allo noted that a new ice cream
number of buildings, he said, have been
parlor had opened oo Main Street. He
reno~ated. He told specifically of the
told of the city's participation in the
old ice house which had been conannual
Governor's
Beautification
( 'ontlnued to Page x
Program, where a number of awards
have been received, some repeated
several times.
Interesting to the review team was
the ordinance on vacant lots where the
city cleans up lots where the owners fail
to and bills owners for the cost.
made reservations for Board members
The review team also heard reports
Wilmer Lee Davis, James Carraway
oo the fact that the city has just moved
and William McDaniel. Floyd said
into a new library. With the largest
Carraway is to serve as moderator for
circulation in the county except the
a session of the convention on Friday.
main library in Florence, the old
Floyd said this was the first time
facility had been outgrown. The old
school bad started without three
School District Five offices had been
teachers, and this had held up
p1rchased when citizens rallied to raise
preparation of the school's policy
$15,000 within two weeks to match an
manual. He told the Board that a
equal grant from Florence County
committee had been elected last Friday
Council, and went on to renovate the
to study the manual and make building . This library is to be dedicated
recommendations. The committee is
in early November.
composed of Floyd, Jerry Powell
The Review Board asked if the
(Coordinator of Title One Programs),
Downtown Revitalization Program,
the three principals and four teachers.
which plans are in the bands of a team
Floyd said he feels it is important to
from Clemson University, would be
funded by merchants only. Mayor
let the teachers, who were elected,
DeCamps said the town is looking for
have some input into the manual in
areas which effect them rather than sources of funding, has taken some
steps, and is looking for other outlets.
looking at the manual from a total
She said, "Property owners have seen
administrative viewpoint. He emthe plans as it exists and are delighted .
phasized that he is looking toward
I called 67 property owners personally
imput from the teachers, and that he
when the model was on display at the
does not think it wise to adopt a whole
City Hall, and of those contacted 53
policy and later have the teachers say,
came to inspect the plans. I have found
"It would have been nice if you would
that a one to one talk makes for better
have considered us."
The superintendent reported on the
communication."
The Review Board asked "Have you
school openings, and said he had
devised a schedule when this work will
received favorable comments on the in·
be started and finished , or do you plan
service training which kept 90 per cent
to do it catch as catch can?"
of the teachers busy for two days prior
The mayor replied that as soon as a
to the opening of schools. He said some
schedule is devised officials want to
workshops were mandatory and some
plan one phase which can be attained
could be selected. "We got more
fairly easily, so when this phase is
positive feedback from this training
completed people will see that we are
period than any we've had since I've
going to implement this revitalization
been here."
progr~m. She said the Clemson study is
He announced to the Board that
in part funded by a foundation and the
school will be dismissed at apcity is funding in part.
proximately 12:45 on Oct. 25, to allow
Ken Lyerly, Existing Industry
for more inservice training. Clint
chairman, said the existing industries
Hackney will conduct a workshop OD
have been contacted to affirm their
penmanship for all teachers and he said
willingness to help in any way. He noted
he considers this very important.
that a day care center had been a
He said that a funding level has been
suggestion of long standing, and that
reached on the matter of vocatiooal
one bad been added to the city just
students who spend part of their school
recently. He told the Review Board Gf
day at the Hemingway Area Vocatiooel
the 1978 "Industry Day", which really
Center, and that instead of paying the
impressed those who attended. At this
$16,135.56 for which the Diltrict hu
event educatiooal facilities displayed
been billed the District bad paid
c:urricUlum and trade 1kills. He said,
$4,867.a?. He said he bad a:plainecl thllt · ''Tbis clay played an important role in
the District could not fund the Cenllir
la IOliDI lnd0 et.ry, buailleu, and people
for the approximately la ltUdeola wr.; :tccetber.'' He noted tbat students and
attended last year on an e1111 nee basis
plbJk took advantaae of the day to
and not have any say in what wu spe11C.
ID tbe area w•t
Floyd said the type of billlnl
been used by the CenteNano&amp;

spaces, approximately 24, along the side ol the railroad which runs
through the center ol the city.

that facility_alaM.
('ontiaued to h

committee has taken a great effort to
involve itself with industries to let them
know how important they are to the
community, but also wants industries
to know how important the community
is to them . "These go hand in hand," he
said.
In response to the question by the
Review Board as to whether the sales
team gets corporation from existing
industries in seeking new industries,
Henry Poston , chairman, and a
Wellman employee, said, "Jack
Wellman is on the State Development
Board and we get 100 per cent corporation from all existing industries."
It was pointed out that Dubois Dyeing
Company has expanded it's facilities
within the past two years and Johnsonville Manufacturing Company has
expanded within the past year.
Tom Birchmore, chairman of the
Industrial Sites Committee, told the
Review team that his committee had
reaffirmed the four sites and two
alternate sites that are available for
industry. He noted that his committee
has been relatively busy during the
past year and had looked at other sites,
but had not been able to obtain letters.
He pointed out that the packet information available to prospective
industries contain information about
the site size, location and cost as well as
the cost of putting in services. He
pointed out that two of the available
sites are on the river and two are adjacent to the railroad.
The Review Board was pleased with
the aria! views of the available industrial sites and suggested including
information about location of water
lines, sewerage lines, and the
availability of natural gas. One
member said, "When you are talking
with a prospective industry, they are
looking at money (the cost of supplying
these services).
The Review Board asked if the city is
in a position to extend these services to
the industrial sites, to which the mayor
replied, "There would be no problem in
extending sewer lines to industrial
sites. There are funds available from
FIL'\ to extend sewer lines to in·
dustries. And for the economical advantage to the area, there will be no
problem."
Councilman David Taylor who chairs
the finance committee of the GREAT
Towns sales team, pointed out that the
city is under a user pay basis, bonded,
and any tie on would have to come
under Iha t basis. He said contracts for
natural gas to industrial sites would be
easy to obtain, since one provider of
this service is anxious to assist.
It was pointed out to the Review
Board that the city is still under a
council form of government with a four·
year staggered term. The city officials
said they see the need for a city ad·
minlstrator and are IMking ways to

that

•
omg
amoWJt owed on the waste water
treatment plant.
The city operates under a codified
ordinance system with an excellent
police department. Officials ere endeavoring,
under
the
Clemson
Revitilization Program to secure a new
City Hall with police deparbuent
facilities. Presently, the City provides
24-hour dispatching service for the
Volunteer Fire Department, the
Rescue Squad and the Police Department.
The mayor and other members of the
sales team reported favorably on the
fact that there is no concentrated area
of sub-standard housing, that curbside
sanitation pickup is available, the
excellent quality of life which is
available to the citizens, the transportation and marketing facilities
which are available, the higher
educational facilities which are in easy
driving distance and available to area
students.
The Review Board pointed out that
some industries are wary of transportation because they are not used to
the customes of the south.
After listening to the various reports,
the Review Board went into a con•
ference among themselves and voted to
reaffirm Johnsonville's present status
as a GREAT Town for another year.

J'Ville School
New Teachers
Continued from Page I

He told the Board that the High
School League had revised the rules
and would now allow for the High
School Basketball teams to play an
additional two games per season or
participate in an invitational tournament. He noted that Lake City is
trying to develop a tournament,
because it is difficult to schedule two
extra games at this point. The tournament will be played Thursday,
Friday and Saturday nights after
school dismisses for the Christmas
holidays. The Board voted to allow the
students to participate in the tour·
nament this year, with the notation that
this decision involves this year only.
They also noted that no student w~
does not participate will be penalized if
there are prior committments such as a
family trip.
Board Member Jack Belshaw said be
would like this to be understood et any
time. For instance, if it was the beert of
the season and a family must take their
vacation at that time, that the player
not be penaliU!d .

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Ground Breal{ing ceremonies we
eld last we.ekin Johnson vii a
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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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c1pat1011 of construction of a new educational · wing on the church. The two
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                    <text>Page 1- TIIE \\'EEKI.Y OBSEH\' EH . llemingwa~·. S . ( ' .. Thursda~·. .June ~o. l~t, 1

.. ..,., ...

,

).f.A~:~·;..•&lt;~..,

.Y1•.

-'~

Halfway House
The Johnson\'ille-He111ingway Council on Alcohol and Drug Abuse has leased this
house as a con1bination counseling center and "crash 11ad" to be run b~· Ah·in
Cribb.

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                    <text>•

•

•
•

"

•

•

•

•

..

•

1'he mantel which graces the central room of the Gamble House 1s one of foui
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..

•

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Veda Eaddy and Thomas Hanna (hiding by the column).&#13;
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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

,

•

...

,
I

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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                    <text>')

•

..

•

..

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.. ··&gt;
..

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... .

...

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•

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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
•

•

•

•

•

I

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                    <text>f

•

t

c

•

•

~

c

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
I

t
I
(

c

I
I

l
'

''
i

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                  <text>The photographs and documents in this collection were created or collected by Mrs. Mildred Browder Hughes.  Mrs. Hughes was a fixture of Johnsonville journalism for decades, working extensively with The Weekly Observer from its inception in 1974.  She continued to write through the 2010s and was the author of several books, including "Life In The Past Lane." </text>
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                <text>Photo by Eugene Cain, via the Digital Public Library of America</text>
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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>1973-2012</text>
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                    <text>Vol. 3 No. 18

I

Hemingway, S. C., 29554

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Henry Edison Eaddy and Wife

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Henry Edison Eaddy is shown with his wife. the former Eliza Higgins. Eaddy was
011e of the founders or the Old Johnsonville Methodist Church and also the Trinity
Methodist Church.
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(Editor's Note: This is the third in a
series or articles by Mrs. Elaine Eaddy
dealing with the history and heritage of
some of the early families of the
Hemingway-Johnsonville area. Mrs.
Eaddy said that she was writing the
articles as a Bicentennial project to
comme1norate the 200th birthday our
our country'.)
By E. Y. EADDY

•
During the Civil War period, tlie
community we· now call Johnsonville
was known as Buzzard's Roost. The
name reflected certain activity which
occured at the community's general
store and whiskey shop.
Gambling .and drunken brawls had
given the place a bad name and no selfrespecting woman would enter its
environs. But is is said that older male
children were occasionally dispatched to
Buzzard's Roost to ''bring Daddy
Home."
Both the character and name of
Buzzard's Roost changed in 1870 when a
small group of people met with Rev. W.
W. Jones under a clump of trees for
worship services. The religious revival
kindled at that spot was climaxed in July
1872 In the organization ' of Old,
Johnsonville Methodist Church. Rev. A.
Nettles served as pastor until 1873 when
a building was constructed.
The site of the new church--the
fourth in the area, after Ebenezer at
Muddy Creek, Prospect at Prospect and
Trinity near Johnsonville--was on the
Williamsburg-Florence County line. The
deed, recorded in Deed Book NP, pp. 7071, Williamsburg County· Court House,
dated Nov. 7, 1873, states in part that
"W. J. and Peruria L. Ard his wife for
the sum of $20 ... paid by W. J. Haselden:
E. Baxley, G. S. B. Huggins, H. E.

Eaddy
and
C.
B.
Huggins,
Trustees ... have granted all that parcel
of land situate in the County of
Williamsburg ... on the South Side of
Muddy Creek, ' bounded by a line
commencing thirty five yards south of
Muddy Creek Bridge on the Georgetown
Road and running East for Eighty fiv.e
years thence South for one hundred and
forty yards, thence East to the
Georgetown Road thence in a Southerly
direction along said road to the first
i:nentioned ... point, containing one and a
half acres .... "
One provision of the deed prohibits
the use of any part of the land for a
cemetery, 'stating, ''And it is ... furiher
agreed that there shall be no burial
ground on the abo:ve premises."
With or without permission from the
owners, people of the community were
soon burying their dead there, and the
Ard Family Cemetery soon became Old
Johnsonville.
The founders of this church were an
unusually able, devout, and ·dedicated
group of men. Historically the 1870's
were a turbulent and improverished
decade, and only such a group as listed
above could have succeeded in
establishing a new church.
The interest of the Haselden family
in religion and specifically their
devotion to Methodism, were mentioned
in the earlier Ebenezer story.
·
Of the church's founders, Edmund
Baxley, born about 1822, was a large
land owner who built an unusually fine
Georgian house near the present
northern town limits of Hemingway. He
served the South in the Ci vii War in
Company D. Second Regiment of
Reserves,
transferring
to
an
independent company in 1864 that saw
much action in South Carolina defense.
The South Carolina Legislature

•
nsonvz
Continued from Page I

'Close to it was a large turpentine still .
Th e skimmings from the crude sap were
thrown out in a great heap, and when
cooled, this dross was as hard as a rock
and burned like the fat-test lightwood .
There were huge piles of dross and good
sized lumps of it were knocked off,
placed on scaffolds about waist high and
then set ablaze. This gave the brightness
of daylight to the scene .
' 'Inside the dining room a regular

8 Pages

Wednesday, December 31, 1975

appointed him a Commissioner of Roads
in 1863. His brother dying in Confederate
service in 1862, he reared a family of
nieces and nephews with his own
children .
Another founder , H. E . (Henry
Edison &gt; Eaddy (1832-1912) had been one
of the organizers and founders of the
earlier Trinity Methodist Church. He
had married Eliza Louisa Ann Huggins,
the daughter of John Samuel Huggins
and Zilphia Ham . This Samuel Huggins
was the inventor of the first mechanical
cotton planter used in the South and was
·an ordained Methodist minister.
H . E . Eaddy , another church
founder had fought in the Civil War and
had returned home to his ravaged
plantation to take up a career as a
surveyor, writer, engineer, farmer and
legislator. The Eaddys reared a large
and talented family . It was H. E . Eaddy
who s·upervised construction of the
church . ·
G. S. B. (George Samuel Briley )
Huggins (1831-1914 ) was an ordained
Methodist minister from l!n old and,
since early colonial days, distinguished
South Carolina family. He, too, had
participated in the Civil War and was
severely wounded in the Second Battle of
Manassas . .
His wife, the former Elizabeth
Timmons, a niece of Henry Edison
·' Eaddy (above) had the plantation slaves
hitch mules to a wagon and berself drove
the Jong and hazardous distance to
Virginia to bring her husband home to
recuperate.
His letters to his wife and his mother
reveal a man of deep faith . He was
lamed by his wounds. A contemporary
wrote that despite his lameness, he
walked the footlogs across Muddy Creek
to attend services at Old Johnsonville.
A little group 23 men pledged on July

oos

29, 1872, amounts varying from $3.00 to
$50.00 to build the church. They were L.
R. Haselden , H. E . Eaddy, Thomas R .
Grier, S. T. Cooper. W. J . Dennis, J . J .
Haselden, I. N. Lawrence, D. Cox , J . E .
Taylor, C. B. Huggins, B. L. Ferrell , W.
M. Haselden , Wm . M. Potter , L. L.
Owens, R . F . Cox , Thos. H. Tanner, L.
A. Haselden, J . G. Haselden, A. J .
Venters, Geo. S. B. Huggins, Wm . J .
Haselden, Enos McDaniel , and R •. T .
Hugg.ins .
Old Johnsonville Methodist Church
wa s a uniting forc e in a very trying
period and helped to weld isolated
neighborhoods into a community with
some common aims . One charter
member said that it '. 'was the beginning
of progress in a countryside that had
remained dormant since the Civil War ."
In September 1896 the families came
together for a church festival , its
purpose being to raise funds to purchase
a piano. Until that time , a ''tune raiser ''
had had to suffice at the struggling
church .
This social event was held at the
home of Stephen Haselden in
Johnsonville. It was discribed in some
detail by Judity (Grier ) Eaddy to her
daughter-in-law , Elizabeth (Waddell)
Eaddy, who recorded her mother-inJaw's reminiscences in a manuscript
that she entitled ''All in a Lifetime."
''The festival was a lawn party and
was held at Uncle Stephen Haselden's .
Everybody, young and old, went. The
women carried their babies. Most people
came in wagons and as it was very
warm, the babies were made
comfortable on the hay with a quilt
spread over it.
''Uncle Stephen's house was just
across the road from where the
parsonage
now stands in Johnsonville.
- -

.

•

•

Continued to Page Z

'

George Samuel Briley Huggins
G. S. B. Hug~ins was one of the founders of the Old Johnsonville Methodist
Church. Huggins was a11 ordained Methodist minister and veteran of the Civil
War .

oos

nee

hot supper was served, turkey and
barbecue with all the 'trimmings' at
fifty cents a plate. Outside in the light of
the beacons were stands where
lemonade and little cakes and ice cream
were sold. These stands were thronged
with customers . until everything was
gone. It was the first ice cream ever
made in the comqiynity and was
considered a great treat.
''The ice was shipped up Black
Mingo from Georgetown to the bridge

15'

twelve miles from Johnsonville and then
brought from the bridge by wagon, half
a• day's' trip at least.
·
•

''The ice cream was made from
boiled custard, made with cream and
eggs. One egg for every cup of cream
was the rule. The custard was poured
into fifty pound tin lard cans and
covered. These · cans were placed in
large zinc or wooden tubs, surrounded

by ice and salt and vigorously turned
back and forth until it· was froze11
through and through. At intervals the
cans had to be opened and the frozen
cream around the side scraped off the
the whole stirred so it would freeze
through and through."
About seven years later a graded
school, the first in the area, was also
established at Old Johnsonville ,
replacing the one-room school of the
past. This will be our next story .
•
..

•

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                <text>Obituary for Henry Edison Eaddy&#13;
It is the painful duty of the County Record to chronicle the death of Mr. Henry E. Eaddy, well known as the "Sage of Possum Fork". He died at his home near Johnsonville Friday morning about 2:30 o'clock.&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Eaddy was a man of rare personality. He was a self made man in every sense of the term. Intellectually he was a genius, being an expert mathemetician. He was a civil engineer by profession, a hospitable Christian gentleman in his home, and a man of charming manner to all who came in contact with him. He was of unusual vitality, both physically and mentally for one of his advanced age, having celebrated his eightieth birthday in March.&#13;
&#13;
The evening prior to his death he ate supper and was in his usual happy frame of mind and apparently in good health as he had been for some time and fell asleep. At 2:30 Friday morning he was found dead.&#13;
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Mr. Eaddy was born and reared and spent his long life in the vicinity of Johnsonville. In his young life he married Miss Eliza Louisa Ann Elizabeth Huggins of Timmonsville, a daughter of the late Rev. J.S. Huggins, inventor of the first cotton planter used in the south.&#13;
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He had represented the county of Williamsburg in the State Legislature several terms. He was first elected in 1890. He was one of the original founders of the Old Johnsonville Methodist Church and Trinity Methodist Church in Florence County and supervised the construction of the Old Johnsonville Church. During all of his public life he strove to render his county efficient service.&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Eaddy leaves a widow, the former Eliza Huggins, five sons and two daughters: Messrs. J.A. of Bushnell, Fla.; C.L.of Linden, Fla.; John M. of Kingstree; S.O. of Johnsonville; Dr.A.G. of Timmonsville; Mrs W. A. Hanna of Gifford; and Mrs. R.B. Dickson of Johnsonville.&#13;
&#13;
The funeral service, conducted by Rev. E.P. Hutton, took place in Old JohnsonvilleMethodist Church at 4 p.m. Saturday, and internment was made in the church burying grounds. Six of his grandchildren acted as pallbearers. The funeral exercises were largely attended.</text>
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                    <text>...

•

., "

. .,

,

,...-.. r~

,

·"'~

Stone Home

'

I

Ii was to this home on Mill Branch near Johnsonville, the birthplace of the late
Hilburn Stone, that he returned In mid-December 1917 to cut a cedar for bis last
Christmas tree. The wooden blocks uQder the house have been replaced with
cement blocks, the barn and stables have disappeared. as has the picket fenc~
bat much about the old Austin Stone house remains unchanged and it Is one of
only a few that has survived the elements of time and nature.
.

Going Home

•

ns

as

• •

ra itton
There is much said at the
}loliday season about "going
}lame." It will never be known
if it was coincedence which
took the late Hilburn Stone
back to the place of his birth ... back home .•.to cut the tree
for the last Christmas he was to
enjoy with his family, or if he
had a foreboding that, indeed,
this would be his last Christmas, and if perhaps, he just
wanted to ... go home. Be that as
it may, he went home to Mill
Branch on a late Saturday
afternoon just before Christmas, 1977, and cut the
Christmas tree which would
adorn the den of his home that
ast Christmas.

J. Hilburn Stone was born on

of that Christmas with us, how
they, with a disabled father, or
those who had lost their father,
had a joyful Christmas Day
because of the santa without a
beard or reindeer who paid
them an unexpected visit.
When Hilburn and his wife
were blessed with their first
c hild, Charles Willis, his
father, still with the love for
Christmas and it's true
meaning , Hilburn wanted his
son to have a Christmas tree
with lights. This seemed impossible since there was no
electricity in the rural area
where he then lived back at
Mill Branch.
But Hilburn put his mind to
working art'li came up with an

idea for the lighted Christmas

April 12, 1912 to the late Roline
and Meddie Dennis Stone in the
home of his paternal grandparents, Aaron Austin and
Sally Marsh Stone. The home is
located on S.C. Road 21-1331,
approximately one-half mile
south of Johnsonville, known
then as the Mill Branch area.
The home at that time was a
sturdy frame house, built very
high off the ground amid large
oak and hickory trees which
provided shade for the large
yard of almost snow white
sand. The yard was enclosed
with a white picket fence and
not a weed or blade of grass
was allowed to grow on it. "Grandmother Salley", as
Mrs. Stone was affectionately
known, kept the yard (and even
wider the house) swept clean
as if it had been the floors of the
house. In the left corner of the
yard near the steps to the porch
grew a huge gardenia bush that
spread it 's fragrance all
around the place. Close to the
back gate was a tall lilac tree
which added to the uniqueness
of the yard. Also in the back
yard was a very deep well
which provided water for the
tone family and their
vestock, as it still provides
- water for the tenant who occupies the house today.
Outside the huge white yard
were the barn and stables
where the mules and horses
were kept, along with the corn
and hay produced on the farm
for their food. There was also a
place for the cows, chickens
and guineas which provided
milk, butter and eggs for the
family as well as meat. Adjacent to the yard on the east
side was a large garden where
vegetables were grown for the
family's use.

tree. He purchased tail light
bulbs for an A-Model Ford and
soldered them to wire used for
automobiles. He then attached
the wire to an automobile
battery, and to make the lights
colored, he cut off the ends of
small
assorted
colored
balloons and put one over each
light. Charles, being a
mischevious little one-yearold, the tree was placed on the
porch just outside the window.
That way Charles could stand
inside and look at his tree with
the pretty lights and not be
exposed to a shock from the
battery.
_
_
-years went on and Christmases came a nd 'Nent, but
al ways the tree was a n important
part
of
the
preparations for the Christmas
holidays.
A little later the family was
blest with a little girl, Lou Ann.
Her passing at three years of
age left a tremendous scar in
the heart of her parents. But
Christ still lives and it was
because of Him that \Ve have
Christmas, so the Stones
continued the celebration
annually in His name.
They were again blessed
with an addition to the family,
a son, Kenneth Hilburn, his
father 's namesake, came to the
family and then they had an
infant son and a nine-year-old
to enjoy Christmas with.
Before long the boys were old
enough to help cut and bring in
the Christmas tree. They enjoyed helping to decorate the
tree until they got old enough to
feel that was for mama and
daddy if he wanted to help, but
it was a little too much for their
masculinity. Wrapping gifts
was absolutely out of the
question for them.

When Hilburn was a small
boy his parents built a home
09}y a few hundred yards to the
east of his grandparents' and
be lived there until he became
a Yowig man and was married
to the former Blondell Dennis.
They moved to town in a house
on Pine Street just across from
the site of his last home.
Hilburn
was
a very
thoughtful person and seemed
~ always put others before
himself, and Christmas time
was one of the seasons when he
Ahowed his concern for
P~lclren and the elderly most.

Time passed swiftly, the
boys married and now have
their own homes anf families.
The grandchildren, as they
came along, added to the joy of
the Christmas season. In
early December, 1977, a large
artificial Christmas tree was
erected in the living room of
the Stone home. With a tree
trimming set for a special
night, to make it a special
occasion for the five grandchildren, Hilburn bought paper
cups, plates and napkins with a
Christmas
decor .
Hot
chocolate and sandwiches were
served the grandchildren as
they labored hard to trim the

One Christmas prior to his

~rriage he played Santa
B Us to the children on Mill
l"ancb. Some young people in
our area could share the story

tree.
That would have been sufficient for any family except

that this family spent most of
their time in the den and could
not see the tree in the living
room As the middle of
December approached,
Hilburn decided he would get a
live tree for the den. He wanted
a cedar, but where could he get
one? Then he thought of the
cedars near HOME, although
he had been away from his
birthplace for many years and
it no\v had another owner.

It was getting late on
Saturday afternoon and he
wanted the tree with lights
shining before Sunday. What
could he do·? He called the
home of the owner of the fann
where he- was born, but no
answer. He could find her
nowhere. He decided to leave a
note in the door telling her he
was going to get one of her
trees and would pay her soon.
On the way he met her, and
after sharing a good laugh at
the difficulty he had in finding
her, he was on his way with
Mrs. Stone beside him. Once at
Mill Branch, he hurriedly went
into the mass of trees where he
cut one down. His wife,
knowing of his illness, took the
tree and carried it to the
pickup, much against his will.
It was taken home, trimmed
and enjoyed until Hilburn was
hospitaliz.ed on December 22.
He was away Christmas, but
whe Hilburn arrived home on
Tuesday night he was greeted
by the entire family and
around
that
tree . .. his
tree ... gifts were exchanged
and it was as if it was Christmas and homecoming all
wrapped up into one big happy
occasion. Isn't it wonderful
that the precious Babe of
Bethlehem whom Hilburn had
honored all those years, had
made it impossible for him and
his family to know that he had
gone " back home" for his last
Christmas tree?
His death came suddenly on
December 31, 1977.

May

be yours tbrou~
holiday season

MOORE &amp;

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