Memories of Bemis
Joel Jackson Memories of Dr. Kelly Smythe.
Sula (Turner) Hillhouse
The day was a Sunday - it was hot and dry with hardly a leaf
moving: a typical day in Decatur County, Tennessee. My Aunt and Uncle from Bemis had
been visiting our family during the weekend and now were getting ready to go home.
When my Aunt Ethel and Uncle Wafford (Bates) were about ready to leave, I started begging
to go home with them. (They had no children and I loved being with them - most
especially because they petted me to death.) My parents hesitated, but Aunt Ethel
said it was okay with her - so Mom and Dad relented and allowed me to go. I was so
excited.
Now, school was in session in Bemis, but in Decatur County the schools
had been dismissed for a few weeks for the fall "cotton picking" season.
In those days (the 1940's) crops were harvested by hand, and families needed every
school-aged child to help with the awesome task of picking acres and acres of
cotton. So it was the custom in rural communities to suspend class for a few weeks
so children could help their families (and sometimes their neighbors) pick cotton.
If I'd been a very good "cotton picker" Daddy might have thought
more than once about allowing me to be away from home for a few days; but the fact was, I
was not a very productive picker of cotton - thus permission was granted!
It was getting dark by the time we drove into my Aunt and Uncle's
driveway on Old Kentucky Street in Bemis, so I couldn't see well enough to tell much about
the neighborhood that night. You see - this was my very first visit, and I was
anxious to see what all the houses and yards looked like. (Where I lived, we
couldn't even see our neighbor's house.)
The street lights were on and reflected off the multicolored foliage on
the trees that lined every street. It was a beautiful sight, and I thought
Bemis must be the most beautiful place in the world.
While my Uncle unloaded the car (Mom and Dad had loaded them up with
fresh fruits and fall vegetables), my Aunt fixed something for us to eat. We usually
ate supper much earlier than this and we were all hungry. I'll never forget that
first meal at this house on that fall night in 1943--sandwiches made with sliced bread,
bologna, cheese, sliced tomato and real mayonnaise! That was the first time I'd ever
eaten store-bought loaf bread and bologna and I thought that was the best food I'd ever
tasted....never mind the country ham, home-ground sausage, pork loin and chops, fresh eggs
with hot biscuits and gravy, fried chicken, fresh picked vegetables and hot cornbread,
fresh fruits, made-from-scratch desserts, fresh milk that had been cooled in our
"spring-house". All of this was home grown and home made, and was what we
had all the time and I was used to it - so the soft, fresh loaf bread and bologna were a
treat to me.
We were all pretty tired, so we got ready for bed early. I could
hardly think about sleeping because I was still so excited. Soon after crawling into
that fluffy feather bed I started missing Mama, Daddy and my little sister, June.
They seemed so far away--60 or 70 miles to me seemed like half way across the state!
Soon, though, I feel asleep. We didn't have to get up early because
Uncle Wafford worked on the Second Shift and wouldn't have to go to work until 2:00
o'clock Monday afternoon.
On the farm we always got up really early, and Daddy went to feed the
animals and milk the cows about 4:00 o'clock. While he did that, Mama cooked a
really big breakfast - every day! You see, people who worked on the farm had to
work so hard they needed a big breakfast to keep them going until lunch time -- there was
no mid-morning snack-break in those days! At the same time Mama was cooking our
breakfast, she also cooked foods to be packed for Daddy to take to the field and for us to
take to school for lunch. So, since my "biological clock" was set to get
up early, I woke up before my Aunt and Uncle did. I tried to be quiet and not wake
them -- but I just had to peek out the window to get a look at the surrounding
neighborhood, at least as much as I could see from behind the pull-down window shade.
Finally, I heard them stirring and soon smelled coffee, so I knew
breakfast would soon be ready. I got up, slipped into my clothes, made my bed and
went into the kitchen. I offered to help but Aunt Ethel had everything under
control. She was such a happy person--always smiling and I loved being with her.
We ate breakfast and pretty soon after we finished Uncle Wafford said
he was going to the Post Office. I learned that everyone in town had a
"box" at the Post Office and went there daily to pick up their mail. I
also learned that many of the men in town would meet at the YMCA before going to work and
play checkers - or just sit and talk. I also learned that the men could take a bath
(shower) at the "Y" for a small fee--which many of them did. That seemed
so strange to me - we took our baths at home - in a tin wash tub.
I actually don't remember much we did during my first day in Bemis -
except we walked up one side of the street and back down on the other side - stopping on
occasion for Aunt Ethel to talk to neighbors who were in their yards or on their front
porches. The houses were so white - like they'd just been painted, and the yards
were all neat and clean. Later we sat in the swing on the front porch and watched
neighbors going to and coming from work at the shift change. I remember some people
passing by said they were going to the Company Store - others were on their way to the
"Block" (which I later learned was "the Patton Block" where a group of
stores, a cafe, a taxi stand and Pettigrew's Drug Store were located.)
It wasn't too long after Uncle Wafford left for work at 1:45 before the
kids living on Aunt Ethel's street began coming by on their way home from school.
The wind was blowing - not really hard - but hard enough to blow some of the leaves off
the trees. They floated gently down and danced their way across the sidewalks and
streets. Now, living in the country, I'd never thought much about leaves falling off
the trees before. There was just something kind of special about their scooting
along on the sidewalks and paved streets that caught my attention.
Right away some of the kids came outside and began riding their
bicycles up and down the street - and even around the block. They'd often call out
to one another - and sometimes would stop and talk together for a few minutes. I
thought they were the luckiest kids on earth. I don't know if I felt jealous - or
just a little bit intimidated; maybe both.
I soon learned a few of the kids by name: Barbara and Elizabeth
Hinson, Georgia Pearl Kennon and her brothers Farris and Larry, and Willard Cagle, who
lived next door. I can't say I got to know any of them during that first visit, but at
least knowing their names was a start.
One of my most favorite treats, during that first visit to Bemis, was
going to Pettigrew's Drug Store on the Patton Balock to get a chocolate sundae - my very
first one ever! I remember it had two scoops of vanilla ice cream served in a tall,
clear, footed glass dish and covered with yummy chocolate - piled high with whipped cream
and a red cherry on top. That was the best thing I'd ever had to eat in my whole
life....even better than bologna, cheese and tomato sandwiches!
While we were eating our chocolate sundaes, a lady came in and stopped to
talk to Aunt Ethel. Her name was Miss Annie Phillips - and she talked to me, too,
asked all kinds of questions. I thought she was a very nice and friendly lady.
When she started to leave she told me she hoped I'd come back to visit Aunt Ethel again
and come with her to Sunday School. I got the feeling she really meant it - and
that made me feel real good.
All too soon my first visit in Bemis came to an end, and I had no idea
when I'd ever get to come back. I remember looking longingly at kids playing on
lawns, on sidewalks and a couple of boys tossing a ball as we drove slowly down the street
on our way back to my home in Decatur County.
Some months later, two men I'd never seen before, came to see
Daddy. They talked for a long time and after they left I learned they were from the
Bemis Cotton Mill. They had come to ask Daddy to come back to Bemis to work in the
Mill. Daddy had lived and worked in Bemis for several years before I was born - so
he was what they called an "experienced hand". They told Daddy that he was
really needed because the "Draft" had taken several of the Bemis employees into
the Army and left the Mill short of help. The material made in the Mill was in such
demand because of the war, that the Bemis Bro. Bag Company needed to increase
production. In order to do that they needed to hire more employees.
Daddy told the men to give him a little time to get the rest of his
crop out of the field and he'd come and "help them out for a little
while". The first Sunday afternoon Daddy left to be gone for a whole week, I
cried and cried. Mama, June and I were all by ourselves. We heard all kinds of
noises during the night -- and for the first time ever, I felt afraid. I know it
must have been hard on Mama, too. She had to do most everything by herself.
June and I helped as much as we could, but for the most part Mama had it all to do.
For what seemed like a very long time (it may have been only a matter
of weeks) Daddy would ride the Greyhound Bus to Jackson and then catch a City Bus to Bemis
on Sunday afternoons. He would work all week and then make the return trip home on
the following Friday. Sometimes they had to work six days a week and he didn't get
to come home for the weekend - and that made it really seem like a long time. I can
remember sitting on a stump down by the road, in front of our house, watching for Daddy to
come walking up the hill on Friday afternoons.
The War just kept escalating and the Mill kept hiring more
people. Before long nearly everybody in the extended Turner family, who was old
enough, was working in the Bemis Cotton Mill--my Granddaddy (Ben) Turner, my uncles,
aunts, cousins, my sister Opal, and Daddy.
By the spring of 1944 I suppose Daddy either decided, or was convinced
by his superiors, that he was needed in Bemis long-term so he made arrangements to move
his family to Bemis. I was both excited - and scared. The school year was
about over and I especially dreaded changing schools. At first, we moved into the
house with my Mammy and Pappy Turner - they lived on Davidson Street. Their house was near
the railroad tracks and trains ran day and night. Every night I thought for sure the
train was going to come right through the house! They were so loud and always blew
the train whistle at every "crossing." I think there were about four
crossings in Bemis, so the whistle blew continually all the way through town.
One thing we learned very quickly while living near the railroad
tracks: If you had a washing on the clothes line and heard a train coming - you'd
better get the clothes off the line before the train got there or the clothes would get
sprinkled with tiny balls of coal soot!
Then came that faithful day - our first day to go to school in Bemis,
and I was so scared. Mama walked June and me to school. Oh my! It looked
so big. It was a brick, two-story building located next door to the Methodist
Church. I was assigned to Miss Mildred Pearson's fifth grade class on the second
floor - at the west end of the hall. She just could not have been sweeter or nicer
to me - but I felt as "lost as a goose". I had been attending a country,
one-room school (almost like the one on "Little House on the Prairie") and our
text books were altogether different from those I was given at my new school.
"How in the world will I ever understand what all they're talking about?" was
the question that kept running through my mind.
First thing every morning we'd say the Pledge of Allegiance to the
Flag. Every day we would sing patriotic songs. I remember that Joel Brooks got
to lead the singing more than anybody else. He sat right in front of Miss Pearson's
desk and it seemed like his hand always went up first when she asked for volunteers to
lead the singing. I loved singing the songs -- and sometimes, even now -- nearly
sixty years later - I break out singing, "Over hill - over dale, we have hit the
dusty trail...." Often we'd get to go outside, line up single file and practice
marching like soldiers. I thought that was lots of fun, and it was -- but it was
much later that I realized how very much the War influenced about everything we did during
those years.
Another thing I soon learned about, that the students were very excited
about doing, was the buying of "stamps" for ten cents each, which they would
stick into a stamp book. When a book was filled with stamps it would be exchanged for a
$25.00 War Bond. People everywhere were being encouraged to buy War Bonds to help support
the War effort. I begged dimes from all my relatives and before school was out I managed
to accumulate enough stamps to get a War Bond.
A few year later I used that War Bond to buy a piano and Mama and Daddy
let me take piano lessons from Mrs. Greer (I believe her name was Lessie Mae.) In 1958 we
gave that same piano to the newly organized Northside Methodist Church - to which we moved
our membership and became Charter Members.
Miracle of all miracles! I passed the 5th Grade! I may have received the first
"social promotion" in the Madison County School System.
Not long after school was out, Daddy found and bought a house on
Chester Levee Road. We were glad to have a house of our own again - and have more room to
spread out. There was a lot to do getting everything moved and in place. Mama and Daddy
planted a late garden. They always had a garden and we were expected to help with the
planting, the cultivating and the harvesting - so that kept us busy during that first
summer.
We moved our membership to the Bemis Methodist church and Brother L. L. Jones was the
pastor. (My parents continued their active membership there until their deaths: Dad in
1993 and Mom in 1999.)
Soon fall was upon us and June and I were now starting the 2nd and 6th
grades in Bemis. June still attended classes in the brick, two-story building beside the
Methodist Church, but the 6th and 7th grades met in a white, clap-board building across
the street, west of the brick building. To my surprise, I didn't feel so lost any more - I
suppose it was getting to start "on the same page" with everybody else. I
actually started to like school for the first time ever. I made several really neat, new
friends and felt so lucky to be going to school in Bemis - and really surprised myself by
making good grades.
It was during the sixth grade, I believe, that World War II came to an
end. We had no TV so we only saw the excitement in our neighborhoods - and heard it on the
radio. The War is over! The boys will be coming home! How excited everybody was. Our
family was just as happy the War was over but we couldn't be totally excited because my
very-most-favorite cousin, Ben F. Blount, who was born and grew up in Bemis, wouldn't be
coming home. He had joined the Army as soon as he was old enough and transferred into the
Paratrooper's Division soon after Basic Training. He was killed on his first
"jump" into a battle zone in Sicily. We, as all families were who lost family
members in the war, were devastated.
Ben F. was especially close to us because as a young boy and teenager
he would come and stay with us during the summers and help Daddy on the farm. He loved
working outside - and my Dad had no sons to help on the farm - so Ben F. was a great help
to him. Ben F. was like a "brother" to Opal, June and me.
After his family first received word that he was "missing in
action", I remember sitting on that same stump down by the road in front of our house
(where months later I waited for Daddy to come home from Bemis on Friday afternoons), and
looking expectantly down the road for Ben F. to come walking up the hill. That was not to
be....before too long my Aunt got another letter from the Department of Defense notifying
her, with much regret, that Ben F. was now classified as "killed in action".
After the War was over, my Dad thought the boys who had left their jobs
in the Mill to go to the Army, would be coming back to their jobs and that he would no
longer be needed in the Bemis Cotton Mill. But, as it turned out, the Government passed
the G. I. Bill of Rights and many of the Bemis veterans took advantage of that opportunity
and went back to school to continue their education. Therefore, Daddy's job and the jobs
of lots of other people in the Mill, were secure.
I was really glad because I had come to love our life in Bemis. Why, for a quarter we
could go to the movies on Saturday afternoon, buy a coke and a bag of popcorn! We grew up
on Roy Rogers, Red Ryder and Gene Autry.
My world continued to expand when I was allowed to go swimming in the
Bemis swimming pool and learn to skate at the Bemis skating rink. Bemis kids were so
blessed to grow up in such a special "village community" where everybody knew
everybody else. Members from all Bemis families either worked, played, worshipped, or went
to school together. There was never any fear of walking home from the movies or skating
rink at night, or walking to a friend's house after dark to spend the night.
Seventh and Eighth grades were a time of growing - physically,
emotionally, socially and spiritually. In those days nobody ever thought about objecting
to Scripture being read daily at school, or prayers being voiced in the classroom. We had
wonderful Christian teachers who not only were intent on our learning the 3-R's but were
interested in preparing us to experience well rounded, diverse and productive lives as we
journeyed through the ensuing years. The teachers and Principal knew us personally - and
knew most of our parents. There was an unwritten and unspoken collaboration between
teachers and parents in the education of the children in Bemis, Tennessee....an
arrangement that in my opinion just cannot be improved upon.
Now, in the fall of 1947 I went to J. B. Young High School -- a
freshman, and a "green one at that"! J. B. Young was a beautiful brick,
two-story building and was not very old. Principal Alton Copeland insisted that it be kept
impeccably clean, and personally saw that it was "spit and polished" at all
times. He took great pride in the school's appearance, as well as his students' successes.
Mr. Copeland was a good man and every student who ever darkened the door of J. B. Young
High School has heard him read, several times, his very favorite scripture: Ecclesiastics
3:1-12. He read that particular passage on many occasions during our four years there.
During our time at J. B. Young High School, we were exposed to
different cultures through the monthly programs brought in from outside and presented to
the student body in the school's auditorium. The girls were taught to cook, sew and the
art of housekeeping by Mrs. Frances Mercer and later by Mrs. Eleanor Baxter and Mrs.
Bettye Neely. Several Home Economics students were chosen each year to fill the role of
"Hostess-Servers" at the many business, social and professional luncheons and
evening banquets held in the large Meeting/Dining Room on the second floor of the Y.W.C.A.
This was an unique opportunity and we were meticulously trained in the proper method of
serving at both formal and semi-formal occasions. For instance....."always serve from
the left side of the diner", etc., etc. Not only was it good training for young high
school girls - but it was a lot of fun as well.
The guys were taught by Mr. Kirby McKnight to do wood working projects,
how to work with electricity, and do many other practical things in the Vocational Shop
that would be of benefit to them throughout the course of their lives. Quite a number of
Mr. Kirby's students were so impacted by his teaching, and by the content of his
character, that they chose their life-time careers in some phase of work they were exposed
to in his Shop Class at J. B. Young High School. This stands as a testimony to Mr. Kirby
McKnight's profound influence on the lives of the young men he taught.
J. B. Young students were also taught the importance of proper
nutrition, personal hygiene and physical education. Some may be surprised to learn that as
far back as the 1940's and 1950's we received some introduction to sex education in Health
and Home Economics classes - in segregated groups of course! We were taught that character
was more important than popularity - not in a formal or required subject, but every
teacher used the opportunities they had on a daily basis to instill in each of us the
qualities necessary to become a good citizen and a good and decent person. We received all
this valuable training, and more, in addition to the curriculum required by the State and
by the School Board.
I'm sure every J. B. Young student could share favorite stories about
one of our favorite teachers of all time -- Miss Sally Sweeney. She was a tiny
"bundle of dynamite" who Joe Nip McKnight swore had eyes in the back of her
head. She taught all of us, all that we could absorb, in the areas of math, algebra,
geometry, etc. I'm sure all of her students would agree that there will never be another
"Miss Sallie".
Sports were always of great interest to most of the residents in Bemis. Through the years
there were always successful sports teams fielded through different Bemis recreational
organizations. Likewise, sports were an important part of our high school experience. All
J. B. Young teams were very much supported by the community. During our freshman year,
while a new gymnasium was under construction, we practiced and played our basketball games
in the gymnasium at the Y.M.C.A., as had the school's teams in years past. Mr. Copeland,
with the help of skilled volunteers who loved the game of basketball, coached the teams.
When we, the Class of 1951, started our sophomore year, J. B. Young
High School had its very own, brand new gymnasium - what a beauty! We were so excited and
so proud! Now everybody was able to enjoy the new gym because physical education classes
were a vital part of the required curriculum. No longer would the basketball teams have to
leave the campus to practice.
In the spring, prior to our sophomore year, Mr. Bill Leftwich joined
the teaching staff as teacher and coach. And coach he did! He worked that spring and
summer organizing, recruiting, preparing and training J. B. Young's first football team to
be ready to take the field that coming fall. Nobody - not even the coach - expected the
team to be very successful that first year. Most of the boys who ultimately became
"the team" had never played football and knew very little about the game.
They won all of their games that first season. Mr. Bill said years later, when asked how
he'd been able to field such a powerhouse that first year (with only part of a season to
coach and train this new team), "I guess it was because they never had time to learn
how to lose." Whatever the reason, that first successful season established J. B.
Young's football team as "the team to beat" from then on.
While successfully guiding the football team through a winning first
season, Mr. Bill had to start working with the basketball teams (both boys and girls) as
soon as school started in order to be ready for the season when it opened in November. He
recruited a friend of his, Howard Thomas, (who loved girls' basketball) to come as a
volunteer coach and help him - at least until football season was over. Mr. Thomas was
tough - boy was he tough! - but he knew basketball and was an excellent coach. He enjoyed
it so much that he continued to come to our practice session (and to our games) even after
football season was over.
Mr. Bill was very successful during his years at J. B. Young and
produced many winning teams. Many of his student athletes went on to become very
successful men and women in a wide variety of professions, businesses, the military, the
clergy, in education, as well as in other types of work careers.
Suffice it to say that through the past fifty-plus years, Bill Leftwich
has kept up with almost every student he ever coached and continues to be interested in
their lives. He's still a great fan of basketball and follows many local teams - being
especially interested in the teams at Union University.
High School was definitely the highlight of my life, up to that point,
and although more than half a century has passed since my high school days, I continue to
have fond memories of my years at J. B. Young High School. My experiences as a member of
the girls' basketball team are forever indelibly imprinted in my memory. It saddened me to
see, earlier in this year, our dear old J. B. Young High School building razed. I do
understand the need for progress - but I also understand the need for preserving and
maintaining quality structures for their utilization and for posterity.
I, for one, am grateful - and I'm quite sure that hundreds and
thousands of current and former Bemisites could join me in grateful appreciation to the
Judson Moss Bemis family for choosing to locate a Cotton Mill in an area south of Jackson,
Tennessee, and for building a Model Village for the families of their employees. In
addition to building and maintaining the homes, they built a house of worship, a Company
Store that carried nearly anything anyone would need to buy, and all the recreational and
entertainment facilities the community could have hoped for. All this was provided so
employees and their families could live comfortable and productive lives, could raise
their children to enjoy their childhood, and could prepare them to evolve as useful and
productive citizens throughout the course of this lives. To this end, I believe Bemis Bro.
Bag Company was more than successful.
I count myself very blessed to have had the privilege of growing up in
the very unique and special place called Bemis, Tennessee.
********************************
by Raymond Killion Brasher
I was born in our home on "C" street -
delivered by Dr. Smythe. My sister, Bonnie Ruth, (deceased) was born in the same
house by the same doctor. My brother, Harold (deceased) was born on Massachusetts
Street, delivered by Dr. Cottongim.
My father, Jessie William Brasher, was born in Chester County in 1892.
He lived in Texas for a while when he was a boy and then lived in Steele, Missouri
until he moved to Jackson, Tennessee around 1917. He worked at Southern Engine
Boiler Works on North Royal for some time, then got a job driving street cars in Jackson.
His "run" was from the court house to the end of Neely Station, which is
now Hollywood Boulevard. When the street car barns burned around 1920 he went to
work at Bemis. He was a loom fixer in the weave shop where he worked for about 40
years.
My mother, "Dallie", was born Effie Elizabeth Johnson in
Decatur County in 1900. Her father, John Henry Johnson, worked at the Company Store.
I remember him as a slight built man with a big mustache. My grandmother on Daddy's
side was born Minerva Isabell Dillon. She died when I was three years old so I don't
remember her. Her family came from New York in the early 1800's.
My maternal grandmother was born Sophia Emily Fisher in Decatur County.
She married John Henry Johnson and they moved to Bemis around 1920 or so.
My mother had 6 sisters and 2 brothers and I think they all worked in
the mill for at least part of this lives, some longer than others. My mother died in
19763 and my father died in 1982.
My daddy liked sports, hunting, music (played the guitar) and loved
shooting pool at the"Y". My brother played the banjo a little bit and I
played guitar. We used to sit on the porch on Missouri Street and play and
sing--lots of fun!
Momma loved to cook, wash and iron and clean house (at least that's
what I remember most about Momma). She sure liked to eat so we always had some good
meals. She was also the disciplinarian in the family and I sure remember that!
My parents lived at several addresses in Bemis--Massachusetts,
"C", New Town and Missouri.
My special memories in Bemis would fill a book so I can't list all of
them. I remember playing ball in the street, "Annie Over", hide and seek,
tin can, marble, tops, pick-up-sticks, jack rocks, card games like Old Maid (someone would
always mark the Old Maid), Rook (they would always mark the "Rook" too), jumping
ditches, climbing trees (and all these were before I was old enough to go to the
"Y"). I was more or less raised at the "Y". I played pool,
basketball, softball and a little bit of everything -- so much I could fill another book.
I loved going to school. I remember all my teachers from first
grade through eighth grade. High School was great! I began to see girls in a
different way! I started high school in 1941 and graduated in 1945. I
especially remember the rivalry in basketball between Bemis and Jackson. I was
fortunate enough to be on the starting five in 1944-45 season when we beat Jackson for the
district title.
The Bemis Theatre was great! Nickel movies and talent shows (I
was one fourth of a quartet that won a talent content one year. Others were Kelly
Harris and Freck King. Can't recall the fourth member) We sang barbershop
quartet songs but we won our our jokes!
I remember the class day exercises at graduation time and how Mrs.
Woodson smacked her lips and kept us straight, or thought she did. We graduated
twenty-nine members and said goodbye to the good old days.
I went to Herron Chapel Baptist Church. I have some fond memories
of some of my Sunday School teachers. I joined the church in February 1942 and was
baptized in cold water. Brother Scates was pastor and I remember him saying to me,
"Raymond, the water heater is out so we're gonna make this short and sweet."
When I was a kid Christmas was an exciting time--always looked forward
to getting fruits and nuts, cap pistol, pair of roller skates (wore them out in a couple
of weeks and then make a scooter out of them by pulling skates apart and using two by
fours).
I remember when Christmas time at church was mostly for children.
We would have little plays and every kid would get a bag of hard candy. We
didn't have nurseries at church when I was a kid; mothers sat on the back row seats and
nursed their babies.
When I was growing up most mothers didn't work at public jobs so they
were there to "keep house". I remember Monday was wash day and Tuesday was
ironing day. My job was to keep the fire going around the wash pot and to punch the
clothes around and to run the rinse water into two wash tubs. I can remember the
blue stuff you put in the rinse water and how good it felt to place your arms in the cool
water.
We had a cow in the cow pasture at the end of "C" Street next
to the creek. I was about six year old then and don't remember the cow's name but I
do remember that when I went with Daddy to milk, he would call out, "Soook
Jersey", and our cow would come running. She knew Daddy's face or his voice (I
don't know which) and would come to get some feed and be milked. I remember Momma
making butter. I helped her churn and if I caught her not looking I would slurp a
little creamy milk from the churn.
We had hogs every year when I was a boy. Hog killing time was a
pretty hard job but the fresh back bones and ribs and tenderloin and sausage were so good!
Daddy made the sausage and Momma put it in cloth sacks and hung it in the wood shed
along with a ham or shoulder and that was mighty fine eating for quite a time. Daddy
had a "meat box" made of oak wood and it was about four by five feet which he
used to "salt down the middlins" which was used for eating and for seasoning
too. During the summer that box was empty. One day my brother and I decided it
would make a good boat if we stopped up the cracks (which we did). We had a little
red wagon, so one day while Momma was not looking, we hauled that meat box/boat up to the
mill lakes and we got in and paddled out right in the middle of the lade. When water
started coming in through the cracks I told my brother, "we're sinking".
We swam out and I guess that old meat box is probably still in the ground where the lake
used to be.
When we lived on Missouri Street we had the "slop route" for
that street. Daddy cautioned us about black widow spiders and I can still see some of
those little buggers down around the slop can. I loved to see the hogs eat--kind of
hated to kill them in November.
We had a garden too. My brother and I furnished the fertilizer.
We took our little red wagon and went to the cow pasture and collected the cow
paddies and piled them up in the back yard. We had plenty to spread over the garden
spot when a man would come around in the spring to "break up" gardens.
Daddy was a good gardener like most folks raised on a farm. I learned a lot about it
too.
We had ice brought to the house by Mr. Gaugh and his helper. We
kids were always trying to reach in and get some ice shavings out of the ice wagon.
We had groceries delivered too. Mr. Ivan Hampton took our orders and they were
delivered right to the house. What service!
We had good toilets on Missouri Street. First, we had a
two-holer. Later we had a self-flusher. Couldn't beat that.
The Company Store, West Drug Store, Dr. Smythe, company nurse.
Twas' heaven!
Then came the war in 1941. I had just turned fourteen and how
exciting it was to follow every day's news of the war. It hurt when we heard of some
of Bemis' own being killed or wounded or captured, but it was finally over and life went
on in Bemis.
I finished high school in May 1945 and married my high schools
sweetheart, Raymell York in July of that year. I went to work in the mill in the
spinning room as doffer right out of school in May. I still have my first paycheck
stub. I was drafted into the Army and discharged in 1947. I returned to work
in the mill until the strike. I went to work with the Illinois Central Railroad as
Telegrapher/Agent/Operator. I quit the railroad in 1962 and went to work at the
Jackson Post Office as mail carrier until I retired in 1990. We moved to the Old
Malesus Road in 1962. Raymell and I will be married fifty-seven years July 14th.
We have three daughters, seven grandchildren and two great grandchildren. My
wife and I are so glad and proud to have grown up in Bemis where industry and friendliness
truly described our way of life--our heritage.