Elison
Hendley and family (Nashville, Georgia)
John A. Gaskins had vast holdings
of land in the Ten-mile Bay, and the reasons he removed
about 1910 a short distance to homestead what I always
knew as the Perry Hendley Place have been erased by time.
In 1941, sometime after Mr. John A. died, Mr. Perry
Hendley bought the farm. The families had been connected
before that, though, as Mr. Perry's father, Mr. Walt,
lived in the Ten-mile Bay and Mr. Perry had worked for the
Gaskins family in the turpentine business for several
years. Mr. John A. was long before my time, but I remember
Mr. J. Henry, Mr. John A.'s son. Mr. J. Henry owned a lot
of land, too, and even money that he used to make
interest-bearing signature loans. Mr. Walt was also before
my time. At any rate, the eastern part of Berrien County
has been and is thick with Hendleys. I don't know all the
family connections, but suffice it to observe the large
number and early times of Hendleys in Folks Huxford's
Pioneers of Wiregrass Georgia.
(As I advised, this particular
narrative about cane mills is rambling, long-winded, and
personal. Worse, this paragraph is anticlimactic, being
more a description of the times than a linear account.
Regardless, I feel an obligation to report myself as it
relates to an East-Berrien Hendley, Mr. Hilton Hendley,
the game warden. I have also written this paragraph
because it puts a limit on the extent of mischief that
wholesome young boys allowed themselves in the rural South
in the 1950s and 1960s. There was a veritable gang of
young boys who let their time drift between school, work,
and entertainment, which consisted of two main types,
hunting and bragging about hunting. (It was not scary to
be alone at dark up to the crotch in a swamp hunting
ducks, but it was way too scary to talk to a girl at that
time, so entertainment was hunting and bragging about
hunting.) Of course, among the boys, some specialized more
in entertainment than school and work. Context is needed.
For an urbane reader or for a younger person--if one does
not have the advantage of descent from Highland stock--it
might be a little difficult to understand right away how a
person can be passionately disrespectful of authority, but
respect the person upholding the law. That is the way we
were and I won't bore you with the details, but it is a
heritable trait, expressing itself in the general
population as teen rebellion, but constituitively
expressed across all demographics in my little hometown.
As an example, I once watched my father, whose pride,
independence and stubbornness bordered on pathological,
patiently wait until a policeman completed a parking
ticket, only to remove it, shred it, throw it on the
ground, all done with the full attention of the policeman.
As a second example, I was a small child when we were
stopped for speeding. It was a short diversion as
apparently Daddy was obliged to remind the patrolman that
the personal allegiance he had to a fellow Mason exceeded
that he had to the law. As a final example and one I find
humor in, Willie Luke (the husband of Aunt Maggie, grandfather L.G. Outlaw's sister) lived in
Lanier County, but wanted his children to attend school in
Berrien County. The law didn't stand in the way and Daddy
sent the school bus to snatch those children everyday and
bring them to the good schools in Berrien County. All this
was small stuff for someone who had bootlegged (and worse)
earlier in his life. [I must note that my sister had a
conniption about this statement, thinking it sullied my
father's memory. She added that he was young, homeless,
and under the influence of others. I noted these
"others" were his uncles. She replied that one
of them was a preacher. I said that made the remaining one
even worse. We found common ground finally by
acknowledging that this enterprise was not a way to make a
living, but just a sideline, like making syrup is for most
folks these days.) In sum, I was about 11 when I realized
that when Daddy declined something "because it is
illegal," he was just politely refusing. That is all
to say that, at best, laws were considered guidelines, but
usually laws were considered more like one person's
opinion of how to do something. Thus, we all started
driving before the legal age, and most of our parents were
more concerned about how they were going to get us off
motor scooters and motorcycles and into something with a
little more metal protecting us. In short, by 14, we were
free agents in cars, trucks or pieces of one of those, and
this gave us access to the whole outdoors, at almost any
time of day or night. Disrespecting authority, we were an
unorganized gang, but for early-morning hunting for doves,
strictly illegal, we'd meet over at Dr. Brown's, who went
out of his way to appear gruff, but the twinkle in his
eyes gave him away. Mrs. Brown, bless her soul, just took
it all as a mother's duty to get up at 4:30 am and cook
breakfast for whatever bunch of boys Butch invited. Butch
was popular (as were his parents), so the group was large
and might include Hank Snead, the best shot among us, one
of my best friends, and one who specialized more in
entertainment than school or work, and Chip Yancey, also
one of my best friends, who worked hard but studied hard
too, and was a little short on entertainment if anything.
These three friends and many other neighborhood boys
(Lamar Weeks, Henry Gray, Chuck Herndon, Bill Mathis,
Freddie Duncan, Wayne Watson, Tommy Hand, Jimmy Watson, to
mention a few) died long before their time leaving many of
us (Terry Smith, Harry McNabb, Bob Lovein, Dane Perkins,
to mention a few others) sad, but cherishing the memories
all the more. As the eating and the bragging stage of
hunting ended, the gang would pile up into cars,
particularly Butch's old Ford station wagon, and head for
the fields to hunt illegally. Just before leaving Butch's,
it was an uncommon amount of fun to call the radio station
and have "On the wings of a snow white dove, God sent
his pure sweet love . . ." played and dedicated to
Mr. Hilton. I don't know whether he knew about our taunts,
but in our minds, it elevated the cost of getting caught
as we were not only the predator, but also prey. Looking
back, I'm glad he didn't catch us since it just would have
enraged our parents against authority, and I absolutely,
totally, and unconditionally guarantee that our parents
would have embraced us, hunkered down, and defeated any
offensive. As I said, I am glad we weren't caught, but I
do smile if I think about what the glare on my mother's
face would have looked like. I'd bet that if she had not
been able to use that glare, as close to a snarl as a
glare can be, she would have had to curse from time to
time.)
For the remainder of this
narrative, I will properly focus on Mr. Perry Hendley and
his son, Elison. Their farms joined our family farms (see
Mark Watson), being near the Ten-Mile Creek that
originated at Avera Mill Pond (now, Lake Lewis). In the
end, we were even closer as Elison bought the Joe Holland
place when it became available. (Granny Watson never let
Grandpa live down the fact that he didn't buy this place,
but I think that Grandpa was happy with what he had, and
Granny Watson's family did not serve as an inspiring
financial model anyhow.) Specifically, the land north of
that marked "Herbert Watson" is the Joe Holland
place and the land joining that to the east is the Perry
Hendley place (see paragraph 1). This proximity obviously
lead to many interactions, all of them positive from my
point-of-view, formed early and maintained until the
present. I was indeed in awe of the Hendleys. They seemed
to stand a little taller, wear stiffer shirts, keep
cleaner fence rows, have better pastures, and Elison, in
particular, made a fine figure riding his horse. When I
look back, I can think of many things that the Hendleys
did for me, but nothing I have done for them, except maybe
take good care of pleasant memories. As some small
examples, Mr. Perry chipped our trees (really, it was a
fine black elderly employee of Mr. Perry, Mr. Sylvester
Copeland, who cleared the paths from tree-to-tree, who
used the hack to cut streaks, who used the broadaxe to put in the gutter, who hung the cups, who scraped the face, and who dipped the gum-how prophetic was
his name!). Mr. Perry and Elison gave me my first cane. On
another occasion, Elison pulled me out of the ditch and
realized I didn't need to be lectured (and even politely
pretended to have forgotten about it years later). . . .
and, the list could go on.
Slide 1 shows Elison standing by
the family cane mill at Mr. Perry's home place, which
joins the farm that Elison purchased, as mentioned above.
(By 2003, Mr. and Mrs. Perry Hendley, as well as the
daughter, Majorie, were deceased.) When Elison was young,
the mill was used as a side-line operation to supplement
income; during my youth, most syrup operations had ceased
or were done on a family or hobby basis. Elison's memory
of the realities of making syrup-the early mornings, the
cold weather, the hard work-brings a different perspective
to this task than we latter-day aficionados have. This
mill does not have a name on it. The rollers are 14"
in diameter and the vertical face of the squeezing surface
of the mill is 9", with the overall height of the
rollers including the gears being 13".
Slide 2 is a photograph of the
kettle shed that was used on the Perry Hendley place. The
kettle over to the side belonged to Mr. Walt Hendley,
Elison's grandfather, as discussed in the opening
paragraph. The kettle set in the furnace was Mr. Perry's.
Note the gum bucket in front of the furnace and other farm
equipment.
As time goes by, I value my
earlier memories more, and I suppose one of the memories
that many people cherish most is when they first became
useful. When I was growing up, times were hard for many
people in the rural South. Indeed, it took some years for
the post-war prosperity to come South, and the process in
rural areas never completed. Doing for oneself was a
necessary habit. Therefore, when Mama's brother Sam
renovated the house on a farm he had bought, his lumber
was standing as pines down on the Grandma place (shown as
"Herbert Watson" on the map of my
farm.) He
hired the trees felled, but sawed them up himself. I spent
a good deal of my time with my uncles as both my parents
had city jobs. I was always anxious to "help,"
and Sam's standard reply was, "it'd help if you'd get
out of the way and keep your mouth shut." But, using
a cross-cut saw requires two people, so I became the
second person. There is no comparison between zipping
through a tree with a modern chain saw and dragging a
cross-cut saw through a tarry log. (Who can remember a
corked whiskey bottle full of turpentine, which was
drizzled on the saw to cut the tar?) Sam was patient and
was smart enough not to expect too much of me. In the end,
though, I was a helper doing a man's work (far far
superior to being Mrs. Browning's runner on a
paper-collection route), and I was proud (although I
probably did a minuscule amount of work). The logs were
taken to Mr. Perry's place for sawing. On his return from
the war, Elison had been set up by his family with a
sawmill, which he powered with Mr. Walt's old iron-wheel
tractor. Today's view of the saw mill cannot do justice to
the small but bustling activity of former times. The
carriage for the mill (Slide
3) shows it currently. This
mill was made by Taylor (of Macon?), but no other
indications of its origin were noted, and Elison did not
remember-it has been 60 years.
Although it is still common
practice to "drop in" on folks in my hometown, I
only take that liberty with a few of my relatives. Thus, I
don't visit with Elison overly much, but when I catch him
outside, I always stop and enjoy reminiscing with him. Our
conversations drift widely, but often around sugar-cane
syrup. At one time, we may discuss curing sweetpotatoes, a
valuable anywhere food for sustenance farmers. Our
sweetpotatoes were often sliced, fried, and drenched with
cane syrup, along with the accompanying sausage. Else,
they were baked. Ordinarily, there were baked
sweetpotatoes all day long on Granny's table. (But, to
this day, I don't want to reach down into a dark potato
bank for fear of inconveniencing a snake or rat.) Our
discussions have turned to Sweet Water, the original power
drink. A Mason jar full of water sweetened with sugar-cane
syrup (about a pint of syrup to the gallon, also known as squeezle, especially by the turpentiners [see Butler C.B. (1998) Treasures of the longleaf pines--naval stores. Tarkel Publishing Co., Shalimar, FL) was usual for field hands during the first part of
the last century (but, by the 1950s, farmers were
more-or-less obliged to give each hand a 6-ounce Coke
morning and afternoon). I like to talk about Sweet Water
because it reminds me of my father, who ate everything
(cheese, butter, bread, pork chops, fish) covered with
sugar-cane syrup. I have some of these habits, too, and I
suppose they seem unsophisticated to the inexperienced
palate. There's also some amusement talking with Elison as
well as my mother's other brother, Herbert, about getting
hogs drunk. That would happen when the skimmings were
allowed to ripen. Sometimes, though, it was not by chance.
Daddy and his friend Seward McNabb did a little hobby
farming. I can't say it was a good idea, but they filled
50-gallon barrels about ¾ full of corn, covered it with
water, and poured in sugar-cane syrup (which was pretty
cheap sometimes in the spring after it had gotten strong).
Well, you can image how popular with the hogs this meal
became after a few days of bubbling!
Postscript. Elison Hendley died in Nashville, GA, on October 4th, 2004, after a long and brave struggle against lung cancer. I am among many admirers who are left to cherish his memory.
Thanks to Fred Knowles for sharing the photograph of his grandfather, Seward McNabb. Thanks to Lawrence Copeland for obtaining and sharing the photograph of his father, Sylvester Copeland. Thanks to John Crawford for restoring the photograph of Mr. Copeland. Thanks to Willard Smith for introducing me to the term, squeezle, a synonym for sweet water. Thanks to Jimmy Griffin for suggesting Butler's book. Thanks to Ken Christison for his astute observation that "squeezle" phonetically resembles "switchel," a sweet drink similar to ginger ale.
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