Saturday, August 28, 2021

August 16-22

 Monday, August 16

Yesterday afternoon, I picked vegetables so I would be ready to cook them for lunch today.  Pastor Linda came for lunch and a visit I prepared a garden vegetable meal with the bonus of cornbread.  We had green beans, purple-hull peas, fried okra, sauteed zucchini with tomato & onion and sliced tomatoes.  Served with iced tea, of course.  We had a great meal and visit.  Bill even joined in.  With I had taken a picture!

Girls Scouts had their first meeting at Trinity tonight.  I hope it went well. After we got rid of the pool table and ping-pong table last week, Walter had the carpet cleaned and Christine Calvin (GS leader) cleaned and arranged the room.  We are excited to have them in residence and to have our space used productively.




Tuesday, August 17

Baking day always starts with preparing the levain the night before.  By the end of the day I had 4 nice loaves.  I recently purchased two smaller banneton baskets for rising, but I did not see any significant difference in the finished loaves. 


Three for the freezer and one to slice


Wednesday, August 18

Amanda started her Roane State English class this morning, so I did not have to drive her to school.  Claire left for MTSU today.  We hope and pray that this school year is more "normal" despite the continued outbreak of Covid.  Claire is moving into a dorm apartment suite with 3 other girls (all vaccinated!).  She will not start classes until Monday.

I have received an invitation to give my Creation Care talk to the Central UMW group.  I some time today thinking about that and working on some family history.  I finished the day with a nominations committee meeting at church which lasted until 7:30.  I picked up Ruby T's salmon dinners on the way home.


Thursday, August 19

Third Thursday means neighbor lunch.  This month was my turn to host.  I took the lazy way out and bought a Key Lime Pie to serve for dessert.  To that I added cheese & crackers and a tomato/cucumber salad. We had our usual lively conversation for a couple of hours around my table.

The day ended with a LoCo Dem Executive Committee meeting by Zoom. I don't think I could stay on the committee unless we were meeting by Zoom.


Friday, August 20

Today was my last day to drive Amanda to school.  I have enjoyed the time I've spent with her this summer as her driver.  Mike will pick her up from school this afternoon and take her to get her license.  She will start driving herself to school next week.  I feel some sadness at the passing of an important phases.  I'm honored that I have been part of it.

After lunch the "Energizer" group met at church for Bingo.  No food was served, but there was a good turn-out and everyone had fun.  This was to be the last event before the fellowship hall is turned over to the church sale activities.

After Bingo, I worked with Jim Anderson to initiate a Habitat for Humanity Critical Repair Grant.  Jim needs a ramp at his back entrance for safety.


Saturday, August 21

Bill and I travelled in the RV to Rugby, TN for the annual British Motorcar and Motorbike show.  It is an outdoor event that we have attended in the past.  We enjoyed the pleasant mountain drive up Hwy 27 to Rugby, ate lunch from one of the vendors and looked at cars, a few motorcycles and some crafts.  We were home by mid-afternoon.




Clever apron made from a man's shirt


Sunday, August 22

We have been concerned about the impacts of Hurricane Henri on Rhode Island, Boston and other points NE.  Anna was able to get a ride with a friend to Heather's house in Vermont, so she will be safe.  The planned internment for Jake, which was to be tomorrow, has been postponed.  Anna will remain with Heather for at least a week.







Sunday, August 22, 2021

The Home Place, August 9 - August 15

Monday, August 9 - My reflection on the loss of the family home

The Home Place

Sunday, August 8, 2021, the Taylor’s historic family home, my brother and sister-in-law, Park and Cindy Taylor’s home, burned to the ground. Park and Cindy moved in there to live with and care for our father when their girls, Rand and Elizabeth, were in elementary school. The house was built by our grandfather John W. Taylor in the early 1920s. It has housed, in various stages of life, five generations of our family.

Fire has taken all the “stuff” but it cannot take our memories. The house welcomed family reunions, family gatherings at Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Fourth of July, birthdays, weddings and funeral wakes. It has welcomed newborns and brought comfort to the elderly. Sadly, no new memories will be created.

Our home place was the repository of family history that was greater than the sum of the individual items or memories. Today we are grieving the loss of things material, the loss of the past and the loss of the future of our home place. The cross remaining on the mantle reminds us that there is always hope and renewal, even from ashes.

The fire consumed everything. Park and Cindy’s personal belongings, family antiques, pictures including paintings by our grandmother and Cindy’s mother. Park and Cindy rent a house on Wolfe lake during the summer, so they have the clothing and personal things there and a place to live temporarily but that is all. They had been to the house earlier in the day, but were not home when the fire started. By the time the fire was discovered it was too far gone for anything to be saved.


Jan 3, 2013

Aug 9, 2021



Photo of an aerial photo of the home place circa 1960-65

This was a day of mourning for a loss that feels like a death in the family.  I grieve for Park and Cindy who have lost so much.

Amanda started school for real today and I started my routine of driving her or picking her up.  Today I drove her to school.  She doesn't have to arrive at the high school until 9:30.  Her first period class will be English at Roane State which won't begin until Aug 18 and will only meet on Mon and Wed.  She gets her license on Aug 20 and my Uber driving will end.

Brenda arrived late afternoon for an overnight on her way back home to Jackson, Mississippi. I served her roasted chicken with some garden vegetables.


Tuesday,  August 9

After dropping Amanda off at school, I went to church to take some pictures of the pool table in the youth room that we hope to give away on Facebook marketplace.  The girls scout troop is coming back to Trinity and we have offered the youth room.  They do not want to use the pool table and we would like to get rid of it.


Wednesday, August 10

This morning I posted on Facebook Marketplace an ad for the pool table that we would like to have removed from the 3rd floor youth room at Trinity.  I was immediately overwhelmed with responses.  The first response was from a woman who said she would come immediately.  That turned out to be about 3 pm.  Walter, Pastor Linda and I were there when she and her crew (family) of 2 men and 3 women managed to haul to table down the stairs and out to their car.  Good riddance for us and something that we hope will bring pleasure to her family.  She also purchased the ping-pong table for $28 and they hauled it away, too.  Win-Win!

My day actually started in the garden.  I seem to have a Wednesday pattern going.  I got a pretty good harvest today.

Enough to eat and share


Thursday, August 12

The only solution for so many hot peppers is to pickle them  Fortunately, I found a box of a dozen pint jars in the attic.  I sliced and put the peppers in a brine yesterday and finished the processing today.  I also pickled one pint of okra.  That will be a treat one day!


Good vegetable meal and enough extra breaded okra to freeze a pint.



Friday, August 13

Today is the day!  We put the boat in the lake to test the new trolling motor.  There were also maneuvers we had to do to calibrate the GPS settings.  The motor will hold the boat in place without the need for an anchor.  I hope we enjoy fishing more with this new tool.

Ready to use - remote control and all!

Storage mode

Plugged in to recharge the batteries

The day wasn't done yet.  After supper, we went to the Matzek's to celebrate Amanda's 16th birthday with cookies and ice-cream and a few rounds of ping-pong.  We washed her car and will give her an interior car-detailing for her gift.





Saturday, August 14

I spent most of my time today working on the Park Springs History.  I took time out to make a focaccia pizza with eggplant, fresh tomatoes, anchovies and fresh mozzarella.

Maybe a little too crisp, but delicious none-the-less.


Sunday, August 15

The Meet and Greet dinner after church was cancelled because of Covid concerns.  The administrative council last Monday decided to reinstate mask requirements whenever the church is open to the public, such as worship service and the sale, and to not hold dinners at this time.  




Sunday, August 15, 2021

Park's Spring or Park Springs

 Tuesday, August 3

Melanie and I loaded the Kia and were on the road by 9:30.  We traveled I-40 east to I-81 North and left the interstate at Wytheville, Virginia.  We got off for lunch just one exit before leaving 81 for 77 and ate lunch at a great Mexican restaurant that had an outdoor patio.  We had decided that because of Covid, we would not eat inside.  Turned out that the restaurant was the same one Bill and I have eaten at on trips to Virginia. We proceeded across southern Virginia on Hwy 58, a beautiful road that took us across the Blue Ridge. 

Crossing the Blue Ridge

Not long after lunch, the camp director at Park Springs, Tim Powell, returned the call I had made to him.  We arranged to meet him at Park Springs at 4 pm.  We were excited!  The site of the original Park's Spring is located just across the North Carolina border, south of Danville.  It is now the home of Park Springs Christian Camp and Retreat Center .  Tim was very gracious to walk us around the lake, to the site of the original springs and inside the historic building used as the primary activity center for camps and retreats.

After our time at Park Springs, we traveled to downtown Danville to find our hotel, "The Bee." The hotel has been restored from the former office and press rooms of Danville's long-time newspaper, The Danville Bee.  It styles itself as an "urban boutique hotel."  We enjoyed our stay in the historic old building.  We had enough wine, fruit and cheese to see us through the evening, so did not go out again.


Park's Spring or Park Springs:

The primary activity center is the original gymnasium built sometime between 1880 and 1920.  We believe that this building may have been here as the activity center when our grandmother Mary Park spent summers with her Aunt Mary Park as a child, circa 1910.  

Tim Powell, Director of Park Springs Christian Camp, standing at the lake side of the building.  The basement was originally used as a dressing room for bathers (swimmers).  It is now used as the dining hall and additional activity area.


An early, undated photo, of the bathing area as it was used many years ago. The caption reads "Part of the beach at Park Springs North Carolina. Justly famous for its good bathing.
(from ncccha.blogspot.com/2010/parks-spring.html)


The 10-acre lake, formed by damming the springs, has been used for recreation for at least 100 years.

Much of the interior of the activity center is original, the wooden floors and 2nd story decking, the beams and the stairs.  

The massive beams are original

The small building to the right is the kitchen.

The original springs lies just out of site on what is now adjacent property.  Some remnants of the original stone and concrete structures remain.  There was just one spring at Park Springs. In a FB post to the CCHA FB page in 2016 (no longer active) Joe Elliot writes:  "There was only one spring house. There was a ground level concrete pad about 15 feet square with a roof and sides built around the spring, to keep it clean. The spring was in the middle of the pad with about 5 or 6 concrete steps going down to the spring water water level.  The opening at the bottom of the steps was about 3 feet, the water was clear, still and very deep.  I would just dip my buckets in and lift them out.  This was my grandparents only source of drinking water for as long as I can remember.  There could have been more natural springs in the general area, but only one was fully developed for everyday use as a water supply.  This water was really good and I drank plenty of it."

The original building as improved, with the kitchen to the left.

What we know or think we know:

1868:  The property that became known as Park's Spring was deeded to Mary M Park, wife of John S. Park by Thomas Slude and his wife.

1877: A mineral spring six miles northwest of Yanceyville was owned by John S. Park.  From a Caswell County Historical site:

There are countless springs around Caswell County and many of them are well known locally for their association with certain families or events. Two, however, were of enough significance that their waters were analyzed early in the twentieth century and described in a publication of the Geological and Economic Survey of the state. Strader's Spring, located about two and a half miles northwest of Pelham was one. The second spring described in the report was Park's Spring, six miles east of Pelham where the water comes up beside a small creek into a section of terra-cotta pipe. In this case the spring was clean and well maintained, the water being so popular among those in the surrounding country and as far away as Danville, Virginia. The analysis of Park's Spring water was similar to that of Strader's Spring; in this case there were 33.7 parts lime per million and 14.1 of soda.

Source: When the Past Refused to Die: A History of Caswell County North Carolina 1777-1977, William S. Powell (1977) at 15.

1881: Flier advertising a "Grand Pic-Nic and Dance, July 4th at Park's Spring, Manager T.H. Park (Thomas Park, son of J. S. & Mary Park)  
Advertisement for Picnic & Dance, Park's Spring, 1881

1895: John S. Park died, leaving property to his wife, Mary

1899: Thomas H Park lost his share of the property by court judgement to settle a debt.  That share is later purchased by C.A. Park

~1910: Mary Park, our grandmother, great niece of Mary Park spent one or more summers at Park's Spring.  This was a special time and place for her.

1911: Mary V Dunn, daughter of Mary Park, sold 1/2 of her share of the property known as Park's Springs (94 acre tract) to John A Park (son or grandson of J.S. and Mary), for $6000. He was living in Alligator, MS at the time. 

1915: Mary Park died, leaving property to her six children: Thomas H, John, Charles Alexander, Nathaniel M, Mary Virginia, James Gaston.  

1912: James G Park (Jim) acquired 4/6 of the shares of the property, leaving only the shares owned by the heirs of John Park.

1920: James G Park and the heirs of C A Park, sold the property to K.C. Arey of Danville for $3500.   This marks the property passing out of the Park Family. It was operated as Park Springs Amusement Company

1924 - 1938: Park Springs Amusement Company was owned by Judge Cox Womac perhaps in partnership with K.C. Arey, both of Danville, VA. Prize fights and other entertainments were offered there, in addition to "bathing" and taking mineral waters. Rumor is that boxer Jack Dempsey trained there. 

Source:  The Bee (Danville, Virginia), 23 April 1924.


1938: Danville Kiwanis Club purchased Park's Spring from J. M Berry who had operated a cabaret and staged boxing matching.  The Kiwanis established a camp for under-privileged boys.

1971: Danville Kiwanis Club offered the property for sale

1976: Piedmont Christian Assembly purchased the property and today operates Park Springs Christian Camp and Retreat Center.


Wednesday, August 4

Before leaving Danville we drove around the historic downtown and found the overlook for the Dan River Falls. We also made a short visit to the Danville Public Library to their Genealogy Room which was quite extensive. From there we went to Yanceyville, NC where we had an 11 am appointment in the Registrar of Deeds office.  We spent about 2 hours there and found the original property deeds that conveyed the property to Mary Jane (Mimms) Park, wife to John S. Park and the deeds that sold the property out of the Park family.  We counted it as very successful research and is the basis for part of the time line above.  


Old Ladies Road Trip, August 2 - August 8

Monday, August 2 -
Happy Birthday, Clara Nelle Westmoreland Taylor
August 2, 1929 - February 26, 2020

Brenda got on her way by nine.  She is not a morning breakfast person, so didn't sample my delicious Blueberry Zucchini Bread.  Melanie went to UMW with me and enjoyed the camaraderie of the women.  We spent the afternoon visiting and talking about our upcoming road trip in search of our roots at Park Springs and Caswell County, NC.

Bill is continuing to work on his electrical project. Sam Rowe was helping with the trenching and damaged the gas line from the tank to the house.  The gas company sent a man who repaired the line and Bill wanted some photos so he would later know exactly how to locate the repaired section.

We went the the Matzek's for supper.  I took all the supper fixings for burgers and veggie burgers.  After supper, Bill enjoyed a few ping-pong matches while Melanie and I enjoyed watching.


Tuesday, August 3

Melanie and I loaded the Kia and were on the road by 9:30.  We traveled I-40 east to I-81 North and left the interstate at Wytheville, Virginia.  We got off for lunch just one exit before leaving 81 for 77 and ate lunch at a great Mexican restaurant that had an outdoor patio.  We had decided that because of Covid, we would not eat inside.  Turned out that the restaurant was the same one Bill and I have eaten at on trips to Virginia. We proceeded across southern Virginia on Hwy 58, a beautiful road that took us across the Blue Ridge. 

Crossing the Blue Ridge

Not long after lunch, the camp director at Park Springs, Tim Powell, returned the call I had made to him.  We arranged to meet him at Park Springs at 4 pm.  We were excited!  The site of the original Park's Spring is located just across the North Carolina border, south of Danville.  It is now the home of Park Springs Christian Camp and Retreat Center .  Tim was very gracious to walk us around the lake, to the site of the original springs and inside the historic building used as the primary activity center for camps and retreats.

After our time at Park Springs, we traveled to downtown Danville to find our hotel, "The Bee." The hotel has been restored from the former office and press rooms of Danville's long-time newspaper, The Danville Bee.  It styles itself as an "urban boutique hotel."  We enjoyed our stay in the historic old building.  We had enough wine, fruit and cheese to see us through the evening, so did not go out again.


Park's Spring or Park Springs:

The primary activity center is the original gymnasium built sometime between 1880 and 1920.  We believe that this building may have been here as the activity center when our grandmother Mary Park spent summers with her Aunt Mary Park as a child, circa 1910.  

Tim Powell, Director of Park Springs Christian Camp, standing at the lake side of the building.  The basement was originally used as a dressing room for bathers (swimmers).  It is now used as the dining hall and additional activity area.


An early, undated photo, of the bathing area as it was used many years ago. The caption reads "Part of the beach at Park Springs North Carolina. Justly famous for its good bathing.
(from ncccha.blogspot.com/2010/parks-spring.html)


The 10-acre lake, formed by damming the springs, has been used for recreation for at least 100 years.

Much of the interior of the activity center is original, the wooden floors and 2nd story decking, the beams and the stairs.  

The massive beams are original

The small building to the right is the kitchen.

The original springs lies just out of site on what is now adjacent property.  Some remnants of the original stone and concrete structures remain.  There was just one spring at Park Springs. In a FB post to the CCHA FB page in 2016 (no longer active) Joe Elliot writes:  "There was only one spring house. There was a ground level concrete pad about 15 feet square with a roof and sides built around the spring, to keep it clean. The spring was in the middle of the pad with about 5 or 6 concrete steps going down to the spring water water level.  The opening at the bottom of the steps was about 3 feet, the water was clear, still and very deep.  I would just dip my buckets in and lift them out.  This was my grandparents only source of drinking water for as long as I can remember.  There could have been more natural springs in the general area, but only one was fully developed for everyday use as a water supply.  This water was really good and I drank plenty of it.

The original building as improved, with the kitchen to the left.

What we know or think we know:

1868:  The property that became known as Park's Spring was deeded to Mary M Park, wife of John S. Park by Thomas Slude and his wife.

1877: A mineral spring six miles northwest of Yanceyville was owned by John S. Park.  From a Caswell County Historical site:

There are countless springs around Caswell County and many of them are well known locally for their association with certain families or events. Two, however, were of enough significance that their waters were analyzed early in the twentieth century and described in a publication of the Geological and Economic Survey of the state. Strader's Spring, located about two and a half miles northwest of Pelham was one. The second spring described in the report was Park's Spring, six miles east of Pelham where the water comes up beside a small creek into a section of terra-cotta pipe. In this case the spring was clean and well maintained, the water being so popular among those in the surrounding country and as far away as Danville, Virginia. The analysis of Park's Spring water was similar to that of Strader's Spring; in this case there were 33.7 parts lime per million and 14.1 of soda.

Source: When the Past Refused to Die: A History of Caswell County North Carolina 1777-1977, William S. Powell (1977) at 15.

1881: Flier advertising a "Grand Pic-Nic and Dance, July 4th at Park's Spring, Manager T.H. Park (Thomas Park, son of J. S. & Mary Park)  
Advertisement for Picnic & Dance, Park's Spring, 1881

1895: John S. Park died, leaving property to his wife, Mary

1899: Thomas H Park lost his share of the property by court judgement to settle a debt.  That share is later purchased by C.A. Park

~1910: Mary Park, our grandmother, great niece of Mary Park spent one or more summers at Park's Spring.  This was a special time and place for her.

1911: Mary V Dunn, daughter of Mary Park, sold 1/2 of her share of the property known as Park's Springs (94 acre tract) to John A Park (son or grandson of J.S. and Mary), for $6000. He was living in Alligator, MS at the time. 

1915: Mary Park died, leaving property to her six children: Thomas H, John, Charles Alexander, Nathaniel M, Mary Virginia, James Gaston.  

1912: James G Park (Jim) acquired 4/6 of the shares of the property, leaving only the shares owned by the heirs of John Park.

1920: James G Park and the heirs of C A Park, sold the property to K.C. Arey of Danville for $3500.   This marks the property passing out of the Park Family. It was operated as Park Springs Amusement Company

1924 - 1938: Park Springs Amusement Company was owned by Judge Cox Womac perhaps in partnership with K.C. Arey, both of Danville, VA. Prize fights and other entertainments were offered there, in addition to "bathing" and taking mineral waters. Rumor is that boxer Jack Dempsey trained there. 

Source:  The Bee (Danville, Virginia), 23 April 1924.


1938: Danville Kiwanis Club purchased Park's Spring from J. M Berry who had operated a cabaret and staged boxing matching.  The Kiwanis established a camp for under-privileged boys.

1971: Danville Kiwanis Club offered the property for sale

1976: Piedmont Christian Assembly purchased the property and today operates Park Springs Christian Camp and Retreat Center.


Wednesday, August 4

Before leaving Danville we drove around the historic downtown and found the overlook for the Dan River Falls. We also made a short visit to the Danville Public Library to their Geneology Room which was quite extensive. From there we went to Yanceyville, NC where we had an 11 am appointment in the Registrar of Deeds office.  We spent about 2 hours there and found the original property deeds that conveyed the property to Mary Jane (Mimms) Park, wife to John S. Park and the deeds that sold the property out of the Park family.  We counted it as very successful research and is the basis for part of the time line above.  After another Mexican lunch, we spent about an hour at the Caswell County Museum in their document collections, but did not find anything useful.

Leaving Yanceyville, we traveled cross-country to Winston-Salem where we spent the night.  Again we made our supper of wine, fruit and cheese we had on hand. (And breakfasted both days on Blueberry Zuchinni bread with cream cheese.)

Danville images

The Bee, exterior

From the roof deck of the The Bee, looking into the courtyard formed by the absence of an old building.  Hotel rooms are on either side.  We were on the first floor in what must have been partitioned off from the press room.

Some architectural details have been retained

The Falls of the Dan  River




Thursday, August 5

From Winston-Salem, we took I-40 to Asheville, then detoured up I-26 for a few miles before taking the back road through Hot Springs, NC.  At Hot Springs, we enjoyed lunch on the deck of the Spring Cafe.  The drive through the mountains and along the valley of the French Broad was much more enjoyable than fighting trucks on I-40 over the mountains.

Hot Springs, NC

I'm not very good at selfies!  It was a lovely location for lunch.

We actually got home in time to have Bonnie out for steaks on the grill.  Bill did his usual excellent job of preparing them just right.


We traveled 685 miles, plus extra for riding around, on our three-day Old Ladies Road Trip.  It was a first for us but we hope it won't be the last.


Friday, August 5

Melanie needed to be in Chattanooga by noon, so we were in no hurry to get away Friday morning.  We drove down Hwy 27 to Chris & Erin's house in Hixson.  We were both sad that our time together was ending.  We hope that we will have many more opportunities for sister adventures.  Melanie will enjoy time with Solis. On Sunday, she plans to catch a ride home to Jackson with Michael who is traveling that way.

I used the trimmings from last night's tenderloin to make BiBimBop for Bill and me.

We learned late today that David came home from Orlando with Covid.  That is why he hasn't returned our calls this week.  The conference closed early because of infections and they started home last Sunday. He started feeling bad on the way home.  When they got home, both he and Trisha got tested and only he tested positive.  He has not been seriously sick, but has mainly suffered fever the first days, with fatigue and headaches lingering.


Saturday, August 6

Of course, the garden needed attention - mainly picking.  I harvested enough green beans to make about a quart, enough purple hull to shell out a pint, almost 11 pounds of tomatoes and about 3/4 pound of okra. In the afternoon, I processed all the ripe-enough tomatoes.  After washing, trimming and quartering, I had about 7 quarts of tomatoes which processed into a bit more than 14 cups of juice. I decided to wait until tomorrow afternoon to can the juice.

While we were gone, Bill finished (all but the cover-up) his wiring project and is ready to charge some boat batteries.  He wan't a few pictures for his records.

We had fried catfish for supper, with green beans, peas, and sliced tomatoes, of course.








Sunday, August 8

Sunday, Sabbath, a day of rest. HooRay! Except those tomatoes were waiting for me after lunch.  I found one more box of a dozen pint jars in the attic this morning.  The store shelves are empty of canning supplies.  I put up 7 pints of juice in the pantry.

Just before bedtime, I had a devastating message from Park. The Taylor home is Sunflower burned to the ground this afternoon.  I will process that news tomorrow.  After talking to Park, I went to bed grief-stricken.