Table Of ContentAN ANCHOR BOOKS ORIGINAL, SEPTEMBER 2011
Copyright © 2011 by The Foxfire Fund, Inc.
Cover Design by Cardon Webb Cover images: washboard © Bettmann/Corbis All rights reserved.
Published in the United States by Anchor Books, a division of Random House, Inc., New York, and in
Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto.
Anchor Books and colophon are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.
Some of the material in this work was originally published in slightly different form in Foxfire Magazine.
Grateful acknowledgment is made to Alfred Music Publishing Co., Inc. for permission to reprint “Hello in
There” words and music by John Prine, copyright © 1970, copyright renewed by Walden Music, Inc. and
Sour Grapes Music, Inc. All rights administered by Walden Music, Inc. All rights reserved. Used by
permission of Alfred Music Publishing Co., Inc.
The Foxfire Fund, Inc.
PO Box 541
Mountain City, GA 30562-0541
706-746-5828
www.foxfire.org
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
The Foxfire 45th anniversary book : singin’, praisin’, raisin’ / edited by
Joyce Green, Casi Best, and Foxfire Students.
p. cm.
eISBN: 978-0-307-74487-6
1. Appalachian Region—Social life and customs. 2. Folklore—Appalachian Region. 3. Appalachian Region
—Biography. I. Green, Joyce, 1940–II. Best, Casi, 1991–III. Foxfire magazine.
F106.F695 2011
974—dc22
2011007737
www.anchorbooks.com
v3.1
Only Gone from Our Sight
Words and Music by Reagan Riddle, Recorded by The Primitive
Quartet
God calls loved ones home, yet our pain He can feel,
He always knows best, He can comfort and heal.
Remember, my friend, weeping lasts for the night,
We’ll see them again; they’re only gone from our sight.
Only gone from our sight to the beauties of Heaven,
Only gone from our sight to a city so bright,
Where the flowers of God are blooming forever,
Keep looking beyond; they’re only gone from our sight.
This book is dedicated to the memories of
Robert Murray, Foxfire curator extraordinaire,
and Marie Carter, gift shop comanager,
who are only gone from our sight.
Acknowledgments
Over a period of six months, a group of dedicated individuals have
worked earnestly to see The Foxfire 45th Anniversary Book come to
fruition, and so many people have contributed ideas, time, knowledge,
and information toward the finished project. We would like to
sincerely thank present and past students of Rabun County High
School for much of the content you will read through the sections of
this book. Due to his love of gospel music, we would also like to
dedicate the music section to Mr. Mark Earnest, Rabun County High
School principal, and thank him for his commitment to and support of
the Foxfire program. We would especially like to thank students
Brittany Houck, Alyssa LaManna, Katie Lunsford, Kayla Mullen, and
Kelly Smith for their many hours of interviews and transcription. We
would not have been able to meet our deadline without their help.
We want to recognize Rabun Gap–Nacoochee School, Billy Joe
Stiles, and William Thurmond for their information, input, and help
with the history and information used in the Farm Family stories. We
also thank Mrs. Dorothy Carnes for the picture she provided of the
Woodard family, and the Clerk of Court staff of Habersham County
and the Northeast Georgia Regional Library for their assistance with
research on some of the crime stories.
Former Foxfire book editors Margie Bennett, Kaye Collins, and
Lacy Hunter Nix brought their expertise back to the mountain and
provided knowledge and help that made this whole thing possible.
They proved to be such valuable assets, and their contributions were
enormous. Kaye Collins sacrificed her summer vacation from teaching
and spent countless hours in the archives of Foxfire, training students,
researching, writing, interviewing, and providing guidance to those of
us who were new at this task. Lacy Hunter Nix stepped in to fill a void
in the middle of the project, and her knowledge and dedication proved
to be a godsend. Margie Bennett, longtime Foxfire teacher and ally,
even worked from a hospital bed in Tennessee and was so willing to
tackle any task, whether it was interviewing, transcribing, writing, or
just securing permission slips from contacts to have their stories
published. Sheri Thurmond worked extensively on the Farm Family
section and conducted several interviews. Teresa Gentry was
instrumental in getting this book project off the ground and also
interviewed and edited several articles. Museum curator Barry Stiles
and former student Ben McClain also provided expert knowledge and
helped to organize and write many of the how-to articles.
Special thanks go to Rev. Delbert McCall and Reagan Riddle, who
allowed us to use the lyrics of their songs, and to all the musicians who
allowed us to record their musical compilations for a CD. Lee
Carpenter worked tireless hours to format tons of material and get it
ready for publication. His creative ability and sense of design provided
the needed touch in the book’s completion.
Finally, our deepest appreciation goes to the contacts whose stories
are featured within these pages. This book would not have been
possible if they had not been willing to share their lives with our
readers. And then there’s Ann Moore, Foxfire’s president and chief
executive officer. Ann is a remarkable woman who remained calm
during the most stressful times even though she carried the heaviest
burden of us all. She sacrificed meals and sleep and worked through
her vacation to provide the direction and guidance we desperately
needed. She proofed all the copy numerous times and was definitely
the glue that held us all together. I truly admire her dedication and
commitment to Foxfire and our contacts and students.
—Joyce Green and Casi Best, editors
In addition to the acknowledgments from our editors, I, too, want to
thank everyone, especially the writing staff, who played such a huge
part in the compilation of this book. My appreciation to Lee Carpenter,
as well, who spent many nights after his regular job, pulling the book
together as a whole for us; the excellent design is also his work. Lee is
a patient man! He always allowed us to make last-minute changes and
rewrites, and though it may have been a bit stressful, he took it all in
stride! I also want to acknowledge and say a special thank-you to the
two editors for all that they have contributed to bring this book to
fruition. As you can see, so much of the work that is included was
accomplished by them. Casi is a former Foxfire student who made a
huge contribution to Foxfire during her high school years, and she
continues to do so. While a student, she contributed over three hundred
volunteer hours to us, in addition to her classroom work. She is an
intelligent, wonderful young Christian woman whom I think the world
of. She is now at Piedmont College becoming a nurse, and she will be
a great one! Joyce Green: What in the world can I say? She is so
incredibly creative, as you can see from her introduction to the book,
her section introductions, and the songs she wrote that we’ve included
here. What you don’t know is that she is a wonderful person, a great
teacher, a brickmason and carpenter, an interior decorator, a beautiful
singer and talented musician, and a caring Christian wife, daughter,
and mother. Joyce is so talented in so many ways! Without her
dedication to this book and the untold (and unpaid) hours she spent
writing at night, on weekends, and during the final stages of this draft,
we would not have been able to put this manuscript to bed on time.
With sincerest appreciation to Joyce, Casi, Lee, and our book crew
members for this latest, terrific addition to the Foxfire collection.
—Ann Moore, president and executive director
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Banjo Ringing Loud and Clear, Mountain Music in the Air
Introduction
“People will forget our past if it isn’t recorded.”
Foxfire’s History
A Beautiful Life
In the Good Ol’ Days
“Praise the Lord, Sammy’s quit smoking!”
An interview with Sammy Green
“Don’t you ever stop by my house again asking for whiskey!”
An interview with Madge Merrell
“So that’s pretty well my eighty-nine years.”
Jack P. Nix tells us about his career
“But he was a stinker, that boy of mine.”
An interview with Lillie Billingsley
“He had his head stuck up, and Mama shot him.”
Memories from David “Lightnin’ ” Callenback
“I don’t feel like I’m Republican; I know I am.”
An interview with Carlee Heaton
“Most of the toys I had was homemade.”
Coyl Justice shares childhood memories
“The first airplane … we thought it was the Lord a-comin’.”
An interview with Vaughn Billingsley
“You either moonshined or you sold corn to moonshiners.”
Memories from Allen English
“Castro, he invited me to come see him.”
Tommy Irvin on forty years as ag commissioner
Knoxville Girl
Crime Close to Home
“A ripple of dramatic emotion swept over the courtroom.”
The 1939 murder of Grace Bingham Brock
Hell-Bent and Whiskey Bound: A Scaly Mountain Murder
As told by Lillie Billingsley
“Well, now, this is a true story.”
A story of birth and death from Melissa Rogers
Last words, in a choked voice: “Good-bye, men.”
The hanging of Will Brown
“Yeah, that stuff’s a-growin’ wild up there.”
Life and times of former sheriff Marley Cannon
“Machine Gun Bandits Hold Up Bank Of Clayton”
1934 bank robbery as recalled by Huell Bramlett
“I ain’t made no liquor in a long time.”
Bass Dockery, “the Wild Russian”
“Let me tell you about Bass.”
Bill White says, “We hit it off good”
“Oh, Lord, if you won’t help me, don’t help them.”
The legend of the Moccasin gang
A Legacy Lives On
Sam McMahan on the loss of the Woodards
Barbara Allen
Tales and Legends
“This happened on a cold, windy winter night.”
Family ghost stories from Melissa Rogers
“Our cemetery is haunted. Did you know it?”
Louise Tabor relates a tale for Halloween
“If you believe in spirits at all, like I do …”
Bob Justus talks about the “little people”
The Legend of the Deer and the Witch
Lillie Billingsley’s “tale that my daddy told me”
“You may not believe this, but they say …”
Numerous Rabun legends from several people
“These old mountains have lots of magic.”
Fairy tales and folklore from Clyde Hollifield
“I wasn’t hallucinating.”
Greg Stancil’s true encounter with the devil
Echoes
Mountain Music Fills the Air
“We went to the Grand Ole Opry in 1960.”
Curtis Blackwell
“I like the ol’ brother-style duet stuff.”
Wallace “Josh” Crowe
A Story and a Song
David Holt
“It’s been real, and it’s been fun, but it ain’t been real fun!”
LV and Mary Mathis
A Family Tradition
Mountain Faith
Fishers of Men
The Primitive Quartet
A Band Is Born
George Reynolds and The Foxfire Boys
“Because He Loved Me”
Morris Stancil and his son, Greg Stancil
The Banjo Can Also Touch the Heart
Dale Tilley
“I’m a musician.”
Gary Waldrep
“Emergency services pronounced me dead at the scene.”
Young Harmony
Daddy Was a Farmer
School Farm Families
Rabun Gap–Nacoochee School Farm Family Program
Dr. Karl Anderson
“I think it was the people that made it so special.”
Frances Fry Deal
“Jack Acree … washed my mouth out with soap!”
Jimmy Deal
“What I’ve got now, I picked up from Rabun Gap School.”
James Adams
Farmer’s Daughter
Jo-Anne Stiles Hubbs
Description:For almost half a century, Foxfire has brought the philosophy of simple living to hundreds of thousands of readers, teaching creative self-sufficiency and preserving the stories, crafts, and customs of Appalachia. Inspiring and practical, this classic series has become an American institution. Th