Friday, November 23, 2007

The Goolsby Family

Irene, Ellie, Osa Bell, Gladys, Alton and Ethan - My Mother & Aunts & Uncles

Ellie and Osa Bell front..Gladys, Irene, Ethan back - My Mother & Aunts & Uncle




While researching family history I came across a book with various stories of memories of various authors and accidentally found this story submitted by my Aunt Irene (my mother's sister). My mother, Gladys, the youngest girl, was born in 1907 and died in 1988. Charles the youngest boy was born in 1910 and died a month before he was 14 in 1924 . Sam Goolsby was my grandfather.
I’m not sure when this story was written but it had to be many years ago. This is a re-typing of the story as written....Karl...



Contributed by Mrs. A. C. (Irene Goolsby) Morgan



In the year of 1901 there was a man by the name of Sam Goolsby with his wife and seven children bought a small farm near Williamsburg Al. He wanted a place with plenty of room for the children and enough land for farming as the children grew up. Mr. Goolsby had a job as mail carrier from a little mining town of Palos over to Porter mines. He also served as Deputy Sheriff. After a few years had passed three more children were born to the Goolsby family. Rosa and Osa Bell, the two oldest girls left home by then. Bill, the oldest son had a job in the commissary at Porter; while Ethan a younger son with the younger children farmed the land. Everything went along fine until the spring of 1910, while most of the family was in the field planting there was a loud sound like a lot of dynamite had exploded, the earth trembled, like all the mountains were caving in. An hour or so later a man went to the Goolsby home to tell Mrs. Goolsby that Palos mine had an explosion and her husband had been killed. Mr. Goolsby was on his mail route from Palos over to Porter. To get across the river he had to walk a small bridge that passed in front of the mine. He was just over the bridge when the explosion came, part of his body was blown into the river and was never found.
After the funeral expenses were taken care of there was very little left and Mrs. Goolsby was expecting another baby in three months.
Mrs. Goolsby was determined to keep all her children together. She still had seven children at home. Their names were: Bill, Ethan, Velma, Ellie, Irene, Alton and Gladys.
To help with caring for the family Bill had saved a little money working at the commissary. He decided to go to Birmingham and take a business course. He finished the course and got a job with Birmingham Electric Company. Each month he sent money home to help out with the family. Ethan and the rest of the family farmed the land. They rose at daylight and worked until dark. They planted corn, cotton, watermelons, potatoes, peas, beans, and sugar cane in the fields. They also had a large garden near the house with most everything in it that was needed for the table. They milked six cows morning and night, canned the fruit out of the orchards. The chickens and hogs were to be fed and watered. All the milk and butter and eggs that weren’t used at home, Ethan carried to Porter with his mule and wagon, sold to the folks around the mines.
That money was used to buy sugar, coffee, flour, salt and occasionally some cheese or weiners or a piece of cloth for the girls a dress or the boys a shirt.
After Mrs. Goolsby’s last baby, Charlie, was born she began to fail in her health.
She couldn’t help with the hard work anymore but she planned the work for the rest of the family.
In the fall the fodder was to be pulled in the large sugar cane patch, the cane to be cut and piled near the spring to be made into syrup for the winter. After everything was ready Uncle Rob Nichols with his two mules and wagon would bring the sorghum mill to make the syrup for the goolsby family. It would usually take a week.
The whole family enjoyed syrup making. Of course, there was a lot of work getting the cane ground to keep the juice ready for the syrup pan. Ethan helped Uncle Rob make the syrup.
Some of the young folks that lived close came at night, especially the Nichols girls and boys. Mrs. Goolsby and some of the girls would cook big meals at the house for all who wanted to eat. They had lanterns and lamps all around in the trees so there would be plenty of light. After they finished making the syrup they usually had 350 gallons in barrels to put in the smokehouse.
A few months later hog-killing time came. They raised four or five large hogs. The smokehouse was filled with large hams hanging from the rafters to be smoked and large barrels of salted meat for the winter.
By then Ethan was old enough to get work at Porter Mines, he worked the winter months there.
Mrs. Goolsby managed to keep shoes and clothes for the children to send them to school, which was a three mile walk each way. They only had one teacher for all the grades. The building was also used as a church. In the winter it was heated by a pot-bellied heater.
It was very comfortable close to the heater but rather cold on the back seats.
Another large family attended school there, the Goolsby’s best friends and neighbors, the Nichols: Burgie, Bertha, Grover, Robert, Maggie, Lillie, Idella, Alice, and Oscar. There was another one named Dexter, who was the oldest and had finished school and was their teacher. He was teacher there for two terms at Williamsburg. The children all loved him, he was good and kind, but he would certainly stand you in the corner if you were bad or didn’t get your lessons.
Mrs. Goolsby was very careful about her girls’ friends but she never feared to let them spend the night with the Nichols girls and she really enjoyed the Nichols girls visiting at her home.
Mrs. Goolsby sent her children to Sunday School and Church on Sunday, prayer meeting on Wednesday nights, and they were allowed to go to a party occasionally or a fish fry at the Nichols home.
As the years passed Mrs. Goolsby’s health grew worse. All the children were about grown except Gladys, Alton and the baby Charlie. One day she called them to her bedside and told them she would be leaving them soon. She asked them to move away from the homeplace after she was gone. In the following spring she passed away. Two of the Nichols girls were there that night, Maggie and Idella, they dressed her and laid her on a padded door until they could get a casket and make funeral arrangements.
All the neighbors came with their mules and wagons for the funeral. They carried her to be laid to rest beside her husband in Village Falls Cemetery at Mulga.
One month later the children sold everything but the furniture. They moved to Birmingham. Ethan found work and the girls got jobs in town. Everything went along nicely until Ethan got sick. He saw a doctor who advised him to go west to get well. The children were separated then among the brothers and sisters who were married, except Alton, a close friend of the family by the name of Mrs. Tom Reeves took him. But on the second Sunday in May every year at the Williamsburg Decoration, you will see some of the Goolsby family there to see old friends and neighbors which bring back memories.
THE END…………..

As a young boy I remember our family gathering flowers of all sort from our yard on Mothers Day and my Mother (Gladys) would pack a feast and we would take the long trip to that cemetery to clean and decorate the graves of her loved ones. Numerous members of her family would also bring delicious food and we would spread out sheets on the ground and have some of the best eating a person could desire.
After the meal, some of us would walk down to Bayview Lake to skip rocks across the water. I still visit that cemetery time to time and memories come rushing back. Karl....



(As is mentioned in the story, the Nichols family were close friends of the Goolsbys.)







These are poems in the same book submitted by my Aunt Irene.



Nichols Fish Trap and Dam



It was early one morning
In the month of May.
A man called Nichols was sowing hay
Near the banks of Warrior River they all say.
He gazed across all forlorn.
That’s when a new thought was born.
I’ll build a dam across the river.
A fish trap I’ll put right in the center.
The rocks he gathered from his own land.
He built it himself with his own hands.
He trapped the fish for his family
And many more he had to store.
To keep them that was another chore.
He dug a pond below a running rill.
Not very far at the foot of a hill.
He sold the fish to the folks from town.
And some the neighbors that lived around
He needed the money we know that’s a fact
He had eleven children to be exact.
The following winter after days of rain.
His wife came down with a pain in her chest.
The doctor came he did his best.
In a few short days she was laid to rest
The following days he worked hard and long.
To forget his sorrows he must be strong.
He raised his children who were large and strong.
While not in school they helped at home.
Their education was their only aim.
Some call it knowledge, we call it brains.
Some made teachers and a lawyer too.
Just read a book and it they knew.
Years had passed it was in nineteen and thirty eight.
Uncle Ron we called him had another fate.
Progress they call it as we all know.
We must have it for our country to grow.
They built the lock they called seventeen.
To make the river very deep it seems.
For boats to travel from town to town.
To carry the cargo all around.
The water covered his dam and fish trap too.
As nothing else in this world could do.
In August of that very same year.
He was laid to rest by his wife so dear.
Many years have passed since that sad day.
Some of his sons and in-laws too.
Are sleeping there not far away.
Bertha May Smith the oldest daughter
Who now lives there and calmly waits.
She owns the big white house near the cemetery gate
She lives alone she has lost her mate.
But time heals sorrow; she has faith.
THE END…………….


Woodruff Mill



By: Mrs. A.C. (Irene Goolsby) Morgan



In a shady nook by Village Creek
Stood a quaint old mill that was used once a week.
The farmers came to bring their corn
Some by mule or wagon drawn.
The huge round wheel was turned by water
To grind the meal while the farmers loitered
They talked of their crops of cotton, corn or new mown hay
Sometimes of their church on Sunday
Their families were large three or four
Some were a dozen, less or more
Years have passed the old mill’s gone
The dam is there but the creek rolls on.
I remember it well it was near our home.

THE END






Thursday, November 22, 2007

Thanksgiving 2007


We had only 12 this year but we had a great time and a truly great meal.
Our family is spreading out across the U.S.A. and it's almost impossible for all get together as a group anymore.

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Logans' School Picture

Logan really looks great in his school picture. He's in the first grade in Washington State.

He's 7 years old now and we wish he and his younger sister and two brothers were closer.
Maybe we can make the trip next spring.

Wednesday, November 07, 2007

Pumpkin Patch Visit



Our grandson Eric and his wife Summer take Ethan to the Pumpkin Patch and he doesn't look too happy about it in the top picture.
He seems to be in a better mood in the bottom picture. Isn't he a cutie with his new haircut?

Ethan Gets His First Haircut


Gone are the curly locks and gleeful smile and replaced with a big boy look and solemn face.
Our great grandsons' first haircut changed his looks completely but he's still a cutie. I'm sure that big smile returned very quickly.

Saturday, November 03, 2007

Grant Is a Star Senior

Our grandson Grant is a senior at Kingwood Christian School and was recently chosen as a Buffalo Rock, Fox 6, Star Senior. He appeared on Fox News.
He was one of fifteen chosen in the greater Birmingham area.
One individual was chosen from each school after writing an essay on 3 values they thought would insure their own personal success. Extra curricular activities and community service were also credited to the final pick.
Grant is the president of the Student Government Association at Kingwood.
He was involved in varsity sports and other activities.
He was accepted to The University of Alabama and will major in Business or Pre-Med.
We are hoping for the latter since we always wanted a doctor in the family.
Mamaw and Pawpaw are proud of him.....

Beware Of Experts


The so called "Experts" told us a couple of months ago to expect little to no color this year because of the drought. Straight from green to brown they predicted.
Knowing that "experts" are seldom correct, I told everyone to keep their cameras handy since the "experts" had "spoken." I went out on a limb and said it would probably be the best year yet. Lo and behold with little to no additional rainfall, we have the prettiest colors in my area than anytime in at least the last 35 years.
Could the "experts" be wrong about people being the cause of global warming?
Judging from most of their predictions, I wouldn't bet the farm on their consensus.
This is a picture of our side yard which is usually quiet drab.

Friday, November 02, 2007

Adam Can Spell


For the second year in a row, Adam has won his school spelling bee! He will now get to represent Tabernacle at the district spelling bee in January (a preliminary contest before the county bee), and he will also get to participate in the ACEA spelling bee competition in February. Last year, he won the ACEA bee and placed second at the district bee.
Great job Adam. Mamaw and Pawpaw have to carry a dictionary with us to correct our lapse of memory in spelling.
We wish you the best of luck at the district bee.

Thursday, November 01, 2007

Ingenuity at its' Best

Adam & Joseph don't like to dress in run of the mill costumes so they use their cleverness to think up their own design.
I hope Joseph isn't planning out his future profession with the burglar outfit. I suppose Adam messes up so many clothes that his mom just put him in the dirty clothes basket.
They were as cute as could be and were a hit at their church where they went after their visit with us. We loaded the heist bag and detergent box with lots of chocolate but we aren't the blame for any stomach distress.

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

HAPPY HALLOWEEN


Adam & Joseph
Mamaw & Pawpaw have got treats so we will see you tonight.
Wear your scariest costumes to see if you can scare us. (NO TRICKS)
Love you both

Tuesday, October 02, 2007

Washington State Visit


It's been months since we last saw our
4 Grand Children in Washington.
We were invited to come out for a swim
in the kids pool but the weather changed
for the worse and it was too cold.
We had a great week playing with the kids
but it took a few days of rest when we got
back home. The years are catching up
with us. Some pictures are posted below.

Our 1 Week Visit







Mamaw holding Peyton..Mamaw holding our daughter.
Bryce climbing the rock.
Mamaw holding the sleeping boys













The "Super Charged" 4 playing in the back yard .






Things grow big in Washington.
Good soil and moisture.










Muscle man Drake showing off his "tattoos"









Pawpaw holding Peyton.








Even Copper has his own bed.










We send a box almost every month
to the kids and they look forward to
opening them. We timed this one to
arrive about a day after we got there.
Even Copper the dog gets into the act












Bryce is ready for some ball playing.











More box opening.














Drake and Peyton are up to something.










Poor little Logan has to go to school
when he would rather stay home
with Mamaw and Pawpaw



















Morning time and pacifier time.















Dog gone dog has his own bed
but prefers the couch.













Monday, September 10, 2007

Grandparents Day


Two of our grandchildren, Joseph and Adam, wishing us a happy day with signs they made. Our daughter posted this on her blog and I borrowed it.

Saturday, August 25, 2007

Joseph Takes A Dive.



One for the money
Two for the show
Three to get ready
Four to go.
Here is our grandson Joseph showing his Mamaw & Pawpaw how he has learned to dive.
It was the first time we saw it so I guess he has been practicing in private ( With Mommy and brother Adam)
They learn so fast and grow up too fast as the years seem to be flying faster and faster as we age.
Summer is almost over and they are back in school so they can't come over as often now.
Soon it will be pool closing time again and I dread the winter that I hate more and more each year....

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

My Inside Hobby




When it gets too hot to work in my yard, I sit inside where it's cool and embroidery pillow cases. I give these as wedding gifts mostly, or to close friends.
With the temperature in the 100s lately I have finished these 5 pairs very quickly and as the heat lingers I will probably get more done....Madeline

Bigfoot Brigade


Here I am with my middle daughter and her 2 boys, Adam & Joseph.
We are all wearing a bigfoot "T" shirt designed by our son in law, their Dad.
The design won a contest and we all got freebies.
Click on picture to enlarge. Madeline

Tuesday, August 07, 2007

Fish Pond is now Rock Garden











After the owls successfully cleaned out our fish pond, we decided to make it into a sunken rock garden. It wasn't as easy as it sounded. First I had to cut a drainage outlet and found several inches of muck in the bottom that had to be manually removed. Large rocks had to be man handled and I'm not the man I once was. After I removed the rubber liner, We had to devise a plan for the garden that would be easy to look at and easy to maintain. The large rocks had to be moved again and again to get the right look or something we could live with. We placed small river rock in the bottom over garden felt to give it a dry river bed look. We planted flowers in pockets between the large rocks on the walls and decorated with our abundant supply of garden ornaments. It will look better next year when we add more flowers. We rebuilt one corner with the liner intact where we have water irises planted. We miss the goldfish but this will be easier to maintain than the pond so maybe it's for the best.

Monday, June 25, 2007

Joseph, A Junior Genuis


Here is a picture of our grandson Joseph 8, with Meterologist David Neal, with Fox 6, at the Jr. Genius Challenge winners' party at the McWane Science Center. It seems Joseph entered the contest and forgot about it untill he was notified he was a winner.
We don't know all the details yet but he sure looks proud and Mamaw and Pawpaw are always proud of him as well as our 10 other grand children and 1 great grandchild. We believe they are all genuises...:-)

Saturday, June 23, 2007

Pair of Fish Thieves

I finally got both of the thieves to pose together. Mr. & Mrs Owl. look awful "fishy".
I suppose you have to do what you have to do to raise a family.

Friday, June 22, 2007

The Fish Thief


This is one of the pair of Owls that cleaned out our fish pond. They both allow us to get close and even seem to pose. I always thought owls were nocturnal but these are active all day.
We have a yard full of pesky chipmunks that we would love for them to put on their menu.
Our whole yard, I'm afraid, has been undermined by the cute little vermin and I've trapped many but don't have the heart to kill them. I usually take them to some near by woods so they can start a new colony.
I suppose the owls do catch some but the fish were so much easier to nab.