The Pinkstons of Bryant Station
May09

The Pinkstons of Bryant Station

If your family lineage traces a long way back in Maury County history, you’d do well to study the names chiseled in rock at Haynes Cemetery, a fine old resting place high on a hill in Scribner’s Mill. Ancient red cedars border a plush, rolling green adorned by 400 headstones and sprinkled with spontaneous patches of purple irises, the Tennessee flower. Carved into the native rock, names encountered represent Duck River...

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Two Jacks
Jun18

Two Jacks

Mr. Kinnie Polk “Sam” Freeland and Miss Ida had a boy born to them more than a dozen years after their last one, Tom (named after the bachelor uncle who lived with them in the big old house in Scribner Mill). Jack was the blessed infant’s name and, from the beginning, he was doted on and seldom corrected by Miss Ida. His uncle Thomas who lived in one end of the big old house was particularly amused by the boy and...

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The Class Trip
Jun11

The Class Trip

Bryant Station School held classes for first through eighth grades in a two-room schoolhouse. There were two teachers presiding, one also serving as principal. When Mrs. Willie Hight was principal in the 1950s, she drove the school bus, in addition. The Bryant Station School in the 1950s with Mrs. Willie Hight and Mrs. Angeline Brown. In 1936, when my dad Jack White graduated from the 8th grade, the principal was twenty-five-year-old...

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Homers
Jun07

Homers

My dad was the Railway Express agent in Columbia and his office was in the old depot. In his long career, he shipped all kinds of livestock, everything from rattlesnakes to elephants – literally – without use of a forklift. It was all done with brawn, brain, and nerve. Jack White in a Railway Express office in Cookeville, Tennessee. A regular cargo was homing pigeons, usually shipped in custom woven basket crates from Evansville,...

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The Art of Integration
May02

The Art of Integration

In late February, the Alabama State Council on the Arts employed award winning Livingston, Alabama songwriter Jacky Jack White to work with students at Robert C. Hatch High School in Uniontown, Alabama. Their mission was to construct an original musical play using the techniques of “arts integration.” The deadline was May 16. Jacky Jack White with student. Diana Green of the State Council explains that White and Hatch teacher Darren...

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The Blimp
Jan10

The Blimp

Just a block east of the square, on Commerce Street in Lewisburg, Tennessee, stands a rather rundown, nondescript building that houses the Good Samaritans and the Masonic Lodge. Looking at the drab old place, a newcomer could not possibly imagine its former splendor. Yet I assure you, most splendid it was.   This was the Easy Pay Tire Store, commercial empire of Mr. Robert Wallace Ritter, Sr., assisted ably by my Aunt Kathryn Scott...

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