Dig the past

Way back on Day 10 of this current Slice of Life Story Challenge, I had a lot of fun playing around with a prompt asking what the first line of my autobiography would be. I really prefer the idea of memoir…my definition: Mining one’s memories for the stories that matter most, digging in the storied strata of one’s past.

I came up with this “opening line” for it:

My father named me for his mother, and that was the beginning of everything.

Truth.

From the moment I entered this world, my grandmother and I were bound together by blood, love, and namesakery. Long after she’s left it, our bond remains unbreakable.

Were I ever to write an extended memoir, her stories would be layered throughout. I am part of them; they are part of me.

She would say, You were named for me like I was named for my Papa. I loved him so. He was very religious, sang in the choir every Sunday. He had a beautiful bass voice…he used to keep bees when I was young and I’d help him get the honey.

She was sixteen in March of 1932 when her Papa, Francis, died by suicide. On his sixtieth birthday. I don’t know the whole story but what little I do know, I shall keep for now. Grandma told me they brought him home in a wooden casket lined with black oilcloth and that she sat up with him all night before the burial.

The point is that my grandmother’s stories made me hungry to know as much as I could about her childhood, daily life long ago, how people endured such hard times. Many didn’t. The old cemeteries tell stories of their own.

I asked her about the 1919 influenza epidemic: I don’t remember it. I was little. I do remember people talking about “hemorrhagic fever” and Mama saying she made big pots of soup for the neighbors who were sick. Papa carried it to them and left it on their porches. He wouldn’t go in because he didn’t want to bring the sickness home.

I asked her about meeting my grandfather: Oh, we always knew each other. He’s nine years older than I am and he and Mama used to pick cotton together…

Granddaddy would say: We’d all see who could pick the most cotton and it was always Lula [Grandma’s mother] or me. That was before the boll weevil came along and people started planting tobacco.

Grandma said: When tobacco came along, I was a looper…you had to be careful. That juice was sticky and would stain your clothes; it was hard to get out…using a wringer washing machine or washboard, I might add.

The setting of all this is a tiny community called Campbell’s Creek, established around 1700, way down east in the far reaches of Beaufort County, North Carolina. It’s part of Aurora although the actual town is five miles away. Most of the town is now in serious disrepair and the place is so remote that when I happen to encounter people who’ve been there, they typically say something like “I thought I was going to the end of the world.”

It is one of the places I love best on this Earth. The beginning of everything…Aurora is Latin for “dawn,” you know.

My grandparents, Columbus St. Patrick and Ruby Frances, were born here in 1906 and 1915, respectively. They married during the Great Depression. Their first home was a tenant house; their first child, my father, was born there. Granddaddy was a sharecropper. He plowed fields with mules. He was skilled with farm tools that people seldom use now, like an adze. This would give him a unique advantage when he “couldn’t make a go” of farming and went to Virginia to find a job as a shipwright, just as war broke out and ship production went into overdrive. When the war was over, he tried his hand at a number of things, but he had two more children to provide for; he went back to the shipyard until he retired.

All of his life, Granddaddy was a farmer at heart: I can remember when we ordered chickens by mail and they’d be delivered in cages by horse and buggy. I was three or four when I saw my first automobile…

That would have been around 1910. A Model T.

Time was, he’d say, in his country dialect bearing faint traces of Elizabethan English, that the whole family could go off for a week to visit somebody and you didn’t have to lock your house or barns because nobody would bother them. People looked out for each other. There won’t no nursing homes. When somebody was sick we all took turns helping out.

Grandma said: I was sitting with a friend’s mother. She’d been sick awhile and we all knew her time was near. She hadn’t spoken a word in days, hadn’t moved or responded to anyone. She was just lying there in the bed when all of a sudden she sat up and opened her eyes. She started laughing: “Can you hear them? Can you hear them?” Her face just glowed...it had to be angels. A little while after, she was gone.

I grew up on these stories and so many more.

My summers were spent learning things that I wasn’t even aware I was learning, things that will drive my interests for the remainder of my days: story, history, culture, nature.

Faith.

And science.

I’ve written much about the little dirt road that ran past Granddaddy and Grandma’s house. It’s one of my life’s greatest metaphors. I can recall, in the 1970s, when it was covered with gravelly “rejects” from phosphate mining, Aurora’s biggest industry since 1964. Granddaddy and Grandma were so excited for their grandchildren to come digging in the road to find sharks’ teeth—some were quite large — coral skeleton, and various fossilized bones of sea creatures. Someone of official status must have soon realized the value of these rejects and they weren’t scattered on the old dirt road anymore. Instead, they were taken to a newly-created fossil museum in town. Today, children from all over come to dig for fossils they can keep, and they can learn about the history in the little museum. There’s even an annual fossil festival at the end of May; last year I went for the first time with my seven-year-old granddaughter.

This excerpt is from an article in the April 2023 edition of the magazine Our State: Celebrating North Carolina:

Beneath our state’s soil and waves is a lost world waiting to be discovered—a geologic trove we claim as our own…about 50 years ago, coral specimens were found in drilling samples near present-day Aurora. They were sent to the Smithsonian Institution, whose scientists soon visited—and identified the area as one that proclaims the most prolific fossil record of the Miocene (2.3 million to 5.3 million years ago) and Pliocene (5.3 to 2.6 million years ago) marine life on the Atlantic coast.

About fifty years ago… I’d have been a child playing in the gravel on the old dirt road, collecting shark’s teeth, unware of the true treasures of my life.

The Aurora Fossil Museum, writes the author, “continues to keep the past alive.”

It’s analogous to to me: Scientists finding bits of ancient creatures, trying to piece them together to understand stories of this “lost world,” and how I hold to bits of story from this same place, the lost world of my grandparents.

Generations rise and fall…layer upon layer of story strata settling in their wake.

I am a remnant of their world. From early childhood Grandma infused me with story, unknowingly turning me into amateur oral history exacavator, archivist, curator…the stories still live in me.

My father named me for his mother, and that was the beginning of everything.

Imagine my delight when I learned last year that the Aurora Fossil Museum had been approved for an official historical site license plate with the NCDMV. I applied for one right away….it finally came, a couple of months ago. I’m among the first to have it:

I imagine Granddaddy’s beaming face. I hear Grandma’s typical expression of surprise: My land!

Dig the Past! the license plate reads.

I do it every day that I live. I go on mining my memories for stories, working their meanings out bit by bit, trying to preserve them for the priceless treasures they are.

Keeping the past alive. For the future. For right now.

That’s what memoir is for.

*******

Composed for Day 30 of the Slice of Life Story Challenge with Two Writing Teachers

20 thoughts on “Dig the past

  1. I can feel your heart in this beautifully crafted slice.The way you weave your thoughts, memories and grandparent quotes holds the reader’s attention and emotions. Thank you for this gift of text on Saturday morning.

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  2. I knew you would come back to that first line, Fran. All that hemming and hawing, and now look what you have produced! Your first chapter, but certainly not your last. This is exquisitely crafted, everything from the first line to the license plate/title. So much to sift through here. I love this intention- “ I go on mining my memories for stories, working their meanings out bit by bit, trying to preserve them for the priceless treasures they are.”

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    • Cindy, I so appreciate the faith here in your words. I labored over this post – extra layers of pressure, wanting it to be right, and honorable, considering my topic. Thank you so much!

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  3. You’ve got the beginnings, backbone, of a beautiful memoir. Write it for your granddaughter. Write it for yourself. Definitely keep writing it. The preservation of history is important.

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  4. You are well on your way to getting those stories down for others to learn from and experience. There is so much depth to what is here and I am confident that one day those stories will be bound up on a shelf. You have a gift for words and story…thank you for sharing.

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    • What a gift of a response, Amy – thank you for the faith in your words! This post was harder than most for me to write – there’s a deep sense of wanting to honor my grandparents, so I want it to be right, at least as good as I can make it. Again – your words mean much!

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  5. Oh my gosh – Fran. Your memoirs needs to continue into a book. I loved every word of it! I want to know more! I also was named for grandmother – on my mother’s side, but I never got to meet her. She died of a brain aneurysm at the age of 46. Her name was Josephine and I received the Americanized Joanne. I have always imagined what our relationship would have been. I loved reading about your family, your close connections to each other, and your connection to the land. Just plain fabulous. Thank you for this.

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    • Thank you for these words, Joanne – they mean a great deal to me, that the stories are “worth” reading (as of course they are precious to me). Your grandmother died so young! I recall seeing her beautiful photo on your blog. She’d have loved you dearly – of this, I am sure – for who you are and for the namesakery, too. I’m telling you, it’s a powerful tie.

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      • Thank you, Fran. I often make up little imaginings of Josephine and me together. My grandfather stepped in and became my champion. He always noted how much I looked like Josephine. He also was take away too young – 63, which at the time I thought was old! 

        I went on eBay and bought a copy of The Piebald Princess. Our 2nd grade girls read all kinds of princess books and then compare and contrast. I would love to read this book to them. I can’t wait until it comes!

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      • This is so precious re: your grandfather, and that you look like your grandmother. Oh – you will LOVE reading The Piebald Princess, especially aloud! I’m delighted you will use it – you must let me know the response!

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  6. I could have kept reading for hours! What interesting stories you learned from your grandparents. I loved the comparison between mining your memories for stories and mining the earth for its fossils and remnants of the past. These lines: “My summers were spent learning things that I wasn’t even aware I was learning, things that will drive my interests for the remainder of my days: story, history, culture, nature.” The impressions that people and places leave in our lives.

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    • Amy, thank you for this lovely response. At some point during the writing, as you know, the inner critic says, Why tell all this? People will not be interested…but then to discover that they are…it’s an incredible gift, knowing it matters to others, too!

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  7. Oh, my word! (My Land!). I, too, could have gone on reading for hours, as Amy said. You indeed are an excavator, a teller of stories. A memoirist through and through. Please, please, please let this be the first chapter and carry on. Fran, this is lovely. The sentence about the strata of stories settling into the wake is just stunning, as is the cemeteries tell stories of their own. Maybe we should do a Zebulon to Zebulon poetry and storytelling event next year – – you come here and read from your recently published book. Catch a ride with the Poetry Fox – – I hope he will be so popular this year that folks will demand he return next year, and I’ll tell them all: just wait. We’re adding Fran Haley, the possum. The possum and the fox will be here. This is lovely, just lovely.

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    • Thank you for these thoughts and the encouragement, Kim – I labored on this post. It didn’t come easy, as I try to do justice to the times, place, people…I had to let it go but there really is more to tell. If I ever do publish a book I will certainly be there for the Zeb to Zeb fest – such fun that would be! Slide over, Poetry Fox!

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  8. Fran, this powerful story brought forth so many emotions for me – beginning with the inseparable connection through your name, the personal nature of tragedies whose stories need be kept in the heart, to these lines: “Scientists finding bits of ancient creatures, trying to piece them together to understand stories of this “lost world,” and how I hold to bits of story from this same place, the lost world of my grandparents.” You have inspired me which this story, thank you.

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    • Thank you so much for this thoughtful response, Melanie – makes me happy to know that you found inspiration here. i labored over this post – it didn’t come easy, probably because I want it to do justice to time, place, and people. I let it go, for now. Know that your words mean much!

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  9. Wowza! I could. Not. Stop. Reading. (Well, until I got to the end…) You crafted this lovingly and wove every layer within it making me want to read more. Your first line, when I read it on Day 10 was already interesting on its own. Thank you for fleshing it out and sharing it with us.  

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