Runways of My Life
By Lee Smith
()
About this ebook
Lee Smith
Lee Smith is the best-selling author of over a dozen books, including Dimestore: A Writer's Life and Guests on Earth. She lives in Hillsborough, North Carolina.
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Runways of My Life - Lee Smith
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PREFACE
In March of 1932, the Great Depression was coming to an end, the Lindbergh baby was kidnapped and murdered, Germany was preparing for war, and I began my life.
Birmingham, Alabama, was an interesting city to grow up in. There were steel mills, trains, and a good local park with an elephant called Miss Fancy.
A few years later, as I grew, Germany invaded Poland and was threatening the rest of Europe. I was fascinated by the airplanes that took part in the conflicts. In my imagination, I was a fighter pilot with many kills to my credit. My favorite thing was to put a chair on the floor with the back down, on which I would sit, using the legs as my guns. I had many close calls, but was always victorious.
My grandmother wanted me to be a doctor like my grandfather, but also encouraged my talent as an artist.
Some of my ancestors fought in the Revolution and the Civil War (or the War for Southern Independence
) on the side of the Confederacy. Strange how every man who took part in the Revolution is considered a hero now, but not so the men of the Confederate states. In both wars, they fought for what they believed, and in both wars taxation and representation were an issue. Slavery was tolerated during the Revolution, but was an issue in 1861. Now, in 2018, the collective National Conscience
has mandated the destruction of Confederate monuments and many more memories of the Old South, such as most of Stephen Foster’s songs. Right or wrong, history is being rewritten. I find it a travesty, but I didn’t pursue politics again until the war in Vietnam, in which I did participate. Anyway, I have an ancestor named Reed who died on the bridge at Concord, and several others who died at Shiloh and other battles. My own life almost ended in North Vietnam.
In 1939 our family moved to Marianna, Florida.
Due to having scarlet fever and rheumatic fever, I had a heart murmur and could not do athletics, so I joined the Marianna High School band. My earlier experiences playing the violin, which my aunt Bess taught me, helped my musical interests. Our band director, Herman Dean, had been a lead clarinet player in the John Philip Sousa band and was a strict disciplinarian. I advanced to lead trumpet player and was selected Best Boy Musician,
which may have been more of a popularity position than an award for a good musician, but I didn’t turn it down. I did do some solos and enjoyed the experience. I’ll always be grateful for the discipline I learned from Mr. Dean. That discipline helped me in my Air Force years and was essential to my survival and success. It is still important to me in everything I do. Other than my father, Mr. Dean was my childhood idol and hero.
Our move from Birmingham to Marianna was due to my father’s changing from his job at his brother’s scrapyard to a partnership in a limestone plant and farm equipment business. Marianna Limestone Company dug limestone from a quarry, crushed it into powder, and spread it on fields around Jackson County. It improved the quality of the soil when it was too acidic. I got to drive one of the spreader trucks when I got older. That was thrilling to me, driving my own truck on a job! My older brother, Sam, was doing the same. The weather in northwest Florida changed to more rain during the year. This caused the limestone to get wet in the ground, making it impossible to crush into powder, so the limestone production slowed to a stop. The plant was abandoned and the truck sold. The farm equipment business was also slow, so my father sold his share to his partner and opened a business called Sam Smith Machinery. He bought WWII surplus equipment, cranes, trucks—anything and everything. I remember once when he acquired hundreds of oxygen masks from the Army Air Corps. Many had names or initials of aircrew members who had used them in the war. Some were new. He bought hundreds of fire extinguishers. I had the job of cleaning them for resale. During those days, my father started developing the fields around the old limestone plant and our house. At one time, we had seventeen hundred acres of land. I found myself driving mules; plowing; and carrying corn, peas, peanuts and whatever by mule-drawn wagons from our fields. Mules are smart. They know left and right: gee
and haw.
Growing up, I met many people. Many were black people, who had a most interesting and pleasant culture,—peaceful and spiritual. I can’t remember a mean or spiteful one. One stands out in my mind as a fine and gentle person: Arthur Myrick. Arthur was an old man when I knew him. He would often drive up to our home near Marianna with his wife, two mules drawing their wagon. He would always remove his hat when he saw my mother and exchange pleasantries. Arthur did some work for my father when he was younger. When Arthur was a boy, he and his family had worked on the plantation where we now lived. They had been slaves.
The place we owned and built a house on about 1942 was once a plantation owned by Colonel Russ—the first name on the deed. He was a Civil War colonel, and he and his wife were buried in the field behind our house. We tried to preserve their limestone brick marker, which was about six feet long, three feet wide and four feet high. The graves had been ruined at some time by vandals, I guess. The bodies were no longer there. I found the remains of a slave graveyard; a few limestone markers were scattered in the woods not far from Col. Russ’ grave. I remember the name Liza
on one marker I found.
When not in school, I spent a lot of time hunting and fishing on our property. About a mile and a half from our house was a small creek that ran through the very thick woods and finally into the Chipola River. The Chipola ran into the Chattahoochee River, which flowed into the Gulf of Mexico.
My obsession for adventure drove me to attempt a trip down the creek to the Chipola River. My transportation was a home-built, eight-foot kayak, made of strips of wood covered with canvas. Transportation
is a generous word for it, as I had to drag it a lot of the way over fallen trees and through the brush. I fished when I came to a good spot, catching a few small fish and seeing many cottonmouth snakes drop from trees into the creek near the boat. I spent most of the day doing this. At one point, I reached a deep spot where the creek was about twenty-five feet wide. Suddenly, a very large alligator arose from the weeds on the left bank, and with one quick motion, plunged into the creek less than ten feet from where I was. The wake from this monster rocked the kayak violently, but I stayed aboard, retracting my feet, which had been dangling in the cool