Daily Archives: 04/16/2014
Liberty’s White inks with Dordt College
Seated alongside Liberty High senior Heath White as he signs with Dordt College are his parents, Kevin and Amy White. Standing is Liberty football coach Kyle Stewart.
LIBERTY — Liberty High School senior Heath White signed last week to continue his football career on the next level at Dordt College in Sioux Center, Iowa.
In addition to playing running back and wide receiver for the Red Devils’ football team, White played basketball and ran track for Liberty, as well as being a member of the Devils’ state runner-up wrestling team.
White is a scholar athlete and a member of the youth group at Enon Baptist Church.
“Heath has a never-say-die attitude,” Liberty football coach Kyle Stewart said. “He goes hard in practice and games the entire time and never gives up. His tremendous work ethic will help him succeed on the next level.”
Leadership class helps build fence at Better Skills office
COUNTY — March was Disability Advocacy Month. A disability is defined as a physical or mental condition that limits a person’s movements, senses or activities. Those with disabilities long to be known for who they are.
“I’m really passionate about language,” said Julie Petty, self advocate and keynote speaker at the 20th annual Family Connection Hopes and Dreams Conference. “I’m not a cerebral palsy woman. I’m a woman with cerebral palsy. I’m a friend. I’m a sister. I’m a wife. I’m a mother. I am not cerebral palsy.”
Pickens County is fortunate to have a Board of Disability and Special Needs
Kathy Patterson Zorn files for re-election as probate judge
COUNTY — Pickens County probate judge Kathy Patterson Zorn has announced her candidacy for another term.
Zorn worked in the probate court for 18 years before her election in 2002. She is a lifelong resident of Pickens County, living on the same parcel of land her entire life. She graduated from Furman University with a double major in business and accounting. She is a member of both the National College of Probate Judges and the South Carolina Association of Probate Judges, where
Spring workshop with Christina Laurel planned at county museum
PICKENS — The Pickens County Museum of Art and History announced recently that registration is still open for a special workshop with award-winning instructor Christina Laurel.
On May 24, Laurel will hold “Graphite Expanded” from 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. This class, designed for adults, will beheld in the Liz Smith-Cox Educational
Do you know where it is?
On The Way
By Olivia Fowler
Have you ever thought that so-called inanimate objects really aren’t inanimate at all? Well, I have. There’s a children’s storybook about how a child’s toys come to life at night and have amazing adventures. The movie “Toy Story” probably stole this idea
I have a theory, never disproved to my satisfaction, that this is what happens to many useful things I depend upon to get through the day. All I ask is that someone prove me wrong, and I’ll happily check into an asylum.
Maybe this doesn’t happen at your house, but it does happen at mine. It’s evening and you’ve come inside for the day. The first action taken after you
30th annual Azalea Fest coming up this weekend
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PICKENS — Spring has always been special in Pickens County, with warm, sunny days and cool crisps evenings. And the third weekend in April offers the best way for area residents and visitors to Pickens County to say goodbye to the chills of winter with a two-day event filled with activities to thrill all age groups.
The 30th annual Azalea Festival, slated for April 18-19, is shaping up to be a
Got to get my act together
All About Ben
By Ben Robinson
Lately I’ve been concentrating on getting my act together. I have the opportunity to make a special trip to Kentucky.
I’ve already asked for the time off, and was simply told not to leave the paper in bad shape. That makes sense. The trip to Kentucky is on a Christian mission trip, and the way I figure it, if you take off and leave with no thought toward your coworkers, you’re not really showing any Christian spirit.
I also have my car taxes due this month. The county thinks a lot more of my car than I do. If I ever decide to sell the car, I need to let the county folks market it for me. But taxes do not work that way, so I need to just be quiet and pay my share.
So with the taxes and the county taxes coming up, I’ve got quite a handful to save up for. But looking at my income coming in and comparing it to the bills
Courier Obituaries 4-16-14
Mary Broome Blalock Wilson
Clemson — Mrs. Mary Broome Blalock Wilson, 90, of Winston-Salem, died Saturday, March 29, 2014 at Clemson Downs Retirement Center in Clemson.
She was born July 2, 1923 in Asheville, N.C. to William Edward and Cora Morgan Broome. Mrs. Wilson graduated from Mars Hill College and Wake Forest College in Wake Forest, N.C., where she was a member of Phi Beta Kappa. She retired from Summit School in Winston-Salem, N.C., as secretary to the Headmaster after 29 years of service. Mrs. Wilson was a member of
All aboard for fun!
Central prepares to celebrate
its Railroad Heritage
The whistles will be blowing as the annual Central Railroad festival takes off April 26 at 10 a.m.
In honor of the cherished tie that binds Central’s past to the future, members of the Central Model Railway and Historical Association, the Central Heritage Society, the Town of Central and its local businesses, have designed the Central Railroad Festival so that residents of Central and Pickens County, in addition to tourists and visitors, can celebrate the abundant history and heritage that defines Central.
The village had its beginnings in 1873, when the Atlantic and Richmond Air-Line Railroad Company completed a track running through Pickens County. Because it was midway between Atlanta and Charlotte, about 133 miles each way, the Railway Company decided to set up its shops there, and the place was called Central.
A depot and houses were erected for those who worked on the railroad. Stores were erected to provide supplies and food for the people. Shops for the railway workers were built, for this was to be the Terminal where engines refueled and changed. Engineers, conductors, telegraph operators brought their families and, finding the refreshing climate and friendly people to their liking, built homes and settled down.
On the north bank of the railroad track in the middle of the town, a long platform was erected for the coal chute where big, heavy dump carts were kept loaded with black shiny coal. At the end of the coal was a great tank of water that seemed to be always overflowing.
Branching off the right of the track toward the textile mill was the “Y” for turntable, where engines changed. Just below the tank, across from a large grove of trees, a long rambling hotel was built to become quite famous up and down the line. The hotel served not only for an eating-house, but also for telegraph operators, dispatchers, ticket office, waiting room, and a sample room for drummers to display their lines for the inspection of local merchants. The famous old building burned in 1936.
According to the Central Heritage Society, Central was incorporated as a town on March 17, 1875, by an Act of the South Carolina Legislature; however the town saw a great change take place in the year 1897, when the Southern Railway moved its headquarters from Central to Greenville.
“The first trainload of cars pulled out Sunday, July 4, 1897, leaving a dazed group of citizens,” reads a passage on the heritage society website. “All shops and all offices were closed. The trains no longer stopped to change engines. Families that had built their homes and settled down were uprooted. Houses were vacant and business was at a standstill.”
The town eventually made a recovery from the loss of the railway headquarters, but quaint and quiet, nestled on the outskirts of Clemson, the unassuming town of Central has an incredibly rich history and heritage linked to the railroad tracks that run through the heart of its town.
This year’s festivities will actually begin early on the morning of April 26 with the Central Elementary 5K run, Keep It Movin’. The event supports the Keep it Movin’ run/walk program that exists at Central Elementary, a Title I school, that affords more than 100 students the opportunity to walk or run before the start of school, along with earning incentives. Winners will be recognized at the festival.
The festival will begin at 10 a.m. and run until 6 p.m., featuring entertainment, food, music and arts and crafts vendors.
The Southern Wesleyan Jazz Band will kick off the music on the festival’s main stage, performing in the opening ceremony from 10-11 a.m.
An Elvis impersonator will take the stage to pay tribute to the King of Rock and Roll from 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. and again to close the festival from 5-6 p.m.
In addition, the Flying Saucers, a 1960s tribute band, are set to perform from 1-2:30 p.m., and local singer/songwriter Tony Tidwell will play from 3-4:30 p.m.
There will also be plenty of activity strictly for the kids, including face painting, the Lowe’s Make It and Take It craft area and Ziggy’s Music and Magic show.
In addition, the Central Fire Department will have its engines on display.
La Dance Studios the Hot Foot Cloggers will also entertain the crowds.
Also featured will be live steam engines. The Central Water Department will also have a special display at the festival.
The Central Railway Museum, which features a large HO-scale model railroad layout complete with cities, towns and features found in the region more than a half-century ago, will also be open for visitors The museum also houses a Heritage Room, featuring classic model trains popular in the mid-20th century. Also, there will be a tour of the Central red caboose.
Central restaurants will be open on the day of the festival, offering options ranging from international cuisine such as Mexican and Japanese to coffee house and deli specialties, as well as seafood. Street vendors will also cater to a variety of tastes, offering pizza, hot dogs, barbecue, nachos, corn dogs, hamburgers, sandwiches, funnel cakes, chicken wings, crab cakes, Italian ice, kettle corn, fried Oreos and more treats.
Clemson Area Transit buses will run continuously, taking festival-goers from parking areas.
Admission to the festival is free, and convenient parking is available.
The Central Railroad Festival is sponsored by the Central Area Business Council and the Clemson Area Chamber of Commerce. The festival is supported by the Town of Central and the Central Railway Museum.
“The atmosphere of the railroad is so unique to the town of Central,” Paynter said prior to last year’s festival. “There is no other town on the map with such a unique flavor running through it.
“The festival keeps growing year after year, and our reputation continues to spread. The Railroad Festival is so family friendly — there are things for everyone to see and enjoy — and it is all free.”
St. Michael’s Episcopal Church to host multi-family yard sale
EASLEY — Local residents will have an opportunity to find a Saturday deal and benefit community outreach by shopping at St. Michael’s multi-family yard sale on Saturday, April 26, 8 a.m.-1 p.m., at St. Michael’s Episcopal Church.
In addition to bargains on everything from clothes to household goods, there will be fresh breakfast and lunch plates available for purchase.
Community members can participate in the sale and reserve a selling space