Daily Archives: 12/15/2020
Upper State champions
The Easley High School competitive cheerleading team is one step closer to a state championship after taking first place at the state qualifier last week. The Green Wave scored 274 points in the competition to best second-place A.C. Flora’s 267 points and third-place Catawba Ridge’s 257. The Easley cheerleading squad is led by seniors Emma Arnold, Trinitee Atkins, Jonna Harper, Carolina LeCroy, Haleigh Myhand, Bree Sewell, Erica Sheriff, Courtney Smith, Hadley West and Rileigh Williams. The Green Wave will compete for the state championship Saturday in Florence.
Devils announce volleyball honors
By Bru Nimmons
Staff Reporter
bnimmons@thepccourier.com
LIBERTY — After missing the playoffs the last two seasons, the Liberty Red Devil volleyball team bounced back this year to finish 9-1 in the regular season and win the Region I-2A championship.
While the Red Devils’ playoff run was ultimately cut short in the first round against Landrum, accolades continue to roll in for the program after their return-to-form season, with two players being named to the S.C. Class 2A all-state team, among a number of other accomplishments.
The leader of the pack for the Red Devils this season was junior Kendall Meinders. Meinders was named Region I-2A player of the year and was named to the Class
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Pickens volleyball players named all-stars
PICKENS — Three players on the 2020 Pickens High School Lady Blue Flame volleyball team have received post-season statewide and region honors.
Senior Maddie Gentry was named to the North-South 4A/5A all-star team, and sophomore Lauren Dow and junior Caroline Lucas were named to the all-state volleyball team, which recognized them
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What the Framers intended?
I’ve been reading a very interesting book about the Constitutional Convention of 1787. It was written by a journalist who reports each day’s session as a daily news story.
Since the convention’s proceedings were closed to the public, there are no newspaper accounts of what was going on in the State House in Philadelphia during that fateful summer. They even kept all the windows closed — all through the sweltering heat — to prevent eavesdropping. But the author went back through the notes of James Madison and others to reconstruct how the great event unfolded.
Much like politics in America in 2020, it was not pretty.
The way people talk about the Constitution these days,
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Festival of Lights
The first Jewish-American soldier of the Revolutionary War was killed on the banks of the Seneca River. Francis Salvador was a Jewish plantation owner from Charleston. He came from the Sephardic Jewish community in London and was the first Jew to be elected to public office in the colonies. He was also the first Jewish-American person to be killed in the Revolutionary War.
It happened on Aug. 1, 1776, in the town of Esseneca, a Cherokee settlement located along the banks of the Seneca River. Maj. Andrew Williamson and his force of 2,300 men had camped along the Seneca River when
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Thank you to Courier and community
Thank you to Courier and community
Dear Editor,
On behalf of MasterCare Assisted Living, words cannot express our heartfelt thanks for the overwhelming response for personal protective supplies for our residents and staff.
We know beyond any doubt that Pickens County residents and businesses care about the needs of keeping our elderly safe and healthy. It was very evident, as there was immediate response after the
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Jesus’ extraordinary parents
This is the time of year when we display our nativity sets, and it’s common to see depictions on the front of Christmas cards that have Mary and Joseph in a stable with the baby Jesus, who is lying in a feeding trough commonly referred to as a manger.
The word nativity comes from the Latin term, which simply means born. Technically, we’ve all experienced a nativity, but in today’s world, the term is primarily used in connection with the birth of Jesus Christ the Redeemer. We also hear the word incarnation at this time of year, and within the Christian faith, this is referring to the Son of God and how He miraculously came down from heaven and took on the human form
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Courier Obituaries 12-16-20
ANNIE CHRISTINE COX
PICKENS — Annie Christine Cox, 92, wife of the late Alfred L Cox, passed away on Saturday, Dec. 5, 2020, at Rainey Hospice House in Anderson.
Mrs. Cox was born Dec. 14, 1927, in Oconee County, a daughter of the late Jules Henderson and Ethel Carpenter Henderson.
Annie was a member of Red Hill Baptist Church in Pickens. She was a loyal employee of Sangamo
A father and son’s final fishing trip on the river they were raised to love
By Dr. Thomas Cloer Jr.
Special to The Courier
“Let’s go to Thompson River; my rod and creel are already in the truck,” he said with a strain in his voice that revealed his weakened state.
“You think you can make it Dad?”
“I can make it if we go at a slow pace, and you don’t start that fast walking like you’re going to a dog
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Spivey – Smith engagement announced
Spivey – Smith
engagement announced
Mrs. Avis Spivey of Liberty
would like to announce the engagement of her daughter
Sheila Spivey
to
Donnie Smith
son of
Mr. Donald Smith, Sr. of Liberty
and the late Mrs. JoAnn Smith.
The bride is also the daughter of the late Mr. Howard Spivey.
The wedding is planned for December 31 and will be held at Potter’s Clay Fellowship at 5 p.m. Potter’s Clay Fellowship is located at 142 Grace Drive in Easley. Formal invitations will not be sent, but all friends and family are invited to attend.