RR Sd RAN a OE Wednesday, December 23, 2009 Christmastime in Rusty Springs Well, it’s Christmastime in Rusty Springs, my hometown. A lot of things have changed here since my childhood. Of course that was a half a century ago, so I would expect things to be a little different. Percy Stan- field doesn’t sell Studebakers here any- more, for one. And the grade school’s _ been closed, consoli- dated, and eventually . de-constructed. Like everything else, Christmas is a whole lot different in 2009 than it was in 1959. Peeking back at Christmases past, here are some ver- bal snapshots from my childhood in Rusty Springs... Old Maids Not the card game. Tressie and Mabel Whitkanack. Tressie and Mabel (always goes together like peanut butter ’n jelly, grits 'n eggs, RC 'n Moon Pie) were the two younger sisters of my great-grandpa Whitkanack. They not only never married, I never saw them separated. By any grade schooler’s account they were not only old, they were an- cient. Actually when I was about seven or eight, they were probably no more than 70 but I pegged them at about 105 in “kid years”. Tressie and Mabel figured into our lives twice a year. They hosted a family reunion on Memorial Day with proba- bly 75 to 100 of us gathered on their lawn eating everything from fresh strawberries to fried chicken to apple pie. The other time was at Christmas. Actually about two weeks before Christmas. That’s when the season began for us. That weekend included a trek into the woods to find the right Christmas tree and wound up at Tressie and Mabel’s house Sunday evening. We then took about a quarter mile walk in the cold, still night to the Dar- win Methodist Church, where my Uncle Bert began his preaching career. That Sunday evening was the begin- ning of Christmas every year. It was a little clapboard sided church, no more than 30 feet wide and #0 or so feet long. A yellowish light shined out through four windows on each side of the single room. A tin roof kept off the snow. The old oak floor- boards had been worn smooth, not by a machine but by decades of sturdy leather-soled shoes. One pot-bellied stove provided what little heat there was, it’s metal sides glowing red hot. People standing close to the fire warmed quickly on one side, but the cold clung to the other. A bucket stood beside it, full of the coal we all hoped wouldn’t be in out stocking come : Christmas morning. The pews were ash benches with backs. There were no cushions. No comfort for a congrega- tion of rugged people not really used to any. Uncle Bert wasn’t the fire and brim- stone kind of preacher from TV. He just told us honestly and plainly how it was on that first Christmas. And we were no Mormon Tabernacle Choir, but we filled the clear, cold night with old Christmas hymns. And, of course, all us kids acted out the Christmas story in front of proud and long-suffering par- ents. My cousin Penny's doll always got to be baby Jesus, even if its name was Annie. I guess being the preacher’s daughter had its perks. And no sooner than the final “Amen” rang out, we’d hear a hearty “Ho, Ho, Ho” booming from-the front steps. The door would swing open and Santa would stomp in with his big bag. It always held an orange and a bag of candy for every kid there (Uncle Bert’s other job was driving the Curtis Candy truck delivering candy to rural stores). And it always held just enough so that every good boy and girl had some. Of course there were no “bad” boys and girls there that night. Then there was the cold walk back to Tressie and Mable’s. The moon, hung high in the sky, had its light am- plified by a blanket of snow. It was so quiet the crunching of footsteps on crusty snow almost echoed. It was amazing how much colder it could get in just an hour or so that time of the night. But we enjoyed a hot fire and some hot cocoa with a couple of marshmallows melting away before we piled in the car and slept while Dad drove home. Ron Isbell Publisher Grandpa Santa I barely remember when my Grandpa had both his arms. He lost one in a fight with a corn picker before I started school. Why none of us grandkids couldn’t identify Santa every Christmas Eve is, I guess, one of the miracles of the sea- son. See RUSTY SPRINGS on Page 2B The Kings Mountain Herald Dear Editor, I wanted to know if their is a Santa i In the hearts and on the faces all set a-glow : i is everywhere at once and yet nowhere at a But in the hearts'and in the minds of people big and small : Most of all I hoped they wouldn't tell. dh > “big guy” so. | -Emily Weaver ] they see. They think that nothing can’ | Our own Virgina asks, ‘Is ®anta real? Claus? My friends Thanks for your say he is fake but tell time. me the truth please. Virginia Dellinger Dear Virginia, If there was no Santa I'd surely tell you so But to repeat such a lie would strike quite a blow Every. time we hear his trademark laugh, “Ho, ho ho!” eyes tight scared ls ‘If they know that T I'm awake then Christmas will not come ‘And how sad would that be with no presents to and from.’ 1 prayed they hadn’t seen me wake, I hoped they didn’t know But Christmas still came that morning z as it | had betore. Pan Though no one believed those elves I encountered at. my door Somehow old Santa didn’t hear that I had seen their faces There is still a little magic to be found in the strangest places * The magic Ties in 1 loving others and showing them you care And Christmas without Santa is like a garden with no air Yes Virginia, you have my: word, there is a Santa Claus To once again repeat that truth gives me ‘no moment’s pause You may not see him coming down your chimney with care But I promise, come Christmas morning, he will have been there And all of the faces of the ones you love and who love you Will be right there to laugh and be in wonderment. It’s true! Editor, Kings Mountain Herald and joy. Alas! how dreary would be ; the world if there were no Santa ceive or imagine all the wonders't | Claus. It would be as dreary as if are unseen and unseeable in the there were no VIRGINIAS. There world. they. are not there. Nobody can co . Yon may t tear apart the baby’ srat- tle and see what makes the noise in- side, but there is a veil covering the unseen world ‘which no _ man, nor eve | the'uni : » YC ha 1 hey. have been al edb skepticism of : a 1 skeptics 1 ag be which is not. Spnaeensibly by might as well not believe i in fairies! ~ You might get your papa to hire men to watch in all the chimneys on ital ~ Christmas Eve to catch Santa Claus, wi but. even if ‘they did not see Santa ab Claus coming down, what would that Ne - prove? Nobody sees Santa Claus, but li thats no sign that there is no Santa Su Claus! The most real things in the world are those that neither children ‘nor men can see. Did you ever see fairies dancing on the lawn? Of Ni course os, but that's no proof that 3 ; i SR PN ENE,