Monday, April 27, 2015

Do You Remember…April 27, 2011?


As your writer of Family Trails, I have the honor of delving into old pictures of days gone by and trying to solve mysteries that were left behind in Grandfather Weaver's scrapbook. Digging around in Alabama's past is an adventure for me….except this week. 

This is a part of our recent history that we all wish had never happened. 
April 27, 2011.

In memory of those Alabamians and all others who lost their lives 4 years ago today, I will just end this week's post with photographs I took in Tuscaloosa and in Pratt City after the devastating tornadoes that tore across Alabama.  











Wednesday, April 22, 2015

From Alabama to Appomattox Courthouse

Clipped from a newspaper probably printed in 1937


Mysteries continue to unfold from Grandfather Weaver's scrapbook.
Did Charles Sisson Weaver know either of these men? Mr. Crump was from Lincoln, Alabama, and Mr. Turner was from Whatley, Alabama. 
When I read the fine print from these 2 articles saved for some reason in our great-grandfather's book, I discovered that Mr. Turner passed away on December 24, 1940, the day AFTER Mr. Crump in Lincoln celebrated his 100th birthday, December 23, 1940. 

Also from a paper in approximately 1937
Grandfather Weaver may have saved these articles about 2 of the last surviving Confederate soldiers in Alabama because he knew them. 
He may have saved these articles because he was interested in history. 
He may have saved them because he too had read the entire Bible more than once just as Mr. Crump had. 
I think that all of the above is true, but I think there is more to the story of why he might have saved these articles. 

Grandfather Weaver was 5 years old when General Robert E. Lee surrendered at Appomattox Courthouse, Virginia on April 9, 1865.  I have a newspaper clipping somewhere in my "stash" that calls Charles Sisson Weaver "a child of Reconstruction." His half-sister, Becky, told him stories of soldiers stopping by the Weaver house looking for food and rest. I think that since Charles Sisson Weaver grew up hearing and seeing the results of such a terrible time in our country's history, he must have had great admiration for the men and boys not much older that him who had fought to protect their families. And so he clipped out their photographs…he read their brief story remembered in  just a few lines in a newspaper…
This was his way of honoring these men who lived just a few miles down the road from him. 

Wednesday, April 15, 2015

The WEAVER LIBRARY at First Baptist Church, Talladega, Alabama


Welcome, Family Trails readers to a visit to the Weaver Library. By looking at this picture above,  a family member might feel as if he or she just pulled up a chair in the sitting room on Cherry Street in "Tee's House." Yes, this little setting is right out of Tee's house… the secretary, the lamp, the chair, even the floral prints… but it now is the entrance to the Weaver Library at the First Baptist Church in Talladega, Alabama. 
My sister, Rebecca, and I visited the Weaver Library again this past weekend when we attended the April in Talladega Tour of Homes. Rebecca had a very special addition to make. Among some of the boxes she has been exploring, she found our great-grandmother's Bible. It was a very worn and well-loved black leather-bound Bible with "Mrs. C. S. Weaver" printed on the cover. She and I discussed it and decided that it belonged inside the secretary alongside some other family books. 
If you visit Talladega to reach out to your family roots, visit the Weaver Library and open up the secretary. There you too can thumb through the pages of Nancy Antoinette Haynes Weaver's Bible.


The family cookbook and family photographs inside of the secretary

Family History books and Talladega History books are also inside. 




Our cousin, Lucretia, wrote about how the Weaver Library was created. Here are her words that she wrote for her grandchildren not too long ago. Interspersed in this article are pictures taken this weekend showing the beautiful bookcases filled with books and the furnishings in the library.

Clock above the check-out desk

The Children's Library
Soon after arriving in Talladega in December 1897, my grandparents, Charles Sisson and Nancy Antoinette Weaver, joined the First Baptist Church.  Each of their ten children were members, as were all of the grandchildren.  As adults, many served in leadership roles in the church.

When I realized that 1998 would mark the one-hundredth anniversary of the family's association with the church, I began to think of how we might observe this important part of our heritage.  There was unanimous family agreement that a memorial gift to the church would be an appropriate way of observing this important occasion. In all, thirty-six Weaver family members from five generations had been members.
  
After  months of traveling back and forth from Big Canoe, where I was living at the time, to Talladega, to consider  various projects, it was finally decided that the expansion and renovation of the church library would be of significant value to current and future families of the congregation.  



The minister, the library committee, and church officials were enthusiastic about receiving this new facility from one of its oldest families.

I accepted the responsibility of chairing the committee composed of my uncle, Tenison Weaver, cousin, Robert Weaver and brother, William Malone, along with the minister and Peggy King, librarian.  Pledges of sufficient funds from family members allowed the work to begin; and the church board authorized the facility to be named The Weaver Library.

Forty-five descendents of Charles and Nancy Antoinette Weaver gathered on July 12, 1998 for the dedication, one hundred years after the family began its membership and service to the church.


        The Weaver Library is an ongoing success thanks to Peggy King who heads the Library Staff and some 25 volunteers.  The library serves not only the church members, plus children in its child development center, but is available to community residents.






    Last August when I met some family in Talladega for a mini-reunion, our first visit was to First Baptist Church and the library.  What a joy to find it as beautiful and functional as the day it opened fourteen years before, and to learn of the blessing it has been for so many people.
   We give thanks for the vision and for the dream fulfilled. It is our  hope and prayer that it will continue to touch many lives for years to come. 
                                                          Written and submitted to Family Trails
by 
Lucretia Malone Mount Davenport
               
      




Many thanks to our "Aunt Lucretia" for sharing her written account of how the library began. 
As you can see by looking  on the shelves that they are full! It is a glorious thing to see this! The children's section is adorable and very child-friendly. There are windows that let in the beautiful light and make the library an inviting place for church members, children's preschool classes, and the community of Talladega. There are chairs and tables and rocking chairs for stopping to select a book. There is even a huge fluffy dog pillow for the children to lounge on.


All of us in the Weaver family also want to give our warmest and heartfelt thanks to Peggy King for her 30 years of service as the librarian. Peggy has been devoted to this project since the beginning. Peggy and I chatted on the phone for a good long time, and I could tell she has a strong desire to see that the Weaver Library continues WELL. I asked her what the needs are to keep the library active for future generations. She explained to me that any money that is donated into the Weaver fund through gifts is saved and used for technical purposes and for furnishings.  I then asked her how she saw the future of this special library and how anyone interested could help. Her reply was the concern that fewer books are being checked out, most likely due to the popularity of "ebooks." She foresees this library needing to make an investment in this not-so-new mode of reading in order to keep up with other libraries in the surrounding area.

Bronze plaque at the entrance 

Can I just put in a personal plug here? Making donations in honor and in memory of our dear family members would be an awesome way to let the First Baptist Church know that we feel strongly about its continued success. I for one will admit that I have not been a faithful giver to our library since the needs and struggles that I actually see in my own hometown every day tug at my heartstrings, and therefore my pursestrings. But visiting the church where my Grandmother "Bo" took me every summer to Bible school, where my great-grandparents worshipped, and my mother was baptized, where I attended every family funeral since I was old enough to sit in a pew quietly…this has opened my eyes to the legacy that Lucretia made happen. When you are outside of the library and you hear these sweet and noisy preschoolers, you cannot help but hope that they have all the resources they need that our family library can provide. 

Drawing of  the church hung above Tee's chair at the Weaver Library
Happy "Weaver Wednesday" to you all as the blessed Easter season continues! I hope you enjoyed our visit back to our library. Stay tuned for more blogs each week…. I have an idea where this blog is headed now that the weather is so beautiful. How about if we talk about family reunions? Billy and I have heard frogs outside for 5 days. (We have also heard the fox! …poor frogs!) But hearing frogs on a hot and humid night can conjure up only one tremendous family tradition memory to me……can anyone guess what that might me? 

Wednesday, April 8, 2015

"Cut and Paste" and the Weaver Library




Good morning,  Family Trails readers. If you have been on the trail from the beginning, do you remember one of the first posts about how this all got started?
I referred to daughter Rebecca who steers me on the technical side of this project. She helped me design this blog, then talked me through how to put pictures into my writing, how to add labels….basically how to use my computer to reach out and share The Scrapbook

So I've been thinking about this lately….why a "50-Something" who graduated from college, raised 3 children, taught preschoolers for a while, and who can take apart a sewing machine to fix it when it doesn't work, CANNOT  use a computer to its fullest capabilities! Why! Why! Why! Oh yeah…just remembered…I finished college in 1981. I bet that's it!

Actually, I do have 3 computer gurus that I turn to frequently to bail me out of Computer Anxiety Disorder (let's call this CAD) almost every week! My 3 children. All grown up, all extremely computer literate, all helpful, although not always completely patient with their CAD-inflicted mother. I would just like to say "Thank you " to all 3 for their guidance in helping me through this new adventure. 

So, why am I rambling on so about this? I do have a great excuse. You see, my cousin, who I call "aunt"  wrote a beautiful account of the history of The Weaver Library at the First Baptist Church in Talladega. She has written about many family stories of her childhood for her grandchildren, and this library history is part of her writing. I have wanted to write in Family Trails about the library, but I did not have all the facts straight in my head. Aunt Lucretia offered me what she wrote, including some great pictures. She sent it to me in an email attachment, and all I have to do is move it into my blog space….(the CAD is flaring up at this point!)

Daughter Rebecca suggested that I click on "Cut and Paste." How many times have my children helped me with "Cut and Paste"?At least one hundred times, and I still cannot remember the steps! Now when I was a little girl, cut and paste was my favorite activity.


 Just give me a pair of scissors and the jar of Elmer's paste, and I could be content for hours. But that was the 1960's…. this is 2015. 

So all this to say…stay tuned in each "Weaver Wednesday" because one week I will have finally  succeeded in posting about the Weaver Library.
I will not give up.
 I will not let this laptop get the best of me.
I am still teachable and willing to learn! 
I am 50-Something….hear me roar!
(Actually I never liked that Helen Reddy song, "I am woman, hear me roar", but I just had to tweak the title and use it here.)

Lora Weaver Ragsdale's secretary at the entrance to the Weaver Library
First Baptist Church
Talladega, Alabama

Friday, April 3, 2015

Happy Easter!

Happy Easter ! And God's Peace to One and All!



Wednesday, April 1, 2015

April in Talladega



In two weeks, sister Rebecca and I are going to the Spring homes tour, 

Idlewild

We have gone a few times in the past, and it is a great weekend of touring homes, gardens,  and churches, and enjoying delicious lunches and beautiful receptions. Rebecca and I are especially looking forward to an event that will be held at Heritage Hall Museum.


The April in Talladega 2015 website says that there will be a tribute to Robert Weaver. I am looking into this so I can report more about this next week. Our Weaver family lost Uncle Robert this past November, and the city of Talladega lost a very active citizen who loved his town. It should be an interesting display of items from his shoe store.


A very unique opportunity is the "Ghosts of Talladega Cemetery Tour," where big characters of Talladega's past come to life and tell their stories in Oak Hill Cemetery.


Two years ago The Ghost Tour started about 5:30…perfect timing too. After a full day of walking, you are just tired enough to let your imagination get away with you as you hear these tales.


Doesn't this look like fun? 
These reenactors were great! 



 Also on that year's schedule, the tour included a drive down Highway 21 to Plank Road Station in Winterboro for barbecue,  music, and an outdoor art festival. 




  We even stopped by the Kymulga Grist Mill and Covered Bridge on the way.


This was interesting…some ladies were decorating the bridge for a wedding that afternoon.
We were just a few hours too early. Wouldn't it have been great to see a wedding on a covered bridge?




If you are looking for a great way to enjoy the coming of Spring, check out the link, 
April in Talladega, to learn more about the homes on the tour this year, and come join us. It is great fun. Wear your walking shoes and bring your camera. Talladega is a hidden gem in this beautiful state of Alabama.