My Mountain Mansion Memories

MY MOUNTAIN MANSION MEMORIES
of Edmond and Eliza Sparks Ellington





My grandparents lived in Walkertown when I was born,
in a little cabin owned by the L & N Railroad, as I've 
been told. My grandpa worked cleaning the coal camp 
for the railroad, and that's where my dad learned to play
the banjo. The colored folks would sing and play the blues
and sing old negro spirituals as they worked. 
My dad loved every minute of it. 
 
 


As I remember, there was a huge rock on the side of the mountain and you knew you were almost there when you got to the rock. A big snowball tree , as we called it grew in front of the house. There was a barnyard where grandpa kept the the hogs, and a "meat" house where they hung the meat to "cure" after the hog was slaughtered. I can see it yet, slabs of pork preserved with salt, hanging from big hooks.
They had a cow and there was always fresh milk. I was fascinated to watch as they strained the milk from bucket to bucket, straining out all the impurities, and then separating the cream from the milk to use to churn butter.
The water came from a big well in the back of the house. A bucket was lowered down into the well by a rope and then pulled up by the rope. We had a large "dipper" that was used to drink from. There was nothing like a cold drink of water from the well on a hot day. The bucket was then carried inside the house and every one drank from the same dipper. That would be unheard of in todays world.
Then there was the big garden with all kinds of vegetables that were either canned or stored in the root celler. This was a place under the floor where it was cool and all the root vegetables were stored there. The root vegetables were those that grew under the ground. There was no lack of homemade jam and jelly.
In the spring my grandma would order baby chicks from the catalogue. She couldn't wait for them to come. They not only had chickens to eat but plenty of fresh country eggs.
On wash day the clothes would be boiled over a fire in a cast iron kettle outdoors. They werre stirred with a stick to get them clean. The laundry soap was homemade "lye" soap. The clothes line was a rope strung between trees and the "wearing " clothes were hung there to dry. The rags and old work clothes were hung either on the fence or laid in the yard. The ironing was doone with a heavy flat iron that was heated over the kitchen stove.
Saturday evening we "laid" the table for morning. The plates, cups and saucers and milk glasses were turned upside down on the table and covered with a cloth to keep them dust free till the next meal. No more work than necessary was done on Sunday so the meals for the whole day were prepared at one time. There was no such thing as electricity there in those days . In the kitchen stood a long wooden table and and a cast iron stove with a warmer on top to keep the food warm.
My dad would go outdoors and grab a chicken, hold it, and wring it's neck and then bring it inside where a kettle of boiling water was waiting. The chicken was plopped in the water and we "plucked" all the feathers off and cleaned it good. What we had to eat depended on what kind of chicken we had. If it was a fryer, we had fried chicken, fried potatoes, homemade biscuits and gravy and always a big dessert. Sometimes it was chicken and dumplin's, with green beans and potatoes and such. The table was always spread fit for a king.
Our home was always filled with music wherever we lived and grandpa's was no exception to the ruld. At the end of one room, stood an old pipe organ. Where it came from or how they got it up the mountainside, I do not know. My cousins had no idea either. It was just always there. What I do know is that after dinner when we all gathered round that old organ and my dad began to play, you could hear us all singing all over the mountainside and people would come out of their homes to stand and listen.
My grandpa, "Pee Pee" as we called him, was a preacher. He never learned to read or write. However, when he felt the call of God on his life too preach the Gospel, God performed a miracle on him and he was able with no formal teaching or training to read the Bible. He could never read cursive or handwriting but he could read print. Because of the hard work and time consuming duties he was never able to get a formal education. To my knowledge he never learned to write. But oh! what times we had in that llittle cabin.
As the sun began to set we would start getting ready for bed, because there was no electricity, the only light came from coal oil lanterns. We went to bed early to conserve coal oil. We slept on homemade feather beds. When all us children were bedded down, "MeeMee" , "Pee Pee" and Daddy would take turns reading the Bible, then we children said our prayers and the lantern was blown out.
Even though they had to get up before dawn, I guess my fondest memories were of my grandparents prayers. We would fall asleep as they prayed and if for some reason we woke before morning they would still be praying. We just felt safe and sheltered there, knowing God was with us.
I asked "MeeMee" once why she prayed so much. Her answer was this. "I've got all you young'ins to get saved before the Lord comes back". That was good enough for me.
How I long just one more time to cross that old swinging bridge that I used to fear so much and climb that mountain and find it all again.
Time and progress has made many changes and I'm told the old homepleace no longer stands, but it will forever stand in my heart as a monument.
There were no fancy trimmings, no luxuries of life, just hard work and dirt poor, yet richer than any king or kingdom. Rich in love, peace, contentment, happiness and joy beyond measure. No; money could never buy my hidden treasures. They are forever sealed in my heart, passed on to my sons and hopefully passed on to some way weary traveler along life's way. Lay not up for yourseslves treasures on earth, but lay up treasures in Heaven.
These are my memories of our "little mansion on the mountain", while I am here awaiting that Heavenly Mansion where my loved ones wait for me.
In memory of Edmond and Eliza Sparks Ellington by Rita Day
Page designed by Lynda Combs Gipson