Showing posts with label "Horace Greeley McGraw". Show all posts
Showing posts with label "Horace Greeley McGraw". Show all posts

Sunday, July 19, 2020

The Church in the Wildwood by Herk McGraw

THE CHURCH IN THE WILDWOOD

OLD CHURCH
POST OFFICE, TIPPLE

There is a church in the valley by the wildwood
No lovelier spot in the dale
No place so dear to my childhood
As the little brown church in the vale
Oh, come, come, come, come

John McGraw (Beige) had two sons Harrison (Pole) and Horace Greeley (Uncle Dad) who still lived in the McGraw hollow. HG married Pearl McGinnis and Harrison married her sister Pauline (Pliney) McGinnis. A third son, Okey (Oak), lived on the hill overlooking the school and the Post Office. We lived three tenths of a mile down the road from the school.

In the late 19th Century Pearl and Pauline decided there should be a church in the community. At their insistence Uncle Dad built a small building for it about half way between his house and Milam High School– now John McGraw School. The small congregation called it a Non-Conformist Chapel. Pauline and Pearl being, sugar sweet and fiery Scot-Irish lasses, “suggested” the congregation become a Methodist Denomination. It did! (1)

I remember the membership being thirty-two to thirty-six with an average attendance of fifteen to twenty. It had three windows on each side with a small platform over each for oil lamps for night meetings. A large oil lantern with a big globe on it was used near the pulpit. Grandpa Fud and Grandma Mary kept all of them. The little church was the center of our worship community.

Sunday Services usually consisted of a short program with some singing before Sunday School classes. Singing was always a great time for me. Janet Meredith, or Mom (Nora) would hum a note and start the song. We would sing the first stanza only. “Church in the Wildwood” was my favorite.

One Sunday Uncle Leon and I were standing beside each other. I was singing away with gusto when Uncle Leon looked down and said, “Herford your book is up side down.” Made no difference to me I kept right on singing. All of the congregation singing sounded so beautiful and perfect. (I would like to have a recording of that little congregation singing now. I bet present day choir directors would cover their ears.)

Every so often we had a visiting Preacher deliver a Sermon following Sunday School. He (no women preachers then) would always have an altar call. It seemed longer than the sermon. (I went to the altar more times than a dog has fleas).

After the service the Preacher was invited to have dinner with Fud and Mary's family. That was a fun time because all us grandchildren would be there with our parents.

The playing was a highlight but the dinner was special and interesting. The women served the men and boys over twelve at the first table, us children at the second, (left-overs from the first table), and the women last (all the left-overs). Well, that didn't last long with eight screaming cranky bellies. The women decided to give us a plate, send us to the front porch, and call the men in. It satisfied mine and those other seven bellies. When the meal was over it was back to the front porch for the Preacher, Grandpa and the dads, and playing for us.

Once a year or when the older folks felt it was necessary, a revival would be held and there would be standing room only. The service was not over until Grandma (Sister Mary) had prayed.

There would always be a group of young “men” standing around outside waiting to walk the girls home. They would be talking and smoking and what ever else they did. One night I was standing at a back window with Uncle Leon and one of the “good ole boys” blew smoke in the window.

Across the road from the little church was an open field with sloped sides that was used for outdoor activities in warm weather. I remember one particular Easter while us young ones were in Sunday School the old folks hid Easter eggs in that field and when our classes were over we were turned loose to find them. When all were found Grandpa Fud would divide the eggs evenly among us younger ones. It was a hoot.



THE NEW CHURCH
POST OFFICE, MCGRAWS

Come to the church in the wildwood
Oh, come to the church in the dale
No place is so dear to my childhood
As the little WHITE church in the vale

Many years later I came to visit my grandparents and while I was there Uncle Darrell came by with a special cinder block for Grandpa to look at. They discussed its use for a new church building. I was disappointed of course. I liked the little church building and could not vision a new one.

The plans and building of the new church was hatched by Uncle Dad and Grandpa Fud. They got a group from the church community and raised the money for the building to be built. Many of the church community and the community at large jumped in and built the building and the congregation built the Church. It is a neat building with indoor plumbing, a kitchen, Sunday School rooms, a beautiful sanctuary and a bell tower but no steeple.


Daniel “Mack” McGraw oversaw the block work. (1)
Wm. Harrison “Harry” McGraw oversaw the wood work and finished out the pulpit area.

Several years later my little family, Dot and Cathi, came to visit Grandma Mary and Grandpa Fud, and we attended Sunday School in the new Church. There was a discussion regarding the strength of prayer and God's response. Grandpa Fud got up and began to witness how the congregation had prayed for a new location and how God had come through and they were able to buy the lot behind John McGraw School.

Time for contention to arise! As usual, in most any conversation objection to any statement is called for. Wilda McGraw said, “Fud, you know I told you that y'all could have the lot beside Ed Kerns' Store but you wouldn't have it. Grandpa said, “Judge not or ye shall be judged,” and sat down.

Many, many years later at a family gathering it was decided that Fud and Gertie's families would buy and install a steeple on the bell tower. I believe Shelburn “Doc” Brooks oversaw the purchase and installment of the steeple.


In 1992 Harry McGraw's wife Verna McGraw and daughter Jennifer McGraw-Beckette made the pulpit paraments in Harry's honor. They were consecrated by Pastor Bill Brooks on July 19, 1992. (4)


A couple years ago KennyMcGraw and Adam Hicks painted the steeple for the first time. (3)

That's my story and I'm sticking to it.
Herk McGraw

Want to hear The Carter Family sing The Church in the Wildwood? CLICK HERE

Acknowledgments

(1) I wish to think Darrell V. McGraw, Jr. for his assistance and contribution.
(2) Darrell V. and Julia Z. McGraw, The John McGraw Family, 1975
(3) Kenny McGraw
(4) Patty McGraw

(Admin-Photographs courtesy of Patty McGraw and Brian McGraw


Saturday, September 3, 2016

Today in McGraw History - September 3, 1953


Today in McGraw History. . .

At the reunion, I told a few people how it was H.G. "Dad" McGraw's habit to stop in at the newspapers to visit when business would find him in Beckley. On many occasions, the editors thought the visits were interesting enough to share with their readers. This is the second in the series of columns that we've found. We will have a few more of these columns to share in the months to come. . .

(This one is hard to read, so we have transcribed it below in case you can't make it out.)


The  current hot spell is the hottest any of the old timers can remember around here.  

Horace Greeley McGraw was in from McGraws yesterday, and, as is his custom when he comes to town, he stopped at the Herald office to exchange greetings.

We asked him if there had ever been a hotter spell in his recollection.  

"No, I can not remember when it was this hot around here.  But we have had worse droughts. The 1930 drought was worse, that year it rained hardly at all from early spring until fall.  There was another bad drought in 1894."

Mr. McGraw set the column straight on the slight controversy which occurred a few months ago over the naming of Hotchkiss, small Raleigh County community, and Maben, in adjoining Wyoming.  

These two places were named for Major Jed Hotchkiss and John B. Maben, he said-- and he ought to know, for both of these gentleman, accompanied by Uncle Dan Gunnoe, came to his house in 1893 and stayed all night.  

They were land agents, and "never surveyed a foot of the Virginian or C & O right-of-way," says Mr. McGraw.

They bought up and immense acreage for the Western Pocahontas Land Co.- 24,113 acres to be exact.  The land company, of course, was a subsidiary of the C & O.  This tract was part of the old Mandeville survey of 90,000 acres.  

Maben and Hotchkiss sold most of the remainder of the big survey to W.M. Ritter in 1965.  Mr. Ritter, a very smart businessman, paid $30.00 an acre, less $80,000.00 for rights-of-way to get out the lumber.  It did not require nearly $80,000.00 for this purpose, however, and when he later sold the land to some Cleveland financiers, he received $80.00 an acre at the time reserving the timber for his own.  

In 1900 occurred the big court battle between the Virginian and C & O over which was to get the right of way at Jenny Gap near Lester.  Mr. McGraw went down to Oceana to hear the case tried, and he has never forgotten the courtroom scene.

Judge Joseph Sanders was sitting on the bench.  He appeared to be strongly inclined to the C & O's side.  Judge Nelson Campbell, a Monroe Countian, was one of the C & O 's attorneys in the case.  He was a giant of a man, with a long flowing beard almost to his waist, and weighed over 300 pounds.  

After all the evidence had been taken, Mr. McGraw recalls, Judge Campbell stood up and faced the court, saying in a thunderous voice; "Judge Sanders, your decision may be against us in this case- but you have no right to rule against us.  No court in this land has a right to give a decision against us."

Judge Sanders did rule in favor of the C & O, but the State Supreme Court reversed the decision, just has Campbell had said.

Mr. McGraw recalled that it was a quirk of fate that placed Judge Sanders on the bench.  Judges were nominated by convention then, and the delegates from Wyoming, Raleigh, Mercer, and McDowell and possibly other counties then in that judicial district, had assembled at Bramwell.  The year was 1895.  When the first vote was taken, Raleigh County's James H. "Fud" McGinnis and a McDowell man received a tie vote.  Some of the Raleigh delegates had not yet arrived, and a party of horsemen was quickly dispatched to Raleigh to round up the errant delegates. In the mean time, however, Joseph Sanders, who had just been defeated for Mayor of Bluefield, sent word to the convention that he would be receptive to the Republican judicial nomination. And he was nominated before the Raleigh delegates arrived to give the nomination to Fud McGinnis.  

---

Of note to me in this article is James H. "Fud" McGinnis. We have our own James H. "Fud" McGraw who is the son of William Harrison "Pole" McGraw. "Fud" was the progenitor of Paul, Darrell V. (Sr), and Kenton McGraw among others. 




Tuesday, August 18, 2015

Wednesday, August 12, 2015

Today in McGraw History: August 12 1956

Today in McGraw History. . .

At the reunion, I told a few people how it was H.G. "Dad" McGraw's habit to stop in at the newspapers to visit when business would find him in Beckley. On many occasions, the editors thought the visits were interesting enough to share with their readers. We will have a few more of these columns to share in the months to come.

If you were at the reunion, you may remember Herk McGraw talking about H.G.'s tobacco and how everybody wanted it. The second to last paragraph has H.G. talking about that very thing!


It's interesting that John named his son after Horace Greeley, as well as a dog, a horse and an ox!

We still haven't been able to verify the story about why or when John changed the family name, and this is the story that has been passed down, but since his son relayed it as such it could be true. We continue to research this and a great many other things and as we learn new information we will continue to share it with you here and on our web-site!



Tuesday, July 29, 2014

New From Our Website - Genealogy: Horace Greeley "Dad" McGraw

Now available on the ABOUT US section of our website, a Family Group Sheet with genealogical information for Horace Greley (H.G.) "Dad" and his wife, Amelia Pearl McGinnis. Fun fact: H.G's Brother Pole was married to Pearl's sister Paulina.


We already have charts on the site for Napper, Collins, Pole, Mayhorn and Gus. There are more to come, but if you think we've made a mistake, or have more information that you think we should add, email us at contactus@mcgrawreunionwv.com.

Christmas is coming! If you're interested in ordering one of our exclusive McGraw shirt designs, you can find all of the information over on our web-site at www.mcgrawreunionwv.com/shirts.html.