More Growing Up Country

It’s Just Pinched

Brother Dave and I were hooking up a turning plow, the first plow in the field in the spring. I was 8 or 9, he was 10 or 11, so he was driving.  I was about to hook the tractor’s lift arms to the plow and I was motioning to him, “Down, down, down, Ooooweeee!”

My left thumb had been caught between the tractor lift arm and the plow and mangled. I screamed, pulled my bloody thumb free, and took off running for the house.

Dave hopped off the tractor and was right behind me, yelling, “It’s just pinched, Pat, it’s just pinched!”

Never has a pinch left such a scar.

The Way It Was

We rarely went into town, into Gadsden, AL, when we were growing up on the farm in the late 1940s.  In town is where you’d see the segregation signs. In the lobby of Sears & Roebuck there were two water fountains with signs over them. One fountain was for “White,” and one was for “Colored,” the signs said.

When I was a boy I never thought much about it one way or the other. It was just the way it was.

Dodging Work

Picking cotton is real job. Not like newspapering, not like a lot of so-called jobs. Dave and I didn’t pick a lot of cotton, but we picked enough.

Cotton boll
Cotton boll

It was hot work and hard on your back.  And if you weren’t real careful when you pulled the cotton out of the boll the needles on top would slice your fingers open. Heck, you got cut even if you were careful.

We were picking for a sharecropper who worked my Dad’s land, in shouting distance of our house.  One one of us – the way I remember it, it was Dave — said:

“I think I hear Momma calling us.”

And then I said, “I do too.”

And we ran for the house.

NOTE: That’s the only time I can remember my brother running away from work.  He’s 79 now, and he’s still working — two jobs.

Coming Monday: Setting Goals

The Rule Maker

I resigned from The Charlotte News in 1969 to go to work for WAYS radio in Charlotte. I didn’t want to be radio news reporter but John Kilgo, the WAYS news director, had offered me a company car — I was driving a rusty Chevrolet Corvair, the one I bought for $1 and a whole lot more money.

this is a 1986 file photo of perry morgan, former publisher of the virginian-pilot and the ledger-star. photo was taken in march, l986.
This is a 1986 photo of Perry Morgan, courtesy of The Virginian-Pilot and The Ledger-Star, where Morgan was publisher.

So I went to see Perry Morgan, editor of The News, and resigned.

“You not hitting me up for more money, are you?” Morgan said to me.

“No sir,” I replied.

“You’re really quitting. You’re going to be a radioman.”

“Yes sir,” I said.

“Boy, you’re a fool!” Morgan told me. “You should be trying to hit me up for more money.”

I told him, I said “Perry, I know the rules. The maximum raise here is $10 a year. It would be years before you could pay me as much money as WAYS is going to pay me now.”

And Morgan replied, “I made the rules. I can change the rules.”

Postscript:  He did change the rules, at least for me. And my radio career was over before it had begun.

John "Killer" Kilgo
John “Killer” Kilgo

NOTE:  Kilgo, the guy who tried to get me to go to work for WAYS radio, had been a reporter at The News  when I graduated college and went to work there full time in June 1966. He was, by far, the most dominant  breaking news reporter in Charlotte and, it turns out, the best breaking news reporter I ever worked with or against in a 42 year career.  Most of his stories, it seemed like, were published on the front page.

Kilgo’s nickname was “Killer.”  I don’t know where that moniker came from but it was well deserved.  He did not take prisoners.

When I went to work at The News “Killer” was told to take me around my beat — I was assigned to cover county government, the District and Superior Courts and the Sheriff’s Department — and introduce me, help me get off to a good start.  He had covered that beat and knew everyone. He took me around, introduced me, said the usual nice things and then, right in front of me, he would say, “I want you to help this boy out when you can but if you got something good, call me.”

Like I said, “Killer” did not take prisoners.

Coming Friday: More Growing Up Country