You Know, Don’t You

Who would have thought that a letter written by my great grandfather 186 years ago would have survived.  And yet, there it was, in a drawer at the Virginia State Library in Richmond.  Bo and Mark, two of my sons, and I had gone there hunting for our roots.

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The letter

William Hume Stith, who was seven years old, had written a one-page letter, dated June 15, 1830, to his mother.  He had written in ink, perhaps with a quill.

“My Pa says I must write to you and in obedience to his orders I now sit down to do so,” William told his mother, whose maiden name was Rebecca Harris. He said he missed her and his brother, John, and he made a promise:

“I will endeavour [sic] to be as good as I can but you Know [sic] what little boys like me are.”

Coming Monday: More

 

 

 

They Say Guns Don’t Kill People

George Mobley’s common-law wife stabbed him in the heart with a butcher knife.  Almost killed him.

[I don’t know how she spelled her name, but George pronounced it, “Louise-ee.”]

The Mobleys had four or five children.  They lived in a slum in Charlotte, in a shotgun house that was torn down years ago to make room for the parking lot next to the stadium where the Carolina Panthers play football.  My Dad’s syrup plant was nearby, on Graham Street, and that’s how I knew George. He worked for Dad for years and I worked for Dad in the summers, starting when I was in junior high.

George was a good worker and a good guy when he wasn’t drinking.

After he got well and came back to work he and I were sitting around at lunchtime one day, eating our sandwiches, and I ask him:

“George, why did Louise-ee stab you?”

And he said, “Well, I had her down on the floor choking her and she said, ‘George, if you don’t let me up right now, when I get up I’m gonna “stub” you.’  I didn’t let her up right then. And when she got up, she stubbed me.”

George’s throat had been cut years ago — he had a nasty looking scar around his neck– and I asked him about that too.

“Louise-ee cut my throat,” he said.

“Had you been whipping up on her?”

George said, yes, he had, that he had been drunk at the time. He said she was quick with a knife.

I thought I might as well ask him about the crease in the back of his skull while I was at it.

“Did Louise-ee do that too?” I asked, pointing to the crease.

“She chopped me with a hatchet,” he said.

Finally, Louise-ee killed George.   She shot him.

That’s why I never bought the NRA line, that guns don’t kill people.  George had been stabbed, slashed, and chopped — and lived — but a gun killed George Mobley.

NOTE: I was in George and Louise-ee’s house one time, when Dad sent me over there to get him.  First thing I noticed was a big, expensive looking TV, way better than our TV. I asked George how much he had paid for it.

“Five dollars and two moves,” George replied.

Coming Friday: You Know, Don’t You