Granny’s Journey
Granny came into the world
shortly after the assassination of President Lincoln,
grew up during post-Civil War reconstruction,
and lived a long life in Southern Appalachia.
She witnessed the invention of radio, telephone,
automobiles, airplanes and television.
She lived through two World Wars, Korea,
and early U.S. involvement in Vietnam.
She mourned the assassination of three U.S. presidents,
the loss of four sons and her husband.
She saw astronauts go into space and orbit the earth.
While raising a family, she baked, canned, cooked,
farmed, gardened, washed clothes on a washboard,
weaved on an old-fashion loom,
and road side-saddle, all while puffing her
Pamplin, Virginia clay pipe along the journey.
She lived during a time when neighbors looked
after neighbors and were willing to help.
I knew this strong mountain woman
and still ring her 1889 dinner bell,
she was my maternal great-grandmother.
There were many rugged female pioneers who helped build this nation, they were not famous, but without them we would have never made the journey!
4 thoughts on "Granny’s Journey"
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Beautiful! I feel I know her, too. You captured so much of her life–her joys, experiences, times of strife, her character. Love the images of her “puffing her / Pamplin, Virginia clay pipe” and you still ringing her dinner bell. And, yes–all those “regular” people who were truly extraordinary.
This is a wonderful tribute.
Thank you for the comments, she was a strong woman.
especially love how she rode “road side-saddle, all while puffing her / Pamplin, Virginia clay pipe along the journey”
Thank you. She passed just short of her 98th birthday and was smoking her clay pipe almost until the end.