THROUGH
MOUNTAIN MISTS
Early Settlers of Union
County, Georgia
Their
Descendants...Their Stories...Their Achievements
Lifting the
Mists of History on Their Way of Life
By: Ethelene Dyer Jones
Reunion, anyone?
Summer seems to
be family reunion time. The choice of time probably goes back to when
most of the work on the farm was done by plowing a team of mules,
cultivating the crops and hoeing and weeding whatever was planted in
the fields until it was "laid by" and left to grow and mature until
harvest time came in the fall. Families thought about gathering and
catching up on news, rejoicing over babies born since the previous
year's reunion, and remembering beloved family members that had passed
away within the year. It was called reunion. The union had never been
broken, just delayed by hard work and lack
of communication (unless, of course, some like the Martins and the Coys of legend who continually had a feud
going).
Annual reunion
was just a time to be united again, as the term implies. Reunion, anyone?
Call me a
reunion person! Whether the event is a family reunion, a high school
class reunion, a college class reunion, a church homecoming, or a
birthday gathering, I enjoy planning for, implementing and being in the
midst of the activity.
Saturday, July
15, 2006 will be a big day in the year
for Dyer-Souther and related families as they gather for the annual
reunion that brings many from Georgia,
surrounding states, and far-flung places.
One year, we
had a young man all the way from France. He
practiced his English on those attending, and if anyone had an inkling
of the French language, they embarrassed themselves by trying to speak
French to him. He was kind, however, and did not laugh at our attempts
to be bilingual. And yes, he was our kin, too. One of our male cousins
had gone to France and
married there. The child of that union was visiting relatives in north Georgia just
at the time of the annual reunion. What better way to be "broken in" to
the culture of his American kin than the annual family reunion?
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At
last year's reunion, Theodore "Ted" Thomas, great, great, great
grandson of William Jesse Souther Jr. holds the old double yoke for
oxen used when his ancestor moved from Old Fort, N.C., to Choestoe,
Ga., prior to 1848 and built the Souther Mill on Choestoe. The yoke was
restored by Mr. Thomas and given by a grandson of the miller, Mr. John
Paul Souther of Gainesville.
The yoke was a special presentation to the Union
County
Historical
Museum
by Mr. Souther.
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We're changing
our pattern this year. Instead of the third Sunday in July, we're
meeting the third Saturday in July, the 15th.
Since 1999, the
Dyer-Souther Heritage Association has used the beautiful Conference Center
facilities at North Georgia Technical College,
Blairsville Campus. This year we're changing location to Choestoe Baptist Church's
new Family Life Center
building. Choestoe is the locale where our ancestors settled in the
1830's.
We welcome kin
as well as interested visitors to the reunion. Registration starts at 11:00 a.m. and
the buffet meal will be served at 12:00.
Reunions always mean good food. People tend to bring their "best"
dishes to spread on tables well laden with delectable food. The French
writer Moliere in the seventeenth century
penned these words: "One should eat to live, and not live to eat." Had
he known about our Southern family reunions, he would have known that
once a year we "live to eat" Roma Sue's chicken dumplings, chocolate
pies that our late Aunt Northa taught some
of us to make, or caramel pies like our late Aunt Pauline taught her
granddaughter to make. Reunion, anyone? The
food invites. And there's something about eating with your kin. Sharing
food seems to strengthen family ties.
We've had the
request that there be "less programmed" time and more time for
visitation and sharing family genealogy. We will have a program in
which we recognize first-time attendees, the family that traveled
farthest, the youngest, the oldest, and everyone over the age of 90. We
will, in solemn remembrance, have a memorial service for those who have
passed on since our last reunion. We will take care of necessary
business recommended by the Board of Trustees. But mainly, we will
visit, be happy, enjoy being together. Reunion, anyone?
A special
program at 3:00
p.m. at this year's reunion will be
to honor Micajah Clark Dyer (1822-1891),
inventor who received a registered patent in 1874 for his "Apparatus
for Navigating the Air." Those gathered for the reunion and others who
will come for the special event will observe the unveiling of the
historic sign to name a portion of Georgia Highway 180 the Micajah
Clark Dyer Parkway.
Georgia Highway
180 winds from Highway 129 up toward Bald Mountain, the
highest peak in Georgia. The
road overlooks the area of Rattlesnake Mountain
where Clark Dyer worked on and launched his flying apparatus. He was a
young lad when his grandfather, Elisha
Dyer Jr. settled the land in the early 1830s. The family was in Union County when
it was formed in 1832.
Reunions are
for looking back and appreciating the legacy our forebears left to us.
For many years
members of the DyerSouther clan heard the
legend of "Clark Dyer and his flying machine." It was passed down,
generation to generation. When the official patent was found, along
with detailed engineering instructions on the building and operation of
the "Apparatus for Navigating the Air," we of this generation marveled
that this was not a legend but it actually did happen. As the legend
holds, Clark Dyer looked at the birds and wondered, "Why can't I fly?"
And he set to work to make an airship for that very purpose.
Reunion, anyone? We
invite you to come on Saturday, July 15, and help us celebrate a legend
made reality. Maybe you will gain inspiration to delve into your own
family's treasured stories and find that they are more than legend.
c2006 by Ethelene Dyer Jones; published July 13, 2006 in The Union
Sentinel, Blairsville, GA. Reprinted by permission. All rights
reserved.
[Ethelene
Dyer Jones is a retired educator, freelance writer, poet, and historian.
She may be reached at e-mail edj0513@windstream.net;
phone 478-453-8751; or mail 1708
Cedarwood Road,
Milledgeville,
GA
31061-2411.]
Updated June 19, 2018
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