Saturday, March 22, 2025

Recollections from generations past. (Rodney Bounds- 5)

 


(Rodney Bounds 1892 - 1990)

TRANSCRIPT FROM 1979 INTERVIEW (CONTINUED)

INTERVIEWER: I read an article, and I was talking about that to the ladies, that

 there was a brick kiln in the area of Basketswitch. Have you ever heard of

 that? They said that was the reason that the railroad siding was put in there

 at Basketswitch, to handle the bricks that were being produced by the brick

 kiln at Basketswitch, and it was an article that came out in the Sunday Sun

 Magazine, a number of years ago. And I’d never heard of a brick kiln there.

RODNEY: I never did either. There was a, after the church was done away

 with. Walt Bowen had a steam mill there. And he got killed. He got wound up

 in the one of the pulleys had, the way I understood it, I didn’t see it, but you

 know there’s a key that fits in there and the key fit in there and it was loose

 and I think he drove some kind of wedge into it, but it stuck out a little bit

 pass the axel or whatever, shaft, he walked by and it caught into his clothes.

 It was winter time, and had on a lot of loose clothes, right smart clothes

 wound him around down and it beat him to death, right there. For several

 years after that, before this factory was put there. I can’t think of their names,

 now they did it, I know them. But they were from around Ocean City, I think.


INTERVIEWER: I know their name but I can’t remember it. Was there a lot of

 woods here in this area and the Basketswitch area? Lets say if you went up

 to  Queponco, if you went out this way, has this been lumbered? That’s what

 I’m trying to say.

RODNEY: Well we had a station right down here. Wesley Station. And a calf

 pen where you would bring calves and put them in. They would stop there

 and ship them. That’s been a long time ago. I never brought none out there

 but I carried them to Newark, and the freight would come along before that

 morning and at Basketswitch, and down here they had a place where they

 would load cars, a switch. Load three cars or something like it. There was

 three mine prop outfits to load them with, as windlass you might say. The

 poles settled and braced and then a wench or a shaft went from it, with a

 block and pull, and you hook on your load, start your mules out and pull

 them around and load your car with. I never loaded any down here, but I did

 at Basketswitch.


INTERVIEWER: And they had that at Basketswitch and another one at Wesley Station?

RODNEY: Yes. And at Ironshire it was the same way. I loaded props at

 Ironshire. Had a little piece of woods up there, between Ironshire and Berlin,

 and that was the closest place to load it. Mine props used to be good

 business. And piling and they got so that they were cutting them props in 9

 foot lengths, hauling them right to the mines, Trader wouldn’t buy any more,

 load his own car then, so that kinda knocked that in the head. That was back

 there in the 30s. Gradually the poling business got out too. Anybody that

 wanted a load of piling they had trucks to haul them and so it done away with

 all their railroad stuff.


INTERVIEWER: Now Wesley Station is right down this road? Yes this is

 Cedartown Road. It’s just right down here beside the railroad track. Right/

RODNEY: Where the bushes had growed up and so forth. The fellow bought

 the lot and built a home on it, just last year. That’s where the mine props was.

 If I remember right the pens that loaded the calves was on the other side of

 the railroad. They used to have an extra wheel like that, you know, and all day

 long all the little stations, if the farmers wanted to ship calves that’s the only

 way he had to get rid of them, was to carry them out, put them on the train.


Continues next Saturday here at The Pocomoke Public Eye.


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