Saturday, May 3, 2025

Recollections From Generations Past (John Wesley Adkins - 4)

 


(Transcript continues)

INTERVIEWER: Did you all go to church?

JOHN: Oh, yes.

INTERVIEWER: Alright, where was the church?

JOHN: The church was right down by the school.

INTERVIEWER:  Alright, right down. Okay, by the school.

JOHN: It was there now but before it was on the curve right up by Mr. Hark Townsend. You know Tom Sturgis?

INTERVIEWER: Yes.

JOHN: Well his wife’s homestead was right up just before you get to the church, right where the cemetery was. They I don’t know. The church, I think whilst we was away. I think they did away with the church. I don’t know whether it burnt down or whether they tore it down or what, but I think they moved it. And they moved it up to Newark across the railroad.

INTERVIEWER: What kind of church was it, a Methodist church?

JOHN: Yeah.

INTERVIEWER: Okay. Was it an all-day affair on Sundays? I know a lot of people I’ve talked to, Baptists especially. I think they went in the morning, they stayed all day and then they stayed at night some too on Sundays.

JOHN: No. They went Sunday morning and then they would come home about 11:30, 12:00 and then. But they had class meeting, experience meeting. Every Tuesday night was prayer meeting and then they had class meeting, experience meeting. You’d get up and testify tell them how (inaudible speech) your soul was doing and all that and then they had prayer meeting and my father and all I used to go. But you see I was, I mean we was. We wasn’t. We wasn’t not even what you called a wealthy, that wealthy. I didn’t even have shoes to wear.  I used to have to wear my sister’s, my half-sister’s shoes. But I would go. I would go and Mr. Harry Bowen he had a store. And so one day he says, alright everybody called colored old people. So he says bring the kids out, he says I want to clear the attic out with some shoes. So we took us all out there, we went up the stairs and just about everybody picked out what they wanted to wear and I picked out above everything else a pair of women’s sharp-toed (inaudible speech) shoes. But they fitted (laughter) and he said no (inaudible speech). So he says if he wants them let him have them. So I wore em, I took em and carried em home. I was the oldest one out of the family that would go to church with my father. Every time he went to church I would go and I used to sit there and watch them in prayer meeting. I don’t know whether you don’t know what an old-time prayer meeting is?

INTERVIEWER: No I really don’t. I may have read about one but …

JOHN: Well it’s, you see, they sing and they clap their hands and they motion and they throw their heads and I used to say they’re gonna bust their heads you know (laughter) like that but they never did. They never did hit their heads. Then after a while one would pray. They would pray then somebody would start another hymn and they’d sing about three pieces like that and pray and then they’d go around and shake hands with everybody and then they’d have a group time with the Lord. If they took up a collection, I can’t remember because that was very poor collection. It wasn’t a thing of money at the churches in them days. It wasn’t a matter of a whole lot of money. It was matter of spiritual and friendship you know there wasn’t.

INTERVIEWER: Okay was there a minister?

JOHN: Yes, they had a minister.

INTERVIEWER: Do you remember who it was?

JOHN: Well I can remember. I can remember Reverend Stuart. We had a preacher named Reverend Stuart. Had one name Reverend Jolley and I can’t remember.

INTERVIEWER: And as far as did they, did they live in Newark or did they travel around to different churches?

JOHN: No they only tended to …

INTERVIEWER: To Newark.

JOHN: They only the church. You see (inaudible speech) one Cedar Chapel and one would be Williams Chapel. I don’t know the difference yet. I never figured it out. I never tried to really. But they didn’t. They didn’t visit or they didn’t preach, each one preached.

INTERVIEWER: To their own place?

JOHN: To their own place mostly.

INTERVIEWER: Now as far as ministers today get all sorts of salaries. Would they be helped out by their congregation by given things to eat and things from the garden and things like that or did they make their own way?

JOHN: No. They got a salary but the salary that they got it was probably about … I don’t know, it was probably very small.

INTERVIEWER: They had a very strong spiritual commitment then?

JOHN: Yes. Yes, and there were a lot of em. Reverend Jolley he was one preacher that (inaudible words) He would go right in the fields with the rest of the people and scratch potatoes.

INTERVIEWER: Okay so he worked in addition to preaching?

JOHN: Yes. Yes, and then Sunday morning he’d be up in the pulpit you could see mud on his shoes uh dirt where his shoes was dirty.

INTERVIEWER: That’s good too. He wasn’t setting himself above?

JOHN: No. No.

(Continues next Saturday here at The Pocomoke Public Eye.)

Friday, May 2, 2025

Million $$$ Lottery Winner-

 (WBOC)


Delmar Man Wins $1 Million on Salisbury 

Scratch-Off Ticket


(View news story:)

Flags to wave in Crisfield!

 (WMDT)


Crisfield celebrating patriotism, civic pride through “Show Your Colors” project


CRISFIELD, Md. – If you’re looking to celebrate unity, patriotism and civic pride, look no further than Crisfield.

(View news story:)

Crisfield celebrating patriotism, civic pride through "Show Your Colors" project - 47abc

Thursday, May 1, 2025

Hospitals merge-

 


Exciting news for our community! As of today, May 1, 2025, TidalHealth and Atlantic General Hospital have officially joined forces to bring you even better care, closer to home. This partnership means more access to specialists, advanced treatments, and the latest technology — all within a stronger, more connected healthcare network. While we grow together, one thing stays the same: our commitment to delivering the exceptional care you trust.

Two trusted providers. One shared vision for a healthier tomorrow. We’re better together!

Learn more:

Better Together | TidalHealth

Monday, April 28, 2025

FEDS shut down CLIMATE-SMART farming conservation program.

     (This emblem is now history)

The Chesapeake Bay Journal 

The U.S. Department of Agriculture in April announced the termination of its $3 billion “climate smart” program, a grantmaking initiative that was supporting hundreds of millions of dollars in conservation work in the Chesapeake Bay watershed.

(View article:)

End of USDA ‘climate smart’ program could have big impact on area conservation work - Maryland Matters

Mark your calendar-

 



Sunday, April 27, 2025

Time Machine: 100 years ago this week in Pocomoke's newspaper; 1987, 1938, 1967, 1935.

 

(Further portion of article is not included here.)



(Editorial)



October, 1987 (Editorial)
Salisbury Daily Times


September, 1938
Salisbury Times



*December, 1967

Salisbury Times

*February, 1935
Worcester Democrat

         tkforppe@yahoo.com

Saturday, April 26, 2025

Recollections From Generations Past (John Wesley Adkins - 3)

 

(Transcript continues)

INTERVIEWER: Did you have chores to do? You had responsibilities on the farm?

JOHN: Yes indeed.

INTERVIEWER: You know I think this is something important for children to hear these things today, many of them have no responsibilities.

JOHN: They don’t, they don't have, their family does their chores. But we had chores to do. We had to get the wood out. We had to keep the yard raked and we had to. My father chopped the wood in the summer. He got the wood ready in the summertime, and he would do it in the woods. We would go down there and cut the trees down, saw em up and he’d burst the wood up and then in the wintertime all we would do is take the mules in the cart and go down there and bring the wood up and dump it up in the yard. But our chores was to see that we made all the fires. We had to get up and make all the fires in the morning. We had to get the light wood. We had to go in the woods and get what they call laddered knots. You know pine tree, the limbs after the tree decays it puts out a knot and that’s pine. And we used to have to go into the woods and gather them up and then we would take em home and put em on the chopping block split em up and make kindling out of em. In the morning we could take and light a match (Inaudible speech) and start your fire.

INTERVIEWER: Now where did you start school? Where did you go to school?

JOHN: Well I didn’t go to school much. I went to school only to Newark but you see we had work to do on the farm and my father was like most of those old timers, was a little bit funny about school. They thought it was (inaudible speech) for kids to being to school sitting doing nothing when they had work for them to be doing.

INTERVIEWER: Well he had a point then. (Laughter.)

JOHN: So all this time that all the horses had to be taken care of the cows and the horses was all the manure had to be cleaned out. Spread out on the farm and then re-filled up with clean pine shats. We used to rake pine shats in the woods for days and days and haul it and dump it up. That was done every year. That’s where the manure came from it wasn’t much fertilizer, very little fertilizer. (Audio not clear) is we didn’t raise many potatoes we tried it. I think about one year, and if you use stable manure for white potatoes you get pocky potatoes. You have a pock on them. You have to use fertilizer.

INTERVIEWER: Okay so they bought fertilizer for potatoes?

JOHN: Yes.

INTERVIEWER: Okay when you did go to school was there a black or colored school in Newark or did you go?

JOHN: There was an all-colored school. There was a colored school and a white school but we only went to a colored school.

INTERVIEWER: Where was the colored school?

JOHN: You go right straight after you get to Newark you turn left you go right across (inaudible speech) the store we was talking about you go right across the railroad right down by Masons cannery.

INTERVIEWER: Yes, alright I’m following you.

JOHN: On that street down there the school house was right down there on the left.

INTERVIEWER: Alright. It’s still there, isn’t it?

JOHN: Yes. The old building is still there I think.

INTERVIEWER: Yes. It is, I remember last year seeing that. (Audio not clear)

NTERVIEWER: Well now let me ask you. Going to the store and everything, the black people went as well as the white people to the store? You know, on Saturday nights and everything.

JOHN: Oh yes. Yes, mostly the farmers, not the women. The women wouldn’t go, not even the colored women wouldn’t go. It would be, you take like Mr. Hark Townsend and he had a brother. I forget his name. Mr. Hark Townsend and there was another man. They just liked to hear the boys sing and the boys used to go out there. And there was a place up in Ironshire that they made home brew and they’d get a car load of em. Two or three car loads of em and they’d go up there and they’d buy em this brew. I think for about 15 cents a bottle. The man made it himself and then they’d get to singing and then they had a big joyful time. Big joyful time.

(Continues next Saturday here at The Pocomoke Public Eye.)

Thursday, April 24, 2025

New Superintendent- first female for the Worcester position; Pocomoke High background.

 


Newark, MD, April 24, 2025– At a special Board meeting Thursday, the Worcester County Board of Education announced its appointment of Dr. Annette Wallace as the next Superintendent of Schools for Worcester County pending contract negotiations.

(View full announcement:)

Handy in Crisfield for sale-

 (WBOC)

CRISFIELD, MD - After operating in the city for over 120 years, Handy Seafood has listed its processing plant in Crisfield up for sale.

(View news story:)

Handy Seafood Puts Crisfield Processing Plant up for Sale | Latest News | wboc.com

Pocomoke Business Person of the Year-

 



EASTERN SHORE POST/JANET BERNOSKY

Jessmin Duryea, of Cypress Roots Brewing Co., (third from left) was selected the 2024 Business Person of the Year by the Pocomoke Area Chamber of Commerce. With him, from left, are chamber President Jamie Bailey, state Sen. Mary Beth Carozza, and Lisa Taylor, executive director of the chamber. 

Wednesday, April 23, 2025

Some pictures are keepers. No doubt about this one.

 

                                                                                                                 Steve Green/Bayside Gazette
BONNETS OF ALL STYLES 
Last Saturday’s Berlin Spring Celebration kicked off with a bonnet parade featuring children of all ages and hats of all styles and creativity. 

HAZMAT units called to Pocomoke fuel leak Tuesday evening.





(WBOC)

POCOMOKE CITY, MD - The City of Pocomoke says a fuel leak from a docked vessel prompted emergency teams and a hazmat team to be dispatched to the Pocomoke River on Tuesday night.

(View news story:)

Emergency Crews Respond to Fuel Leak on the Pocomoke River | Latest News | wboc.com