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Memories of WWII in Roebuck Springs
By Beverly Donalson Lewis
July 2005
It was the summer of 1943. I had finished my freshman year at Ramsey, we had a baby boy to carry on the family name, and summer to enjoy time with my little sister. Mama had to look for a place to move, as the man we rented from needed the house. She found a place in Roebuck Springs and Daddy flew in to sign the papers from Sedalia, Missouri.
It proved an ideal place once Mama fenced it in to keep my little sister from running away. We shared the drive with Professor and Mrs. Hall. He was principal at Woodlawn Grammer, Kennedy and Minnie Holman schools. The roads were not paved, only surfaced, with trees along the sides giving shade to walkers. Mama fell in love with the red bud that bloomed along the curve by the Gottleib's Drive.
Gas rationing was in full swing so one had to plan one's errands, and think only of necessary trips. Neighbors were great to offer rides, or pick you up along Valley Road or 4th Avenue as the street car turned at 85th Street to return to Birmingham.
By the time you walked to the Roebuck Country Club in the summer heat you counted it a refreshing treat to take a dip in that icy spring-fed pool. Pelham McDonald, a Woodlawn High student who lived at 514 North Drive, delivered our newspaper on horseback.
Mama had a bag swing put up, and carpenters built what they referred to as a "Flying Jenny," a huge post put in the ground with a large spike driven through a board that two people could use as a see-saw, or go around in a circle. The bag swing was a favorite even though you had to wait "'til the cat died," meaning until the swing actually came to a stand still with no effort on the part of the swinger. Mama had a glider on the screened-in porch. I spent many hours keeping my baby brother content while reading Jane Erye, Wuthering Heights, and The Scarlett Letter, as well as other historical novels. There was one about Spain from which I drew the name Donna to name a German Shepherd puppy my mother's brother Bill had given me. If I finished my tasks, and the children were napping, Mama released me to explore all those hills and valleys to my heart's content. At that time there were no houses beyond Rutherford Circle or Ridge Road.
In the wee hours of the morning on June 6th, 1944, Ethel and Bob Ware, long-time friends of my mother called her and said they had just heard Daddy's name mentioned on the radio- D-DAY HAD BEGUN!
Mama came and woke me, and we sat glued to my grandmother's old Atwater-Kent radio. The news announcement came on again. A young reporter from the Atlanta newspaper was standing behind Daddy and said, "Lt. Col. John M. Donalson in command, from Birmingham, Alabama, flying a C-47, towing gliders filled with paratroopers leading the D-Day Air Force invasion." Even when the newspaper reports came out, we were still in shock. Fred Myers, who lived at 427 Exeter Drive suggested that we could all gather at Wilson Chapel to offer prayers for our men and their safe return. I kept my sister and brother while Mama attended.
We kept a large map on the breakfast room wall so we could follow our allies' victories and heartbreak tragedies from the news reports. These were broadcast by well-known commentators like Edward R. Morrow. We counted days between V-mail from our loved ones overseas, sending them news from home in return, while Mama tried to make the worst of times better for us at 511 Valley Road in Roebuck Springs.
Beverly Donalson Lewis
(Mrs. Donald C. Lewis)
Trussville, AL
July 2005
Recollections of Roebuck Springs
by Virginia Hamilton
April 2, 1989
One summer afternoon in 1925, Birmingham News
columnist and author, James Saxton Childers, was writing a book
in a back room of Wilson Chapel. A tall man on a big black horse
followed by a hound rode up to the window and asked if he might
come in. "I just rode over from y home, " the visitor
told Childers, "to welcome you to Roebuck and ask if there
is anything I can do for you-- such as lending you a horse."
He and his brother-- the rider explained-- were feeding three horses
and would be happy to have Childers ride with them. A few days later,
Childers, on a little mare named Dixie, joined his new acquaintance
for a horseback ride through the woods and trails of Roebuck Springs.
Childers' visitor was my father, McClellan
Van der Veer -- known to his friends as "Ted." He
had just moved to Birmingham from New York City and he was to make
his home in Roebuck until his death forty years later.
My own early memories are of the Roebuck Springs of
the Twenties and Thirties. At first my mother, father, and I lived
at 8727 4th Avenue South-- in the white house with columns built
by Dr. J.C. DuBose and later owned by Mrs. Gladys Molloy. In those
days, the house had no columns and contained-- for the use of our
extended family, often numbering ten people-- only one bathroom.
Later my grandparents moved to 433 Exeter Drive, maybe because that
house had two bathrooms. My aunt, Elizabeth
Van der Veer, remembers those houses well. She was the champion
of our Sunday afternoon ping-pong contests on the wide porch at
Exeter Drive.
Eventually my parents built a small frame house at
630 Ridge Road heated only by a large coal stove in the living room.
My father loved that property with its view of the hills and valleys:
having served in the Navy in the First World War, he named his home
"Topside." At first we had no close neighbors except for
trees.
Those who lived here in that long ago time considered
that we lived "in the country." The opportunity to keep
horse and hounds, to ride horseback around this sparsely populated,
almost rural area, to possum hunt in the woods, had attracted my
uncle, Stewart
Van der Veer, and he persuaded my grandparents to settle in
Roebuck rather than in fashionable newer suburbs "over the
mountain." If one went horseback riding or for a Sunday afternoon
stroll in the hills back of our house, it would not be unusual for
a couple of rough-looking characters to cross our paths and look
us over. These moonshiners checked every intruder to be sure that
the revenuers were not on the trail of their bootleg stills hidden
back among the trees.
These hills also produced iron ore; when we passed
open mineheads, I would ask to look inside.But I was never allowed
to step inside the mine opening; if a female, even a very young
one, should enter a mine, the miners would not reenter that mine
believing that disaster would ensue.
Our family had not been the first to be attracted
by the rustic charm of Roebuck Springs. The Ross Smiths-- who owned
Wilson Chapel-- lived in a rambling one-story white brick house
just across Fourth Avenue, in a beautiful natural setting of plants
and flowers. (Now, unfortunately, part of interstate 59). In my
memory, Ross and Jessie Smith were an imposing couple-- he handsome
and courtly, she presiding graciously over a silver tea service;
to me, they epitomized the expression, "to the manor born."
Just west of here, on Fourth Avenue, on a rise above
the lake, live the Frye family; Mr. Frye was a banker and a frugal
Scotsman; he believed in the motto "a penny saved" and
often saved the nickel carfare on the yellow streetcars #38 or #25
by walking from his home in Roebuck to his office in downtown Birmingham.
I remember other old-time residents like the Hugh
Morrows, who lived in a stucco house next door to the Ross Smiths;
the George Strange family across the street; the Walter Moore and
Armistead families whose large frame house and its surrounding farm
stretched from Fourth Avenue to the edge of Roebuck Golf Course
in an area known today as South 88th Street containing about 25
houses.
But my main recollections are of Roebuck Springs in
the 1930's and 1940's as a kind of artist colony. I say artist,
meaning writers, musicians, and booklovers, most of them attracted
to Roebuck by my father's enthusiasm. Just up the road from Wilson
Chapel, across from Jim and Pat Abbott, lived Dorsey
Whittington, the first conductor of the Birmingham Symphony
Orchestra, and his pianist wife, Frances Whittington. Their living
room was large enough to hold the two grand pianos so they could
practice at home for their duo-piano concerts.
John Temple Graves II, whose column appeared each
morning on the from page of the Birmingham Age-Herald, married
Rose Smith, daughter of Ross and Jessie Smith, and lived for a time
with her parents across Fourth Avenue fro Wilson Chapel.
Douglas Hunt, who taught English at Birmingham-Southern
before he joined father's editorial staff on the Birmingham News,
and his wife, Mary, built a house on Ridgetop Circle overlooking
the city. Here they raised champion boxers and Mary wrote novels.
Another writer, Bill Hays, and his wife Mabel, lived next door to
us in the house where Alex and Charlotte Wellman later moved. Bill
wrote short stories for the pulp magazines about adventures on the
railroads. When he sold a story, Bill was elated; when his stories
were rejected as they often were, Bill was desolate.
Also on Ridge Road near our house, the owner of the
Studio Bookshop-- Birmingham's earliest bookstore located where
Smith and Hardwick is today-- M.B.V. Gottlieb, an immigrant from
Russia, build a large wooden house, a replica of a Russian country
dacha, and filled it with furniture, paintings, icons, and other
memorabilia of his homeland. I was particularly attracted to a large
wooden nest doll that opened to reveal a dozen smaller dolls concealed
inside. I also dimly remember the terrible night when Gottie's wooden
house burned to the ground, all the Russian furnishings and the
nest doll consumed in the flames. Later Gottie married and he and
his wife, Mitzi, and their son, Paul, lived on Valley Road below
Harry Horner's big house.
Retired people also built on our hill; Harry Austin,
who has survived the San Francisco earthquake of 1906, and his imposing
wife whom he and everybody else called "the Duchess,"
bought the house built by Claude Morton.
Mr. and Mrs. Will Thomas, who had come from Ohio to
retire in a warmer climate, built a house on the bluff next door
to us. Mr. Thomas was a cautious builder; my father said his stucco
house would never succumb to earthquake or fire and would stand
for eternity. So far, this house, later owned by the accountant
Francis Latady, is still standing.
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