Rickus. Rick Campbell

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Rickus - Rick Campbell

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bears her name.

      Along about this time, June bought a 1950 Ford. We would go to the Highway 29 drive-in theater about twice a month, Saturday nights. One night, we saw The Wizard of Oz. Another night, they had Gene Autry and his horse, “Champion,” there in person, on top of the concession stand.

      In 1951, I had my tenth birthday. I also saw two other movie stars. We grammar school kids marched up town to see William Holden, who looked like a mannequin, in a clothing store, and Gloria Grahame. She had on a green dress and red hair. I wanted her to be my school teacher.

      That summer, we went to Battle Creek, Michigan, to visit June’s sister, Frances, and her husband, Lefty Lankford. We toured the Post cereal plant, and they gave us a lot of samples. After a week, we went back home. June was taking flying lessons under his GI Bill. One day, he took me and Jerry up in a yellow Piper Cub plane. We flew over our house, and I saw my bike in the yard. I knew I would join the Air Force one day. Later that year, Mama sold the café, and June was building us a house on Stevenson Drive.

      1952 was a busy year. After my eleventh birthday on February 2, I joined Boy Scout Troop 34. Our meetings were held each Tuesday night at seven o’clock in an authentic log cabin behind the mill pond. The last week of August, before school starts, the scouts go to Myrtle Beach State Park and camp out in pup tents. This trip would be the highlight of my summer for the next five years. One day, I came home from school and saw this antenna attached to the side of our house. June had bought us a TV. By this time, Greenville, South Carolina, had a TV station. We got a good clear reception. One day, our school class was invited to someone’s house to watch the coronation of Queen Elizabeth. Boy, was I glad when that was over. However, I don’t remember any commercials during all that. But I may have been asleep. No, really, the coronation was a beautiful and historical event. I’m proud that we were fortunate enough to see it on live TV.

      Hank Williams died New Year’s Day 1953. It was a sad time for the music world and to millions of his fans. Years later, when I had my own band, a man asked if I knew “I Saw the Light” by Hank Williams. I sang it for him. Another reason that Hank’s songs and legacy will live on for a long, long time. Pro wrestling was a big thing on TV in 1953. Grandma Ellen even watched it.

      At a scout meeting one night, they asked for volunteers to be at the gym at two o’clock Saturday. The mill was going to sponsor a wrestling event. Around two o’clock, there came two station wagons, a man and woman in each one, and in the back, there was all kinds of equipment. We helped carry all that stuff up to the gym’s basketball court. When we were finished, there sat a wrestling ring. The event was to start at seven. By six-thirty, the gym was packed. I think they expected to see someone famous, like Mr. Moto or Gorgeous George. However, in the first match were the two men that drove the station wagons. In the second match were the two women. In the main event were all four, in a tag team match. Afterward, we helped them load up, then they left. That night, I learned an important lesson. “Wrestling is fake.”

      In December, we celebrated Christmas in our new house on Stevenson Drive.

      In 1955, I acquired a valid South Carolina driver’s license at the age of fourteen. The last week of November every year, Aunt Frances and Uncle Lefty would come down on a two-week combination of thanksgiving and Christmas vacation. Lefty liked to go quail hunting down here.

      One day, Aunt Frances took me to the city hall, in their new 1955 Plymouth, to try for my driver’s license. After I passed the written test, Highway Patrolman Broadwell took me out for the driving test. Just as I pulled away from the curb, a car passed us real fast.

      Broadwell said, “Catch that car!”

      I caught it.

      He said, “Pull up beside it.”

      I did.

      He told the driver to pull over. He did.

      Broadwell got out and gave him a ticket. Broadwell got back in the car and said, “Go back to city hall, you got your license.”

      I went from “scared” to “relaxed.”

      As Barney Fife would say, “It’s a jungle out there, help to catch criminals and lawbreakers.” The summer of 1956, I went to Camp Old Indian with the scouts for a week, earning more merit and badges toward “eagle scout.” Later, of course, we went to Myrtle Beach. That summer was also the first time I heard Elvis. He changed music as I knew it. I began to learn rock ’n’ roll.

      After my sixteenth birthday in February 1957, I got my social security card and a part-time job at the Big Mill, working on Saturdays from 6:00 a.m. ’til 12:00 noon. My take-home pay was $6.33.

      I worked there for over a year. Two years later (I was in the Air Force), I received a vacation check from the mill for .63 cents. I still have the letter in a frame. Also, in February, I was very proud to achieve my goal of becoming an eagle scout. All of my pins, badges, and awards are now on display in the Ruth Drake Museum. That summer would also be the last time I went to Myrtle Beach with the scouts. That fall, I started school in the eleventh grade.

      One day, a school mate invited everyone to her birthday party at her house on Saturday night. So I borrowed June’s car, picked up my cousin, Tommy, and drove five miles out Blue Ridge Ave. Ext. to Jenny’s house. Her parents greeted us at the door. We played some games, had a couple of dances, ate cake and ice cream, then jenny opened her presents. The party was over at nine o’clock, so Tommy and I headed home.

      I had not gone two miles, when I noticed a light. I looked in the rearview mirror; nothing behind me. But I kept seeing a light. I said, “Tommy, where’s that light coming from?” Finally, he put his head out the window and looked up. “G——dam there it is, pull over!” First time ever heard him cuss.

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