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28 minute read
By the community, for the community
Manager Ed Short
Co-op Editor Patty Singleton-Seay
ALABAMA LIVING is delivered to some 420,000 Alabama families and businesses, which are members of 22 not-for-profit, consumer-owned, locally directed and taxpaying electric cooperatives. Subscriptions are $12 a year for individuals not subscribing through participating Alabama electric cooperatives. Alabama Living (USPS 029-920) is published monthly by the Alabama Rural Electric Association of Cooperatives. Periodicals postage paid at Montgomery, Alabama, and at additional mailing office.
POSTMASTER send forms 3579 to: Alabama Living, P.O. Box 244014 Montgomery, Alabama 36124-4014.
ALABAMA RURAL ELECTRIC ASSOCIATION
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Fred Braswell
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Lenore Vickrey
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Mark Stephenson
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Jacob Johnson
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Whistling ducks Common south of the Rio Grande, black-bellied whistling ducks 28 greatly expanded their breeding range northward and eastward in recent years. Now many of them breed in the United States, including parts of Alabama.
VOL. 73 NO. 10 October 2020
FEATURES
4By the community, for the community
October is National Co-op Month. 16 Black Belt tastes “Flavors of the Black Belt” Trail will help you eat your way through the locally produced food products of Alabama’s Black Belt counties. 22 Haunted fort? A ghost story in time for Halloween: Did you know Fort Morgan on our 16 Gulf Coast is considered one of the most haunted places in Alabama?
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DEPARTMENTS 11 Spotlight 28 Outdoors 29 Fish & Game Forecast 30 Cook of the Month 38 Hardy Jackson’s Alabama
ONLINE: alabamaliving.coop
ON THE COVER
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October 2020
Covington Electric Cooperative
Board of Trustees
Gary Harris
Sec./Treas. District I - Dozier
Dr. Bill King
District II - Andalusia
W.B. Smith
Chairman District III - Brantley
C. Heflin Smith
Vice Chairman District IV - Kinston
Trey Martin
District V - Enterprise
Patricia Janasky Assistant Sec./Treas. District VI - Samson
Headquarters:
18836 US Hwy 84 Andalusia, AL 36421 334-222-4121 1-800-239-4121 Fax: 334-222-1546
Main/Enterprise Office Hours:
7:30 AM - 4:30 PM Monday - Friday
Report Power Outages
1-800-239-1193
covington.coop
By the community, for the community
By Ed Short, CEC President, CEO and General Manager
Many of our members probably think of October as the time to start planning elaborate costumes for Halloween. Others might just look forward to the temperature dropping a little. But around Covington Electric Cooperative, October means one thing: National Cooperative Month.
It’s a time when we celebrate the special role cooperatives play throughout our country and in our own community. Cooperatives are unlike any other business in that we are born out of our communities and truly answer to the members we serve.
Electric cooperatives can trace their origins to 1936, when President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the Rural Electrification Act into law. The act provided federal loans to help rural communities build their own electric systems when private power companies decided they wouldn’t profit from serving rural areas. To do that, residents of those communities came together to form the first electric cooperatives.
In 1944, our first members joined that effort by forming Covington Electric Cooperative. At the time just 14% of farm families in our current coverage area had electric service. To combat this problem, Covington Electric joined 11 other electric cooperatives throughout Alabama and northwest Florida to form Alabama Electric Cooperative, now known as PowerSouth Energy Cooperative, to generate and transmit wholesale power to members.
Today, Covington Electric provides electricity to more than 23,000 meters across 2,700 miles of line. But we have never lost sight of the fact that we serve our members first. We are invested in this area because, just like you, we live here. We share your values and we put them first rather than answering to a group of outside shareholders.
Those principles are reflected in the many ways our members benefit from their ownership in the cooperative.
Our cooperative leaders are members of this community, so they have a real understanding of what our local area needs. Among those leaders are the six members of our board of trustees who are elected by members like you. They are your direct line to the cooperative, and they give the people they represent a voice in every important decision we make.
Many of those decisions are about how to give back to the community. Covington Electric not only helps to create jobs for local families but we also invest in our community in a variety of ways, from our Bright Ideas grant program for teachers to scholarships and the Youth Tour for local students, economic development partnerships for businesses and so much more.
As a not-for-profit organization, we are not incentivized to charge you more to produce greater profits for shareholders who may have no connection to the community. We want our members to have reliable electricity at an affordable price, which is why we work to promote energy efficiency loan programs and provide free energy audits. When we do bring in more money than we need to provide that service, we return the difference to you in the form of capital credits.
But even as we never lose sight of our roots in this community, Covington Electric and our members are also part of something bigger. We are one of more than 800 distribution cooperatives across the country that work together to restore power during major outages, develop new technologies and build electric infrastructure that benefits everyone.
When someone needs us, whether it’s our own members or a neighboring electric utility, we are there to answer the call. That more than anything else is what cooperatives are all about. It’s a responsibility we are proud to undertake and the mission that drives us every day. n
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THE COOPERATIVE DIFFERENCE
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Cooperatives were created in 1936 when President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the Rural Electrification Act. Today, there are 834 distribution cooperatives and 63 generation cooperatives serving more than 42 million people across the United States.
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THE BENEFITS OF MEMBERSHIP • Cooperative members are owners of their utility, not just customers. • Cooperative leaders know the communities they serve because they are part of them. • The elected board of trustees gives members a say in the running of their cooperative. • Cooperatives give back to their communities in the form of scholarships, the Youth Tour and more. • As not-for-profit utilities, the good of the members is the first priority for cooperatives. • Cooperatives return money they don’t spend on providing service to members in the form of capital credits.
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Open membership
Membership is open to anyone ready to accept the responsibilities that come with it.
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Democratic control
Cooperatives are democratically controlled by members who actively participate.
Economic participation
Members contribute to the cooperative and share in its benefits in proportion to those transactions.
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Autonomy
Cooperatives are independent organizations and can only enter agreements with member support.
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7THE COOPERATIVE PRINCIPLES 5 Education Cooperatives educate members and representatives on the electric industry so they can make informed decisions. 6 Cooperation Cooperatives work together to improve service and overcome major outages. 7 Concern for community Cooperatives work to develop their communities with member-supported policies.
Hurricane Laura devastates south Louisiana; CEC sends help
Hurricane Laura was a category 4 storm when it devastated south Louisiana on Aug. 27. Its impact was historic and by many accounts worse than Rita back in 2005. That’s saying a lot.
When CEC and other Alabama electric co-ops received a call for help from Louisiana, we were ready to go. CEC sent its first crew to Beauregard Electric Cooperative Inc. on Aug. 29. CEC rotated crews and a second group traveled to Louisiana on Sept. 11, when the first group returned home.
As of the deadline for this publication, power had been restored to roughly 10,000 of the 43,000 BECi meters with the help of approximately 1,100 line work ers and right-of-way crews from multiple states. BECi’s power provider had restored service to half of its 22 substations at this time. BECi was expecting full resto ration to take another three weeks, but acknowledged some areas with heavy damage may have to wait longer for power to be restored.
CEC Vice President of Operations Bert Champion briefed the CEC crews on what they could expect when they arrived at BECi. “We shared information about damage assessments, progress reports, working conditions, hazards, etc.,” said Champion. “Safety is the top priority in these situations and it’s absolutely critical that everyone keep their minds on what they’re doing. They understand the importance of following every standard operating procedure, even when thousands of people are without power, because those safety protocols are what save lives. It was extremely hot in Louisiana with high humidity during this time, so the working conditions were very uncomfortable. We’re used to that in south Alabama, but there are a lot of marshy areas in the BECi service area that are not accessible with bucket trucks. These areas are known habitats for snakes and alligators that can potentially be more than a nuisance if you’re not careful. We encouraged our workers to always be observant in their surroundings and to remember the safety protocols at all times,” said Champion.
The first CEC line crew that headed to BECi included Jacob Qualls, Dustin Hinson, Kevin Anderson,
CEC Lineman Brian Lasiter works on a damaged distribution line in the Beauregard Electric Co-op service area after Hurricane Laura caused major widespread damage in south Louisiana.
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Justin Bracewell, Ronnie Dixon and Brian Lasiter. The second crew that went included John Johnson, Melvin Jeffcoat, Jeff Martin, Clark Kilcrease, Russell Mosely, Ross Parker, and Charles Williams.
“Neighbors Helping Neighbors” has always been the co-op way and the positive impact of this long-stand ing commitment is never more apparent than during the aftermath of a natural disaster. Louisiana co-ops sent several crews to assist CEC after Hurricane Opal wreaked havoc on our service area in 1995.
“When co-ops get knocked down by Mother Nature, we come together in a unified effort to rebuild the grid and restore power to the people. It’s quite remarkable and CEC is very proud to be part of this unique alli ance,” added Champion.
We can all play a part in making our interconnected world safer.
Do Your Part. #BeCyberSmart.
Visit staysafeonline.org for cybersecurity tips.
Scammers will target people any time of the year, so always be on guard
If you receive a phone call demanding immediate payment for your electric bill, hang up and call Covington Electric Cooperative. We don’t want any CEC member to be a victim of utility scams.
Scammers try to convince people they have an unpaid balance on their electric bill. They threaten to turn power off if a payment is not made immediately over the phone. Residential and business members have been targeted in these scams.
These criminals sound authentic by answering questions with confidence and persisting a payment must be made to avoid immediate disconnection of service. This can be an unnerving experience for the members who get these calls, but there are ways to protect yourself.
CEC will never demand immediate payment over the phone. We have made courtesy calls to remind members their account is past due, but members were given several options to pay their bills.
Scammers may also use email in their attempts to victimize people. Some of these emails may look legitimate with a logo, business address and phone numbers as well as your mailing information. They will request personal information such as a bank or credit card number, but don’t give anyone your information.
CEC members always have a variety of ways to pay their electric bill, including CEC drive thru-windows, online using our secure CEC website or the CEC app, CEC kiosks, by phone using our automated phone service, or pay where you shop at Dollar General, Family Dollar or CVS Pharmacy.
Awareness is the key to protecting yourself from a scam, so spread the word about this rampant criminal activity. Remember to call CEC (1-800-239-4121) to report suspicious activity relating to your electric account.
CEC Christmas Art Contest 2020
Attention CEC Members with Children in 5th and 6th grades!
Covington Electric Cooperative needs your help to make our company Christmas cards this year. We’re asking all interested fifth and sixth grade students who live on our lines to submit a design.
The winning design will be reproduced as a greeting card and mailed to hundreds of individuals and businesses throughout our region and the nation. It will also be featured on the December cover of Alabama Living magazine.
Judges will select a winning design, a first-runner up and second-runner up. These students will win cash prizes of $75 (winner), $50 (first-runner up) and $25 (second-runner up). The winner and runner-ups will have their photos taken with their designs to be featured in Alabama Living.
Entry forms are ONLY available online at https://covington.coop. Designs must be drawn on an official entry form. Entries may be dropped off or mailed to Covington Electric Co-op, Attn: Patty S. Seay, 18836 US Hwy 84, Andalusia, AL 36421 no later than Monday, Oct. 19
OFFICIAL RULES
Students must use the official CEC Christmas art entry sheet.
The art can be horizontal or vertical, but you must stay within the dotted lines.
Only use crayons or colored pencils. NO markers.
All words in the drawing must be spelled correctly.
One entry per student. Student must live on CEC lines and be in fifth or sixth grades.
Late submissions will not be considered.
Contact information must be written on entry form.
Entries must be mailed or dropped off at the main CEC office located at 18836 US Hwy 84, Andalusia, AL 36421, no later than Oct. 19.
Open To 5th and 6th Graders Only!
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Fall Foliage
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Cullman county in 2018. SUBMITTED BY Debby Boyd, Addison. Cades Cove 2019. SUBMITTED BY Charlene Coleman, Brewton.
3. Changing of the seasons. SUBMITTED BY Arthur J. Davis, Bay Minette. 4. Golden leaves at Birmingham Zoo. SUBMITTED BY KJ Sharpe, Andalusia.
Submit “Christmas vacation” photos by October 31. Winning photos will run in the December issue.
SUBMIT and WIN $10! Online: alabamaliving.coop Mail: Snapshots P.O. Box 244014 Montgomery, AL 36124
RULES: Alabama Living will pay $10 for photos that best match our theme of the month. Photos may also be published on our website at alabamaliving.coop and on our Facebook page. Alabama Living is not responsible for lost or damaged photos. Send a self-addressed stamped envelope to have photos returned.
A grateful young person in Louisiana made a hand-written thank-you note for a line crew from Marshall-DeKalb Electric Cooperative, based in Boaz.
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Alabama co-ops help others hit hard by hurricanes
Hurricane Laura made landfall Aug. 27 as a category 4 storm and caused widespread damage to western Louisiana and eastern Texas. The storm caused massive damage to electric transmission structures and caused a system-wide outage that knocked out electricity to more than 1 million people.
In true cooperative fashion, Alabama’s rural electric cooperatives made arrangements even before Laura made landfall to help restore power after the storm. More than 175 men – mostly linemen, but also mechanics and warehousemen – from 14 Alabama cooperatives drove to Louisiana with needed equipment as soon as the storm passed and set to work.
The Alabama co-ops traveled to Beauregard Electric Cooperative, Inc. (BECi) based in DeRidder, Louisiana, to join more than 1,000 linemen to restore power to the co-op. All 43,000 members were without power; the co-op had more than 5,000 broken poles on its system.
Safety is always the top priority in any restoration effort, so several members of the safety staff of the Alabama Rural Electric Association (AREA) went to Louisiana to help the crews work safe and stay healthy. (AREA publishes Alabama Living.)
For the crews, the 16-hour days are long, the weather is hot and humid and the work is difficult. But restoring electricity to people who have not had it for weeks lifts the crews’ spirits, as do the expressions of gratitude – sometimes hand-written cards, or snacks or water – they receive from thankful residents.
The crews were still working in Louisiana when Hurricane Sally formed and strengthened in the Gulf of Mexico, with a path that directly impacted Mississippi and Alabama. The Alabama cooperatives brought their crews back to the state to be ready to respond to outages caused by Sally. BECi completely understood the need for the crews to prepare to help their own members and was grateful for their assistance.
As this issue was going to press, co-ops in southwest Alabama had requested help as Sally was set to make landfall, and several crews coming back from Louisiana volunteered to help those co-ops before heading back to their homes in other parts of the state. We’ll have more on the response to Hurricane Sally in the November issue of Alabama Living.
Whereville, AL
Identify and place this Alabama landmark and you could win $25! Winner is chosen at random from all correct entries. Multiple entries from the same person will be disqualified. Send your answer by Oct. 7 with your name, address and the name of your rural electric cooperative. The winner and answer will be announced in the November issue.
Submit by email: whereville@alabamaliving.coop, or by mail: Whereville, P.O. Box 244014, Montgomery, AL 36124.
Contribute your own photo for an upcoming issue! Send a photo of an interesting or unusual landmark in Alabama, which must be accessible to the public. A reader whose photo is chosen will also win $25.
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September’s answer: The Waldo Covered Bridge, built in 1858, is 115 feet long and located in the Waldo community in Talladega County. Also known as the Riddle Mill covered bridge, it is the second-oldest covered bridge in Alabama and was constructed to allow commercial and private traffic across Talladega Creek. (Information from Encyclopedia of Alabama) Photo submitted by Tammy Riley of Southern Pine EC. The randomly drawn correct guess winner is Donna Hill Grice of Arab EC.
Take us along!
We’ve enjoyed seeing photos from our readers on their travels with Alabama Living! Please send us a photo of you with a copy of the magazine on your travels to: mytravels@alabamaliving.coop. Please include your name, hometown and electric cooperative, and the location of your photo. We’ll draw a winner for the $25 prize each month.
Brothers David and Samuel LoDuca took their copy to the United States Military Academy at West Point, where Samuel reported to USMA as a new cadet in the class of 2024! Their parents, Paul and Summer LoDuca, are members of Baldwin EMC. Vicky Hollenbeck of Wetumpka visited the Kansas City Zoo with her favorite magazine. She is a member of Central Alabama Electric Cooperative.
Letters to the editor
E-mail us at: letters@alabamaliving.coop or write us at: Letters to the editor P.O. Box 244014 Montgomery, AL 36124
Required reading
Your article in the September issue (“Getting a second opinion,” Hardy Jackson’s Alabama) was one of my favorites! The last two sentences were powerful!
“Though Methodism is fine for me, I always like to get a second opinion.”
Of such an attitude, religious toleration is born.
This article should be required reading in every college (and high school) history class.
You are an especially gifted writer and I look forward to your articles each month.
Thank you for sharing your God-given talent with us!
Jackie Campbell
Somerville
Was amazed to see that in the latest issue not one single individual was pictured wearing a mask. So sorry to see you do not support the curbing of COVID-19 in our great state. I am a 77- year-old customer and was deeply distressed that you show such a callous attitude towards this serious virus that has in some way affected all the citizens of Alabama.
Roy Gamble
Flat Rock
Ed. note: Many of the photos in the September issue were taken before the statewide mask directive was in place and indeed, before the COVID-19 pandemic was known. We at Alabama Living comply with all directives of the Governor regarding the pandemic and agree with you that we must work together to curb the spread of the virus in our state.
Disputes football stats
The article by Brad Bradford (August 2020) had Tua Taguvailoa being the number 1 efficiency rating and Joe Burrow being number 2. It couldn’t be further from the truth. Only one player in NCAA history barely beat Joe with almost an 78% efficiency and Tua was not even close.
Tua did not receive the Heisman, Unitas Gold Arm, Davey O’Brien, Lombard, Maxwell, Walter Camp, Manning and AP National Player of the year awards, Joe Burrow did!
Yes, I’m an LSU alum living here in Alabama and I have followed LSU since I was 5 in 1953. And OBTW, your prediction will be way off the mark!
Raymond G. Dougherty
Decatur
Distressed by photos
Brad Bradford responds:
Using the football database final rankings as of January 13, 2020, my article stated passing efficiency: Tua 206.9, Burrow 202, Jones 186.8. Burrow WAS the best in the SEC. That was not up for debate. It had to do with Mac Jones' rating and returning as the starter. Burrow threw for 5,671 yards- 1st by far; threw for 60 touchdowns/1st by far, completion percentage of 76.3/1st.
Passing efficiency takes into account completion percentage, touchdowns thrown, interceptions, yards per completion, touchdown percentage. If the article had stated anything except passing efficiency, I would send a retraction. I stand by the above stats.
Find the hidden dingbat!
More than 600 of our readers found the hidden pencil on the red placemat on the table in the photo on Page 17 in the September issue. Apparently the fresh ly sharpened pencil inspired some of our younger readers who may have been look ing forward to using their own pencils when they got back to their school class rooms. Robert Barrentine of Wiregrass EC wrote us that as soon as he got the mail, “the first pair of hands on your Alabama Living was my granddaughter’s, Katie Von cile Adams. I laughed, for in three minutes she found the pencil.” Kathy Hickman of Greenville, a member of Pioneer EC, had help from her granddaughters as well: “It was so fun letting them find it.”
We got a few more poems, including this one from our prize winner, Ian Shreve of Hartselle, a member of Joe Wheeler EMC. Ian, who is 9 years old, even set his poem, written in couplets, to music! “If you have a piano and a person who can read music (like myself) then you can listen to it,” he wrote. When I had seen The magazine, I found the pencil (Without a stencil!)
As I have now seen On page seventeen.
This pencil is new, Used just a few. I had such great fun Searching for this one!
As I have now seen On page seventeen.
Congratulations, Ian! We appreciate all the letters we get from our readers of all ages! This month, we’re hiding a candy corn. Good luck! The deadline is Oct. 7.
By email:
dingbat@alabamaliving.com
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By mail:
Find the Dingbat Alabama Living PO Box 244014 Montgomery, AL 36124
Mayberry town barber
Beloved character lives on, thanks to tribute artist
By Jeremy Henderson
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Allan Newsome pretends to give a haircut to a young fan held by David Browning, a now-retired Barney Fife impersonator. PHOTO BY HOBART JONES
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All of a sudden Allan Newsome’s wife, Jan, will point at him: community of “The Andy Griffith Show” aficionados large enough “There — you’re doing it right now!” to spawn multiple annual fan events, a dozen or more books, a
He doesn’t hear it. In his mind, when he gets back from popular Bible study curriculum (born in Huntsville’s Twickenham a Mayberry Days event and it’s time to hang up the coat and put Church of Christ), and even an upcoming quasi-documentary of away the scissors, that’s it. He’s back to being regular old Allan sorts (which Newsome stars in). He is, to reference a Season Two Newsome, a 54-year-old Huntsville man with a mustache that he’s classic, a keeper of the flame for fellow fans, having maintained had since high school, an IT guy at Redstone Arsenal who hap practically every major Griffith fan site for more than 20 years, pens to run a couple of personal including WeaversDepartment websites on the side, not a barber Store.com, an online emporium shop. (named for Aunt Bea’s favorite
But he’s outnumbered. His son place to shop) of Griffith kitsch Adam swears he hears it, too. and collectibles that is currently
They’ll all be at the dinner table pushing a line of “The Andy Grif or on the couch and Allan won’t fith Show”-themed coffee and baeven be talking about the show. con. Jan handles the orders. It might just be a quick comment And, of course, there’s his pod about the weather, or something cast, “Two Chairs No Waiting,” he saw on the news that he can’t another Season Two reference. wait to forget, and Jan will stop He’ll be recording the 586th ep him and say, “Now, come on, Al isode tonight. Should be a good lan. That sounded just like him.” one. There’s been a bombshell
He’ll laugh. Sometimes he’ll development in the mystery of argue. Hey, if it’s true — if he oc “Nice Dress Nellie,” the nickname casionally forgets that he’s not on Newsome visits with Betty Lynn, who played Barney Fife’s girlfriend, of a recurring show extra. A fan stage and lapses back into charac Thelma Lou, on “The Andy Griffith Show.” PHOTO BY HOBART JONES claims to have a solid lead on the ter — then, well, that just comes woman’s last name. That may not with the territory. That’s what sound quite as thrilling as when nearly three decades as the world’s premiere (and only, as far as he Allan got the guy in Indiana to isolate and reverse the audio of the knows) Floyd the Barber tribute artist will do to a man. rewinding tape recorder in Season One’s “Mayberry on Record,”
Allan Newsome is one of the top powerbrokers in a thriving but it’s still pretty sensational stuff.
But his greatest contribution to the culture, by far, is Floyd Law- son, the Mayberry town barber.
In the beginning
It all started in 1994. He was at Mule Day in Gordo, Alabama, and a group went out to eat, David Browning included. Until his recent retirement from the impersonation circuit, Browning was the king of Griffith tribute artists. His spot-on Barney Fife was a must-have at Mayberry meetups for 30 years.
So, they’re all just waiting for a table, quoting the show to each other, doing voices and everything like always, and Allan does Floyd’s “Bobby Gribble hates Emma Larch” routine from the “Case of the Punch in the Nose” episode. He nailed it. Browning loved it.
Not long after that, Allan and Jan were at the Mayberry Squad Car Rendezvous in Bradford, Ohio, a town that boasts a full-sized replica of Wally’s Filling Station. And, of course, Browning was there.
“He kept getting me to come over and talk to people like Floyd,” Allan says. “Then he took me aside and said ‘Hey, you want to dress up and come to Mount Airy as Floyd for Mayberry Days?’”
Mayberry Days is the big one. It’s held every year in Andy Grif fith’s hometown of Mount Airy, North Carolina, which has capitalized on the show’s phenomenal syndication success by billing itself as the real-life Mayberry. The Snappy Lunch diner down - town? It’s actually mentioned in an episode. And of course, so is Mount Pilot, Mayberry’s slightly larger sister city. Only, on an ac - tual map, it’s Pilot Mountain, southeast of Mount Airy by 11 miles.
Griffith pilgrims can visit the Andy Griffith Museum, tour the town in a vintage squad car, pose in a replica courthouse, and yes, have their bangs trimmed at Floyd’s Barbershop. The town’s offi - cial website is VisitMayberrry.com, and you don’t have to scroll far to find a photo of Allan Newsome.
He thought dressing up for that event would be a one-time deal. Instead, he’s become a fixture. You don’t come back from Mayber - ry Days without a selfie with Allan Newsome.
Allan got hooked on “The Andy Griffith Show” while a student at Auburn in the late 1980s. He’d seen it before heading off to col - lege, obviously, but something about the simplicity of it, and the clockwork regularity — 5 p.m., 10 p.m. — seemed tailor-made for an electrical engineering student trying to keep sane between ex - ams.
“We’d need a break from studying and you’d just pop some popcorn and sit down and watch ‘The Andy Griffith Show,’” Allan says. “It would just relieve some of the stress that you had from just trying to do all that dadgum homework.”
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Reminders of home
Plus, it reminded him of home. He’s from Henegar, a DeKalb County town of 3,000 people or so. Aunt Bea’s friends — Clara Edwards and Myrtle? They might as well have been ladies from his church. And he can’t watch an Ernest T. Bass episode without thinking of this one farmer down the road he’d see as a kid.
Allan’s dad, Wayne, laughs at that one.
“Yeah,” he says, “that’s a pretty fair assessment.”
Wayne and his wife Ann still live in Henegar, and, yes, they now hear traces of Floyd in their son’s voice, too. The first time Wayne met Allan’s alter ego was at a Huntsville Stars baseball game years back. Allan and David Browning were both there, in character, as part of the team’s perennial “Mayberry Night” promotion.
“I said ‘I can’t believe I sent him to Auburn to do that,’” Wayne laughs. “It just didn’t seem like him. He’s always been a matter-offact guy, but to see him as Floyd, it’s like a totally different person.
But he loves it.” that’s what he’s gathered from watching the show.
And the more Allan stuck with, the more it Wayne may not know that the new kid in town made sense. What he said about seeing Henegar framed Opie for busting the streetlight with in Mayberry, and vice versa? Wayne sees it, too. an apple rather than a rock — that would have He still sees it. knocked him out of the Mayberry Days trivia
“Allan grew up in that type of town. It’s still preliminaries in a heartbeat, I told him — but a Mayberry town,” he says. “No one locks their he’s definitely a fan. doors. Everybody’s friendly. Everybody knows “Oh yeah, it still comes on, it’s a great show,” he everybody. And, yeah, we definitely have a few says. “Mayberry is just the place you want to be.” characters around here.” Exactly, Allan says. That’s the reason the show If we’re talking Mayberry parallels, Wayne ac tually might be one himself. Newsome “trims” a fan’s hair for a photo at a Mayberry fan event. endures. It’s not just because it’s good. It’s because it’s an escape to simpler times. In 2020, that’s
For starters, he was police commissioner for a PHOTOS BY HOBART JONES something that grows more valuable by the day. short while in the ’80s. Almost by the hour.
“We had more than one police car, though,” he says. “We had But it sure is hard on his ties. two or three.” “A lot of times we don’t even call him on doing the voice any
He also even used to own Stone’s Department Store, which more, but that’s the other thing he does now,” Jan says. “He fiddles might as well have been a Weaver’s come to life, he says. At least with his ties all the time, just like Floyd.”
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Floyd (Allan Newsome) and Barney (David Browning) ride in a Mayberry fan event parade.