Georgia Mountain Laurel April 21

Page 62

Ed West Connects People and Property by John Shivers

F

or long-time Rabun County Realtor Ed West, his love affair with land began as a small child growing up in Sautee-Nacoochee in White County. His father, O.B. West, Jr. was a farmer, and Ed’s upbringing was typical of a farm child’s life. His mother Merle was a Copeland before she married O.B. with ancestral roots in the Darnell family. These families were deeply planted in Betty’s Creek in northern Rabun County. Ed says it always felt like home, because of the kinfolks who lived there. “We were always visiting Betty’s Creek.” Little did he dream that someday he would be one of the senior real estate professionals in the same county where his mother graduated from Rabun Gap-Nacoochee School, and from the school’s junior college. She taught in a one-room school in the Germany Community, and after her marriage, was a teacher in Sautee. While teaching at the Sautee school Mrs. West taught all three of her sons. Ed and his brothers were taught the value of a good education older brother Benton graduating from Georgia Tech, younger brother John attending Emory University and Ed a graduate of the University of Georgia. The boys worked alongside their parents. Ed, however, with the exception of a couple of small detours, is the only one who never totally lost his connection with land. Benton went on to become an airline pilot and John was an orthodontist. Ed graduated from UGA in the 1966 and invested two years of his life in the U.S. Army. He served as a Infantry Army Officer in Southeast Asia. After mustering out, he went to work in sales for a business machine company in Albany, Georgia. That’s when his career path and his life-long love for the land converged. Even then, he couldn’t see the big picture. “I’ve always had an appreciation for the land,” he says. “Being raised on a farm probably had a lot to do with that.” During those years Ed had been systematically buying up small parcels of raw land. “It was dirt cheap back then, and you could usually get owner financing.” But buying land caused him to want to learn more about the many legal aspects of property acquisition. To scratch that itch, he enrolled in a real estate class. At that time, he was just seeking knowledge, which he thought would give him more expertise in buying property, and he would be able to feel more confident in his dealings. At the conclusion of that course, another career path began to emerge. The impetus was the insistence of his real estate instructor, that he should take the state board exam to become a licensed real estate agent. “He said even if I never used it professionally, the license would be a good thing to have.” It turned out to be one of several good pieces of advice Ed received down through the years, and one that he has never regretted heeding. His life was about to come full circle. The late Ed Poss, who pioneered licensed real estate sales in Rabun County, encouraged the newly-minted agent to come hang his license in Rabun County. “Being the good salesman he was,” Ed explains, “he convinced me to ‘just move on up here and help me sell real estate.’” Ed and his family, were sold. Ed Poss was working solo out of a one room rented office in Clayton. “When I started, if we needed privacy, one of us would go outside and write up a contract on the hood of a car.” He points out that contracts then were single page documents, compared to eight or nine or more pages today. And Ed wrote those contracts. In the 1970s Lake Burton cottages sold for under $10,000, and average homes fetched prices ranging from the mid to upper $20,000 range. Mountain property could be had for $200 to $300 an acre. “Even then,” Ed says, reflecting on his career, “one of the most rewarding aspects of being a realtor was meeting new and wonderful people, many of whom became long-lasting friends. Listening carefully to buyers, their concerns, and learning exactly what they were looking for,

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Articles inside

Rabun County Historical Society: Remembering Rabun County’s Gristmills

7min
pages 70-73

Foxfire: “A Quilt is Something Human

5min
pages 74-75

What a Beautiful Mess I’m In

2min
pages 68-69

By the Way

3min
pages 66-67

Of These Mountains

4min
pages 64-65

Ed West Connects People and Property

5min
pages 62-63

Breathtaking Mountain Life Awaits

3min
pages 60-61

Mountain-made Architectural Marriage Wows

3min
pages 56-59

10 Questions for Cherisse Sansone, PT, MLD

4min
pages 50-53

Rabun For the Gospel: The Cure for the World

4min
pages 48-49

Therapy Techniques to Help Your Kids and Adolescents

2min
pages 54-55

Sisters on the Fly at Tiger Drive In

0
page 45

The Family Table

6min
pages 40-43

Finding Peace in Pandemic

5min
page 44

Bon Appetit

3min
pages 36-39

Cover Artist – Anna DeStefano

5min
pages 14-15

GNPA - A Passion for Nature

4min
pages 20-23

Mountain Laurel Festival

1min
pages 28-29

North Georgia Arts Guild

4min
pages 16-19

Celebrate Clayton is Back in 2021

2min
page 26

Property Stewards

2min
pages 30-33

Adventure Out

3min
pages 34-35
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