Country Zest & Style Autumn 2022 Edition

Page 21

Edwina Mason: Remembering Millwood

J

By Linda Roberts

ust back from a trip to Hawaii with friends, Edwina Mason invited a visitor into her photo-filled living room one recent hot summer day to talk about growing up in the Clarke County village of Millwood. Mason, now 84, has vivid memories of the tiny town and what it was like for a Black youngster in the 1930s and ‘40s. “I was born in a four-room log cabin— two rooms down and two rooms up,” Mason Photo by Linda Roberts said. “And I was the third in a family of nine children…six girls and three boys.” Edwina Mason looks at a family Mason was born at home in 1937 with a history researched and commid-wife assisting her mother with the birth. plied by her first cousin, George “I’ve lost track of how many of the others Holmes, Jr. Her family members who were also born at home,” she added. are descendants of Nathaniel Mason recalled the Millwood of her youth Carter, a slave who worked at the as a “tight knit little community where Carter Hall plantation at Millwood. everyone knew everyone.” The small log The village of Millwood was foundcabin eventually burned, but by that time ed to serve the plantation’s needs. her family had already relocated to larger quarters in the heart of the village. “I spent a lot of time with my grandmother, Mary Carter Holmes, who worked at Powhatan estate (which later became Powhatan School) doing domestic work,” she said.. Mason also did baby-sitting and helped her mother, Mary Mason, who served at dinner parties in the neighborhood. Black children in grades one through six attended a two-room school in what is now often referred to as the Millwood community center. After sixth grade, they took a school bus to Johnson & Williams School in Berryville where Mason graduated from high school in 1954. “I was 16 when I graduated as I skipped a grade,” she said. “I never went to an integrated school.” In her early childhood, Mason said, Black and White kids “all played together, but as we got older we stopped…I guess we just knew it was time.” Not allowed to go to the roller rink, the Black children still skated, but in the street. They also went swimming, but not at a pool. The creek that ran through the village was their option on hot summer days. Carter Hall, a historic estate adjoining the village, also provided excellent water for drinking from a spring on the property. Black children played there and used their wagons to haul drinking water home in jugs. While Millwood has one store now, the popular Locke Store. When Mason was growing up there were three general stores in the village and one belonged to her uncle, George Holmes. It was a favorite spot to visit for Mason and her brothers and sisters who eagerly sought out the store’s penny candy selection. The Black children all attended Sunday School at St. Simon, known to many local residents as Bishop’s Chapel at Christ Episcopal Church. Mason, who moved to Berryville in 1980, now attends St. Mary’s Episcopal Church in town and remembers years ago in Millwood when she attended Shiloh Baptist Church next to what is now the post office. “I was a Baptist in the morning and an Episcopal in the afternoon,” Mason recalled. Mason raised two children on her own and has seven grandchildren. She’s proud of her life as a single mother. “I didn’t give up and I did what I had to do,” she added, including domestic work and employment as a teacher’s aid in Boyce and Berryville. In 1989, she car-pooled to a new job at the Navy Federal Credit Union in Vienna and retired in 2006. Many older residents of Millwood Mason knew have passed on and “I’m the older generation now.” More than 40 years ago, she moved to Berryville to establish her own life and “be on my own.” She doesn’t go to Millwood much any more because it makes her sad. Still, if anyone asks about her home town, “I will always say I am a Millwoodian.”

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Articles inside

LETTER from PARIS: A Moveable Feast in a Tour de France

5min
page 78

PROPERTY Writes: A Horsey Hideaway at Hidden Trail

3min
page 77

Common Grounds: 10 Years of Grounding Our Community

3min
page 76

At Morven Park, No is Not an Answer

4min
pages 74-75

SEEN & SCENE

1min
pages 72-73

The Village Green in Orlean, No S Necessary

2min
pages 70-71

Plains Community League All About Good Works

4min
pages 68-69

Talk About a Blood Hound

3min
page 63

The Mission: Go Native, Protect Pollinators

3min
page 62

Honoring Andrew Looney With a Special Brand

4min
page 60

Perspectives on Childhood, Education, and Parenting: Off to Another Fine Start

3min
page 59

Carry Me BACK: It Happened One Day

3min
page 58

A Historic Road Down by the Riverside

3min
page 57

A New Leesburg Home In Sync with the Environment

3min
page 56

From Local Royalty, the Best Ham Biscuit on the Planet

2min
page 54

Mapping the Memories of Fauquier’s African-American Communities

4min
pages 52-53

Kinloch Farm Beefing Up Its Local Hoofprint

3min
page 50

A Day and a Lifetime at The Saratoga Races

3min
page 49

MODERN FINANCE: Swimming Naked Can Be a Bad Idea

4min
page 47

The Magnificent Mister Mayberry

3min
page 46

Reconciliation Begins with Relationship

3min
page 45

CHURCHES

1min
page 44

It’s All About the Brain at Janelia Campus

3min
page 43

Salamander Officially Breaks Ground for Residences

2min
page 42

Soil and Septic Go Hand In Hand for Mark Smith

4min
page 39

At Warrenton WOW, It’s All About the Oxygen

4min
page 37

Ribbons All Around At Upperville

2min
page 35

A SAM HUFF LEGACY: The West Virginia Breeders Classic on Oct. 8

4min
pages 32-33

A Royal Romance With A Whiff of Warrenton

5min
page 30

BOOKED UP: FOX, HORSE, DEER

1min
page 29

An Artful Gift Passed on to a New Generation

3min
page 28

It’s Always Been Miles To Go Down the Road

4min
page 27

Sporting Pursuits

3min
page 25

VIRGINIA POLO: A Never-Ending Commitment to Excellence

5min
page 24

Sadler’s Joy: A Champion in the Flesh and in Bronze

3min
page 22

Edwina Mason: Remembering Millwood

4min
page 21

Fifth Annual BIKE THE GRAVEL: Tour de Conservation Easement

3min
page 20

Sweet Elephant Bestows its Luck on Lauren Connolly

4min
page 19

Make NOTE

2min
page 18

AS EVER YOURS: The Lost Generation

2min
pages 16-17

THIS & THAT

1min
page 14

A Well-Deserved Honor for Oh So Talented Tutti

4min
page 12

HERE & THERE

1min
page 11

The Scent of a Woman

2min
page 10

It's Show Time

1min
page 9

Porsches and Horses All on the Same Day

3min
page 7

Horses Are Not The Only Form Of Transportation At The Upperville Horse Show

1min
page 6

A Red Truck Classic

3min
page 4

Celebrations

1min
page 3
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