Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Susan Rutledge Crowned Homecoming Queen

From 1 Tryon
Senior Susan Rutledge after being named Tryon's Homecoming Queen for the 1970 football season.. Also pictured is senior Mary Powell.
From 1 Tryon
Junior Rhonda Williams was crowned Miss Tiger for the 1970 Football Season. Also pictured is David Justice.
From 1 Tryon
Full Homecoming Court.
In front of a large, rain soaked, homecoming crowd, the Tryon Tigers made quick work of the Salem Tigers with 37 first half points and went on to a 51-18 victory. Of course, this was after pre-game festivities where Susan Rutledge was named homecoming queen by a vote of the student body and Rhonda Williams was named Miss Tiger by a vote of the football team.

This game also showcased a couple of senior football players, Mike Leonard and Bobby Dempsey, who joined Stuart Williams and Ken Warrington with a lot of offensive firepower.

From press reports:
  • Tryon continued to show that it deserves a place in the top ten after having been virtually ignored for the first month of the season. It registered its second straight win and moved to 5th place.
  • Judy Hutcherson, Muriel Johnson, Susan Rutledge, and Lisa Stone were the seniors on the homecoming court.
  • This was to be senior night (it was the last scheduled game, but the schedule got changed afterwards). It was to be the last game for the following seniors: Michael Burns, Joe Covil, Bobby Dempsey, Mike Leonard, Jim Vining, Ken Warrington, Stuart Williams, Bob Willis, Susan Rutledge (cheerleader), Cathey Early (band) and majorettes Judy Hutcherson and Bunny Henson.
  • Tryon's victory was spearheaded by fullback Ken Warrington who notched four touchdowns and kicked one extra point.
  • The Tigers tallied three times in the first quarter on an opening play pass from halfback Mike Leonard to halfback John Mize for 60 yards and two of  Warrington's jaunts for three and 30 yards.
You can view the program and the rest of the newspaper articles by clicking here. Next week the Tigers take on rival Polk Central. A team they had not beaten since 1967.

Neil Diamond's Crackin' Rosie made it to #1 on the charts.

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Return of The Gladiators

Every Saturday after a game, the seniors would meet at the football field to work out the kinks sustained during the previous nights game. Normally the field is locked, but we had a key. The day after the Hendersonville game, Ken Warrington still had the affects of a head ache he got dishing out a pounding during the game (offense and defense) and the rest of us were probably a little more sore than usual. The field also seemed a little more worse for the wear. There were a lot more divots than usual. We all talked about how disappointed we were in the game, and about how we should have won, but everyone had a higher step than normal. They  say there is no such thing as a "moral" victory, but this was one. In fact, it carried through the rest of the season.

After the work out, we crashed a picnic being held at the park (a Spartanburg Textile company had rented the park for a family outing) and feasted on fried chicken, hamburgers and hot dogs.

We had generally gotten good press after the Hendersonville game - enough that an embarrassed Hendersonville coach, Joe Hunt, implied he'd be hood-winked. Tryon's next foe was to be Asheville's TC Roberson - and the Rams were not going to be surprised. "These next two weeks are going to decide where we will finish in the conference," Coach Norris Jones said. Roberson plays Hendersonville two weeks from now. "But we can't by any means look past Tryon. They have a very good fundamental club. Tryon will hit harder than any club we have faced and this Ken Warrington (Tryon fullback) is a good runner. We can't look at Hendersonville now because this Friday's game will be the most important we have played this year."

Never-the-less, the Asheville paper still didn't have confidence in the Tigers, "Roberson Over Tryon - If Tryon hadn't made such a big deal of the Hendersonville game, Roberson might have been tempted to look past it to its game with the Bearcats next week. But Coach Norris Jones in his typical rhetoric said, "Tryon has a real fine football team." He also said, "If we don't beat Tryon we might as well forget about any conference championships. We recognize how good Tryon is and we will be ready."

A defensive surprise was in the works for the Rams. Tryon had been working on a 4-4-3 defense after one of the seniors had seen a show describing how it worked. The coaching staff reluctantly agreed to let the team try the defense "conditionally" (I later learned this was an example of situational leadership by coach Neal). This proved to be vital to the teams dominance the rest of the year.

Game day at Roberson was also unusual. Because of a JV football game that week, the Tigers could only dress out 16 players for the game. Roberson fans shouted out, "Where's the rest of the team? Were they scared to come?" However, Tryon had the last laugh, beating the Rams 12-0.

Some newspaper comments:
  • Tryon used a bruising ground game, led by the running of 170-pound senior fullback Ken Warrington to whip the Rams.
  • Tryon continued to shine behind the running of fullback Ken Warrington and the defensive play of end Nathan Shields.
  • With Tryon beating TC Roberson last Friday night by 12-0, one can't help but wonder if this Tryon club isn't perhaps a little stronger than anticipated. And all this hullabaloo about Tryon's "tiny Tigers" is a bunch of phooey. The Tigers are a big football team and they like to hit. In fullback Ken Warrington they have a blue chip player. Tryon moved up to #7 in the polls.
You can see all the articles and pictures of the game by clicking here.

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Bearcats and Tigers Battle For Conference Championship

Although no one new it at the time, the Hendersonville Bearcats took on the Tryon Tigers at Harmon Field in what turned out to be for the Parkway Conference Championship. The Tigers, leading the conference at 2-0, were  underdogs as the  powerful Bearcats were ranked 4th in the Western North Carolina Polls. In a game that went down to the wire, Tryon's two point conversion attempt to win the game, failed, and the Bearcats took home a 7-6 victory.
40 years has caused most of my game memories to become blurred - but this game has several lasting ones:

  • Ken Warrington's running in the 4th quarter was brutal. Every play there was a "Pop", with a defender grunting at the intensity of Ken's hit (we found out Ken's helmet split during the game).
  • Quarterback Stuart Williams actually missed the hand-off to Warrington on the late scoring play, but followed Ken into the end zone for the score.
  • With the victory bell ringing after the score, the crowd took up the chant , "We Want Two!". There were no tie breakers in those days.
Write-ups from local newspapers:
  • "The Bearcats might have been ranked 4th in AA schools in the state, but they had their hands full Friday night as the smaller Tryon team played its heart out."
  • "The Hendersonville Bearcats prevented an attempted two-point conversion late in the fourth quarter to avoid suffering an upset at the hands of the tiny Tryon High Tigers"
  • "Joe Hunt's Hendersonville squad almost had more than it could handle in Tryon and he thinks his team had been brain-washed into thinking the Tigers weren't quite as good as they were. "Elmo Neal had been crying about how little his team was," said Joe, "but their line is bigger than ours. We really weren't expecting the game to be close, but I think we might have underestimated Tryon. They had a good, sound football team."
  • My first inclination was to kick but I saw that we probably didn't have enough time to score again, so we went for the two points." It was this decision of Elmo Neal, the Tryon Tigers coach, that gave the Hendersonville Bearcats a narrow 7-6 victory and prevented a major upset. Neal's small, inexperienced Tigers battled on even terms with the traditionally strong Bearcats in the last half. "We felt like we could run against them," said Neal, "but we didn't get to our game plan until the third quarter. Hendersonville uses a defensive shift and we began to hit its weaknesses," commented the proud mentor. "We have a good football team," concluded Neal.
You can read more write-ups of the game by clicking here.

Rosman Coach Bill Cathy came into the locker room after the game to tell the team they had played a great game. The significance of this was that Rosman was the last game on the schedule and Rosman historically gave Tryon fits. I found out later that Coach Cathy watched a lot of Tryon's games and probably new more about us than we knew about ourselves.

The Tiger Rag also made its first appearance of the year with Senior Editor Sue Davis. You can read a copy by clicking here. (40 years has hurt the readability of this issue)

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Class of 71 Getting Together Again

Tryon High School Class of 1971
(& bordering years)

5th Annual Reunion

Where:                Keith & Paula Henson’s Lake House
                           508E Lakeshore Drive (About ¼ mile past                Tea House on Right)


When:                 Saturday Evening, October 16; Starting at 6:00 pm
Bring:                  Some hors d'oeuvres or snacks, & drinks.   We’ll have ice, paper products & utensils.
Spouses are welcome.  Pictures, year books, stories, cameras & video recorders are also recommended.  Bring pictures of your family!

Dress:                 Comfortable – We suggest that you bring a sweater – it may be cool on the porch         

Saturday, September 11, 2010

1970 Tigers Take on Rival Landrum

It had been a long time - Tryon did not beat a rival during the 1969 football season. Landrum's visit to Harmon Field was met with much anticipation. In what was probably a turn around for the season, the game was literally over mid-way through the first quarter. The Tigers completely dominated the Landrum Cardinals and went on to a 42 to 6 victory. You can read the newspaper clips of the game by clicking here.

The Asheville paper had this to say, "although plagued with inexperience and a lack of size (Tryon), are according to head coach Elmo Neal, "displaying plenty of hustle and putting out 100 per cent this year." Tryon is 3-1 and leading the Parkway Conference with two league victories.
The Tigers backfield is led by 165-pound hard running fullback Ken Warrington who is the teams leading ground gainer. Neal also cited the Tryon defense as doing a good job. "They put us in position to score three times against Landrum and allowed only 2 of 15 passes to be completed for 8 yards", noted Neal.

Ain't No Mountain High Enough by Diana Ross made it to the top of the charts as the Tigers Looked toward perennial power Hendersonville's visit to Harmon Field for next weeks game.

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Toy museum opens, lets Tryon play on its 125th birthday

NC town celebrates anniversary with parade, other festivities

Published: Sunday, September 5, 2010 at 3:15 a.m.
Last Modified: Sunday, September 5, 2010 at 12:40 a.m.
TRYON, N.C.


The hand-carved wooden toys and items adorned the small house, seemingly cut into the side of a hill near downtown Tryon. The house, completed in 1925, was home to the Tryon Toymakers and Woodcarvers group, who created toys and other items from 1915 until 1940.
“The amount of history this building holds is just incredible,” museum director Nathan Galloway said.
The Toy Maker’s House Museum opened this weekend in conjunction with the town of Tryon’s 125th birthday celebration held Saturday. Showcasing the history of the group, the house had on display many of the craft items from the guild.
“This was the gallery space and the office building,” Galloway said. Another building behind the house served as a workshop.
Toy making came to Tryon with two women, Eleanor Vance and Charlotte Yale. The women, who helped found Biltmore Estate Industries with the backing of Edith Vanderbilt, came to Tryon in 1915. They started the Tryon Toymakers and Woodcarvers, which taught children and adults the art of toymaking and wood carving.
“Teaching them a craft gave them jobs,” Galloway said. “Tryon Toymakers and Woodcarvers, literally, their pieces span the world.”
The mantel around the fireplace of the small house at 43 E. Howard St. showed the intricacy of the art, with interlacing leaves, flowers and vines.
“Looking up at the rafters, the crossbeams — they certainly don’t make them like this anymore,” Galloway said.
Pieces were either donated or loaned to the museum, including a delicately painted set of Goldilocks and the Three Bears toy set.
Morris the Horse, the mascot of Tryon, originally was created by a student of Vance and Yale. Galloway explained the original Morris was 17 feet tall and was built in 1928 for the Tryon Riding & Hunt Club. He was an enlarged version of one of the group’s toy horses. The original Morris was destroyed in a fire, and a reconstructed one now stands in downtown Tryon.
The opening of the museum was part of the 125th birthday celebration of Tryon. The city of Tryon, granted a charter from the State Legislature in 1885, was incorporated into Polk County.
The anniversary was celebrated Saturday morning with a parade down the center of Main Street. Other activities included a Friday morning golf tournament. On Saturday at Harmon Field, the Tryon Arts & Crafts displayed local arts and crafts, and an African-American exhibit will be displayed in the Shops of Tryon on Trade Street.

Monday, September 6, 2010

Tryon's Lake Lanier Written up in Gainesville Paper

Greetings from the ‘other’ Lake Lanier

S.C. reservoir not as big as its Georgia cousin, but a happy home for lake dwellers

POSTED: September 5, 2010 12:30 a.m.
Watch: South Carolina's Lake Lanier

South Carolina's Lake Lanier

A visit to Lake Lanier's smaller namesake in South Carolina near Tryon, N.C.

Greetings from the ‘other’ Lake Lanier
TOM REED/The Times

With about six miles around the shoreline, Lake Lanier in South Carolina is much smaller than Northeast Georgia's Lake Lanier.

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TRYON, N.C. — Hogback Mountain rises in the distance. Sounds from nature fill the air, occasionally broken by the sound of a car passing by on the curvy Lakeshore Drive.
Welcome to the other Lake Lanier, a tranquil community in upstate South Carolina, bounded by the historic village of Tryon, N.C.
"It's like stepping back a little bit in time, watching the kids skiing and swimming and just having good, old-fashioned fun," said Patty Otto, treasurer of the Lake Lanier Civic Association for homeowners around the lake.
The private man-made lake dates to 1925, preceding by some 30 years the North Georgia reservoir by the same name.
It was part of a project started by the Tryon Development Company. A set of aging plaques embedded in original stone pillars at the community entrance gives that brief history.
Initial business was brisk, with some $1.6 million in land sales taking place in the summer of 1925.
"People were flocking here from Atlanta and Charlotte to buy lots," said Otto, owner of the Lake Lanier Tea House restaurant, which doubled as a sales office in those early days.
In its heyday, the Tea House was a popular stop for famous folk traveling through the scenic area.
Presidents Dwight D. Eisenhower, Richard Nixon and Bill Clinton dined there, along with such celebrities as actor David Niven and author F. Scott Fitzgerald.
"There used to be cabins around, as well," Otto said. "On the end where the (restaurant's) bar is now, there was a bathhouse in the 1930s. People would pay 50 cents and swim here all day."
During World War II, soldiers would visit before being shipped overseas.
"And then, when they came back, the boys would get off at the Tryon or Landrum (S.C.) depot, and their first trip would be up here at the Tea House," Otto said. "I'm told they would come up and throw their uniforms and medals, everything, right in the water."
Lake Lanier also was the longtime home of a Boy Scout camp. Several structures remain from those days, including the rustic dining hall and a tall diving tower extending over the water.
Allen Smith, president of the civic association, grew up going to the lake, including attending the Scout camp.
"Every time I went swimming over here as a kid, my mother would tell me to be careful where I jumped in," he said. "She would say, ‘They just cut the trees (when building the lake). They didn't drag them out.'"
Over the years, all the lots on the 6-mile shoreline were bought, with most residents building homes at - or over - water's edge.
Today, some 300 families call Lake Lanier home, with nearly half of them belonging to the civic association.
"The town of Tryon controls what's built over the waterbed, and they own the lake bottom," Smith said. "I don't think they own the water, but they have a right to it once it crosses the dam."
Tryon uses Lake Lanier as its main water source.
Lakeview Drive encircles the community, following the contours of the lake and crossing the dam, which breached in 1926. Photographs of the disaster hang in the Tea House, along with pictures from other eras.
Georgia's Lake Lanier, which hugs shoreline in Hall and several surrounding counties, traces its roots to the River and Harbor Act, which was approved by Congress in 1946.
The law authorized "a multiple purpose dam on the Chattahoochee River at Buford in the interest of navigation, flood control and power and water supply."
A groundbreaking ceremony was held on March 1, 1950, on the Buford Dam.
Work on the main earthen dam, as well as three saddle dikes, powerhouse and road improvements, took five years to complete. Gates at the intake structure were closed so that the lake could start to fill.
Two years later, the lake reached full pool. A dedication ceremony was held on Oct. 9, 1957.
Unlike its South Carolina counterpart, much of its history would be marked by controversy. Georgia, Alabama and Florida have been embroiled in lawsuits over the use of water in Lanier, with a federal judge ruling last year that it couldn't be used as a municipal drinking source.
Both lakes draw their name from Sidney Lanier, who was born in Macon and died in Lynn, N.C., just outside Tryon.
The house where Lanier died of tuberculosis still stands, a private residence with historic markers facing Lynn Road. A plaque in a stone monument declares Lanier as "the beloved poet of the South."
Beyond their rich histories, the two lakes differ widely in physical comparison.
Lanier in North Georgia covers about 38,000 acres and stands at nearly 1,070 feet above sea level (1,071 feet is full pool).
South Carolina's Lanier contains about 140 acres of water and is about 50 feet deep at its deepest. The deck across the road from the Tea House overlooks a depth of about 20 feet, Otto said.
The two-year drought that throttled much of the Southeast drained Lanier in Georgia to about 1,050 feet above sea level. Lanier in South Carolina dropped by 6 to 8 inches.
Georgia's Lake Lanier, which is operated by the U.S. Corps of Army Engineers, draws hundreds of thousands of visitors per year. During a weekday boat tour of South Carolina's Lanier, no other craft hit the waters, despite bright blue skies and warm temperatures.
Forget the crowds, though. Those who live on the lake swear by its laid-back, neighborly lifestyle and friendly atmosphere.
Ellen Delehanty, 88, grew up on the lake, then went on to live for a while in California.
On a trip back home in the mid-1970s, she said she was ready to come back.
As she and her husband "were riding our bicycles around the lake, I stuck my head through a broken window of this place and thought it was pretty nice," Delehanty said, looking back at her home.
The couple returned to California, then packed their bags for South Carolina.
"I call this God's country," said Delehanty, who grew up on the lake and has lived the past 33 years there.
"My children said, ‘Well, mother, God made it all.' I said, ‘Yeah, but he made a special something around here.'"

Friday, September 3, 2010

Tigers Travel To Edneyville in Week Three

From 1 Tryon
Tryon traveled to Edneyville (now part of North Henderson) to try and redeem themselves after a less than stellar performance against Cowpens. The task wouldn't be easy as the Yellow Jackets were led by Danny Dalton, who would later go to Western Carolina University and set school passing records, with Chuck Nix as a 205 pound running back, and with a couple of linemen weighing in at 240+ pounds. This was an issue going in to the game because we knew that Joe Covil at 137, Mike Burns at 155, and Bob Willis at 160 were not going to be able to move those guys out of the way - so - during the week preceding, we practiced shield blocks - just attempting to get between them and the ball carrier. During the game, one of Edneyville's big folks fell on Bob Willis and remarked, "I didn't hurt you did I little fella". 

Anyway, the offense was still a little under performing but the Tigers managed to pull out a 6-0 win and with two Parkway Conference Wins, were now on top of the conference standings. Read the write-ups of the game by clicking here.