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Saturday, April 01, 2006

A Southern Gentleman

BOB GOOCH
By CHRIS McCOTTER
Readers of this column will want to mark March 9, 2006, as the day a man named Robert Miletus Gooch passed from this world of physical limitations to one of untold reward and renewal. At the age of 86, Bob, albeit stubbornly, put up his hunting boots for the final time. The most senior of Virginia's outdoor writers and certainly the most prolific now exists as a memory to those of us that knew him.

And what a magnificent memory Bob is to so many of us. If you have read Virginia Afield for the 30-plus years Bob penned it, you have been on countless fishing and hunting trips with the man. Perhaps you have never met him, however through the combination of 26 simple letters arranged into an infinite number of words, you came to know Mr. Gooch and his love for exploring the outdoors. I hope you did, because this true son and gentleman of Virginia, was a great one.

At his funeral at Beaver Dam Baptist Church near his home in Troy (Fluvanna County) there were so many folks Bob had touched it was standing room only. Even the balcony was full. Readers of his column, magazine articles and books, members of the congregation he worshipped with, a Marine detail, fellow outdoor writers that either had Bob as a mentor or inspiration were all present to honor a man I don't believe we'll see the likes of again.

I have known my mentor since 1993. It was my first year of guiding on Lake Anna, and I was working part time at a county newspaper. I had read Bob's work and learned he lived nearby. I really wanted to meet him. I understood how critical it was to have outdoor writers help to market guides, and I also knew that if we had a bad day, Bob would have very little to write about.

On a sultry late July day, I arranged to take Bob bass fishing on Lake Anna with much anticipation. I didn't have to wait long to realize it was a good match. Bob hooked and landed a largemouth nearly eight pounds as we fished a brushpile some 22' below the surface. I still remember he wore a red flats hat and a blue collared shirt with jeans on that hot day. Bob was 74 then and he was still full of pep and inquisitiveness. He told me this was the largest bass he had ever caught. He also told many people of his experience through his writings, and I was quickly on my way as a reputable guide.

From that day on, Bob and I had many adventures. From fly-fishing for bluegills and shellcrackers on Anna (his favorite fishing pastime) to dove, quail and pheasant hunts, I had the great pleasure along the way of observing a man that set a fine example in all he did.

He didn't cut a wide swath like some larger than life figures. No, Bob was a quiet leader. Dignity, faithfulness and honor are words that come to mind when I try to sum up his personality.

What struck me most about Bob was his ability to be so kind to others that might be seen by some as competitors. Was he just a well-bred Virginia gentleman? Or did his years as a Marine, businessman or adventurer give him enough experience and wisdom to know how to act in said situations. I think it was a combination of both that lead to a true state of grace for Bob.

It is rare you find someone with this quality. It is rarer still to attain it yourself. I'm still trying. Whenever I have a sticky situation I ask myself, "What would Bob Gooch do?"

I was fortunate to have been able to visit with Bob recently. It was at Martha Jefferson in Charlottesville one evening a couple of weeks ago. I was on the way back from a show in Fishersville and felt it was time. I knocked on the door of his sixth floor room heard him say, "Come in."

I forced my feet to continue forward and there was my mentor, in a hospital bed, on oxygen with the regulation gown. Even with these physical fetters, I soon realized Bob's mind was fine, though his heart was tired, and my trepidations quickly turned, as always, to attentive fascination.

We chatted about Bob's grandchildren (exemplary to say the least), about fishing and about then Bob's condition. As the oxygen hissed quietly, ever the optimist, Bob told me he was fine, even as he struggled to catch his breath. I never heard the man utter a self-pitying word in the 13 years I knew him.

During our times together, I asked a lot of questions and did a lot of listening to his responses. One time on the way home from a fishing trip, I asked what he thought the secret to happiness in life was. To me, he embodied that goal. Was it that money gave security and therefore happiness? Did your relationship with a life partner (Bob is survived by his wife, Virginia of 62 years) make the difference? Or was it something else he had learned over the years?

He was sitting next to me in his white Toyota pickup truck as I drove and he remained silent, I guess, from the weight of the question. His response came in carefully measured sentences.

"Well, I can't speak for any one else, but I think balance in your life helps keep you happy."

He then detailed how relationships, church, work, pastimes and civic duties were important.

The morning Bob died I was in Canaan Valley, West Virginia. I knew because when my wife, daughter, son and I were getting back into our Jeep to head home, a red winged blackbird cut loose with that signature "Con-ka-reee" chorus that makes me feel so happy to alive. We all stopped and looked across Route 32 at the bird sitting on a reed and singing in the sun. It was the first I had heard this year.

It has been my experience when someone I know dies that often a simple but insistent bird gives me some kind of sign that his or her soul has been freed of earthly ties, soaring away to a place we can only hope to imagine.
When I arrived home, the call came from Bob's daughter he had passed.

I think I speak for many of us when I say, "Go, Bob, to a place beyond, where your spirit can continue it's journey, and thank you for your fine example during the time you were among us."

Until next time, remember to cherish, protect and conserve the outdoors while sharing it with others.

Source For Obituaries

Our plans are to use this site as a source for local obituaries. This information obviously will be in addition to news, commentary, sports, and other items published at cb-journal-standard.blogspot.com.

One week of notices already is on the site. The notices were from the first week of the year.

We are working to put every week of notices on the site.

There will be a delay between publication in the print version of The Journal and the web version. We ask for patience, reminding everyone that our first priority is the print version.We look forward to developing the obituary aspect of the site along with the site's other features. Thank you for viewing our pages, both in the newspaper and on the web site.

Mayor's Race Will Tell Us A Lot

By RICK GUNTER
Journal Editor and Publisher
The ancient Chinese would appreciate Crewe's mayoralty race between incumbent Mayor Henry H. Crittenden and former Police Chief William C. "Billy" Abel. For the Orientals had a saying about such developments. "May you live in interesting times," said the Chinese.

This race, whatever form it eventually takes, represents all of that.

I admire former Chief Abel for stepping forward to challenge the incumbent mayor. That takes a measure of gumption in any circumstance, and it sure does in this one.

But having said that, I hasten to add that this race will tell the residents of Crewe and all those others who have ties here something very profound about this small Southside Virginia community.

It will tell us what kind of town in which we want to live and work.

Do we want to look forward? Or do we want to go back?

Cut away all the verbiage, and this race, at the end of the day on Election Day, May 2, 2006, will answer those questions.

I had deep differences with Mr. Abel when he ran Crewe Police Department. Some of those difference were aired in public and many were not.

I also have had some differences, although of a different nature, with Mr. Crittenden. But I will give the man this: He has communicated with me. He has been forthright with the public and press and not left us hanging awaiting his response.

The current mayor and the majority of Crewe Town Council took office literally with the bases loaded. Everywhere they looked was a mess, including Mr. Abel's own department.

Mr. Crittenden and his council colleagues inherited the a mess and little money with which to address it.

From my view in covering this governing body, it has done the best it could with what it has to work with.

The centerpiece of its record is that the governing body, particularly the mayor, got the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality off the town's back to some degree. The new mayor managed to save the town from being fined horrendously by the agency after the previous mayor appeared to believe the DEQ was "not serious" in directing that the town clean up its environmental mess.

The current mayor and council, or at least most of council, inherited the environmental lawsuit filed against it by Ben and Sherry Jones. A consent order was signed and when the Joneses grew upset that the town was not fulfilling its end of the deal, the municipality was pulled back into court facing a civil contempt motion and huge fines. The town prevailed in that round perhaps in some measure because it could show the judge a long list of positive actions it had taken. Unlike in the past, the town appeared not to hide its head in the sand and hope the problem would disappear on its own.

Crittenden and the council have been blamed, totally unfairly in my mind, with the town's loss of its only full-fledged grocery store. Unless there is a smoking gun I have not detected, the town is innocent of this slander. But some voters, I just bet you, will vote against the incumbents because of this situation.

I hope I am wrong, but I do not see the town getting a legitimate grocery store anytime soon. It has been about six months since Star Value closed its doors for good, and many people have come to the conclusion that, hey, that rickety old store was not so bad after all. It clearly becomes imperative that the next mayor and council keep pushing to bring a grocery store. I still find it shameful to see a bus taking folks out of town to do grocery shopping.

All of these developments over the past couple of years have been played out against a backdrop of a declining tax base. Mayors and councils are fear to mention a tax increase. Their constituents clamor, "We are on fixed incomes."

I want to know what the "fix" is.

The town is in a bigger "fix" than most of its residents and if a mayor and council in the next year or so do not raise taxes, then the governing body will be as derelict as were those leaders over the past several years.

Make no mistake: The town is in a dilemma. It lacks a growing revenue base. The Joneses still are talking about suing for major bucks. The water still stinks and there is no grocery store, a lack that impacts the town from accomplishing other necessary goals.

Why anyone would want to seek to deal with these and other problems is a mystery to me.

Bernard Baruch was one of the greatest American investors of all time. He had a classic line. "In every crisis," he once said, "there is an opportunity."

Crises surround our town. Don't let anyone tell you this in not so. The good old days probably never existed. If they did, they won't be the same now or in the future. This generation has to make its own way. The next generation have to stand on our shoulders, or will it find that our shoulders were too soft to hold up very much?

This is why the town needs forward-thinking, not a call to return to business-as-usual.

In the end, you, the voters, will have to decide. But between now and May 2, all of us would be wise to demand straight talk not only of the incumbents, but also of the challengers.

The Crewe-Burkeville Journal, 2006

The Crewe-Burkeville Journal has served western Nottoway County, Virginia, and the wider Southside Virginia community since 1959, but its deeper roots date back to pre-World War II, when the local newspaper was known as The Crewe Chronicle. Longtime owner of The Journal, Jim R. Eanes, and his partner, Jim Hudgins, bought out The Chronicle in the 1960s after they established The Journal. Mr. Eanes operated The Journal for 40 years. Rick Gunter purchased The Journal from him in 1999 and operates it today.

Tuesday, March 28, 2006

Ethel Elliott Special Soul

ETHEL ELLIOTT

By RICK GUNTER
BURKEVILLE, March 9, 2006 -- The Journal's newspaper carrier taking papers to Burkeville Market always looked forward to Tuesday nights. That was because no matter how challenging a day he might have had, he knew that Ethel Elliott likely would be there to greet him with a smile that was genuine and say a kind word or two.

He knew he was not the only one to whom Ethel Elliott showed such warmth. It was her trademark.

Mrs. Elliott died unexpectedly on March 1. She was 55. Tuesday nights, at least for the carrier, will never be the same.

"She knew 99 percent of the people who came in here and they liked her," Earl Moore, the market's owner, said Monday. "She was friendly to everyone."

Mrs. Elliott had worked at least a quarter century at what has become the only full-service grocery store in Burkeville and Crewe. The longevity was not lost on Moore, who recalled she was there when he began working at the store while in college.

"She was a wonderful person," said Moore. "She loved people and she enjoyed coming to work. She never wore a frown. She was sweet and kind to everyone."

Ethel Bradshaw Elliott had battled colon cancer. She told The Journal newspaper carrier mentioned at the beginning of this story that she was saved from the dreaded disease by an "angel."

"I had an angel on my shoulder," she said with a smile.

She was always urging the carriers and others to get checked for colon cancer.

Her family, in a statement released as part of Mrs. Elliott''s obituary, said Mrs. Elliott raised her children "to be strong, independent, smart, and honest adults."

The statement continued:

"She loved Christmas, always staying up until the wee hours of the morning, fixing everything just the way she liked it. Ethel had a heart of gold. She would give you her last dime. She will always be remembered and live through her family.

"Her first and only grandchild brought such joy to her life. She lit up when Larissa's name was spoken. 'Sugar' as she was called by Larissa. She will be greatly missed."

Indeed. She will be missed by many, including The Journal's newspaper carrier on Tuesday nights. He will miss seeing that smile on Ethel Elliott. But he will never forget her and the joy that flowed from her tender soul to her face.

Many, many other people in the community share in her loss. But their lives will forever continue to feel her warmth.
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