At the induction center for the U.S. Army the Chief Medical Officer remarked “Robertson you have the legs of a linebacker” the young man proudly replied “Yes sir, I grew up on Tally Mountain.”
Sgt. Robertson went on to serve his country in WW-II, he was decorated with three oak leaf clusters, the Purple Heart and the Bronze Star. He most notably led his platoon out from behind enemy lines after being trapped for seven days following their landing on Normandy Beach. The platoon would later be known in history as “The Lost Platoon.” Sgt. Robertson was my dad.
Dad never spoke of the decorations he received. All that I know of them is what I’ve learned from others and reading. However he would tell me stories of his training in the infantry; he’d speak of the saw-briars at Ft. Jackson, S.C.; of the heat in Death Valley. Most often though, he spoke of his training in the hills of Tennessee, “those folks from Tennessee are just plain good folks” he’d say “they got to be to be able to go up and down them hills.” Yes, I think it was his happiest time in the service, training in the hills of Tennessee, he’d then go on to tell how he was accustomed to the hills because he and his brothers grew up hunting and working on Tally Mountain.
Dad loved to hunt and fish but because of the demands of the dairy and arthritis in his legs he was unable to take the time or stand the strain of walking up-hill, so we spent what free time he had hunting on the level ground around the farm. The game was plentiful, the trails were easy to follow and just spending time with my dad was fine with me. He always talked of the mountain and whenever we could we’d get on the tractor and ride up to the top we’d climb up the fire tower and look out on what seemed to me to be the entire world. Dad would show me the farm to the west; he would point out Tallapoosa to the north, and Buzzard Rock to the east. Still as a young child I never really knew what it was like to walk up the mountain or what it looked like in the “hollers” that dad spoke of so fondly. All of that was soon to change me. For when I turned thirteen dad bought me my first 22-rifle.
The fall after I turned thirteen Uncle Dewey and Aunt Bonnie came up to visit. I always loved for my kinfolk to come, dad would put off the chores that we normally had to do and after we finished milking we’d get into the truck and ride around showing uncle Dewey all the changes that had taken place and then we go visit with some of the other kin. Aunt Gladys would always have us over for supper and she’d fix a meal like it was Thanksgiving. However, things were different now Uncle Dewey’s surgery made it hard for me to understand what he was saying and even though I tried not to I shied away from him. I could still remember the tone of his laugh and the quality baritone in his voice and why that had all changed was more than a thirteen-year-old could comprehend. After they had been here a few days uncle Dewey found out that I had a new rifle, he took me outside and pointed toward the tower and said,” lets go”. So we loaded our rifles and went looking for squirrel or something that mom could cook for supper. What I found that day was far more meaningful than anything I could have eaten. Uncle Dewey showed me Blackjack trees that were full grown but not much taller than I, we found acorns with caps as big as quarters, long leaf pines with needles at least a foot long, and pinecones that were as big as pineapples. There were rock cliffs that were just right for a young man to climb and in places they jutted out to form what I considered the perfect home, “a roof over your head what more could a man what.” Each time we crested another rise there would be a new hollow for us to walk down into, new sights to see and new things to explore. Yes, to a thirteen-year-old I’d found the Promised Land. Years later I took my mother up that trail and I still remember her saying that as long as she had lived at the foot of Tally Mountain that she had thought that all you had to do to get to the top was go up. She had never known that there were so many ridges and hollows in between. Uncle Dewey showed me places where he and his brothers had hunted and where granddad had brought them to cut wood. He said that granddad would never cut the tall straight trees down in the valley you had to save them for timber, so they came to the mountain to cut the crooked trees to get firewood for the cook stove. He took me to a place where we could look down on the farm and for the first time I began to realize that the farm was not just my home but a home to another generation.
I know that neither one of us knew what was happening that day. I was too young to understand, and even as an adult I cannot grasp the full implications, but I know it has changed my life. A couple of weeks after Uncle Dewey and Aunt Bonnie went back home. I asked my dad to take me back up on the mountain, he looked at me and said he reckoned I was big enough to go on my on. I loaded my rifle and off I went. For the next seven years I spent every moment I could exploring the wonders that lie just out my front door. They have become a part of me, each year sometime in late August or early September when the heat and humidity of summer begins to break, from somewhere deep inside I can hear the hollows calling. Calling for me to once again to come and to enjoy. Each year God has granted me the privilege of walking over the same hills, to cross the same streams and to climb the same mountains. The same places that my father and his father and even his father walked. It is not within me refuse to return to stalk the game, to partake of the bounty. Doing so is part of what I am and for that I make no apologies. I no longer depend on them for physical sustenance as my forefathers did but I do depend on them for replenishment of the soul.
This story has been rambling around in my head since Uncle Dewey’s death. Since that time I have been trying to sort out the feelings I have and the things I wanted to say. At his death I could not help but to think that another bridge to my past was gone and that my cousins and I were now becoming the bridges to the past. This is true, but there was more I wanted to say and now as the saws begin to cut the trees on the mountain and around the farm I realize just how much that little hike up the mountain really means. Yes, I am saddened to see the trees fall for they are old friends, but I know that it is something that must be. I know that I have been privileged far more than many to rest in their shade and to be comforted by their beauty. I also know that the paper upon which this is written came from trees (how can anyone forget the smell of the paper mill…. “Smells like bacon and eggs to me,” as Aunt Nadine would say.) The house in which I live was built form trees, even the knotty ones were used for the walls, and the bent one were used to cook the meals which raised my father and his brothers and sisters. The trees as they stand are not what last –it’s the heritage from those trees that will last. Its not our lives, which last but the heritage of our lives which, will last. And our heritage is something we must protect; we must be the strong bridges to the past, the straight trees so that our children can know from where they came. To give them the deep conviction that God, our creator, provides for us the things, which we need. The love within the family is part of God’s provision, within which we can find strength to face the problems of the world and its trials. In taking time to take a young man up a mountain, Uncle Dewey was taking time to look back at his past and show part of me my past and helping me find strength for the future.
“Yes sir, I grew up on Tally Mountain”
The end
David Robertson
The Bridge Builder
“There followeth after me today
a youth whose feet must pass this way.
This chasm that has been naught to me
to that fair-haired youth may a pitfall be.
He, too, must cross in the twilight dim;
good friend, I am building the bridge
for him.”
Will Allen Dromgoole
(Bridge builder found in church bulletin 9/95)
Wp/tally/5/94