Elzie Byron Cornett, Sr
- A Tribute -
If this were being written for
Reader's Digest it would inevitably be tiitled "My Most Unforgettable Character."
Truly unforgettable is my grandfather, Elzie Byron Cornett, Sr.
He influenced my formative years and teen years, providing my with found memories of growing up.
Of average height and slim of build, Pappaw was none-the-less a giant in my boyish eyes. I believed then ( and to major extent, now) that he could answer any question or solve any problem. If the answer wasn't readily available he would mull the situation over and offer a solution.
In my early years I spent many hours at his house being tended to by my grandmother (and Pappaw's wife), Nannie. During those years he worked at the mines - probably for D.D. Stewart - and I got to see him only in the evening and on the weekend.
They were joyous
and mischievous moments for he took delight in making Nannie fuss and fret by allowing me to join him in enjoying an evening smoke - a Roi Tan cigar! If Nannie fussed too much we retired to his bedroom to enjoy our smoke, after he secured the door by placing a cedar chest across it. To a boy of four or five, this was fantastic!
As I grew older I began paying more attention to the stories he told of his youth and of the fine sense of pride he had in the things he did.
Eventually growing too old to work at the mine (Although he was weighing coal for Wheeler Boone's operation when he was in his 80s!) he went to work for Robert "Bobby" Boone. Boone was a local attorney who owned the Continental Hotel in Pineville and also maintained his office there. Pappaw served as manager of the hotel and what I now see as an adviser to Boone, wh also had several coal interests.
The Continental was an imposing three-story brick structure which filled a half-block at the intersection of Walnut Street and Virginia Avenue. Now, in 1989, the site is home to a post-modern building housing the Total Care Medical Clinic.
In its heyday the Continental was home to fancy sit-down dinners and grand balls. It had been lavishly furnished and served a "better" clientel.
The Continental I knew was on it's last legs, having given over to office space for an accountant, an optometrist and Boone. It was also a semi-retirement hotel for several. including Miss Alva Tandy, a former teacher in the Pineville City Schools. I began frequenting the hotel when Pappaw went to work there in the mid 1960s. By the early 1970s it had been raze3d, making space for a municipal parking lot.
As I remember it, the lobby was a mismatch of styles - the ornate furnishings of the '20s and '30s either having been replaced or just appearing drab by the 1960s. Here were assorted writing desks whose varnish had either darkened with age or had been covered with black paint. Here too were worn, cracked leather settees and over-stuffed chairs. Flanking the front desk, on the inside of a pair of square plaster columns, were two heavy brass floor lamps, dull with age, sporting brass shades with beaded fringe.
Dimly lighted, dusty and dingy though it may have been, the Continental was never-the-less a haven in the early afternoons after being dismissed from grade school. There I would head to visit with Pappaw and share my day's activities with him.
In the little room behind the front desk we would sit and talk.
It was there I can first remember him telling me how he came to injure his left hand. It happened when he was a youngster, growing up in the coal camp town of Peach Orchard, KY, in Lawrence County.
As Pappaw told it, he was about five or six years old at the time, placing the year around 1896 or 1896. He had found a object laying in the road.
"I thought it'd make a good fishin' float," he told me over 70 years later.
"I put it on a flat rock and got a hammer and nail to make a hole in the center of it," he said with a grin flashing through his sky-blue eyes. "I hit the nail once and it bounced off! The second time - it bounced off!"
"The third time I hit it, it blew up!"
The object was a blasting cap, which blew up under his left hand.
He told me the camp doctor wanted to amputate bu his grandfather said "NO" and bandages the wounded hand himself. He then took Pappaw, on horseback, for an overnight ride into Paintsville, KY where another doctor saved the hand.
Years later the only indication of the accident was a slight curve to his fingers. Also, the fingers on that hand were about and eighth of an inch shorter than the ones on the right hand.
Another facet of our afternoon visits was stories and songs.
Puffing on a Roi Tan Perfecto, he would tell me tales of Frank and Hesse James or Samson and Delilah. Or - through a cloud of blue smoke - he would warble "Frankie and Johnnie" pr "Red Wing" (his favorite).
(Mentioning blue smoke recalled for me Pappaw's unusual remedy for a head cold, or stuffy nose. He would smear a cigar with Vick's Vap-O-Rub and merrily puff away. It usually opened his nasal passages, but left the entire house smelling as if it had recently been fumigated.)
It was at the Continental, in the breeze way behind the hotel facing the alley, that Pappaw instructed me in the "art" of cracking a bull-whip.
He made the whips himself, plaiting gour strands of supple leather he had truimmed to the correct size. The whip-stock was a hammer handle he had painstakingly shaved to the right dimensions with a hawk bill knife and a piece of glass. The handle tapered toward the middle to provide "flex."
We spent many long hours behind the hotel while Pappw patiently taught me how to make that braided leather "crack like a .45!" The first week or so of practice my earlobes stayed bloody where I let the tail of the whip come behind me and flick me my head.
Memories of Pappaw's last few year revolve around a cat, a dog, a dogwood tree, the top of Pine Mountain and Oak Street.
In his twilight years Pappaw would sit in the dusk in a lawn chair at his house on Oak Street. Just he and his oldest daughter, Irene, lived there - Nannie having died several years before.
Gently petting his dog - Lightnin', a bench-legged, black and white mongrel - he would quietly smoke and watch the world go by. Or, he would watched contentedly as Sputnik the cat stalked birds under the dogwood.
When I stopped by to see him in the evenings he would - at least once a week - ask me a baited question about the radio and TV aerial atop the mountain.
Peering intently at the mountain with eyes older, dimmer and weaker than mine he would ask, "How many antenna's do you see there?"
With my younger, almost 20/20 eyesight, I could count four. He'd laugh and say, "There's five! See that little one down to the right?" If I squinted I could just see the outline of the tower.
Thoughr dead for many year now (almost 14) a part of him is with me each day; I carry hime with me in my love of animals; my enjoyment of the old songs. At times I find myself wondering if I'm handling a job or a situation in the same manner he would.
And yes, I can still make a braided piece of leather and a hammer handle sound like a gun shot....
September 29, 1989