Fruit of the Gods

December pomegranates

By Jan Leitschuh

Ruby red
pomegranates are starting to appear in groceries now as a seasonal item. Their cheerful rosy husks evoke a sense of Yuletide feasting and decoration. Their origins are Mediterranean, and exotic. 

Pomegranate fruits are actually berries, filled with hundreds of jewel-like seeds, usually dark red. The sweet, fleshy, juicy coating surrounding each seed, often referred to as the aril, is the edible portion. 

Are you surprised to learn that these juicy, seedy delights are not only wildly healthy — more so than red wine or green tea — and have even been grown in our area by devoted gardeners? Who knew? That info sent me scurrying to research.

Generally thought of as a fruit of hot, dry climates, I was excited to learn of certain specimen pomegranates growing in our area. While no farmer would undertake to push the envelope on a marginally hardy and less-than-productive Mediterranean fruit, lots of backyard gardeners might want to experiment with a lovely and exotic “pet” that actually produces fruit and gorgeous flowers.

An old pomegranate used to grace the Southern Pines backyard of Beth Carpenter, local resident and North Carolina native. “We live on Orchard Road, and we had an old pomegranate and a big fig tree on our property when we bought the house 30 years ago,” said Carpenter. “Someone told us this is called Orchard Road because it was the orchards of the old Boyd estate. It makes sense. Who else would have done it?”  The Boyds were noted for their interest in local agriculture, and horticulture.

Local gardeners wishing to experiment, as the Boyds did, may not get the heavily laden crops found in Mediterranean climes. Carpenter said, “It was a normal pomegranate, and had fruit just like you find in the store. But not many, only one or two a year.” The best chance for fruit production and ripening is in areas south and east of Raleigh.

Though this old tree had weathered many a Sandhills season, it is no longer. A winter storm got it.

A wonderful fruit-bearing specimen continues to thrive in the slightly colder climate in Raleigh at the North Carolina State Arboretum. Though pomegranates often take the shape of a large shrub, this one is trained into a small tree shape, well over 8 feet tall. It blooms with exotic, hibiscus-like red flowers before setting fruit. Hummingbirds and butterflies love the highly attractive, open red flowers. There are even double-flowering varieties that resemble carnations.

A third pomegranate specimen has grown on the farm of my friend Linda Fisher of Red Oak, near Tarboro. She remembers the bush — likely planted by her mother or aunt in the ’50s — from her childhood and says it still produces a few fruits every year. Fisher told me it gets no care, water or attention, lives in dry, poor soil, and still thrives. She said they have a little year-end ritual, eating a few of the seeds every winter “like the Greeks.” 

In Greece, the fruit is closely associated with winter and the Demeter myth. Persephone, Demeter’s daughter, was captured by Hades and stolen away to the Underworld. Demeter, goddess of agriculture and spring, begged for her daughter’s return. Alas, Persephone had been tricked into eating six pomegranate seeds in the land of the dead and was permitted to come back for only part of the year, in spring and summer. The quiescence of fall and winter is recalled in the ritual of the seed eating.

Many pomegranate varieties can tolerate temperatures as low as 10 degrees Fahrenheit, which certainly makes growing in the Sandhills a possibility. Timing of the hard freeze is critical, though — if they are in the stage of producing new growth, a frost can kill them. Some cultivars are specifically bred to cope with this possibility of late spring frosts. Plants are not uncommon in South Carolina, often found around old home sites and plantations, especially in the Midlands and Coastal Plain. While they grow and flower well there, just like in North Carolina they tend to fruit poorly in our humid climate.

Pomegranates (Punica granatum) have been popular fruit throughout human history. They are experiencing a surge in popularity now due to the health benefits associated with their juice. Pomegranates, high in vitamin C, also produce a unique and powerful antioxidant called punicalagin. There are also several useful phytochemicals in pomegranates. 

The juice has been shown to have greater antioxidant capacity than such common health beverages as green tea, red wine, grape juice, cranberry juice or acai juice. If you want your own pomegranate “pet,” there are internet sources for plants. I’d suggest calling the company to discuss your growing conditions. Ask for a cultivar recommendation. I planted the variety “Wonderful” when we began our cottage garden, and while it did not survive that first hot summer, it may have not had optimum attention and water to establish it. In good conditions a mature tree can grow approximately 10-15 feet tall and 5-10 feet wide. Pomegranates love to sucker with slender, thorny stems, but could also be trained into a tree like the North Carolina State Arboretum specimen.

First, the growing basics. Your tree will need at least 8 hours of direct sun in the growing season (and more is better) in well-drained soil and a sunny area. You’ll probably need to add lime, phosphorus and potassium to your soil. A pH of 6.5 is about perfect. Pomegranates are self-pollinating, so you only need one, but fruit production is greater with two plants.

You could also grow one in a pot like your pet citrus, or in a sheltered area. Inquire about the more compact forms, if a pot is the ultimate home. Growth is moderate, and should bear well three years after planting. While some European pomegranates are over 200 years old, vigor may decline into the second decade.

In the fall during years that climatic conditions allow good fruit set, the globe-shaped fruits can be striking, resembling Christmas ornaments.  Fruit typically ripen in September to November. Pomegranate plants are said to be well-suited for the shrub border. They make a great backdrop for small shrubs and perennials and good screens. They benefit from a 2-to 3-inch layer of organic mulch.

If fruit production is desired, irrigating to provide even soil moisture will reduce fruit drop and prevent fruit splitting. Additionally, fertilizing plants in March and July with 1 pound of 10-10-10 for every three feet of plant height will aid in fruiting.

Or, you could just buy the attractive fruits in stores right now, and enjoy their sweet health benefits yourself.

The pomegranate season is short, so grab them this month while you see them.

Pomegranate and Pear Salad

3 cups green leaf lettuce, rinsed and torn

1 Bartlett or Anjou pear

1/3 cup pomegranate seeds

1 tablespoon vegetable oil

1 tablespoon lemon juice

1 teaspoon Dijon mustard

1 tablespoon pomegranate juice

1/2 tablespoon honey

Fresh-ground black pepper, to taste

Divide the lettuce between two bowls. Halve and core the pear, then cut each half in slices. Divide the pear slices and pomegranate seeds between the two bowls and mix gently. Combine the vegetable oil, pomegranate juice, lemon juice, mustard, honey and pepper in a saucepan. Bring to a boil over high heat; reduce heat and simmer, stirring frequently, until the dressing thickens slightly, about 2 minutes. Pour the warm dressing over the salads and serve.  PS

Jan Leitschuh is a local gardener, avid eater of fresh produce and co-founder of the Sandhills Farm to Table Cooperative.

Trial by Bottle Cap

Now opening — or not — near you

By Joyce Reehling

Eyes open and all the thoughts that start the day begin a race in her brain to see which will get there first. She will stumble in a fog of sleep with a hint of a dream. And thus it begins, a series of questions and answers and challenges.

Up she gets to wash hands and face and brush her teeth. An almost ridiculous task as she will have tea and toast or cereal and have to brush all over again. It’s a ritual — to be followed by the ceremony of opening things.

At the intersection of age and the half-life of jars, boxes of tea, bandages and condiments, there have been developments — no, conspiracies — to demonstrate that youth has taken a bus out of town.

Twice a week the day begins with replacing her hormone replacement patch. The “glue” that will attach to her skin has a cover on it which must be removed. A glue that will, before the next time it is to be replaced, not fully adhere to her body like it stubbornly adheres to that cover now. She takes a deep breath and tries not to scream.

Padding down the hall and into the kitchen, there is a new box of tea to open. Such boxes have a “Tear Here” tab with the vague promise that it will actually tear here or somewhere near the line of the cutout guides. It almost never happens that way. No, she must first put her finger on either side of the “guides” in the hope that the tab will begin to tear at least a little, then reroute her efforts down that line. This never works. And it is now that her first thoughts of murder, or at least a tribunal to try, convict and sentence the designers of these tortuous schemes, takes hold.

Perhaps death by perforation.

Somewhere, leading otherwise innocent lives, are the people who devised the “Push Down and Turn” tops of this world, the ones that never quite catch correctly. Or the bandage string that she is convinced was never intended to really work. Or the tiny tops of small objects that are screwed on so tight that she dreams of having a tiny vice for them in the garage.

Perhaps death by vice.

Tea brewed, she must now confront the milk carton plug with a circle on top that would cut the finger off a Navy SEAL. She reaches for the chopstick that has become her way of wrenching this diabolical thing off. And she hasn’t even had her first sip of tea.

FedEx has left a small box, probably sometime yesterday, but they never seem to ring the bell anymore, so she discovers it through the kitchen window. Again the dreaded “Tear Here.”

This tab, obviously designed by a particularly malevolent person, always breaks off and never goes beyond the first 1/8 of an inch. Screwdrivers or a box cutter must be carefully employed. With the box finally open, there is a plastic bag with no visible way to open save cutting it. Should she need to return the object they will tell her that it must be returned as shipped. They never say how, since it will never fit back into the bag or into the box. They have, it would seem, developed packing methods similar to sea monkeys, starting tiny and then exploding.

Perhaps death by shrinking.

No sip of tea has been had, nor toast, but by now she is boggled in the brain and her blood is running hot. Others must surely feel these frustrations but the fact that she is not alone is, oddly, no comfort.

She looks out the window for her reset button or a “Push Down and Turn” to begin this day all over again. And then she sips her tea. And sighs with dreams of a courtroom with these designers at the defense table and a jury of women over 50.

Finally, a smile. PS

Joyce Reehling is a frequent contributor and good friend of PineStraw.

Sacred Spaces

Across life — and death — the places where we connect

By Tom Allen

What makes a place sacred is often a matter of experience and memory.

Our daughter married this summer, in a historic Raleigh church, repurposed earlier as a bluegrass venue, then restored, once again, as a church. The founding congregation moved to a suburban location in 2001. Religious-themed, Tiffany-styled stained glass windows traveled with them. Simpler patterns remained. When a developer purchased the building, he filled the empty spaces with stained glass fitting a more secular venue — a colonial-era vineyard, a maestro conducting a symphony.

When a new congregation purchased the building, they set out to restore the space to its original intent as a house of worship. Some rooms were left open for artists’ displays. The church also agreed the sanctuary could be used occasionally for concerts. They’ve done an amazing amount of work in a short time — updating antiquated HVAC systems, refinishing hardwood floors, and preserving decades-old pews. Finding a new home for the current windows and replacing them with stained glass depictions of the faith is planned but costly.

So when I walked Hannah down the aisle on August 19, instead of depictions of the Good Shepherd or the Christmas story, a couple, straight out of Colonial Williamsburg, was strolling through a vineyard. Above a wooden cross a conductor raised his baton, ready to give the downbeat. Although some of the visuals seemed to contradict the setting, the day, we all agreed, was a high and holy occasion, a pull-out-all-the-stops celebration with lots of grand memories.

For many, a church, a synagogue, a temple, is sacred space. The words and rituals echoing there connect people to something beyond themselves, something transcendent, mysterious, yet something very real. Babies are baptized, vows are spoken, the sick are anointed, the dead are remembered. Some spaces house relics and saintly figures. Holy books, altars, and tables become enshrined. Whether an upright piano donated in memory of a dear granny or the tomb of a beloved saint buried for centuries in an undercroft, crypts and crevices enhance the sacredness of these spaces. Westminster Abbey, a simple rural sanctuary or an outdoor chapel canopied by oaks — all places where sacred spaces abound.

But people need not enter a temple or church to feel the holiness. The delivery rooms where my children were born, occasions that took my breath away, became sacred places. The room in a nursing center, where I held my parents’ hands as they breathed their last, was just as sacred as the churches where I embraced a belief that something was beyond those final breaths.

I know a couple in their 80s who have walked the same path, weather permitting, every afternoon since they retired. She is stooped. He holds her hand. The path has grown shorter and the walk takes longer, but that trail is, for them, a sacred and holy space.

Places of horror can be sacred as well. Sites of the unfathomable — Ground Zero in Manhattan, Dachau, Auschwitz, the Killing Fields of Cambodia — these places, where innocents were slaughtered, become shrines to the sanctity of life and the hope that “never again” will prevail.

You probably have personal sacred places, beyond walls and steeples. The space might be the chair where loved ones used to sit, a car they drove, a garden they once tended, a kitchen table where life was shared, or a grave that confirms that they lived and loved and mattered.

Sometimes I fear we’ve lost our capacity to see wonder where true wonder lies, to see the sacred in the everyday, the holy in the mundane. Perhaps the story of the first Christmas — the birth of a baby in a cow stall — reminds us all, whether we embrace the story as our own or not, that beauty and wonder often come to us simply, quietly and in the most unexpected times and places.

For one and all, may these days be merry and bright, blessed with peace and graced with wonder. And may you find a place, a time, or just a moment, that simply takes your breath away.  PS

Tom Allen is minister of education at First Baptist Church, Southern Pines.

 

December Books

Our Town 

Southern Sunrises, by Tom Bryant

An endearing collection of Bryant’s “Sporting Life” columns, originally appearing in PineStraw magazine, captures what it is to be Southern and true in these stories of fishing, bird hunting, friends and family. 

The Hamlet Fire: A Tragic Story of Cheap Food, Cheap Government and Cheap Lives, by Bryant Simon

A look at the 1991 fire at the Imperial Foods processing plant in Hamlet reveals much about the state of the food industry in America. The investigative reporting by Simon suggests local lore surrounding the tragic fire is incorrect. Worth a read. 

Spiderella: The Girl who Spoke with Spiders, by Romey Petite and Laurel Holden 

This is a surefire gift for little ones of all ages. A collaboration of two Southern Pines artists and storytellers, it’s a modern version of the Cinderella theme with illustrations and costumes that stay with you long after the book is closed.

Coffee Table

The Authentics: A Lush Dive Into the Substance of Style, by Melanie Acevedo and Dara Caponigro

The best coffee table book of the year by the founding editor of Domino magazine. The photographs of the graceful spaces and the people who inhabit them are beautiful, but this book is made readable by the interviews with each “Authentic.” A wonderful addition in your living room. 

Vogue Living: Country, City, Coast edited, by Hamish Bowles and Chloe Malle

This collection of Vogue homes from 2008 to 2016 showcases the magazine’s brilliant and varied photography. Similar to the Vogue Weddings: Brides, Dresses, Designers from 2012, this is sure to be a staple for appreciators of elegance. 

Stocking Stuffers

You Look Better Online: Your Life in 150 Unfiltered Cartoons, by Emmet Truxes 

This stocking-sized book is full of truths about modern life that will have adults, young and old, giggling through Christmas morning and beyond.

365 Days of Firsts: A Daily Record of Baby’s First Year 

A little book to help new parents record each memorable milestone. Attractive, with quick dates and a few lines to fill in as the newborn grows up, this is a fantastic (and easy) way to chronicle the treasures of life. 

Biography 

Bunny Mellon: The Life of an American Style Legend, by Meryl Gordon

The story of the trendsetting Bunny Mellon, the designer of the White House Rose Garden, is full of family secrets, politics, art and fashion among America’s 20th century elite.

Churchill and Orwell: The Fight For Freedom, by Thomas E. Ricks

A dual biography of Winston Churchill and George Orwell, two of the most important people in British history who shared the vision and courage to campaign tirelessly, in words and in deeds, against the totalitarian threat from both the left and the right.

Leonardo Da Vinci, by Walter Isaacson 

The author of Steve Jobs and Einstein takes a spellbinding look at history’s most creative genius, weaving a narrative that connects Da Vinci’s art to his science. He shows how Leonardo’s genius was based on skills we can improve in ourselves, such as passionate curiosity, careful observation, and an imagination so playful that it flirted with fantasy.

Sisters First: Stories from our Wild and Wonderful Life, by Jenna Bush Hager and Barbara Pierce Bush 

Much more than a tale of politics, the girls who saw both their grandfather and father serve as President of the United States co-author a thoughtful memoir about their lives and American history over the last 30 years. 

Grant, by Ron Chernow

The Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Washington and Alexander Hamilton delivers a brilliant account of Ulysses S. Grant’s life. Chernow provides a deeper understanding of the often misunderstood and frequently caricatured Civil War general and post-war president.

Nonfiction

Overload: Finding the Truth in Today’s Deluge of News by Bob Schieffer

The legendary television broadcaster examines today’s journalism and those who practice it. Based on interviews with over 40 media leaders from television, print media, and the internet, Schieffer surveys the perils and promises of journalism’s rapidly changing landscape.

The Future Is History: How Totalitarianism Reclaimed Russia, by Masha Gessen

A brilliant book by the biographer of Vladimir Putin, Gessen follows the lives of four people to chart the path of a Russia from the doorstep of democracy to a virulent autocracy.


The Last Castle: The Epic Story of Love, Loss and American Royalty in the Nation’s Largest Home,
by Denise Kieran

The fascinating true story behind the magnificent Gilded Age mansion Biltmore — the largest, grandest residence ever built in the United States. The story of Biltmore spans world wars, the Jazz Age, the Depression, and generations of the famous Vanderbilt family, and features a captivating cast of real-life characters including F. Scott Fitzgerald, Thomas Wolfe, Teddy Roosevelt, John Singer Sargent, James Whistler, Henry James, and Edith Wharton.

Fiction

The Last Ballad

by Wiley Cash

The chronicle of an ordinary woman’s struggle for dignity and her rights in a textile mill, The Last Ballad is a moving tale of courage in the face of oppression and injustice. Cash tells the story of Ella May Wiggins and brings to life the heartbreak and bravery of the labor movement in 20th century North Carolina, paying tribute to the thousands of heroic women and men who risked their lives to win basic rights for all workers. 

Cookbooks

The Farmhouse Chef: Recipes and Stories from My Carolina Farm, by Jamie DeMent

From the owner of Piedmont Restaurant in Durham.

Cúrate: Authentic Spanish Food From an American Kitchen, by Kate Button

From the owner of Cúrate in Asheville.

Poole’s: Recipes and Stories from a Modern Diner, by Ashley Christensen

From the owner of Poole’s Downtown Diner in Raleigh.

CHILDREN’S BOOKS

Brinkley Boyd of Weymouth, by Annie Hallinan

From the author of the Sandhills best-selling title The Sweetest Christmas Eve comes this new tale of Brinkley Boyd. A small, quiet mouse, Brinkley enjoys living at the Boyd House at Weymouth. There are rooms to explore, animal friends to make, stories to hear, and adventures to be had. This special edition of Brinkley Boyd also includes a Weymouth Center guided scavenger hunt and special photographs from James and Katharine Boyd’s wedding. Ages 4-9.

The Very Very Very Long Dog, by Julia Patton

Bartelby is a very long and lovable dachshund who lives in a bookstore. He has a lovely set of friends who take him for walks through the city, but he has no idea that his bumbling backside leaves a trail of destruction and accidents behind him. Embarrassed that he has no control over his back end, Bartelby vows to never leave the cozy bookstore again. Can his friends help him find a way to help himself? Ages 3-7.

Top Elf, by Caleb Huett

Ollie and Celia think they know what the life of an elf is supposed to be like: make toys; help Santa; make more toys; help Santa; try out a new icecream flavor; help Santa. However, after 20 years, the current St. Nick is ready to pass the torch to the next Santa who will be chosen in a rather unusual way — a contest! Let the Santa trials and the fun begin. Ages 7-12.

Nyxia, by Scott Reintgen

Nyxia — an amazing substance that can be transformed into a ring, a sword, a life-saving vest, a wall. Nyxia — sought out by the Babel Corporation. Nyxia — the thing that just might transform Emmett Atwater from an underprivileged teen into a millionaire if only he can earn a spot on the team traveling to the planet Eden to extract more Nyxia. Hunger Games meets Enders Game, this first installment of the Nyxia trilogy leaves the reader begging debut author Scott Reintgen to hurry please with book two. Ages 14 and up. PS

Compiled by Kimberly Daniels Taws and Angie Talley.

Their Darkest Hours

For brilliant red poinsettias, keep them under wraps

By Ross Howell Jr.

For years as a grad student and later as an itinerant bachelor, I put off buying Christmas decorations because I didn’t want to move them from one apartment to the next. Holiday decorating for me meant buying poinsettias — usually in foil-wrapped containers — to get instant seasonal cheer with minimal effort.

Besides, poinsettias have a cool history.

Indigenous to Mexico, Euphorbia pulcherrima owes its popular name to Joel Poinsett. Born in 1779 to a wealthy family in Charleston, South Carolina, Poinsett was a world traveler. President John Quincy Adams appointed him as the first Minister to Mexico in 1825. While visiting south of Mexico City, Poinsett saw a plant known among locals as Flor de Nochebuena, or “Christmas Eve flower.” An amateur botanist, Poinsett sent samples back home. Propagated and sold, the plants by 1836 had become known in the States as “poinsettias.”

So what did I do with my once-lovely poinsettias after the holidays were over? I dumped the then-desiccated plants into the trash.

As time passed, my lazy approach to holiday decorating left me feeling guiltier and guiltier.

All those plants I’d tossed. What if I’d tried to winter them over, do whatever mysterious things needed to be done to have them erupt in scarlet again the following Christmas?

Then one evening a message popped up on my neighborhood listserv.

“Is anyone in the area trying to force poinsettias? We are trying to do it but have to travel during the ‘dark time’ and need someone to tend them for us.” The sender was Tom Krissak.

Surely Krissak could give me a shortcut to poinsettia success. I mean, he already knew there was something called “dark time.”

Turns out, Krissak — retired from the funeral business — had sent the message on behalf of his partner, Samuel Johnson, who’s the gardener in their household. Krissak gave me Johnson’s number.

“Oh, I really just took up plants after I retired a couple years ago,” Johnson confesses over the phone.

He tells me he grew up in northern Virginia but has lived all over the world. A mathematician, Johnson first came to Greensboro to teach at Guilford College.

After years at Guilford, he left Greensboro for a time and studied the law, became a practicing attorney and returned to Greensboro for a second time.

“I like trying to keep plants alive,” Johnson says, “but I have just the opposite of a green thumb. If you want to talk about poinsettias, you need to call Esther Maltby.”

Maltby is a neighbor who recently stepped down after seven years as director of the Dunleith Community Garden on Chestnut Street.

“Esther and I worked out a deal,” Johnson continues. “She’s caring for the poinsettias while we’re away. If they live, we’ll split the plants between us.”

So what’s Maltby’s take on the poinsettia project?

“It’s really Samuel who’s done all the research,” Maltby says. “I just agreed to babysit.”

Maltby tells me she grew up in Pakistan, the daughter of Protestant missionaries. Her father was an engineer; her mother a teacher. Poinsettias were prolific where they lived in Pakistan, growing into bushes 8 to 12 feet tall.

“I never gave a thought to cultivating little ones,” Maltby says with a laugh.

Her strategy for forcing the poinsettias to bloom is to keep them in light—but not direct sunlight — for eight hours a day. Then she plunges them into darkness — under cardboard boxes covered by blankets — for the remaining 16 hours of the day.

When Maltby sees red bracts sprouting, she’ll stop the “dark time.” She began the process in mid-October, a little concerned about having enough time to bring the plants to full Christmas glory.

“Samuel messages me every day, asking how the poinsettias are doing,” she says. “I tell him they look good; they’re putting out lots of green leaves.”

She pauses.

“I sure hope this works,” she says.

Me, too.

Regardless, I realize now keeping poinsettias holiday-to-holiday requires way more mindfulness than a lazy guy like me can muster.  PS

Ross Howell Jr. is getting ready for Elon University’s January term, when he’ll be teaching a general studies course entitled “A Brief History of Truth.”

The Untamed Lady

Film star Gloria Swanson dazzled the Sandhills, making a movie here in 1926

By Bill Case

Well before the clock struck midnight ushering in the new year of 1926, Pinehurst was abuzz with the report that a film crew from Paramount Pictures would be visiting the Sandhills in short order to film several scenes for a new movie. Even more electrifying was the news that Gloria Swanson, arguably Hollywood’s biggest star, had been cast in the film’s lead role.

The presence of Swanson’s name on theater marquees had guaranteed blockbuster profits for Paramount in the 26 silent films she had made for the company. Most of these movies were produced and directed by the studio’s legendary filmmaker Cecil B. DeMille. It was DeMille who had lured Swanson to Paramount in 1918, having been mesmerized by young Gloria’s alluring screen presence, first noted in Mack Sennett comedies, and then wasted in worse than mediocre films made by a lesser studio. DeMille realized that the 4-foot-11 Swanson was not a prototypical bombshell beauty. Much of her appeal stemmed from the unmatchable glamour and elegance she naturally projected on screen. DeMille capitalized on these qualities by branding Swanson as the ultimate clotheshorse.

Women focused on Swanson’s attire and appearance and flocked to the cinema to see Gloria adorned in the latest (and sometimes over-the-top) styles. Whether ornamented in peacock or ostrich feathers, turbans, jewels or beads, she defined chic. Swanson’s haute couture attire definitely influenced women’s fashions in the ’20s. Her captivating appearance coupled with torrid on-screen romances with heartthrob actors like Rudolph Valentino and Wallace Reid made for an irresistible combination for moviegoers. Swanson’s success had given her considerable leverage in dealings with Paramount, which now compensated her upward of $20,000 weekly.

The Hollywood star’s love life also provided considerable grist for the movie tabloids. The 26-year-old had already been married three times — the first at age 17 to fellow actor Wallace Beery, who subsequently became an A-list star himself. She separated from Beery a year later, asserting in her memoir that Beery physically abused her. Swanson’s second marriage, in 1920, to film producer Herbert Somborn seemed more a business arrangement than the product of a love affair. The couple did parent a daughter, also named Gloria, and adopted a son, Joseph, during their union. But that marriage crumbled also. The ink on the divorce decree was barely dry when in January 1925, Gloria married her third husband in France. A member of French nobility, Henri de la Falaise, Marquis de la Coudraye, had met Gloria while serving as her interpreter during the filming of Madame Sans-Gene. Handsome, attentive and multilingual, Henri was an authentic war hero, having demonstrated valor fighting for France in the trenches during The Great War. His status as a marquis allowed Swanson to enhance her already regal stature in show business with a title of her own. The only marital box that Henri could not check was the one marked “finances.” He had very little money of his own despite the fact that his mother was a scion of the Hennessy cognac family. Still, it seemed the couple was well matched and that Gloria’s heretofore turbulent personal life would culminate in a fairy-tale ending. Henri would accompany his wife, the “Marquise,” to Pinehurst for the filming.

Preceding the glamorous couple was the film’s director, Frank Tuttle, who arrived on Monday, the 4th of January, and promptly scouted the area for potential scene locations. Better known in Hollywood circles as a writer, Tuttle had recently directed a handful of movies for Paramount, but had not previously directed Gloria Swanson. The 30-member Paramount troupe, along with Gloria’s co-star, Lawrence Gray, trailed Tuttle into town. On Thursday evening, an eight-piece band, which included legendary Pinehurst caddie Robert “Hardrock” Robinson, greeted Gloria and Henri upon their arrival at the Southern Pines railroad station platform. The stage was set for the shooting of the film eventually to be called The Untamed Lady.

Swanson described the plot of the movie as a “story about a spoiled rich girl (St. Clair Van Tassel) who almost ruins her life with her willfulness but who is rescued before it is too late by a young man who truly loves her in spite of her faults.” The script called for scenarios involving car wrecks and gallops on horseback. Given that Swanson was an experienced horsewoman, Tuttle presumed he would have no need for a double for the heroine’s riding scenes.

Even Pinehurst golfers, who normally displayed scant interest in cinema, were intrigued by the arrival of Swanson and the Paramount production crew. The Pinehurst Outlook reported that even the best players had “changed their playing schedules in order to be thoroughly acquainted with the doings of the small movie company that has come to this resort.” And interest in the production extended well beyond the Sandhills. The Elizabeth City Daily Advance reported “scores flocked into the Carolina Hotel to get a glimpse of the famous screen actress. Parties of girls, all ‘Swanson fans’ drove in from High Point, ninety miles away . . . Charlotte and other nearby points sent their unofficial and curious delegations. All in all, Pinehurst seethed with an activity such as is common only in boom towns.”

Though Swanson may have appeared happy and carefree to her adoring fans, she was beset with turmoil regarding her future in filmmaking. Frustrated by what she deemed to be Paramount’s poor script selections as well as the heavy workload demanded of her by the studio, Swanson had decided the previous July not to renew her contract with the company. Instead, she had inked a new deal with United Artists (UA), where she anticipated that she, like fellow UA superstars Charlie Chaplin, Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford, would have the freedom to choose scripts she liked. UA would also afford Swanson the opportunity to independently produce movies herself, and do so on a less demanding schedule. But before beginning her new association, she was contractually obligated to make two final movies for Paramount, the first of which was The Untamed Lady.

Swanson believed that Paramount intended to make as much money as it could in these last two films by stripping the production expenses to the bone with “no big directors, no expensive stories, (and) no large casts.” She was particularly displeased with the studio’s selection of Frank Tuttle as the director of The Untamed Lady, later suggesting that “out of insecurity . . . he (Tuttle) pretended to be utterly confident at all times, the dapper Ivy League type who always had the answer ready before the question was asked.” While Gloria was initially inclined to “breeze through” the filming without making any special effort, it occurred to her that she soon would be producing her own movies so, “if the studio was determined to throw me into rote parts . . . I would take all the extra energy I might have used in more demanding roles, and devote it in learning how to make pictures. In other words, I would turn Paramount into my producing school if I could.” And she did, redirecting scenes that Tuttle had already approved, making changes to the script, and consulting one-on-one with the crew’s technicians. Swanson would reflect that Tuttle (who would ultimately enjoy a successful directing career) may have come to regard her as “more willful than the girl in the script.” Nevertheless, Swanson considered the filmmaking knowledge gained during her two weeks in Pinehurst to have been invaluable preparation for the more active production role she undertook in later movies.

Tuttle chose the Sandhills Woman’s Exchange cabin as the location for one scene. McKenzie’s Pond (near what is now Juniper Lake Road) was selected for another in which the obstinate St. Clair Van Tassel insists on driving across an unsafe bridge in flagrant disregard of a warning sign. At the time, McKenzie’s Pond teemed with activity. Picnickers and folks out for a brisk walk enjoyed the serene atmosphere where farmers brought their grain to Jesse McKenzie’s mill, formerly known as Ray’s Mill. Within a decade of the filming of The Untamed Lady, the dam collapsed, and all vestiges of McKenzie’s Pond would disappear. Later the dilapidated remnants of the old mill burned to the ground. Today, visitors would be hard-pressed to envision the site’s once idyllic setting.

Not surprisingly, the marquise and marquis were feted during their stay in Pinehurst. Swanson and her husband were guests of honor at a dinner dance held at Pinehurst Country Club arranged by Mr. and Mrs. Arthur N. Pierson Jr., of Westfield, N.J. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Tuttle, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Tufts, and Lawrence Gray were among the attendees. Charles Picquet, the general manager of Pinehurst’s Carolina Theatre, hosted the couple at the theater for a Friday evening affair. Gloria also made a splash at the Gun Club, which had invited members of the film troupe to take part in the club’s weekly shooting competition. Showing dead-eye proficiency, Swanson took home first prize among the female contestants.

The Sandhills had been chosen as a venue for the January filming with the belief that the location would be southerly enough to be snow-free. But on the eve of the climactic scene in which Gloria was to make a dash on horseback to a log cabin to warn Lawrence Gray’s character that the movie’s villain was in hot pursuit, snow blanketed Pinehurst. With a costly delay beckoning, Tuttle scrambled to find the nearest suitable snow-free location. He found one on Drowning Creek, 15 miles south of Pinehurst, complete with a log home called Mosagiel Cabin. The 3,000-acre site, which later became part of Camp Mackall, was then owned by local attorney J. Talbot Johnson. Tuttle made arrangements with Johnson for access to the property late on a Sunday night. By 9 a.m. the next morning, the crew, together with Gloria, her horse, and 10 Packard automobiles, had made the journey to Mosagiel Cabin. An hour later the day’s shooting began. The Pilot reported that Swanson soon was engaged in “riding the pine woods at more than the speed limit and tearing up the turf in the effort to rescue the unsuspecting fellow at the house.”

Then, after 10 minutes in the saddle, Swanson suddenly stopped the horse in its tracks. Dismounting, she walked it back to the corral and informed the nonplussed Tuttle that she could not go through with any further riding. She made no further explanation for her sudden decision, nor did Tuttle ask for one. In her autobiography, she explained that, “I had the clearest premonition of tragedy as I rode, a voiceless warning that I must never ride again. I knew that Henri’s father had died after a riding accident, but the feeling I had admitted of no logical connection. It was a command of terrifying force . . . I couldn’t dream of ignoring it. Moreover, I knew that nothing would induce me to ever ride again.” Swanson’s double completed the shooting.

The Carolina Hotel prepared sumptuous dinners for the film company at Mosagiel Cabin both Monday and Tuesday nights. At the conclusion of filming, a reception was held at the cabin where some of the locals savored the chance to chat with Swanson and the rest of the troupe. The Pilot reported the impression of one guest who gushed that “Gloria is a peach,” and that the cast was “chummy as if they were home folks.” Gloria was effusive in her flowery praise of the Sandhills. She expressed her love of Pinehurst, Mosagiel, the climate, the delicious atmosphere, the pine trees, the elegant pine straw carpets to ride over, and the wonderfully clean water.

After final editing was expeditiously completed, The Untamed Lady was set for release on March 22. The well-connected Charles Picquet finagled pre-release world premiere showings at the two Carolina Theatres, by having the film air-freighted from Los Angeles at the cost of $200. Two presentations were scheduled for March 17 in Pinehurst with two more scheduled the following day at the theater in Southern Pines. The Pilot reported that “probably one of the biggest crowds ever drawn by a single attraction came flocking into the two Carolina theatres” to attend the movie, and to see how the area’s familiar points appeared on the big screen. The report concluded that “the show was all right. The crowd was pretty near the whole population.”

But when the film made its grand opening the next week, reviews were tepid at best. The New York Times’ review described the film as “a sort of farfetched, modernized conception of The Taming of the Shrew, but as Miss Swanson does not look like a shrew, and never acts as if she really needed taming, one may gather that, taking it by and large, William Shakespeare’s play has somewhat the better of the film.” Gloria Swanson’s rueful observation that Paramount sought to punish her imminent departure with a substandard production may not have been far off the mark.

After completing an obligatory final movie for Paramount, Swanson plunged into her eagerly anticipated association with United Artists. For a while, she became something of an entrepreneurial trailblazer for women in cinema, employing the technical knowledge she acquired in Pinehurst to not only act in her films but produce them and assume the financial risks involved. She looked to Henri for advice, but the marquis’ skills did not really run in that direction. For the most part, Gloria was on her own. And though she now had a good working understanding of the filmmaking process, she had yet to learn how to control costs by keeping shooting on a tight schedule. By the star’s own admission, her first production effort took “nine months to make instead of six weeks.” Far over budget, The Loves of Sunya depleted an unhealthy portion of Swanson’s cash reserves.

Undaunted, she undertook the task of bringing Sadie Thompson to the screen. The story featured a puritanical minister attempting the reformation of Sadie — a prostitute (played by Swanson). Instead the minister falls in love. Swanson cleverly maneuvered the then controversial project past the objections of the censors, and made what was subsequently regarded as one of the best of the silent movies. Swanson felt that Sadie was a potential box office hit, but she harbored a concern that many theater owners might refuse to exhibit the film. If that happened, she could be financially ruined. To make matters worse, Sadie had run over budget and Swanson needed cash, both for her own needs and for financing her next picture.

So it was a beleaguered Swanson who met banker Joseph P. Kennedy (father of U.S. President John F. Kennedy) for lunch to seek financial assistance and advice. It was the start of a star-crossed relationship. After reviewing her finances, Kennedy informed Gloria that her affairs were a mess. He offered to take charge and restore order. Worn down by her debts, and impressed by Kennedy’s business acumen and take-charge persona, Gloria agreed. Before long Joe Kennedy had taken over Swanson’s entire life. He would urge her to sell her distribution rights to Sadie to get clear of her mounting debts. Despite misgivings, she did so. As she expected, the movie became a hit, and Gloria would regretfully watch as the buyer amassed large profits.

As Kennedy was making a concerted effort to wriggle his way into the film business himself, he cajoled Swanson into making a picture in a joint venture with his own fledgling operation, RKO Pictures. Kennedy insisted that the talented Erich von Stroheim direct the movie. But Von Stroheim was notorious for causing interminable delays and that unfortunately occurred on their project, Queen Kelly. Saddled with staggering overruns, the movie was never released in the U.S., though a modified version was shown in Europe. Swanson’s reliance on Kennedy’s judgment as a movie mogul seemed misplaced.

To complicate matters, the two had become lovers. Gloria would later write that though she enjoyed a happy marriage with Henri, she “knew perfectly well that whatever adjustments or deceits must inevitably follow, the strange man beside me, more than my husband, owned me.” Kennedy managed to lure Henri away from Gloria’s side by hiring him to fill a position in Paris as European director for Pathé Studios.

The Swanson-Kennedy film collaboration coincided with the advent of “talkies.” Many silent movie stars were unable to make the transition to sound, but Swanson possessed a clear and pleasing voice and had little difficulty. Her first talking picture, The Trespasser, was a major success, but a second effort was less so. Her professional and personal relationship with Kennedy came to an abrupt end after Gloria questioned Joe’s attribution of certain expenses connected to Gloria’s individual account. The end of their affair came too late to salvage Swanson’s marriage to the marquis and the two divorced.

Swanson continued to acquire husbands and make movies thereafter, but her star definitely waned as she entered her 30s and the moviegoing public’s tastes changed. By 1949, she was reconciled to the fact that she would never make another movie, having been off the screen altogether for over eight years. But then director Billy Wilder cast the 50-year-old actress as a faded silent motion picture star who dreams of a comeback in Sunset Boulevard. Swanson’s knowing, on-the-mark performance won an Oscar nomination and capped a remarkable comeback that the character she played — the delusional Norma Desmond — failed to achieve. Today, Sunset Boulevard is regarded as one of the all-time film noir classics.

Swanson considered most of the roles offered her after Sunset Boulevard to constitute pale imitations of her Norma Desmond character, and she turned them down. She made only three films thereafter, though she performed often on stage and in television productions. She busied herself as a nutritional advocate, writing her autobiography, and painting and sculpting. She died in 1983 at age 84.

But what became of the film of The Untamed Lady? Like those who had attended the picture’s March, 1926 sneak preview at the two Carolina Theatres, I had hoped to view how McKenzie’s Pond, the Sandhills Woman’s Exchange cabin and Mosagiel Cabin appeared on screen. However, as is the case with many of the old silent movies, no reels of the film are known to presently exist. In the early days of filmmaking, a studio rarely retained a movie in its library unless someone in charge felt there was a prospect the film might be rereleased in the future. Often, the last exhibitor in a run was not even asked to return the movie to the studio.

“There was no market for a film after its theatrical run,” explains Todd Berliner, professor of film studies at the University of North Carolina at Wilmington. “Studios made a practice of retaining their movies only after television and video became potential ancillary markets, allowing the studios to reap benefit from an existing film.”

The Film Foundation, a nonprofit organization founded by Martin Scorsese and dedicated to film preservation, estimates that 90 percent of American films made before 1929 are lost. The Library of Congress believes that 75 percent of all silent films are lost forever. Nonetheless, there remains a slim chance that The Untamed Lady could turn up one day. In 1978, a cache of silent movie reels was discovered beneath an ice rink in the Yukon. The films were in good condition having been protected by the permafrost from decomposition.

Today North Carolina is no stranger to the cinema. The Color Purple, The Last of the Mohicans, Dirty Dancing and Talladega Nights were all filmed here by major studios. But Paramount’s production of The Untamed Lady stands as Hollywood’s first feature film shot on location in the Tar Heel State. So it was that North Carolina’s film debut and the Golden Age’s greatest female movie star joined to captivate the Sandhills for a fortnight.  PS

Pinehurst resident Bill Case is PineStraw’s history man. He can be reached at Bill.Case@thompsonhine.com.

Northern Bobwhite

Diminished in number, the bird with the distinctive call is making a comeback

By Susan Campbell

For those fortunate enough to live in open piney woods or adjacent to large farm fields, the whistled call of the bobwhite quail may be a familiar sound. But, as with so many of our bird species, this once prolific songster has diminished in the Piedmont. And anyone in search of winter partridge for the table is increasingly likely to be disappointed.

Bobwhite quail measure between 8 to 11 inches beak-to-tail and have very cryptic brown, black and white markings that make them all but impossible to see in the grassy habitats they call home. The male has a bright, white eye-stripe and throat marking, and is the one who announces his territory through a repeated “bob-white” call. The female is not only smaller but drabber, with an eye-stripe and throat that are a buffy color. This stout bird’s short sharp bill, strong legs and feet with sharp claws, make it well adapted to foraging at ground level for insects, berries and soft vegetation.

Northern bobwhite males attract a mate using their loud repetitive calls in the spring. The female will reply with a four-syllable whistle of her own. Following breeding, the pair creates a domed nest concealed in tall grasses, and the hen lays up to 20 pure white eggs. It takes about 25 days of incubation for the young to hatch. Hens will renest if the eggs are eaten or destroyed. Upon hatching, the chicks will immediately follow their parents, learning how to hunt bugs and which shoots are the most nutritious.  As a group they are referred to as a covey.  They will stay together through the winter and may join other families to form coveys of thirty or more birds. When alarmed at an early age, the young will scatter and freeze to avoid predators. Once they can fly, they will take to the air in a loud blur of wings if they are startled by a potential predator.

Quail were a very popular game bird throughout North Carolina until not that long ago. Since the 1980s, when their numbers began to decline, they’ve been much harder to find. A combination of factors is believed to be responsible. Not only have open woodlands and agricultural fields with hedgerows become more scarce but ground predators such as foxes, coyotes, raccoons and free roaming cats have increased. Also, the timing of rainfall can significantly affect breeding productivity. Too much rain too early may inundate nests and dry conditions when chicks hatch may result in insufficient food.

These days, hunters search for coveys in the forests and fields that comprise the patchwork of Game Lands in our portion of the state or they go to private game reserves. Their pursuit requires a well-trained bird dog and a good deal of patience. However, active quail management is occurring locally. Two strategies are at work: opening up forested habitat using prescribed burning and replanting undesirable vegetation with quality cover.  Recent efforts by biologists with the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission and at Fort Bragg (along with assistance from local Quail Unlimited chapters) are resulting in gradual increases in northern bobwhite. We certainly hope this trend continues so that in the not too distant future, sightings of winter coveys will be once again commonplace throughout central North Carolina and the song of the bobwhite will return to the South.  PS

Susan would love to receive your wildlife observations and photographs at susan@ncaves.com.

A Light Touch for Christmas

Creating a Scandinavian Yuletide

By Deborah Salomon     Photographs by John Gessner

Deck the halls with boughs of holly? Probably not.

Chestnuts roasting on an open fire? Old school.

Little drummer boys? March on by.

At this echelon Christmas theme parks — Victorian, teddy bear, monochromatic — become passé. Instead, Southern Pines floral designer Matthew Hollyfield befriends his client, studies her home, her furnishings, her art and personality, even her clothes. He interprets these clues into his plan.

Since Marilyn Grube, a retired federal judge with sparkling eyes and smile, is all about gardening, Matt goes au naturel — local greenery framed by many lights shaped like berries or, flanking the front door, tiny flowers.

The result tiptoes a line between ho-ho-ho basic and bouffant, as in faux snow and glitter. At Chez Grube, a quiet elegance rules while allowing a few wow moments — a single 9-foot Christmas tree placed on the covered terrace but visible through windows and French doors, decorated entirely with painted glass pine cones, crowned by a bird’s nest rather than a star.

This organic style invites onlookers to come closer, touch, marvel at details.

Marilyn presents interesting material for Matt’s personality profile.

Marilyn and her husband James, both golfing Californians, had visited Pinehurst for 30 years. The East Coast posed an adventure, first Atlanta, then Pinehurst, where they retired in 2008 for familiar reasons: “I felt a connection because Pinehurst was open to outsiders from all over the country. They live here because they want to,” says Marilyn. She sought a house with gardening potential but wasn’t interested in the elongated red brick built in 1969 and hidden from the road by an overgrown berm. The Realtor had never been inside. Let’s have a look, she convinced them.

Not only did the garden (“A forest, really.”) have possibilities, but Jim and Marilyn could envision stripping the house down to its studs and rebuilding with a light, airy, California presence — exterior brick painted white, archways instead of doorways, miles of crown moldings, and wall space for an impressive art collection, from Abraham Lincoln to Morgan horses bred by her father to splash-dash contemporaries, portraits of her sons and mother and a few fanciful photographs. The ceilings are high, the rooms, oversize.

“My husband was a big man . . . he wanted elbow room,” Marilyn says.

Once ensconced, she joined, volunteered, entertained and, of course, gardened. “It is my passion and frustration,” the latter meaning insects and varmints. “I never heard of voles. And the deer! In California, I grew roses; here, camellias and hydrangeas.”

For the first few years, Christmas décor remained traditional. “I was used to family Christmases, a very special time. We went all-out heavy reds and greens.” After Jim died in December, 2013, “I ran away for four years. This is the first Christmas doing it my way.”

How so? She chose Swedish, knowing nothing of bearded gnomes, only that Scandinavian décor is spare and well-designed — also that it might suit her collection of painted and lacquered figurines on Yule themes, exquisitely hand-carved from small-leaf linden or birch, brought from Russia by Ilana Stewart of Old Sport & Gallery in Pinehurst Village.

“Look at the expression in his eyes,” Marilyn says, lifting a Santa, lovingly.

“I design them, then they are painted by families with acrylic paint I bring from the U.S.,” explains Russian-born Ilana, a longtime Delta flight attendant. “Children do the sanding. (These skilled jobs) support many families so the kids can attend university.” No duty is imposed on hand-carried craft art.

Most of the figurines are displayed in the sunken library, which Marilyn calls a bridge between the kitchen/dining room and the contrasting contemporary living room. The library also houses a grand piano with inlaid panels, built for royalty in 1898 by Bluthner of Germany, purchased and rebuilt for Marilyn’s mother, a concert-worthy pianist, by her father. “This is my most valuable possession, emotionally,” she says. Other appreciative Bluthner owners have been Tchaikovsky, Liberace, Debussy and The Beatles.

That living room is from another world. Sleek, angular retro Scandinavian designs are done in white, turquoise and kelly green except for an heirloom bureau holding family Christmas photos and Jim Grube’s carved desk table, used during his entire legal career, now spread with a puzzle which the family works on during the holidays.

Matt has shifted the Christmas palette accordingly to white and pastels, his population from Santas to angels; all melt into the aura of a cool, bright space created by Marilyn after her husband’s death.

“Matt is bold, fearless,” this devoted client says. Their relationship is one of trust. Matt listens, then plans, then installs without sharing many particulars with Marilyn. Ordinarily, a floral designer works from a concept, a color, a collection or even a price point and presents his or her ideas for approval. The assignment could be one room or an entire house, billed by the hour or job. Services usually include installation and, if desired, deconstruction and packing. Matt and four elves readied the Grube residence for Christmas in about five hours.

Back in the dining room, “Matt made my table magical,” Marilyn beams, by juxtaposing Papa, Mama and Baby polar bears leading Santa on his journey against red silk amaryllis and paper whites. Must not discount the decorative value of the table itself — large, round, dark, deeply grained wood reminiscent of a mountain lodge, here surrounded by molded acrylic chairs in brilliant turquoise.

Matt follows the natural path into the kitchen where he expresses Noel through fruit — a citrus wreath and rusticus vine over the sink, lemongrass from Marilyn’s garden, an old armature holding apples, garlands of smilax. “Matt and I debated over the oranges and lemons, since they’re not red,” Marilyn says. “But they’re seasonal now in California, which reminds me of home.”

She makes a point for regional icons. An authentic Christmas tree would be a Judean date palm, not spruce or balsam, whereas dinner might feature spit-roasted lamb or goat, maybe chicken, but certainly not turkey — and never ham.

gingerbread cottage from The Bakehouse in Aberdeen, an antipasti plate with green olives and tiny red peppers complete Christmas in a kitchen both glamorous yet  restrained. One full-sized oven, a warming drawer mounted under the island and a narrow Sub-Zero supplemented by wine and cold drink storage in the butler’s pantry suffice.

In the front hallway a flat metal tree holds Marilyn’s collection of mini-ornaments, some vaguely Scandinavian, including delicate painted eggshells.

The entrance now makes sense given Marilyn’s leanings toward light, fresh and natural. Wired ribbons and tiny bulbs seem to float through greenery. The door wreath is oval and the mat says, simply “Hello.”

With the job done, Marilyn awaits children, grandchildren, other family and guests. “I have happy memories of Christmas, as a child,” she says. “When the ornaments are unpacked, I feel they are my sentimental friends; they have personalities that go back 30 years.” Beginning now, she will take them forward against a new background, perhaps in a different language:

A God Yul (Merry Christmas, in Swedish) to all … and to all a God Natt.  PS

Strokes of Fame

Shots heard ‘round the Sandhills

By Lee Pace

Payne Stewart’s 20-foot putt to win the 1999 U.S. Open on the last stroke of the championship on Pinehurst No. 2 is certainly one of the most famous strokes in golf history, let alone the annals of this little Sandhills burgh. Films have been made, books have been written about Stewart’s masterful stroke under enormous pressure; the photo of him extending his fist in celebration just as the ball trickles into the hole with thousands of spectators packed around the green is an image for the ages.

But let’s face it: That was a putt, a whack that any 8-year-old could replicate through a lion’s mouth at Myrtle Beach. What about full shots or at least chips and pitches, strokes that require the ball to at least get airborne and some fusion of multiple moving body parts?

Golf has been played at Pinehurst since 1898 on as many as three dozen courses if you include all Moore County. Here, then, are 10 of the best shots ever made in the Sandhills.

Denny Shute’s 3-wood, 1936 — The PGA Championship was Pinehurst’s first taste of major championship golf when the match-play event came to No. 2 in November 1936. Favorites for the title like Walter Hagen, Gene Sarazen, Paul Runyan and Tommy Armour lost earlier matches, leaving Denny Shute, the 1933 British Open winner, to face Jimmy Thomson in the 36-hole championship match. Shute was 2-up over Thomson through 33 holes coming to the par-5 16th hole in the afternoon round. He nailed a 3-wood second shot on the 475-yard par 5 to five feet and was conceded the eagle putt, giving him a 3 and 2 victory.

Ben Hogan’s sand wedge, 1940 — The 28-year-old Texan was winless on the PGA Tour and seriously considering giving it up when he came to Pinehurst in March 1940 for the North and South Open, a tournament considered one of pro golf’s top events of the era. In the opening round, Hogan holed out a shot from a greenside bunker on the par-4 11th for a birdie, fueling him to a 6-under 66. He led by seven shots after 36 holes and wound up beating Sam Snead by three for his first professional victory. He went on to win consecutive tournaments in Greensboro and Asheville, and the match for a Hall of Fame career was lit. “I had finished second and third so many times I was beginning to think I was an also ran. I needed that win,” Hogan said.

Sam Snead’s 4-iron, 1941 — It was a heavyweight threesome if there ever was one — Snead, Hogan and Charlotte’s Clayton Heafner in the last group of the final round of the 1941 North and South Open on No. 2. Hogan faded early, leaving Snead and Heafner in the spotlight. “They were trailed by almost all of the final day gallery of 4,000, and these two big hitters traded birdie punches from start to finish of the last 18 holes,” said one newspaper account. Snead had a one-shot lead coming to the final hole and ripped his 4-iron approach to within inches, securing a three-shot win. “As he broke through the ring of galleryites to tap the ball in, he got a hand such as few golfers ever receive,” the newspaper continued. Snead would win three North and South titles.

Harvie Ward’s sand wedge, 1948 — Harvie Ward had no designs on winning the North and South Amateur when he traveled to Pinehurst from Chapel Hill in April 1948. In fact, the Tarboro native and University of North Carolina golfer didn’t even pack a change of clothes. But he advanced day by day in match play until he reached the final against Frank Stranahan. The big shot came with a 1-up lead through 34 holes. Ward hit into the front bunker on the par-3 17th, then into the back bunker. Then Ward hit a magnificent recovery from that bunker to inches away for a tap-in bogey. Rattled, Stranahan missed a 3-footer for par and the hole was halved. Ward collected his 1-up win with a par on 18.

Hobart Manley’s run of threes, 1951 — It wasn’t just one shot from the 24-year-old Savannah amateur that makes the archives of great golf in Pinehurst — it was 15 of them. Manley and Billy Joe Patton were locked in a tight battle for the North and South Amateur title, and Patton was 2-up through the 13th hole of the afternoon round of the 36-hole finale. Patton would play the last five holes 1-under par, but he lost to Manley, who ripped off five straight threes, which were four-under with birdie, par, eagle, par, birdie. “Just watching the drama unfold made my heart pound and left me limp,” Bill Campbell remembered. Manley won the title, 1-up.

Billy Joe Patton’s 4-wood, late 1950s — The career amateur known for his uncanny recovery ability and gregarious nature hit any number of outstanding shots on No. 2 in winning three North and South Amateurs, but it was a certain 4-wood shot from a troubled lie in the late 1950s that summarized his gift to golf. Patton was in a playoff against Dr. Bud Taylor in the North and South and they came to the second hole. Patton’s tee shot came to rest in a bunker to left of the fairway, near Palmetto Road. He addressed his shot with one foot in the sand, one above it and his ball hung up in tall grass. At that very moment a woman stopped in her car and called out to no one in particular, “Does anyone know where I can get a room for the night?” Nonplussed, Patton continued to address the ball and said, “Lady, if you can wait a few minutes you can probably get mine.” He made bogey, lost the match and vacated his room for a trip back home to Morganton.

Tom Watson’s 8-iron, 1973 — Executives at the Diamondhead Corp., Pinehurst’s new owners since late 1970, conceived the idea of the World Open — a 144-hole marathon on the PGA Tour for a $100,000 first prize. The first one was held on No. 2 in November 1973, and twice a new course record was set. Gibby Gilbert shot a nine-under 62 in the first round and Watson followed with another 62 in the second round. The key shot for Watson was his 8-iron approach for eagle on the 14th hole, and he followed that with four straight birdies. “I was in a daze after that,” Watson said of the eagle. “I felt I could make everything after that.” Alas, the 24-year-old Watson had not quite learned to win and faded with rounds of 76-76-77 as Miller Barber collected first prize.

Mark O’Meara’s 6-iron, 1980 — O’Meara burst onto the national golf scene with a runaway 8-and-7 win over John Cook in the 1979 U.S. Amateur at Canterbury in Cleveland and came to the Country Club of North Carolina the following year as the defending champion. But he almost missed match play as Houston golfer Fred Couples shot rounds of 69-70 to collect the medal and O’Meara was one of 12 players who tied for 57th place, necessitating a playoff to determine the last seven spots in match play. The playoff started at 10 and, on the par-4 11th hole, O’Meara hit his 3-iron into the hole from the fairway. He promptly turned and walked back to the clubhouse. O’Meara lost to Willie Wood in the first round.

Annika Sorenstam’s 3-wood, 1996 — The young Swedish golfer won her first major in the 1995 U.S. Women’s Open at the Broadmoor in Colorado and came to Pine Needles in Southern Pines as the defending champion. Her coach, Pia Nilsson, accompanied her and spoke of golfers in Sweden as looking “at things differently — we’re trying to find ways to shoot 54, make birdies on every hole.” Sorenstam made it look that easy with a final-round 66 that staked her to a six-shot win over Kris Tschetter. The key shot was a 220-yard 3-wood on the par-5 10th and the ensuing 25-foot eagle putt.  “I was in a zone today,” she said. “It was like I could close my eyes and hit. Whatever I did, my shots went straight, my putts went in. It was unbelievable.”

Payne Stewart’s 6-iron, 1999 — Everyone remembers Stewart’s U.S. Open winning putt on the last hole. But the shot that staked Stewart to a one-shot lead on the last hole was his 6-iron to four feet on the 17th hole. Caddie Mike Hicks said the roars when Stewart hit his ball and when Phil Mickelson knocked his to six feet were greater than anything he’d ever heard on a golf course — including the Ryder Cup. “It’s getting kinda wild out here,” NBC’s Roger Maltbie said. Mickelson missed his putt and Stewart made his. “It was a gimme,” Hicks said. “He hadn’t missed inside four feet all week.”  PS

Chapel Hill writer Lee Pace has chronicled many of these memorable shots in Pinehurst lore in three of his books—Pinehurst Stories (1991), The Spirit of Pinehurst (2004) and The Golden Age of Pinehurst (2012).

Batteries Not Included

A plugged-in and powered-up Christmas

By Bill Fields

There were some Christmases growing up that Carolina Power and Light and Eveready Battery must have loved. The same would go for the manufacturers of those flimsy extension cords whose “U.L. approved” tag didn’t inspire a lot of confidence.

It is tempting to think that the popularity of high tech gifts is a relatively recent development, but anyone of a certain age knows that isn’t true. Of course, high tech of 40 or 50 years ago must be considered for its day, the way a 260-pound offensive tackle would then have seemed only slightly smaller than Godzilla.

Still, Christmas was juiced long before Major League Baseball. Along with “A Visit from St. Nicholas,” there were other words unique to the season.

“TO PROTECT FROM ELECTRIC SHOCK, DO NOT OPEN
COVER OR BACK. NO USER-SERVICEABLE PARTS.”

That caution came on one of the best presents with a cord I ever got, a reel-to-reel tape recorder from Santa/Western Auto that allowed me to pretend I was one of those basketball play-by-play announcers I heard on the radio so many winter evenings from distant locales. The machine should have come with a different warning: Until you go through puberty and start pronouncing “Fayetteville” with three syllables, you have absolutely no chance of sounding like them.

I could amuse myself with simple things — a ball of crumpled foil and a hanger shaped into a hoop taped to a doorframe, anyone? — but there was a period when I was attracted to something that powered up like bream to a cricket.

Take indoor putting. I could groove my stroke just fine by rolling a ball toward a chair leg or coffee mug, but the “Electric Putt Return” from Sears took living room practice to a higher plane. In form it resembled a dustpan, but in function the device was positively Jetsonian in how a golf ball was propelled after an attempt, only rarely failing to make it back to your feet. The distinctive click occurring when a ball began its return is on the soundtrack of my childhood.

The putting trainer had a single purpose, but the glory of another of my 120-volt holiday delights from Sears was its multi-purpose utility. Shaped like an oversized loaf of bread about two feet long, there was a clock — with alarm — on the left, a tiny television — VHF and UHF — in the center and a radio — AM and FM — on the right.

Despite my most creative antenna directing, the TV picture was usually snowy, sometimes rolling and never fully satisfying. Still, the clock and radio worked well and the whole “solid state” combo sat on my desk, leaving enough room to do homework. Owing to its faux mahogany top and sides, it was even handsome in its early-’70s way. The appearance certainly trumped the value “entertainment system” my parents gifted themselves one year. It wasn’t lacking in functions with an 8-track, radio and turntable, but the lift-off plastic lid covering the record player made it a leisure suit of electronics.

Year over power corded-gizmo year, I would say I made out better than the adults.

There was the matter of the irons, blemished but numerous, in the years when Dad worked at Proctor-Silex, which manufactured them. A steam iron, no matter how good or how much of a bargain, should be purchased when necessary, like new sheets, and never adorned with a red bow.

One Christmas there was an electric knife under our tree. I’m sure it came with a warning, too, but wasn’t as useful or as much fun as my tape recorder. The man who is credited with coming up with the idea of an electric knife, Jerome L. Murray, also developed boarding ramps to get people onto airlines and a pump essential in open-heart surgery.

Two serrated blades going through a ham or a turkey a couple of times a year — the noise of the contraption sometimes punctuated by the jarring contact with a platter — surely doesn’t measure up to Murray’s other accomplishments.

But those were the times and, as sure as kitchens were done in avocado, those were our things. PS

Southern Pines native Bill Fields, who writes about golf and other things, moved north in 1986 but hasn’t lost his accent.