Joe's Stories from the Road
for the month of November 05
Current month- November '05
Nov 3
Voting Rights, George Wallace, Rosa Parks
As I approached Selma I knew I had to visit the bridge
where the Voting Rights marches had begun in 1965.
The African American community had tried several times within a
span of a week to march from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama, to tell
George Wallace’s state government that it demanded the same rights to
vote that the rest of America had at the time.
After several failed starts, it finally went on.
Before the marchers got to Montgomery more than 25,000 people had
joined them. A lot of
whites had joined in the march, also.
The State Police beat many people but the march was a success.
Shortly afterward, President Lyndon Johnson got the Voting Rights
Act passed in Congress.
Rocinante and I rode to the
Edmund Pettus Bridge as soon as we arrived in Selma and visited
the Voting Rights Museum. I
bought some books and old newspaper clippings of that time to share with
the children in Eastern Kentucky.
My next stop was Prattville, Alabama, where I visited
with my good friend, Mable Ward and her daughter Wanda.
The visit was short since I was behind on my schedule but I did
have a great visit and they bought me a wonderful southern lunch.
Mable’s husband, Everett, who was a Chief Master Sergeant when I
was at Vandenberg, taught me how to water-ski.
If it had not been for him I would not have been able to ski
behind the flying airplane with Tex McClatchy at Lake Powell in 67.
We took some photographs and then I was on my way again.
This time it was the capitol building in Montgomery.
In 1967, as I was approaching the Capitol Building, a TV news
reporter stopped me for an interview.
He became so interested in what I was doing he asked me if I
would like to meet Governor George Wallace.
Of course I would.
He took me down to the cafeteria where the Governor was having lunch
with some workers. We were
introduced and then the Governor got up and walked me down to a door at
the end of the hallway.
After unlocking the door we walked upstairs and came out into the
beautiful Governor’s office.
We talked about the bicycle trip and his bid for running for
President. All the time I
was calling him Governor- thinking that he was the Governor.
When I looked down at the sign on the huge desk, it read
“LURLENE WALLACE GOVERNOR OF ALABAMA.”
I then realized that his wife was actually the elected Governor.
But he was really the governor.
A week after I left the Capitol my mother in Kentucky
received an autographed photo of George and another of Governor Lurlene
Wallace. There was a nice
letter from Mrs. Wallace saying that George had told her of my visit and
that she was sorry that she did not get to meet me.
Three to four weeks later I learned by newspaper article that
Mrs. Wallace had died of cancer.
This time, I was going to visit the Capitol Building
again. As I was approaching
the Montgomery area I learned that Civil Rights Leader Rosa Parks had
died. In 1986 I had the
privilege of meeting and talking to Mrs. Rosa in New York City when she
and I received the first Ellis Island Medals of Honor.
She was a shy but very gracious and classy lady.
Progress.
At the Capitol Building this time I photographed the bronze star on the front steps where Jefferson Davis was sworn in as the President of the Confederate States of America. Then I photographed a bronze statue of Jefferson Davis with the flags atop the Capitol Building flying in the background above Davis’s head.Very ironic. The United States flag and the Alabama flag were flying at half-staff in honor of Rosa Parks.
Honor Guard and casket of Mrs. Parks.
No one could have planned what happened to me the next morning. I rode Rocinante down through the city toward highway 231 where I would turn to go on to Dothan and Tallahassee. My next stop was the St Pauls AME Church where Rosa Parks would soon lie in state for two days and nights. I rode to the church and leaned Rocinante against a shade tree and waited for the funeral procession. It is incredible that I could be at that place in this great country after over 8,000 miles on a bicycle- on that day. I stood with several hundred others who had come to pay their respects to a great American. Soon the horse drawn hearse came into view up the street. A drum beat softly and several hundred people walked behind the hearse. I took a lot of photographs as the hearse turned into the church lot. I was observing and participating in an incredible piece of American History. As the horses came to a stop, I watched the military men and women quietly remove the casket from the glassed-in hearse. A restored Cleveland Street city bus that Rosa had sat in when she refused to get up and give her seat to a white man sat in the background to remind us all what had taken place in 1955 in Montgomery, Alabama. Awesome my friends, Awesome. What a blessing that I could be there for Rosa Parks’ memorial service and see her taken to her people.
Restored Cleveland Avenue bus. Iconic symbol of the Civil Rights movement.
Nov 11
People on the Trip
On this bicycle trip, as on any trip, one sees a lot
of interesting and unusual places.
Most are beautiful and awesome.
But the real joy is the people that show up in your life.
Let me tell you about some people that have shown up again in my
life and also about some new folks.
Old timers first.
As I was crossing Mississippi I got a call from my nephew Steven
Bowen and his wife Stephanie.
They informed me that they had been on vacation in Florida but
were now on their way home.
They wanted to connect up with me.
They finally found me resting under the welcome sign for the city
of Demopolis, Alabama. They
had gone from Florida to Mississippi and then back to Alabama to find me. It was great seeing
them and they took me out to dinner.
Steven is my nephew who wrote an article about me and the bicycle
trip for The Kentucky Explorer magazine. Thanks Steven and Stephanie.
When I was crossing Texas I got an email from a
gentleman named Bill Carpenter.
He found my address in the article that my nephew had written for
the Kentucky Explorer magazine.
In his email Mr. Carpenter said that the Kentucky Explorer was
his other bible.Let me
explain.Brother Bill
Carpenter and his wife were our pastors at the Bowen Church when I was
in high school.So he kinda
helped raise me in a good way.
His influence helped me stay straight.
While I was in the Air Force, Bill was called to work for a
church in Florida.I had
not seen him in over forty years.
In his email he told me that my route on the website had me going
through his new town, Perry, Florida, and that he wanted me to stop and
stay the night with them.I
emailed him several times on my way across the South.
I did stop and stay the night.
We enjoyed talking about old times in Eastern Kentucky.
I also spoke to his church group. Bill and Omalene are wonderful
people. Thank you, folks, for great food, family, and friendship.
As I approached Florida I got an email from a fellow
named Mel in Michigan.He
learned about the second bicycle trip in an article in the League of
American Bicyclists magazine.
Mel told me that he and a friend, Dwight, now of St. Augustine,
Florida, had met me in Gatlinburg, Tennessee, in the spring of ‘68 when
I was on the first bicycle trip.
He remembered details.
He said that when we talked that I mentioned that I would like
someday to become the Governor of Kentucky.
He also said that he and Dwight bought me a piece of pie with ice
cream and coffee and that we talked for an hour or more about many
things.Dwight is one year
younger than me and Mel is one year older.
Both men had gone on to become college professors.
When I arrived in St. Augustine I had a great visit with Dwight
and his lovely wife.This
winter, I am meeting Mel in Berea, Kentucky, to talk old times.
When I go through Gatlinburg this spring on the bicycle both
Professors are going to meet me there.
They have assured me that I can expect pie with ice cream and
coffee again.I was kinda
thinking more in the line of a good steak dinner.
We will see.Hey,
men, it was great of you to befriend me way back then and then really
special for you to be a part of the second bicycle trip as well.
Next I met three really great young men.
As I was eating lunch in a Folkston, Georgia, restaurant I looked
out the window and saw three young men riding up on their packed
bicycles.They were
obviously doing some real bicycling.
As they reined their steeds, smiles spread across their faces as
they spotted Rocinante leaned against the wall.
Then they looked inside and saw this old guy smiling back at
them.We had a bicycle
conversation of epic proportions.
These were great young men and I’m so proud of them.
They told me they were from Pennsylvania and had ridden 1200
miles so far. They were
going to southern Florida and then taking Amtrak back home.
The young men were Sam Fisher, Bennie King, Jr., and Daniel
Beiler.They were 16, 18
and 19 years old.If these
are the kind of young men that America is bringing up we are going to be
in good hands.It was
refreshing to see these young men with incredible attitudes and
wonderful spirits.Their
parents, who had been nervous about them taking such a trip, can be
proud to call them their sons.
My hat’s off to the young men, their parents, and their
communities.It was great
talking to you.Ride on and
do it more than once.It is
good for you. Please write us and tell of your adventures.
Nov 20
President Jimmy Carter and First Lady Rosalynn Carter
I was getting excited about getting home to my family
in Kentucky.I had one more
special stop to make before going home.
Several times during the last two years I had written the Carter
Center in Atlanta to see if maybe I could get just a few minutes with
former President Jimmy Carter.
Each time I received a form letter informing me that it was
impossible since they get so many such requests.
Both Janine and David Musser, from the AHA, had written a couple
of times requesting the same thing and received the same results.
Even though I had been turned down I still wanted to
ride to Plains, Georgia, and see where Jimmy Carter called home.
Nightfall came and I had made it to Americus so I stayed the
night.Plains was a short
ten miles away.In
Americus, at supper, I picked up a copy of the local newspaper. There
was a story saying the National Park Service was hosting a bicycle rally
the next morning starting at the Plains High school where Jimmy and
Rosalyn had gone to school.
At ten o’clock the next morning I was at the high school to attend the
bicycle rally.
(editor’s note: It is worth noting that on Joe’s second day off since
leaving Phoenix, AZ, he chooses to go on a bicycle rally.)
I was the only bicyclist that showed up.
I told the two Park Rangers that
they didn’t have to escort me to all of the Jimmy and Rosalynn
highlights. I could bicycle
it by myself. But they
insisted that they would ride with me.
So off we rode to visit the Carter’s hometown.
We pedaled to the visitor’s pullover at the Carter
home. As the Rangers described the area, a dark SUV pulled out of the
driveway. One of the
Rangers said, “We know where he is going.”
“Well, take me there, if you don’t mind”. “Follow us,” one
replied.
Down the street a short distance and around a couple
of corners we stopped in front of the Boys and Girls Club of Plains.
A Secret Service man was walking toward us.
I asked him if I could go into the building if the President was
in there. He answered, “Sure. It is a free
country. But the President is not in there. But he will be here in just
a few minutes.”“When
he gets here, do you think he would take a minute to meet me?” I asked.
“We can probably make that happen.” He said while walking away.
The Secret Service man was talking as he walked away.
It looked like he was talking to himself but I guess he had a
hidden microphone. In just a few minutes another dark SUV pulled up and
stopped just across the street from where we were standing with our
bicycles. Rosalynn
got out on our side of the SUV and walked straight over to me. I reached
out to hug her and she hugged me back.
President Carter, with a Secret Service man, walked around the
SUV from the other side and came over and talked to me for several
minutes. They wanted to
know where I had been. I showed them a small map of the US with my route
on it that I keep with me.
I gave both of the Secret Service men my cameras and they walked around
us and took several photos while we talked.
I have raised $60,000 to build a statue of former
Kentucky Governor Bert T Combs.
Governor Combs had worked for President Carter as a legal council
on the SALT talks. And, Governor Combs lived in my hometown and was the
only governor in recent history that had ever done anything for Eastern
Kentucky.I asked President
Carter if he would come to Kentucky after the bicycle trip was over to
unveil Governor Combs’ statue.
President Carter told me that he tries to stay away from those
types of events.So even
though I got a “NO,” I did get to ask him.
President Carter and Rosalynn went into the Boys and Girls Club
while the Park Rangers and I continued our tour of Plains.
Later that afternoon the National Park Service people
invited me to the annual dinner for the Plains preservation
organization. In the
meantime, my brother in law, Jimmy Goodman, surprised me by coming to
Plains to spend a couple of days with me. We rode our bicycles to
downtown Plains to visit some of the shops and send all the Kentucky and
Indiana families Peanuts from Plains.
A man from New York pulled up with a seven-passenger tricycle on
his trailer. He unloaded it
and asked us if we would like to ride.
Sure. So we got on the contraption with him and four other
people. We rode around the
block a few times. When we stopped, I tried to get other people to take
a ride with us. Suddenly, the dark SUV pulled up in front of us and
President Carter and Rosalynn got out and walked over to us.
The owner asked the president if he would like to ride with us
and told him that he could drive.
So, President Carter and Rosalynn climbed on the seven-passenger
tricycle and we rode around the block in Plains.
I can honestly say that the former President of the United
States, along with the First Lady, Rosalynn Carter, rode with me on part
of my 14,000-mile bicycle trip.
About an hour later I walked into the hall for the
invitation-only dinner and to my surprise President Carter and Rosalynn
were there, too. I got in
line behind President Carter.
I waited until he got down the line a few feet and then took a
photo of the former President, dressed in jeans, pull-over shirt and
work shoes, filling up his paper plate just like everyone else.
After we had finished eating, a lady with the National
Parks Service walked to the podium and started talking.
“Tonight we have a distinguished guest with us.”
I am thinking, “We sure do, the President of the United States.”
The National Parks spokesman went on, “In October the parks
service sponsored a bicycle rally and only two bicyclists showed up,
President and Mrs. Carter.
We had such a good turnout in October we decided we would have
another bicycle rally in November.
So this morning we had our rally and only one bicyclist showed up
and he had ridden almost 9,000 miles to get here.”
At that time she introduced me and asked me to stand up.
Wow! -being a distinguished guest when a former president and
first lady is in the crowd.
That has got to be the ultimate compliment of all the bicycle trips that
I will ever take. Thanks to
the great people at the Jimmy Carter National Park.
The next morning I attended the Sunday School Class
that President Carter teaches.
And he is a good teacher. After the class and church service
President Carter goes outside the church and permits anyone who wants to
have their photo taken with him.
I had already had photos taken of me with him talking in the
street and several photos of us riding on the seven-passenger tricycle.
Then at church I got in line to get a photo of us after church.
While I was standing with my hand on his shoulder he punched me
slightly in the side and asked,
“Do you think you have enough photos yet?”
Mr. President Carter, you have been my hero since you ran for
President and then you really became my hero when you and Mrs. Carter
got out of the car and walked down the street hand in hand during your
inaugural parade. And
President Carter, I read your new book on Endangered Values while I was
in Plains. Everyone in this
country should read your book.
We all must be engaged in our communities and country.
And thank you for reminding us to not forget that.
President Jimmy Carter
Nov 30
Butterflies, Home for the Winter
I left Plains, Georgia, feeling pretty good.
And I was excited about heading back home to be with my family.
As I was approaching Atlanta I realized that Atlanta was not a
bicycle friendly city.
There was just no good way for me to get into downtown Atlanta on a
bicycle. All of the roads
that I tried were miserable for a bicyclist.
Late afternoon, a car clipped my rear view mirror and broke it
out. It did not cause me to
swerve but it made me very nervous.
I started looking again on the maps for a better highway.
I found a motel and bedded down for the night.
The next morning I was eating breakfast before daylight.
I wanted to see the Carter Library and Martin Luther King Center
and then get on northward out of the big city.
I got on the highway as the sun was touching the tops
of the large trees. The
temperature had dropped to 24 degrees during the night.
I knew I wouldn’t see any butterflies today.
If you have read back to when I started the trip, you know how
important butterflies are to me- even when I was a young boy.
Butterflies showing up in my life are a reminder to me that God
would watch out for me and that everything would be okay.
During the bicycle trip I have seen hundreds of butterflies. On
the front bag of my bicycle, leading the way, are decals of three
butterflies. One was given
to me by the Inn Keeper in Plains.
So, this particular morning I knew that I would not see a
butterfly because it was below freezing.
And a butterfly can’t maneuver in freezing weather.
I had not been on the highway five minutes when I saw
a huge billboard up the road.
It was one of those fancy billboards with lights and louvers. As
the louvers change, the sign displays a new image.
When I first looked up I saw a new car model being advertised.
Slowly the louvers began to change.
There before me was a 24 foot long and 8 foot tall Monarch
butterfly. A tear rolled down my cheek. God can show
you a butterfly even when the temperature is to cold for them to fly.
A few more days and I was in Cleveland, Tennessee.
My wife, Barbara, and two of my grandsons, Caleb and Caden
Crabtree, met me in Cleveland and we spent the weekend with Caleb and I
riding over the mountain in Smoky Mountain National Park.
It was awesome being with Barbara again.
She and I had a lot a catching up to do.
When I was home we got our gardening caught up and planted some
more shrubs around our getaway which is an old barn with 1100 feet of
living space in it.
Barbara, thank you for being such an awesome woman and trying to
understand why I have to do this 14,000 mile bicycle trip again.
I have enjoyed a great winter with my family and with
David and Janine Musser visiting schools from Eastern Kentucky to
Louisville. It has been
great being in the classroom with the school children that I have been
talking to while on the trip.
And all the schools have been decorated with maps and photos of
the big bicycle trip. Hey
kids and teachers- you don’t know how sweet it is to see all those
posters and photos after being on the road so long.
It was great visiting with you and I look forward to taking you
along for the rest of the trip.
Another 4,300 miles.
Clay model for Gov. Bert T. Combs statue.
The artist, Raymond Graf, had the artwork completed on
the Bert T. Combs statue and Barbara, Sara Combs and several friends
drove to Louisville to see it.
Later, we also took Governor Combs’ daughter, Lois, to see the
artwork.Everyone agreed
that Raymond had captured the very spirit and soul of
our beloved Governor Combs in his clay art work.
It has now been sent to the foundry to be poured in bronze.
Shortly after the bicycle trip we will have a great unveiling
ceremony.
Ross, Caleb, Caden, Kyle, Shelby, Avery, Annell,
Yousef, and Marlena- I love each one of you as an awesome grandchild and
I want you to know that Papa Joe loves each one of you very much.
The people of Powell, Wolfe, Menifee, and Lee counties
invite each of you to Eastern Kentucky on June 17 to be with us when we
celebrate the ending of this bicycle odyssey.
On the last day of the trip many bicyclist and motorist will
meander down the 45 mile long Red River Gorge National Scenic Byway and
end the bicycle trip with a festival and a major bicycle race in
Stanton, Kentucky. Please come join us.