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Grandfather's Clocks

Katherine Vance

Carolina Photojournalism Workshop 2010 - Little Switzerland Stories
Somehow by the grace of whatever or whomever, I ended up here and I look out
my window every single morning and I pinch myself and I tell myself this is real.
She'll grow up like one of us. She'll be a tomboy, she'll have to be.
When you don't have any brothers and sisters you've got
to have a friend. Dad was my best friend, and he still is.
It's actually hard for me to stay in the kitchen because I like being out
where I can talk to the people. It's just like sayin' hello to them everyday.
A horse will never lie to you. If they have an issue they're gonna let you know, in a hurry.
Once music gets in your soul it’s there ‘till you’re gone; there’s no stoppin’ it
I am often asked if Crossnore children and youth are orphans
and I always answer absolutely yes, they are society's orphans.
From the congregation, to the man out here on a bike that’s never
heard about salvation. Whos willing to listen, I’ll tell em about it.
There is something mystical about it. It sucks you back.
There’s nobody alive today that can remember there not
being a Woody’s Chair Shop. There’s always been one.
It's a dual struggle. I'm an immigrant and the mother of a disabled son.
They really want me to quit because I'm getting older. But if I quit it just
seems like I give everything up. I do it, I love it, and it's been my dream.
What I enjoy about it is making it, selling it, delivering it, meeting people, seeing that it's got a good home.
These are like my children, you know. They're not just something that's thrown out there and left to the wind.
Sometimes I would get overloaded with the everyday things and I would come to
the mountains and look over the mountains, and suddenly, it was so small.
Just watching that old waterwheel turn, you can sense that something important went on here.
Becoming a glass maker has helped connect me to my family.
We call it saving the good stuff...there should be a few places where the beauty of the place and the values
of the old communities that have been here before can be identified and preserved to the extent possible.
As madre, they can trust me to negotiate whatever the problem may be.
I’m not always successful, and it’s not about success. It’s about being there.
I think it's a lot to do with the south, and then it's here in the
mountains too, we take a lot of pride in ... our loaferin' time.
  • 1
  • At Home With the Quirks
    02:31
  • 2
  • One of the Boys
    02:53
  • 3
  • Forged in Faith
    02:53
  • 4
  • A Cook, Not a Chef
    02:25
  • 5
  • Joined by the Saddle
    02:48
  • 6
  • Music of Old
    02:56
  • 7
  • Society's Orphans
    02:32
  • 8
  • Road to Redemption
    02:49
  • 9
  • Intentionally Together
    02:54
  • 10
  • Filling the Seat
    03:17
  • 11
  • Living for Alan
    03:16
  • 12
  • Not My Last Rodeo
    02:39
  • 13
  • Grandfather's Clocks
    02:29
  • 14
  • The Mountain Perspective
    02:48
  • 15
  • Grist for the Mill
    02:51
  • 16
  • What Binds Us?
    02:35
  • 17
  • The Core of the Community
    03:25
  • 18
  • Madre of Mercy
    03:09
  • 19
  • Loggin' and Loaferin'
    02:35
Resume Slideshow

Grandfather's Clocks

by Katherine Vance

Luther Stroup of Spruce Pine, NC, continues his grandfather’s legacy at the Stroup Hobby Shop by crafting custom-made grandfather clocks.

5 Comments

  1. Posted September 9, 2010 at 1:04 pm | Permalink

    Beautiful job on one of our Home of the Perfect Christmas Tree product makers. We are proud to have Luther’s products included in our collection.

  2. Posted August 30, 2010 at 6:09 pm | Permalink

    Love this so well done. Good audio, nice images and video and most importantly, a good story!

  3. By: Max Borst
    Posted July 12, 2010 at 10:22 pm | Permalink

    Look at his hands. How many things these days can you say were made this way. Hand made is a “labor of love” Nice job, really well done & enjoyable.

  4. By: Tom Wheeler
    Posted July 10, 2010 at 1:15 pm | Permalink

    I enjoyed the story and the video is excellent. It is good to preserve the crafts that are fast disappearing from our society…..thanks

  5. By: Daniel Vance
    Posted July 9, 2010 at 10:38 pm | Permalink

    Well done, this man gives me a new appreciation of the difficulty in making a living as an artisan in a world of mass production. I like the close-ups.

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