Bob, I trust your Coach is still in remission and doing ok?Very interesting. Cool to see the roots of some of the schools known today.
Thanks for sharing.
I spoke with him a few weeks ago and he was doing great. He still has a small hand in with the boys with weight room and maybe a day or two after school here and there. He at DUKE for check ups and treatments at times but still loving life and as he would put "giving God all the glory".Bob, I trust your Coach is still in remission and doing ok?
That’s great news. He is a wonderful human being and your community is lucky to have him mentoring your kids. The next time you see him tell him that Dinwiddie holds him in their prayers.I spoke with him a few weeks ago and he was doing great. He still has a small hand in with the boys with weight room and maybe a day or two after school here and there. He at DUKE for check ups and treatments at times but still loving life and as he would put "giving God all the glory".
Will do!That’s great news. He is a wonderful human being and your community is lucky to have him mentoring your kids. The next time you see him tell him that Dinwiddie holds him in their prayers.
Thank you for the update.
Oh, and by the way, one of my best friends recently bought the Toll Keepers house on Bent Creek in Gladstone. It was built in 1820. He has been working on buying it for several years. It didn’t have a deeded right of way and he was able to negotiate a solution and finally closed on it a month or so ago. I’ll be headed out there soon to see what needs to be done to the wiring to make it safer. Incidently, this same buddy owns Fork Inn in Sutherland VA. Google it, it’s got quite the history.
Was stationed at Fort Eustis VA years ago and we did summer training sessions with the National Guard units that would roll through there. Years ago, the Feds gave that post/base to the State of VA to use as a national guard base. I've seen that stadium many times. Several of the local Nottoway football players would work out in the gym. I believe Nottoway had just one the state title the previous fall which was in the 90s.I agree. It’s neat to look back and see the origins of some of the schools we are failure with today. I’m sure there are many many more across the state and across the country.
At Fort Barfoot, formerly Fort Pickett, in Blackstone Va there is an old stadium on the base. I’m sure it was built in the late 40,s. Pickett, at the time, was huge. It was built as WW2 escalated. It probably housed 40-50k troops. I’m sure they built the stadium just after the war as part of providing activities for the troops. The bleachers wrap around three sides, are probably 20 runs high, and completely made from bricks.
Our team spends a week on base every August. They practice twice a day on this field. I doubt that the kids can appreciate the nostalgia, but us old guys do. We actually held a scrimmage one year up there against Mills Godwin. That was super neat.
World would be a thousand fold better if most people had just 20 percent of Doug Smith in themThat’s great news. He is a wonderful human being and your community is lucky to have him mentoring your kids. The next time you see him tell him that Dinwiddie holds him in their prayers.
Ive said it before, I feel extremely blessed to have had my boys play under Doug (and I dont mean the rings)World would be a thousand fold better if most people had just 20 percent of Doug Smith in them
Records show it was 12-0 Appalachia. And at Gate City too. And that was an undefeated season for Appalachia.The old Appalachia High School stadium was quiet the venue. Remember watching the late, great Ed Clarke, better known as the Stonega Stallion, play there in the fall of 1969 against Gate City. Believe the score was something like 7-6 or 7-0. Can’t remember exactly to many years of good living. Also Tom Turner made the stadium famous during his coaching career.
I think he's referring to 1968. An excerpt from the BHC...Records show it was 12-0 Appalachia. And at Gate City too. And that was an undefeated season for Appalachia.
I was actually referring to the video on this thread mentioning that Union had played 3 games at Riggs Stadium when it was only the one against Sullivan North.Wow, Appalachia was sure a storied program in that era.
Any chance you can post the link to the video that you are referring to Union Fan?
I can vouch for this. In the mid 90s when I was in school, we all went hunting before school and had our guns in our truck. Nobody bothered them and Nobody ever got in troubleThe first couple of decades that Dinwiddie High was around, many kids couldn’t play football because they had to get home from school and help get the tobacco crop harvested. That’s just the way it was back then. By the 90’s, most farms were using seasonal farm labor from Mexico, so kids were not as obligated. And with each passing year, more and more family farms ceased operations, or leased their land to larger farmers.
For you younger people, this will be almost unbelievable.
90% of high school boys drove trucks to school.
90% of those trucks had guns on a rack on the back window. (most were loaded).
90% of all boys in high school wore a Buck Knife on their belt.
100% of the time nobody got shot or stabbed.