Old Timey Tales
Sundown
'Possum
(As told to the author by Ola Maupin, Lillie Westmoreland, Maud
Vincent and reiterated by Jack Maupin.)
by
Mary Bursell Maupin
**Reprinted
with permission from the Journal of the Jackson Purchase Historical
Society, Vol. IXXX, July 2002, pp. 28-29.
On cold winter
mornings, the older men of the Austin Springs, Tennessee community
hovered around the pot-bellied stove at Johnson Brothers’ General
Store. Depending on who had a radio, they would often discuss
current news. Most it was bad, as these were the days of the
Great Depression. However, while it ranged throughout the United
States, the Austin Springs area did not suffer nearly as badly as other
parts did. Even though farm prices had hit rock bottom, there was
still food in most of the pantries. Neighbors helped
neighbors. At hog killing time, neighbors would show up at a
farmer’s house and help him butcher enough hogs to feed his family for
a year. The next cold day, they would arrive at another farmer’s
house and do the same thing over again until all the families had
enough meat for the winter.
For a change in the diet, some of the men took to the woods and hunted
rabbits or squirrels in the daytime when they were not working.
Those who had dogs, and most did, hunted opossums and raccoons at night
after a long day at the saw mill or driving a wagon load of timber to
the mill.
Wes Maupin had a couple of ‘possum hounds. Every night after
supper, he and his wife’s twin brother Ollie McClain, who lived across
the field, would pick up the lanterns, reach for the rifles and head
for the woods, following the dogs. Game was plentiful, and it wasn’t
long before the dogs had picked up the scent of a raccoon or
opossum. Next morning, on their way to the mill with a load of
logs, Wes and Ollie would stop at Johnson’s Store to get warm and
related the events of the previous night.
One such morning, Corbett Rickman, who lived on the hill between the
McClain farm and Wes Maupin’s house, said that he and his wife hadn’t
had “a ‘possum in quite a spell.” He asked the young men if they
would bring him one. He would fix a place for it near the chicken
coop.
They both agreed to bring him one on the next hunt. The next night Wes’
dogs treed an opossum that weighed about eight pound. Ollie
punched it out of a tree while Wes held his dogs. They didn’t
want the dogs to kill it before Corbett had a chance to feed it out and
eat it. After it landed on the ground, Ollie put it in the tow
sack he was carrying just for that purpose. They headed for the
Rickman house. Finding the lights out, they put it in the pen
which Corbett had said he would fix for it, and each went his separate
way home. They felt it had been a good night’s work.
The next morning Corbett was delighted about the eight pounder and told
everyone at the store how big it was and how he and his wife were going
to eat it one of these days as soon as he had fed it out.
During the next several weeks, he and his wife fed it morning and
night. They took the scraps from the table and all the clabbered
milk they could spare. They figured it would be ready to eat in
about two weeks, and Corbett could hardly wait.
A few nights later, Wes’s dogs treed another opossum. However,
this one was not quite as big as the one they had caught before.
Ollie punched him out while Wes held the dogs. By nine o’clock,
the boys were shaking out of their tow sack the opossum they had just
caught. It replaced the cone in Corbett’s pen.
This exchange of critters went on for over a week. Always the one
exchanged was a littler smaller than the one they took from the
pen. During this time the boys didn’t go near the store, even
though they would have liked getting warm and visiting with
friends. They were uncertain whether Corbett might confront them
about they hunts they were going on.
Over two weeks had passed before that chilly morning Wes and Ollie
climbed down off the top of their lumber wagon and sauntered into
Johnson’s Store. They could face any rage Corbett might discharge
on them that cold morning.
Surveying the room, they spied Corbett leaning back on two legs of his
favorite cane-bottom chair. Upon seeing Wes and Ollie, he let the
chair down on all fours and exchanged pleasantries as the two men
crowded in around the stove, shaking hands and greeting everyone.
After all, it had been over two weeks since Wes and Ollie had seen
their friends at the store.
After a while it was time for Wes and Ollie to get the loaded lumber
wagon on down the road toward the mill. They pushed back their
chairs and bid all good day. But as they started for the door, Ollie
turned toward Corbett Rickman and asked, “Corbett, guess you and the
Missus is about ready for the ’possum and sweet taters, ain’t ya’?”
Corbett replied, Ya’ know fellers. That’s thar’s the durndest
thing. The more we fed that critter the littler he got.
This morning he weren’t no bigger than my hand so I set him loose.”
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