This probably violates blog etiquette.
Several posts ago, I mentioned the Merry Community sign just south of the the Pike/Vaughn intersection. This weekend, John Hunt added a comment to the post which fascinates me:
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Here's the scoop on Merry.
The whole area west and south of the Pike/Vaughn Road intersection used to be called "Scotia," named after the historical Scott family estate on Pike Road close to the intersection. Those with older ties to the area still call it that today.
However, in the 1880s, a railroad line (the "Seaboard") linking Montgomery with Savannah and the eastern seaboard was laid out, and there was a freight and passenger depot at the point where the tracks crossed Vaughn road, about where the Chantilly Parkway joins into Vaughn Road today. Since there was already a station by the name of "Scotia" elsewhere on the Seaboard line, the station at the Vaughn Road crossing was dubbed "Merry."
When the depot was later abandoned, its large sign reading "Merry" came into the possession of Barnett Pinkston, who later put it on display in his country store located on the NE corner of the Vaughn/Pike intersection (the store was torn down a few years ago). For decades Pinkston's was the best-known country store in the area, and since people stopping there always saw the name "Merry," the name stuck and it started appearing on maps, even though older maps showed "Scotia."
Some of these details can be found in the book "Memories of the Mount: The Story of Mt. Meigs, Alabama" by John B. Scott, Jr. (published by The Black Belt Press in Montgomery in 1993). Other details I can vouch for personally, since I spent many years growing up in Scotia, often running up to Pinkston's store to buy fish bait as well as anything my grandmother (Virgnia Scott Martin) needed in the kitchen. I strongly recommend John Scott's book to anybody interested in the history and personalities of the Mt. Meigs and Pike Road areas.
Regarding the "Dangerous Intersection" sign: When I was a boy in the late 60s, it was a big event if a dirt truck drove by. But as the years have passed, traffic has picked up, and many horrific accidents have occurred at this intersection.
- John Hunt
2 Comments:
Hi Hillary,
I'm glad you liked my post! John Scott's book is certainly worth reading (it won the Alabama Historical Society award for the best work on Alabama local history in 1994), so the more people who find out about it, the better. As the face of the countryside east of Montgomery continues changing, it will become ever more important to have a complete record of this area's past.
I live in Germany now but occasionally get back over there to see my family in Montgomery and Scotia. For the times in-between, I'll enjoy reading your blog to find out what's happening in my old stomping grounds.
Greetings and best wishes,
John Hunt
John,
Thanks again for posting. I love Germany, have been there several times. It's the one of the places where "Funk" as a surname doesn't draw curiosity. My father was a teenager during the Occupation and lived in Munich as well as Garmisch. Those older places have so much charm, but Berlin is now one of my favorite cities.
Check out the East section of the paper on Wednesdays. www.montgomeryadvertiser.com/east
I write several stories a week for that part of the paper. I hope you enjoy them.
Prost!
Hilary
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