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Vaughan,
Mississippi
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The
site of the train wreck that took the life of the legendary
engineer, Casey Jones is located in Vaughan Mississippi.
Shortly after midnight on April 30, 1900, the "cannonball"
left Memphis, Tennessee with Jonathan Luther "Casey"
Jones at the throttle. Trying to make up time in the
run from Memphis to Canton, Mississippi, Jones has just
run through a stop signal when a freight train came
into view crossing the track in front of the "Cannonball.
Realizing that a crash was inevitable, Jones ordered
his fireman to jump clear just before the "Cannonball"
rammed into four cars of the freight train. Jones was
killed in the crash.
The
early 1900s were a period of expansion for the railroad
across the country and train wrecks were almost a daily
event. The brief account of the crash that appeared
in the Memphis Commercial Appeal mentioned the engineer's
death, but it was not considered a major news story.
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The
tale of the ill-fated "Cannonball" would
have ended on that night in 1900 if not for a friend
of Jones' and a popularity of Vaudeville. Wallace
Saunders, and African American engine wiper in Water
Valley and a friend of Jones was deeply moved by the
engineer's death and composed "The Ballad Of
Casey Jones" as a tribute to his friend. The
song eventually found its way to Vaudeville and with
the addition of some fictional verses, became a popular
hit. By the end of World War I, dozens of versions
of this song had been published and millions of copies
of the sheet music were in circulation. Casey Jones
had become a legend.
The
Casey Jones Museum is no longer open
Also
in Vaughan is Greg Harkins Woodworks, where plantation
style rocking chairs are still manufactured by hand.
Greg uses work techniques passed down from the mid 1800's.
He has made chairs for 20 years, three of these as an
apprentice under a Master Chairmaker. Greg has preserved
a once dying craft by hand turning parts and using techniques
to make extremely durable chairs of very fine quality.
Each piece is dated and signed and guaranteed for life.
His creations are in twenty countries and are in the
homes of many famous people such as Pope John Paul,
Bob Hope, George Burns, President Bill Clinton, and
Former Presidents, George Bush, Ronald Reagan, and Jimmy
Carter.
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