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Mark of the Potter: A blend of artistry and hospitality beckons visitors

Mark of the Potter now has an Airbnb available for visitors to escape for a weekend. (Mark of the Potter)

The Mark of the Potter, nestled in the heart of northern Habersham County, has long been a cherished haven for pottery enthusiasts and a draw for tourists seeking a taste of history. Under the ownership of Chad and Maria Peck, this iconic establishment has undergone a transformative journey, evolving from a pottery haven to a rustic retreat in the scenic Batesville community – a front-row seat to the enchanting falls of the Soque River.

The deck view of the Soque River falls from the newly renovated apartment at the Mark of the Potter. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

The Peck family, originally from Atlanta, inherited the property in 2018 when his mother and stepfather passed away.  A former grist mill turned art studio, the facility includes an apartment above the showroom – a hidden gem that the Pecks envisioned sharing with others. 

Prior to any renovations, Peck states, “The original layout was kind of ‘wonky ‘ and only had a wood stove for heat and two window air conditioners to cool for the summer.”  He explained that in the winter, some areas of the apartment remained cold, and in the summer remained hot. 

Last winter, the couple devised a plan to convert the apartment into an Airbnb, bringing modern comforts, tasteful decor, and unrivaled views of the Soque Falls. The newly renovated space boasts three bedrooms, two bathrooms, a private entrance, internet access, and a deck, providing guests with an escape into tranquility.

With a self-imposed deadline of October 1, aligning with the vibrant colors of fall, the Pecks embarked on a 10-month journey of transformation. Initially working on weekends, the project gained momentum, with Chad dedicating extended periods, working tirelessly to meet their ambitious goal. Taking a two-week hiatus from his contracting business in September, Chad immersed himself in the project, ensuring its completion by October 2.

Chad humbly attributes the success of the venture to his wife Maria, acknowledging her as the visionary behind the Airbnb concept while he contributed the labor as a seasoned contractor.

The response was resounding—a testament to the allure of their creation. The Airbnb was booked for three weekends in October, marking the beginning of a new chapter for the Mark of the Potter.

He explained that they have plans going forward with the property across the street that the Pecks also own. According to him, he first has to see if his plan is allowable and then see what that cost may be once designed. 

Adding to the recognition, Atlanta Fox 5’s feature reporter Paul Milliken and cameraman Tim Whaley visited the facility on Tuesday morning. Their feature showcased Mark of the Potter not just as a pottery haven but also as a holiday shopping destination, emphasizing the charm of the newly unveiled Airbnb apartment. The festive spirit was amplified with a visit from Santa Claus.

MOTP owner Chad Peck warms by the wood stove in the showroom. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

Mark of the Potter invites the community to their 5th annual “Photos with Santa Claus” event. Professional photographer Kim Martin will provide four high-resolution photographs for each session. The event is scheduled for Saturday, November 25, from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., and Sunday, November 26, from 12:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.  The sessions, priced at $50.00 each, promise a magical experience.

Attendees can revel in the warmth of a bonfire, partake of refreshments, and indulge in s’mores, creating lasting memories against the backdrop of the Batesville community’s rustic charm.

United Community Bank Foundation donates to NGTC building campaign

CLARKESVILLE, Ga. – The North Georgia Technical College Foundation recently received a $2,500 donation from the United Community Bank Foundation for The Mark capital campaign. The college will use the money to support the development and operations of the Dr. Mark A. Ivester Center for Living and Learning and Cy Grant Gymnasium.

The college says Dr. Ivester, its late president, worked for more than twenty years in various leadership roles to ensure students had access to the resources needed to succeed at NGTC. The college is building the facility to memorialize his legacy.

Commonly referred to as ‘The Mark,’ the building will house a community wellness and learning center. The college is building it on the old Cy Grant Gymnasium site on the main Clarkesville campus (see video). Crews recently tore down the school’s historic gym to make way for construction.

Artist rendering of the Dr. Mark A. Ivester Center for Living and Learning is being built on the site of the old Cy Grant Gymnasium on the North Georgia Technical College campus in Clarkesville. (image courtesy NGTC)

“We are thankful for United Community Bank Foundation’s donation and value their commitment to the success of our students,” said Amy Hulsey, NGTC’s vice president of institutional advancement and marketing and executive director of the foundation.

Pictured, from left, are NGTC President John Wilkinson; NGTC Vice President of Institutional Advancement and Marketing and Executive Director of the Foundation Amy Hulsey; NGTC Foundation Board of Trustees Member and UCB Habersham President Tim Ash; and NGTC Foundation Board Chair David Tinsley. (Photo by NGTC Foundation)

The donation will go toward a new space for mental health wellness and designated fitness areas. The Mark will also house future classrooms for academic programming.

Construction is set to begin next year.

Anyone wishing to donate to the project may contribute online or by check. For more information, visit the NGTC Foundation website.

Hall County Sheriff’s Office awarded grant for local DUI enforcement

(HCSO photo)

The Hall County Sheriff’s Office (HCSO) has been awarded a Highway Enforcement of Aggressive Traffic grant for the federal 2024 fiscal year.

Also referred to as a H.E.A.T. grant, the program aims to combat crashes, injuries, and fatalities caused by impaired driving and speeding. The H.E.A.T. program also serves to increase seatbelt use and educate the public about traffic safety and the dangers of driving under the influence.

HCSO received $186,880.80 and is one of 24 law enforcement agencies in Georgia to receive the grant.

“The Governor’s Office of Highway Safety and our partners continue to implement programs designed to save lives and promote safe driving behaviors,” Allen Poole, Director of the Governor’s Office of Highway Safety said. “We can ask everyone to help our state and nation reach zero traffic deaths by driving safe speeds, always wearing a seat belt, keeping the focus on the road and not the phone, and never operating a vehicle under the influence of any substance that impairs your ability to drive.”

H.E.A.T. grants fund specialized traffic enforcement units in counties throughout the state. The program was designed to assist Georgia jurisdictions with the highest rates of traffic crashes, injuries, and fatalities with grants awarded based on impaired driving and speeding data.

“I’m proud of our ongoing partnership with the GOHS, which continues to help provide the tools necessary to keep our community and its visitors safer on the roadways,” Hall County Sheriff Gerald Couch said.

As law enforcement partners in the Drive Sober or Get Pulled Over DUI campaign and the Click It Or Ticket seatbelt campaigns, the Hall County Sheriff’s Office will also conduct mobilizations throughout the year in coordination with  GOHS’s year-round waves of high visibility patrols, multi-jurisdictional road checks and sobriety checkpoints.

For more information about the H.E.A.T. program or any other GOHS campaign, visit www.gahighwaysafety.org or call  404-656-6996.

Georgia’s wild turkeys were once considered a conservation success but now are in decline

This strutting wild turkey would be a vision of beauty to a turkey hen or a turkey hunter, but the birds are harder to find in recent years. (Photo by Joe Berry)

(GA Recorder) — The majestic gobble of the wild turkey no longer echoes as loudly through Georgia’s Piedmont region as it once did.

The wild turkey was once considered a conservation success story. In 1973, Georgia’s turkey count was just 17,000, but by 1984, 113,000 of the plump little critters roamed the state. Unfortunately for the turkeys, that growth has been reversed.

“We’ve documented ongoing declines actually for about the last 20 years in turkeys across the southeast, Georgia included,” said Michael Chamberlain, a wild turkey expert and professor at the University of Georgia’s Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources. “There’s no question populations have declined, which is reflected in the harvest that has declined quite a bit in the past decade or so.”

Georgia hunters bagged 9,809 turkeys in 2022, down from 11,781 in 2017 and just over 33,000 in 2012, according to data from the Georgia Department of Natural Resources. The department finds that in recent years, the average turkey hen has produced only about 1.5 poults or baby turkeys. That’s about a third of the peak level in the state and below the break-even point of two poults per hen.

“It’s not an issue that’s solely in Georgia or even the southeast,” Chamberlain added. “Those same declines are being documented now in a number of other areas including areas of the mid-Atlantic, areas in the Midwest as well.”

The biggest threat to turkeys is loss of habitat, said Emily Rushton, DNR wildlife biologist and turkey expert. That includes people developing wild lands, clearing forests to create farms or fragmenting the habitat with roads or gas lines.

“We think too that when we restored turkeys into these areas, they were reproducing so well that it sort of inflated the population to levels beyond what naturally should be there, and so part of it is sort of like a leveling off of the population, and there’s also some unknowns too. A lot of states are doing disease research to see if there’s something that’s causing these lower reproductive levels.”

In 2021, Georgia pushed back the start date of turkey season in an attempt to help stave off population decline. Turkeys are the only game bird hunted during their breeding season, Rushton said.

The goal was to start the hunt after the male turkeys, or gobblers, had fulfilled their role in creating the next generation but were still strutting and emitting their namesake noises.

“What we want to do is start the season after the gobblers have bred hens, but while they’re still gobbling to give hunters that enjoyment of calling in birds when they’re gobbling, but also give them time to breed hens,” Rushton said. “We’re trying to get the opening day to turkey season as close to that peak incubation date as we can, when most hens are on nests, but gobblers are still gobbling and responsive to hunters.”

It’s too soon to say whether the change has had an impact, Chamberlain said.

“It’s going to take some time to kind of see a signal, if you will,” he said. “Other states that have made changes, it’s taken several years to start seeing kind of, ‘OK, we’re starting to see some improvements here.’ We’re early in the process, and hopefully, things will improve following the regulations changes, but it’s going to take more than just that to right the ship.”

Since most turkeys in Georgia live on private land, restoring the wild turkey will require landowners to prioritize sustaining suitable habitats, he said, adding that he believes the message is starting to get out.

“I think it takes people being aware of the problem, first of all, and being invested in being part of the solution,” he said. “The last few years, with the increase in use of social media and the ability for people to obtain information and see that there’s a problem, they now realize that what they’re seeing in their backyards is not entirely different than people in other states.”

Chamberlain offered advice for landowners who want to pitch in for Georgia’s turkeys – take a look at the world from a turkey’s perspective and manage your property accordingly.

“Just drop down on one knee and look around you,” he said. “That seems really simplistic, but if you just do that and look around your property, you can identify areas where turkeys may use or may not use. Turkeys avoid danger primarily with their eyes, so they have to be able to see. If you get out on one knee and you can’t see around you, they can’t either. And that’s not saying they will not be there, but it puts them at a disadvantage relative to predators that are trying to kill them or eat their eggs.”

Fulton judge rejects revoking defendant’s bond for social media posts in 2020 election case

Defendant Harrison Floyd, left, a leader in the Black Voices for Trump organization, listens on Nov. 21 as Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis addressed the court during a bond revocation hearing related to the Georgia election indictments. (Dennis Byron/Hip Hop Enquirer via AP)

(GA Recorder) — The former director of Black Voices for Trump Harrison William Floyd avoided jail on Tuesday after a Fulton County judge approved a temporary bond order that allows him to publicly comment on the 2020 presidential election racketeering case as long as he does not refer to witnesses or his remaining fourteen co-defendants.

The Fulton County District Attorney’s Office crafted the updated bond order for Floyd following a two-hour court hearing at which prosecutors argued that Floyd’s social media posts violated his bond agreement that prohibited him from communicating about co-defendants and potential witnesses in the high-profile case.

Instead of sending Floyd back to jail on Tuesday, Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee ordered prosecutors and his attorneys to reach a consensus on the new terms of his bond order that will remain in place for the time being.

According to McAfee, Floyd technically violated a bond agreement that prohibited him from communicating about witnesses and co-defendants.

McAfee, however,  said that Floyd’s comments on social media didn’t warrant sending him back to jail and instead called for more clarity about what Floyd’s allowed to say about the case on social media and in other public venues.

Floyd spent several days in Atlanta’s Rice Street jail in August after a grand jury indicted him on charges alleging that he, Donald Trump and 17 of their co-defendants illegally conspired to try to reverse Trump’s 2020 election loss to the Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden in Georgia and several other states.

According to the new court order, Floyd may discuss the case on social media as long as he does not comment about specific witnesses or co-defendants. He is also prohibited from publicly communicating about any witness, co-defendants, or unindicted alleged co-conspirator except in response to something they have said about him.

Former co-defendant Jenna Ellis, an ex-Trump campaign attorney who last month agreed to cooperate with prosecutors in the conspiracy case, was one of Floyd’s recent targets on X, formerly known as Twitter. On Tuesday, prosecutors shared a text message from Ellis stating that she believed Floyd was trying to intimidate her by tagging her account on posts insulting her for coming forward as a state witness.

In addition, Floyd posted on X an emoji of fecal matter in reference to Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger and one of his top officials, Gabriel Sterling. But Sterling testified Tuesday that while he was aware of Floyd’s posts, that as a public figure he didn’t feel threatened by the disparaging remarks.

According to Von DuBose, an attorney for former Fulton election worker Ruby Freeman, Floyd’s several dozen social media attacks against Freeman over the past few weeks contributed to a spike in threats against Freeman. She is expected to testify at an upcoming trial about Floyd allegedly pressuring her to falsely admit to committing voting fraud while counting absentee ballots following the Nov. 3, 2020, general election.

“Freeman’s been listed on death lists,” DuBose said. She’s been told that she needs to leave her house by the FBI so we need to keep an eye on what’s out there.”

District Attorney Fani Willis expressed her concern that Floyd would not be immediately placed behind bars on Tuesday. McAfee indicated that additional changes may be made to the bond order in the next few weeks.

“This defendant is very well aware of what happens when he tweets about this  case,” Willis said. “We do not believe it is appropriate for him to make derogatory comments about anyone. He can publicly criticize me all he wants to. I don’t value his opinion.”

Floyd’s attorney John Morrison argued Tuesday that Floyd did not send anyone an email or direct message when he simply tagged their names on X. In addition, the threats referred to by prosecutors were made by people responding to Floyd’s original post.

“These are just people who are expressing their opinions based on his post,” Morrison said. “He has no control over these people.”

A labor of love: Clarkesville Community Thanksgiving

The Clarkesville Community Thanksgiving dinner will be held Thursday Thanksgiving Day from 11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. at the Clarkesville First Presbyterian Church. (First Presbyterian Church of Clarkesville website)

It is a labor of love – to share the love of Jesus and to serve the community.

Eric and Mariah Holbrook, Ruby Allison, Clint Eller, and Darrin Johnston have partnered with the First Presbyterian Church of Clarkesville to provide Thanksgiving dinner for anyone who would like to join them.

“We did this for 5 years with Stoneys and now we are partnering with First Presbyterian Church. We are really excited about Thursday!” Eric Holbrook says.

The meal will be served from 11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. in Clarkesville at the First Presbyterian Church, 181 Jefferson St, Clarkesville. The food will be plated in “to-go” boxes. There is a drive-thru and an opportunity to sit down and enjoy the meal.

Holbrook said he and Darrin Johnston will be smoking 25 turkeys for the event – all donated by businesses and individuals in the community.

If you would like more information about The Clarkesville Community Thanksgiving Dinner, you can call Eric Holbrook at 706-968-6993 or Mariah Holbrook at 706-949-2974.

These are the times you should avoid hitting the road over the holiday

The day before Thanksgiving is traditionally the busiest travel day of the year.

The American Automobile Association (AAA) projects that 55.4 million travelers will head 50 miles or more from home over this holiday and that 49 million will drive. If you’re among those hitting the road, prepare for delays.

Transportation data analytics company INRIX expects Wednesday, Nov. 22, to be the busiest travel day, with average travel times as high as 80% over normal in some metro areas. INRIX recommends leaving in the morning or after 6 p.m. to avoid the heaviest holiday congestion.

“The day before Thanksgiving is notoriously one of the most congested days on our roadways. Travelers should be prepared for long delays, especially in and around major metros,” says Bob Pishue, transportation analyst at INRIX.

The chart below shows INRIX’s Worst and Best travel times forecast.

In metro Atlanta, the heaviest congestion is expected to be along I-20 East from Birmingham to Atlanta on Friday around 5 p.m. That usual two-hour-fifteen-minute trip could stretch to more than four hours (see below).

Pishue offers some common sense advice to help ease your holiday travel stress.

“Knowing when and where congestion will build can help minimize holiday traffic frustrations. We advise drivers to use traffic apps, local DOT notifications, and 511 services for real-time updates.”

Peak Congestion by Metro

Metro

Route

Peak Congestion Period

Est. Travel Time

Compared to Typical

Atlanta

Birmingham to Atlanta via I-20 E

Friday, 5:00 p.m.

4 hours 2 minutes

54%

Boston

Boston to Hyannis via Pilgrim Hwy S

Thursday, 3:30 p.m.

1 hour 58 minutes

54%

Chicago

Chicago to Milwaukee via I-94 W

Wednesday, 4:00 p.m.

2 hours 1 minute

18%

Denver

Fort Collins to Denver via I-25 S

Friday, 5:45 p.m.

1 hour 37 minutes

27%

Detroit

Detroit to Grand Rapids via I-96 W

Wednesday, 2:15 p.m.

3 hours 8 minutes

35%

Houston

San Antonio to Houston via I-10 E

Sunday, 4:45 p.m.

4 hours 2 minutes

38%

Los Angeles

Los Angeles to Bakersfield via I-5 N

Wednesday, 4:30 p.m.

2 hours 59 minutes

88%

Minneapolis

Rochester to Minneapolis via US-52 E

Friday, 5:30 p.m.

1 hour 56 minutes

15%

New York

Jersey Shore to New York vis Garden St Parkway N

Sunday, 11:15 a.m.

1 hour 51 minutes

64%

Portland

Cannon Beach to Portland via Sunset Highway E

Sunday, 2:45 p.m.

1 hour 59 minutes

36%

San Diego

Palm Springs to San Diego via I-15 S

Sunday, 4:45 p.m.

2 hours 39 minutes

24%

San Francisco

Monterey to San Franciso via Santa Cruz Hwy N

Sunday, 7:00 p.m.

3 hours 10 minutes

63%

Seattle

Seattle to Bellingham via I-5 N

Wednesday, 3:30 p.m.

2 hours 39 minutes

71%

Tampa

Tampa to Orlando via I-4 E

Thursday, 8:15 a.m.

1 hour 55 minutes

36%

Washington, DC

Washington, DC to Baltimore via Balt/Wash Pkwy N

Wednesday,

2:00 p.m.

1 hour 13 minutes

71%

SOURCE: INRIX

 

Residents express concerns over proposed changes to White County Code

Five people voiced their views on the proposed code changes during a public hearing at the White County Senior Center on Nov. 20, 2023. (Dean Dyer/WRWH.com)

CLEVELAND, Ga. – The White County Planning Commission heard from citizens Monday night about proposed changes to the Official Code of White County.

A small crowd attended the public hearing that was held at the White County Senior Center to get feedback from the public. Five people addressed the commission to express their views.

“They had opportunity to voice their opinions tonight. I think I did hear they didn’t feel they had enough time with the document in advance, but you heard what Mr. Sell said, it’s been out there for thirty days on the website, it’s been on the radio, it’s been in the paper,” said Planning Commission Chairman Charlie Thomas.

REVIEW Proposed Code changes here

Most of the changes to the Code deal with land use, specifically short-term rentals. A major proposal would prohibit short-term rentals in a subdivision unless there are covenants that allow it. If the property is not in a subdivision and the property is classified as A-1, R1-or R3, the approval for short-term rental will be made by administrative staff if they meet the requirements. That means citizens would not be allowed to express their views about the change.

White County Community and Economic Development Director John Sell explains the proposed changes to the White County Code. (Dean Dyer/WRWH.com)

That caught the attention of Chairman Thomas.

“The biggest thing I heard tonight was the one lady that voiced the opposition of not having public hearings for the short-term rentals outside of subdivisions, you know. It’ll be an administrative process if this passes. I mean, this hasn’t passed yet,” he said.

The planning commission will discuss the issue further before making a recommendation to the White County Board of Commissioners. The commissioners will hold a public hearing on the proposed code changes at 4 p.m. on December 4 in the Board Room at the Administration Building at 1235 Helen Hwy. Cleveland.

The proposed revisions may be viewed on the county government website at www.whitecountyga.gov

HABCO Commission approves property sales, aquatic center repainting

The Habersham County Commissioners approved two property sales and repainting of the aquatic center exterior at their Monday night meeting. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

Two property transactions and a maintenance project were approved Monday night by the Habersham County Commissioners.

Approved was the sale of property on Demorest-Mt. Airy Highway, which was originally purchased for a proposed 911 center. County officials opted not to build on the former Demorest Elementary School soccer fields due to size constraints and the challenging topography of the parcel. Instead, they plan to construct the center approximately a mile up the road on GA 365 North, near Double Bridge Road.

The decision to forgo the use of the property at 3116 Demorest-Mt. Airy Highway was influenced by its limited size and challenging terrain, situated in a low-lying area. The prospect of constructing a road suitable for emergency vehicles was deemed economically impractical. Finance Director Tim Sims explained that the estimated cost of building a road to accommodate emergency vehicles was approximately $800,000.

The Habersham County Board of Education has agreed to repurchase the property from the county at the original purchase price of $249,600.

The County Commission approved the sale of 1387 Washington Street in Clarkesville for $155,021. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

Additionally, the county commission approved the sale of a county-owned building located at 1387 Washington Street in downtown Clarkesville. Originally housing the county elections office and currently accommodating the Soque River Watershed Association office, the 1,314-square-foot building was acquired by Habersham County in 1985. Samantha Gore emerged as the highest bidder for the property, offering $155,021. Both parties have until December 31 to finalize the property transaction.

The county commission approved repainting the exterior of the aquatic center. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

Also approved was a contract with Intercontinental Commercial Services for the waterproofing and repainting of the Ruby C. Fulbright Aquatic Center. The cost for these maintenance activities is $51,766. The county received two proposals for the project, with the alternative bid amounting to $244,087.

Sims explained that once the contract is executed, Intercontinental Commercial Services will commence work, with the completion date contingent upon the temperature and weather conditions. The last time the aquatic center was repainted was in 2016.

Edward Joseph Booth, Sr.

It is with profound sorrow that we announce the passing of Edward Joseph Booth Sr., age 71, of Clarkesville, Georgia, on Tuesday, November 14, 2023.

Born in Youngstown, Ohio, on September 16, 1952, he was the son of Clarence John & Threasa Martin Booth.

Ed enjoyed a multifaceted career. He was a professional drummer in a rock band, bringing joy and rhythm to many. His culinary skills shone in his time cooking and managing restaurants, including the Ritz-Carlton in Atlanta and Boston. His entrepreneurial spirit led him to find his calling in designing and building houses, where his commitment to high-quality craftsmanship was evident.

As a member of St. Mark Catholic Church, his faith played a significant role in his life. He contributed his time and expertise to the church’s activities with enthusiasm.

Most of all, Ed loved his family tremendously.

Ed was a devoted husband and is survived by his loving wife of 47 years, Judy Blank Booth of Clarkesville, GA; son & daughter-in-law, Edward Joseph, Jr. & Halie Booth of Fayetteville, GA; daughter & son-in-law, Stacy Anna Booth MacMaster & Peter MacMaster of Buckhead, GA; many cousins, other relatives, and friends.

Funeral services are set for 2 pm Friday, December 1, 2023, at St. Mark Catholic Church, with Father Jose Luis Hernandez-Ayala officiating. The inurnment will follow at Hillside Gardens Cemetery. A reception will be held in the church fellowship hall afterward.

An online guest registry is available for the Booth Family at www.HillsideMemorialChapel.com.

Arrangements are in the care and professional direction of Hillside Memorial Chapel & Gardens of Clarkesville, Georgia. (706) 754-6256

Demorest honors Scouts’ memories

Family members of Brent Lee Moore gather around his memorial during the rededication ceremony Saturday morning in Demorest. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

Tribute was paid this weekend to two former Scouts by the city of Demorest. A small crowd gathered Saturday at the Brent Lee Moore Memorial Field behind city hall. The gathering of mostly family and friends was for a dual ceremony honoring the lives of the field’s namesake and Travis Roseman.

City leaders rededicated the ballfield to young Brent Moore’s memory. They also dedicated a water fountain at the site in honor of Roseman, who built it for his Eagle Scout project in 1985.

Significance of the Ceremony

Demorest Mayor Jerry Harkness acknowledged the somber significance of the ceremony’s timing. This year marks thirty years since Moore’s life was tragically taken and twenty years since Roseman passed. Demorest City Councilman Shawn Allen came up with the idea to honor them while overseeing repairs at Moore Field.

Demorest Mayor Jerry Harkness expresses his gratitude for everyone attending the morning ceremony on Saturday, Nov. 18. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)
A crowd gathered for the first dedication of Brent Lee Moore Memorial Field in Demorest two years after his death. (photo submitted)
Baseball team members practice on Moore Field as some grab a drink from the fountain Travis Roseman built. (photo submitted)

The former schoolyard is now a city park. A granite monument bearing Moore’s name still greets visitors. It was dedicated in 1995, two years after the young Cub Scout was killed in a jet ski accident on Lake Burton. The accident devastated his family and shocked and saddened the entire community.

Gone too soon

Brent Lee Moore died in a jet ski accident on Lake Burton on July 3, 1993. (photo submitted)

Brent Lee Moore died on July 4, 1993, just thirteen days shy of his eighth birthday.

“It’s just wonderful to know that our son is being remembered and that this field won’t lose its impact and its significance,” Moore’s mother, Jill Hayes, told Now Habersham.

Hayes teared up at the tribute, no doubt recalling how, three decades earlier, she and her family stood in that same place, still reeling from the sudden and tragic loss of her son.

She says faith has gotten them through it all, and the love of a blended family, which includes Brent’s sister Candace and five half-brothers and a step-brother.

Jill and her husband, David Hayes, joined Brent’s father and stepmother, Brad and Tonya Moore, at the Nov. 18 ceremony. Dozens of family and friends joined them, along with Alice Roseman, who was there in remembrance of her son.

Travis Roseman enlisted in the U.S. Navy after graduating from Habersham Central in 1985. (photo submitted)

Travis Roseman enlisted in the Navy after graduating from Habersham Central High School in 1985. He retired after six years in the service and went to work for the Tennessee Valley Authority. Roseman and his family were living in Soddy-Daisy, Tennessee, when he was tragically killed in a car wreck in 2003.

He was 35.

Roseman was the first Boy Scout from Demorest Troop 660 to earn his Eagle Scout badge. The fountain at Moore Field was part of that achievement.

Upon learning the history of what went into building that fountain, Councilman Allen made it his mission to restore and preserve it to keep Roseman’s legacy and memory alive.

‘The greatest thing you could have done’

While repairing the water lines, city crews found the remnants of a Boy Scout Handbook inside the fountain. Although much of the book had disintegrated over the past 33 years, part of its cover was still intact. Allen framed what was left of the handbook alongside a photo of the water fountain with its newly installed plaque. He presented the keepsake to Roseman’s mom during the ceremony.

Clarkesville Troop 5 Boy Scouts unveil the water fountain Eagle Scout Travis Roseman constructed nearly 40 years ago. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)
Demorest Councilman Shawn Allen presents a framed photograph of the fountain and the Boy Scout handbook cover found in the fountain. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

“I think that’s even more amazing, but I am not surprised at him,” she said, referring to the handbook. “He thought of things like that.” Clearly pleased and grateful, Alice Roseman added, “I just think it’s the greatest thing you could’ve done for him.”

Brad Moore expressed a similar sentiment about the tribute to his son.

“For me, I just appreciate the community remembering him. I met people today that I didn’t even know knew Brent, even at a young age. It’s very special that he is remembered.”

Brent Lee Moore’s family stands at the monument welcoming visitors to the field that was rededicated to his memory. Pictured, from left, are Brent’s stepfather, David Hayes; sister, Candace Moore Turner; mother, Jill Hayes; father, Brad Moore; and stepmother, Tonya Moore. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

 

This article has been edited for clarity

House fire leaves Hall County resident homeless

The Hall County Fire Marshal’s Office is working to determine the cause of a late-night fire that forced a resident from their home.

At approximately 10:20 p.m. on Monday, Nov. 20, Hall County Fire Rescue responded to a residential fire in the 3300 block of Robinson Road. Firefighters arrived to find the small residential structure fully involved.

Crews quickly extinguished the blaze, but the house was destroyed.

The resident and their pet exited the home safely before firefighters arrived. Fire officials notified the American Red Cross, which is assisting the displaced homeowner.

The cause of the fire is unknown.