Windell Davis

Muhammed Ali once said that “service to others is the rent you pay for your room here on earth”. If the champ is correct 2020 Fannin County Sports Hall of Fame inductee Windell Davis has a fully-paid long term lease on the finest accommodations in the county.

Personally, Windell was far from a superstar in his athletic endeavors. Because he was small, his parents would not allow him to try out for the football team at East Fannin High School until his junior year in 1958. By that time, he had grown to a whopping 135 pounds when he reported for his first football practice under Wildcat Coach and Fannin County Sports Hall of Fame member Babe Howell. Coach Howell assigned him the position of right guard on offense and linebacker when the opponents had the ball. He did not see much action until the night of October 31, 1958 when East Fannin met Adairsville for the Region 4C East championship on the Pepperell High School field just outside of Rome, Georgia.

The game was a scoreless defensive struggle until an Adairsville running back mishandled and fumbled a pitchout.  As fate would have it, Windell Davis found himself Johnny on the spot and he scooped up the ball and headed down the sideline toward the Adairsville goal. He remembers Coach Howell exhorting him on as he raced goalward. Unfortunately, Windell did not hit pay dirt and was tackled inside the Adairsville 20-yard line. His return set the Wildcats up nicely, however, and William Lynn Harris scooted into the endzone on the next play for the only touchdown of the game as the Wildcats chalked up a hard earned 6-0 victory and the region championship. The 1958 East Fannin squad ended the season with a record of 8 wins and 2 losses, the best record in the history of Fannin County until East and West Fannin High schools were consolidated into the new Fannin County High School in 1976.

Windell graduated from East Fannin in the spring of 1960 and a few years later, in 1963, received an invitation to spend some time with his Uncle Sam. He was trained as a combat medic and, fortunately, was not called to serve in the escalating conflict in Vietnam. Windell was honorably discharged in 1965 after spending much of his military duty in Hawaii.

Between 1966 and 1968, three major events occurred that shaped the life of Windell Davis for the next 50+ years. First, he married Inez Mull Davis in December, 1966. The two are still together some 53 years later. The union has produced five successful children, Danette, Denise, Vincent, Vernon and Jeffrey.

Windell, Inez and Barney, their Boston Terrier, make their home in Mineral Bluff in the house that has been home for the Davis family for more than 40 years. Windell is seen on a regular basis at Recreation League games and seldom misses a  Fannin County High School athletic contest in any sport. He continues his lifelong support of athletics in the county that he loves by doing ‘what he can, when he can’.

The second life shaping event for Windell came to pass in 1968 when he was persuaded to run for Fannin County Tax Commissioner. He won the election over a crowded field of contenders and continued to serve the county in the same capacity for a total of 34 years and 4 months. He was elected for a total of nine four-year terms, serving longer than any other elected official to date in Fannin County. He retired from public service in 2003 on his 62nd birthday. Windell is understandably very proud of his record of public service and for the confidence that the voting public showed for his abilities and performance over a long period of time.

Finally, Windell Davis began a lifelong period of service to athletics in Fannin County in the spring of 1968 when he volunteered to coach the Morganton Giants team of 13 to 15-year-old boys in the area Dixie Youth Baseball League. He continued to coach the Giants and other youth league baseball teams for some 20 years.

In the late 1980s and early to mid-1990s, Windell became the coach of the 10 and under girls basketball team in the Fannin County Recreation League. He reached the pinnacle of his coaching career in 1995-96 when he and Susan Roberson coached the 10U team that won the Georgia Parks and Recreation Department state championship in their age division. His team finished as state runners-up the following season.

In addition to coaching youngsters, Windell Davis has contributed to the athletic endeavors in Fannin County in a myriad of other ways. He has been active in organizing, fund raising, transporting young athletes to and from practice and games and any other functions that he has been called upon to perform. He even volunteered his time to write a sports column about East Fannin sports in an effort to provide recognition for young athletes. One observer says that Windell simply does ‘what he can, when he can’.

When Windell was 57 years old, he was invited to play for the Fannin Generals, a senior softball team that competed in the Blairsville Recreational Softball League. He played for the Generals for a number of years and coached the team from 2000 until 2008. During his time playing for the Generals, Windell learned that former New York Yankees pitcher Bob Turley had purchased a home in the Blue Ridge Lake area. Turley pitched for the Yankees for eight years and won the Cy Young Award in 1958. Windell contacted Turley and persuaded him to don a Generals uniform and pitch a couple of innings in a game.

Windell Davis is a charter member of the Fannin County Sports Hall of Fame and continues to play an important role in the organization’s activities. His hard work, wise input on issues facing the Hall and reputation in the community are invaluable to the group.

 

2000 Fannin Summer League

Winning a state championship in any sport, at any level, is a special accomplishment. The 2000 Fannin Summer League baseball team did exactly that and, in recognition of that auspicious feat, has been selected as the Fannin County Sports Hall of Fame team to be honored as part of the 2020 induction class.

The 2000 Fannin Summer League baseball team consisted of a group of 15 and 16-year-old youngsters who competed in the Dizzy Dean Baseball League. The Fannin team was short on numbers with only eleven players, but long on determination and talent. The members of the team had competed with or against each other since T ball age and would continue to compete together as members of the Fannin County High School baseball team. But the summer of 2000 saw them unified in their quest for the Georgia State Dizzy Dean Championship.

Leading the Fannin boys were coaches David Lunsford, Gerald Williamson and Greg Nazerian. During the academic year Lunsford was the head coach of the Fannin County High School Rebels baseball team. Williamson and Nazerian were old pros at the baseball coaching trade having guided youngsters in various competitive baseball leagues for a number of years. The triumvirate established a special chemistry early in the season. Lunsford says “Williamson masterminds the operations. He gets it done. Nazerian coaches first base and is an easy-going guy whom I depend on for support on and off the field”.

The Fannin boys kicked off the 2000 season on May 27, in an early season tournament in Boynton, Georgia. They finished the tourney as runners-up with a 3-1 record. During the remainder of the regular season, which essentially extended through the month of June, the team posted a record of 5 wins and 4 losses, giving Fannin a so-so record of 8-5 entering tournament play. With only 11 players, every member of the team was called upon to contribute to the cause.  Regular season team highlights included two victories over Gilmer County, two wins over Dalton and a 16-1 pasting of Lafayette. Individual players with stellar performances included pitcher Daniel Lunsford who twirled a complete game 2-hitter against Lafayette and outfielder Chris Sosebee who clouted a grand slam home run in the June 20th game with Gilmer County and had 4 RBIs in a game against Dalton.

The District Dizzy Dean Tournament began at the Fannin County High School field on Friday, June 30, and was scheduled to run through Saturday, July 8. The Fannin boys entered the tourney as something of a dark horse team. The starting pitching rotation of Brandon Bradburn, Anthony Cheatham and Daniel Lunsford would be severely challenged if Fannin managed to advance very far in the tournament. The challenge increased dramatically when Rome knocked off Fannin, 4-1, to send the locals to the losers’ bracket. Outfielder John Michael Croft scored the only Fannin run and the pitching duties were shared by Daniel Lunsford and Brandon Bradburn.

After the loss to Rome, the Fannin boys regrouped and won three consecutive games over Rockmart, West Cobb and Woodland to set up a return match with Rome on Friday, July 7. The winner would advance to the finals on the following day against Adairsville. With Bradburn on the mound and catcher Brandon Williamson making two great throws to nab runners trying to steal, Fannin shut out their nemesis from Rome, 3-0, and climbed their way out of the losers’ bracket to face Adairsville for the tournament championship. Fannin would need to defeat Adairsville twice to win the title since Adairsville had not yet lost a game. Fannin won the opener but dropped the nightcap to finish as runners-up in the District Tournament. Both teams, however advanced to the State Dizzy Dean Tournament in Boynton, Georgia beginning on July 15.

Entering the State Tournament, Fannin would boast a starting lineup of Hutson Vann at first base, reliable glove-man Michael Cornelius at second, Bradburn at shortstop when not pitching and Stephen Nazerian at third base. Outfielders would be Kurk Conklin, Matt Henson, Daniel Lunsford (when not pitching) and Anthony Cheatham, again when not pitching. Backup help in the outfield would come from Chris Sosebee and John Michael Croft. Brandon Williamson handled the catching. Nazerian and Vann were both big hitters each producing a lot of doubles and RBIs. Coach Lunsford had this to say about Nazerian: “He is a slick fielding player. He makes a lot of highlight plays. He has a good glove and will help produce a lot of key runs for us in the tournament”.

Although all 11 players made significant contributions, Matt Henson was undoubtedly the key to the team’s success. Lunsford made these comments about Henson: “Henson is the best all-around player on the team. He plays wherever you need him.” After his high school days Henson was awarded baseball scholarships to Young Harris and then to UNC-Asheville and has been inducted into the Fannin County Sports Hall of Fame for his individual accomplishments.

In the State Tournament, Fannin again fell into the losers’ bracket by dropping a 9-4 decision to Adairsville in their second outing. Undaunted, the Fannin boys reeled off four consecutive victories and found themselves facing Rome on Saturday, July 22 with an opportunity to win the State Championship. Rome had not yet lost a game in the tourney so Fannin would need to sweep two games to capture the title. Leading up to the championship series, several members of the team made memorable contributions. In the game with the Sequoyah Pirates on Tuesday, July 18 Henson had 4 hits and 3 RBIs and Stephen Nazerian blasted a bases loaded double to drive in three big runs. Brandon Bradford pitched a complete game in a 5-2 revenge victory over Adairsville on Wednesday, July 19. On Friday, July 21, Cheatham, Lunsford and Henson combined to limit the Sequoyah Indians to one run in an 11-1 Fannin victory.

In the first game against Rome on Saturday, July 22, young Anthony Cheatham pitched what his coaches called “probably the best 7 inning game he has ever had” as Fannin moved one step closer to the State Championship in a tension-filled 4-3 victory. Kurk Conklin was the offensive hero with two huge RBIs. Fannin had just enough left to win a wild nightcap 9-7 and win the Georgia Dizzy Dean State Championship. The winning run was scored on a double steal that brought Manager Lunsford to say “we are not known for our speed. We very seldom win games by stealing bases. We hit a lot of singles”.

Winning the Georgia State Championship entitled the Fannin boys to play in the National Dizzy Dean Tournament at the recently completed, world-class Snowden Grove Baseball Complex in Southaven, Mississippi beginning on July 29, 2000. The immediate challenge was raising enough money to make the trip and the coaches and player parents immediately ‘hit the streets’ to solicit financial help from local merchants and citizens. The community support was strong and the Fannin team soon found themselves in rooms at the Adam’s Mark Hotel in Memphis awaiting their opener in the World Series in Mississippi just south of the Tennessee border.

The Fannin County Summer League Baseball team won two games and lost two games at the World Series to finish 5th in the Nation. They defeated the Southaven host team in the opener to the tune of 12-0 and also topped Summerton, Alabama, 4-2 in a brilliant complete game 4-hitter by Brandon Bradburn.

A small group of eleven young men and three coaches brought glory to Fannin County during a short two-month span in the summer of 2000. In case you missed it, it was quite a ride.

Shannon Dillinger York

When asked to summarize his life and career, legendary Alabama football coach Bear Bryant said “I ain’t nothing but a winner”. Although 2020 Fannin County Sports Hall of Fame inductee Shannon Dillinger York is too unassuming to describe her life and career thusly, the words attributed to Bryant could easily describe her.

For the skeptics in the audience, consider these accomplishments in Shannon’s life to date. In 1990, she was selected as ‘Miss East Fannin’ at East Fannin Middle School. In 1993, she was elected as Homecoming Queen at Fannin County High School. In 1994, she was elected as the ‘Best All-Around’ senior girl at Fannin County High School and in 1997 she was elected Homecoming Queen at Piedmont College.

Shannon was an honor student at both Fannin County High School and Piedmont College She was the recipient of the Governor’s Honor Award at Fannin High and was awarded a Presidential Academic Scholarship at Piedmont. She earned a B.S. Degree in Psychology and Spanish from Piedmont in 1998 and a Master of Education Degree in Health and Physical Education from North Georgia College and State University in 2003. She also earned a degree as a Specialist in Educational Administration from Lincoln Memorial University. She taught Spanish, special education and physical education for 8 years and was named the Fannin County Teacher of the Year in 2012. She also served as Assistant Principal at Blue Ridge and Fannin Middle Schools for 8 years.

Shannon has a rich alto/baritone singing voice and, in 2011, won the ‘Mountain Idol’ talent competition This achievement led to a number of opportunities to perform at various venues and events throughout North Georgia. She recalls that, before winning the Idol competition, all of her public singing had been in church. News of her talent reached Georgia State Speaker of the House David Ralston who bestowed on Shannon the huge honor of recruiting her to sing the National Anthem on the closing day of the State House of Representatives session in 2018.

Involvement in athletics began for Shannon with the East Side Youth basketball team when she was 6 years old. She played for the East Fannin Middle School Wildcats for a couple of years before beginning her high school career at Fannin County High School in the fall of 1990.

At Fannin County High School, Shannon York became the starting point guard for the Lady Rebels basketball team at the beginning of her sophomore season in 1991. She excelled in that role for three seasons. She was the floor leader on offense, a tenacious defender and a veritable ‘coach on the floor’. She played the game with gusto and at a relentless pace. She led the Lady Rebels to the Georgia Class AA State Championship in 1992-93, the first state title in the history of Fannin County at the high school level. As a senior in 1993-94 she was the recipient of the Best Defensive Player Award and the Most Unselfish Award.

Shannon lettered two seasons in cross country at Fannin High. She finished 6th out of more than 70 runners in the Region 8AA cross country meet and qualified to compete in the state meet, the first Fannin County High runner to do so.

Following high school, Shannon was awarded a basketball and academic scholarship to attend Piedmont College in Demorest, Georgia. She was the starting point guard at Piedmont all four years that she competed there. She was named to the conference all-freshman team in 1994-95. She was awarded the Bush/Harris Memorial Scholarship in 1995-96 and in 1997-98. She was elected team captain at Piedmont and earned the Coaches Award as a senior in 1998. Shannon became the all-time career assist leader in Piedmont women’s basketball history during her junior season.

While attending Piedmont, Shannon met her future husband, Richard York. Richard is something of a legend himself at Piedmont and was elected to the Piedmont Athletic Hall of Fame in 2007 in recognition of his exploits in basketball and golf at the school. Shannon and Richard were married in the summer of 2001. The union has produced two children, Reagan, age 15, and Hudson, age 12. Reagan plays basketball and volleyball at Fannin County High School and Hudson, a student at Fannin Middle School, is into basketball, golf and baseball.

Shannon and Richard are intimately involved in the activities of their children. Shannon also stays busy a Chairperson of the Leadership Program of the Fannin County Chamber of Commerce, her music projects and overseeing the professional care of her mother, who is struggling with health issues. She also helps out and supports Richard in his career with WoodmenLife, an Omaha-based life insurance and financial planning company. The company has some 1200 employees and Richard, an over-achiever cut from the same fabric as his spouse, was named as the firm’s top performer of the year in 2018.

Shannon York gives much of the credit for her successes to her parents, Debbie and Junior Dillinger. Junior was her basketball coach from the day she began competing until she reached the 7th grade. She and her sister Tara learned the fundamentals of basketball from Junior and were ready to play the game when they reported for duty with Coach Johnny Farmer and his Fannin County High School Lady Rebels. Shannon also cites Coach Farmer for his role in developing her athletic skills to the championship level.

In a testimonial to Shannon’s character in her high school yearbook, her parents expressed the thought that she ‘always had her life in order’. She is truly ‘nothing but a winner’.

 

Charles Woodall

1955 marked the debut of organized football in Fannin County Schools. It also marked the football debut of 2020 Fannin County Sports Hall of Fame inductee Charles Woodall.

Until the county-wide school consolidation in 1955, the enrollments of the high schools of Fannin County at Morganton, Blue Ridge, Epworth and McCaysville, were not considered sufficiently large to sponsor competitive football programs. When these schools merged into the new East and West Fannin High Schools, however, the enrollment numbers reached a level at which the two schools could find enough able-bodied young men among the student bodies who would be able to compete in the game of football against teams from other schools.

The man chosen to lead the Yellow Jackets of West Fannin was Boyce ‘Buddy’ Padgett. Padgett was a young coach from Hayesville, North Carolina who had been a star lineman in his day at Western Carolina College. He came to West Fannin with only three years of coaching experience on his resume. He was green but eager as were most of the young men who reported for practice on a hot August day on the rocky athletic field at Epworth. The football field at West Fannin would not be ready for use until the following year.

Padgett installed the single-wing offense, the same offense used by the University of Tennessee and several other college teams. The configuration of the formation in the single-wing is similar to the ‘shotgun’ spread offenses of today, but with one major difference. The tailback, lined up three yards or so behind center, took most of the direct snaps from center in the single-wing offense. The player chosen to play the tailback position was one of, if not the best, all-around athlete on the team and had the option to run, pass or, drop back another couple of yards just before the snap and ‘quick kick’ the football. Charles Woodall possessed the skills to execute all three options and was given the job of running Padgett’s team as the starting tailback. Charles had played a little ‘PeeWee’ football for the Copperhill/McCaysville teams as a youth, so he had some experience on the gridiron.

On Saturday night, September 10, 1955, the first West Fannin football team took the field at Copperhill to do battle with the Bradley County, Tennessee High School ‘B’ team. Although the opponent was a team consisting of backup players, the game was a huge challenge for the Yellow Jackets. Bradley County High School, located in Cleveland, Tennessee, was one of the largest schools in Tennessee with an enrollment of some 2500 students. They also had one of the strongest football teams in the state. West Fannin, a school with an enrollment of roughly 650 students, battled Bradley on even terms and emerged with a 7-7 tie. The game demonstrated that West Fannin had a number of good athletes and that Charles Woodall was a special running back and passer.

West Fannin went on to post a record of 5 wins, two losses and one tie in 1955. Charles Woodall accounted for 60 % of the teams 112 points, rushing for 7 touchdowns and passing for 4 more. West Fannin earned its first victory of the season on September 30 by defeating Menlo High School to the tune of 26-7 in another game played on the Copperhill High School field located next to the Ocoee River just across the state line in Tennessee. Menlo High School, located in Chattooga County in Northwestern Georgia, was another school fielding a football team for the first time and were no match for West Fannin and Charles Woodall. Against Menlo, Charles scored four touchdowns. The scores came on runs of 30, 40 and 8 yards out with the final tally coming on a 75-yard kickoff return. It was one of the greatest performances in the history of football in Fannin County.

Although the timing of events allowed Charles Woodall to play high school football for only one season, he set a standard of excellence by which Fannin County football players would be measured for many years. His coach Boyce Padgett has these words to say about him: “His level of ability was extremely high; he was fast; he was quick and he was agile. Charlie was a leader and he managed to handle himself with dignity and poise. Off the field Charles was held in high esteem by his peers. On the field he commanded respect from his teammates. He was a coach’s player. He was alert to teammate concerns and always came down on what was best for the team. How he presented himself and how he functioned as an individual and character traits rank high on my list as qualities essential to Hall of Fame consideration. I was selected by my peers in 1995 to the Florida High School Activities Association Hall of Fame. I know how much this selection means. I believe that when you apply qualifying criteria you will decide that Charles Woodall met or exceeded those criteria”.

The athletic resume of Charles Woodall includes entries for a couple of activities in addition to football. He was a starting guard for the Epworth High School basketball team of 1954-55 and at West Fannin in 1955-56. He was the team playmaker and leader on the court. He was also a baseball star of some note in local American Legion and Babe Ruth League competition. Former Major Leaguer and charter member of the Fannin County Sports Hall of Fame member, Joe Tipton, saw Charles play on a number of occasions and encouraged him to attend professional baseball tryout camps held nearby.

When the local Dixie Youth baseball program was organized in the Fannin County/Copper Basin area in the summer of 1964, Charles volunteered his time to coach one of the teams in Epworth. He went on to coach youngsters in this endeavor for another five years or so. He was also the shortstop for several softball teams in the area. T.J. Thompson, another local sports legend, remembers that Charles used his amazing speed to turn routine infield ground balls into infield hits.

After graduating from West Fannin, Charles briefly considered moving on to play collegiately at Western Carolina College. He was a bit small for the college game, however, weighing in at 150 pounds. So, Charles decided to stay in his hometown and landed a job at the Smelter Store in Copperhill. He remained with the Tennessee Copper Company until the company shut down operations in 1987. He took college-level courses in the evening, worked his way up in the Company and was the supervisor at the London Mill when the company closed its doors. He moved on to work at Vulcan Materials in Norcross, Georgia as Superintendent of Central Services until his retirement from Vulcan in 1997.  His final professional position was with Capital City Machine in Atlanta as General Manager until he retired for good in 2010.

Charles Woodall was a pioneer and one of the most talented athletes in the history of Fannin County. The Fannin County Sports Hall of Fame is honored to welcome him as a member.

Charles was born in Knoxville, Tennessee and lived there until his father, R.H. Woodall, took a job as a boilermaker at the Tennessee Company in 1948 when Charles was 10 years old. He has a sister, Mary Nell Pittman and a younger brother, Jim. Jim also played football at West Fannin and had a long coaching career. Jim was elected to the Fannin County Sports Hall of Fame in 2014.

Charles has three adult children, Scott, Debra and Tania, all of whom competed in athletics at West Fannin or Fannin County High School. He and his wife, Karen make their home in Woodstock, Georgia where they are active is church activities. Charles also enjoys woodworking, boating and camping.

 

Bob Stewart

Bob Stewart has been a vital part of the sports landscape of Fannin County for more than 50 years. His body of athletic work as a player, coach, baseball umpire, football and basketball official, organizer, administrator and as hands-on athletic director with the Fannin County Recreation Department has earned him membership in the Fannin County Sports Hall of Fame Induction Class of 2020.  

Bob grew up in McCaysville and began his career as a player at McCaysville Elementary School and West Fannin High School. At West Fannin, he was an all-around athlete participating in baseball, track and field, football and basketball. As a senior in 1961-62, Bob earned a starting guard position on the basketball team and, playing in the backcourt with fellow FCSHOF member Mike Hartness, averaged 9 points per game. He played his best basketball in the Region 3AA Tournament in 1962 and was instrumental in helping the Yellow Jackets win the Region title with wins over Calhoun, West Rome and North Whitfield in the title game. Bob played a sound floor game, defended tenaciously and scored at a 10 point-per-game clip in the tournament. He and Hartness were named to the All-Tournament Team in recognition of their outstanding play. That team went on to win the first State Tournament game in the history of the school, a 56-39 victory over Elbert County.

After graduating from West Fannin, Bob played basketball at Truett-McConnell for two seasons. He then returned to the Fannin/Basin area and landed a job with the Tennessee Copper Company.

The game of slow-pitch softball was quite popular and very competitive in the Fannin County/Copper Basin area in the early 1960s. Bob Stewart and some of his friends and acquaintances founded a softball team in the summer of 1964. A variety of potential nicknames for the team were suggested and one member of the group said ‘what about the Zots’. He explained that ‘zot’ was the sound that the aardvark in a popular comic strip made when sucking up an ant. The nickname was adopted unanimously. Little did the players know that the Zots would become legendary in Fannin/Basin history as one of the dominant teams in the area for more than 50 years.

Bob held down the third base spot for the Zots during most of his 35 years with the club. Many local observers who witnessed Bob play the game describe him as the best fielding third baseman ever to perform in the area.

Music was an important part of life in the Stewart family. Bob’s father E.P. ‘Slim’ Stewart was a native of Louisville, Kentucky where he and his four brothers, Al, Gene Jay, Bill and Redd, were professional musicians. The brothers had their own radio show in Louisville in the years leading up to World War II. Brother Redd would gain fame as a country music songwriter and has been inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame. Some of the songs that he wrote or co-wrote are the ‘Tennessee Waltz’, ‘You Belong to Me’ and ‘Slow Poke’. Redd joined Pee Wee King’s group called the Golden West Cowboys and, following the end of World II, Redd became the lead singer of that group replacing Eddie Arnold who had elected to pursue a solo career.

Mary Evelyn German was a native of McCaysville who sang with a local group. Her group won a talent contest and one of the prizes was a trip to Louisville to sing on the Stewart Brothers radio show. She and Slim hit it off and were married in October of 1942. They moved to McCaysville where Slim gained honest employment with the Tennessee Copper Company. It was into this musical environment that Bob Stewart was born in 1944. He quickly learned to play multiple musical instruments and discovered that he has a decent singing voice.

In addition to forming the Zots softball team in 1964. Bob Stewart also organized his first band called the Twilights. The Twilights became one of the most popular local bands and performed at numerous venues in the North Georgia and Southeastern Tennessee area for years. Bob was a member of other groups throughout the years and has been the Coordinator of the popular local Pickin’ in the Park endeavor since 2013.

Bob Stewart coached youngsters at all age levels in competitive athletics in the area for more than 40 years. He was instrumental in establishing the Tri-Counties Junior Basketball Program in 1977-78 and coached the Epworth junior varsity basketball team (ages 10 through 12) to the championship in their age division. He also coached several youth baseball teams including the Copperhill Braves in the Dixie Youth League in 1968.

Bob began officiating local baseball, football and basketball games in the mid-1960s. In 1987 he registered and qualified with the TSSAA (Tennessee Secondary Schools Athletic Association) and began officiating basketball and football games for that group. He worked as a TSSAA football official for 27 years until his retirement in 2014. During that period he was selected to officiate Tennessee football state playoff games 12 seasons. He was named as the Tri-State Football Association Official of the Year in 2007. In football contests, Bob as generally given the assignment of Umpire. The Umpire is stationed behind the defensive line and linebackers which means that he is in the middle of the action on most running plays. It is a dangerous assignment, not for the faint of heart. In a 2014 playoff game Bob found himself too close to the action and was knocked cold in a collision with a big linebacker. He decided then and there that he should call it a career to protect his 70-year old body from further damage.

The Tennessee Copper Company shut down most of its operations in 1987. The Company that had been the life-blood of the area for a century was gone. Bob Stewart had served as a safety engineer at the Company for his final 13 years there and was able to land on his feet when he was hired by Maytag as a safety inspector. He retired from Maytag in 2004.

Shortly after his retirement from Maytag Bob Stewart met fate head-on when he encountered Bernie Hodskins in a local retail business. Hodskins was the Director of the up and coming Fannin County Recreation Department and asked Bob if he knew any local sports-minded individuals who might be interested in joining the Recreation Departmet as Athletic Director. The job was a natural for Bob and he signed on with the Department and worked out a schedule that would permit him to handle his duties at the Rec Center Complex and continue his TSSAA officiating duties as needed.

Bob remained with the Fannin County Recreation Department until his retirement from full-time duties in late 2018. He continues to devote a good deal of time to the Department, however, on a part-time basis.

Bob Stewart and Kathy Hensley met at the Teen Canteen in Copperhill and were married in 1966. They have two grown daughters, three grandchildren and one great grandchild. As of this writing, Kathy Stewart serves as the Mayor of the town of Copperhill, Tennessee. Bob prefers athletics to politics and leaves the statesmanship duties to his spouse.

Melissa Holler Patton

Following a legend can be a daunting assignment. History books are full of names such as Keith Montgomery (who succeeded Herschel Walker at Georgia), George Selkirk (who followed Babe Ruth with the New York Yankees), Ray Perkins (successor to Bear Bryant as football coach at Alabama), Paxton Lynch (who succeeded Peyton Manning as quarterback of the Denver Broncos) and many others. 2020 Fannin County Sports Hall of Fame inductee, Melissa Holler Patton, had her own solution to a similar situation when she succeeded Shannon Dillinger York as starting point guard and team quarterback with the Fannin County High School Lady Rebels basketball team in the late autumn of 1994. She became a legend herself.

Melissa grew up in Morganton, Georgia and began her basketball career in the 4th grade. Robert Craig was her first coach and continued to coach the teams for whom Melissa played through middle school. She cites Craig as a big influence in her development, especially in the areas of conditioning and emphasis on the defensive side of basketball. She is also quick to mention that her parents, Linda and Boots Holler, were enthusiastic supporters of her basketball efforts and seldom missed any of her games.

When she reported for practice as a freshman at Fannin County High School in 1992, Melissa had developed strong fundamental skills and made the Lady Rebel team as a freshman. She began her career at the beginning of a dynasty. The Fannin County girls, under the leadership of Coach Johnny Farmer, won two state titles during the decade of the 1990s and freshman Melissa Patton was a member of the 1992-93 Lady Rebels state championship team. It was the first state championship in any team sport at the high school level in the history of Fannin County. During her four years of competition, the Fannin girls posted the gaudy record of 98 victories and only 13 defeats.

Melissa earned a starting guard spot at the beginning of her sophomore year. Shannon Dillinger was the starting point guard and Melissa was assigned the ‘Number 3 Guard’ position in Coach Farmer’s offense. Her duties were essentially to play strong defense and attempt to work the ball inside to Fannin’s post players, Leslie Jabaley and Suzianne Green. She also helped out with the ball handling duties and one long time observer points out that, with Dillinger and Holler handling the ball, employing a pressing defense was a waste of time and energy for opponents.

With the graduation of Shannon Dillinger, Melissa ascended to the role of point guard for the Lady Rebels for her junior season of 1994-95. She had a banner season leading her team to a 23-5 record advancing to the quarterfinals of the Class AA State Tournament before losing to eventual state champion, Haralson County. For her efforts, Melissa was named as the Team Best Defensive Player and was selected as a member of the Class AA All-State Honorable Mention Team. She scored a then-school-record 7 three-point field goals in a game against Copper Basin that year. She scored a total of 30 points in that game. She continued to add to her highlight film later that season when she dished out 12 assists in a game against East Hall.

The 1995-96 Fannin High Lady Rebels finished the season with a record of 28-1, the best record in the history of the school. With Melissa Patton piloting the ship, Fannin advanced to the semi-finals of the Class AA State Tournament before dropping their only game to Dodge County. Melissa again received many individual honors including a repeat selection on the Class AA All-State Honorable Mention Team. She was named as the team Co-MVP along with fellow FCSHOF member Leslie Jabaley. She was selected as the Northwest Georgia Tip-Off Club Player of the Month for the month of December, 1995, a month during which she averaged 12.2 points, 3 steals and 7 assists in games played.  She was named MVP of the Taco Bell Christmas Tournament in December of 1995.

Johnny Farmer smiles when asked to reminisce about his time coaching Melissa Patton. Farmer says that Melissa “always came ready to play and gave 110% when she stepped on the floor. She was very coachable and was always in the best of shape. She was a race horse and I raced her to win. Best remembered for her ball handling and her tenacious defense. She was given the Best Defensive Player Award one season and I awarded her ‘The Glove Award’ meaning she was on you like a glove”.

Melissa also found time to play softball at Fannin High and earned three varsity letters in that sport. She played in the outfield and generally batted in the leadoff or number two hitter in the lineup.

At the end of her high school career, Melissa was offered a basketball scholarship to play at Oglethorpe University in Atlanta. She chose not to continue her basketball career, however, and attended the University of North Georgia where she earned a B.S. degree in Finance. She has been a Member Services Representative at Tri-State EMC in Fannin County for the past 12 years.

Melissa married Randy Patton in 2000. They have three children, Morgan, age 19, Brook, age 17 and Sadie, age 9. Melissa enjoys running and coaching Sadie’s Recreation Department basketball team.  Sadie’s team won the Rec Department 8U state championship in 2019. Sadie also plays softball and was on the 10U team that were state runners-up in 2019. Who knows? — Sadie might follow in the mother’s footstep and become an athletic legend herself in a few years.

 

Clifton Biddell Hunt (Shag)

2020 Fannin County Sports Hall of Fame inductee Clifton Birdell Hunt (better known as ‘Shag’) was born in Tate, Georgia on January 12, 1913. Shag was born in an America where baseball was truly the country’s National Pastime. For most of Shag’s first 45 years or so, the game was one of the most important parts of his life.

In 1926, Grover Hunt, Shag’s father, was killed in an accident when he fell from a building on which he was working. Shag was only 13 years old at the time. He was the oldest of the three Hunt children and he dropped out of school around the 8th grade to help support the family. In 1929, Shag’s mother remarried and moved to Detroit with the two younger children. Shag stayed in North Georgia and took up residence with his Uncle Gus in Loving, Georgia. When not working on the farm, he spent hours playing baseball on the fields at Epworth and Copperhill. Around this time, he acquired the nickname ‘Shag’ for the many hours that he devoted to shagging fly balls in the outfield. It was also about that time that he met Paul Kimsey, a young man from Epworth who played on several local baseball teams with Shag. The two would remain friends for the remainder of their lives.

Economic times were hard during the Depression years of the early 1930s and newly elected President Franklin D. Roosevelt, after taking office in January, 1933, began introducing a number of programs designed to alleviate the hardships of many Americans. One of the Roosevelt programs was the Civilian Conservation Corps, the CCC, established in the spring of 1933. The stated goal of this program was to conserve the country’s natural resources while providing jobs for young men. The program proved to be very popular and, by 1935, over 2650 CCC camps had been established in all states employing more than 600,000 young men.

Shag Hunt, along with Paul Kimsey, enlisted in the CCC and, by the spring of 1935, the two young men found themselves assigned to CCC Camp 485, called the Sandy Creek Camp, near Athens, Georgia. Camp 485 fielded a strong semi-pro baseball team that competed in the Georgia Piedmont League against top-flight amateur teams in Northeast Georgia. Shag immediately became the mainstay of the camp pitching staff with Paul Kimsey behind the plate catching most of Shag’s offerings.

Shag was the pitching ace of the Athens team for two seasons, posting a record of 10-3 in 1936, pitching 116 innings and giving up 96 hits. He was also one of the most popular young men in the camp and discovered that he had a flair for writing poetry. He became the ‘Literature’ Editor of the camp newsletter, called the ‘Cracker’, and wrote a poem for each issue.  Shag’s poems did not contain any complex imagery or esoteric references, but were straightforward thoughts about nature, life, love, friends and family and, naturally, baseball.  His poems were characterized by humor, pathos and a comman man’s view of living.  Following is a tongue-in-cheek poem about the camp baseball team that Shag composed in 1936.

Our catcher started out this year
 As lively as a singer
He tried to catch a foul tip
 And cracked up his finger

Our pitcher had a fast one
 And threw a curve not using his thumb
He was a pretty good pitcher
 But my goodness he sure was dumb

Our first sacker was a honey
 He was tall enough and slim
He couldn’t get a grounder
 He couldn’t bend over, not him

Our second baseman was a little guy
 He wasn’t so awful hot
But one thing about him
 He was Johnny on the spot
We had a guy on third base
 Who was as lazy as could be
How he ever managed to hit
 Is a mystery to me

You should see our shortstop
 He could get around like a deer
Until he went after a hit
 And landed on his rear

Our left fielder was a genius
 He sure could cover ground
But when the ball got in the sun
 He could only go round and round

Our right and center fielders
 Led the team in being spry
‘Til they bumped heads together
 Trying to catch the same fly

The subs they don’t play much
 They watch the opposing pitcher’s slants
They’ve sat on the bench so much
 Now the seat is out of their pants

Our umpire had a crooked eye
 He didn’t know a ball from a strike
The last game he tried to call
 To get home he had to hitch hike

From the 1920s until the early 1950s, many industries in the United States sponsored company semi-pro baseball teams. This was particularly true among the textile plants that thrived in North Georgia, South Carolina and North Carolina at the time. The arrangements varied but, generally, the company would seek out good baseball players, provide them with a not too complicated job at a reasonable wage and oftentimes company housing. In return the men would perform for the baseball team representing the company on weekends and sometimes during the week. Some of the rivalries that developed between small town teams rivaled that of the New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox.

Following the 1936 baseball season, Shag Hunt was discharged from the CCC. In September he married Mary Susan Davenport in Loving, Georgia and signed on to play with the Sugar Hill team near Buford, Georgia. This team competed in the Northeast Georgia Textile League. The Sugar Hill team was affiliated with the legendary Bona Allen Company semi-pro teams but the precise nature of that relationship has not been determined. What has been determined is that Shag had an outstanding season at Sugar Hill in 1937, posting a record of 11-3. He pitched 98 innings and had 70 strikeouts. Shag’s first child was born in Buford in August of 1937.

Shag’s performance at Sugar Hill, earned him a spot with the Greensboro, Georgia team of Georgia Piedmont League. He played at Greensboro for two seasons, 1938 and 1939. He had a record of 17-9 in 1939 and pitched a no-hitter against Commerce on Saturday, May 28, 1938.

Shag moved on to Greenwood, South Carolina and pitched for a mill team in the Central Carolina League in 1940, 1941 and 1942. He was very popular among the fans and, in a 1940 fans’ poll, he finished as runner up as the most popular player in the league. His best record at Greenwood was likely 1942 when he appeared in 28 games and compiled a record of 16-9. He also managed the team at various times.

Shag, his wife Susie and young daughter Mary Sue returned to Fannin County following the 1942 baseball season at Greenwood. Shag was never called to serve in the military during World War II, probably due to his age, but Susie’s four younger brothers all served in the conflict. Shag took a hiatus from baseball during the war to help care for, financially and emotionally, Susie’s mother and father. Shag was a first-rate carpenter and his skills were in great demand in the community. The second Hunt daughter, Elizabeth Ann, was born in 1944.

Following the end of World War II, Shag began pitching for the Blue Ridge, Georgia and Murphy, North Carolina semi-pro teams. These teams played some of the strongest semi-pro teams in the area including the Buford Shoemakers, the Atomic Bombers of Oak Ridge, Fulton Bag of Atlanta, the Grant Park Aces of Atlanta and many others. In 1947 his record was likely 12-4, including four shutouts. Published game accounts also report that, after the game against the Marietta Veterans Administration in August, Shag had 141 strikeouts in 139 innings pitched.

In 1948, the Blue Ridge team record was 15-12. Hunt’s record in those contests appears to have been 13-10. His record in documented games in 1950 was 9-3. He retired from active competition in the early to mid-1950s. Although exact records are virtually impossible to reconstruct, Shag undoubtedly won more than 200 games during his pitching career.

After his retirement from baseball, Shag was a home builder supervising and participating in the construction of some of the finest homes in Fannin County. He was also very active in church work serving as a deacon in the New Hope Baptist Church. He and Susie had a third daughter, Rebecca Reid, in 1950. Becky, Mary Sue and Ann all have very fond memories of Shag. One of Becky’s favorite memories is of Shag’s lifelong friend, Paul Kimsey, calling her ‘Little Shag’. Shag died of a stroke at the age of 63 on November 22, 1976 and is buried in the New Hope Baptist Church Cemetery in the Loving Road section of Fannin County.

As is the case with many small-town athletes who competed in athletics in the time of Shag Hunt, details of his career are very elusive and unearthed only after extensive efforts. All accounts, in the media an from first-hand interviews, however, are that Shag Hunt was a very talented pitcher and was highly respected by his family, peers and fans.

April Sisson Conti

Oftentimes great athletes seem more eager to talk about the feats of teammates or family member than to talk about themselves. Such is the case with 2020 Fannin County Sports Hall of Fame inductee April Sisson Conti.  And with good reason. April’s son, Evan Cole, is an up and coming basketball star for the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets. Evan stands 6’ 9” and is entering his junior year of eligibility with m the Jackets. He recently led his team to four victories on a preseason tour of Spain where they met several top international teams.

April began her own basketball odyssey at the age of five and did not hang up her sneakers until the end of the 1989-90 season at Fannin County High School. She earned four varsity letters playing basketball for the Lady Rebels under the tutelage of legendary Coach Johnny Farmer. April averaged 9 points per game as a junior and 13 points per contest as a senior. She was named as the Northwest Georgia Tip-Off Club Player of the Month in January 1990 and also was awarded the team Glenn Wilkes Hustle Award that season. Her teams at Fannin won region titles and advanced to the state playoffs during her junior and senior seasons.

While competing at a basketball camp at UT-Chattanooga, April impressed one of the coaches of the Tennessee Magic AAU team and was invited to play with that team during the summer between her junior and senior years in high school. She accepted and played with the Magic in games throughout the South,

Fannin County High School sponsored the first track and field team in the history of the school in the spring of the 1986-87 school year. April Conti was a freshman at the school at that time and suddenly was afforded the opportunity to display her wide range of athletic skills. April was not a one-dimensional athlete. She was well-coordinated, fast, quick, strong and possessed superb leaping ability. The multi-faceted sport of track and field was a natural for April and she competed in a variety of disciplines including the sprint events, middle distance events, relay events, the long jump and the high jump.

She excelled at the high jump and placed fourth in that event at the region track meet as a freshman. She continued to improve as a high jumper and won the Region 8AA championship in the event two times during her career. She finished sixth in the high jump at the state meet at the end of her senior year of competition in 1990. Her coach, Mike Durham, had these words to say about her performance: “Any time you get to the victory stand, you have done a good job because this means that you are one of the six best at your event out of the 16 that started in the state championship”. Overall, she earned three varsity letters in track and field (she did not compete in track and field during her junior year) and was named as the Most Valuable Player in that sport during her sophomore season.

It was in the sport of softball, however, that April Conti produced her most prodigious numbers. She earned four varsity letters in softball, starting in the outfield her last three years. During her stay at Fannin, her teams won four sub-region championships, two region championships and placed in the Elite 8 in state class AA rankings in 1988 and 1989. As a senior in 1990, April posted an incredible batting average of .625 while smacking 18 home runs and recording 75 RBIs. Following her senior season, she was selected to represent Region 8AA on the Georgia Athletic Coaches Association North All-Star Team and participated in the North-South All-Star Game held in Augusta in June of 1990.

April Conti was much more than just a stellar athlete during her years at Fannin County High School. She was an exceptional student academically earning a spot on the Principal’s List and/or Honor Roll every grading period while in high school. She was a member of the Beta Club, the Student Council and the Annual Staff. She was elected Student Council President for one year. She was the runner-up in the Homecoming Queen selection as a senior and was elected as the Best All-Around Senior Girl student by her peers during her senior year. She graduated from Fannin County High School with an impressive resume of academic and athletic accomplishments in the spring of 1990.

April was recruited by several colleges to play several different sports an elected to attend Georgia State University in Atlanta on a softball scholarship. She played there for one season but discovered that, at that point in her life, her passion for the nursing profession was more powerful than her passion to continue her athletic career. She transferred from Georgia State to Brenau University in Gainesville, Georgia where she earned her degree in nursing.

April’s career choice was Perinatal-Care Nursing and she became a Registered Nurse in that field. She has enjoyed a 20 plus year career with Northside Hospital, serving as the Nursing Director of the Labor and Delivery Operating Room at Northside/Forsyth Hospital for eight years. She currently works with the Georgia Perinatal Consultants at Northside/Atlanta Hospital specializing in high-risk pregnancies.

April married Salvatore Conti in 2014. Sal is the Director of Information Services with Equifax in Atlanta. April and Sal reside in a condominium in midtown Atlanta. When not watching Evan play basketball for Georgia Tech or enjoying the myriad of entertainment and dining opportunities available in Georgia’s Capital City, the Contis travel extensively and their mode of transportation is generally by motorcycle. On a recent vacation they traveled coast to coast seeing much of the USA from the backs of their motorcycles.

Morgan Arp

Morgan Arp first touched a basketball late in the autumn of 1960 when he was a seventh-grade student at Mineral Bluff Elementary School. He is a fast learner, however, and his accomplishments in the sport during the following six years have earned him a spot in the Fannin County Sports Hall of Fame induction class of 2020.

Morgan grew up on 100-acre farm four miles from Mineral Bluff in a family that included four boys and two girls. Much of his time was spent in the outdoors, hunting, fishing and doing chores around the farm. Although he was always a robust, athletic young man, there was little time to devote to organized sports. That changed when Kenneth Wood joined the staff at Mineral Bluff as a teacher and coach at the beginning of the 1960-61 school year. It was the first stop for Wood in a 16-year basketball and football coaching career in the Fannin County School System at Blue Ridge Elementary School and West Fannin High School in addition to the two years that he remained at Mineral Bluff. It was Kenneth Wood who recognized young Morgan Arp’s latent athletic ability and persuaded him to join the Mineral Bluff basketball team.

At Mineral Bluff, Morgan joined forces with David Nichols and Johnny Rogers, and these three young men would be teammates throughout their basketball careers at Mineral Bluff and later at East Fannin High School. They were a formidable threesome who led the Mineral Bluff team to the 1962 Fannin County Tournament Championship with a resounding 53-17 victory over McCaysville in the finals. The McCaysville team, led by Fannin County Sports Hall of Fame member Steve Cheatham ran roughshod over every other team in the county but, in addition to the loss in the County Championship game, lost two regular season games to the Mineral Bluff boys by the lopsided scores of 48-28 and 63-21. Rogers, Nichols and Morgan Arp scored in double figures in all three games.

Morgan reported for his first basketball practice at East Fannin High School as a freshman in the fall of 1962. He was greeted by first-year coach Ron Ely, a lanky 6’5” 23-year old fresh out of Tennessee Wesleyan College. Ely, a native of Pennington Gap, Virginia had been a standout basketball player at Tennessee Wesleyan and brought discipline and some fresh, innovative ideas about the game to Morganton. He remained the Wildcat head coach for three seasons and Morgan Arp credits Ely with teaching him much of what he learned about the game of basketball.

Morgan was a starter for the East Fannin basketball teams all four years that he competed. He was a team leader and was elected as the team Most Valuable Player as a freshman, sophomore and senior. He stood just over 6 feet tall playing much of every game inside against taller opponents. He was tough as nails, giving no quarter and expecting none in return. Opponents could expect a rugged, relentless battle from him from the opening tip to the final whistle. One of his opponents who faced Morgan numerous times had these words to say about him: “Morgan was a very productive player. He played much taller than he was. Got the most out of his ability. Very aggressive, played with an attitude (very sharp elbows). Probably the most physical player I ever played against. Excellent defender, rebounder and inside scorer. Not stylish but very effective”. 

When asked about his most memorable moments on the court, Morgan is quick to recall his battles with Larry Cantrell of Copper Basin. Cantrell was a giant for his era, measuring 6’8’ from head to toe. He would receive a basketball scholarship from Auburn of the SEC following his graduation from high school. Although giving up 8 inches or so to Cantrell, Morgan Arp was the aggressor in all of their battles, approaching the challenge as though the two stood eye to eye. In his six games against Copper Basin during the Cantrell era, Morgan and his Wildcat teammates managed to split the two games in 1962-63 and 1963-64 and dropped a pair of one-point games to the 1964-65 Cougar squad, arguably the best boys basketball team in Copper Basin history.

Another battle for Morgan were the annual games against cross-county rival West Fannin High School. It was something of a David vs Goliath struggle since West Fannin had roughly three times as many students as East Fannin. The Wildcats managed to defeat West Fannin twice during Morgan’s junior and senior seasons, however, including a 58-52 victory in a game at West Fannin on January 18, 1966. Morgan Arp poured through 20 points in this big victory which would be the last time that an East Fannin team would defeat a Tom Foster-coached Yellow Jacket quintet. Foster, another Fannin County Sports Hall of Fame member, retired following the 1973-74 season.

The East Fannin Wildcats finished the 1964-65 season with a 22-5 record and narrowly missed a trip to the State Tournament. In his three years in Morganton, Ron Ely had molded his team into a championship-caliber outfit and prospects were bright as the 1965-66 season loomed ahead. Fate intervened, however, and Ely received and accepted an offer to assume the roundball coaching reins at Cherokee County High School in Canton, Georgia. He would remain in Canton for 13 years and win two state titles during that time. Overall, Ely had 693 victories that also included stops at East Hall High School and Lakeview Academy. He is a member of the Cherokee County High School Sports Hall of Fame.

To replace Ely, East Fannin tapped Jack Myers to take over the boys basketball program. Myers, who played college basketball for two seasons at the University of Maryland, came to Fannin County after coaching several seasons at Sequatchie County High School in Dunlap, Tennessee. His coaching style was considerably different from the disciplined-style of Ely but he did inherit a strong hand of talent, including the irrepressible Morgan Arp. The 1965-66 Wildcat hoopsters would finally break through and earn a trip to the Class B State Tournament in Macon. It would be the only appearance at the big event in the 21-year history of basketball at East Fannin High School.

Again, fate intervened and East Fannin was matched with pre-tourney favorite Waynesboro High School in the first round of the State Tournament. Waynesboro lived up to the hype and eliminated the Wildcats 75-61 on their way to the State Championship. As something of a consolation prize, Morgan was named to the Chattanooga Times All Tri-State team, one of only three Georgia players to be named to the team.

In addition to his basketball exploits at East Fannin Morgan also played football for two seasons. He played end on both offense and defense. His recovery of a fumble for a touchdown in the 1964 North Gwinnett game was instrumental in leading the Cats of a 20-13 victory. He was also a member of the Big E Club and Key Club at East Fannin.

After graduation from East Fannin Morgan worked for a spell in Warner Robins before deciding to attend college. He chose Piedmont College in Demorest, Georgia but faced an acute lack of funds dilemma. The Registrar at Piedmont was taken with Morgan’s determination and was instrumental in helping him pay for his college education through grants and work programs. Morgan graduated cum laude from Piedmont College with a B.S. in Social Studies in 1970. He later earned a Masters Degree in Educational Administration from the University of Georgia and a Specialist Degree in Educational Administration and Supervision from Lincoln Memorial University.

Following his graduation from Piedmont, Morgan landed a teaching and coaching job at East Fannin High School. Under the mentorship of long time Fannin County education administrator/school superintendent Ed Dunn, Morgan soon moved into the newly-created position of home-bound teacher He remained in that position for 5 years and then moved on into positions of visiting teacher and then assistant school superintendent. In 1993, he threw his hat into the ring and ran for Fannin County School Superintendent. Morgan says that he and his family visited almost every home in the county seeking votes. In a crowded field of contenders, he emerged on top and served as Superintendent until his retirement in 2002. He points out that he was the last elected and first appointed Superintendent in the recent history of the county. Overall Morgan Arp devoted more than 30 years of service to the educational system of Fannin County.

Morgan Arp and Mary Jabaley were married in November, 1982. They live in a gorgeous home on Blue Ridge Lake where they enjoy boating and cooking. They also devote considerable time and effort to charitable endeavors in the area. Morgan also plays a little golf from time to time. They have two adult children, Thomas, who works for State Farm Insurance and Christy, who is the Fannin County Economic Development Director.

Epilogue – Mary Jabaley Arp passed away on September 16, 2019.

Tina Grice Bath

When asked about her introduction to athletics, Tina replies that “for as long as I can remember, being active and playing sports has always been a part of my life. A large part of my childhood consisted of playing outside until dark, riding four wheelers, fishing and keeping the grass from growing on our dirt covered basketball court with my two older brothers and sister. I am very thankful for my upbringing, and I believe this was the foundation of my interest in athletics and to be physically active”.

Tina grew up in Morganton and began playing basketball in the first grade. She continued to play in middle school where she was coached by Robert Craig. She began playing for winning teams early in her career. She was a member of the 10 and under all-star basketball team that won the Georgia Recreation and Parks Association state championship in 1991.  A few years later her Fannin County Middle School team 8th grade team finished with a perfect record of 14-0 on their way to winning the North Georgia Middle School Basketball Tournament Championship.

Great athletes are prone to make a lot of headlines. 2020 Fannin County Sports Hall of Fame inductee Tina Grice Bath made her first appearance in the headlines before she ever set foot in any athletic arena. She was the first baby born at Fannin Regional Hospital on January 1, 1981 earning a $50 U.S. Savings Bond for her auspicious debut.

At Fannin County High School, Tina displayed her wide range of athletic talents by earning a total of eleven varsity letters, three in basketball, three in softball, four in tennis and one in cross country. In basketball, arguably her best sport, she was a starter at the low post position for three years. She was described in the local press as a ‘Rock of Gibraltar inside the paint’. Coach Johnny Farmer says that “Tina was a very strong and physical player who sharpened her skills each season as a Lady Rebel. After her sophomore season I nicknamed her ‘Super Soph’ for having such a great season in helping us become state runners-up in 1997. Each year I challenged her to be better the next year and she did not let her team or the fans down. Tina led the team in rebounding three years in a row. She also played great interior defense. Man-to-man was our base defense and we never switched inside because of her strength and physical play. Her teammates nicknamed her ‘Train Wreck’ for the wicked screens she would set’.

During the State Championship season of 1998-99, Tina averaged 15 points and 10.2 rebounds per game. She scored a total of 458 points that season and was named to the Georgia Class AA All-State Honorable Mention team. She was selected as the Northwest Georgia Tip-Off Club Player of the Month for December, 1998. She was awarded the team Best Offensive Player for her performance during the 1998-99 season, after receiving the Most Improved Player Award as a sophomore and Best Rebounder as a junior.

Tina and Fannin Coach Johnny Farmer developed something of a mutual admiration society of two during her playing days. Tina says that: “Coach Farmer instilled life values that are carried out to this day. Excuses, attitude and disrespect were not allowed, no exceptions. Instead there was correction, respect, dedication and determination. I believe this style of coaching is the most rewarding of all. It was truly an honor to have had the opportunity to be coached by Johnny Farmer and Eddie Payne”.

In addition to her basketball endeavors, Tina also played softball, tennis and ran cross country at Fannin County High School. In softball, she was a catcher and outfielder helping the Lady Rebels reach the state playoffs three times during her career.

Tina was awarded a basketball scholarship to North Georgia College and State University and played there for one season. She went on to earn her B.S. degree in Sports and Health Sciences from American Public University. She holds certifications from American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM) as an Exercise Physiologist and (through ACSM and the National Center on Health, Physical Activity and Disability) as a Certified Inclusive Fitness Trainer. She is currently employed Fannin Regional Hospital as an Exercise Physiologist in the Rehabilitation and Wellness Center.

Tina’s passion for athletics has carried over to her attitude toward her career. In her words – “My career as an Exercise Physiologist has allowed me the opportunity to assist those recovering from sports and other injuries and those living with physical and cognitive disabilities. By developing exercise programs and providing one-on-one specialized training, I have a unique opportunity to help individuals overcome limitations and enhance their physical abilities and overall well-being. It has been extremely rewarding to transform my passion for athletics into a career dedicated to helping others improve their lives. I am also very thankful to have the opportunity to give back to the community that has given so much to me”.

Tina and Shaun Bath were married in 2005. It appears to be the ideal match since Shaun has introduced Tina to even more physical activities including kayaking, snowboarding and skydiving. They live in Pickens County.

Two more activities have been added to the resume of Tina Bath since 2015. That year she began volunteering for the Special Olympics and became a member of the CrossFit Fannin Gym and Physical Fitness Center that opened that year in Blue Ridge. CrossFit is a growing discipline that incorporates elements from several sports and types of exercise. The official definition of CrossFit is ‘constantly varied functional movements performed at high intensity’.  It embraces demanding activities and attracts only those individuals who are serious about physical conditioning.

Tina Grice epitomizes all that is positive about athletics. She is a humble individual who is quick to give much of the credit for her successes to her coaches, teammates, family members and especially to her mother Sandra. She is grateful to her mom “for her support and sacrifices throughout the years that made it possible for me to have such a wonderful experience in athletics. I am who I am today because of her”.

2016 – Athlete of the Year

Adam Ingram of Fannin County High School has been named as the 2016 Athlete of the Year. During the 2015-16 school year, Adam lettered in four sports for the Rebels – football, basketball, track and field and soccer. He was recognized and awarded with a plaque honoring his accomplishments at the 2017 Induction/2016 Inductee Plaque Unveiling Ceremony held at the Fannin County Recreation Center on Monday, August 8, 2016.

2019 – Athlete of the Year

Chandler Kendall of Fannin County High School has been selected as the 2019 FCSHOF Athlete of the Year. Chandler was a standout in football, basketball and baseball during the 2018-19 school year. He was named to the All Region 8AAA basketball team and helped the Rebel baseball team win the Region 8AAA Championship, the first such title in school history. He played shortstop and pitched for the Rebel diamond squad. He has committed to accept a baseball scholarship to continue his career at Tennessee Wesleyan University in Athens, Tennessee.

Chandler signed his scholarship documents at a ceremony at Fannin County High School on Thursday, April 25, 2019. Following the signing ceremony, Chandler’s Athlete of the Year plaque was presented to him by FCSHOF Board member Rene Godfrey.

1963-64 West Fannin High School Basketball Team

In his 14 years as head coach of the West Fannin High School boys basketball teams, Tom Foster led seven squads to the State Tournament. The 1963-64 team advanced to the semi-finals of the Class AA State tourney, the only team in school history to advance to that level. In recognition of their singular accomplishment, the 1963-64 West Fannin High School boys basketball team has been selected as the team inductee in the Fannin County Sports Hall of Fame induction class of 2019.

The 1963-64 Yellow Jacket boys team was a senior-dominated squad with Ray Arp, Steve Fry, Tommy Bowling and Jimmy Key as returning starters from the previous season. The only underclassman on the starting five was junior Donnie Arp. The first two players off the bench were juniors Robert Guthrie and Sammy Ledford. Other supporting players were senior Norman Pope, junior B.J. Taylor and sophomores Johnny Corn, Jerry Guthrie, David Key, Steve Cheatham and Malcolm Holden.

The first 10 games played before the New Year saw the Jackets win seven and lose three. A season opening loss at Loudon, TN was avenged two weeks later when the Yellow Jackets drubbed the Redskins to the tune of 76-50 in a game played in the West Fannin gym. A 58-57 loss at Ringgold on December 6 would the only Region 3AA North loss of the season. On December 17, the Jackets scored a school record of 126 points in a victory over Gilmer County.

After the calendar moved from 1963 to 1964, the Fannin boys hit their stride and won 12 consecutive games. Highlights included a 66-61 victory over region rival Ringgold and a 66-59 win against Murray County at Chatsworth. West Fannin had played Murray County every year since the 1955-56 season and had lost eight consecutive games on the Indians home court. On the night of January 14, 1964, however, Steve Fry poured in 35 points as the Yellow Jackets snapped the onerous streak. Fry’s 35 points was an all-time single game scoring high in school hoops history up to that point.

Two weeks later, on January 28, the Yellow Jackets hosted Lumpkin County at the West Fannin gym. Lumpkin came into the game boasting a record of 17-2 and were led by 6’ 3” forward/guard Stan Worley who was being recruited by a number of colleges. Coaches Whack Hyder of Georgia Tech and Garland Pinholster of Oglethorpe were on hand that evening, ostensibly to watch Worley in action. Tommy Bowling stole the show, however, as he blistered the nets for 22 points leading his team to a resounding 70-48 victory over Worley and his teammates from Dahlonega. Bowling’s performance was the first step in a journey that led to a 4-year basketball scholarship to Georgia Tech.

A 69-46 victory at North Whitfield on February 7 gave the Jackets a 7-1 record in Region 3AA North competition. That mark was the best in the sub-region and earned the team the number one seed in the overall Region 3AA tournament held in Dalton.

The West Fannin boys went on to capture the second Region 3AA championship in the history of the school with victories over Calhoun, 60-41, in the first round, 58-55 over West Rome in overtime in the semi-finals and 62-60 over Rockmart in double overtime in the championship game. Tommy Bowling scored two of his team-high 25 points on a driving layup against Rockmart to cinch the title. Yellow Jacket heroes were plentiful throughout the tournament. Bowling led the scoring parade with 15, 18 and 25 points in the three games. Ray Arp, a 6’ 3” post player, poured through 17 points in the West Rome victory. The Rockmart contest was a war of attrition with Robert Guthrie and Sammy Ledford playing big roles off the bench replacing starters, including Steve Fry, who had fouled out of the game. Ledford scored a vital 12 points in the victory. Bowling and Fry were both named to the All-Tournament team.

The opening game of the State Class AA Tournament saw the Yellow Jackets matched with Headland High School from South Atlanta. It was a revenge match of sorts since Headland had ousted the Jackets from the 1961 tournament in a classic 63-60 struggle. Headland went on to win the state title that year. 1964 was another year, but after three quarters, the Fannin boys found themselves on the short end of a 52-51 score. Headland’s high scoring guard Jimmy Tingle was on his way to a 40 point total in the game. The fourth quarter, however, saw the relentless up-tempo game of the Yellow Jackets break through for 27 points while Headland could only post 15. The 79-68 victory vaulted West Fannin into the semi-finals against Hart County. Bowling and Fry led the scoring parade against Headland with 25 and 29 points, while the Arp brothers, Ray and Donnie, chipped in 13 and 8. Floor leader Jimmy Key rounded out the scoring with three points.

A cold-shooting first half doomed the Yellow Jackets in the semi-final contest with Hart County and, despite a gallant second half comeback, West Fannin fell short by two points, 53-51. Bowling, Fry and Donnie Arp led the Jackets in scoring with 16, 15 and 15 points. Tommy Bowling and Steve Fry were named to the All-Tournament team as the boys from Fannin County ended the season with a record of 25-7 and were ranked as the number 3 team in Georgia’s Class AA Division.

Most sports writers and knowledgeable observers described the 1963-64 West Fannin boys team as a ‘run and gun’ aggregation. The offensive attack was certainly waged at a fast tempo as the Yellow Jackets scored 2225 points for an average of 70 points per game. The Jackets scored more than 90 points in four different games and posted 88 points in a game against Class A powerhouse, Cass. The scoring was led by Tommy Bowling who averaged 18.5 per game and Steve Fry who scored at a 17 points per game clip. In the pre-3-point shot era, most of Fry’s baskets were long range missiles from deep in the corner, easily 3-pointers in today’s game. Ray and Donnie Arp both averaged scoring in double figures. The maestro of the ensemble was guard Jimmy Key who generally directed traffic and was the primary trigger man on most of the team’s fast break baskets.

Tommy Bowling was awarded a basketball scholarship to Georgia Tech and won a basketball letter there in 1967. Steve Fry was initially a walk-on candidate at the University of Georgia and then received a scholarship to play basketball at Lagrange College. He won three varsity letters there. The 1963-64 West Fannin Yellow Jacket boys basketball team will be remembered as one of the best quintets in Fannin County and North Georgia and certainly earned their place in the Fannin County Sports Hall of Fame.

Jackie Ledford Gilliam

No athlete in the history of Fannin County sports, boy or girl, man or woman, was more accomplished in the art of scoring points in the game of basketball than Jackie Ledford Gilliam. Her amazing career accomplishments have landed Jackie a spot in the Fannin County Sports Hall of Fame Class of 2019.

Jackie grew up in McCaysville, the daughter of Wallace and Mildred Ledford. Mildred was the second youngest of the seven children of Burt and Nola Tipton. All seven children were outstanding athletes in their day in Fannin County and the Copper Basin area. Two of the boys, Earl and Joe, played professional baseball, Joe spending seven season in the Major Leagues with Cleveland, Philadelphia, Chicago and Washington. He played in the 1948 MLB World Series as a member of the World Champion Cleveland Indians. Dorothy, better known as Dot, was a terrific basketball player who led the McCaysville High School girls team to the 1943 Georgia District 9 Championship. Both Joe and Dot have been inducted into the Fannin County Sports Hall of Fame. So young Jackie had an exceptionally strong athletic gene pool to draw upon as she began playing basketball.

Jackie credits her aunt Dot with providing the inspiration for her to start her basketball career. She picked up a basketball for the first time as a fourth grader and Dot was there to encourage her to work hard and hone her skills.

Jackie Gilliam’s organized basketball journey began during her 6th grade year at McCaysville. She made the varsity squad that year under the tutelage of Coach Clyde Henry, another member of the Fannin County Sports Hall of Fame. She won a starting forward (or offensive player) position in the seventh grade and, during the next two seasons, scored a mind-boggling total of 670 points. She and her McCaysville teammates were undefeated during those two seasons and won two Fannin County Tournament Championships.

Her success carried over to her time at West Fannin High School where she made the varsity team as a freshman. She served her apprenticeship that season playing a supporting role behind three experienced upper-class forwards on the Yellow Jackets team. She was a starting forward as a sophomore and quickly became the go-to player on the offensive end of the court. It was a time when girls basketball games were contested between two 6-girl teams on the floor at any one time. Each team had three forwards and three guards on the respective ends of the court. The forwards and guards were limited to competition at one half of the court and were not permitted to cross the center line.

During her sophomore season, Jackie Gilliam averaged more than 18 points per game. Her team finished with a respectable 13-11 record and were denied a trip to the state tournament when they lost to Ringgold in triple overtime in the Region 7AA Tournament at Dalton. For her efforts, Jackie was named as the team Most Valuable Player and was selected as a member of the Chattanooga Times All Tri-State first team, an honor seldom bestowed upon a sophomore.

The Ledford family moved to Marietta, Georgia between Jackie’s sophomore and junior years due to her father’s job requirements. She joined the girls basketball team at Cobb County’s R.L. Osborne High School where she continued to post spectacular scoring numbers. As a junior she scored 706 points for a 30 points per game average. She won numerous awards at Osborne including MVP of the prestigious Cobb County Tournament and was named as the school’s Most Athletic girl student for the 1967-68 school year. A newspaper account of her exploits includes the following quote: “Miss Ledford, is acclaimed by many as the outstanding girls basketball player in Region 6AAA and possibly best all-around in the state”.

During the summer following her junior season, Jackie married Fannin-County native Frank Gilliam. Frank was a tackle for the West Fannin football team graduating in 1966. The marriage forced Jackie to take a detour in her basketball career because the Cobb County Board of Education had a ruling that prohibited married students from competing in athletics. A groundswell of public protest ensued but the rule remained in effect for another year. Cobb County finally rescinded the ruling a year later but that was too late for Jackie to continue playing basketball at Osborne.

It is often said that when one door closes another opens, and Jackie was recruited to play basketball at Cherokee County High School in Canton, a few miles up the road from Marietta. The Cherokee County girls had won two consecutive state Class AAA titles and returned all three forwards from the 1967-68 title team. Jackie was asked if she would consider a move to a guard position to avoid altering the ‘chemistry’ of the offense and she agreed. Jackie proved to be as accomplished on the defensive end of the court as she had been as an offensive threat and the Cherokee girls won a third consecutive state title. A sportswriter for the Atlanta Journal describes Jackie’s impact in the state title game vs R.E. Lee with the following tribute: “The pretty Miss (sic) Gilliam, who was a 30 point per game scorer for Osborne before transferring to Cherokee, was put at guard and was the prime reason Lee’s gunner, Phyllis Yates, was held to 16 points”. Jackie was named to the Class AAA All-State team for her performance in 1968-69. She was the Cherokee High leading rebounder with an average of 12 per game and was honored by having her number retired at the end of the season.

Jackie feels that Mary Robbins, her coach at R.L. Osborne, was the one person who really “taught me how to play basketball”. The two were very close and, ironically, after her graduation from high school Jackie was contacted by Coach Robbins with the news that she could arrange a basketball scholarship for Jackie at Mississippi State University if she wanted to continue her athletic career. By this time, however, Jackie and Frank Gilliam had settled into married life and she declined the offer.

Jackie and Frank were married until his untimely death in 2004 at the age of 54. The couple had just returned from a trip celebrating their 37th anniversary when Frank passed away. Their marriage produced two children, Frank Jr. and Nicholas who live nearby in Canton and Powder Springs, respectively. Jackie has four grandchildren. After many years in the medical field, as both a dental technician and a surgical technician, Jackie is now retired and lives in Blue Ridge with her puppy Snuggles.

 

Randall Beavers

Randall Beavers joins his brother Ron as a member of the 2019 Fannin County Sports Hall of Fame induction class. Randall played football and basketball at East Fannin High School  from 1967 through 1971.

Randall was born in Morganton, Georgia, the sixth of the nine children of Clifford and Ethel Beavers. Seven of the children were boys, all of whom played football for East Fannin High School.

He played youth baseball and was a member of the basketball and football teams at Morganton Elementary. The administration of Morganton Elementary discontinued football at the school after Randall’s seventh grade year. The reason for the action is unclear but it is clear that the absence of a football program at the elementary school deprived the high school program of their only feeder program. It was necessary, therefore, that boys who wanted to play the sport learn the fundamentals before making a meaningful contribution to the high school effort.

Randall has a generous portion of natural athletic ability, however, and made both the varsity football and basketball teams as a freshman in 1967-68. In football, he was a running back on offense and played defensive back when the opponent had possession of the ball. By the time Randall reached his junior season, he was the most dangerous weapon in the East Fannin offensive arsenal.

Randall Beavers was named as the Most Valuable Back on the Wildcats football team as a junior. He went on to earn the team Best Offensive Player award as a senior. He was a team captain during his senior season in the fall of 1970. At the end of his senior season, he was named to the Atlanta Journal/Constitution Class C All-State Honorable Mention team. The AJC All-State teams generally included 22 players selected to the first team and a larger number named to the Honorable Mention group. For the 1970 season, however, the newspaper saw fit to name only eleven players to the first team and another eleven players to the Honorable Mention team. Randall, therefore, was honored as one of the 22 best players in the state Class C division for his senior season.

Victories were scarce for the Wildcats football teams, but Randall had a career night in the contest against Union County on September 4, 1970. He scored three touchdowns in that game, a 32-12 victory for the Cats. He scored one touchdown on a run from scrimmage, another on a punt return and a third by returning an intercepted pass for a TD. He also had a 90-yard run from scrimmage for a score that was nullified due to a clipping penalty against East Fannin.

In recognition of his basketball performance, Randall was awarded the Most Valuable Defensive Player and overall MVP following his junior campaign. As a senior he received the team Best Athlete award. He had a personal single game scoring high with 35 points in the game against Gilmer County on February 12, 1971. He was the captain of the 1970-71 East Fannin basketball team.

At the end of his senior season, Randall was selected as the Most Athletic Senior Boy by his classmates. He was a student leader and member of the Key Club, Big E Club and the school annual staff.

After graduation Randall worked in Atlanta for a time before returning to the mountains of Fannin County and then Hiwassee, Georgia for employment. He continued to stay active in sports by playing softball for the Hiwassee Indians team. He won the annual Independence Day Hiwassee Home Run Derby contest four times.

While living in Hiwassee, Randall decided to attend evening school, while working full-time, to pursue a college degree. His hard work paid off in 1987 when he earned a Bachelors’ degree in Conservation Game and Fish Law Enforcement from Brenau College. His initial goal was to begin a career as a game warden. No opportunities were available in that field, however, so he accepted a position in Fannin County with the Georgia State Board of Pardons and Parole in 1990. He was a Parole Officer for more than 26 years. He was named as the Northeast Georgia Employee of the Year in 2003.

Randall retired from the Pardons and Parole Department in 2016. He currently works part time as a bailiff in the Fannin County Court System.

He started playing golf in 1995 and continues to play several times a week. He currently plays to a 7 handicap and won the Copper Basin Seniors Club Championship in 2016 and 2017. He also won the 1st flight championship in the 2009 Brett Dickey Memorial Scholarship Tournament. Randall serves as a Board member of the Copper Basin Golf Club.

Randall resides a few miles outside of Morganton in a house that he built near the location where he lived while growing up. It is a bucolic setting and Randall seems content and comfortable in that setting. He has three adult children, Randy, Kimberly and Kari and three grandchildren.

 

Ronnie Beavers

Ronnie Beavers played every sport available to him in each of his four years at East Fannin High School from the fall of 1969 until his graduation in the spring of 1973. He has continued his participation in athletics beyond high school and continues to play softball at an advanced level of competition. Ronnie’s body of work in athletics has earned him a ticket for admission to the Fannin County Sports Hall of Fame Class of 2019.

Ronnie grew up in Morganton, one of 9 children of Clifford and Ethel Beavers. Seven of the Beavers children were boys and all seven played football at East Fannin High School, beginning with Charles in 1957 and ending with Steve in 1975.

Ronnie was the recipient of a team award in each of his four seasons. As a freshman in 1969 he was named as the team Most Valuable Lineman. The honors continued when he earned the basketball Sportsmanship award as a sophomore, the Best Offensive Football Player as a junior and finally as the football Most Valuable Player as a senior. He was selected as a co-captain of the football and baseball teams as both a junior and as a senior.

Although he played all sports, Ronnie is quick to point out that football was his first love. While at East Fannin he generally played for teams that consisted of no more than 15-18 players. He played both offense and defense and seldom left the field of battle during a game. At various times during his football career he played center, offensive lineman, defensive end, cornerback, linebacker and fullback. He weighed in at a solid 220 pounds during his senior season. He was quick and loved contact.

Although victories were rare for the East Fannin football teams, Ronnie remembers two games with special fondness. In 1970, the Wildcats rose to the occasion and dominated a favored Union County team to the tune of 32-12. During Ronnie’s senior season of 1972, East Fannin finished with a record of two wins and eight losses. The losses came in the first eight games of the season and all of the games were very close. The memorable win came in the 9th game of the season when Ronnie Beavers and his East Fannin Wildcat teammates managed to defeat arch-rival Copper Basin 13-12 in the only victory that East Fannin ever recorded in that series. In the finale of the 1972, the Wildcats captured their second victory of the season with a 24-0 thrashing of Hiwassee Dam.

Ronnie Beavers was selected to the Atlanta Journal/Constitution Georgia Class B All-State honorable mention team following his senior campaign in 1972. At the end of his senior year, his classmates at East Fannin elected him as the Most Athletic senior boy.

An early mentor in Ronnie’s athletic life was Fannin County Sports Hall of Famer, Fred Ganues. Fred was an avid East Fannin supporter and felt that Ronnie had the ability to continue his football career at the college level. He encouraged Ronnie and used his network of contacts in the sporting community to spread the word about his athletic ability. Unfortunately, East Fannin was a very small school and did not produce very good football teams. Funds for the athletic programs were scarce and East Fannin teams received very little publicity in the local or state media. When college coaches asked for game films of Ronnie’s performances they were informed that the school did not have the financial wherewithal to produce luxuries such as films of the games.

Ronnie received recruiting letters from several schools including the University of Tennessee. At the end of the day, however, no firm offers of financial aid were forthcoming. He was invited to go to Knoxville as a ‘preferred walk-on’ but in the intercollegiate athletics world of 1973, no scholarship help was given to walk-ons. The Beavers family was not in a position to fund Ronnie’s college education until he could show the UT coaches what he could do, so the football career of Ronnie Beavers ended with the final East Fannin game of 1972.

After graduation he set out for Atlanta where he worked for a while before he landed a job with the L&N Railroad in Chatsworth, Georgia. He was soon transferred to Blue Ridge and remained with L&N for more than 30 years.

Ronnie began playing slow-pitch softball with teams sponsored and coached by Fred Ganues in the early 1970s. He continued to play the game and remains active with a seniors squad in Maryville, Tennessee some 47 years later. During his softball career, Ronnie has played for several ASA, USSSA and ISSA teams. He played with the Fannin County Generals team from 2005 until 2014 seasons and led them to four championships in the Blairsville Recreational Softball League. He was a member of two Class A Church League teams that won Tennessee State Championships in the 1990s.

In addition to his softball activities, Ronnie Beavers stays active with several hobbies including riding his motorcycles, ice sculpturing and photography. He lives in Maryville with his wife Karen and their basset hound, Sadie. Ronnie says that he has several parcels of land in Fannin County and hopes to build a retirement home in his native county in the not too distant future. He is also a charter member of the Fannin County Sports Hall of Fame Board and devotes considerable time to Hall of Fame activities.

 

Ron Hartness

As a youngster growing up in the friendly confines of Epworth, Georgia, Ron Hartness marked the passage of time not so much as summer followed by fall followed by winter followed by spring but by the athletic uniform that he donned at various points during the year. Ron was a stellar all-around athlete and has been elected to the Fannin County Sports Hall of Fame Induction Class of 2019.

When Ron entered Epworth High School in the autumn of 1954, there were four high schools in operation in Fannin County — Epworth, Blue Ridge, Morganton and McCaysville. The only sport offered at those schools was basketball. Ron Hartness tried out for and made the Epworth High School varsity basketball team as a freshman.

Several male students at Fannin high schools who wanted to participate in football opted to pay tuition to attend Copperhill High School across the border in Tennessee. Although this option was available, the expenses and transportation issues deterred many good athletes from expanding their resumes beyond the sport of basketball.

A new world of athletic possibilities opened in 1955, however, when the high schools of Fannin County were consolidated into the new East and West Fannin High Schools. Ron Hartness, and other youngsters, were suddenly afforded the opportunity to play football, baseball and track and field, as well as basketball. Ron played them all and played them all with enthusiasm and skill.

Ron Hartness was a starting end for the West Fannin football teams of 1955, 1956 and 1957. He was a solid performer on both offense and defense as he anchored the right side of the Yellow Jacket line for three seasons. He caught a 60 yard touchdown pass in the 1956 Bryson City game and was largely responsible for the West Fannin comeback to gain a 13-13 tie with Copper Basin in 1957. Late in that game, Ron blocked a Basin punt that was recovered by teammate Wendell Ash for a touchdown that brought the Jackets to within one point at 13-12. Ron then caught a pass from Earl Wade Arp for a successful point after touchdown attempt that ended the game in a hard-fought 13-13 tie.

He started at forward and center for the West Fannin basketball team for two seasons. Ron averaged 10.9 points per game as a junior and 15.6 points per game as a senior. He also averaged at or near double figures in rebounding both years. He scored a career-high 30 points versus Gilmer County during his junior season leading his team to a 50-48 victory. As a senior, he dropped in 25 points in a 49-46 overtime victory at Cherokee County in Canton. He pulled down 22 rebounds in a game with Murray County during his senior season. He scored in double figures in 18 of the 20 games played during his senior season.

Ron pitched and played third base for the West Fannin baseball team during his junior and senior seasons. The school did not field a team during his sophomore year. His best season offensively was his junior year when he hit for a .322 average. Arguably his best sport, Ron also played American Legion baseball for two years. He started for the Georgia Tech freshman team in the spring of 1959 and later for the Ft. Jackson, South Carolina team while serving in the military. Recognized for his prowess on the diamond, he was often recruited to play with the local semi-pro powerhouse team at Isabella during the summer of 1957.

Ron Hartness is a strong leader and was highly respected by his fellow classmates and teammates at West Fannin. His coaches and teammates selected as captain or co-captain of all three major sports teams – football, basketball and baseball – for his senior season of 1957-58. He was also a class officer and student leader.

Following his graduation from West Fannin High School in 1958, Ron Hartness attended both Georgia Tech and the University of Georgia for one year each. He then entered the Army Reserves for six months’ active duty at Ft. Jackson, South Carolina and Ft. Knox, Kentucky. He then moved to Atlanta where he worked for the United States Post Office. He married a McCaysville girl, Doris Thomas, in 1962. As evidence of his strong ties to his Fannin County roots, Ron asked his high school friend Leon Guthrie to be his best man, Ron Jabaley and Ronnie Davenport to serve as ushers and high school teacher and minister Powell Hoover to officiate the ceremony.

Ron transferred to the Internal Revenue Service in 1965 and his growing family moved to Washington D.C. and then Memphis, Tennessee and back to Atlanta for periods of time. Ron was promoted to Manager of the Data Processing Center with the IRS in 1971.   

Ron retired in 1990 and Doris retired from the Department of Transportation in 1996. They had purchased a 65-acre tract of property in Fannin County and he and Doris built a home and moved back to their beloved mountains in 1997. Ron and Doris have three grown children, Chandra, Duane and Tech. Ron stays active by playing golf twice a week.

It is nearly impossible to find anyone who speaks ill of Ron Hartness. He is respected by all who have known him both as an athlete and also as a citizen of the community. His daughter Chandra perhaps summed up the type of man he is with the following tribute from a few years ago: “You have blessed my life with your wisdom. You are a man of great character and integrity. You are a wonderful father … we love you for making us feel special and so important!” The Fannin County Sports Hall of Fame is fortunate to welcome such a man as a member.