Archive Contact Us Home
The Hur Herald. A questionable publication from West Virginia.
  Search: Submit Button
Page Two
Obituaries
Faces
Sports
Weather
Opinions & Comments
People, Humor & History
Photo of the Day
We Get Letters
Columns
Moments in Time
Submit News Tip
Sunny Cal Scenes
Wirt from the Road
Looking Back
Church News
About Us
Links
Archives
Guest Book
Contact Us
Grantsville, West Virginia Forecast
Looking Back - A photo scrapbook
Church News
Ad Space
 
McIntosh Mansion

SUNNY CAL JOURNAL - A Field Of Play

(07/26/2003)

By Bob Weaver 2003

Photo courtesy of the Morris Bower Collection

This photo of a brand new Calhoun County High School, taken about 1920, shows the newly developing "south side" of Grantsville, dirt streets and the yet to be developed football field, later to become Wayne Underwood Field.

Near the river's edge you can see some of dozens of gasoline riverboats that went up and down the Little Kanawha, a "modern" transportation link with the outside world, replacing ox carts and horse drawn wagons.

The football field was long the center of activity in Calhoun, from football to baseball games, outside wrestling matches, contests, hot-air balloon ascents, graduations, circuses, carnivals, fireworks and country music shows, not to forget the thousands who came to the 1956 Centennial Celebration, which covered the field from one end to the other.

I remember it well as the site of rocketry experiments in the 50's by the rocket boys of Calhoun, shooting missiles toward the heavens before the entire student body.

All Calhouners, and thousands of visitors, will remember it as the place to get the best hot dogs in the world.

This field of play has survived dozens of floods, some major, some minor.

Flooding created years of work by band boosters, bus drivers, teachers, parents and supporters, moving stuff above the flood line, cleaning up and moving back.

It has been the tromping grounds for nearly thousands of graduates of the old high school, who courted on the bleachers, or climbed down the riverbank to crouch behind the hog weeds and practice inhaling....cigarettes.

It was home to legendary football coach Wayne Underwood, whose winning ways are yet recalled, and for whom the field is named.

Since the school moved to the Mt. Zion campus, the field has held forth as a place for youthful athletes, with the six-acre site being donated to the county by the Board of Education.

Volunteers have managed to make some improvements and keep it going, although it has been the source of discord over how to operate it, generally on a shoestring.

For most people it will be a place of old memories, and for some there will be a few new memories, if the field carries on through this century.

Archive Contact Us Back To Top
Hur Herald ® from Sunny Cal
The information on these pages, to the extent the law allows, remains the exclusive property of Bob and Dianne Weaver and The Hur Herald.
All information may be freely used but must not be sold or used in any type of commercial endeavor, or used on any web site without the express permission of the owners.
© Bob and Dianne Weaver, The Hur Herald, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006