Beacon Journal reporter Jim Carney posted this Mother's Day tribute to his mom on his Facebook page:
A few words about my Mom.
Her name officially was Willie Madge Slate.
She was born in AprIl 1922 in Honaker, Virginia. Her Dad died when she was seven and
the family was split apart with brothers Carl, Ralph and Brack going to live
with an uncle in Maryland, her little brother living with Uncle Dot Slate, and
she and her sister Gladys living with their mother, Sophia Slate.
She went to nursing school in nearby
Bluefield (West Virginia), and joined the Army as a nurse, where she met my Dad, Bill. They
married and had three kids -- Patsy, Ralph and me.
Willie Slate Carney |
She cried at John Denver's “Country Roads”
and wrote poetry when no one was around. She and my Dad would get weepy after a few drinks when their kids were all
gone as they listened to Randy Newman on vinyl.
She loved her grandsons and had a special drawer where
she kept her candy for them. She had a faulty thermostat and fans on all
summer, even while the AC was running. She didn’t learn to drive till she was
past 40. She loved her soaps when we were kids and made us lunch every day when
we walked home from King School. She loved looking at birds and babysitting her
little grandsons.
She was devastated when Patsy was diagnosed with Stage 4
breast cancer and died two years and two months before Patsy in February 1995.
As time has passed, the joy of her love and presence has
only grown, even as memories fade. I plan to listen to “Country Roads” on the
way to the cemetery today.
God bless all mothers of all time.
“Country Roads” has become the
unofficial state song of West Virginia. It is sung in Mountaineer Field and
elsewhere after every West Virginia University sports victory. Transplanted
West Virginians sing it in bars all over this country.
The city council of Bluefield,
West Virginia, where Jim’s mom went to nursing school, is leading a push to
make “Country Roads” the fourth official state song, joining “The West Virginia
Hills” by Ellen Ruddell King and Henry Everett Engle in 1885, “West Virginia,
My Home Sweet Home” by Col. Julian G. Hearne, Jr. in 1947 and “This Is My West
Virginia” by Iris Bell in 1962.
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