World Changers work to change Huntington for the better

http://marshallparthenon.com/14049/news/world-changers-work-to-change-huntington-for-the-better/

Mitchell Kerley, working on the wheelchair ramp and the Barnes’ residence. Kerley was with the Thompsonville First Baptist youth group, and was a valedictorian of the Class of 2017 at Frankfort Community High School.  

HUNNINGTON, WV (Marshall University Parthenon.  Please click to read the full story.  Here is an excerpt below.)

The sounds of construction and home repair could be heard throughout Huntington last week while members of the Christian organization World Changers volunteered at 14 different worksites throughout the city.

The crews worked on several different projects at homes throughout Huntington such as building wheelchair ramps, painting, building decks, replacing roofing and other home improvement needs.

The volunteers, who took up lodging in Huntington High School at night, consisted of 139 students and adults from 10 different churches from Georgia, Illinois, Kentucky, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Carolina and Tennessee.

One of the Huntington homes that World Changers worked on during the week belonged to Isabell Barnes, whose mother is in a wheelchair. Barnes said that she has been trying to have a wheelchair ramp built at her house for years and that World Changers is an answered prayer.

Akin High School “Bulldogs”

http://www.illinoishsglorydays.com/id988.html

AKIN, IL –  NOTE.  This is the first of a series that I am going to start from the website illinoishsglorydays.com.

The site was founded 12 years ago, by Dave Nanninga, who grew up in Mineral, IL.  He is a graduate of Annawan High school.  He took interest in the history of the school in his hometown, so the site was born.

You will see links to several High Schools in the county that have consolidated.  In the future, I might expand beyond Franklin County into schools that were opponents of teams, especially in the old Little Egyptian Conference, in which Thompsonville, Valier, and Royalton were members of.

Enjoy this as we go down memory lane from time to time.  The first school we will be featuring is Akin High School, as I will do the former county schools in alphabetical order.

Akin High School Bulldogs

Excerpt from the Illinois High School Glory Days website.  Click on the link above for the full story.

Akin (population approx. 100) is located in far south-central Illinois in the east-central portion of Franklin County.  Akin is about 8 miles east of Benton.  Akin is situated in a country setting on County Road 3 just east of County Road 17.  The Illinois Central Railroad travels to the west of Akin.  The town appears to be about 3 blocks from north to south and 3 blocks from east to west. Akin is an unicorporated town at this time.
Adam Rosoho  advises:
“As for the grade school at Akin, it is still operating.  They are the Akin Bulldogs and their colors are red and white.  The enrollment for Akin Grade School K-8 is 115 students.  The school only offers Boys Basketball and Girls Volleyball.”
Akin High School Quick Facts
Year opened:                  1920s?
Year closed:                   1940s?
Consolidated to:              Benton High School
Akin HS team nickname:  possibly the “Bulldogs”
Team uniform colors:        possibly Red & Black
School Fight Song:          unavailable

                     

Rend Lake College Spring 2017 Honors Lists

ReAnne Palmer, Rend Lake College Public Information

INA, IL– Rend Lake College is pleased to announce 396 students have made the President’s and Vice Presidents’ lists of academic honors for the Spring 2017 semester.

The lists include 150 individuals named to the President’s List. Those students earned a 4.0 grade point average (GPA) during the semester as a full-time student earning 12 credit hours or more. Another 246 students were named to the Vice Presidents’ List. Students on the Vice Presidents’ List earned a 3.50 – 3.99 GPA during the semester as a full-time student.

“With nearly 400 students landing spots on the honors lists this spring, I couldn’t be prouder of the countless hours of hard work and dedication shown on campus. I speak for everyone on campus when I say congratulations,” said RLC President Terry Wilkerson. “It’s a testament to these students and their instructors, and they should all be very proud of this achievement.”

Below are the ones from Franklin County who achieved academic honors.

President’s List

BENTON – Mariann Cook, Sierra Deangelo, Ally Devore, Sara Dixon, Mackenzi Dollins, Emeri-Jean Farnam, Dakota Head, Hillary Ionson, Brette Mahan, Mallorie Melvin, Lindell Minor, Presley Robbins, Dylan Snyder, Noah Thomason, Anna Weaver, Lauren Zinzilieta

CHRISTOPHER – Camryn Maloney, Kayla Parrish, Phillip Smith

COELLO – Carrie Shaw

EWING – Wade Hutchens

MACEDONIA – Kelsey Conley

MULKEYTOWN – Kristi Barnett, Amber Dublo

ROYALTON – Kassandra Jones

SESSER – Emily Bulla, Pam Dorris, Nicholas Marlo, Skylyn Simpson, Mackayla Tindall

THOMPSONVILLE – Kayla Follmer, Hudson Garrison, Ivan Wysong

VALIER – Alexandra Boner

WEST FRANKFORT – Alexa Beaver, Jared Eastwood, Mary Linsley, Katie Ramsey, Christian Reed

WHITTINGTON – Morgan Wilson

Vice Presidents’ List

BENTON – Alison Anthis, Kelly Bishop, Lindsey Cox, Bria Curry, Dionna Dillon, Colton Essary, Johnel Eubanks, Brittany Ferris, Nicholas Freeman, David Garrett, John Giacone, Payton Hallis, Abbigail Hart, Kelsey Head, Aubrey Hunter, Haley Ing, Caleb Kearney, Christine Keppler-Clayton, Amy Kovarik, Matthew Krug, Andrew Lingle, Logan Maxey, Molly McGuire, Virginia Morgan, Devon Morris, Alexis Newell, Bradley Phillips, Makayla Rich, Naylin Ronchetto, Benjamin Schilli, Kassie Spencer, Holden Storey, Whitney Summers, Leigh Thomas, Caleb Wilkerson

BUCKNER – Morgan Wirtes, Callie Young

CHRISTOPHER – Brooke Akers, Emily Cavinder, Julie Faling, Zoie Frey, Anthony Hargrove, Kailey Kerkemeyer, Jacob Underwood

EWING – Ike Hutchcraft, Cole Hutchens, Kacee Roberts

MACEDONIA – David Motsinger

MULKEYTOWN – Sandra Eversole, Allanna Garrison, Cameron Jones, Loghan Matyi, Micah Motsinger, Jonathon Swisher, Zachary Webb

ORIENT – Brittany Segatto

ROYALTON – Kassie Jeralds, Kalynn Myers

THOMPSONVILLE – Maleissa Baney, Casey Bowlin, Austin Kerley, Maddie Miller, Aiden Payne, George Styles, Damien Wilburn

VALIER – Peyton Jennings, Sophi Johnson, Bailee Jones

WEST FRANKFORT – Courtney Browning, Shannon Browning, Kelsie Simpson

WHITTINGTON – Megan Rudolphi, Dylan Terry

ZEIGLER – Kenneth Newton

 

Growing up in T’ville with Ol’ Ugly

by Steve Dunford

Kendell Marvel at Old Setter Days in Galatia back in May. (Thank you for the photo, Mary Beth Puckett.)

Ol’ Ugly will be taking the state tonight at Black Diamond Harley Davidson, along side Herrin native David Lee Murphy who has had a very successful country music career, and highlighting the event will be country music superstar Toby Keith.

Ol’ ugly is successful country music songwriter Kendell Marvel, who has written songs for Gary Allen, Blake Shelton, Jake Owen, Jamey Johnson, Joe Diffie, Lee Ann Womack, Trace Adkins, Darius Rucker,  Tracy Lawrence and Josh Turner.  There might be some that I have forgotten about.

Right now the latest hit he wrote, Either Way by Chris Stapleton is getting a lot of air play on country radio.

How we started calling each other Ol’ ugly I do not know. That is just what referred to each other as.  I just know he is much more successful and tons better looking than I am.

I remember him as a kid in the rival town of Galatia, packing around a guitar that was bigger than him.

I also remember him in junior high as a cocky little runt who was the point guard for their basketball team.  I was an overgrown kid, that current West Frankfort Basketball coach Kevin Toney referred to as man child.   He was a young coach at Mulkeytown then.  I had chest hairs sticking out of my uniform, and could have grown a full beard if my mom would have let me.

We (Thompsonville)  were playing at Galatia my 8th grade year.  They were 30 points better than us, but Jerry Warren our coach at the time, showed his McLeansboro roots by having us play their style of ball.

It was early in the 4th quarter and we were winning 14-12.  The little runt was driving on a fast break, it was a rare occasion, but I got back on defense.  I sent his shot into the second row of the Junior High gym in Galatia.  He walked a way with his team having an OT win.  I walked away with a broken right thumb and fore finger.

I was 5′ 10″ at the time and Kendell was probably 4′ 11″ on his tiptoes.  A lot of people thought I would end up 6′ 4″ or 6′ 5″.  I grew a little over an inch.  Kendell was the one that ended up that tall.

At the start of my sophomore year, Kendell started going to school at Thompsonville.  He is from the booming metropolis of West End.  His house sit right on the Saline-Franklin county line.  I have heard all kinds of theories why he transferred. but I think a girl named Randa Kerley had something to do with it.  She is now his wife of nearly 30 years.

He immediately dethroned me as class clown, and I had to take the secondary role.  It was mandatory that we took a study hall.  Both of us made trips to the office during them.  We really never was in deep trouble, we were yelled at and sent back to class.  I had two different teachers tell me that he was funnier than you, but there were times they had to get rid of both of us because they were afraid they would bust out laughing.

All through high school he would be picking at festivals and honky-tonks around Southern Illinois.     He always had the entourage from T’ville and Galatia that followed him around.

One night that comes to mind, was he was playing at a fundraiser at a tavern down in Pope County, I believe it was around Eddyville.  Channel 3 happened to be there.  My mom was watching the news the next morning and I was woke up to her saying Stephen Duane come here.  I came close to going, but I went to a ball game somewhere instead.  I was interrogated for half the day asking if I went there.

We had our senior prom at the student center at Rend Lake College.  We had a live band, they were cocky, but they were terrible.  I remembered some in the band came up to the table that I was at and said how do you like our music?   I said I can get someone out of the crowd that can sing better than you all.

Randa was aggravated at him at first, but he strapped on the guitar and sang a few songs.  He got out of the doghouse by singing the Oak Ridge Boys song  Ill Be True to You, and dedicated it to her.  I went up to one of the disgusted band members and  said he wrote that for her.  He said “really”.  I was lying through my teeth, not realizing at the time he would be one of the top songwriters in country music.

A few weeks later from that event, we were both part of the Thompsonville High School class of 1988, all 26 of us.

A few years later, he was still singing and picking and followed his dream, embarking on a music career in Nashville.

In 2000, he had his breakthrough hit as a songwriter, Gary Allen’s Right Where I Need to Be. I heard the song a few times on the radio, but I did not realize he co-wrote it.  I was heading to work one morning, heard it on the radio, and right after that, Kent Zimmer and Juli Ingram interviewed him on Z-100.  I was thinking how cool I went to high school with the writer of the song.  I also thought that it was someone who pursued their dream, and was successful.

I have kept a close eye on his career, and went and heard him a few times at some festivals.  Every time we would cross paths.  Even though he has a lot of fame and fortune now, he has not changed one bit.  In the last several months of working on this website, some of the most popular posts comes from sharing he has been in an event, or videos of performances from him.

A little over a year ago, he came to church on Easter Sunday at Calvary Baptist Church, where I attend. His in-laws John and Terri Griffith attend there.  At the start of the service we all go around shaking hands.  I tapped Ol’ ugly on the shoulders.  Then he called me Ol’ Ugly, and hugged my neck.   I did some catching up with him and Randa after the service.  I was asked a few times why we called each other ugly that night at church.  To this day, I still don’t know.

A few weeks ago, I had the privilege of hearing him down at Old Settler Days at Galatia.  There were several hundred there form Thompsonville, or had Thompsonville ties.  I caught up with several people from Galatia that I hadn’t seen in years.   There were  He mentioned that he is glad the people from Galatia are still not mad at him for “switching over” to Thompsonville.

He mentioned on stage how when we played each other, how we would end up eating pizza together at Bondo’s in Galatia.  We couldn’t stand each other when the ball was tipped up, but we all became buddies again after the last horn sounded.   In fact, a young Doug Creel banned us from going to Galatia.  There was a little altercation on the stage at halftime my sophomore year at a game at Galatia.

As soon as we got off the bus, there was a convoy of vehicles making the 11 mile trip down Route 34.  We did not have a very fun practice Monday afternoon, that is when Bondo’s  and the whole town became a forbidden place.

I know there will be several of you attending.  Have fun tonight and stay safe.  He will be making appearances at Desoto and Harrisburg later in the year.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

One dead, two ‘armed and dangerous’ men at large in fatal Harrisburg shooting

http://www.dailyregister.com/news/20170616/one-dead-two-armed-and-dangerous-men-at-large-in-fatal-harrisburg-shooting

HARRISBURG, IL – (Travis DeNeal – Harrisburg Register.  Please click on the link above for the full story.  Here is an excerpt below.)

A Harrisburg man is dead and Harrisburg police are looking for two “armed and dangerous” suspects, after a Friday morning shooting in the 1400 block of South Granger Street.

According to sources close to the investigation, the dead man has been identified as Aaron Gregory. As word spread Friday morning, friends posted their condolences on his Facebook page.

The two men wanted in connection with the shooting have been identified by the same source as Xzavier Burnell Gibbs, 19, of 612 S. Jackson St. and Jarred R. Crawford, 30, of 314 N. Land St. – who already were the subject of a manhunt for more than a week, over a aggravated battery warrant.

Motorhome fire near West Frankfort Lake

THOMPSONVILLE, IL-  Cave-Eastern firefighters were called out on Charley Good Road this afternoon to a motorhome fire.

Ewing-Northern Fire department provided mutual aid.    Exact location is not determined.

Charley Good Road is located at the west end of the city limits of Thompsonville, and goes toward West Frankfort Lake, across from Three Angels Broadcasting.

sd

Power outage in Logan-Parrish area

by Steve Dunford

From reading posts on social media, there is a power outage in the Logan-Parrish area of the county.  The area is south of Route 34.

Southeastern Illinois Electric-Cooperative is reporting on their website 27 homes without power at this time.  They have not given a restoration time yet.

 

 

Police on the lookout for two armed and dangerous Harrisburg men

http://www.dailyregister.com/news/20170605/police-seeking-armed-and-dangerous-harrisburg-men

Law enforcement officials have gotten some leads, but the search for two Harrisburg men considered armed and dangerous goes on, Harrisburg Police Chief David Morris said Monday.

The men are Xzavier Burnell Gibbs, 19, of 612 S. Jackson St., and Jarred R. Crawford, 30, of 314 N. Land St. Both are wanted on no-bond warrants for aggravated battery.

Because both men are considered by law enforcement to be armed and dangerous, neither should be approached, Morris said.

Morris said anyone with information can also leave a confidential message with the Saline County Sheriff’s Department at (618) 252-8661.

Franklin County SIU graduates for the spring semester

Southern Illinois University Carbondale held its Spring 2017 commencement activities, May 13.   They are listed below according to the town they reside in.

BENTON:

Brock C. Britton, BFA, art

Savanah J. Bullock, MSW, social work

Benjamin S. Dawson, BS, engineering technology

Raven C. Denbow, BS, animal science

Michaela L. Dollins, BS, civil engineering

Natasha K. Hammonds, BS, social work

Makennah M. Miller, BS, elementary education

Cassidy R. Neal, BS, accounting

Ethan M. Overturf, BS, special education

Jessa M. Thomas, BS, social work

Katie L. Williams, BS, elementary education

CHRISTOPHER:

Brenna L. Johnston, BS, social work

Jill A. Logan, MSW, social work

SESSER:

Cody A. Lingle, BS, information systems technologies

THOMPSONVILLE:

Charles J. Eaton, BS, information systems technologies

Cletus E. Price, JD, law

WEST FRANKFORT:

Ellen S. Beasley, BS, health care management

Devin Blackledge, BS, information systems technologies

Christi J. Bromley, BS, communication disorders and sciences

Micah D. Broy, BS, social work

Adam L. Dutton, BS, accounting

Heather M. Milligan, BS, social work

John C. Nolen, BA, computer science

Melanie S. Stoner, BS, paralegal studies

Jacob A. Wiegand, BS, journalism

Thompsonville man arrested for recent burglaries

James Muck- Franklin County Sheriff’s office image

There has been a rash of burglaries in or around Thompsonville over the last week.

Around 2:23 a.m. Friday, a sheriff’s deputy was called to the area to investigate a complaint about a suspicious person on foot.

Around 4:30 a.m., the investigator saw a man on a blue and silver mountain bike and attempted to stop him, but he rode the bike off into a wooden area, the release said.

Franklin County Sheriff’s Deputies arrested 23 year old James Muck, who stole the bicycle, as well as recovered several stolen items.

Muck, who is on probation for burglary, was taken to the Franklin County Jail.- sd

Benton, West Frankfort, Illinois News | Franklin County News