The McKenzie Banner Features

 

 

FEATURE FOR WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2001 

  Paul Carroll Relates a Lifetime of Service  
 
 
By Deborah Turner  
  
  
 
 

Mr. Paul Carroll has given a lifetime of service to the town of McKenzie, Tennessee.The buckeye lying amongst other previously pocketed items on the table of Mr. Paul Carroll define the era from which he sprang - the Great Depression and World War II - when it was common for men to carry buckeyes in their pockets. No mere good luck charm, the buckeye was said to help relieve the pain of arthritis and rheumatism.

Mr. Paul was born nearly 77 years ago, on February 2, 1925, on a farm just outside McKenzie.
"The old farmhouse is still there," says Mr. Paul, describing the farm's location as being where the Ford Dealership is located today on Highway 79 toward Paris. Carroll was the oldest child of the family, with parents Harry and Lucille Carroll later having two daughters, Betty and Nell. Today his sisters are Betty Wheat of Paris and Nell McAden from Mississippi, near Memphis.
While his mom spoiled him, he admits with a smile, his dad set him to work on the farm. "We worked from dusk 'til dusk," he declares, raising cotton and food crops, milk cows and hogs.

Sunday offered a respite from the drudgery of chores, with the mornings spent in worship at the U.S.A. Presbyterian Church on Shiloh Road.

"I had a horse I rode on Sunday afternoon," Carroll says in the charming, colloquial southern English of his era. He had trained the young filly himself, and had his share of falls from the bucking horse until she was broken in for riding. "I just got back on there," he says matter of factly.

His grandmother, Ada (pronounced locally as Ader), had an old horse named Wheeler that pulled her buggy, but his father had a black, four-door Model A Ford. "Most families had a car of some sort," he said of those living in his neighborhood.

Carroll went to school in McKenzie, about two miles from home, catching the bus "up at the old highway as we call it now," he says. The bus transported 40 children to school each morning in two loads with the first route running from Milan's Store up Shiloh Road, then to the school before circling back to pick up the 15 children in Mr. Paul's neighborhood.

"The bus" consisted of a specially made, enclosed truck bed that was fitted onto the back of a truck. Children entered the bus through a back door and took their places on the benches that ran alongside either wall.

"The man that owned the bus took that bed off when school was out in the summertime and at Christmastime and used the truck for something else," Carroll explained.

It was while riding horses with a group of friends one Sunday afternoon that the boys heard the news that the United States had joined the war in what had become World War II.

Following graduation from high school, Carroll made one more crop with his family, then - "disgusted with farming" - he joined the United States Army, taking his training at Camp Fanning in Tyler, Texas.

He was sent to New York and "transferred around to two or three different places" before he became weary of the inaction and told his superiors, "Why don't you send me overseas?"

"I opened my big mouth to the wrong fella then 'cause he sent me down to the 100th Infantry Division," Carroll related, wide-eyed.

In two weeks of trans-Atlantic travel the convoy of troop-bearing ships reached the shores of Southern France where German planes strafing the decks, forcing the men to jump overboard in order to reach the shore.

Carroll recalls France as a beautiful country with cold winters from his vantage point high in the Alps mountains. The division, trained as mountain troops, wintered in the caves of the mountains.

"For about a month there we had to stop and just try to stay warm; all the rest of them did, too. We had two winters to live through that thing."

The 100th Division was part of a larger operation involving four American divisions and one French division. As part of a platoon responsible for laying mines, Carroll recalls, "The year that the war ended, we had put out more mines that summer; I think that's what made them stop. We just drove the Germans out."

Working with the mines, "you just had to know what you were doing," he relates. "The scariest part about it was when we got orders to go back and take them up! We cleared a lot of the minefield after the war kind of slowed down to make sure we didn't leave something to hurt somebody."

Originally sent as a group of replacements for other troops lost in the war, Carroll was one of only two survivors in the anti-tank platoon.

He maintained contact with John Mosely, one of the friends who had been with him at the store when the boys first heard about the war, and who was also fighting in Europe near Carroll’s division.

At the war's end, having made his way from France into Germany, Carroll remained in Europe as a member of the occupation forces as an MP (Military Police), during which he recalls the soldiers had a lot of free time while cleaning up equipment to ship back to the United States.

Back home, he taught agriculture courses to veterans who were also home from the war, as part of a post-war program sponsored by the federal government. "Teaching agriculture was more or less a way to give boys some excuses to work and make money," he says.

During this time period, he started courting Nellie Ann Vick, a girl from his neighborhood who he had known most of his life. "I thought she was pretty," he says, recalling dates spent at the picture shows, at dances or sitting around the ice cream parlor in McKenzie. The couple dated about a year before getting married when he was 24 or 25 years old and she was a little younger.

He quit teaching in order to manage the McKenzie Seed Company, an enterprise he had bought into with partner Billy Vawter. "Six to eight years later," he says, "I said something about selling out to do something else and one of the boys said, 'Are you serious? I'll buy you out!"

Mr. Paul Carroll with Governor Frank Clement during Mr. Paul's politically active days. Mr. Paul served as a Magistrate with the Carroll County Court for some 25 years.He sold the company to John Mosely and took a job working for the Wallace Seed Company in Jackson, traveling from Mississippi up into Kentucky as a representative of the company. "It was about as hard a work as the old job," he recalls of his then-new position. After about five years, he grew "tired of the road every day" and began to set about changing the direction of his career.

"I kindly knew a bunch of insurance agents and I felt like I could do as good or better than some of them could," he says. Although some people attended classes designed to teach the insurance business, Carroll says, "I just read the book."

He entered into a partnership with Billy Bryant, buying Leach's Insurance Agency in 1960. The partnership continued for 25 years until 1985 when Carroll bought the business.

Carroll has been an active participant in the McKenzie Industrial Board since its inception in the mid-1960s, working closely with men like Hoot Gibson and Billy Barksdale to help bring industry to McKenzie.

He recalls one of the organization's greatest accomplishments as being the construction of the Industrial Park on the outskirts of McKenzie toward Huntingdon, an enterprise that required the accumulation of funds and purchase of land as well as the development of the location.

Mr. Paul Carroll at the Dedication of the McKenzie Memorial Hospital in McKenzie, TN. Mr. Carroll was chairman of the committee that brought the hospital to McKenzie.He was also instrumental in bringing the hospital to McKenzie. During this time, he was also an elected magistrate of the county court, operating as finance chairman.

Carroll was part of a delegation that traveled to Nashville to meet with Governor Ned McWherter to promote the improvements of Highway 22 from McKenzie to Gleason and Highway 79 to Paris, that remains under construction.

He stepped out of the limelight of the insurance business in 1990, when he sold the Paul Carroll Insurance Agency to his son and daughter-in-law, Jimmy and Ruth Carroll.

Jimmy has had a taste of his family's farming roots as well following in his father's footsteps in the insurance business, having previously run a hog-farming operation.

Mr. Paul also had a yearning to return to farming that led him to buy a stretch of farmland some 20 years ago from the estate of his aunt, Ellen Kemp. "I just wanted to farm," he says of the land where he keeps beef cattle. "Up until a couple of years ago I had a man who lived there and tended to the cows; I've done it myself since 1989."

He enjoys feeding the cows, watching after them and seeing to the water and fences at the farm. An entrepreneur at heart, he used a portion of the land in building the Holly Hills subdivision that branches out from Shiloh Road behind Dr. Sumrok's office and the McKenzie High School.

Sadly, Carroll lost his wife Nellie Ann several years ago, after which his sister Nell came to live with him for about four years, finishing out her nursing career at the Methodist Hospital in McKenzie.

The house in which Carroll lives today, he says, was a house his wife wanted to build after seeing the house plans in the books she enjoyed reading. Especially lovely is the sun porch that looks out upon the back lawn.

Jimmy and Ruth, have two children, both in college. Paul attends Bethel College and assists in coaching the high school football team in McKenzie. He plans to coach football as a part of his career following graduation.

Rachel attends college in Providence, Rhode Island. "It's been good for her - it made her grow up and she loves it up there," says her grandfather.

Carroll's oldest son, Mike, is a former teacher in Knoxville who is now assistant principal at Farragut High School in Knoxville.

Mike has three sons: Brandon, who is now in film school at Florida State University; Brett, who is a student at Middle Tennessee State University; and Chase, who is a freshman in high school.

Mr. Carroll is a member of the U.S.A. Presbyterian Church in McKenzie.

 
 
archives:   06-13-01 - Desert Storm 10-year Reunion
06-20-01 - Ida Hughes
06-27-01 - Chuck Slaughter
07-04-01 - Vernon Bobo
07-11-01 - Dixie Carter Reunion
07-18-01 - Jackie Burchum
07-25-01 - Dr. A.D. Marshall
08-01-01 - Dr. C.E. Pipkin
08-08-01 - Jeff Gaia
08-15-01 - James "Bird Dog" Reed
08-22-01 - Habitat for Humanity
08-29-01 - Brown Foster turns 96
09-05-01 - It's Time for FOOTBALL!
09-12-01 - The Webb High School Story
09-19-01 - Jimmy Sinis
09-26-02 - Small Town, U.S.A.
10-03-01 - Oscar and Sara Owen
10-10-01 - Bobby Pate
10-17-01 - Dennis Trull
10-24-01 - Willard Brush
10-31-01 - Cindy Summers
11-07-01 - Eddie Moody
11-14-01 - What's Not Secret About Shriners
11-21-01 - Roberta Taylor/Johnson Temple
11-28-01 - Trezevant's Miss Agnes Bryant
12-05-01 - Cherokee Wolf Clan
 

    

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