Jul 19 2010

Dr. R.A. Forrest’s Church

Filed under: Living in Stephens County, Toccoa Falls

I love these doors. I finally stopped yesterday afternoon and took a photo of them. They have been restored, and I think that they are so simple that they are elegant. The church is beautiful. I also had a chance to go inside and see where the founder of Toccoa Falls College preached for so many years. Dr. R. A. Forrest (pictured below) was the pastor from 1925 until 1950.

“In 1925, the First Presbyterian Church issued him a call to become their pastor. After much consideration and with the understanding that he would be able to continue his evangelistic work throughout the United States and Canada, he accepted the call and served as pastor of this church for twenty-five years. During his pastorate a beautiful brick edifice was built, and the church membership increased. It is of interest to note that, though he felt several times that he should resign because of the pressure of his other duties. The church refused to allow this until he reached the age of retirement.” —Taken from the book: Achieving The Impossible with God.

Here’s another view of the doors. I love the lamp post, too!

May 16 2010

Worth A Thousand Words!

Filed under: Toccoa Falls

Sometimes a photo really is worth a thousand words! The one above fits in that category. It is of a student during Commencement at Toccoa Falls College yesterday morning. Below is a photo of Prof. Julio Vena, one of my favorite profs. He was my New Testament teacher while I was at TFC, and this is his last full-time teaching year. Next year, he will teach part-time. Since the college’s Centennial in 2007, he has carried the mace into the auditorium as a part of the academic regalia.

I love this photo. It truly captures the heart and spirit of Toccoa Falls College.

May 14 2010

Just A Couple of Shots!

Filed under: Memories

Commencement is in the morning, and I think I have finally mastered my flash. (It has only taken me six months!) The campus is almost empty except for graduating seniors and their families. I can’t explain what comes over me whenever I attend commencement services. I cry. I want to cheer, hug everyone, and I feel a sense of relief, which makes no sense because I’m not the one who has done anything other than show up and take a couple of crazy photos like this one of one of our deans, Dr. Brian Shelton, who has a ton of titles and degrees (none of which I’m going to list on my personal Web site). In this photo he is “standing in” for the college president Dr. Gardner, who will hand out diplomas in the morning.

Serious stuff . . . I had to mind my “P’s and Q’s” and not do anything radical. I was able to do that . . . so I’m rather proud of myself. Notice the gloves these guys are wearing. Sort of a British thing, don’t you think?

May 08 2010

Filming at Forrest Cottage

Filed under: Toccoa Falls

I wish Toccoa Falls College founders, Richard and Evelyn Forrest were alive to see and experience all the activity that took place at their home today. WSB TV (Channel 2) was back on campus filming for the program Georgia’s Hidden Treasures, which will spotlight Toccoa Falls along with several other places of interest in Georgia. News anchor John Pruitt drove up with the show’s producer and camera crew. Having them on campus these last few weeks has been lots of fun. They are super, super nice! And we will miss them, but we can’t wait to see what Leona—their ace photographer—puts together. (Do you see the falls in this photo? Upper left corner. It’s visible from the deck at Forrest Cottage.)



May 07 2010

Dreams Do Come True!

Filed under: Paw Prints

Here’s a real “rags to riches” story. This little dog spent the better part of last year lost and running from one place to another on our campus. Several of us tried in vain to catch her. When we first noticed her, she had a long chain attached to her collar. But slowly over the next few months the chain began to wear away and fall off. There were times when she was covered with mud. Other times, after bathing in the stream that runs through campus, she looked like she had been groomed. “We have to catch that dog,” a friend said after noticing her traveling across the foot bridge that leads to the athletic fields. But she always alluded us.

She led people on wild chases around the ponds on the lower road, took up with the neighbor’s pack of dogs, and basically learned to live large on a 1,100 acre college campus. You would think she had it made, but that was not the case, especially in a place where winters can be harsh, summers extremely hot, and rainy weather goes on for days. Everyone wanted to help her, but no one could. She was not going to be cornered, and she was certainly not going to risk being caught up in a human’s grasp.

I spent last Thanksgiving worrying if she had food to eat and even drove out to the college to feed her. I never knew where I would find her, but somehow she always turned up. Back then, she never allowed any of us to get very close. I left food at a distance and would drive off wondering if she had enough to eat.

A few weeks ago, we notice that she was extremely busy—more than usual. She was hurrying somewhere. Something was up, but we didn’t know what it was until someone called to say, “I think she has puppies.” She did. Five to be exact. We found her neatly dug out den on the side of a hill overlooking the campus. It was a safe place, a warm place, and a place where the wild animals that live in the nearby national forest would not find her. We suddenly realized, she was a smart dog. So smart, in fact, we teased that she may even have her masters’ degree in Survival.

Since there were puppies involved, everyone knew she had to be caught. She couldn’t continue rummaging through trash cans and stopping for empathetic handouts left by caring strangers. She needed a home—a real home. So a small, safe animal trap was set, and she was finally caught. It would be an okay story if it ended here, but it doesn’t.

In the days that followed her “capture,” the campus seemed horribly empty. There was no little dog hurrying by my window or rushing past the students as they headed to class. Life was way too normal. I threw away the remains of the dog food I had been carrying with me in the car and told myself, It was the best thing. She’s safe now. She was in a good place and that was important. But these reassuring words felt little more than empty. There was no closure. No goodbyes and no way to shore up the vacancy we all were feeling. We had done something almost unthinkable. We had become attached to this little heartbeat of a dog that started out belonging to no one and ended up residing in all our thoughts and prayers.

While she was taken to a foster home in Atlanta to be spayed, groomed, and given all her shots in preparation for adoption, we remained in Toccoa trying to imagine our days without her. What would we talk about when we saw one another? Work? That wouldn’t do. She had brought us together and now we were left on our own to sort things out.

Last week, a twist of fate and an act of God brought her back to us—not to live as she did before—but to live with three other dogs in a wonderful home overlooking a small lake. Last night I did something I never thought I would do. I took her photo. I reached out and stroked her face, rubbed her chin, and told her how beautiful she is. So if anyone ever tries to tell you that dreams do not come true, don’t believe him. They really, really do . . . .