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April
2003
Contents
Message
From the Executive Director:
* The Upstate as the next regional city
Conservation:
* Couple preserves land along highway 11
* Northern Greenville county tract preserved
* UF members donate land adjoining
Jocassee Gorges to State
* Conservation Bank Act signed into law!
Articles:
* The Upstate is being developed at the rate
of a new Haywood Mall every three days!!
* Downtown Schools: a key step toward sensible
growth
* Downtown schools in the Upstate
good news and bad news
* Can Stories Save a River?
Bringing Lawson's Fork back to life
* Main Street: Heart and soul of the Upstate
* Victory for streams in the Upstate!
Upstate Forever News:
* Events
* Awards
* Volunteers
* Staff
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CAN
STORIES SAVE A RIVER?
Bringing Lawson's Fork Back To Life
by
Betsy Teter
Im rounding a bend in Lawsons Fork
Creek in my long, tan kayak, leading a flotilla of twenty boats on a Sunday
afternoon in late April. Energetic paddling has put me a couple hundred
yards ahead of the other boats, and Im drifting now, enjoying the
quiet in this out-of-the-way corner of Spartanburg, South Carolina. A
little further down the stream I encounter the sounds of splashing and
rock-and-roll music coming from the woods. I float sideways to the current
and wait for some of the others to catch up.
The
middle of Lawsons Fork Creek is a place I could never have pictured
myself six years ago when a group of local writers gathered at a downtown
coffee shop and founded the Hub City Writers Project. In the intervening
years, we have published a series of twelve books, most of them collections
of stories about the place we live. None, though, have had the impact
of the one we published last spring about this urban stream.
We
knew when we started that most people in town would think it was a crazy
idea. Lawsons Fork Creek was nothing but a drainage ditch for factories,
strip malls, and subdivisions. An afterthought. A place where if you went
swimming, your skin would fall off, as a childhood friend
once warned me.
Could
stories save a river? We didnt know the answer to that question,
but we wanted to find out.
The
idea started small: Interview the folks who lived and worked on the river.
Put a local writer in a boat and send him down the creek to tell
his own story. Take some kids to the rivers edge. Have them write
some poetry. Find a local artist to illustrate the flora and fauna. Take
somephotographs.
Author
Gary Henderson found 92-year-old Bea Hewitt to tell the story of the big
flood in 1928. He found African-American artist Thomas Parham to describe
how the indigo textile dye used to sweep down the river before the mills
all closed. He found a silver-haired biologist who told him that thanks
to the Clean Water Act, Lawsons Fork was 500 times cleaner
than it was when he first started water samples.
Meanwhile,
fresh from publishing an anthology of the work of early South Carolina
naturalists, local English professor David Taylor set off in his kayak
to explore a creek few had ever seen except from bridge crossings. In
a stirring narrative, he told of encounters with sunken shopping carts
and toilet bowls. But he also found fishermen pulling bass and brim from
the water. He followed great blue herons and watched beavers slip into
the creek. The manuscript David handed us in December 1999 was the story
of a creek being reborn.
Heady
with our own ingenuity, the Hub City Writers allowed ourselves to get
increasingly ambitious. We found two local videographers to create a documentary
about the river and wrote a $10,000 grant to the S.C. Humanities Council
to help pay for it.
We got the Spartanburg Water System to fund an elaborate web page.
And
of course we needed a festival to launch the book. For four days in April
2000, in four locations, with four completely different sets of activities,
we encouraged Spartanburg residents to come to the banks of Lawsons
Fork Creek. We put our slogan, Explore the Interior on banners
and bumpers and T-shirts. There were Indian storytellers and symphonies,
a childrens river drama and nature walks; an environmental arts
exhibit and kayak rides. There were gospel choirs and river murals and
bluegrass bands and articles in the newspaper every day for a week. The
National Endowment for the Arts paid for most of it with a $10,000 grant,
and our local arts council chipped in another $5,000.
It
was a festival that could only have been created by a group of writerspeople
who made fiction and poetry but didnt stop to think how crazy (and
exhausting!) this publicity stunt really was.
But
what an impact. Today is the one-year anniversary of the closing ceremony
of our Lawsons Fork festival, and we are celebrating. Just yesterday,
there was a successful river trash sweep. One group of volunteers pulled
27 automotive tires out of a 100-yard-long stretch. Its challenging
to catalog all the changes that were set in motion by the publication
of The Lawsons Fork: Headwaters to Confluence. Unbelievably,
there now are five boat launch sites up and down this creek. Thanks to
a $25,000 allocation from our local Legislative Delegation, Lawsons
Fork has become a recreational river.
A
conservation organization out of the state capital set up shop in Spartanburg
and has just opened two miles of hiking trail along Lawsons Fork.
A local foundation has given them $240,000, and they are currently scouting
the Lawsons Fork floodplain for more trail sites.
A
group of residents downstream at Glendale Shoals has spearheaded the opening
of
a small sculpture park on the banks of the river. Rebirth,
a ten-foot-tall abstract representation of the native umbrella magnolia
crafted from black steel beckons people to park their cars and come look
at the river. There are plans for a community garden on the bottomland
just around the next bend.
A
partnership we launched with an elementary school has blossomed into a
two-year-long environmental science and writing initiative. Third graders
at Chapman Elementary School, which sits on a hill above the creek, have
become experts on macroinvertebrate life in the waterway. These kids not
only can tell you the difference between a caddis fly and a stone fly,
they can draw you pictures of them and write poems about them as well.
The children know that when these insect larvae are found under rocks
in their creek, it means the stream is healthy. When the rocks are empty,
something is badly wrong.
Last,
but certainly not least, a group called Friends of the Lawsons Fork,
dormant for nearly 25 years, is meeting again with a new generation of
river activists. They plan Sedimentation Patrols to make sure developers
have silt fences in place. Theyve bought water testing kits and
will check the water quality twice monthly. A prominent local philanthropist
has joined, and with a group of friends, she recently waded waist deep
in the water
to oversee the difficult removal of numerous sunken shopping carts.
Today
theres a tailgate party going on in the woods in a large area where
the underbrush has recently been cleared. They are cooking barbecue, awaiting
the arrival of our group of paddlers. The place looks like a mountain
campsite, not a Piedmont floodplain overrun by kudzu and privet. A banner
welcoming us hangs across the river.
We
pull our boats to the side and climb up the bank by way of a ladder someone
has graciously placed there. I recognize some of the guys who pulled the
27 tires out. One of them owns the house through the woods, and I wander
through the crowd of
50 or so until I find him.
Wow,
this place looks great, I say to him. What made you do this?
Ive
just figured out I have waterfront property, he says with a wink.
Can
stories save a river?
Unquestionably
yes.
| Upstate
Forever member Betsy Teter, a former journalist, is executive director
of the Hub City Writer's Project. Her work with the Lawson's Fork
has led her into several other environmental endeavors, including
being named co-chairman of the newly formed Spartanburg Greenway
Alliance. This article originall appeared in Orion Afield (Autumn
2001), 187 Main St., Great Barrington, MA 01230, www.oriononline.org
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