The dedicatory address was given by
Wofford President Benjamin B. Dunlap. Remarks were
from Chairman of the Board of Trustees Hugh C. Lane,
Jr. and Associate Professor and Director of
Environmental Studies Kaye S. Savage. Response was by
Trustee and principal Goodall Center benefactor D.
Chris Goodall ’78. The dedicatory prayer was from
Perkins-Prothro Chaplain and Professor of Religion
Ronald R. Robinson ’78. President Dunlap’s address is
printed below; the video of it and other presentations
can be accessed at http://www.wofford.edu/gbg/.
President
Dunlap’s Dedicatory Address
Welcome to all of you and most welcome to our honored
guests: Chris and Linéll Goodall along with other
members of the Goodall family, Jean and Glyn Morris, Anna
and Justin Converse, Carlos Gutierrez and URRC, Katherine
and Mike James, Janna and Mike Trammell, Cara Lynn and
Chris Cannon, Bet and Bill Hamilton, and Carmen and Chuck
Howard.
It’s curious, isn’t it, how some places marked so
indelibly by the past seem full of emptiness while others
are thick with dreams—and how some of those latter sites
have the feel of former battlefields or deserted palaces
where such melodramatic events occurred that they strike
us as semi-haunted. Chickamauga feels like that, or
Fatehpur Sikri—but, much closer to home, so does any
tin-roofed shack on the edge of a cotton field or the
shell of a shut-down textile mill. For a native of
the midlands like me—and despite my friends who live
around here or the burgers and fries I’ve had at
Dollene’s—this spot where we’re gathered now feels so full
of ghosts to me that, like an archaeologist trying to dig
down through successive centuries, I’m inescapably aware
of all the men and women who worked those endless shifts
here at Glendale Shoals while the spindles were still
humming and the mill itself was like a busy hive with
constant coming and going, and, of all those Sunday
afternoons, when the ladies in white dresses rode the
streetcars with their beaus and their parasols to the
scenic end of the line, crossing that steel-girdered
bridge and strolling around the pond that used to spread
out beyond it, and of how, in the minds of those vanished
people, there were all the usual hopes and fears and
baseball games and lightning bugs at night so that,
looking backward from their time, they too were wistfully
aware that they were living at the end of a long, long
chain of events stretching back to the Revolutionary War
and the skirmishes that had occurred just down the road,
adding the red life’s blood of patriots and redcoats to
what had been earlier spilled by unnamed Cherokee braves
and the animals they were hunting. All that, and, in
between, an iron foundry there on the Lawson’s Fork
somewhere in among those other locations, and, two or
three centuries later, the people still living here who
were startled out of their sleep one night to find the
mill was on fire and watched it burn to the ground—all but
a staircase and a couple of chimneys and the office where
old Mr. Converse knew the big safe’s combination and the
contents of the books that clerk after clerk had written
in, keeping the business going that had finally come to a
halt. After which, there was a sort of lull, though
not a complete cessation: life went on here in
Glendale, but the crowds were mostly gone and not
everybody was sorry to see them go, though at night it
could be said the ghosts outnumbered the people and it
must have seemed that this particular place was waiting
for its history to resume. . . which is, of course, why
we’ve come together here, at this auspicious moment which
is, for us, between the past and future, contributing in
some small measure to what has been and what will be.
Well, I’m waxing so rhapsodic because, over the past
several years, I too have absorbed the vision first shared
with me by B.G. Stephens, who grew up here in Glendale
some sixty or seventy years ago, and John Lane, who lives
just a short paddle up the river, and Glyn Morris, who
bought the mill and with his own generous passion for this
site wanted a rebirth to occur after it burned in
2004. There were others, of course—Ellen Goldey,
Doug Rayner, Terry Ferguson—who brought their Wofford
classes here and saw the possibilities. And SPACE
[Spartanburg Area Conservancy] and PCF [Palmetto
Conservation Foundation] who were willing to partner with
us on linking our projects together. And the
scholars convening for ASLE [The Association for the Study
of Literature and Environment] from all over the world who
visited this site and let themselves be quoted—saying, in
effect, that here was an opportunity to create an
environmental center unlike any other, a place where one
could study and observe both the natural beauty of the
Piedmont and the urbanizing changes underway even here at
Glendale Shoals, now and in the future. And Kaye
Savage, of course, who saw the program in its infancy and
signed on to be its first director. And, above all,
I should note that, literally within minutes of my passing
news of Glyn Morris’s offer to the Wofford Board of
Trustees, Jim Bostic had made the initial gift that got
the project underway, and the Converses, the James, the
Cannons, the Trammels, the Hamiltons, the Howards, and
Carlos Gutierrez along with many others stepped up with
their own generous pledges, creating a succession of
donors that culminated in the extraordinary gift that
finally enabled Donnie Love and McMillan Smith to go to
work and make the dream a reality.
That extraordinary gift came to us, of course, from
Chris Goodall and his family, and here we are this
afternoon, on the doorstep of the Goodall Environmental
Studies Center, met to dedicate a facility that, in a
matter of just a few more months, will be further
embellished with vineyards and botanical gardens, an
exterior deck and classroom, and, most significantly, an
ever-increasing stream of students—not just from Wofford
College, but from public and private K-12 schools here and
elsewhere in the county, converging on this spot as we
have done today. . . and as those Sunday excursionists
used to do so many years ago.
One thing we can say for certain: time continues
to run like water over that dam, and this moment will give
way to countless mornings and afternoons that will in turn
be vividly remembered by those who’re still to come, who
will benefit so hugely from the vision and generosity that
I’ve recounted. What we celebrate today is a worthy
accomplishment for us, for Glendale, for Wofford
College—but also for all those others whose ghosts are
crowding about us. . . applauding, I’m fairly
certain. It is my part now to ask you all to join in
that applause.