Blind Justice of the Peace Showed Christmas Compassion Gerry Griffith December 21, 2017 Justice, as doled out by one man in Moundsville in the early 1960s, really was blind. One chilly night near Christmas, I was lucky enough to observe that he was also unexpectedly compassionate. Chester Burk ...
Griffith Files: Grandma’s Rocker-A Baby Boomer’s Downsizing Dilemma Gerry Griffith May 27, 2017 8 They are taking away my grandma’s rocking chair tomorrow and it feels like an old friend I’ve known all my life is going away to live with strangers. The decision to give it up was a tormenting struggle invo...
We Watch Forever Gerry Griffith May 10, 2017 They had a party at our prison last night and they thought we couldn’t see.This rotten stone hell where we walk in darkness forever is not as it was when I faced the hangman in 1932 or as it was when my compa...
The Griffith Files: Remembering John F. Kennedy’s 1962 Visit to Wheeling Gerry Griffith November 22, 2016 1 Author’s note: As promised more than a year ago when I began this series, the stories have progressed beyond the memories and stories of my Mother, Mabel, and are now the product of my own experiences. Thus, th...
The Mabel Files: Sightless Workers Guild Rescues Mabel and Lizzie Gerry Griffith September 4, 2016 1 He didn’t have a gavel so Christopher Cerone rapped his knuckles loudly on the wooden table to bring the meeting to order. It was tough to get the attention of the room. The 25 or so blind people were much too ...
The Mabel Files: Standing Up for Sightless Folks Gerry Griffith July 21, 2016 Lizzie Goes on Wheeling TV and Stands Up for Sightless Folks Of all the remarkable things that the remarkable sightless Lizzie Minns did in her remarkable life from raising a sighted daughter and becoming a ...
The Mabel Files: A ’52 Nash in Elm Grove Gerry Griffith June 7, 2016 3 Mabel Wrestles a Four-Wheeled Beast Called Nash on the Streets of Elm Grove Mabel jammed the gear shift on the steering column of the hulking 1952 Nash Ambassador into what she believed was first gear. Then,...
Mabel Files: A New Home, but Staggering New Challenges Gerry Griffith May 11, 2016 Elm Grove was a welcoming neighborhood for Mabel, George, Lizzie, and little Terry in 1953. The cozy little house on Columbia Avenue had something for everyone, and it was where the little family finally recove...
The Mabel Files: Health Challenges and an Iconic Wheeling Doctor Gerry Griffith February 25, 2016 Wheeling’s Dr. Earl S. Phillips had been the Minns’ family doctor for 20 years, seen the family through illness and injury, delivered Mabel and George’s first baby boy, performed all the regular health checkups...
Mabel Files: Red Scare Campaign Launched in Wheeling Gerry Griffith February 1, 2016 George Griffith hurriedly shoved the unopened, official-looking envelope into the breast pocket of his U.S. Postal Service uniform jacket, as he left the letter carriers’ locker room at Wheeling’s main post off...
The Mabel Files: Monsters, Wheeling Creek and New Arrival Gerry Griffith January 14, 2016 The Monster in the Basement, Washing the Car in Wheeling Creek, and the New Arrival In 1947, the Minns/Griffith family enjoyed post-war prosperity. Their little white house on Wood Street in Wh...
The Mabel Files: A Christmas Gift of Faith Gerry Griffith December 23, 2015 Tom and Lizzie Minns rarely had much to spend on each other at Christmas during their long and frugal marriage. The blind couple had always used what little money they had managed to save from their Wheeling co...
The Mabel Files: A Homecoming Gerry Griffith October 12, 2015 A Homecoming: Grief, and New Beginnings in the Spring of 1945 Writer’s note: Mabel Griffith passed away on September 28 at the age of 95. She told me many more stories of her family’s life in Wheel...
The Mabel Files: The 1924 Benwood Mine Disaster Gerry Griffith September 13, 2015 With a loud click, a wrinkled shaky hand placed 15 cents on the glass countertop of Tom Minns’ confectionary on Market Street on a rainy Thursday morning in late 1944. “What can I get for you?”...
The Mabel Files: Tom Minns’ Call to Political Action Gerry Griffith August 26, 2015 Familiar-Sounding Themes of the Presidential Campaign of 1944 The speaker strode to the McClure Hotel Ballroom podium. The polite applause that began with his introduction grew into a more enthusiastic ...
The Mabel Files: How Tom Minns Became One of Wheeling’s First Telemarketers Gerry Griffith August 13, 2015 Tom Minns drummed his fingers on the glass candy counter and let out a heavy sigh. Lizzie sat in her usual chair next to the doorway that led from the store to the family’s living quarters. A ball of string was...
The Mabel Files: A Long Nervous Wait Gerry Griffith July 27, 2015 Mabel Minns and her blind father, Tom, sat restlessly on a bench in the massive marble-floored waiting area of Wheeling’s B&O Station on a rainy evening in April 1944. Tom tapped his little bamboo...
The Mabel Files: Goodbye to a Little Dog with a Big Heart Gerry Griffith July 16, 2015 2 Heaven goes by favor. If it went by merit, you would stay out and your dog would go in. – Mark Twain The streets of Wheeling have always been populated with colorful and remarkable characters whose exist...
The Mabel Files: A Working Dog’s Story Gerry Griffith June 30, 2015 Feature Picture from paintlater.wordpress.com Mabel Files 17 When I was a young dog just trying to survive on the streets of Wheeling in the early 1930s, few people ever paid any attention to me except, o...
The Mabel Files: Wheeling Men in Aleutian Islands Gerry Griffith June 22, 2015 Wheeling Men Endure Isolation, Cold, Grueling Labor, and Air Attacks in the Aleutian Islands In the early days of World War II, the military masterminds of both Japan and the United States cast strategic eye...
“The Mabel Files” Part 15: Japan “Casts the Die” Gerry Griffith June 15, 2015 1 Wheeling’s Centre Market, and the shops nearby like Tom and Lizzie Minns’ Confectionary on Market Street, were at rest on Sunday afternoon, Dec. 7, 1941, while the USS West Virginia and USS Tennessee were on fi...
The Mabel Files: Tale of the Sweeney Punchbowls Gerry Griffith May 18, 2015 2 “Young lady,” whispered the old man to Mabel Minns as he moved slowly and quietly between weathered gravestones and pointed a bent, wrinkled finger toward an unusual mass of granite and glass. “Do you know what...
The Mabel Files: Wheeling Boys Go to War Gerry Griffith May 1, 2015 4 Wheeling barber George Griffith was about to go to war in the Spring of 1941 and the Army fatigues he was issued and directed to wear from boot camp to deployment, just like the plain but tough uniform he had w...
The Mabel Files: Centre Market Gerry Griffith April 13, 2015 3 The Mabel Files: Part 11 Learning the Colorful History of a Keystone Wheeling Neighborhood It was a sweltering July Saturday in 1938, when Mabel spotted the “for rent” sign in the window of the little sto...
The Mabel Files: WWVA Jamboree and “It’s Wheeling Steel” Gerry Griffith April 3, 2015 Mabel Files 11—Tom’s Radio Part 2 Lizzie Minns had a restless night that Saturday in January 1933. She tossed and turned and couldn’t seem to get herself to go unconscious. There was no reason in particular ...
The Mabel Files: Fireside Chats and the Flood of ’36 Gerry Griffith March 19, 2015 1 Mabel Files 10—Tom’s Radio Part 1 “He’s coming Mama and he’s got it,” 13-year-old Mabel called out to her mother, Lizzie, on a Saturday morning in April 1932. Mabel had been gazing up the sidewalk of Jacob S...
Mabel Files: Wheeling’s Bonnie and Clyde Gerry Griffith March 9, 2015 By Gerry Griffith Weelunk Contibutor Wheeling Couple’s Bloody Crime Spree Keeps the Minns Confectionary Crew Buzzing When Tom Minns walked into his little store in South Wheeling on a rainy aft...
The “Mabel Files” 8: When George Met Mabel Gerry Griffith March 2, 2015 1 By Gerry Griffith Weelunk Contributor Mabel, 15, and George, 18, in 1934 Nineteen-year-old George Griffith’s shovel dug into the hard Colorado soil and created a stone-on-metal scraping noise. So did th...
The “Mabel Files”: Wheeling’s Underworld and Big Bill Gerry Griffith February 21, 2015 3 By Gerry Griffith Weelunk Contributor Keeping out of Harm’s Way in a Dangerous Time Tom Minns in the 1930s. “Man, don’t you know who Big Bill Lias is?” asked the smarmy little m...
The “Mabel Files”: The Loss of a Jazz Giant – Wheeling’s Chu Berry Gerry Griffith February 8, 2015 By Gerry Griffith Weelunk Contributor The Minns Confectionary Feels the Loss of a Jazz Giant – Wheeling’s Chu Berry Chris Cerone, the blind, balding 41-year-old musical genius who kept the patron “loaf...
The “Mabel Files”: Part 5 Gerry Griffith February 2, 2015 By Gerry Griffith Weelunk Contributor The Mabel Files Part 5: Stogies, Sandwiches, and Crocheted Lace The 1920s and 1930s were tough times for Tom and Lizzie Minns, the blind proprietors of a...
The “Mabel Files”: Part 4 Gerry Griffith January 26, 2015 By Gerry Griffith Weelunk Contributor The Mabel Files Part 4: Music, talk, and danger inside the Minns’ Confectionary A safe warm gathering place for friendship, but for thieves ... not so much Even...
The “Mabel Files”: Part 3 Gerry Griffith January 17, 2015 2 T.J. Minns and his “Pal” By Gerry Griffith Weelunk Contributor When my grandfather, Thomas J. Minns, had a full head of steam on the sidewalks of South Wheeling in the second two decades of t...
The “Mabel Files”, Part 2: Lindy Visits Wheeling Gerry Griffith January 11, 2015 By Gerry Griffith The young people who loitered around Tom and Lizzie Minns’ little confectionary in South Wheeling on an early summer afternoon in 1927 were excited about the newspaper story that one young ...
The “Mabel Files”: Part 1 Gerry Griffith January 4, 2015 6 By Gerry Griffith Weelunk Contributor A word about this series: Like a lot of men, I mentally compartmentalize life and memories. There are boxes up in my head socked away on various imaginary shelves to ...