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On Christmas Eve 1948, the snow was coming down hard,
blowing and swirling around my old two-ton dump truck as I
drove across the West Virginia Mountains. It had been
snowing for hours and accumulated eight to ten inches deep.
My job at the time was delivering coal to the miners who
lived in the coal camps. I had finished early and was
looking forward to getting home.
As I neared the road that led to my home, I was flagged down
by my stepfather. He told about a mother with three children
who lived about six miles up the mountain. Her husband had
died several months previously, leaving her and the children
destitute. In the tradition of taking care of our town, the
miners had assembled several boxes of food, clothing and
gifts that they wanted me to deliver and with a load of
coal, to the family.
Now, believe me, I didn't want to go. Let's face it, I had
worked hard all day, it was Christmas Eve, the time of
giving and good-will. With this in mind, I turned around and
drove to the coal tipple, where I filled the truck. When I
returned; I loaded boxes in the front seat and in every nook
and cranny I could find in the back. Then I set off.
Back in the hills of West Virginia, folks had built homes in
some pretty out-of-the-way places. This woman's place was
really out of the way. I had to travel on a road that had
not been cleared by the highway department, nor had any path
been made by traffic. I drove up the valley as I had been
directed, and turned off the road into a hollow called Lick
Forks. The road was actually a snow-filled creek bed. When I
saw that, I began to have doubts that I could make it.
Nevertheless, I shifted into first gear and crept ahead.
When I came to the place a mile further on where I was
supposed to turn into the mountain to get to the woman's
house, my heart dropped. There before me was a winding path
that had been hand-cut up the side of the mountain. I still
could not see her house. I pulled the truck up the path and
got out. After looking the situation over, I decided there
was no way I could get the two-ton truck up through the
path.
What am I to do? I wondered. Maybe I can just dump the coal
and ask the family to come down for the food and clothing.
So I walked up the path. It was near dusk, the temperature
had dropped, and the blowing snow was beginning to drift.
The path was six feet wide, overhung with snow-covered
branches and littered with stumps and limbs. Finally I
reached the clearing where the house stood, a little shack
with thin walls and cracks you could see through. I called
the woman out of the house, explained why I was there, and
asked if she had any way to carry the coal and food. She
showed me a home made wagon with wheelbarrow wheels.
Here I was in ten inches of snow, with a truck I had to
empty before dark, an impassable path and a wagon with wheel
barrow wheels. The only solution, as I could see it, was to
turn the truck around, back it in as far as I could, dump
the coal and set the boxes off.
As I returned to the truck, I kept asking. "Lord, what am I
doing here? How can I handle this?? Pleases help me!!"
I started up the engine, turned my truck around and went
into reverse. Foot by foot that old truck backed up along
the mountain path. I kept telling myself, "I'll just keep
going until I can't go any farther..."
However, the truck had a mind of its own. All at once, I was
sitting there in the dark with my taillights reflecting
through the snow on that little shack. I was dumbfounded.
That old truck had not slipped an inch or got stuck one
time. And standing on the porch were four of the happiest
people I had ever seen.
I unloaded the boxes and then dumped the coal, shoveling as
much as I could under the porch. As I worked, the thin, ill
clothed children dragged and pushed the boxes into the
shack. When I had finished, the woman grasped my hand and
thanked me over and over.
After the good-byes, I got into the truck and started back.
Darkness had overtaken me. However, upon reaching the "
road," I stopped the truck and looked back at the path.
"There is no way," I said to myself, that I could have
maneuvered this truck up that mountain through all that
snow, in the dark, without help from somewhere."!!!
I had been raised to worship God. And that Christmas Eve, in
the hills of West Virginia, I knew I had been an instrument
of what Christmas is all about!!!
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