
Laverne Elizabeth Cloud was born on February 23, 1919 to Emma (McBride) & John Franklin Cloud in Tiptonville, Tennessee. She was the 8th and last child. She had 3 brothers and 4 sisters:
Bess, Ruth, Claude, William, Mazie, Carl & Maude Lou. She graduated from Tiptonville High School in 1937 in a class of 33 students. She was married that same year, December 31, 1937, to James David McCoy by a Justice of the Peace in Fulton County Kentucky.
The above pictures are her Senior high school picture and the other is Mama and me.
Since her birthdate is this week I thought I'd do a post in Mama's honor.
Things I remember most about mama: - Drying dishes while she washed – the best time to share the events of our day.
- She loved to read – she told me once we had to go to a different library because she had read everything at our local one.
- Her little ‘sermons’ – you know, “If you can’t say something nice then don’t say anything at all.”, “always look for the good in someone”, and “there is no excuse for being unkind.”
- When she was going out (usually to church)- bright red lipstick and a light spray of Evening in Paris.
- Her flowers – a big peony bush in front of the old garage and the spirea (sp?) bush by the front porch swing.
- Biscuits or cornbread with every dinner.
- Your favorite dessert for your birthday – mine was always banana pudding.
- A basically quiet humble person who could swing a mean paddle or hairbrush if you got out of line.
- Floyd Cramer’s “Last Date” – she always requested that song when Steve would play.
- The letters she would write while I was in college – they sometimes took me a few days to decipher but she wrote every week.
Mama died February 25, 1990 at the age of 71. Her last visit to my house (two days before) was when she and daddy had just come from seeing “Driving Miss Daisy” for her birthday.
As they were leaving she turned to say goodbye and I had a very "strange feeling” hit me that this was a real goodbye and it was indeed the last time I saw her alive. I remember an overwhelming amount of people at the funeral – even with her gentle, quiet, unassuming personality, she was loved by many. Any memories of your own?