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Within these walls

Within these walls

Historic schoolhouse restored, marker unveiled at Soapstone By Jason Evans Staff Reporter jevans@thepccourier.com PICKENS — A historical marker on the More »

This week in the PICKENS COUNTY COURIER’s FOOTBALL FRENZY Sponsored by MOUNTAIN VIEW FUNERALS AND CREMATIONS

This week in the PICKENS COUNTY COURIER’s FOOTBALL FRENZY Sponsored by MOUNTAIN VIEW FUNERALS AND CREMATIONS

ON A ROLL!! LIBERTY OVERCOMES SLOW START FOR THIRD STRAIGHT WIN LIONS LOOKING TOWARDS CLINTON; GREEN WAVE PREPARE FOR MANN; More »

Pickens Lip Sync Battle sparks community unity

Pickens Lip Sync Battle sparks community unity

PICKENS — The second annual Lip Sync Battle was held at the Pickens Amphitheater on Saturday, bringing music, laughter and More »

Grand opening held for Hagood Mill Pavilion

Grand opening held for Hagood Mill Pavilion

The grand opening of the Heritage Pavilion at Hagood Mill Historic Site was held on Friday at a free community More »

PC Habitat for Humanity to host dinner next week

PC Habitat for Humanity to host dinner next week

COUNTY Pickens County Habitat for Humanity (PCHFH) invites neighbors, supporters, and community partners to gather for the Have a Heart More »

4th annual Barns, Boots, Brew and Silent Auction set for Oct. 7

4th annual Barns, Boots, Brew and Silent Auction set for Oct. 7

EASLEY — Family Promise of Pickens County is excited to present its 4th Annual Barn, Boots Brew and Silent Auction More »

 

Lions fall short against Bailey, Blue Ridge

By Bru Nimmons
Staff Reporter
bnimmons@thepccourier.com

GREER — After falling behind 18-15 early in the second quarter, the Daniel High School boys’ basketball team battled to claw back against Blue Ridge and Class 3A Player of the Year Justin Bailey in a third-round playoff matchup on Wednesday night.

Every shot the Lions made was seemingly answered by the

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County basketball standouts receive all-region honors

COUNTY — With basketball season coming to an end for all four Pickens County high schools, players from the county’s teams have been honored with all-region recognition.

Two teams — the Daniel and Easley boys’ squads — lead the county with three picks apiece.

The Lions, who went on their furthest playoff run since 2013, saw

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Pickens Carolina One volleyball team wins tourney

PICKENS — The Pickens Carolina One 18 Elite volleyball team captured the championship at the Nike Savannah Showdown Feb. 19-21 among many powerful Southeastern teams.

The Pickens Carolina One

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County working to help pastor restore stockade for ex-inmates

By Greg Oliver
Courtesy The Journal
goliver@upstatetoday.com

PICKENS — Pickens County officials said they want to work with Central Town Councilman Joe Moss, a local pastor, in refurbishing the former county stockade on Prison Camp Road into a center for inmates in need of job or life skills training after being released from prison.

But they admit there are a number of county matters they are dealing with at the

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Hope springs eternal each year

I could write about war and conflict, inflation and greed. I decided against it, because it’s just the same story told through the centuries, over and over. The plot stays the same, but the characters are different.

Putin is probably no different from Stalin, Hitler, Genghis Khan, Attila the Hun and a host of other tyrants. Until we learn from history, we’re doomed

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Courier letters to the editor

Saitta speaks on Hwy. 11 development

Dear Editor,

I want to explain why I proposed and voted for a short-term moratorium on most land development on Highway 11. The moratorium is on new manufacturing plants, new commercial development, new signage and new large residential subdivisions. It does not affect single residential lots or proposed subdivisions of less than 10 homes.

For starters, “Scenic” is only in the name “Cherokee Foothills Scenic Highway” and it means next to nothing under

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A testimony about a miraculous healing

I want to share a praise report of God healing someone I know personally. We hear about sickness and disease and the endless cries of why, but rarely do we learn about miracles when God intervenes and touches a person with His creative and restoring authority.

In the New Testament, there are true accounts of Jesus asking what He can do for those who were suffering, and when they told Him their request, He said, “I will.” As Christians, we pray because we believe

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Praying in the wake of Putin’s power play

A few years ago, Paul McCartney did a concert in Moscow. Red Square was packed with fans, who, like much of the rest of the world, love his music and appreciate the Beatles’ role in leading a countercultural revolution in the 1960s.

I watched it on TV. It was a great show, and it included interviews with fans who, back in the ‘60s, went to great lengths to acquire Beatles records. Their music was

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Courier Obituaries 3-2-22

JOANN MEECE HAYES

PICKENS — Mrs. Joann Meece Hayes, beloved wife of retired Pastor Tommy Lewis Hayes, passed peacefully on Feb. 21, 2022, after a lengthy illness.

Mrs. Hayes was born in Pickens County to the late Claude Jefferson Meece and Bertha Aiken Meece. She was a member of Cannon Mountain Baptist Church. Mrs. Hayes was a faithful pastor’s wife for 28 years and loved to sing, teach Sunday school and along with her husband, help those with spiritual needs. She also loved gardening, growing flowers, traveling, trips to Edisto State Park, going to thrift stores, taking photos and feeding the birds.

Mrs. Hayes and Pastor Hayes have three children, Cindy Burgess (Curtis), missionary and pastor to Montana Randy Hayes (Joan), and Amanda Wood (Jon). She is survived also by a sister, Mrs. Bernice Bowen, and was a loving

Reconciling racism & religion

By Dr. Thomas Cloer, Jr.
Special to The Courier

For Black History Month, we have focused on the award-winning book “Barracoon: The Story of the Last Black Cargo,” by African American author Zora Neale Hurston.

“Barracoon” is a Spanish word for “barracks.” A barracoon was the hellhole where captured Africans were kept until their voyage to a life of enslavement. This book is already considered a masterpiece of our American literature by many in the literary world. It won Book of the Year awards in 2018 from 14 different entities, such as Time, NPR, Barnes and Noble, Christian Science Monitor, New York Public Library and Amazon.

Although Hurston finished the manuscript in 1931, it was published in paperback by First Amistad Paperback Edition of HarperCollins Publishers in 2019. I wrote earlier about why it took so long for this masterpiece to be in print. The author finished her manuscript in 1931. Hurston interviewed and wrote direct dictation from the African Kossola of his growth to adulthood in Africa and his capture and voyage to Mobile Bay, Ala. Kossola gave memories ranging from his horrifying enslavement to his release from slavery into Jim Crow America.

Chapters I-XII in Barracoon are the words of Kossola, as Hurston wrote them in the 1920s. The dialect of Kossola was written so expertly by Hurston that it flows smoothly and eloquently in the book. Kossola learned a dialect of spoken English as an adult slave in Alabama. Hurston made many visits to Kossola’s little home in Alabama when Kossola was in his 80s. He would be the last former slave who had grown to adulthood in Africa and could give an eyewitness account. His memories

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