Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    The Game Changer

    Page 2
    Prev Next


      But it’s all here on these pages.

      This is a story of a boy that decided on his own to make his life in music and entertainment. I tell about events and conversations that is important to me, not only because I experienced them, but because somehow it all seems to fit in a kind of bigger picture. Perhaps a picture of America. Or of the Negro in America. I don’t know, that’s too deep for me. But I like to think in some way I was part of it.

      They tell me I was born with a unusual memory. My grandfather on my Papa’s side was terrific and my mother had a good memory too. My uncle Jonse Mauney, born in slavery and not able to read or write, was a local “mathematician” with a computer mind. So nothing seems very far off to me.

      Many people interviewed me over the years, but only parts of my story been written in books and magazines. And not always right, either. I also read things my fellow musicians said I know damn well is wrong and it upsets me—some musicians’ memories are not a inch long.

      I believe strongly in telling the true facts, for if a person talks the truth, he can face the world. I want to tell blacks that keep saying the “man” is holding them back: read my story. I want to tell whites that may not know what it is to be turned away because of their color: read my story. I’m not putting anybody down. This is my life just the way it happened and I want everyone to know what I went through.

      I wouldn’t be telling the whole truth if I didn’t use the very words that was said. If any part of my story or the words I use offends anyone, please skip over that part. I’m sorry, but the truth cannot be changed. If it is, it no longer is the truth.

      There are events here I never told anyone before, because I’m a private person. Things very close to me still hurt to this day. And strange things that happened I can’t explain but I’m telling them now. And while there was many good times in my life, if things got bad or people be bad, I’m telling that too. I don’t hate. I’m not militant. If I hate, then damn it, somebody going to hate me back.

      I heard it said that black is beautiful—hell, every color is beautiful. If we to live in this world in peace, then we got to try to get along with everybody. We all need one another. Anybody ever see a piano with all black keys?

      I believe in people. Honest, sincere people, regardless of race, creed, or color. I never did get along with the notoriety kind. I was shy as a youngster and still back off from people that get out of line with me.

      I also believe in the Bible. I believe in the hereafter. I believe in doing right. Treat others as I wish to be treated and I know He will favor us all.

      Through the help of God, He made a way for me from when I was ten years of age. As a child, important people gave me their hand. Took me in. Taught and advised me. Because of this, I believe I was a success long before my music career began. After I was grown, others offered me encouragement when I needed it badly. Got me jobs and made it possible for this musician to play in top clubs, hotels, and theaters in America and over twenty-five foreign countries. Invited to stop at people’s homes and treated like family. Some were preachers, some lawyers and doctors. Some were musicians, singers, entertainers, and writers. Others just old friends and relatives. All good people I respect and still correspond with around the world.

      But I’m just a old country boy from North Carolina that appreciates everything he received. Many helped me to help myself. Any success I had in my life, I owe to the following people:

      Gus Aiken

      Napoleon Allen

      Joe Allston

      John Alston

      Vernon Andrade

      Harvey Andrews

      John A. Andrews

      Victoria Andrews

      Avon City Jazz Band, England

      Paul Barnes

      Russell Barnes and wife, England

      Elizabeth Barnhardt

      Herman Barnhardt

      Indie Barnhardt

      Leonard Barnhardt

      Paul Barnhardt

      Sarah Barnhardt

      Washington Michael Barnhardt

      Will Barnhardt and wife

      Tommy Benford

      Dave Bennett and wife, England

      Lou Blackmon and wife

      Peter Boizot, England

      Boston Broadcasters, Inc.

      Jack Bradley

      Herbert Branch

      Mort Browne

      Beulah Bryant

      Charles Buchanan

      Charles Burke and wife

      Dan Burley

      Clay Burt

      Ray Bush, England

      Jacques Butler

      James Butts

      Albert Caldwell

      Leslie Carr

      Peter Carr, England

      Dennis Chalkin

      John Chilton, England

      Julius Christian and wife

      Ernest Clarke

      Ira Coffey and wife

      Cozy Cole and wife

      Jay Cole and wife

      The Connecticut Traditional

      Jazz Club

      Rev. Arthur R. Corwell

      Herbert Cowens

      Odie Cromwell and wife

      Charlie Crowell, Sr.

      Floyd O. Culp

      Henry W. Culp, Jr.

      Rev. F. A. Cullen

      Stanley Dance

      Walton H. De Hart

      Bertrand Demeusy, France

      Harry Dial

      Dr. Morris Diener

      Wilma Dobie

      Bob Douglas

      Rev. John F. Douglas

      Frank Driggs

      Frankie Dunlop

      Laura Dunlop

      James W. Durden

      The Eady Family

      John Eady and wife

      Linwood Eady

      William Eady and wife

      Pete Endres and wife

      Helen J. Ennico

      Leonard G. Feather

      Billy Fowler, Sr.

      The Friendly Fifty Club

      Leslie Frye

      Theodore Frye

      Joe Garland

      Moses Garland and wife

      Gilbert Gaster, England

      Meredith G. Germer

      Karl Gert zur Heide, Germany

      Frank Gibbs

      Russell Gibbs and wife

      Charles Grear

      David Griffiths, Wales

      Luther Griffiths and wife, Wales

      Dr. Thomas P. Grissom, Jr.

      Dr. David L. Grossman

      Charles W. Hadley

      Michael Hansen, Denmark

      Marion Hardy

      James Harewood

      Aaron Harris

      Alfred Harris

      Bea Harris

      Sheldon Harris and wife

      Willie Mae Harris

      Wynonie Harris

      Jack Harvey and wife, England

      Edgar Hayes

      Alex Hill

      Teddy Hill

      Chris Hillman, England

      George and Christopher Hillman

      Charles Holmes

      Claude Hopkins

      Mel Howard

      Harmey S. Hyatt, Jr.

      J. Wallace Ivey

      Howard W. Johnson

      Jeryl Johnson

      Pete Johnson

      Albert Jones and wife

      C. W. Kaufman

      Jack and Marian Kearns

      Luvenia Kendall

      Rufus G. Kluttz and wife

      Earl Knight

      Barbara Kukla

      Wyn Lodwick and wife, Wales

      Fred Longshaw

      William Macklin and wife

      Henry McClane

      Jay McShann

      John Marrero

      Simon Marrero

      Barbara Martyn

      Barry Martyn

      Helen Merrill

      Peter Meyer, West Germany

      John P. Miller and wife

      H. Minton

      Carrie Misenheimer

      Clayton Misenheimer

      Tim Moore

      Fred T. Morgan

      Dan Morgenstern

      Mel Morris

      John H. Mullen

    &
    nbsp; Peter Muller, West Germany

      Arthur Newman and wife

      Jack O’Brien

      King Joe Oliver

      Harold Oxley

      Ray Parker

      Pasquele Pastin

      Birdell Prince

      Bob Queen

      Madame Gertrude Rainey

      Ed Rauch

      Ellsworth Reynolds

      Billy Roe

      Mrs. Izzy Roe

      Edwin Ross, Sr.

      Phil Schaap

      Walter Schaap and wife

      Sammy J. Scott

      Rev. Floyd Shadd and wife

      Minnie Shadd

      O’Neal Shadd and wife

      Rev. R. E. Sharpe

      Simons Sim, Belgium

      John Simmen and wife, Switzerland

      Ed Smalls

      Bessie Smith

      Pearl Smothers

      Glenn Spears and wife

      Bo Stenhammar, Sweden

      Derrick Stewart-Baxter and wife, England

      Eugeen Suykerbuyk, Belgium

      Luther Thomas

      Eric Townley, England

      Larry Treloar, England

      Rev. W. J. W. Turner and wife

      Peter Vacher, England

      Alajos Van Peteghem and wife, Belgium

      Joe Vennie

      Tillie Vennie

      Dr. Albert A. Vollmer and wife

      Hans Vollmer and wife, England

      Sammy Waters and wife

      George B. Weaver

      Viola Wells (Miss Rhapsody)

      Princess White

      Alberta Whitman

      Alice Whitman

      Essie Whitman

      Mabel Whitman

      J. A. Williams and wife

      Adam Wilson and wife

      Brooks Wilson

      Laurie Wright and wife, England

      Steve Wright

      Genevieve Zuhlcke

      Theo Zwicky, Switzerland

      I Remember

      1. The Beginning

      Saturday, September 25, 1982, was the most exciting day of my life.

      I was resting in my hotel room that evening down in Washington, D.C., trying to gather up my thoughts. My heart was still pounding. First, the Legends of Jazz, of which I’m a member, played the old Ford’s Theater only hours before. It was a command performance for President Ronald Reagan, and he was sitting right there down front applauding, along with Mrs. Reagan and a whole gang of government officials. The cameras were rolling because this was to be a special television show.

      And every time I glanced up at Abraham Lincoln’s blue and black flag-draped box where he got shot in 1865, I got a chill. They say his ghost is still there some place. And I believe it.

      But all that was nothing compared to being invited earlier in the day to lunch at the White House. I wish I could describe how it felt walking up that long staircase, past all the paintings of presidents, and into this beautiful reception room. And then the President of the United States coming over and shaking my hand.

      This old trombone player from Gold Hill, North Carolina, shaking hands with the top man of the country. Maybe the world. I’m not political, but to me he represents all America—the Number One Man.

      I couldn’t sleep that night. I kept thinking about all the other people I met in my life. And the times I had. Where I came from and how they now call me a legend. Sure, I played in many name bands, and plenty without names. Been everywhere. But a legend?

      I kept wondering what life is all about. No one plans to do everything he does in his life, but it happens. Why is that?

      For a moment I thought I heard a voice whispering to me in the shadows of my quiet room.

      My life was spilling through my mind. Good times. Some laughs. A lot of hurts. So much buried inside me.

      I was sure I heard this voice calling. From long ago.

      “Come on, Clyde, come out on the porch and make pee-pee.”

      It was old Mrs. Rose Parker calling me out one cool North Carolina night back in 1907. I was but two years old. They told me Mama was sick, so Mrs. Rose was watching over me.

      “Hurry,” she was calling, “pull your little night shirt up and come make pee-pee.”

      And man, I remember I watered those cornstalks out back of that country house in one big spray. It is my first memory and I can call it today just as bright as the Carolina moon shining through those dark trees.

      The next morning, Papa came after me in his little black buggy. “Clyde,” he shouted from the dirt road, “you got a new brother now.”

      I remember I got excited. With only two older sisters, I sure did want a brother to play with bad. I was clapping and jumping all the way home, but when I saw this tiny brown bundle laying on the bed I was very disappointed. I thought a real brother be my size and this was nothing but a little old baby. I pouted for days after that.

      Papa was Washington Michael Barnhardt. That’s Barnhardt with a double a. I changed the spelling to Bernhardt later when I was grown. Papa was born May 15, 1878, near Mt. Pleasant, North Carolina, and was one of about eight children. His mother was half Cherokee Indian and half Negro. His father Bush was three-quarter Cherokee. I leave it to you to figure out how much Indian blood I have in me.

      In 1892, at the age of fourteen, Papa came to Gold Hill to work in the gold mines. It was a boom town then.

      My mother was born Elizabeth Mauney, pronounced “Mooney.” The date was December 27, 1872, and the place was a short distance out of New London, North Carolina. Mama’s parents, Cad and Heddie Mauney, were slaves. The white master that owned them was named Vol Mauney, so Mauney became their name too. They got married when grandmother was only thirteen and lived in this old rough cabin on the Mauney Plantation up until Emancipation Day.

      Cad Mauney was a dark brown Negro and grandmother was very light. They called her a mulatto. Don’t know for sure if there’s a white man in our family woodpile, but it wouldn’t surprise me at all.

      Mama had eight brothers and sisters. She went to Bennett College, a woman’s school in Greensboro, North Carolina, where she studied to be a dietician, taking care of a family, and all that kind of stuff. Started college around the eighth grade and finished in the twelfth. Today they call it high school.

      Mama was very smart, more then a lot of other colored people around there. But though Papa only went to fifth grade, I always thought he was smarter.

      When Papa married Mama in 1898, she was teaching school and kept at it until I came along. I was born Clyde Edric Barnhardt on July 11, 1905, 2 A.M. to be exact. We was living in the Hannah Shaver place then, about a mile out of Gold Hill, in Rowan County.

      Mama had eight children: Walton Hortense was the first, born April 6, 1899, but later she dropped the Walton and everybody called her Hortense; then two children that died as infants, Irene and Clifton; Agnes came on June 3, 1904; and after her was me. Then Paul, October 16, 1907; Leonard, June 9, 1910; and Herman on April 11, 1912. I remember Herman’s birthday very well because a few days later we all heard about the great ship Titanic going down.

      Mama always told me the Hannah Shaver place where I was born was haunted. A lot of white people moved in and moved out just as fast. Strange noises. Moaning. Scared the daylights out of them.

      Papa knew what everyone said about the Hannah Shaver place. “No hants gonna get me outta here,” he kept telling Mama. He meant the haunts, of course.

      But they did. He bought some twelve acres of land in a all-white area of Richfield, about five miles below Gold Hill. Cost him a dollar a acre. Papa was then a foreman and timekeeper, the only black mine foreman there, and making $2.50 a day. That was high wages, so he could afford the property.

      Mama ordered a wooden bungelow from the Sears, Roebuck Company catalogue, and when it came mail-order from Chicago, a local carpenter put it up in about a week. They spent most of their savings for it. Cost about five hundred dollars as I was told.

      We moved in around September of 1905 when I was but two months old and stayed exactly eight years.

    &nb
    sp; The big house stood off the ground and had six rooms, three on each side of a long hallway running right down the middle. Bedrooms in the back, a kitchen off on one side, then a dining room, living room, and the front parlor with the bay window was for company. The house had tall windows all around, a brick chimney, and a long porch out front. Even had a coal heater in there and a big fireplace. Shingles on the roof.

      Mama put in the newest wood- and coal-burning kitchen range, which she also got from Sears, Roebuck. The stove was made of heavy black steel, and Mama said it took four big men to carry it in. Looked so pretty with fancy white metal trim all over the fire box and on the front and side doors. Had a big reservoir somewhere inside with a warming closet on top.

      We was the only colored people around with such a good stove. Mama paid about twenty-five dollars for it, a top price in those days.

      A family reunion in Allentown, Pa., May 1, 1948. Front row, left to right: Clyde Bernhardt, Herman Barnhardt (brother), Leonard Barnhardt (brother); back row, left to right: Mrs. Leonard Barnhardt (sister-in-law), Agnes Barnhardt Thomas (sister), Maude Coble (cousin), Hortense Barnhardt De Hart (sister), Luther Thomas (brother-in-law), James Durden (uncle).

      Off the back porch was a deep artesian well that Papa got somebody to dig. Had a big pump that brought up the freshest, coldest water I ever tasted. When other people’s well went dry, they came and got water from us. Near the barn was our outhouse, and there was a yard out back for Mama’s vegetables.

      She kept a truck garden there just for us or anybody that needed food or was too lazy to grow their own. She had cantaloups, turnips, squash, onions, string beans, six-week white corn, greens of all kinds. Had peach trees. Apples and pears. Even a big old cow and chickens all running around picking and poking. Papa had this friendly horse he called Mary and a old gray mule, Kate, that wasn’t very friendly.

      Mama took in laundry after we moved to Richfield. Misenheimer’s Springs health resort was three miles away and all the wealthy white people from the North came down there, so she got plenty work from them.

      Mama bought this house from Sears, Roebuck and had it put up in Richfield, N.C., in 1905. (Photo courtesy of the late Mrs. Goodman.)

      Most people didn’t have what we had. The greatest ambition of working folks down there, black and white, was to own their own home, even if it didn’t have but two or three rooms. And have their own horse and wagon. Maybe someday work up to a buggy. God-fearing, hardworking, get-along people that did section hand labor, worked in the textile factories or the mines. There was no shiftless kind around.

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2025