Studio Art By Artist CF Legette

Grow Encourage Enjoy Life
Showing posts with label History. Show all posts
Showing posts with label History. Show all posts

Monday, November 17, 2025

MyTIDIL list



How to make a TIDIL list.

Life goes by faster than you realize. Before you know it you are looking back at more years than you can possibly have left. My advice to any young person comes not as a lecture but just a word to ad to you vocabulary…

MyTIDIL©) Copyright: C. F. Legette

This stands for 
My Things I’ll Do In Life

Take the time to write down fifty (50) things that you want to do in life. Place in a safe place (Be sure to remember where you put it). Every three years review this list and add more to it also check off things that you have already accomplished. You will be amazed at how your mind works when you put things in writing.

 You can comeback to http://www.legette.blogspot.com/ and share your achievements.

"If one advances confidently in the direction of his dreams, and endeavors to live the life which he has imagined, he will meet with a success unexpected in the common hours."
Henry David Thoreau


Here are some dream stimulators:
Community
Education
Family
Financial
Health
Professional
Recreational
Spiritual,
Social,
etc.

Be sure to record the dates of your changes next to your accomplishments.

Saturday, June 14, 2025

Remembering Mother Emanuel





Mother Emanuel
Print

June 17, 2015
Mother Emanuel AME 
Church shooting 
9 church members shot and killed by racist white supremacist thinking  21 year old 

Listed below are the names. 

The Rev. Clementa Pinckney, 41: A state senator and the senior pastor of Emanuel, he was married to Jennifer Benjamin and the father of two children, Eliana and Malana. He was a 1995 graduate of Allen University and got his master's degree at the University of South Carolina in 1999. He served in the state Legislature starting in 2000; The Post and Courier says black fabric was draped over Pinckney's Senate chamber seat on Thursday.
Cynthia Hurd, 54: According to the Charleston County Public Library, she was a 31-year employee who managed the John L. Dart Library for 21 years before heading the St. Andrews Regional Library. A statement said Hurd "dedicated her life to serving and improving the lives of others." The system closed its 16 branches Thursday to honor Hurd and the others who died in the shooting. County officials also say the St. Andrews library will be named for Hurd.
The Rev. Sharonda Coleman-Singleton, 45: A pastor at Emanuel, she was also a speech therapist and high school girls track and field coach, both positions at Goose Creek High School, according to her LinkedIn page. Jimmy Huskey, the school's principal, called her "a true professional ... [who] cared about her students and was an advocate for them." Her son, Chris Singleton, is a baseball player and student at Charleston Southern University. Coleman-Singleton also had two younger children, writes the Post and Courier.
Tywanza Sanders, 26: He was a 2014 graduate in business administration from Allen University in Columbia. Lady June Cole, the interim president of Allen University, described him as "a quiet, well-known student who was committed to his education." Known as Ty, he had worked in sales at department stores such as Belk and Macy's.
Ethel Lance, 70: She had attended Emanuel for most of her life and worked there as a custodian, as well. From 1968 to 2002, she worked as a custodian at Charleston's Gaillard Municipal Auditorium. The Post and Courier quotes a former colleague as saying, "She was funny and a pleasure to be around. And she was a wonderful mother and grandmother."
Susie Jackson, 87: Lance's cousin, she was a longtime church member.
Depayne Middleton Doctor, 49: The mother of four sang in Emanuel's choir. She had previously directed a community development program in Charleston County. In December, she started a new job as an admissions coordinator at the Charleston campus of her alma mater, Southern Wesleyan University. SWU President Todd Voss said: "Always a warm and enthusiastic leader, DePayne truly believed in the mission of SWU to help students achieve their potential by connecting faith with learning. Our prayers go out to family and friends. This is a great loss for our students and the Charleston region."
The Rev. Daniel Simmons, 74: Simmons survived the initial attack but then died in a hospital operating room. He had previously been a pastor at another church in the Charleston area.
Myra Thompson, 59: She was the wife of the Rev. Anthony Thompson, the vicar of Holy Trinity Reformed Episcopal Church in Charleston.

 Five members survived the shooting unharmed, including Felicia Sanders, mother of slain victim Tywanza Sanders, and her five-year-old granddaughter, as well as Polly Sheppard, a Bible study member. Pinckney's wife and two daughters were inside the building during the shooting but were elsewhere.


Tuesday, May 13, 2025

PandaLums Louis Vuitton Wall Art




PandaLums Life-Lesson 
Lock It In 
Louis Vuitton

Wall Prints
Starting at 
$22.34

Your attitude will deflate quickly... 
when you allow cold negative air to penetrate. 
#StayPositive




 

Saturday, February 08, 2025

The Darkest Corner of the Darkest Time




http://www.scsu.edu/event_details.aspx?event_id=1406



The Darkest Corner of the Darkest Time

Thoughts of The Orangeburg Massacre 

    

        Right now, the Railroad-Corner is a quiet. 

However, in my head it still screams out loud every time I drive by it…especially if its February. I think about that time often, but it doesn’t really hit hard until February because all those pictures show up again. It hurts too much to keep thinking about the reality of the tragedy and the thought of the callousness of the act.  There has never been a fair look into the way things ended that day.

     This month meets me with so many different emotions. Because of the time and place Orangeburg was overlooked then and now. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. life was taken just a few months later. This turned all focus from any type of justice away from the small confederate loving town. 

Times changes but the darkness stays the same. 


That small grass hill on the east side the railroad tracks that split the city of Orangeburg, will always have a cold feeling around it. That is where Bump took his last breath. It has been over fifty years since we last saw him run down Gadsden Street,  on his way to a Wilkinson High football or basketball practice. That big contagious smile that he always had can be seen from down the street as he approaches us. As me and my crew enjoy ourselves at our neighborhood corner (Gadsden Street and Walker Avenue) singing, dancing and bullshitting, we anticipate what he was going to do or say to any of us today.

The route he’s taking is one we all traveled often. It is the shortest route to get to Wilkinson High School and to the campus of South Carolina State College. We also take that same route to get to MacDonald’s gas station (One of the prideful Black-owned gas stations in town) to buy snacks or have a bicycle tire patched. The route treks through a couple of back yards, through corn fields, crossing a railroad track, more back yards, and then a long winding dirt road. It is more like an obstacle course than a route. Bump (Delano Middleton) was always running a little late. However, we all knew why. He had to finish up everything Mr. Gramps (His dad) had asked him to do on their farmland...the farm that ran for acres parallel to our neighborhood. It used to bear cotton but now mostly corn and an apple orchard. The animals are few now, but hogs had to be slopped and cows and chickens fed before he went to school. 

Our crew of seven had seen this so often that we really didn’t have to look up. It's Bump. We all say hi and go back to talking about our favorite topics...football games from the weekend or the Jackson Five singing group. But we know what else is coming.  Bump has this big bright smile like nothing could ever hurt him. He is confident and had it all to back it up. I don’t remember a time that he passed by us that he didn’t stop to encourage us in some way. His words sink in even though we pretended not to listen. It all balls down to doing something good in life. He was talking mostly to his nephew (Alonzo) than us, but we all had to acknowledge him...or else. Looking at it now, everything was as if it was predestined for him. He knew what he wanted in life early. As an extremely talented natural athlete, he could play any sport he wanted to and did all of them very well. Coaches smiled when his name was mentioned. His physique was intimidating, and his quickness was even more respected. He would sometimes get tested by foolish unknowing bullies and they all soon learned a hard lesson. No one messed with Bump. 

 

Bump was going to be someone special.

 

 No one ever said it out loud, but we all knew. Needless to say, none of us ever thought that it would be bullets from Highway Patrolmen lifting him to that specialness. 

 

This tragedy happened way too quickly.

 

One day everything is fine and the next day an explosion of racial tension floods our city. The curfew from a protest kept us inside for days. Tensions boil over and a black cloud drops down over the city. The cloud gets darker and darker each day as hate and evil set in.  

 

Things escalate when a group of students begins a protest for civil rights. In addition to lunch counters and restrooms being segregated, there is a bowling alley that locks its doors when students arrive. 

The students are pushed back by force all the way to campus ground.

Then, without warning or instigation ... gunfire erupts into the crowd of college students. Pellets from shotgun blast rip through clothing and flesh. Students begin to run and some fall. Bump falls to the grass to never stand again. Several others fall and rise slowly, two other students also never rise again (Henry Smith, and Samuel Hammond.) As the lights and bullhorns are active above them, they struggle to breathe.

When all is still, armed uniformed men stand around carrying on casual conversations. Some of the men carry clubs and some have their hands in their pockets and casually listen to the last breath of the students on the ground.

 

Screams from other hurt students and yells from loud bull horns merge above the city and the community will never be the same again.

 

 Life around the "Railroad Corner" left that day and never came back. That corner like our corner in our neighborhood the life-point, a meet-up place and it was the sign of how the community was doing. Every good neighborhood has a place where kids can laugh and play without worry. Unless there was a storm (dark clouds) there was always life on that corner. 

 

 No one knows how short our time will be (Never undervalue the time you have with your good friends.) We never gathered at our corner after Bump took his last run past us. It was as if he did like the old western movies where they ride off into the sun. Then there is only darkness as the movie closes, and everything is over. In our neighborhood when darkness comes it's time to head home for safety.  

 

Will there ever be light on the "Railroad Corner again?

 

It’s been over fifty years, but it seems like only yesterday that we tossed the ball around with friends and no matter how much time passes it will never take those moments away. If there is one lesson to learn from this, it is simply to enjoy life while you have it as Bump did...
Even though I will always look to see when there is justice for this tragedy,

 

 

 I can't allow the darkness to overtake the light that guides me. 

Be a good example for all to see while you are here regardless of what others do. 


Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that.

Martin Luther King, Jr.

 

Three simple life rules:

 
Grow: Grow to know the love of God. 
Encourage: Encourage everyone you meet. 
Enjoy: Enjoy Life  

 

 

Rest in Peace My Friend. 

May God Bless any reader that comes across this and remember the lesson from the corner. The dark corner will only have life again when the light comes back. Let the light expose what is hidden in darkness. 

 

The Annual Orangeburg Massacre remembrance is on February eight every year.  




http://www.scsu.edu/event_details.aspx?event_id=1406


     
In Memory of Delano H. (Bump) Middleton

*Pictures credit to 






Wednesday, June 05, 2024

Tuesday, April 23, 2024

Fitness Goals


Life is so much better when the vessel you are using is in good condition. Like any machine, automobile, plane, boat, etc., it has to be in use to perform well. 


No matter what type of workout plan you use, the only one that actually works is the one that you actually do. 


What you have to remember when you begin, start over or comeback to, don’t over think, over -do or overload your workout. 


To keep going, keep your workouts fun. Remember you are not competing for a prize , your prize should be a more healthy life. 

Grow , Encourage, Enjoy Life. 

MUV



 

Monday, May 01, 2023

Celebration


 I am so excited for my better half today. She just added another celebration for the month of April, Birthday, Anniversary and now Retirement. After three decades+ my wife Esther Legette is retiring from South Carolina State work as Director of Parking and Transportation at The University of South Carolina. 

Congratulations🍾🍾🍾🍾

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️😎

Thursday, August 04, 2022

Fine Art Bill Board Contest


Fine Art BillBoard Contest 
Is having a bill board contest. Please help by voting on all three @cflegette Originals. 
Each picture has its own link. Please click over each picture and follow instructions
Thank you. 


Vote 1 

 

Vote 2



S

Vote 3




Thursday, September 23, 2021

Bansky In Detroit


 A Bansky found in an unusual place is not unusual at all. However…Detroit? Across the pond in England, Bansky art pops up with regularity in different places. Most images are social awareness art. 

Eventually, someone noticed the art and the rest goes as usual. 

A group 555 (a nonprofit organization) removed and auctioned. 

The sale proceeds would fund the renovation of a new home, a 30,000-square-foot warehouse on East Warren Avenue that 555 had purchased in 2010. Julien’s Auctions of Beverly Hills, Calif., hired as the auctioneer, announced it anticipated the Banksy would sell for $200,000 to $400,000 — raising the possibility that the Packard Plant Banksy would sell for as much as the Packard Plant itself.

That didn’t happen. On Sept. 30, the Banksy sold for $137,500 to Steven Dunn, CEO of the Los Angeles-based baby-toy company Munchkin Inc. 

Works of Art and More

Midnight Sax

Midnight Sax 11 x 14  Ink on Vintage paper  Framed