A Brief History of Windsor Spring Water Company

The Windsor Spring Water Company was established in 1905 by William H.T. Walker, Jr., son of Confederate Major-General W. H. T. Walker, killed during the Civil War in the Battle of Atlanta, and grandson of prominent United States senator and Augusta’s first mayor, Freeman Walker.  Although the Company was established in 1905, the spring itself was allegedly named for Windsor, England by British soldiers encamped in the area during the American Revolution. In the mid 1800s, Valentine Walker, brother of Freeman, built Seclusaval on the grounds, which in 1988 was placed on the National Register of Historic Places. In 1907, the Greek Revival home became the dwelling of George M. Clarke, his wife, Fannie Perrin Clarke, and their children, Ella Irene, Frances Louise, Minnie Leticia and George Miller, Jr. Walker and Clarke were business partners until 1920, when Walker sold his portion of the business to Clarke.

Under the ownership of the Clarke family, the Windsor Spring Water Company boomed, providing not only Augusta, but Savannah, Charleston and Aiken with the “purest water the earth affords.” 15,000 gallons flowed from the spring daily, and was advertised in 1909 as “containing less solid matter per gallon than the celebrated Poland Spring Water” of Maine. Promotional material published in the early twentieth century provides testimonials from scientists and doctors attesting to the water’s “exceptional purity”, its beneficial use in the treatment of a number of health disorders, including, “indigestion, dyspepsia, biliousness, malaria, chills and fever, lumbago, neuralgia, and rheumatism.” The spring water, which at the time was said to flow from an unknown source, was also a favorite of President William H. Taft, who reportedly traveled with a dozen five gallon bottles on both of his visits to the Panama Canal during its construction.

George M. Clarke died in December of 1933, and his wife, Fannie Perrin Clarke took over the business, and single-handedly saved it from ruin. Clarke’s death occurred in the midst of the Depression, at which time the family became unable to pay off a mortgage of $15,000.00 Clarke had taken out on the property in 1925. With Windsor Spring Water Company and Seclusive Val in jeopardy, Mrs. Clarke traveled to Warm Springs, Georgia where President Franklin D. Roosevelt was seeking treatment at the time for infantile paralysis, and met with Presidential Secretary, Marvin H. McIntyre. During the visit, she secured a homeowners loan, and was able to pay off the mortgage and save the business. Fannie Perrin Clarke operated The Windsor Spring Water Company until her death in 1961, when her daughter Ella Clarke Nuite took over the Company, and continued bottling spring water by hand well into her eighties. Mrs. Ella Clarke Nuite died on June 15, 2007 at the age of 103, her long life surely a testament to the purity of Windsor Spring waters. The century old business closed upon her death.

Pictured are Ella Clarke Nuite, nee’ Ella Irene Clarke, and her brother George Miller Clarke, Jr. The photograph was taken by a private photographer hired by Mr. Clarke. The setting is the original springhouse, built from locally quarried rockd by Paul Fitzsimons, then owner of Windsor Spring. This image is included in an exhibit of historic photographs on loan from the Augusta Chronicle to the Augusta-Richmond County Public Library through the month of September.

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The Windsor Spring Water Company memorabilia was graciously donated to the Georgia Heritage Room by Charlotte Nuite Kitchen, daughter of Ella Clarke Nuite.

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WHERE WE CAME FROM AND WHERE WE WENT, STATE BY STATE

http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2014/08/13/upshot/where-people-in-each-state-were-born.html?_r=0&abt=0002&abg=1

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SEPTEMBER PROGRAMMING

Monday, September 15 at 2:00 pm
Augusta’s own Bill Kirby will be here to present WE WERE THERE: CHRONICLING AUGUSTA HISTORY FOR 230 YEARS.
One of Augusta’s oldest institutions, the Augusta Chronicle, has been documenting local and national news day after day, month after month, year after year for over two centuries. Please join us as Bill Kirby explores the story of “The South’s Oldest Newspaper,” and its place within the history of American journalism. In conjunction with the program, a series of historic photographs taken by Chronicle journalists will be on exhibit throughout the month of September on the first floor of the Headquarters Library. Please call (706)826-1511 for details.

Friday, September 26 at 10:00 am
GENEALOGY 101
Maxwell Branch Library
Tina Floyd from the Georgia Heritage Room will present a beginner workshop on the fundamentals of starting a family research project. Topics will include, how to get started, basic rules for genealogical research, conducting interviews and how and where to gather documentation. This is a beginner level class, but computer skills are necessary. The class is interactive so come prepared to start growing your family tree! Space is limited. Please call (706) 793-2020 to register.

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We Want Your Yearbooks!!

yearbook flyer (2)

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The Joyce Poole Collection

The Georgia Heritage Room is thrilled to announce a significant donation of genealogical materials given by Mrs. Joyce Perkerson Poole. Mrs. Poole has been researching family genealogies since 1976, and has generously donated her books and family histories in an effort to preserve the collection within a controlled environment, and to allow other genealogists access to these important materials.

Mrs. Poole is a professional genealogist and for many years was Registrar for both the College Hill Chapter National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution and the Rev. Pierre Robert Chapter of the National Colonial Dames of the 17th Century. In 1980, she became an adviser for THE HEARD FAMILY JOURNAL, and began research, using the materials she discovered in county courthouses and tax digests on a book about the Heard family. Published in 2004, A HEARD FAMILY RECORD-BASED HISTORY, follows the lineage of the family for whom Augusta’s “Heard Avenue” was named.

Mrs. Poole has published articles in the MAGAZINE OF VIRGINIA GENEALOGY and contributed family histories to books published by the Gwinnett County Genealogical Society and the East Georgia Genealogical Society, as well as Heritage Books for other Georgia Counties, such as Paulding, Meriwether, Cobb; and South Carolina counties, such as Abbeville. She has also contributed family history research and publications to the Augusta Genealogical Society.

Included in the donation are approximately 150 books on Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina and Virginia genealogy, and roughly twenty family history files.

The Augusta-Richmond County Public Library is honored to accept Mrs. Poole’s donation.

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WHO DO YOU THINK YOU ARE? Back on TLC

If you think this season’s celebrities are fascinating, wait until you meet their ancestors.

Your favorite family history show is back with all-new episodes, premiering Wednesday, July 23 on TLC. Meet six of today’s biggest celebrities—including Cynthia Nixon and Jesse Tyler Ferguson—and generations of their intriguing families. You could even win a grand prize to discover your own family story.

http://www.ancestry.com/cs/who-do-you-think-you-are?o_xid=61357&o_lid=61357&o_sch=Email

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GOOD NEWS!

The Ancestry Library Edition is once again available to our patrons. Thank you for your patience as we worked out the technical difficulties.

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JIMMY SCOTT: IF YOU ONLY KNEW

Matthew Buzzell, Assistant Professor of Communications at Georgia Regents University will present his documentary JIMMY SCOTT: IF YOU ONLY KNEW on Thursday, July 17 at 2:00 p.m. in the Auditorium of the Headquarters library.

“Best known for his impossibly high singing voice, enigmatic jazz legend Jimmy Scott has been called by The New York Times, “the most unjustly ignored American singer of the 20th Century.” JIMMY SCOTT: IF YOU ONLY KNEW is an personal and meditative documentary portrait of Scott, his odyssey of loss and redemption, and the most intimate document of Scott’s life to date. Rare archival photos, moving concert footage, lush travelogue, and extensive interviews intertwine to create a document of Scott’s lifelong attempt to overcome exploitation, reunite his family, and find closure through his art.”

JIMMY SCOTT: IF YOU ONLY KNEW premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival in 2002. The film garnered the Audience Award for Best Documentary at the 2003 D.C. Film Fest.

The film received its broadcast premiere on PBS television’s Independent Lens in 2004, winning the Audience Award.

Jimmy Scott passed away on June 12, 2014 at the age of 88. His birthday is July 17th.

http://www.pbs.org/independentlens/jimmyscott/index.html

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Dave the Potter

Beginning Friday, August 1, 2014, the Georgia Heritage Room of the Augusta-Richmond County Public Library will present an exhibit featuring an alkaline-glazed stoneware vessel crafted by enslaved master potter, David Drake. Unearthed in 2006 by Savannah River Archaeological Research Program, the discovery of the jar prompted Archaeologist, George Wingard of SRARP, and Filmmaker, Mark Alberton of Scrapbook Video Productions to create a documentary exploring the little-known life of the enslaved African-American potter from Edgefield District, South Carolina. Also included in the exhibit is a replica jar made specifically for the documentary, “Discovering Dave: Spirit Captured in Clay”; materials detailing the history of David Drake’s life, assorted photos, and a selection of materials highlighting the making of the film. Also on hand will be copies of the documentary for viewing. The exhibit will run throughout the month of August, and is the only time the original “Dave pot” will be on display for an extended period of time. So please stop by the Georgia Heritage Room on the third floor of the library, Monday – Friday, 9:00 to 5:00; Saturday, 1:00 to 5:00, to see this wonderful find.

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July Fourth event to celebrate Georgia Declaration of Independence signers

Four years ago, when James Hanby Sr. organized downtown Augusta’s first annual event in honor of Georgia’s signers of the Declaration of Independence, only nine people showed up – and six were family.

Last Independence Day, nearly 80 attended the ceremony at the
Signers Monument on Greene Street in front of the Augusta Municipal Building.

This year, the 1989 graduate of Hephzibah High School said he hopes to use that momentum to bring national attention and state acclaim to the event….

IF YOU GO

What: Ceremony honoring Georgia’s signers of the Declaration of Independence

When: 9 a.m. Friday

Where: Signers Monument in front of the Augusta Municipal Building, 530 Greene St.

Augusta Chronicle
July 1, 2014
By: Wesley Brown

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