in the river. I do not know. E: Now that was a time of destruction everywhere. S: They say up in North Carolina, they have the same thing today. E: They had a big flood there? S: A big flood up there. E: Well, I am really glad to have met you. That was interesting about all of those arrowheads underneath your father's home in Rock Hill. S: I do not know where they come from, school kids used to gather them up. E: Did your brother say what he is going to do with all of those things that he has in his little house? S: Miss Echols, I have been trying to talk to him and these two nephews. I am eighty-one and we are not going to be here for long. What I want to do is put that in a museum somewhere, while we are still living. He had talked to that lady that was out there. She has left there now, I understand. She was going to try to make arrangements to put the cases up there and give us keys for them. Now, at one time, they wanted to just put stuff on tables. You know how long that would last. E: That is right. S: He will not consider anything like that. E: Your family has a very valuable collection and the finest one in Rock Hill. S: Well, I think so. We have got Reverend Davis' bible out there and a letter from Jefferson Davis, an old piano. My mother wrote to a manufacturer in England, and I do not know whether you saw that letter that she got back from them. They destroyed the records every 100 years and did not know how old it was. Some of her people brought that from England, that old piano. E: You have a wonderful heritage to be proud of. You have two nephews living, Bill and Bob? S: Bob is an adult. E: Well, I know your nephew Bill, and I know your brother quite well. When I go and visit them I am going to pick up on some of this and add more to what you have said today. S: I am sorry, I just did not know. I will tell you, Miss Echols, that never interested me much. 7