He’d Bring Goodies to Town, Even Possums
                               Spoilin' The Broth by Bill Cooke
                                Rockdale Reporter - 2015-09-17

Jerry Caywood recently spoke to the Milam County Genealogy Society about his legendary
grandfather, the late Mr. Lee Caywood who lived to be a ripe old age and drove a mule-
drawn wagon to town regularly from his Talbot Ridge farm.

Many a Rockdale resident can remember Mr. Lee and his wagon because he gave generations
of kids rides in that wagon.

He was the last of the old-time farmers who paid for his Rockdale Reporter subscription
with vegetables from his farm every year. He was a survivor of the Great Depression,
when bartering was part of life. Most folks didn’t have any cash money, so they paid for
services, including doctor bills, dry goods and repairs in trade, or by their own hand.

Jerry said his grandfather’s mules were named Jack and Jerry, and now he wonders if he
was named for the mule or the mule for him.

Mr. Lee liked visiting The Reporter, particularly with my grandfather John Esten Cooke,
my father, W.H. Cooke, and finally with me. He brought lots of stuff from his farm to
our office over the years, including arm loads of walking sticks he made from mesquite
roots.

“Just give ‘em to anybody who needs a good walking stick,” he would say. And we did.

One presentation he made to me really stands out in my memory.

Mr. Lee, his eyes gleaming with pride, brought me two cleaned and dressed possums “for
Peggy to cook.”

Now wife Pegaroo is a very accomplished cook, as our four children would attest, but she
wanted no part of those possums, and neither did anybody else I tried to call.

Mr. Lee said to “cook ‘em up with sweet potatoes.”

Finally, I stuck them in the microwave for about 20 minutes (no sweet potatoes) and then
put them in the back yard for my faithful Dingo to eat. Dingo was a “good ole’ mixed-
breed yeller-eyed dawg” who would eat anything. But Dingo never touched those possums,
and neither did any insects. I finally put them in the garbage.

Pegaroo came home from playing bridge the night that I microwaved the possums and she
did not like the aroma that remained in the house, and reminded me for several days as
the fragrance lingered.

Back in hard times, two possums and a mess of sweet potatoes would have fed a family
several meals and they would have been thankful for it.

Mr. Lee would have remembered plenty of those times. He was born in 1890 and died in
1982 at the age of 92.



bill@rockdalereporter.com
Milam County Historical Commission - Milam County, TX
Statue of Ben Milam at Milam County, TX Courthouse
Old Junior High School Building, Rockdale, TX
Milam County Courthouse - Cameron, TX
Preserve America
Milam County Historical Commission
Milam County, Texas
All Credit for this article
goes to Bill Cooke
and the
Rockdale Reporter
Remembering ‘Mr. Lee’ Caywood and his wagon trips to town.
.