Cullman Senior Magazine Spring 2020 | Page 12

when Sherman and his men came to town. Here is a Granny Dollar quote from the Pro- gressive Farmer article: “I was about 35 years old when the war broke out. My father had to go. He was a very brave soldier and was in the army two or three years before the big battle of Atlanta and Excerpt of credits from finished book. Sherman’s march to the sea. I remember mighty well the day the army got to Atlanta. Father had sent me word not to come for goods, but to stay home and help with the children. The cannons 30 miles away roared so I shall never forget it, though I should live another 100 years. Father was killed during the siege. The city was burned and Sherman went on cutting his way through our cornfields, which were in roasting ears. So making the living all fell on me. I had been promised to marry to Thomas Porter. He had been killed in the army, too. I was so broken up I remained single 40 more years.” There isn’t a lot of information about Nancy in those 40 years. At the age of 79, she met and mar- ried Nelson Dollar and moved back to DeKalb 12 | SPRING 2020 County. She never had children. “Granny” was just a term of endearment. Many years after Nelson passed away, Granny Dollar found herself homeless at the age of 100. She stumbled onto the Master’s School for needy children, which is near Desoto State Park on Lookout Mountain. The young boys, mesmerized by her, put her up in one of the cabins on the school grounds. She lived there until her death in 1931. She was buried by Nelson at the Little River Baptist Church Cemetery, but the money she had set aside for her tombstone was stolen during her burial. Annie Young, a librarian at the DeKalb County Library in Fort Payne 1958–1985, rem- edied that in the 70s. She organized a fundraiser to finally have a tombstone erected for Granny Dollar. It reads: “Nancy Callahan ‘Granny’ Dollar 1826–1931 Daughter of the Cherokee.” I was very happy with the finished novel, and it has done very well in the two years since its release. People often ask me about the cover, wanting to know where I got a color photo of her. For that I actually used a technique on Photoshop I think I invented. Going by the actual B&W picture taken of her for the Progressive Farmer articles, I searched the internet for any matching features. I found eyes from one person, nose from another, hands, ears, hair, etc. It took about 20 pictures of dogs to recreate Buster. When it’s all pieced together, it’s just a jumbled mess. Using a tool on Photoshop called “Oil Paint,” I adjust until it all blends together. Then touch up a few rough lines, and voilà. It was quite a life lived by quite a woman. I’ll leave you with another of her quotes: “The trouble with the white race is that they lay up so much for old age that they quit work at 50 and 60 years. When they stop working, they get out of touch with nature; all wear shoes in summer which keeps them from God’s good earth; then they begin to fail, and soon they are dead.” CULLMAN COUNTY SENIOR MAGAZINE