Winter Garden Magazine February 2016 - Justin & Holli Trisler | Page 13

HISTORY’S MYSTERIES A Romance For The Ages I n 1923, at the age of 10, Mae Jones relocated with her family to Winter Garden from Hartwell, Georgia. Mae was a classic graceful beauty, throughout her life she favored, and was compared to (and often mistaken for) Queen Elizabeth II. One evening in 1928, Mae went to see a film with her sister and brother-in-law, Arlie and Lewis Foxworth, at the Garden Theatre. She was wearing a yellow flapper-style dress which she had made, that draped on her frame in a lovely manner. Lewis’ friend and barber, Dock Reeves, had moved to the Winter Garden area in the early 1920’s from Hartford, Alabama. Dock had the suave and debonair look of a matinee-idol with dark wavy hair and chiseled features. By chance, he happened to attend the same showing that evening, looking charming as ever in a crisp white linen suit. The two parties ran into each other outside the theatre. When Dock saw Mae, it was love at first sight. Dock began flirting outrageously with her, vying for her attention. Mae, being the young and very coy Southern Belle that she was, acted as if she didn’t even know he was there. Later that year, and after much persuasion, Dock and Mae began a courtship which lasted for ten years. During that time, they would return during the summers to their respective hometowns, to visit with their families and friends. Mae had a beau she would visit in Hartwell, and Dock had the eye of an airline stewardess in Hartford. One summer, Mae learned of Dock’s intentions to marry the airline stewardess and became bereft. Upon both of their returns to Winter Garden, Mae approached Dock about the situation…they agreed to stop seeing their other paramours, and became engaged to be married. Dock and Mae Reeves were married in January of 1938 in the Parsonage at the Oakland Presbyterian Church. Theirs was a romantic love that lasted throughout the years, always kind and caring for one another. Dock passed away in 1984 and Mae followed him in 2007. During her lengthy widowhood, gentlemen often would ask her out – after all, she had maintained her genteel Southern Belle looks and charm over the years. Mae refused her suitors and remained committed to Dock, politely explaining she already had a husband; and although he was dead she would never stop being in love him. A true romance of the ages. Now step back to the magical moment of their meeting at the Garden Theatre when Mae was wearing the yellow dress. The Theatre itself had closed back in 1963 and was used as storage for many years. In the 2000’s, the theatre was restored and then reopened in 2008. At the night of the Grand Opening Gala, as guests entered the beautifully renovated room, a spotlight lit one item on an otherwise bare stage – the actual yellow dress which Mae had worn that fateful evening back in 1928. The Garden Theatre teaches its staff and volunteers to provide magical “yello