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Hernando,
Apr 30, 2003 - HERNANDO — The courthouse Square gives the impression
that time seems to stand still, but some residents say it’s time to fix
the clock on the Square.
Proceeds from Saturday’s Celebration of Art will go toward fixing the
clock, one of the Square’s most identifiable landmarks, as well as other
beautification projects.
“(The clock) looks nice, but we’ve just had people comment that the
clock doesn’t work and needs to be fixed,” said Kathy Chatham with the
Hernando Woman’s Club, which is staging A Celebration of Art.
Organizers want tourists and visitors to feel like they are taking a
trip back in time as they step into horse-drawn carriages to ferry them
to and from venues around the Square, but they also want to send the
message that Hernando is still very much up-to-date.
That’s why fixing the clock has become a mission.
“This is going to be our first project,” said Chatham, adding that
proceeds on Saturday will also go towards brick pavers around the
square.
A silent auction will raise funds for the Historic DeSoto Foundation.
New wrought-iron garbage receptacles will also be installed in time for
the Celebration of Art in ongoing efforts to help spruce up the Square.
The clock, which stands squarely in the middle of Commerce Street, has
stood frozen in time for nearly half a decade, Chatham said. The
decorative antique wrought-iron timepiece was purchased years ago for
the city by Keith Farrell, owner of Farrell Companies. It worked for
about two years and then stopped completely.
“It’s been inoperable for a number of years,” said Brian Goff, executive
director of the Hernando Main Street/Chamber of Commerce.
“From time to time we get questions from people wondering why it doesn’t
work,” Goff said of tourists who wander in and say, ‘Gee, your clock
doesn’t work.’ ”
“It’s a battery-operated clock from what I understand,” Goff said. New
batteries were installed, only to have the clock work for about two
weeks.
Jennifer Digby, the former manager of the Hernando Chamber, said the
clock remains one of the more significant landmarks on the Square.
“It’s the best marker in town,” she said. “When people call and ask how
to get to our office, I say turn left at the clock in the middle of the
street. They say ‘You have a clock in the middle of the street?’ I tell
them they can’t miss it.”
Digby did say that the non-functioning clock was a constant source of
frustration.
“I really do wish it would work. I was disappointed when it wouldn’t,”
she said. “I think it’s a great way to mark the triangle that we have in
the Square.”
Tickets to the Celebration of Art, which begins at 5 p.m. with an art
display featuring artwork from the Artist Network of North Mississippi,
are $60 each and may be purchased from any Hernando Woman’s Club member
or the Hernando Chamber of Commerce by calling 429-6397. Major sponsors
of the event are Reeves Williams homebuilders, the Maddox Foundation and
the DeSoto Times.
A silent auction conducted by the Historic DeSoto Foundation will be
held inside the DeSoto County Courthouse. The Rene Koopman Jazz Combo
from Memphis will entertain in the Jim Seay Courtyard behind the Maddox
Foundation. Timbeaux’s on the Square is catering the event.
ROBERT LEE LONG/Community Editor
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