Year In Review North Escambia’s Biggest Stories Of 2010: July, August
December 29, 2010
NorthEscambia.com is looking back at 2010 with our “Year in Review” series. Each day this week, we will review the biggest stories of 2010. Today, we take a look at the biggest stories of July and August.
(For January and February, click here.)
(For March and April, click here.)
(For May and June, click here.)
JULY
Qualifying ended for three seats on the Century Town Council, with Gary Riley reelected with no opposition. Council member Sharon Scott did not run again for her seat.
Retired Northview High School, and former Century, coach Lorenzo Jones was hired as a teacher at Escambia County Middle School in Atmore.
Former Century resident Buck Showalter was named the new manager of the Baltimore Orioles.
Jay Hospital employees and affiliated physicians recognized C. David Smith, M.D., for 30 years of dedicated service.
Community leader Jack Moran of Century passed away in late July. He was 68.
The end of July was hot — with heat indexes at or just above 110 degrees.
Florida House District 1 candidate Ricky Perritt was arrested on drug trafficking charges by the Santa Rosa County Sheriff’s Office.
Accusations were flying between two local candidates over a video that shows one stealing his opponent’s campaign signs. Republican State Congressional District 1 candidate Greg Brown, Jr.and his wife Jennifer were videotaped as they removed campaign signs belonging to opponent Doug Broxson
Rhianna Marie Jones, 30, of California, and Jerry Hover Tinsley, 30, of North Carolina, admitted in federal court that they robbed banks in Flomaton, East Brewton and Florala during a March crime spree.
The Northwest Escambia 11-12 year old softball team ended their season in Fort Myers as the Florida Little League Section 1 Champions.
Tropical Storm Bonnie fizzled south of Pensacola, bringing just a few scattered showers to the Panhandle.
Scott Joseph Thompson was sentenced to life in prison for the murder of Cheryl Cain, the Cantonment woman whose body was found in a Pensacola dumpster in March, 2009.
Construction workers, teachers, bankers, business owners, high school students, ordinary people — over 100 people from all walks of life volunteered their time and skills to make Jennifer Dorriety’s dream of home ownership a reality as an Escambia County Habitat for Humanity Home was dedicated in Nokomis.
For the first time since April, BP stopped the flow of oil in the Gulf of Mexico in mid-July.
An officer-involved shooting in Pensacola claimed the life of Clifton Salter of Cottage Hill.
Northview High School Assistant Principal Michael Sherrill was promoted to assistant principal at Pine Forest High School. Sherri Mims, who was a reading lab teacher at Ernest Ward Middle School, was promoted to assistant principal at Ferry Pass Middle School.
Tens of thousands of people — including many from the North Escambia area — packed the beach in Gulf Shores, Alabama, for a free Jimmy Buffett concert as thousands watched on national television.
In July, Century Town Council member Henry Hawkins has voted against spending $600 so that a $1.1 million grant drainage project could move forward — the second time he had voted against spending a few hundred dollars on the project.
Phillip Arnold, 65, was charged in the murder of Angela Brown, 44, and her unborn child on South Chipper Road.
AUGUST
A Flomaton traffic crash claimed the life of four people — two instantly and two in the following days that died from their injuries.
Royce Ward of Walnut Hill passed away at 78. Ward was a longtime member of the Walnut Hill Ruritan Club and served as the group’s president when the club organized the Walnut Hill Volunteer Fire Department in 1965.
Jay Mayor Kurvin Qualls won re-election by a single vote over challenger Ben Hudson. 72-71.
Sen. Greg Evers, R-Baker, defeated fellow Republican Mike Hill in the August Republican primary for Senate District 2. There was no Democratic candidate, but Evers would face write-in and Tea Party opponent in November.
Deborah Ray (pictured) was named the new assistant principal at Northview High School.
Former Escambia County Sheriff’s Office employee Cathy Lister, 58, was sentenced to 15 years in prison for stealing $1.3 million from the department.
Paul Edward Black, a former Century Correctional Institution sergeant, was sentenced to 40 months in federal prison for possession of child pornography.
The Escambia County School Board approved the daily used of drug dogs in the county’s public schools.
Leslie Gonzalez was hired as the new town clerk in Century.
The first day of school was a hot one at Northview High School after the air conditioning failed.
Molino’s new Dollar General store opened in August with over 12,000 square feet of general merchandise.
Donald Freeman, 49, was found dead next to Highway 29 in McDavid. Foul play was not suspected.
T.R. Miller High School Principal Donald Rotch was killed when his vehicle was hit head-on by a man fleeing Brewton Police in a high-speed chase.
2010’s Best Photos: May, June
December 28, 2010
All this week, we are looking back at some of our favorite and most interesting photos of 2010. Today, we are featuring photos from May and June.
(For January and February, click here.)
(For March and April, click here.)
June 23, 2010. It was the day that the World’s Whitest Beaches were no more. It was the day that the oil began to wash onto the shores of Pensacola Beach. It was the day the sands were stained black with oil; it was the day the tears of the locals stained the remaining sugar white sand.
A month after being found unresponsive and floating face down in a North Escambia pool, Maggie Scott, 3, was fully recovered.
Firefighters battle a barn fire near Bratt. The fire was believed to have been started by lightning.
A rare site: A passenger train travels through North Escambia during May as part of a railway group’s tour.
Northview and West Florida met in a Spring football game.
The Ernest Ward Middle School Drama Team reenacted the raising of the flag on Iwo Jima during Atmore’s Veterans Day Parade.
Brothers Victor and Austin Beck remember Billy G. Beck III during a memorial service on Pensacola Beach. Beck was struck by at least three vehicles while walking on Chemstrand Road.
Fishing boats sit idle at Joe Patti Seafood in Pensacola following the Deepwater Horizon oil spill.
A train caboose in Flomaton was moved from the town’s park to the Flomaton Area Railroad Museum.
The 36th annual Pen Wheels Fishing Rodeo was held in Walnut Hill, providing free fishing for disabled persons.
Joshua Herring, 23, of Pensacola was killed in this single vehicle accident on Pine Barren Road.
President Barack Obama defended his administration’s efforts in response to the Gulf of Mexico oil spill during a visit to the Florida Panhandle in June.
Dozens of children took part in the Summer Reading Series at the Century Branch Library.
Over 4,000 people braved the sweltering heat to attend the second annual Blueberry Jamboree Saturday at the Barrineau Park Community Center.
Oil boom stretches into Pensacola Bay in June.
Escambia County Sheriff’s Office Narcotics Unit agents question the occupants of a home on Highway 4A after serving a search warrant.
Escambia County Sheriff’s Office Sgt. Wes Brown throws a lasso at a horse during the execution of a search warrant at the Highway 97 property.
130 members of the Northview High School Class of 2011 graduated in early June.
A K-9 team searches for a burglary suspect in Molino in early June.
Escambia County Sheriff’s Office Narcotics Division Investigators Rene Reguindin (left) and Heath Jackson (right) perform field tests on a suspected active meth lab found in Davisville.
Year In Review North Escambia’s Biggest Stories Of 2010: May, June
December 28, 2010
NorthEscambia.com is looking back at 2010 with our “Year in Review” series. Each day this week, we will review the biggest stories of 2010. Today, we take a look at the biggest stories of May and June.
(For January and February, click here.)
(For March and April, click here.)
MAY
A 48-year old McDavid woman died after being found floating face down in the Escambia River near McDavid.
Gas prices were up for Memorial Day travel.
A three-year old girl was found floating faced down in a pool in the Bay Springs community. She later made a full recovery.
A new Dollar General store was announced for Molino.
Tate High School’s Mock Trial Team was honored by the Escambia County Commission for winning state in the Florida High School Mock Trial Competition tournament and placing in the National High School Mock Trial Championship.
Longtime educator and Escambia County School Board member Peter R. (Pete) Gindl, Sr. of Barrineau Park passed away in mid-May.
An 11-year old boy faced a third degree felony charge of carrying a concealed weapon and a first degree misdemeanor charge of improperly exhibiting a firearm after he allegedly pulled an unloaded gun at Bradberry Park in Walnut Hill.
May brought a bit of disappointing news for movie fans in the area as Movie Gallery announced the closure of all of their stores, including Cantonment, Atmore and Flomaton.
Over 4,000 people applied for oil spill recover jobs during a hiring event, including hundreds that applied in Century.
Nearly 500 elementary school students took part in the annual Sunshine Math Competition held at Tate High School, including many from North Escambia.
Hundreds attended the annual Old Fashioned Day in Jay.
A Florida High School Athletic Association committee gave preliminary approval to creating a new division for for small, rural schools like Northview and Jay. Schools in the rural division would compete within their own division and have their own playoff series for boys and girls basketball, baseball, football, softball and girls volleyball.
The North Pensacola Relay for Life was held at Tate High School with over 1,000 people taking part.
JUNE
FCAT scores were released in June, with Northview, Tate, Ernest Ward and Ransom recording some of the highest scores in the county at some levels.
The Century Town Council held a public workshop to decide if a local man was operating a junkyard on his residential property and if what he claimed to do for a living was a business — all part of the process to determine if the council would vote to change the rezoning on his property to commercial.
Alex, the first tropical storm of the season, entered the Gulf of Mexico and later made landfall in Mexico.
June 23 — It was the day that the World’s Whitest Beaches were no more. It was the day that the oil began to wash onto the shores of Pensacola Beach. It was the day the sands were stained black with oil; it was the day the tears of the locals stained the remaining sugar white sand.
he Northview High School FFA’s Food For America program was named the best in Florida during the 82nd Florida FFA State Convention in Orlando.
The first health advisories for Escambia County’s beaches were issued June 23 due to the oil spill.
Escambia County deputies were called to a late night bash at the Century Community Center, four months after the Town Council said it would review its rental policy for the building.
Robert Grant Piehl was sentenced to 20 years in state prison after being found guilty of shooting into an elderly woman’s home in a dispute over $40 in fake crack cocaine.
Robin Brownie Floyd, 53, and Lynn Livingston Floyd, 43, both of Gilmore Road, Century, were both found guilty on seven of eight charges of confinement of animals without sufficient food or water.
The Barrineau Park 4-H Club was honored as the oldest continuing 4-H Club in Florida.
The International Paper plant in Cantonment was shut down for about two hours due to a fire in a powerhouse. There were no injuries.
Former Flomaton Police Chief Harold L. Stewart passed away in June from injuries he received in a May traffic accident in Century.
Over 4,000 people braved the sweltering heat to attend the second annual Blueberry Jamboree Saturday at the Barrineau Park Community Center.
There were 130 graduates in the Northview High School Class of 2010, while 75 graduated from Jay.
Former Century Town Council member Marie McMurray passed away. She was 84.
Year In Review North Escambia’s Biggest Stories Of 2010: March, April
December 27, 2010
NorthEscambia.com is looking back at 2010 with our “Year in Review” series. Each day this week, we will review the biggest stories of 2010. Today, we take a look at the biggest stories of March and April.
(For January and February, click here.)
MARCH
A fight at Ernest Ward Middle School during afternoon dismissal ended with a bus driver in the hospital and seven students arrested. The fight began between two students on a bus and escalated into an affray in the parking lot involving a small number of students. Several school staff members and bus drivers tried to stop the fight, and several of them were struck by students. (Pictured top)
After 27 years in law enforcement — 22 of those in North Escambia — Byrneville resident Randy Murph retired from the Escambia County Sheriff’s Office.
The Northview Chiefs baseball team finished March with perfect district record.
Escambia County (Fla.) Sheriff’s Office investigator Heath Jackson announced that he was running for sheriff in Escambia County, Alabama.
Allie Bryan from Northview High School and Leely Trevino from Jay High School were named winners in the Escambia River Electric Cooperative 2010 Youth Tour to Washington contest.
Two unrelated fires damaged two different homes a mile apart on Arthur Brown Road in Walnut Hill within about an hour. Both fires were apparently accidental.
Antonio Demetrius Ewing, then 19, was sentenced to 10 years in prison on charges related to a crime spree in which he robbed the Molino Tom Thumb, stole tires in Century to fix a flat on the getaway car and then escaped from deputies after he was arrested.
March brought Opening Day to the Molino Ballpark and Bradberry Park.
Northview’s Misty Doran had the school’s first no-hitter in more than a half dozen years as the Lady Chiefs shut out Ponce De Leon 10-0.
About 600 elementary school students from schools from Byrneville and Bratt to Pensacola Beach attended the annual “Food for America” program at Northview High School. About 800 people total either attended or worked with the program.
The Escambia County Commission approved rezoning a piece of property on Highway 97 so that a Molino man can move in a mobile home for his son. Bennie Hassebrock told commissioners that he has tried for four years to get approval for a mobile home on the property, which he said had been in his family for over 60 years.
The Century Town Council voted to not rely on their engineer to prioritize street resurfacing projects. Instead, council members were to create their own list — a process the mayor thinks might be too political.
It was announced in March that Ernest Ward Middle School would be the home of an electrical academy, the first such program in the nation.
In March, Census forms began arriving in mailboxes in the North Escambia area, and local officials saud it is very important that forms be returned. In Century, the mayor said he was especially hopeful that residents would respond for federal funding for the town.
Over 1,100 food-containing Buckets of Hope were donated by North Escambia area residents to help the victims of the Haiti earthquake at the First Baptist Church of Cantonment as well as the First Baptist Church of Bratt, area schools and other drop-off points.
The State of Florida approved a permit for International Paper in Cantonment to reroute their wastewater discharge from Eleven Mile Creek to an existing 1,400 acre wetland area owned by IP that includes Tee and Wicker Lakes west of Saufley Field.
Bertha Y. Wright faced a long list of drug charges after being accused of passing fraudulent prescription at a Century pharmacy while deputies found a stash of prescription drugs in her car.
United Bank in Flomaton was robbed by a male and female suspect. There were no injuries.
The Town of Century’s gas consultant told the town council that the town was being a good steward of its gas department, despite claims of faulty equipment leading to abnormally high bills.
APRIL
On April 20, the Deepwater Horizon oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico exploded, with the well free-flowing for three months.
Work was completed at the end of April on a $480,159 drainage project on Highway 29 in Century, and all four lanes of traffic were once again flowing without interruption for the first time in seven months.
The Northview Lady Chiefs ended the best season ever for the Chiefs at the Regional tournament.
Century heritage was celebrated during the annual Sawmill Day.
The 2010 Escambia County Farm Tour took to the roads of North Escambia as well over 100 county, city and state leaders joined leaders from the agricultural community on a tour of agricultural locations across the area.
Former state Senator and Representative Thomas “Tom” Tobiassen died at his Cantonment during the month of April.
There was no more waiting for report cards, progress reports or searching book bags for graded tests for parents of students of Ernest Ward Middle School and Northview High School when the schools joined a pilot program to allow parents to access grades online.
There are new hurricane evacuation zones in Escambia County were announced that reached inland all the way to the North Escambia area.
Grammy award winner Marty Raybon performed during the first Northview FFA Alumni Bluegrass Festival in Bratt. He was joined by Delta Reign and the Dog River Boys.
The faithful celebrated Easter with Sunrise Services held across the area.
Calling themselves the “SWANS”, a group of young ladies at Northview High School collected prom dresses that were made available to any Northview girl headed to prom that needed a dress, no questions asked.
Former Northview High School offensive coordinator Mark Heaton was named the new head football coach at Escambia County High School in Atmore.
Area residents mourned the loss of William C. America of Atmore, a man that made history as the first black member elected to the Escambia County (Ala.) Commission. He was 77.
2010’s Best Photos: March, April
December 27, 2010
All this week, we are looking back at some of our favorite and most interesting photos of 2010. Today, we are featuring photos from March and April.
(For January and February, click here.)
A student is taken into custody after a dismissal time fight at Ernest Ward Middle School ended with seven students arrested and sent a bus driver to the hospital.
Notice the tag on this car that burned on Highway 4 east of Northview High School — “I’m Spending My Kids Inheritance”.
A firefighter watches as Lifeflight lifts off from Highway 29 near Bogia Road after a March wreck.
The beginning of a long journey — the 2010 Law Enforcement Torch Run in support of Florida Special Olympics started in Century.
Taking a swing during Opening Day of Northwest Escambia play at Bradberry Park.
A Molino man died when he flipped his truck off a bridge in Jacks Branch.
Deputies investigate the armed robbery of a Molino convenience store.
Federal agent raided an Atmore tax return and check cashing business during March.
An Ernest Ward Middle School track meet.
April showers forced Relay for Life events in Atmore and Century (above) to move indoors.
The Northview Lady Chiefs celebrate after winning the District 1-2A championship.
Northview Head Coach Sammy Day is showered with ice water after the Lady Chief’s district win.
Grammy award winner Marty Raybon performs during the first Northview FFA Alumni Bluegrass Festival.
Escambia Sheriff David Morgan discusses North Escambia gangs in an exclusive NorthEscambia.com interview.
A juvenile eagle was released by Dorothy Kaufmann, director of the Wildlife Sanctuary of Northwest Florida, in Enon near Walnut Hill.
Photo: Beam Of Light
December 27, 2010
Sunday evening’s sunset provided an interesting display across the North Escambia area with a fiery red beam shooting straight up. NorthEscambia.com photo, click to enlarge.
Year In Review North Escambia’s Biggest Stories Of 2010: January, February
December 26, 2010
NorthEscambia.com is looking back at 2010 with our “Year in Review” series. Each day this week, we will review the biggest stories of 2010. Today, we take a look at the biggest stories of January and February.
JANUARY
A fire along the Alabama-Florida line claimed the life of Verda Mae Gandy Abrams, 91. Abrams was unable to escape the blaze at her home on Tulip Street.
Two campers cut off by a rising Escambia River near Molino were rescued at the end of the month — a week after they were stranded.
North Escambia resident Elmira Gandy Crapps turned 103, with congratulations pouring in from friends, family and political leaders.
Thoughts of Spring were in the air as ball registration ended for Century Little League, the Molino Recreation Association and Northwest Escambia Little League.
The battle over consolidation for Escambia County, the City of Pensacola and the City of Century continued, with Pensacola voicing opposition in late January and words flying between opposing groups. The plan was presented to the public — a 45-page, 14,426 word document.
Two Jay High School teachers entered no contest pleas to charges that they had inappropriate sexual relationships with underage students at the school.
History came alive through the eyes of students at Ernest Ward Middle School as they displayed weeks of work on projects for National History Day.
A rabies alert that had been in effect for North Escambia for five months expired in January. The alert was issued after several people came into contact with rabid animals.
Angel Mitchell was crowned Miss Northview High School for 2010 in front of a sellout crowd in the school’s theater. First Runner-Up was junior Caitlyn Brown, and Second Runner-Up was Sarah Killam, a junior.
The director of the West Florida Library asked the public to push our local legislative delegation to work to fund a new library in Molino.
January brought good new for Alabama Power customers — rates were headed down. But not for Gulf Power customers — rates were headed up.
Hail, flooding and a few power outages were reported as strong storms moved across the North Escambia area.
The State Attorney’s Office launched a review into the county commission’s rebid process and a meeting between a contractor and Commissioner Gene Valentino. It stemmed from a rebid of a Maplewoods drainage project and meetings around Roads, Inc, the second place bidder.
About 200 health kits were on their way from Molino to Haiti, thanks to the hard work of Aldersgate United Methodist Church and generosity of the North Escambia community.
North Escambia residents were applying in January for Census jobs that paid up to $15 per hour.
Many of Escambia County’s 128 bridges are wooden or have wooden supports, and many are 50 to 70 years old. Eleven are classified as “structurally deficient” and seven are classified as “functionally obsolete”. In January, Escambia County began to look for $96.6 million to replace 103 of those bridges — including 50 bridges in North Escambia — within the next 10 years.
Lows dipped into the teens in January, with local utilities like Escambia River Electric Cooperative setting all-time records for energy demands. Hundreds of families were left in the dark when the high demand caused electric failures.
The No. 1 ranked Alabama football team beat No. 2 Texas in the BCS National Championship game, played in the Rose Bowl, 37-21, winning the 13th national title in school history and first since 1992. With the win, head coach Nick Saban became the fifth coach to bring a national championship to the Capstone.
The Town of Century decided that roads in the town were in terrible shape, and they started worked to develop a priority list for resurfacing some of those streets.
FEBRUARY
Snow! From just a dusting to several inches, February brought record snowfall to the area. NorthEscambia.com published hundreds of reader submitted snow pictures, including this snowman family.
Robert Franklin Floyd, 21, of Jay, was charged with an open count of murder and three counts of attempted murder for the shooting and killing Getyron Lopez Benjamin, 18, of Brewton at a home outside Jay.
Work began in February on a project to resurface 22 miles of Highway 97 between Molino and the Alabama state line, while construction continued on Highway 29 in Century.
Governmental consolidation in Escambia County was pronounced dead. The local legislative delegation failed to send the Escambia County Consolidation Study Commission plan toward a referendum or delay action until 2012. That effectively killed consolidation.
The Minority Culture Club at Northview High School celebrated Black History Month during the program “Striving to Help Those In Need”. The students reflected upon the devastation from the earthquake in Haiti, and encouraged Northview students to donate toward the relief effort.
Hundreds of people attended the annual Walnut Hill Ruritan Club Farm Equipment auction. The auction included not only farm equipment, but household items like tools and small equipment, lawn and garden items and more
Two volunteer firefighters from Cantonment were called heroes after jumping into the cold waters of Jacks Branch to save a woman from a submerged vehicle.
Liberty Counsel announced that it planned to sue the Santa Rosa County School District to allow prayer in the county’s schools. The announcement came a day after a federal judge barred the Christian organization from seeking to overturn a consent decree requiring school officials in Santa Rosa County to stop promoting their personal religious beliefs in public schools.
One Century council member said that faulty equipment was to blame for citizens receiving high gas bills in February, while the town’s mayor says the problem was simple — two weeks of sub-freezing overnight lows in January.
The Town of Century’s dreams of resurfacing every street in town were brought back down to an expensive reality in February with a cost estimate from the town’s engineer — $4.5 million.
The Ernest Ward Middle School cheerleaders were named the third best in the nation in their division in the Universal Cheerleaders Association national championships in Orlando in February.The Northview High School Competition Cheerleaders placed eighth in their division.
An elderly Cantonment man was found safe, about 21 hours after he was reported missing following a funeral in Alabama. Clyde Rufus Carroll, 78, was located at about north of Butler Street in Escambia County, Alabama, about 20 miles from Wallace where he was last seen.
Dylan Barnhill, 4, died as the result of a house fire in Atmore.
Jody Posey of Bratt was sentenced to life in prison for sexually abusing a five-year old North Escambia girl.
A Cantonment church spearheaded a countywide project to provide hope to the families of Haiti, one white 5-gallon bucket of food at a time. It was called “Buckets of Hope”, a program of the Florida Baptist Convention’s Florida Disaster Relief program. The concept was simple — fill a clean 5-gallon bucket with beans, rice, sugar, flour, cooking oil and other essentials to help earthquake victims.
Over 5,000 pieces of 80-foot long steel pipe were unloaded from railroad cars in Walnut Hill and transported through Atmore and surrounding communities by truck, part of a $2.46 billion Florida Gas Transmission Company project to expand its natural gas pipe system to meet the growing energy needs of the Gulf Coast and Florida.
Featured Recipe: Slow Cooker Dr. Pepper Pork
December 26, 2010
This weekend’s featured recipe from Janet Tharpe is a “Slow Cooker Dr. Pepper Pork”, a simple toss it all into the Crock-pot and forget it for five hours perfect pork.
To print today’s “Just a Pinch” recipe column, you can click the image below to load a printable pdf with a recipe card.
2010’s Best Photos: January And February
December 26, 2010
All this week, we are looking back at some of our favorite and most interesting photos of 2010. Today, we are featuring photos from January and February.
Our favorite snow picture from February, 2010: Bethel UMC on Highway 21 near I-65.
It was COLD in January. The photo above shows a cup of hot coffee sitting on a frozen pool.
First Runner-Up Caitlyn Brown, Miss Northview High School Angel Mitchell, Second Runner-Up Sarah Killam.
A Pinewood Derby at the First Baptist Church of Bratt.
Second Runner-Up Morgan Ward, First Runner-up Kaitlyn Abbot, Junior Miss EWMS Allison Woodfin and Third Runner-up Mariah Albritton.
Residents gathered in Century to remember Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Rachel, Zachary, Austin and Cody in front of an icy scene in Cantonment.
FEBRUARY
The Ernest Ward Middle School FFA presented the second annual “Golden Cow Dung Award” to Family & Consumer Science teacher Kathy Ellis.
A Cantonment driver crashed through the guardrail on this bridge over Jacks Branch, crashing about 25 feet into the water below. She was evaluated on scene by EMS but not transported to the hospital.
February snow in Atmore.
February snow at Little River State Park.
This group, including some North Escambia residents, built “FROSTYKONGZILLA” in Uriah, Alabama.
The driver of this truck was not seriously injured in a collision with a train in Flomaton, Alabama.
Bratt native Candi Pearson-Shelton was among friends, family and fans with a concert and book tour stop in Atmore.
Our photo of a mystery object glowing in the woods of Bluff Springs gained a little national attention. Deputies and firemen unable to identify the object from outside the woods and followed protocol. The object was not an alien probe as some news organizations theorized, but rather a mosquito trap.
NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.
Christmas Wishes Really Do Come True
December 25, 2010
Christmas wishes do come true. The Bush family’s Christmas wish last year was simple — a cure for Olivia.
We first introduced you to Olivia Bush, 7, in December 2009 in a story titled “A Christmas Wish: A Cure For Olivia”.
Olivia Bush’s story started July 22, 2003, almost four months before there should have been a first chapter in her life. Born at just 22 weeks, she weighed only one pound six ounces. She stayed in the NICU three and half months, defying doctors and coming home two weeks before her due date. Olivia is the second youngest baby to ever survive at Sacred Heart Hospital.
Now, she is blind, able to see just a little light with her left eye. And she suffered frequent seizures — until a portion of her brain was removed in February of this year at Miami Children’s Hospital. During the surgery, doctors removed a seven centimeter portion of her brain — basically taking out the bad, non-functioning portion and leaving behind the good, healthy tissue.
This Christmas, Olivia has been seizure free for a year.
“What better of a Christmas present could we ask for? It has been such a wonderful year! We have been able to just enjoy Olivia and not worry,” mom Amber Bush said on Olivia’s CaringBridge page. “I am so thankful that God put in our hearts to try Miami and just see if they could offer anything else to us. I am also thankful that God saw fit to take the seizures away!”
To read some of our previous stories about Olivia, click below.
- Miracle Girl, Miracle League (Oct. 18, 2010)
- Olivia’s Story: The Littlest Girl’s Biggest Birthday (July 25, 2010)
- Olivia Heading Home To North Escambia After Brain Surgery (Feb. 13, 2010)
- Olivia’s Super Sunday In Miami (Feb. 7, 2010)
- A Christmas Wish: A Cure for Olivia (Dec. 4, 2009)
Pictured: Olivia Bush’s 2010 Christmas photo.