Funds
Will Help
Rebuild Baileyton
U.M.
Church
By BILL
JONES
Staff Writer
Saturday's
Baileyton Benefit Barbecue and Auction raised at least $65,000 to help rebuild the burned Baileyton
United Methodist Church, the event's chairman said on Sunday.
That total
surpasses by about $15,000 the total raised by a benefit barbecue held five years ago at Baileyton
Elementary to raise funds to rebuild the fire-destroyed Sulphur Springs United Methodist Church near
North Greene High School.
Dan Duggar, a retired Greene County educator
and member of Hardins Chapel United Methodist Church, said that while the final results won't be
known until a Sept. 23 meeting of the committee that planned the event, he is confident the final
total will surpass $65,000.
The $65,000 total, Duggar said, includes
about $20,000 that was raised by an auction of donated items that was conducted on the shady front
lawn of the school.
Volunteer auctioneer Wayne Bettis, who conducted the
auction, said more than 300 items had been donated by members of the public and businesses for the
auction.
Among the donated items was a new 42-inch plasma TV that had
been donated by the Wal-Mart Distribution Center in Midway.
"We still
have some money from advanced ticket sales that has not yet been turned in, so we think the
financial news will only get better," Duggar said.
The $65,000 total does
not include money that members of Baileyton United Methodist Church made on Saturday for the
rebuilding effort by selling ice cream and copies of their cookbook.
Ken
Bailey, Sr., a long-time member of the church, said on Saturday that church members had already sold
4,000 copies of the $18 cookbook and had just received 2,000 more copies to sell last
week.
40 Churches Involved
Duggar
praised the efforts of some 425 volunteers from approximately 40 churches that were involved in
preparing and serving Saturday's meal of beef and pork barbecue, and all the trimmings, at Baileyton
Elementary School.
"We had churches involved all the way from Bulls Gap
to Fall Branch," Duggar said. He added that some of the churches involved were so small that they
could devote only one or two volunteers. "But when we all come together as a group, it's amazing
what we can do."
He noted that a number of community volunteers who had
not been involved in planning efforts simply showed up on Saturday morning at the school and offered
their services.
More Than 5,600
Served
During a Sunday interview, Duggar reported between 5,600 and 5,900
people were fed on Saturday. He noted that some 2,800 people who had not purchased tickets in
advanced came to the school on Saturday.
Organizers had purchased 6,000
hamburger buns for the half-pound beef and barbecue sandwiches that were devoured by the thousands
on Saturday.
"We only had about 100 buns left on Saturday night," Duggar
said.
On those buns, he said, volunteers placed some 3,000 pounds of pork
barbecue and some 1,000 pounds of beef barbecue.
Served with the
barbecue, he said, were 140 gallons of baked beans prepared by volunteers at North Greene High
School and 1,400 pounds of cole slaw prepared by members of the Baileyton First Baptist
Church.
Hundreds of cakes baked by volunteers also were sliced and
served, Duggar said.
A huge refrigerated trailer that had been brought to
the scene to hold perishable items, including cakes destined for the Saturday afternoon
auction.
The meat had been cooked in time-honored fashion in underground
barbecue pits at Hardins Chapel United Methodist Church on Baileyton Road and at the Ottway Ruritan
Club on Ottway Road, Duggar said.
At those locations, volunteers from the
Hardins Chapel and Ottway Ruritan Clubs had begun preparing for the barbecue on Thursday night,
burning huge amounts of season hickory wood in the underground pits to produce the hot coals needed
to slow-cook the meat.
At Hardins Chapel, volunteers had tended the
barbecue pit fire, all Thursday night. Volunteers at the Ottway Ruritan Club had gone home at
midnight Thursday and returned at 6:30 a.m. Friday.
Began Cooking
Friday
Both clubs had placed the beef and pork in their underground pits
about 8 a.m. Friday. The meat cooked until about 8 a.m. Saturday, when it was removed, pulled from
the bone and transported to Baileyton Elementary, Duggar said.
Many
participants, he said, came through a drive-through serving line set up outside the school. Others
were served in the school's cafeteria or at an outdoor serving line that was set up beneath the
shade of massive oak trees that dot Baileyton Elementary School's front
lawn.
On-site diners ate in the school's cafeteria and at picnic tables
set up in the shade of the oak trees on the school's lawn.
A gentle
breeze that prevailed for much of the day made dining in the shade a pleasure, organizers
said.
"We got a little overwhelmed at the drive-through line on
Saturday," Duggar said. "But everyone got fed."
Among the volunteers who
worked in the hectic drive-through line on Saturday afternoon were 10 members of the Greeneville
High School Lady Devils basketball team, organizers said.
Duggar said the
benefit barbecue was scheduled to operate from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Saturday.
But cars were already lined up at the drive-through line
outside the school by 10:30 a.m. Saturday when a Greeneville Sun reporter
arrived.
Duggar said volunteers worked until about 11:30 p.m. Saturday
cleaning up the school grounds and cafeteria.
"You could hardly tell we
had been there when we left," he said.
He noted a large "roll-off
trailer" donated by Tracy Gass enabled barbecue organizers to store many items needed for the
barbecue outside the school building, freeing up space in the
cafeteria.
Duggar said a final meeting of the committee that organized
Saturday's Baileyton Benefit Barbecue, and celebratory meal, will be held on Tuesday, Sept. 23 at
Baileyton First Baptist Church.
A firm time for the meal and final
results meeting had not be set, Duggar said.