The McKenzie Banner Features

 

 

FEATURE FOR WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 2001 

  J. C. Popplewell celebrates his retirement after many successful years as a teacher, coach and vice-principal  
 
 
By Deborah Turner  
  
  
 
 

Coach J.C. PopplewellParents have the privilege and responsibility of holding the hands and directing the lives of their children for a little while; teachers touch the lives of many more children and hold the sacred trust of each student as well as every parent to not only teach but guide, to nurture as well as instruct, to be a role model and to care for even those who are difficult to reach.

By all accounts, J. C. Popplewell achieved the lofty goal of a true "teacher", remaining an influence in the lives of many of his students long after they have become adults.

"I enjoyed the kids that I had teaching and in basketball," says the teacher/coach/vice-principal who this past weekend celebrated his retirement with friends, parents and co-workers at Henry School when the PTO and faculty combined to honor his years of service. "I just enjoyed being around them; I still stay in contact with a lot of them, especially the basketball players. I may not see them all year but I still get Christmas cards. We had some good teams - good kids."

During the 1987-1988 school year, five years after coming to Henry School in 1982, the Henry Pirates yearbook was dedicated to Mr. Popplewell for his many worthy contributions to the school and education.

The narrative in the yearbook reads: "He is well liked and much respected by his students as well as by his peers in the educational field. He gives us his all every day in the P.E. classes he teaches. He is always there to lend a kind word, to give a little one an extra smile on their first day of school, to loan 50 cents for a coke, to encourage or just to care. Being a star basketball player in high school and at Bethel College, his coaching ability is a great asset to sports program at Henry School. His football teams have won many county championships. His basketball teams have always had super seasons even when it seemed to others to be a "growing" season. He is considered to be one of the finest coaches around... The Christian concepts are the guiding principles in and out of school. The winning of the battles of life are more important than just the winning of the game. Coach Popplewell - we salute you!"

J.C. Popplewell and wife Melinda have been married 30 years. They met at Bethel College in McKenzie when he was a star basketball player and she was a cheerleader."They would say the same thing today," stated Melinda, his wife of 30 years, without hesitation.

Lou Carter, himself a retired teacher, agrees. "He's a fine gentleman and he's been a fine example of what teaching position is all about: good character - morals - we need more people in the profession like that; good role models for students and young people."

Carter recalls that he and Popplewell attended Bethel College in McKenzie at the same time. "I watched him play basketball, then we didn't see each other for years until his son and my son were in class together. He coached my son in basketball and we became good friends over the years."

Basketball was a driving force in the life of J.C. Popplewell from an early age. He was born on December 22, 1948, growing up in the tiny town of Russell Springs, Kentucky, a town that has since grown to "about the size of McKenzie," he grins.

There was enough work to keep all six of the Popplewell children - three boys and three girls - busy on the family's dairy farm. In addition to milking cows, young J.C. drove the tractor in the performance of many tasks as the family raised all sorts of crops plus tobacco.

"All the above I have done," he said rolling his eyes as if he would rather not dwell too much upon the chores he was called upon to accomplish in his youth. When he wasn't working on the farm, he and his brothers were shooting basketball.

"There wasn't any basketball for girls in Kentucky at that time," Popplewell related, relating that it was 1975 or '76 before girls' basketball was started there. When he was a young coach at McKenzie Junior High School, girls' basketball was played half-court until around 1981.

Although he got into plenty of trouble at home for shooting basketball when his dad thought perhaps the chores weren't quite done, basketball became Popplewell's ticket to college after graduation from high school.

A star high school ball player, Popplewell was noticed by coach Doug Hines who coached Russell Springs' rival Sommerset team. When Hines came to Bethel in 1966 to coach basketball, he remembered Popplewell.

"He offered me a full ride so that's how I ended up here, fell in love, married and stayed," Popplewell grinned, summing up destiny's role in keeping him in McKenzie when his studies were done.

He had been a student and basketball player at Bethel for almost a year before he and Huntingdon native and Wildcat cheerleader, Melinda Milam, went out on their first date in the spring of 1967.

Before that time, he says, "I was busy playing ball and studying - I made good grades 'til I met her." He shifts in his chair, laughing at his joke while speculating there are professors who will agree with him on that score.

The couple dated over the next three years, graduating in June before their marriage on August 8, 1971.

Coach Popplewell, as he became known, hired on at McKenzie Junior High School, teaching science and physical education his first year at the school. For seven of ten years at the school Popplewell was the girls' basketball coach, winning the regional tournament three times in his career at McKenzie.

A game especially memorable to Melinda was the 1975 contest in which her husband led the McKenzie High School Rebel team to victory over the Trezevant High School girls in their only defeat of the season.

"The Trezevant girls' team won the state tournament that year; they only lost one game the entire season and that's when McKenzie beat them," she says, her face reflecting the excitement of the evening 26 years later.

"If they had let me go our son would be six weeks older," she insists, protesting, "Nobody would let me go! I had to sit in the rocking chair and listen to the game on the radio."

By 1980, Coach Popplewell's plate was overflowing as he coached junior high girls and boys' basketball as well as high school girls.

J.C. Popplewell and son Robin at the Bethel College Athletic Hall of Fame Induction Event."It was a little bit too much," he reflects, recalling that his son Robin was four or five years old at the time. "I was spending a lot of nights working - well, I wasn't here," he declares. "I thought I was ready to get out of coaching; I guess I thought it was time they had a change - and it was."

He left his position in the spring of 1981, taking a break from teaching by selling insurance that summer and fall before accepting a position at Henry School in January 1982.

Ironically, Popplewell's first seeds of teaching were sown at the school years earlier when he practiced his skills there as a student teacher under Mr. Horace Derrington.

Robin, then in the second grade, began riding to school with his father each morning while maintaining friends he had met in kindergarten and first grade at church and in later years playing basketball during summer breaks.

Coach Popplewell was able to coach his son in basketball during his fifth through eighth grade years, along with many other children enrolled at the school. When he graduated from the eighth grade at Henry, Robin returned to McKenzie for his high school years.

Popplewell assumed a new role at the school five years ago when he accepted the position of vice-principal.

Last year, he was inducted into Bethel College's athletic hall of fame. As Bethel's most valuable player two years in a row, Popplewell was instrumental in leading Bethel's team to victory in the VSAC (Vol State Athletic Conference) tournament in Nashville, beating teams like Union University, Lambuth University, Belmont University, University of Tennessee at Martin, LaMoyne-Owen, and Christian Brothers University.

Time has brought Coach Popplewell nearly full circle as he enters his retirement years still young and vibrant, though restricted in the participation of two of his greatest pleasures - basketball and softball - after old sports injuries flared up in two herniated disks in his back.

"Until he couldn't, he played basketball every second he could find someone to play with him, and softball all summer," says Melinda, "and in between that fishing and mowing yards."

"If I didn't have that I'd still be playing softball but I can't do it," her husband admits. Today, Coach Popplewell enjoys taking care of the couple's log home, driving his tractor in the accomplishment of bush-hogging and small-farm chores and taking care of the horses that call their barn home.

Friend Lynn Brannon, knowing how much she wanted a horse, currently keeps his 35-year-old Shetland pony at the Popplewell residence as well as a three-year-old unbroken palomino.

"I like taking care of them, watching them and feeding them. It sort of goes back to older days when I was growing up taking care of cattle, calves and all that stuff," he says, recalling as well caring for the family's mules as a boy.

Following Melinda's passion for horseback riding, the Popplewells began taking trips to the Land Between the lakes over the last five or six years where they could rent horses for rides lasting about an hour and a half.

"We haven't bought any yet, we just have good friends who let us ride when we want to," smiles Melinda.

Popplewell also enjoys walking, his long-time passion of fishing, and "playing with that grandbaby."

Now 26 years old, Robin (aquatics coordinator for the YMCA in Jackson) is married to Milan schoolteacher Tamara Popplewell. Their 18-month-old son, Davis Clay, is the apple of his grandparents' eyes.

Melinda explains that "Clay" is a name passed down through generation, with J.C.'s father being Henry Clay, J.C. representing the name James Clay, Robin 's full name being Robin Clay and little Davis continuing the tradition.

Don't try to use J.C.'s full name, however. Melinda says he doesn't answer to either James or Clay, preferring instead J. C., while she retains the privilege of calling him, affectionately, by the name of Jay.

The Popplewells are active members of Long Heights Baptist Church where he is a Sunday School teacher, currently teaching the young couples class, and Melinda is church secretary, a job she describes as her mission.

Popplewell plans to pursue part time employment while spending his free time enjoying the fruits of a life well lived.

His co-workers are his best resume in seeking out that job: "He's the easiest person I've ever worked with, not one time did I ever get frustrated with him," says Leigh Anne Durham, a fourth grade teacher now on maternity leave.

"He's a wonderful, wonderful person. He's right there for us if we need anything - kind, considerate," says second-grade teacher Betty Cate.

"I can't say anything, I'll cry," declares kindergarten teacher Sheila Cox as she rushes back to her place, offering punch to guests at the reception.

Across the room, Mr. Popplewell and Melinda smile as they greet guests in sharing what is simultaneously a beginning and an end, but is more a continuum along a path cultivated over many years into a garden of love and friendship.

 
 
archives:   06-13-01 - Desert Storm 10-year Reunion
06-20-01 - Ida Hughes
06-27-01 - Chuck Slaughter
07-04-01 - Vernon Bobo
07-11-01 - Dixie Carter Reunion
07-18-01 - Jackie Burchum
07-25-01 - Dr. A.D. Marshall
08-01-01 - Dr. C.E. Pipkin
08-08-01 - Jeff Gaia
08-15-01 - James "Bird Dog" Reed
08-22-01 - Habitat for Humanity
08-29-01 - Brown Foster turns 96
09-05-01 - It's Time for FOOTBALL!
09-12-01 - The Webb High School Story
09-19-01 - Jimmy Sinis
09-26-02 - Small Town, U.S.A.
10-03-01 - Oscar and Sara Owen
10-10-01 - Bobby Pate
10-17-01 - Dennis Trull
10-24-01 - Willard Brush
10-31-01 - Cindy Summers
11-07-01 - Eddie Moody
11-14-01 - What's Not Secret About Shriners
11-21-01 - Roberta Taylor/Johnson Temple
11-28-01 - Trezevant's Miss Agnes Bryant
12-05-01 - Cherokee Wolf Clan
12-12-01 - Mr. Paul Carroll
 

    

Phone (731) 352-3323 or Fax (731) 352-3322
washburn@mckenziebanner.com
  

   

Copyright © 2000, 2001 Tri-County Publishing. All rights reserved.