Located in downtown Corinth, Waits Jewelry and Fine Gifts
has been in operation since before the turn of the 20th Century. Opened in 1892, the jewelry store is housed in
a building constructed about 1870. A former saloon and later a post office, the
building retains many features of its original design, including cast iron
cornices and pressed-metal ceilings. As interesting as the historic structure
is, however, the story of the jewelry store’s original owner is even better.
James Waits, a
native of Alabama and a Confederate soldier, was stationed in Corinth during the war.
Captured and sent to prison, he returned to Corinth after the
war ended and opened a watch shop at the corner of Fillmore and Waldron
Streets. In time, the watch shop turned into a jewelry business and Waits
purchased the store on Fillmore in 1892. In 1873, James E. Gift, who had been a private
in Co. M, 5th Ohio Cavalry during the Civil War, also moved to Corinth
and went to work for James Waits. A watchmaker, Gift was apparently a very good
businessman (or at least made timely investments), as he would later become
president of the Corinth Bank and Trust Company and the Alcorn Electric Light
Company. When James Waits died, Gift continued to operate the jewelry store and
married his partner’s widow, Ada.
Born to James and Ada Waits was a son, Ernest Farris
(E.F.) Waits. Waits was also a jeweler and a watchmaker, but he was so much more than
that. A man with boundless energy and
curiosity, he was an inventor who pushed the boundaries of early 20th
Century technology. He might be considered Corinth’s Ben Franklin. In 1902, E.F. Waits was appointed as a weather
reporter for the U.S. Government and worked on perfecting a set of instruments
for determining atmospheric conditions. A
few years later, he built a wireless radio station. Operating from the upper
story of the jewelry store, Waits’ wireless station was the third largest in
the United States at the time and could reach up to 2,000 miles (he was able,
in fact, to communicate to ocean-going vessels).
In 1910, Waits
built an airplane. The type of plane he
built was a Demoiselle Monoplane, a small single-engine, single-person craft. Max Wessner, a
former professional wrestler, copied the design of the plane from newspaper
pictures and convinced Waits to back him financially and technically in
building the machine on the third floor of a drug store next to the jewelry
store. The result was the first known
airplane built below the Mason-Dixon Line.
According to a contemporary news account, “After the completion of the
machine it was carried to a field two miles south of the city where the first
hop was made in it...many spectators were present. Mr. Waits climbed into the
cock-pit and gave the word to ‘shove off.’
The little plane slowly rose into the air and soared about 100 feet,
coming down in a tree top.” Waits was injured in the affair but recovered in
time and continued to fly. Warning its readers about the possibility of seeing
the flying machine about town, the paper wrote that “if you should see a
monstrous-sized bat-like thing sailing far overhead, don't be scared into a
conniption fit, but just remember that it is Mr. Waits or Mr. Weesner out
enjoying a few whiffs of pure altitudinous air." The next year, Waits and
Weesner took the plane to St. Louis, where it was displayed at a national
exhibit.
Because of his interest in flying, Waits was close friends
with Roscoe Turner, Corinth’s famous aviator (more about him in another blog).
Turner flew Waits’ Demoiselle on several occasions and even visited Waits’
store with his pet lion Gilmore. Gilmore was given to Turner (seen here together) as an advertising
gimmick by the Gilmore Oil Company. When the lion died in 1952, he was stuffed
and mounted in Turner’s home. The lion’s remains were later sent to the
Smithsonian, where Gilmore remains in storage. E.F. Waits also built an x-ray machine in the
upstairs of his jewelry store, one of the few x-ray machines in the South at
the time, and he patented an optometric device.
Because of his knowledge of clocks and watches, he was given the job of
keeping the town’s clock in working order, and the official time was based on
Mr. Waits’ store clock. For his official clock-keeping duty, he was paid the
sum of $25 annually. Aside from being an inventor, Waits was an artist and
painted several scenes of the changing seasons above the showcases in his
store. The hand-painted murals are still on display. He also organized a group
called the Sea Scouts in 1932. Composed of Eagle Scouts, the group managed to
build a boat at a local lumber company and then launched it in the Tennessee
River at Shiloh. One of his Sea Scouts –
a Mr. Cleburne Wiggington - was a member of Waits’ wedding party in 1934. The
bride, Miss Eugenia Lynch, had worked at the jewelry store for four years
before the two were married.
E.F. Waits died just four years later, and Eugenia took
over operation of the store. For many years thereafter, she faithfully
maintained the store as it was when her husband ran it, including the painted
scenery. Serving generations of customers, Mrs. Waits worked at the store from
1926 to 2002, a total of 76 years. By keeping the memory of her husband alive
and maintaining the store as he had, Waits Jewelry and Fine Gifts is a treasure
trove of history. Operated since 2006 by Sandy and Rosemary Williams following
a renovation of the building, the Waits store continues to be a part of Corinth’s
history and heritage.
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