The collection of silk flowers, sun-catchers, and angels grows monthly near the Piney Chapel railroad crossing. It’s all a grieving mother can do now that she cannot give her dead son Christmas and birthday gifts.
It’s been two years since 16-year-old Dewey Standridge pulled too close to the railroad crossing on Piney Chapel Road.
A northbound CSX freight train caught the front of his pickup truck on Nov. 9, 2004, dragging the vehicle nearly a half-mile up the tracks. Standridge’s mother, Cindy Morris, says the coroner told her that her son and his 16-year-old passenger Jace Hughes were dead on impact.
Fate stole her son, now thieves are stealing the memorial she has placed near the tracks.
In recent weeks, a little boy angel trimmed in blue that Morris placed in the memorial on the 18-month anniversary of her son’s death disappeared from the makeshift memorial west of the crossing.
It sickens Morris that someone would steal from the dead, especially when she has tried to make the crossing safer—even for those who would steal from her son’s memorial.
“I have tried to get that track upgraded since my son’s death so no one will have to endure the pain I have had,” said Morris.
She said she wants to say to whomever took the ceramic angel, “Think. You crossed that deadly crossing to steal from my son’s memorial, so I am even working to protect you. I want it back.”
Morris said that if the angel was taken by someone who knew her son and wanted a memento with which to remember him, she would have gladly given them something.
On the ninth day of each month, Morris stops at the site to place a small remembrance. But every day is a reminder, because Morris crosses the tracks on Piney Chapel Road on her way to her job as a medical transcriptionist.
The pain of loss remains fresh, but the healing is made more difficult by the theft from the site.
According to the Federal Railroad Administration, there have been six crashes at the crossing, the last two involving fatalities.
Before Standridge and Hughes were killed, on Feb. 8, 2003, 19-year-old Ismael Vega of Athens died when he pulled onto the tracks in front of northbound freight train. Before that, there were at least four other non-fatal vehicle-train collisions.
The Alabama Department of Transportation identified the crossing as one of the most dangerous in the state.
A year ago, the Limestone County Commission agreed to maintain signs and pavement markings. ALDOT received a federal grant for upgrading rail crossings. CSX is replacing ties at the crossing and on both sides, as well as doing other rail bed improvements, but still there is no signal and gates.
A CSX spokeswoman referred all inquiries to ALDOT.
Curtis Vinson of the ALDOT district office in Guntersville confirmed that the crossing project is in the schedule.
“We have worked with the railroad company and the plans are completed,” said Vinson. “However, we have no overall agreement with the railroad. Once it is reached, we will come back with this project. It all depends on the agreement with the railroad. Our plans are complete.”
So, in the meantime, Morris prays that no one will meet a similar fate to her son. On a recent day at the crossing, a driver sped around a curve leading up to the east side of the track. The young driver of the pickup, slowed up a little to pass over the tracks, but she didn’t appear to glance either way down the tracks, seeming more intent on consuming the last bite of her sandwich amid the blare of her radio.
A little while later, a middle-aged driver eased up to tracks, coming nearly to a complete stop as he checked both ways for an oncoming train.
It might take maturity to avoid more deaths at the Piney Chapel crossing, but Morris said youths who pass that way might not live to mature.
“When you go through there at night and you don’t stop, you’re going to plow right into the train,” she said. “Gates will save lives.”
Homepage
Stolen angel adds to mother's heartache
- Local News
-
-
Alabama lawmakers return for 2012 regular session
Alabama legislators return to Montgomery for the 2012 regular session facing a full agenda that will include giving Alabama's toughest in the nation immigration law a tune up and balancing the budgets in what promises to be a difficult budget year.
- Alabama legislators to get gloomy budget forecasts
- Albertville school wins national recycling competition
- Thach Road house fire investigated
- School board to vote on land for Ardmore gym
- County, city OK Carpenter incentives
- MORE STORIES: Click LOCAL NEWS bar at top left
-
Alabama lawmakers return for 2012 regular session
- Today's Featured Story
-
Campaign signs are placed along Forrest Street in Athens. Officials with the city and Limestone County said candidates have few restrictions in regard to sign placement, as long as signs are not on public rights-of-way or on utility poles or other structures.
- Sports
-
-
Local teams set to host area tournaments
Athens basketball fans will get a double dose of postseason play beginning Thursday as the boys and girls teams are set to host area tournaments. Eddie Murphree’s girls team will start tournament play Thursday when they host Muscle Shoals at 7:30. The winner advances to the area championship Saturday at 7 p.m.
- SLIDESHOW: Giants beat Patriots in Super Bowl XLVI
- Giants top Pats for 2nd Super Bowl in 4 years
- Slumping Alabama trying to salvage NCAA spot
- NFL works to protect copyright, as Brady admits illegal viewing
-
Local teams set to host area tournaments
- State and Nation
-
-
Autopsy: Kids killed in WA suffered hatchet wounds
"We suspected that if he had the boys in his control, with him, and he felt the police were closing in, he was capable (of hurting them)," Cox said. "We didn't like that there was only one supervisor. Frankly, she couldn't have stopped him if he wanted to do something."
- Dave Matthews, Jack Black to headline beach fest
- Fire kills husband of missing Utah woman, 2 boys
- Iraqi war vet fatally shoots wife, himself in Florida
- Retrial starting in gambling corruption case
-
Autopsy: Kids killed in WA suffered hatchet wounds
- Lifestyle
-
-
Oregon copter pilot has knack for finding the lost
On Saturday, Rachor found three members of a Gold Beach family after they got lost while picking mushrooms.
- A mother's love: She survived cancer to stay with her family, then her heart gave out
- Local group seeks design for monument to tornado victims, survivors
- New Arrival: Goodwin family welcomes Hudson Bridges Goodwin
- Indy hosts world's biggest football party
-
- Calendar of Events
-
-
Limestone Ledger 2/7/12
THURSDAY
A Relay Rally will be held Thursday at Athens Visitors Center at 100 N. Beaty St. Meet and greet 5:30-6 p.m., meeting 6-7. Open to anyone interested in information about the Relay For Life Limestone County event May 11-12. Food available for small donation. Gifts and door prizes. Committee meeting follows at 7. Contact: Carol Morris 256-434-1039 or CarolMorrisLCA@gmail.com. - Limestone Ledger 2/5/12
-
Limestone Ledger 2/7/12
- Obituaries






