Texas, I Love Yew

July 14, 2015 By: Juanita Jean Herownself Category: Uncategorized

From customer Richard, we get this information —

Did I ever tell you about the sewer-pipe crosses of Clarendon? Clarendon is a town of almost 2,000 people between Amarillo and Wichita Falls on US 287. Someone there discovered that crosses can be made from PVC pipe, not ordinary water pipe, but 5 inch sewer pipe, and that led to this:

(Click the little ones to see the big ones.)

spcross1

 

This one is on the main drag (US 287) in front of a locally owned pharmacy. In the background you can see the one in front of the Family Dollar store. There are approximately 50 similar crosses on US287 within the city limits, and another dozen or more outside the city. Here is one at the Sonic Drive-in.

spcross2

 

And in threes for saving the souls of dead gophers I suppose.

three crosses

 

And in front of homes …

205

 

And in pastures.

215

 

Just so there’s no mistaking, Clarendon, Texas, makes sure that directly under the welcome from the Chamber of Commerce, there’s a Jesus warning.

WEB-pic-sign3

 

Welcome to Clarendon. You’re going to hell.

I don’t know about you people from foreign states, but in Texas religious symbols made with sewer pipes is pretty much considered normal.

It’s to remind you that Jesus doesn’t put up with your crap.

Thanks to Richard for the heads up.

Be social and share!

0 Comments to “Texas, I Love Yew”


  1. Up here in the North country, we have “Our Lady of the Bathtub” statues, inverted bathtubs with a statue of Mary inside, sort of looks like a shrine, very popular here.

    You are not alone.

    1
  2. Seems like the sort of thing that Andres Serrano would have done back in the day and Christians would be up in arms about.

    2
  3. san fraser says:

    Juanita Jean, I love Yew! Last week A “lady”shouted that question to me in a crowd, and seemed surprise when I replied as loudly, “not with YOU, I hope ” She lost a bit of her warm fuzzy at the thought.

    3
  4. Cheryl Ann says:

    One of the things about living in this wackadoodle state is you take stuff like this as normal. A friend came from San Francisco and was shocked by the messages in chain link fences made by sticking paper cups in the holes. Never occurred to me that was odd, and she thought that made it even funnier. She took a lot of pictures.

    4
  5. W. C. (Pete) Peterson says:

    A West Virginia friend of mine once said that three crosses grouped together was a sing that a Klan Rally was being planned for that location. I guess there may be some truth to that, judging from the number of crosses in Clarendon.

    5
  6. Kinda like in the community in which I grew up, where the ma ‘n’ pa corner store had a little “funny” unapologetic sign that said “In G*d we Trust, everybody else pays cash”.

    6
  7. They used the right material, as what else would BS flow thru if not a sewer pipe??

    7
  8. Marcia in CO says:

    Love your comeback, San Fraser … snappy without being nasty! LOL

    I think when there is an overabundance of crosses, then folks must have lost the simple significance of the one true cross!!

    8
  9. Just think, if Jesus had come in the last century, those folks would have electric chairs all over the place. (Seriously, the cross was an instrument of prolonged and agonizing execution….)

    9
  10. Celebrating death and suffering 24/7/365 is the “christian’s” way of life in America.

    10
  11. Sandridge says:

    OOooohhhh Lawd won’t yew buy me twenty feet of PVCeee…

    (apologies to Janice J)

    11
  12. lunargent says:

    Holy Crap!

    I know, I know – but hey, somebody had to say it.

    12
  13. daChipster says:

    daMrs and I sometimes go driving around for fun, and sometimes for visiting, and sometimes just to take the long way home on a road we’ve never travelled before.

    So we were in the car this past weekend, and I noticed something similar, out amongst the rurals here in Ohio. These were small white crosses, about 1 foot to 18 inches high, very uniform in appearance and construction, near driveways, mostly. Or the dirt track they call a driveway, up to the ramshackle doublewide.

    Their size, simplicity and lack of dead flowers or deflated mylar balloons convinced me they weren’t roadside markers for traffic fatalities, unless, I thought, maybe your dog or cat now gets a cross? Or there’s a Christian Possum Society praying for roadkill?

    Now, it turns out, I find that there is a movement – or perhaps several diverse movements, coalescing – called Cross (or Crosses) Across America. As you can probably recite by rote by now, their mission is to indicate that America is a “Christian” country founded by “Christian” founders, for the purposes of being more “Christian” than other, insufficiently “Christian” countries we ran away from to come here to, and is not to be taken over by other, less “Christian” “Christians” or, (capital “G” God forbid) non”Christians” like muslims, atheists or gays.

    Which is why the Cross is white, presumably.

    This movement has been around in one form or another for some time now, but I think the reason it’s caught my eye lately is probably due to a social media campaign in the face of recent Supreme Court and other advances of actual freedom.

    To me, this is another example of “God the Tchotchke” I ranted about a couple of days ago. America is changing, for the better, IMHO, but these people’s only answer is “Oh yeah? GOD!”

    Want to have some fun? If you meet one of these guys, say “Thanks! It’ll be that much easier to round you all up, when the time comes.”

    Wink, wink.

    13
  14. Somewhere on the highway to Texas, I think it was western Indiana or around Effingham, Illinois, there’s a cross that looks to be about five or six stories high–just to be sure you can see it out on the board-flat prairie.

    14
  15. e platypus onion says:

    Freak ’em out. Sneak around and paint a red U N on each cross. Bet they come down in a hurry. Texas wingnuts. Lord love ’em and you don’t even have to water them.

    15
  16. I wonder if there are a large number of would-be crappers with knees (and cheeks) locked together because all the crapper facilities are down due to missing plumbing. And the next semi-load is not due in from someplace in Illinois until next month!

    16
  17. maryelle says:

    So US287 is either the Highway to Heaven or more likely, the Highway to Hell. Depends on your moralistic point of view.
    Counting PVC crosses can’t be as fun as counting Mail Pouch Tobacco signs.

    17
  18. Hollyanna says:

    Iron Celt has seen the gigantic cross in Effingham, IL and lived to tell the tale! Now will these super-Christian Texans of Clarendon take up the challenge and build an even bigger one?
    http://www.roadsideamerica.com/story/10913

    18
  19. If you are in Clarendon, TX you might already be in Hell…

    In Waterbury, CT there is a Cross on a hilltop over the city on land that was supposed to be developed into Holyland, USA an amusement park by a guy known as “Brother Julius” which ran out of money and was never finished…

    http://waterburylife.com/uploads/3/1/3/2/3132611/7801704.jpg?448

    Kind of a creepy place now…

    Heck! For that matter Waterbury is a creepy place known as Dirty Water…

    The FBI was investigating Former Waterbury Mayor Philip Giordano a Republican for corruption when they came onto evidence in a wiretap that he was a pedophile having sex with a prostitute, as well as with her 10-year-old niece and her eight-year-old daughter.

    Philip disappeared for a long time (37 Years) off to Club Fed…

    In 2000 he ran against Joe Lieberman and lost in an election where our choices were “Bad” and “Much Worse.”

    Yep… Dirty Water…

    19
  20. Maryelle, or Barbasol signs. I miss them in a way. Used to be roads through rural Michigan were loaded with these and other signs and they sure made a long drive less tedious. Nowadays they have been replaced with enormous billboards advertising stuff nobody needs or wants and block the view of really beautiful country.

    20
  21. @Maggie

    Burma-Shave sponsored the signs that you’re recollecting.

    21
  22. capitol dave says:

    Shoot, you ought to see the giant cross out between Groom and Shamrock (that’s on I-40 about 80 miles or so east of Amarillo). Thing’s close to 200 feet tall.

    22
  23. Carol, Right you are!
    In the north the “Eyetalians” seem to go for Mary on the half shell or Madonna in a bathtub…

    In Norwich, CT there was a house that had a shrine set up on the hillside with about 140 of them set up…

    http://lh3.ggpht.com/_-inyukUOGN4/S8NBdacSMNI/AAAAAAAAARk/tBlThhtvEY4/s1600/Sanctuary%203.jpg

    The 85 year old owner died and the property was foreclosed with all of them removed as it was kind of an eyesore. The property is currrently overgrown and being reclaimed by nature…

    23
  24. @ Redwood. Here in Vermont, the “Our Lady of the Bathtub” seems to increase as you go North into Quebec, The Italians (of which I am one) have those and they have the international sign for “here lives an Italian who went to Florida” the pink flamingo, in the front yard!

    25
  25. Marge Wood says:

    Maybe they forget that a cross represents giving one’s life for everyone else?

    26
  26. e platypus onion says:

    Back in the day,white cross was a street name for amphetamines or speed. Good for weight loss and keeping yourself awake and extremely busy for several hours at a time. Big with truckers. Not that I would know from experience because I was never a trucker.

    27
  27. Marion (formerly known as MM) says:

    “I don’t know about you people from foreign states, but in Texas religious symbols made with sewer pipes is pretty much considered normal.”

    You made my day, JJ.

    28
  28. Rob Leduc says:

    Good thing you told me that. Ignorant northerner I be, I would have assumed they were U-lock favorable bike racks and hitched my ride to one.

    29
  29. I’m not sure where I will spend eternity but it damn well will not be in Clarendon.

    What a terrible waste of good sewer pipe, though I note that at least it has been used for the transmission of waste products.

    30
  30. charles r. phillips says:

    Somewhere, in some context, somedamnhow, the phrase “Sewer-pipe Jesus” will make it into my first novel.

    For sure.

    31
  31. Wa Skeptic says:

    I don’t know–that grotto in CT might have looked pretty cool with flowers and shrubs instead of so many tchotchke icons.

    32
  32. I’m still grappling with “History is still happening here”, and “The End is near!”

    Which is it?

    33