Remembering Merll Truesdale, 1954-2019

Merll Clyburn Truesdale died in the first hour of Earth Day, April 22 — a fitting date for the longtime environmental and anti-nuclear activist. He was 64.

The lifelong Columbia resident was the only child of the late Eve Slaughter Truesdale and Lucius Clyburn Truesdale. A 1973 Spring Valley H.S. graduate, Merll studied political science at Midlands Tech, where he served a term as student body president.

He was well read and a history buff, a radical thinker who loved and loathed politics, a harmonica-blowing bluesman with a deep and eclectic appreciation of music. He loved cold beer and red wine, and was an esteemed judge at the annual Cannabis Cup in Amsterdam.

Merll was part of the “bucket brigade,” taking up donations for George Wallace’s 1968 presidential campaign. And in 1980, he worked to get the Wallace’s campaign manager and repentant racist, Tom Turnipseed, elected to US Congress. He was a VISTA volunteer during the Carter Administration, and regularly held court at Group Therapy in Five Points.

Merll helped organize meetings that led to the establishment of GROW, the Grass Roots Organizing Workshop in Columbia. He was among a group of hippies that renovated an old, roofless building behind the ball park on Bluff Road, and set up shop in 1977. GROW was a self-sustaining headquarters for South Carolina’s radical activists, running a café and a print shop (Harbinger Publications), and serving as meeting space for a host of political and social justice groups for more than 20 years.

Merll helped establish Columbia’s first food bank, and volunteered at the GROW Food Co-op on Bluff Road that served Lower Richland for nearly four decades. He also did Columbia distribution for POINT, an alternative monthly news magazine published out of the GROW building between 1991 and 2001.

Over the years, GROW housed activists and friends down on their luck, but Merll was the only full-time resident, occupying an upstairs room until the building was sold in 2000.

While Merll never married, he had a family of friends he collected over the years and sustained across several states. He was also dog father to pit bull rescues Winston, Ruby, and Grendel, who were schooled in “puppy dialectics.”

Special thanks to Brad Hubbard and Michael Lowe for ensuring Merll was loved and well cared for during his years at Heartland Rehabilitation Center.

Friends and fans will gather on Saturday, April 27, to celebrate Merll’s life with a potluck between 6-8pm in the backyard of the Modjeska Simkins House at 2025 Marion St., downtown Columbia. All are welcome, including children. Bring your stories and a dish or beverages to share.

If so moved, donations in Merll’s name should be made to any no-kill animal shelter in the Midlands.

Playing for U.S.C. Alliance For Peace on Nov. 30, 1987. Featuring Donald Joe Bennett, Michael Moon Heart Davis (Bass), Ward Croft (Drums) and Merll Truesdale (Blues Harp).

 

3 thoughts on “Remembering Merll Truesdale, 1954-2019

  1. I met Merll when he was a grumpy 21 year old full of revolutionary zeal. We spent the next 25 years at GROW, with Merll being the resident grumpy revolutionary. After his stroke, he retained his revolutionary fervor, but towards the end, he lost his grump. I saw him smile more at the end, than in all of the beginning. He will always have a place in my heart and mind. I believe he knew he was loved, and his next time on the wheel will be an easier ride. And remember kid, when you’re smashing the state, to keep a smile on your lips, and a song in your heart.

  2. Known Merle since Grade School, I have always said he taught me to Question authority, he was his own self to a fault and he did this with no interuptions of who he was or how he believed, he was a great friend with always a kind word when ever i saw him over the years.. sorely missed as he goes.. i truely believe merle deserves some place in the honor of time as he always worked for a better good for everyone..

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