FAIRMONT — If you visit the tidy home of Martha Wayt, you may be invited into her craft room. That’s where Martha keeps a goodly supply of thread, lace, fabric and yarn of every color imaginable, along with all of the other tools of her trade.
The items are organized, in well-marked boxes, and Martha knows right where everything is located. What makes this so amazing is that Martha has glaucoma and has been legally blind since 1988.
Martha doesn’t let her blindness get her down. She spends hours working on projects that make life better for many people. Last year she crocheted outfits for more than 60 dolls. Those dolls were delivered to the Salvation Army, the Red Cross and to several nursing homes.
She is totally deserving as an “Everyday Hero.” — Joyce Irons
Martha Wayt is an interesting woman who lives in Colfax and works for others despite her health problems.
She collects discarded old dolls that have long since lost their usefulness. Her friends and neighbors bring some of the dolls to her, but most of the time, she has someone to drive her to yard sales, Goodwill, Penny Pinchers or anywhere that she is apt to find old dolls.
The dolls are cleaned up, and then Martha designs an outfit for them and goes to work. She may dress a boy doll in a camouflage outfit or a little suit. The girl dolls are dressed in dresses with matching hats. Those dolls without shoes are fitted with tiny little slippers. Each doll is a labor of love made by this “Everyday Hero.”
“I crochet dresses for them. I can’t see very well so it’s all done by feel,” she said. “I enjoy making them for the Salvation Army for Christmas. I’ve given some to the Red Cross, and I’ve taken some to the John Manchin Sr. Health Care Center.”
She said she’s done this for the past few years.
“I’ve crocheted a lot. Made afghans and things like that for people,” she said. “But when my eyes started going bad, I had to learn to crochet by feel. I’ve had problems with my eyes since 1988. I’ve had diabetes and glaucoma.
“You just have to learn to live with it.”
Her eye problems have necessitated numerous surgeries.
“I’m still on pills for my diabetes,” she said. “But I’ve had 14 eye surgeries since 1988. It’s been four or five years since doctors said glasses wouldn’t help me. They said they had done as much as they could.”
She has other health problems as well.
“I have trouble with my back, and I also have arthritis. I caught my foot on the steps twice and fell. But I have an aide who comes in each day and cooks for me, and a guardian who calls every evening. She enjoys coming by once in a while and checking on me.
“So I’m just limited in what I can do. But I always try to do what I can.
“That’s why I spend all the time I can crocheting dresses and outfits for my dolls,” she said.
E-mail John Veasey at jcveasey@timeswv.com.
Local News
‘Do what I can’
Martha Wayt doesn’t let problems stop her
- Local News
-
-
It’s an emergency
A Dalmatian was on a mission. And he was in a hurry.
In a fire truck, the Dalmatian, Patches, rushed into Monongah Elementary on Tuesday morning while students looked on in amusement. -
CVB, MCPARC moving to new homes
The Convention & Visitors Bureau of Marion County and the Marion County Parks and Recreation Commission are excited to have a new place to call home.
On Monday, both organizations began simultaneously moving into their new offices in the visitor center building directly off Interstate 79 Exit 136 at 1000 Cole St., Pleasant Valley. -
Ministers Run still looking for local control
Following two meetings in different locations Tuesday, the Ministers Run Water Association is still looking for a way to keep its utility in local hands.
Last week, the state Public Service Commission held a hearing in Grant Town. -
Man indicted for forgery, uttering, other crimes
A Fairmont man charged with forgery, uttering and other crimes is one of 23 people named in indictments handed down by the Marion County Grand Jury in its second day of deliberations Tuesday.
Jeremy Nathan Ferraro, 31, Fairmont, was indicted on forgery; uttering; obtaining money, property or services by false pretenses; and domestic battery, third offense. -
White Hall students find there’s ‘purpose’ with writing
Picking up a pen and being inspired to write didn’t come from within for author and poet Anna Smucker.
Not until she met an author as a child did she begin to realize which career path best suited her and her interests.
“I thought authors lived in New York or Hollywood, drove around in Cadillacs,” Smucker said. -
Former halfway house director sentenced to five months in prison
The former director of a local federally contracted halfway house will serve time in prison for an inappropriate relationship with an inmate.
Carrie L. Cockrell, 36, of Clarksburg, was sentenced in U.S. District Court in Clarksburg by Judge Irene M. Keeley to five months’ imprisonment followed by five years of supervised release. -
Murray urges BOE members get pay for mandated training, raise for meetings
Marion County Board of Education member Mary “Sis” Murray recently encouraged lawmakers to grant school board members pay for mandated training and a raise for meetings.
Murray serves as president of the West Virginia School Board Association, which she said is made up of 275 school board members across the state. -
‘Close-knit community’
Kids today. Two words are all it takes to bring to mind a familiar refrain commonly associated with old-timers and walking uphill in the snow with the wolves nipping at your heels.
-
Man who led police in high-speed chase indicted
The man who led area law enforcement units in a high-speed chase from Marion to Harrison County in November 2011 is one of 20 people named in indictments returned Monday by a Marion County Grand Jury in Judge David Janes’ courtroom.
-
BOE votes against job change for Neptune
The Marion County Board of Education voted against hiring Andrew Neptune as an administrative assistant during its meeting Monday night.
- More Local News Headlines
-





