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LAURANCE DAVIS stands near a tree on Lady’s Island, S.C., that he was tending along the Spanish Moss Trail when he was mugged at gunpoint in August 2015.
LAURANCE DAVIS stands near a tree on Lady’s Island, S.C., that he was tending along the Spanish Moss Trail when he was mugged at gunpoint in August 2015.
BEAUFORT, S.C.

A Lady’s Island man robbed of his wallet along the Spanish Moss Trail last year is hoping to repay a good deed.

Laurance Davis was kneeling in the mulch in August under a tree planted in memory of his grandson, Brian Davis Bundy, when a man pushed him on the shoulder from behind. Laurance turned to see a pistol pointed at his head. The gunman demanded his wallet before riding away on a bicycle.

About a week later, Davis’ wife, Sarah, was digging around in the same mulch and found another wallet.

“Sir, crime took your wallet. I give you mine,” a note inside said. “Love, Citizens.”

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A single dollar bill had been tucked in the billfold with another message: “Spend the dollar as a symbol of love and compassion.” Also included were drawings of a puppy with hearts and the words “peace” and “love.” Another drawing showed a baby and a hand giving a thumbs-up with the words “Love goodness.”

Laurance Davis hasn’t spent the dollar, which was stained from rain. The 87-year-old filed the wallet, money and notes in a brown binder and left the items out in his living room while he thought of a way to spread the love.

Whenever the couple has friends over, the binder is hidden away.

But Laurance always brings it back out.

“He has to keep it in mind,” said Sarah, who has been married to Laurance for more than 67 years.

To repay the stranger’s gesture, Laurance decided recently to ask people to donate to the Spanish Moss Trail. The path now stretches from Port Royal to near Marine Corps Air Station Beaufort and will need continued maintenance, he said.

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Donations could go to funding the next segment of the trail out to Clarendon Road, Friends of the Spanish Moss Trail director Dean Moss said. Gifts would also be welcome for signs or other amenities, he said.

“Anything the public can do in response to help me say thank you,” Laurance said.

Various organizations have adopted portions of the trail. Bundy Appraisal and Management, the family business Laurance sold his stake in years ago, adopted the trail from Brotherhood Road to Broome Lane in Brian’s memory.

The robbery hasn’t kept Laurance from checking on the Broome Lane trailhead about once a week, though Sarah always joins him now.

“It’s really gotten too much for him, but he won’t give it up,” Sarah said from a trail-side bench in March.

Laurance is considering riding the trail on his three-wheeled bike, though he may give it to his wife and choose another model. He still sees friends regularly on the trail and enjoys checking on the plants, many of which originated in his Lady’s Island yard.

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His parents once lived at the end of Broome Lane on Battery Creek. He plans to continue his regular visits.

An arrest has not been made in the robbery, but that hasn’t kept Laurance from returning.


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