Monday, August 12, 2024

Lucas Countyan Blog by Frank Myers

Saturday, June 19, 2010

The real and present Dry Flat world


Pauline Barker Vincent (right), visiting here with Jo Shrader, is at age 97 Dry Flat’s senior former student and senior former teacher.

Up at 5 Friday to turn the oven on and bake, part of a commitment to the Dry Flat country school reunion, I got to thinking about thunderstorms four ovenloads later --- about 7. Sun was streaming through the east kitchen window, but these are unsettled times weatherwise down here and I wanted a little reassurance.

NBC’s “Today” show, when I turned the TV on to check the forecast, was broadcasting live from the new Wizarding World of Harry Potter amusement park in Orlando --- a Universal Studios bid to capture tourist dollars by recreating the Harry Potter movie sets, actualizing a fictional world in which refugees from the real world can with the swipe of a credit card find diversion, maybe even fleeting solace, in something that has never been, is not now and never will be.

Don’t get me wrong. I don’t have anything against the Harry Potter books (sorry, but I’ve not read them) or Wizarding World exactly --- and I have watched a couple of the movies. They came my way last winter in a temporary DVD swap with friends.

But aren’t we’re increasingly overlooking the real magic --- sitting across the room, just outside the door or a short walk or drive away --- and becoming too reliant for solace on the illusion of magic in places like Orlando or inside the boxes that house our computers, televisions and other purveyors of stuff that looks real and sometimes seems that way, but isn’t? I suppose that’s better than drugs or strong drink, however ….

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I see as much with my mind’s eye rather than through my glasses these days when driving east out of Chariton for a couple of miles on U.S. 34, then south on the Transformer Road across the Chariton River bottoms to the Lucas-Wayne county line: Places that used to be and people who used to live in places that still are. I know where at least two of the houses still standing along that road, built elsewhere to house members of my own family and then moved over here, came from; and see clear as day the old May place --- a mansion on the prairie that marched in tandem with one of southern Iowa’s biggest barns. Both now gone entirely.

Turn left a little beyond the county line and into the driveway at Dianne (Vincent) and Harold Mitchell’s place. If you think Sunnyslope Church of Christ when you read “Dianne and Harold” you’re on the right track.

Their house was built by Dianne’s father, Howard, for Wayne and Ethyle Cummins and their daughters, Karen and Sharon. Sharon is the only Cummins left now and it is real magic when she walks through the door because she looks exactly like her mother, my first and one of my best teachers --- at Dry Flat. We’ve all been stumbling while matching names to the faces of the 50 or so assembled just because we don’t see each other frequently and the years remold us. But not with Sharon. No confusion there.

Pauline Barker Vincent, at 97 Dry Flat’s senior student and senior former teacher, has not changed a bit in my eyes or to my ears either, although her son, Jacob, with more  stomach than I'd anticipated and an unfamiliar white beard, confused me momentarily. He preaches way down in Harlingen, Texas, however --- about as far south as you can get and still be in Texas --- so I hadn’t seen him in years.

Pauline still lives where she grew up and where she raised her children up the road from Dry Flat. I don’t want to overdo this because I know it will get back to her, but she is one of the few people I’ve known who embody grace plain and simple. And I’m not sure she realizes just how much that means to those of us who are not related to her but remember and/or know her.

She also is one of the few people left around here with whom I can talk meaningfully about my late Aunt Mary, her high school friend, and my late mother, who although a little younger shared room-and-board with Pauline in Chariton back in the days of the late 1920s and early 1930s when kids from the deep country quite often boarded in town during the high school week before the days of fast cars, good roads and school buses capable of covering lots of miles quickly.


Ron Christiansen prepares to head out with the second of two hayrack full of Dry Flatters. Harold Mitchell, driver for the first hayrack, is at left in the background.

Since I didn’t mean to go on and on here, I’d better pick up speed just as Friday did. After we’d gathered Friday morning, many of us piled onto two hayracks (ok, some of us didn’t pile, we carefully ascended portable steps) for the trip behind vintage John Deere and Allis Chalmers tractors piloted by Harold Mitchell and Ron Christensen a mile down the road to see the remains of old Dry Flat, converted to a hay shed after the school closed in 1958 and it and the acre that surrounded it reverted by deed covenant to the Vincent farm. In deference to my dad, who didn’t think much of green, I rode behind orange.



Jacob Vincent acted as tour guide on our hayrack as we headed toward Dry Flat. Note the beard. When did that white happen?

The sky was the amazing part of that trip as clouds gathered in the west and northwest. There were those who thought we wouldn’t make it without getting very wet and others who made insensitive jokes about the headlines we would generate if accurately-aimed bolts of lightning picked us off, but we made it. Headed back, the wind shifted abruptly and a hot morning turned almost chilly as we watched the clouds circle away leaving us dry and safe and windblown, awed by the spectacle out there under that big sky.



Dry Flat, converted to a hay shed, doesn't look like much now, but those of us who attended school there see it from an entirely different perspective.


After that an old-fashioned potluck lunch (official because both Jello and olive-and-pimento loaf were among the offerings), more visiting and a program before we scattered at 2 p.m.



Jake gives the Cox brothers, who had to head back into Corydon, a preview of the slide show that will be a part of the afternoon program as Dale Cottrell looks on.

At an event like this, tears can be a sign of success --- and there were some of those. Sharon generated a few just by looking so much like her mother and being so gracious about whose daughter she was. Memories of absent friends did, too. My goodness. My classmate Marilyn (Nickell) Gibbs should and would have been here had death not intervened; so would Linda Mae Allard, neighbor and friend. And many others.

But the thing about it was that it all was real, happening in the here and now in a real place in the real world. And I’ll bet there are those who would have paid the price of a Wizarding World ride to cruise down gravel with us on a hayrack behind a vintage tractor chased by that gathering storm.

The memories may have been just memories, but they were of real people and real places and real events that helped shape real lives in what sometimes seems almost another world, although it was real, too. When in less hurried and troubled times innocence lasted longer and children could, if circumstances were right, be shielded lovingly from many of the world’s woes until they had gained the strength needed to go out into it. It was real magic. I’m amazed at how fortunate we were to live it.


Just visiting was a major part of Friday’s Dry Flat country school reunion.

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Later in the day with clouds gathering in the west and north again we opened the imaginary gates at 6 for the historical society’s arts and crafts fair on our hilltop in west Chariton --- nothing magical about the event either really, but unfolding magic none-the-less for those of us involved in organizing it and watching now.

The exhibitors were enthusiastic, the crowd steady, the food good and the music outstanding. I’d never expected to see fully-grown adults dance down the driveway toward the patio, but there it was live and in living color to music by Adam Barr on trumpet with his small ensemble of Nancy Courter on keyboard and Steve Scott on drums. The barbershop quartet Boys Night Out was just as good.

The nature of the crowd was the exceptional thing because historical societies have troubles attracting younger people. But here were whole families just roaming around enjoying themselves --- even a few bands of kids on their own just like in the good old less dangerous days. I got a kick out of hearing the ringleader of one of these groups, all of 8, reminding her four or five younger charges as they made their way down the path toward the log cabin laden with hot dogs, chips and lemonade --- “now remember we can’t go in there with food.” Our chief distributor of programs, age 7 perhaps and the grandson of the board secretary and one of the exhibitors, did his job far more effectively than any of us several times his age would have done.

We closed at 7:30 and just after the last guests had reached their cars parked for blocks in all directions and all but a couple of the exhibitors had packed up and driven away, the skies opened and then the fireworks started as we stood high up just inside the front doors of the Lewis Building and watched --- incredible bolts of lightning, tremendous claps of thunder, giant punctuation marks to remarkable day.

Now you’ll think I’m funning you when I say that I knew at the start, while baking those muffins, that the day was going to turn out this way, but I did. Wasn’t really worried at all (although I did check computer radar a couple of times just to make sure). I attribute it all to grace, which has the capacity just to roll over and enfold us --- sometimes when we expect it, other times when we just allow it and now and then flat out of the blue. I call it real magic. But you can call it whatever you want --- even wizardry.

Monday, July 29, 2024

Lucas Countyan a Frank Myers post

 

Friday, September 23, 2005

That old empty feeling ...

 Subtitle this, good neighbors are among the greatest gifts.

I've been thinking a lot this morning about Marie Linville, who died Tuesday at 73 in Chariton and who will be buried on Saturday in the Confidence Cemetery down in Wayne County.

My goodness, Marie and her husband, Richard, have been a part of my life since forever. I grew up south of Russell on the Wayne County line, and just a mile down the county line road east were Richard and Marie --- down the hill beyond Cousin Glenn and Pansy Chapman's place on the corner.
They had been married 50 years 7 August, I see --- and I remember that because suddenly later that fall the old house they had remodeled into a home was filled with light as we rattled past before dawn aboard the school bus headed into Russell.

And after that they were always there. My dad helped Richard and his son, Bruce, wrangle cattle time and time again. If we went on vacation, they did the chores and fed the dogs (my dad always called the Linvilles from wherever we happened to be to check on the dogs. God forbid they should miss us and not eat).

Time and time again, the Linvilles went up the road, then back, to-and-froming another of their farms. Time and time again, they stopped to visit.

Marie had a tough life. Rheumatoid arthritis left her twisted and in pain --- but undeterred. Pleasures were simple --- children and grandchildren, old-time country music, some travel, a piece of pie at Swan's Cafe in Promise City. A great and brave and gentle soul, hers.
 

I saw them last, I think, at lunch last fall down at Hardees in Chariton. Richard carried a little stool in the back of the battered old pickup so that Marie could step up as he helped her ever-so-carefully inside.

Grief is a funny thing. This is not the gut-wrenching accompaniment to the loss of a spouse, a child, a parent, someone intimately dear. It's an emptiness, a sense that there's another hole in life now. Blessed be ...

Here's Marie's obituary:

Marie Elizabeth Scheitel Linville, 73, died Tuesday September 20, 2005 at the Chariton Nursing & Rehab Center. Services will be Saturday, September 24, 2005 at 1 p.m. at the Pierschbacher Funeral Home in Chariton. Burial will be in the Confidence Cemetery. Family will receive friends from 6 to 8 p.m. Friday at the funeral home. Memorials may be made to Circle of Friends Home Care in Chariton.

Marie was born on October 20, 1931 in Potsdam, MN, and graduated from Rochester High School in 1949. After graduation, she was employed as a radio-iodine secretary at the Mayo Clinic from 1949 to 1955. She married Richard Ford Linville of Russell, IA on August 7, 1955 in Milroy, MN. Marie and Richard recently celebrated 50 years of marriage.

Those left to honor her memory include her husband, Richard of Russell; two sons, Bruce Linville of Ottumwa and Dennis Linville of Chariton; two daughters, Marceline (Dennis) Slack of Mediapolis, and Rhonda (Mark) White of Chariton; twelve grandchildren and five great-grandchildren; a sister, Eunice Hadel of Blaine, MN; a brother, Marvin Scheitel of Rochester, MN and several nieces and nephews.

Monday, July 22, 2024

Lucas Countyan Blog - Frank Myers Jan. 27, 2013


 From the LucascountyanBlog Frank Myers

Sunday, January 27, 2013

The sporting life 

 Rain is banging against the window this morning, but whether or not it will start start to freeze and turn the south of Iowa into a skating rink remains to be seen. I'm betting "no" since it's 34 degrees at 5 a.m. --- but we'll see.

 The forecast --- a day or two of rain --- motivited me to do something I've been threatening to do for a while late yesterday: Drive down south of Russell to take a look at the new Sportsman's Cabin.


This is a project of the Russell Sportsman's Club, an organization that's been around longer than I have, and replaces the original cabin --- a long, low wooden structure that had deteriorated beyond the point of redemption.

The original cabin had what I remember as a huge (it most likely wasn't that huge; 55 or so years ago I was considerably smaller) brick fireplace in its north wall. Since the cabin always was available for public use, I have many memories of gatherings there, especially of those in the fall when leaves had turned in the surrounding timber and a blazing fire looked and felt good.

So it's nice to know that there's still a Sportsmen's Cabin, even though this incarnation is considerably spiffier than the one I remember.
 
The club, always a strong supporter of boy scouting, still owns a long finger of timbered land along the south bluff of the Chariton River Valley. This was modestly developed for scouting activities, including popular winter encampments. There was even a "ski slope," more accurately described as a big sledding hill since it takes a good deal of optimism to propose that downhill skiing is an Iowa sport.

Anyhow, a lot of work has been done recently, the shooting range was in use when I drove in late Saturday afternoon --- and I like continuity (some of the time).
                                                                                     
                                                                                   
I also drove into both the west and east units of the adjoining DNR-managed Colyn Area, somewhere in the neighborhood of 900 acres that now form part of the Chariton River Greenbelt, but didn't linger long because it was threatening to get dark and there was a "this gate is locked at 3 p.m." sign on the entrance gate to the west unit --- probably an idle threat, since it still was wide open, but who knows?

This pretty area was developed when I was a kid, swallowing the farm of Isaac and Minnie Colyn --- hence the name. Draconian shifts in the landscape that probably wouldn't be used today were buldozed through the area then, and the old wildly meandering Chariton River was ditched between dikes, cutting off a couple of miles of northerly meanders to create two artificial marshes, one north of the river and the other south. We used to skate on the south marsh in the winter (I grew up just south of it), when there actually was water there.

Erosion infill and drought have dried the marshes now and the whole prospect is a little unsettling if you think about how it used to be. But I'll go back another day --- when the sun's shining and there's no possibility of getting locked in --- and do more looking around. 
 

 

 

Sunday, January 21, 2024

The 1929 fire that changed Russell's face forever


Many thanks to Frank Meyer, Lucas Countyan Blog

Back in the 1960s, when I was attending school in Russell, there still was a palpable sense of before-the-big-fire and after-the-big-fire on Main (Shaw) Street --- even though the blaze had occurred 40 years earlier --- on Sunday, March 24, 1929. That's 90 years ago now.


Before that date, as the photo above, looking west, suggests, both sides of the street were filled with buildings. The two-story one behind the bandstand was the Hasselquist Building, which survived the fire and was partially rebuilt --- the facade was preserved but the roof sloped back to cover a one-story retail space that I think housed Chester Produce (someone will correct me if I'm wrong about that).

Barely visible at the other end of the block is the other survivor, a two-story brick that in my day housed the Hess Drug Store downstairs and the Russell telephone exchange upstairs. Nothing between the two had been rebuilt, but trees had been planted and a new bandstand constructed and this was where we gathered sometimes as a community. Eventually, the water tower was located here, too.

It's still the Russell City Park, the Hasselquist Building has been replaced with a new structure and the old Hess Drug Store has been taken down. But a new bandstand now is in place and the area continues to serve as a community focal point.

Here's the story, published in The Chariton Leader of March 26, 1929, that describes the fire that changed the face of Russell forever.

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Most of the block on the south side of Shaw street, in the business section of Russell, today is a mass of charred ruins. There are a few chimneys standing like sentinels guarding the debris, and calling attention to the devastation that has been wrought by the consuming flames, a small blaze of which started in a restaurant, gaining momentum from a lack of means at hand to extinguish. It leaped in billows, bursting to the open and, from housetop to housetop, until, leaving only the brick building at the west end of the block and the two story frame Hasselquist building on the east next to the street, which is now a mere shell, the interior being charred and burned out. The amount of the loss is yet merely conjecture, but will mount up to probably $75,000, and the inconvenience to the tradesmen, aside from their losses, is a staggering blow that it will take a long time to grow from under.

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This is the first disastrous fire that Russell has ever had and illustrates what hazards may occur from small causes and temporary defective means to cope with them. It is said a small blaze started in the flue of the Stacy restaurant at about 3:30 o'clock on Sunday afternoon, which could have been extinguished without much damage had their fire apparatus not proven recalcitrant at the moment of hazard and refused to play a stream upon the blaze, owing to some defective bearing or valve, and thus it was rendered impotent, and the fire gained headway with the result as mentioned. The Chariton fire department was appealed to, but before the fire truck, manned with a corps of firemen, could reach Russell the dangers had so increased that it was imminent that all of the frame buildings on the south side of the street would be consumed.

Some little time was consumed in getting located, minutes but it seemed longer, (before) a line of hose was strung from the old mill pond, and almost suddenly three streams of water began to play on the menaced buildings on the north side, which soon would have crumbled and burst into flame. These were brick structures mainly, and were slower to ignite than the frame structures directly to the south. The awnings were swept off by the flames, and the windows were falling out and the smoke and heat were driven to the interior. The damage here was great but repairs and adjustments will be easier. But had the flames spread across the street and to the east there would surely have been a general conflagration, and no telling where it would have stopped, the wind being in the south.

As soon as the menace on the north side was arrested, the work of checking the flames to the east was fully centered on, a stream of water playing in that direction all the time for this purpose, but the frame buildings were too far along in the wreck to save when the firemen reached the scene. Careful watch was kept on the two story Hasselquist building on the corner, and the fire kept down as much as dividing the force would permit, or was wise, because had it taken fire on the roof, owing to its height, the flames would have escaped across to the Turbot building and the oil stations and would have wildly swept down the block to the east. Certainly these were anxious moments.

To the north there was a rain of embers and time and again the roof of the McKinley building was on fire, in which is the Ewald & Brewer general store, and even a half block north of this, flying missiles of flames menaced, and had to receive attention from the force of the pumps. Also, falling electric wires had to be reckoned with.

Soon after the truth dawned that the conflagration would be general, the crowd began to unload the stores and shops of their equipment and merchandise, and for a block or more in various directions the streets looked like a ship's wharf with the cargoes distributed promiscuously for the loading. Of course much of this was damaged by breakage and the disarrangement and in the main was salvage, yet there was some rescue not salvage. Before the sun had set and darkness had closed over the scene the disheartened shop keepers and tradesmen were gathering the fragments of their equipment and wares in trucks, and storing in improvised headquarters and warehouses until they could get their bearings and improvise places of business.

Lloyd LaFavre, who had recently purchased the W.L. Werts grocery store in the Hasselquist building, was ill upstairs when the fire broke out, and with great effort got from the building. And certainly this is disheartening. Asa Price has also had a tragic introduction to business. He recently purchased the Linville hardware stock in the same building, and it was scattered almost to the four winds. These were some of the incidents of the conflagration.

Mr. and Mrs. Fred Stacy had worked hard in their restaurant, and Mrs. Stacy was frantic when she saw their holdings thus consumed and the fruits of their efforts fed into the maw of the flames. The restaurant of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas McKinley and the shoe and harness establishment of John Thomas represented effort and toil to no purpose in the overwhelming rage of fire, as well as the others in the ill-fated row, who are equally worthy.

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Many years ago, the writer took an excursion through a section of the late confederacy which had been run over by the armies during the Civil War, and in spite of the fact that this was two or more decades after the conflict, many of the evidences of destruction by the flames and sword were still there. Old walls protruded from cellar excavations and chimneys were yet standing, having escaped the shells from the mortars and destroying missiles hurled from the guns of the enemy. So the south side of Russell's business section appeared on Monday morning, with the theatre covered with charred fragments of destruction. And also on the north side of the street there were marked evidences that there had barely been a rescue from the overwhelming fate.

The row of buildings, of frame construction, that was destroyed began just east of the Willits wall paper store, a brick structure, and extended to the street line to the east, leaving the two story double room building owned by Senator R. A. Hasselquist a mere shell. He lost a building west of this, having two in the burned district. He had no insurance, nor probably had any of the others who owned buildings, as this was a frame row, and the rate was practically prohibitory.

Other buildings in the row destroyed were that belonging to E.J. Pyle, occupied by the Stacy restaurant; another by the Lockridge estate and others by John Thomas, R.A. Plotts, and maybe one other.

Lloyd LaFavre had a grocery store in the east room of the big Hasselquist building and the family resided above. He was pretty well protected by insurance.

In the next room, Asa Price conducted a hardware store, and he had reasonable insurance. The Stacys lost pretty nearly everything with partial insurance. They will open a restaurant in the brick building belonging to Eugene Smith, just across the street.

The shoe and harness store of John Thomas was practically consumed with the building. He probably had some insurance, but the inconvenience of getting established in business again is a big loss within itself. Thomas McKinley's restaurant went up in smoke, and just what he will do is not yet known. Granville Carpenter, the barber, also suffered his share of loss, as well as others.

On the other side of the street the hardware and furniture house belonging to the Woodman estate suffered considerable damage, both inside and out, and a new front will have to be put in the Smith building. The building of Miss Emma Ewald was badly menaced and the Citizens bank, as well as the other north side buildings, ran narrow risks. For a time it seemed as though the market of Kells & Wright would be ill fated and Rex Moore's barber shop had a "close shave."

There were probably others who suffered direct loss, but this is a loss for the entire town. Monday the rooms and sheds about town were full of the bric-a-brac of what the fire did not get, and it is hoped that everybody in business will soon get squared away and into the game again. Mr. Hasselquist was looking over his building Monday, and probably will soon begin reconstruction. There are a few vacant rooms in town and these, no doubt, will be filled at once.