Volume. XI.
JULY, 1895. No. 3
THINGS REMEMBERED.
BY CHARLES ALDRICH.
I am not so very old—only in my
sixty-seventh year—and if it were not for this white head I
could readily imagine myself a brown haired boy. But what
immense changes have taken place during the period of my
recollection ! I do not propose to write of these, for they
are matters of recorded history and may be read by all. It has
occurred to me, however, that the setting down of a few facts
of minor importance some very commonplace matters—"the short
and simple annals of the poor "—would really serve to show how
the life of the people has changed since the days of my early
recollection. Others—and there are plenty to do that—will
record the great facts of history. I will make the merest
mention of facts which many good people may regard as trivial.
I remember when there were no matches to be ignited by a
slight scratch. There were few or no stoves in that part of
Western New York where my father's family lived. Houses were
warmed and food cooked by open fireplaces. Good housekeepers
used to "cover up the fire" as a rule, so as to be able to
kindle it anew every morning. But when it went out it was
rekindled by "striking fire" with a flint and steel and
igniting some kind of tinder, either a piece of "punk," a soft
fungus growing in decayed wood, or a bit of cotton rag. We did
have matches, but they were simply "fat" or pitch pine sticks,
dipped in melted sulfur, and made by each housekeeper. Once
the spark caught in the tinder, the homemade match could be
lighted. Thrifty, careful housekeepers often had opportunities
to lend a few live coals to neighbors who were too lazy to
"cover up the fire." I remember what a curious and exciting
event it was when my father brought home from the neighboring
store the first little box of matches that would take fire by
scratching them on some hard surface. But they cost much more
than they do today, and were only used on the rare occasions
when the fire happened to go out The habit of "covering up the
fire" lingered in the old home as I suppose it did in others,
for many years.
There was another device for obtaining light and fire
which I recall, though my memory is not very clear in regard
to it. Some sort of inflammable, phosphoric liquid was
kept in small, tightly corked bottles. By dipping a little
stick into this liquid it would at once take fire on being
brought out into the air. I believe I saw one, but I do not
think they came into general use in our part of the country.
I remember the old tallow candles—the only mode of
lighting houses. At first these candles were made by "dipping"
them. Every good housekeeper owned a set of candle rods The
"shiftless," or less thrifty, used to borrow from their
neighbors. These rods were little round pine sticks, a third
or half inch in diameter, and eighteen or twenty inches long.
Soft, loosely twisted cotton wicks, the length of the candle,
were looped around them and a couple of strong, light bars,
five or six feet long, so placed as to support the ends of the
small rods. The wicks were then clipped in melted tallow until
the candles grew to the desired size, though they were
unevenly shaped being range at the lower end and small at the
top—a sorry way of lighting a house, people would think at
this day. I remember when there came an innovation upon this
crude way of making candles,—in the shape of tin molds. These
molds were made of polished tin, and the candles came out of
them very smooth, slightly tapering in size from the lower to
the upper end. Even this improvement was rather slow in coming
into general use, and the more frugal and conservative
housekeepers adhered to the old tallow dips. Families who
owned a set of molds, however were rather proud of the fact,
deeming themselves in the van of progress, and inclined to
look down upon their old-fogy or less fortunate neighbors.
I remember the regular autumnal visits of
the perambulating shoemaker. In those days the only foot-gear
kept in country stores was men's top boots and coarse brogan
shoes. Shoes for women and children were made by village or
crossroads shoemakers. But farmers were every autumn in the
habit of buying materials—as half or whole "sides" of sole
leather, and sufficient cowhide and calfskin—to make the shoes
for their families. It was quite an event when this supply of
leather was received at our house. It was examined critically
and carefully, and its qualities fully discussed. We all
thought it was about the best the market afforded. After some
days the shoemaker—ours was old Solomon Childs— came with his
bench and kit of tools. A good place was assigned to him near
the great kitchen fireplace, when the work of making shoes for
the family began. Those for the females generally came first.
The old man had served in the War of 18I2, and his brain was
full of "moving accidents by flood and field" telling us over
and over again how our side so "triumphantly" whipped the
British," or drove back and discomfited the Indians. The
ancient shoemaker usually stayed with our family a week or ten
days, and during the long evenings the boys took turns in
holding the tallow candle for him. "Now, bub," said Uncle
Solomon, "hold the candle so that you can see, and then I can
see;" and he pounded or sewed till 9 P. M., doing a week of
honest work. He was a man of about sixty years, portly,
baldheaded, with great beetling eyebrows, an excellent workman
of the old style. The finest boots and shoes of that day were
made of grades of calfskin which would now be considered
coarse and heavy.
One of the institutions of that remote
time was the man who manufactured sausages. The farmers for
the most part fatted and slaughtered their own beef and pork.
For a short time in cold weather their families would rejoice
in fresh meat, but corned beef and salt pork were the staple
meats ten-twelfths of the year. Occasionally a "fatted calf"
would be killed in the spring, but even that lasted but a
brief period. Soon after hog killing time, late in autumn, an
old marl who was the proud and consequential owner of a
sausage machine, dropped into our neighborhood from some
unknown, out-of-the-way region, going from house to house, and
grinding up the carefully selected sausage meat. This was
good, honest, corn-fed pork, without any admixture of tough or
otherwise equivocal beef. The machine—enclosed in a box—was a
rude, revolving iron cylinder, armed with cutting knives, and
the concave wooden sides were also fitted with opposing
stationary knives "The boys" of the family were called upon to
turn the crank I distinctly remember that this was very hard
work. The old man with great gray eyebrows and red nose,—from
which latter organ on the cold days a drop almost always
depended, —fed the machine, and generally, with the airs of a
commander; in chief, bossed the job. On those frigid nights a
great fire would send the flames roaring up the wide chimney,
while the great kitchen was filled with the odor of sage,
"summer savory," and raw pork. The dog and cat stood near by,
intent and expectant, while the boys at the crank tugged and
perspired like men a-mowing. A picture of this scene comes
back, with all its humorous features and accompaniments, after
the lapse of nearly sixty years, as vivid and full of life as
though its events were but of yesterday.
In my early years our school teachers
whittled out the goose quill pens with which the pupils
learned to write— except that occasionally one brighter and
possessed of more mechanical genius than the others—some "big
boy"—could make his own pens. "Will you mend my pen, please ?"
was a request frequently made to our teachers. The quills from
which pens were made came from the wings of geese, which could
be found upon almost every farm, for our mothers from this
source produced their own feather beds. There came, at some
time, a little change in the preparation of quills by which
they were made transparent. These were called "oiled quills,"
and were kept for sale at most of the country and village
stores. Boys or girls in the district schools whose parents
could afford to supply them with oiled quills were inclined to
feel very proud of the fact. Common quills seemed coarse and
countrified in comparison with the beautiful transparent ones.
Previous to forty years ago nearly all writing was executed
with quill pens. When steel pens first appeared it was deemed
a sort of affectation to use them. But they gradually
superseded the goose quills. Some old people, however, never
could get used to metallic pens, but clung to the old goose
quills. In 1881 I saw the poet Longfellow write a copy of his
beautiful little poem, "The Arrow and the Song," using a quill
pen. He adhered to the goose quill as long as he dived. In the
winter of 1860 members of our State Legislature were supplied
with oiled quills from the office of the Secretary of State,
though later on in the session the House of Representatives
instructed its Clerk by resolution to purchase gold pens for
the members, and doubtless the Senate did likewise—for such an
example was apt to be contagious. In those old days we had no
envelopes. Letters were so folded as to be readily sealed with
wafers, which have also disappeared. We used black sand
instead of blotting paper to absorb, or dry up, the ink on
freshly written pages. But the sandbox is also a thing of the
past. And now the typewriting machine—the latest
innovation—bids fair to supersede all pen writing. But who
would not avail himself of one of these rapid and accurate
machines, with its so often interesting and engaging
propelling power ?
I remember when most families in the
country made the cloth, except cotton fabrics, in their own
homes, with which both males and females were clad-linen for
summer and woolen for winter wear. I remember some
rosy-cheeked girls, now long at rest under "the mossy
marbles," who went with me to the district school, whose
winter clothes were made of very handsome red or checked
flannel, the product of their mother's loom. One of our
neighbors, good old Deacon Winship, often animadverted upon
the luxury and extravagance of the times. Among other things,
the Deacon was wont to assert that in his younger days, when
he used "to go to balls" with his wife, she wore white woolen
dresses, which had been clipped from her father's sheep,
carded, spun, woven, and made up at home.
Flax was raised on my father's farm. When it was
sufficiently matured it was pulled" and laid in swaths to be
rotted by exposure to rains and morning dews. It was then put
through a "brake" a rough, homemade wooden machine by which
the woody stems were broken. Then it was beaten to free it
from the stems. Next it was drawn through a hatchel. This was
a piece of board or plank thickly set with sharp, polished
steel or iron pins four or five inches high this process
eliminating the tow or coarser fibers and the last of the
woody stems. Both the flax and the tow were spun and woven
into cloth. Tow cloth was used for bagging and coarse summer
pantaloons. These were cool and comfortable in summer, but
would be apt to create a sensation on State Street or
Broadway. But flax brakes, hatchels, and spinning wheels have
long since passed away, and are rarely to be seen at this time
except as curios in museums.
As far back was I can remember, houses were warmed and
cooking done by open fireplaces. These old fireplaces were
wide and roomy, with broad stone hearths and heavy iron
(sometimes brass mounted) andirons. O, the magnificent fires
we used to have during the long winter evenings in my mother's
kitchen ! A great "backlog" was first put in place, and then
came the "forestick." Fire was kindled on the hearth, and
great armsfull of wood piled upon it. When the wood was fine
and the nights cold these great fires would; come near warming
the whole house. A crane was hung upon one side of the
fireplace, to swing in and out. Upon this were pot hooks of
various lengths, upon which the kettles were hung, and with
such rude appliances our mothers and grandmothers did the
cooking for their families. Bread was baked in flat iron
kettles, by putting hot coals under them and upon the lids or
covers—and very good bread, too. These old fashioned "bakekettles"
may still occasionally be seen in back neighborhoods.
The oval-shaped stone or brick oven was in use as long
ago as I can remember. Occasionally it was built out-of-doors;
but oftener in the house, attached to the chimney, of which in
fact it formed a part. A flue was constructed from the top of
the oven leading into the chimney, thus giving it a good
draft. These ovens would generally hold a dozen or more large
loaves of bread, and would also bake pies and cakes, or roast
meats. When baking-time" came around, extra efforts were put
forth to secure "oven wood." This was to be dry split fine,
and about as long as the oven itself. The thrifty housewife
prided herself upon the excellent quality of oven wood
provided by the head of the family. He was a "poor stick" who
left the "wimmen folks" to pick up their own oven wood! But in
those days of the "old woman" such semi-barbarians existed in
every rural community. A brisk fire was kept up until the oven
was not only hissing hot, but heated so thoroughly as to
retain the heat for some hours. The kneaded loaves or other
articles to be baked were then set in the oven and the door
closed. In due time everything would be "done to a turn,
whatever that was the loaves, pies, and cakes richly browned
and cooked completely through. Meats were most admirably
roasted in these ovens of our mothers and grandmothers—
especially the Thanksgiving turkey or the Christmas goose.
Notwithstanding the march of invention, no process of baking
or roasting has ever accomplished better results. One of the
first improvements in baking bread and biscuits that I
remember was the tin reflector oven. The lower part sloped up
to the center on the back side, and the top down to meet it.
Being open toward the fireplace, widely flaring, they
reflected the heat, so that it baked both sides of the loaves
on cake, roasting meat to perfection. It was a great
improvement at that time, but must have gone out of use fully
fifty years ago.
Cooking stoves may have been in use in many regions, but
as I remember there was only now and then one in our section.
The first stoves that I ever saw were built with a circular,
rotating top, fitted with griddles of various sizes. A crank
on the side of the stove enabled the cook to bring any one or
two of the griddles over the firebox. When the "Rotary Stoves"
first came into use, they were quite expensive and only the
first families" could afford them. They were cumbrous and
heavy. The next improvement in cooking stoves was that of the
elevated oven, so arranged that the flame and heat from the
firebox passed up on each side of it. The elevated oven also
went into innocuous desuetude thirty to forty years ago After
this device came the reign of the Stewart cooking stove and
the range, of which last there are patterns and styles without
end. Speaking of the Stewart— and I have had one in my house
for almost thirty years, and it is a model cooking and heating
stove yet—a dealer once recommended one to an Irishman,
saving: "It will save half the fuel!" "Thin, be jabers, oill
tek two uv and save it all!"
I remember that in those old days—in fact, until about
the time of our great civil war—the luxury of canned fruits
was scarcely known. We had few grocers. Merchandising was for
the most part carried on in general variety stores, which sold
"dry goods, groceries, crockery, hardware, tinware, boots,
shoes, notions" and other things set forth in the
advertisements, as "too numerous to mention". About the only
items on sale in the way of fruits and vegetables were dried
apples, dried peaches and beans. The apples were strung on
long strings at the time of drying and were apt to be
flyspecked and wormy, while the peaches were unpeeled—too
often a bad lot. These things would be a sorry substitute for
the choice canned fruits and vegetables which may be had in
every country village today. The change in this respect I
believe was largely due to the war for the Union. Canned
goods were in demand as delicacies for the sick and wounded
soldiers at the front, and the loyal women responding to this
great want, taught everybody how easily and sensibly fruits
and vegetables could be preserved in tin or glass, for sale or
future use. And now the custom has become universal throughout
the civilized world. Even the farmers, who ought largely to
raise these articles themselves, patronize the grocers most
liberally. But this only emphasizes the change as all the more
noted and important. In the matter of cutting and threshing
grain, the changes have been quite as marked.
As far back as I can remember, say, sixty-two or
sixty-three years, oats, wheat, barley and rye were mostly cut
with the old-fashioned "cradle," a broad scythe, with several
long rods called "fingers," which were arranged parallel with
the scythe, so as to catch the straw as it fell before its
broad sweep. Carrying the cradlefull back to his right and
partly behind him, the stalwart reaper was able to lay the
whole in a smooth swath. After it was dry the straw was
gathered with a rake into suitable bundles and bound with a
band of its own material. Toothed sickles were still in use,
especially in lodged grain, but they were everywhere giving
place to the cradles. Stalwart young farmers who could own
their own cradles deemed themselves near "the head of the
procession," feeling sorry, or looking down upon, those who
were still obliged to use the sickle. Many a farmer made his
own cradle-snath, buying his scythe at "the store," while
cradles complete could be purchased in most villages.
Threshing. in those days, and long afterward was done with the
flail. This was made of two pieces of wood—the handle about
the size of that of a hoe, and the "swingle" or "swiple" a
shorter, heavier piece. They were fastened together with a
stout cord or thong. With these rude implements our fathers
pounded out their small grain. Before I left the farm I did
some of this sort of threshing myself. I recollect that it was
very vigorous exercise and was apt to give one a good appetite
for his dinner. In the Historical Rooms at Des Moines, at the
J. F. Wilson Library in Fairfield, and I presume in the State
Historical Rooms, Iowa City, samples of these old flails,
which were swung by stalwart Iowa pioneers, may be seen by
visitors. The first threshing machines were a species of tread
mill, operated by two horses walking up an endless, revolving
inclined plane. I suppose that one of our present great steam
separators would thresh more grain in half an hour than one of
these primitive machines would in two days. But they were a
wonderful improvement at that time.
Forty to fifty years ago many a rural
neighborhood contained its shiftless, ne'er-do-well farmer—one
who perhaps was addicted to strong drink, or controlled by
downright laziness. Of such a one you might hear it said, and
scarcely another expression could convey so much of derogation
and contempt—"why, the lazy fellow burns his own rails" A man
who was so lazy or shiftless as to burn his own fences for
fuel was deemed so far on the road to the bad—whatever the
cause—that his reclamation need not be hoped or expected. But
in quite recent years the most thrifty farmers' have been
burning their rail fences! In fact, it is one of the best
evidences of thrift and progress to see a farmer thus getting
rid of his rail fences! Should he husband them as carefully as
did his father or grandfather, he would be set down as an old
fogy, indeed! But why this change—for fences involve the
expenditure of millions of dollars? Simply, because the rail
fence —the fence of the fathers and of Abraham Lincoln—has
been superseded (after American timber has been well nigh
destroyed) by barbed steel wire. The rail fence is a thing of
the past in most parts of our country, and especially in the
prairie regions of the west. However, it still clings to
out-of-the-way neighborhoods, as well as to some not
considered " out-of-the-way." In fact, within the last year
and a half, I saw a man splitting pine rails within five miles
of the city of Washington. He had already built several rods
of this primitive fence. Our Iowa farmers have been doing
better than this for several years. They have either used
their rails for firewood, or sold them in the towns for that
purpose, and superseded them with barbed wire fences or
adopted the law which restrains domestic animals from running
at large, and so are able to dispense with outside fences
altogether. This change has largely taken place during the
past twenty years, and is so recent as to be still in the
memories of most readers.
In a hundred directions, perhaps, the
life of the people has changed, each in as marked degree as in
the instances I have noted. Farmers in the country may now
readily command luxuries which fifty or sixty years ago were
beyond the reach of the wealthy. Are equal changes to come
during the next half century?
Des Moines, Iowa, June 17, 1895. |