voted to build a 30 x 40 building to house the trucks and could also be used as a community building. It would be located in the park. The park is really another story as it was started by the Ira Grange as a communality betterment program. They had leased the land from the railroad. However there came a time when the railroad sold the land and a meeting was held at the water house July 23, 1971 to vote on buying the property from the railroad where our park was located. Twelve members were present and it was unanimously voted by secret ballot that we would buy the land for $425.00. The money for the building project was borrowed from State Savings Bank, Baxter, Iowa. It cost $5,000 to be paid back in ten years. The building was erected in the summer of 1972. Original signers of the note to the bank were: Sam Miller, Vernon Bucklin, Bob State, Charlie Koon, Ted Lane, Cecil Carpenter, Max Bucklin, Layman Cornelison, Ronnie Brockett and Raymond Loynachan. Proceeds from the annual fish fry, ice cream socials, auctions and calendar sales made the payment each year on the building plus buying equipment for the Fire Department. In the spring of 1981 a meeting was held to discuss playground equipment for the park. Connie Wright, LuAnne Shaffer and Shelly Shaffer formed a committee to see about a grant from the Jasper County Board of Supervisors who did approve a $1,000 grant. Playground equipment was purchased from the Sully School. All members of the Ira Community met in the park and installed the playground equipment and built a shelter house. Then a special Fourth of July celebration was planned to help raise more monies for the Park Fund. A large parade at 1 PM started the festivities. There were concession booths built and run by the members, food was served and games played during the remainder of the afternoon. Home made ice cream and deserts were served followed by the fireworks at night. In previous years Max Bucklin had next column |
fireworks on the Fourth Of July at the Ira Park and many people had come bringing ice cream and deserts to enjoy the get together and watch the fireworks. Now Max's celebration has been expanded -- by the efforts of his own daughter, Connie Wright. This first expanded Fourth of July celebration brought in almost $1,000 to work with on the park. By 1982 our loan at the Baxter Bank was paid off, but our fire truck needed much repair. In 1983 it was decided to sell the old truck we had purchased and buy a 1973 utility truck. The old one was sold to a collector of fire trucks for use in parades, etc. The utility truck was purchased and formed into an attack unit, smaller and easier to handle than the old one. Once again the young men - Dorwin Bucklin and Tom Gray in particular - spent many hours of hard work to make this possible. The Park Committee and the Volunteer Fire Department have now combined as one group and new officers appointed. In this Centennial Year 1983 Dorwin Bucklin is Ira's new Fire Chief and Connie Wright is Secretary-Treasurer of the Park and Fire Department. The committees and volunteers in and around Ira continue to help on community projects - all in all it makes for a nice place to live and enjoy your family as well as your friends and neighbors. MORE ITEMS OF INTERESTThe pastor of the Ira Methodist Church in 1943, the Reverend Monroe Jackson Rarick, and his wife, were killed by a train which hit their car at the railroad crossing at the east edge of Ira one Sunday morning while they were on their way to Church. Rev. Rarick was very hard of hearing. The 100th anniversary of Union Chapel West of Ire was observed Sunday, September 18, 1977, at the Chapel. The 125th anniversary of the arrival of the Tramel clan to the area of Union Chapel was observed Saturday night, September 17, l977. Descendents from 12 states were in attendance. |
THE SMALL TOWNThere were many advantages of living in a small town like Ira in by-gone days and some of those advantages are still there. Like, for instance, not having to go long distances to one's job or to shop. Kids could and would walk to school. No second family car was needed for teenagers and even when the automobile arrived, a young man had to negotiate for the family car to go on a date. Fancy fur lined vans were not even dreamed of. But there were advantages in the "good-old-horse-and-buggy-days" when a young man could just drop the reigns and old dobbin would slowly go the right way while full attention could be given to courting the young lady. There was no city government to levy, collect and spend taxes. There was no police force as none was ever needed. Residents could go anywhere at night without fear of being molested or robbed. Residents thought nothing of going away and not locking their doors. Of course stores and business places were locked at night and on Sundays, so few people to work on Sundays or even at night, unless you happened to be in the general merchandise business as I can recall very late open hours at one time on Saturday nights. I can recall only one night time robbery in Ira, that of Sid Weston's store. Floyd Mason had an automobile stolen once and it was recovered, but not in Ira, so the thief lived some other place. There was no saloon or liquor store in Ira and I cannot recall any bootlegger selling his booze there. I cannot remember seeing any drunks in Ira. Even beer and wine had to be purchased elsewhere. There mo juvenile delinquency as was and common in the cities. There were no muggings and rape in Ira that I know of. The citizens of Ira were happy without the use of pot, speed, marijuana or other habit forming drugs. People were friendly and everyone knew all the residents of the town and for miles around as contrasted next column |
to the city residents who often did not know nor speak to their next door neighbors. Helping a neighbor was common. Farmers traded labor with one another. In bygone days people in Ira did not have the so-called modern conveniences. Many tasks were done the hard way and there is not room enough here to go into details. However I will mention one. I recall Ira's first grain elevator. A team of horses would pull the grain wagon up a long earthen, then wooden, slope from the west to what would be considered the second floor level where the grain was dumped into a hole in the floor after a door was opened. The team and wagon would then exit thru a door on the east side and reach the ground level by a steeper and shorter slope. A big gasoline powered engine ran the machinery which carried the grain to the top of the elevator from which it ran by gravity thru big pipes to the various bins or to a railroad car. However the floors in the bins were flat with an opening to the chute in the middle so when a bin was to be completely emptied, a man had to enter it and shovel the last of the grain into the chute. By the time the new grain elevator was built someone had thought of sloping the floors of the bins from all sides to the middle so that the grain would all run out. The old elevator bins were of the common house type wood framing construction strengthened against bulging by a few long iron bars across from wall to wall with iron plates and nuts on the outer sides. In Contrast the new elevator bins were much stronger since the walls were built up by bolting a two-by-six plank flat on the foundation, then laying another one on that and spikes driven thru both, then another and another were nailed together until the desired height was reached. Of course the corners were lapped the opposite way on every other layer. Also for the new elevator someone had thought of digging a hole in the ground for the receiving bin so horses and wagons, and later trucks, did not have to next page |
EARLY MEMORIES OF IRABy Maude Logsdon Jontz. It's so good to be here with old friends and neighbors on Ira's Centennial Day. You have all worked very hard to make it a success, and the weather is beautiful. My parents, Alice and Garrett Logsdon, were married in 1896, and shortly after came to Ira, where they ran a hotel around the turn of the century. They boarded and roomed the men who built the railroad from Ira to Baxter. My sister, Blanche, was born in a house on Main Street between the grocery store and Gillie Castor's home. In the early 1930's my brother, Claude, and wife, Mary, ran a restaurant, "the Blue Goose" on the west side of Main Street. He also ran the elevator for a time and also the lumber yard. Later he trucked coal from a mine at Centerville. My father started carrying mail out of Ira April 1, 1904, and continued for 30 years with the help of his family. Hiram A. Jeffries was his first postmaster. Dad drove horses hitched to an enclosed cab buggy and used a small charcoal burner to help keep his feet warm. He wore a long fur coat and cap in winter. The route was about 32 miles of dirt and mud roads with around 100 patrons in the vicinity of Ira. In blizzards the farmers would scoop his horse and sleigh out when he got stuck in snow drifts. All of us took turns helping as we grew up. We always carried the mail around the route in all kinds of weather. We kept one or two good riding horses and used them a lot. In later years we used cars, and my father had 18 Fords and traded quite often. It was a big day when the Sears and Montgomery catalogs came. We'd pile them high in the back seat. Then we'd deliver orders of hats, etc. to our patrons. When Dad retired, Donald Price, the postmaster, invited all the farmers in to our next column |
house for a party, and we had a full house and lots of visiting and fun. The Jessie Cross hill, northeast of Ira, was so steep we'd sometimes have to push to get to the top. Our great-aunt, Mary, would often be there with cookies and lemonade for us. The Charley Gearhearts would let us pick cherries at their place. (There were several other steep, clay hills on the route. One bad one was the "Hoy Hill" northwest of Ira. Garrett upset his car on it one day. Once when crossing the flood swollen creek at the foot of Hoy Hill on horseback, he and his horse were swept down stream by the swift current. His faithful horse "Banty" managed to swim to the shore and climb the bank with rider and mail bags intact. Ed.) Our first mail box on the route was at the Fred and Agnes Battles home We went to school with Claude, Doris, Irene, Harold, Garold and Ardith. Our Ira home was built in 1916 by a German carpenter, Fred Vanetta, after our baby brother, Lynn, died of pneumonia. It was a big ten room house with full basement and attic, and we spent many happy years growing up there. We entertained relatives and friends at school parties, dinners and dances. One day my mother, Aunt Lydia, LeOna and I were outside, LeOna, 4 years old, climbed up a ladder leaning against the framework of the new house. When we saw her, she was walking upon the second story framework. Mother talked to her while I went up and helped her down. What a scare. We had electric lights and a modern bathroom and a big wood or coal burning furnace and heated all the rooms. The outside was covered with a wire mesh and a special plaster containing pieces of black shiny mica which sparkled in the sun. It made a real warm house. Later we ran wires to Dad's garage and blacksmith shop a block away and on up to Kate and Sid Weston's store on the west side of Maine Street. We had Lally and then Delco light plants and ran them quite a lot to keep the lights bright. We later sold the home to Bob State and he and his family continue to live there. Mrs State, the former Anna Jean continued next page |
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