In
the year 1851, John George Krouse settled on a farm in what is now
Madison Township, Jones County, Iowa. He was originally from south
Germany but had lived near Dundee, Illinois, for seven years before
coming to Iowa. His family consisted of his wife, Margaret, and their
seven children—George, Anna, Mary, Jane, Emily, John, and Esther (In
later years George Krouse married Margaret Overly and John married Jane
Wasson. Mary Krouse became Mrs. Isaac Overly; Jane, Mrs. Eliphalet A.
Nichols; Emily, Mrs. William Reed; and Esther, Mrs. George Pangburn.)
The Krouses were a hard-working, hospitable, Christian family, and were
dependable in every way.
Two years later, M. O. Felton, a young
clock peddler from Indiana, came through the county. At Scotch Grove, a
settlement of Manitoba Scotch, Felton lost his horse and was obliged to
look for some other means of earning a living. He soon found a position
as a school teacher and is said to have been the first teacher paid by a
public tax in Madison Township. Anna Krouse was one of the pupils at the
school and soon a romantic attachment developed between the young
teacher and the girl.
Felton’s father came west to enter land for
a home, but a letter called the son back to Indiana at the time and the
two passed each other on the way. In spite of the absence of the son,
the older man entered the southwest quarter of Section ten, Madison
Township. This was not, unfortunately, one of the best pieces of land to
be had.
The following summer M. O. Felton returned to Iowa and he
and Anna Krouse were married on August 29, 1854. This is said to have
been the first marriage of white people in the township. Having no means
to begin farming the young couple returned to Indiana but before they
arrived there his father died. For a time Felton stayed Indiana, farming
in the summer and teaching school in the winter, but in the fall of 1856
they came back to Iowa in a covered wagon, bringing with them their
first child, a daughter.
That winter—one of the worst known to
the oldest inhabitants—they stayed in the Krouse home. Before spring Mr.
Krouse died, but undaunted by the loss the Feltons built a little shack
on the land entered by his father and began housekeeping in the spring.
Eight children were born in this home: Margaret, born on June 15, 1855;
George Leslie, on November 12, 1857; Alfred Nichols, on January 27,
1860; Oliver John (the writer), on February 22, 1863; Charles Wesley, on
October 31, 1865; Anna W., on December 31, 1867; Harlan Philips, on
December 21, 1871; and William Reed, on November 10, 1874.
Their
house was located about the center of the quarter section with some
large shellbark hickory trees nearby. A spring such as those found along
every draw afforded good water. Their first bed was made by nailing
poplar poles to the wall on one side and supporting the free ends on a
larger pole at the other—a one-legged bed as it was called. Mrs. Krouse
loaned them cattle to break some of the land for the first crop of
wheat—seven yoke in a string with a plow cutting and turning thirty
inches. They had to make a right or Gee turn at the corners, swinging
outward in a circle each time.
There were few laid out roads. All
traffic followed the ridges as far as possible, avoiding the draws which
were wet and boggy and only crossed to get from one ridge to another.
There were no bridges: all streams had to forded. The old Pike’s Peak
Trail from Clinton ran through this farm and we children saw many going
west following the same old trail. It is still visible and we older
people can go to it any time and see again the slow emigrant wagons with
their white covers, a tar bucket hanging from the rear axle and usually
a tired dog walking under the wagon. In the middle sixties, these wagons
were mostly drawn by horses, if they belonged to land seekers. A cow or
two and perhaps a horse followed, in charge of a boy or man. The
travelers usually camped out and the settlers were very kind to them,
seldom making any charge for what they needed for man or beast. Few of
them ever took anything without asking or made any trouble.
Farming
consisted mostly of raising spring wheat of a bearded tea (This was
Arabian or Russian wheat, as contrasted with bald varieties.) variety.
This was mostly sown on fall plowing. A bushel and a half to the acre
was sown by hand, the sower following stakes with a white rag for a
marker. The field was then dragged.
The drag consisted of three
wooden bars on each side, each bar set with iron teeth one foot apart.
The two parts were joined by an iron hinge. The drag was eight feet wide
and was pulled by a team of horses with the hitch at the corner so that
no teeth followed in the line of those just ahead. Each time the drag
was lapped one-half. This usually covered the grain as the ground was
all new and was very fertile and worked easily. A boy from seven years
old up usually drove the team with the drag, for there were more
children than anything else in many of these early homes. They were put
to work at a very early age, and woe to the boy who loitered or crowded
the drag to cover the ground more quickly. Oats were sowed in the same
manner.
Corn was planted in the most primitive fashion. The
ground was plowed and then dragged, after which it was marked off by a
wooden marker consisting of three two-inch oak runners with boards
nailed across to hold them together and hounds nailed on so the wagon
tongue could be used to draw it. Then the driver took the straightest
side of the field and drove across, setting stakes at each end and in
the middle at proper intervals to make all rows uniform. When this was
finished the field was crossed by the same marker fast enough to keep
the planters busy between showers, for it usually rained a good deal in
May, the planting month.
The planting began. At first, when the
children were young, the neighbors changed work, so they could be
together and visit while working. The talk usually concerned politics
and other neighborhood matters, even gossip, but mostly religion. Our
neighborhood was intensely religious, and mostly Methodists from Ohio
and Indiana, although a few Scotch to the west and east were
Presbyterians of the old school.
The women or children did the
dropping which consisted of following the mark and dropping three or
four kernels in each cross made by the marker. The men followed with
hoes and covered the kernels, adding a few seeds to fill any missed
hills, but the dropper who missed a hill soon heard of it and the old
Puritan lash or switch was often used as a reminder. Some patted the
hill with the hoe blade while other tread on it. Wet or muddy ground was
never planted until dry.
When the corn showed three or more
blades cultivation commenced. The tool was a wooden beam plow with one
very large diamond-shaped shovel or two small ones pulled by one horse.
It went twice between the rows. When a boy got big enough to use this
tool he thought he was quite a man, but if he left any hill covered or
allowed the horse to tramp it down or plow it out, there was trouble.
The water carrier was a censor of all mishaps or carelessness.
This cultivation was carried on until the corn was in bloom, or silk
they called it, when it was “laid by” and the harvest of the small grain
was begun.
Part 2
About the time of the Civil War, my father used a hand rake reaper
called the Dunleith. It was mounted on four wheels—a master wheel, a
small wheel to support the platform, and two wheels in front. The master
cog was attached to the spokes of a large wooden wheel with a bevel cog
around the outside, driving the sickle with same motion as now. The reel
was driven by means of a leather rope running over a grooved wheel
attached to the master cog and connecting with a smaller wheel on the
center of the reel.
The driver was seated on a spring seat ahead
of the master cog and as high as the shaft of the reel. The seat was
carried on the two wheels that worked independent of the reaping
machinery, as in the case of some modern dray wagons. The grain fell on
a platform partly covered with black tin. The man who raked the grain
off the platform sat at the center of the rear end of the platform on a
stool, with a barrier in from of him to keep him from falling on the
platform while raking the grain to one side. He had to be careful not to
let the bundles get too large or get his fork caught in the reel or
sickle, and the work required great physical strength and endurance.
The binders followed the reaper, binding each gavel into a bundle
with a band made of a handful of grain stalks. Children then came along
and placed the bundles in convenient piles, usual twelve each. How heavy
they were for a small boy! Next came the shockers. Two cap sheaves were
placed on top of the shock to keep out the rain. These cap sheaves were
broken in the middle and spread one above the other crossways and, if no
hard wind came, they kept the grain dry and bright. If they were blown
off or the shock upset, it had to be reset after the harvesting was
done.
Then came the stacking. Nearly everyone stacked, for
separators were scarce and one had to wait his turn. These stacks were
placed at some convenient spot, usually near a shed, waiting for
threshing. After stacking, farmers waited for the grain to go through
the sweat, as they called it, a drying process that all grain takes in
this climate either in the stack or bin.
Between stacking and
threshing some hay had to be cut. This was done with a scythe on wild
land, mostly in the draws, where the grass was thickest. If a man cut a
swath across the upper and lower end of a draw, it could be his and so
respected, but a man never tried to “hog” things so there was plenty for
all. After the grass was cut and dry it was raked together by hand and
cocked up in small piles, then hauled and stacked. People did not cut
much hay; the straw piles fed what stock was kept.
Haying done,
the “boo” of the thresher was soon heard and what a time that was for
the youngsters, and for the old as well. The threshing crew was looked
upon with as much awe as the crew of an airplane is today. They were
usually young men of a rough type. Threshing was done by horsepower. The
separator was a “Sweepstakes,” about the same as now, but without any
blower, feeder, measurerer, or other frills. The power was a master cog
turning on a small cog. This mechanism could be hoisted from the ground
by two rollers to move from place to place. When set it had to be staked
down with eight stakes to hold it in place. Five sweeps were inserted in
it like the spokes of a wagon. A team was hitched to the outer end of
each sweep, making ten horses. The threshers put on their three teams,
the farmer his, and one of the neighbors might furnish a team.
The two green teams usually tried to do it all at first but soon came
down to a slow drill in the center. A man or boy with a whip in hand
usually drove the outfit and was the clown of the gathering. Between
whistling, urging, and swearing he kept the work going. If a sudden stop
was needed, a man got to the head of each farm team and the feeder
crowded the bundles to choke the separator. The horses of threshers
usually stopped at the word of the driver.
The boss of the
machine did the feeding. The bundles were tossed to him by a man, called
the table man—sometimes there were two—whose duty it was to keep plenty
of bundles on the table, heads to the cylinder. Other men handed bundles
to the table man. A band cutter, usually a boy, was beside the feeder to
cut the bands. This was a hard job and I still wonder why a boy was put
at it. He used a common jack-knife and the straw in bands soon dulled
it. The knife was liable to hit the fingers of the feeder (I have done
it myself), if the boy became tired or hurried, and sometimes two boys
alternated in the cutting. If straw was wanted a stacker and several
boys took care of the straw. This was a hard and dirty job; one had to
work like a machine. How I have wished something would break, to give us
a rest.
The measurer was at the side of the separator with two
wooden half-bushel measures. To keep track of the number of bushels he
had before him a board with twenty holes at the top, ten below, and five
at the bottom. When one measure was full he moved the twenty plug to the
right one count. When it had been moved clear across, the ten plug was
moved to right one count. This meant ten bushels. In the same way the
hundred plug was moved to right when 100 bushels had been measured. The
measurer had to be a man of mature years, very just, and not the owner,
so that he would be fair to both parties. It was his business also the
that the grain was clean and not wasted in poor separation.
The
owner was usually at the bin seeing that there was no chance of waste.
Most people, being poor, had no granaries and had to build rail pens.
These were lined with slough hay and made a very good storehouses if
cattle were kept away from them. Children too small to be of any help
were perched on the tool wagon watching the show in high glee. The man
who carried the grain to the bin had a hard job, carrying a bushel of
wheat or one and a half bushels of oats at a time. Handling from three
to six hundred bushels in a day in this way was no easy work.
Finally dinner was called and everyone “hollered” “Whoa” and started for
the house and the wash basin, except the teamster, who had to feed the
horses. Dinner was served at a long table seating from ten to fourteen,
on which were well boiled peach blow potatoes, stewed chicken, gravy,
homemade bread and butter, coffee, and dried apple or dried currant pie
with Orleans sugar for sweetening. Everyone made a man at the table.
After dinner the young fellows indulged in feats of strength, such as
standing in a half-bushel measure and shouldering a two-bushel bag of
wheat or holding out at arm’s length a sledge weighing from fifteen to
twenty pounds to see who could hold it thus the longest. Finally the
boss of the gang would shout, “Horses on!” and the same process began
anew. When one threshing job was finished, the machine was moved to a
neighbor’s. All the farmers changed work for money was scarce till some
wheat was sold and there was little hired labor. The threshing charge
was five cents for wheat and three for oats.
Threshing was often
enlivened by fights. One occasion a farmer put a boy whom some neighbor
had sent to do the stacking. The boy went about the work carelessly.
Finally the owner went up to right things. Before long both came rolling
down by the stacker in a rough and tumble, but they were separated and
the work went on. At dinner, as was the custom, the farmer wanted to ask
the blessing but felt he should make some amends for the trouble. “I
think before I proceed I should apologize for what happened this
forenoon,” he said, and continued that it would have been all right but
when he got on the straw the boy insulted him. At this the boy jumped up
and called him a liar and another fight was started, but it was stopped
and the meal proceeded without a blessing.
Part 3
By the time threshing was over the corn was ready for cribbing. The
last year’s rail pen was overhauled and a bottom of rails made so the
ears would not drop through. A hog was killed for meat, a little wood
cut, and the husking began. The father took two rows on one side, the
oldest boy at home two rows on the other, and a smaller boy the down
row. Every silk and husk must be removed from the ears before they were
thrown into the wagon and the father kept watch for missed ears. When
the box—usually just a wagon box holding about fifteen or twenty
bushels—was filled, the wagon was driven to the crib where all picked
the ears out of the hind end by hand until the scoop could be used.
The most likely looking ears were picked out, carried to the house,
and stored in the garret next to the chimney for next year’s seed. We
seldom had any poor seed, but one year it was found that much of the
corn saved for seed was worthless. Railroads were far apart and there
were no regular dealers any place; but the resourceful Yankee farmers,
my father among them, found that one side of an ear might be good but
the other poor. They picked the best looking ears and shelled them. then
they put the kernels in a tub of warm water and in twelve hours the good
kernels which showed growth were picked out and planted, care being used
to put moist dirt on each hill.
In this way he got a good stand
or corn and good quality in the fall. It was an awful job to handle the
seed, for it kept growing and the sprouts tangled up so it was hard to
pick out and drop the kernels. If there had been larger fields to plant
it would have required lots of labor. The more fortunate who had friends
in the East had seed sent them, mostly from Pennsylvania. That seed,
however, not being acclimated, did not get ripe or fill out well; but in
the course of years this corn mixed with the home grown and made a good
improvement.
After the corn was picked, the visiting commenced
and lasted intermittently until spring. The men, having such hard work
all summer and no labor saving machines, were ready for a rest. There
was usually snow and the families went in the sled in a wagon box partly
filled with straw, with bed quilts for cover on the trip. On week days
the groups usually included only the children not of school age—from one
to three. The women sewed or quilted, and the men talked and chewed
tobacco, spitting in the hearth of the stove or on the floor. Neither
was counted out of order for both chewing ands spitting were the common
custom. The general conversation was neighborhood news of new babies,
sickness, or the stock on the farm, but mostly religion, for our
neighborhood was pious.
The nearest market for grain down to 1872
was at Lowden, on the North Western Railroad, twenty-five miles south.
The small grain, mostly wheat, was sacked in stark A bags with every
man’s name on his bags and was drawn in wagons. Some of them were made
in the local towns but most of them were Schuttler wagons from Chicago
having skein or metal bearings with Fraser axle grease for lubrication.
The old tar wooden spindles were mostly gone, only the poor men using
them. The trip back lasted from two o’clock in the morning until
midnight. Food for the horses and for the men was carried along. Muddy
sloughs, creeks, and the Wapsipinicon River had to be forded.
The
usual price was a dollar a bushel for wheat, and about twenty-five cents
for oats. Wheat ran from twenty-five to thirty-five bushels per load.
The houses were strongly built. First a frame of native hard wood
was put up, strong enough for a fort. The half inch pine siding was
nailed directly to the studding. The roof sheeting was of oak and was
covered with oak shingles that warped badly. While this roof turned
water, sifting snow would come through and had to be removed or it would
spoil the plaster which was lime and hair. The finish—casing, sash,
molding, doors—was all made on the ground. A thin strip, called a bat,
was sometimes laid under each crack in the floors.
The houses
were nearly all rebuilt during the Civil War and for the time were very
good, although they had no modern improvements. A first quality house
was usually ell-shaped with the main part a story and a half high. The
ell was one story and contained a kitchen and a bedroom. In the main
part was a large parlor with a spare bedroom and an enclosed stairway
next to the buttery or pantry, as the people called it, from which the
cellar was reached from the inside. The upstairs had two rooms where the
older children slept. There was usually a cellar under the kitchen with
an outside entrance, for there was much to store in it.
The most
important piece of furniture was a common four-cap cook stove in the
kitchen—the main workshop and living quarters for the family—and unless
sickness or visitors came, this was the only fire in the house. The
bedroom had a four-poster corded bedstead under which, in the daytime
was a four-poster trundle bed which was drawn out for the smaller
children that needed care during the night. A tick filled with straw was
the mattress, with sometimes a feather bed on top of this. One sheet,
one or more heavy cotton comforts, a cotton homemade quilt, and pillows
of goose or duck feathers furnished the parents’ bed. Hen feather
pillows might serve for the children. The parlor had a heating stove,
usually a rag carpet, and homemade curtains, but no shades. The house
was lighted by candles or one smoky oil lamp but that must be used very
sparingly and not at all by the children; they had a grease lamp, simply
a common tea saucer full of hog fat with a cotton string sticking over
one edge.
There were no barns until about the middle 70’s,
although farmers built sheds for their stock, if they could.
Crotches—that is large timbers with a fork—were set in the ground in
rows about nine feet apart, so a ten-foot rail would span the distance.
Three rows were thus set with the middle row the highest. Rails formed
the framework of the roof, resting on the crotches, with cross pieces to
hold up the slough grass or wild hay which formed the roof. The north,
west, and east sides were usually stockaded with rails. Sometimes the
south side of the east end was large enough to shelter two teams of work
horses and was entirely enclosed. When the threshing was done the sides
were often completely covered with straw. The bulk of the straw was left
in the stack at the west end. In the winter all the young stock, the
cows, the sheep, and even the chickens were sheltered in these sheds.
Some poles near the top furnished roosts for the chickens when it got
too cold for them to roost outside.
Here the milking was done.
The cows ran loose but not very many of them were kept and usually none
were milking during the cold months of December, January, February, and
March. The farmers seldom had any winter calves or pigs. As a
consequence, most people were out of milk during the first three months
of the year and I have known people to go miles for buttermilk or to buy
butter, but they all had plenty of lard and pork.
Some packed
butter for winter. It had but little value, since it was sold for from
six to fifteen cents per pound. There were no eggs from September to
March. during the summer months eggs sold for from five to seven cents
per dozen in trade. Orleans sugar was ten cents per pound; coffee,
forty; Young Hyson tea, eighty; calico, ten cents a yard; Kentucky
jeans, forty cents per yard; hickory shirting, twenty cents; and boots
for men, four dollars. Men did not wear shoes. in the winter the small
boys had boots or shoes of common cowhide with red or yellow tops in
front and a copper plate at the toe. As we had so much snow in the
winter and dews and rain in the fall and spring the leather would shrink
and the boots or shoes had to be kicked on in the morning and this
tended to ruin them. In the morning you could hear the boys kicking on
the mop boards-base boards, they call them now, since they have carpets
and don’t mop every day- to get their shoes on.
All the clothing
for the entire household was made at home and until about 1870 all by
hand. There was little wool except for mittens and hose, which were knit
at home. Goods absolutely needed and not made at home were usually
bought in the fall when the grain was sold. Boots, shoes, and gaiters
were needed for the family. The children’s feet owing to going barefoot,
grew very fast and shoes were often too small and had to be exchanged.
Then there was trouble, for we boys feared that if the shoes were taken
back there would be no return.
Part 4
The hogs were all killed at home and hauled to Dubuque fifty miles
away and sold a from one and a half to three cents per pound.
Occasionally a big steer or two would be sold at two years old for
twenty dollars or more per head and no scales were used. We had every
animal named and usually kept the she stuff until it died of old age.
I was a man grown before I ever saw any corn sold on the market. A
quarter section would raise from five to fifteen acres of corn. The land
being new produced well and made enough to feed all a man needed through
the cold months. Then he did without until the new crop. Oats were used
for horse feed mostly. Not one farmer in ten would have an ear of corn
from May till fall. Of course some would but then as now they were the
more thrifty. There was no meat except now and then a chicken. We never
fed or watered the chickens and they had to get on as wild game and were
about as wild. It took a good dog to catch one.
For fruit a few
of the first settlers, among them my grandmother Krouse, Eliphalet A.
Nichols, mother’s sister’s husband, and a few more, planted apple seeds
and had seedlings and some few trees were good. Most of the winter
varieties were of small size and a sort of parody on the wild crab
apple. The women dried pumpkin and we boys called it tobacco and carried
it around, and if not caught chewed it. There was no canned fruit. Wild
strawberries were plentiful some seasons. Blackberries, except along
streams, were usually all dried up.
Where there was plenty of
timber, the fencing was of rails from the ground up and worm fashion. On
the prairie, however, they often drove crotches in the ground to carry
the first rail. This was about eighteen inches from the ground. Two
stakes were then crossed above each crotch, the bottom end of each being
driven some six inches in the ground a short distance from the bottom of
the crotch. This formed a second crotch, higher than the first one. A
second rail was laid diagonally with one end in a lower crotch and the
other in the next upper crotch formed by the two stakes. A third rail
was then laid in the two upper crotches, making a three rail panel. This
was the Indiana method.
Some Kentuckyians split the posts as flat
as they could and then dressed them to about two inches thick and bored
two holes together, split out the middle and sharpened the rails and put
them in as bars. This made a very good fence but took lots of labor.
Iron nails were high and the Kentuckians were taught this method when
there were no nails except those made by hand in the country. The
farmers fenced only the cultivated land, for there was only a small
amount of land cultivated and it was easier to fence stock out of the
fields than in the pastures. Much of the land was held by eastern
speculators.
Another item of farm life was milling. In my time,
we were within eight miles of Corbet’s Mill on a fork of the Maquoketa,
not a long drive from home. The miller took in toll or pay every seventh
bushel of the grain and made a very good grade of flour and meal. It was
a great treat to go the mill but only the ones too little to do anything
at home were granted the privilege. One time, however, when I was a
small boy, my father took me and my two older brothers along to fish
while we waited for the grist. He got some small hooks and two lines and
cut them in two so we each had a hook and line. We had dug some fish
worms-or angle worms- and father put one on my hook attached it to a
pole cut on the bank and set me on the bank or a stump but did not tell
me what to do.
I could feel the fish bite but did not know what
to do and we were admonished to keep quiet. Finally I lifted the fish
clear out of the water and father hollered, “Throw him over the bank!” I
did not know what he meant, but instinctively threw my prize on the
shore and saved him. He was a nice perch and I was about the biggest boy
for a while that ever stood on that bank. We got a fine string but never
since has a fish caused me the thrill of that one. I found a good
two-blade jack-knife on the bank that day but it did not interest me, so
I gave it to father. The water was very clear and we could see the
schools of soft fish in countless numbers everywhere and the rock bass
scooting after them. When we were ready to go home we saw the dam and
the water fall. I have since seen the great falls but they did not seem
as remarkable to me as that small stream appeared to a little boy who
had never seen anything but land and small creeks.
At first the
cattle were turned out on the wild prairie, where they roamed about,
located only by sight or by the tinkling of the bells. The cattle of a
large neighborhood would bunch up during the day and wander over a wide
territory but when evening came, they gradually wandered toward their
own home, partly from habit and partly because some of the cows had
calves at home. No two bells sounded alike. Every man knew his bell by
sound.
As time passed and the free land disappeared, each man’s
herd was kept near home in a fenced pasture. Only those who could afford
it had oak board fences; most of the fences were of smooth wire. This
sufficed if the land was not too heavily pastured, but when the grass
got dry in July the cattle would go through such fences into the crops
so they had to herded. I, being the boy not big enough to help farm
work, was the herdsman. Now picture if you please, a barefoot boy
between six and even years old taking the cows to pasture as soon as
they were milked and staying till about sundown with no companions but
the black shepherd dog, Dash.
There were no holidays or Sundays,
and at times hard rains compelled me to get under hazel brush or a tree
to find shelter. At noon, Charley, a younger brother, would bring a noon
meal which was the same as the others, only cold, and for drink the
water from any slough or spring had to do. This was a rough life and I
got as rough as the treatment. At this time I went neither to day nor
Sunday school though I saw other boys going to school or to mill and
playing around home.
At the same time I learned all about the
names and habits of birds from father. I knew where they nested, the
number of their settings, color of eggs, habits of feeding, and the time
of their coming and departure. None of the water birds nested here but I
could see them passing at almost any hour. I knew how to find the dens
of many animals, how they made them, and what the animal lived on.
Not least of these were the snakes. The snakes soon left the
pastured ground, so there was not much danger from them there, but if
you had to go into some slough or non-pastured field you might run into
them. One day in August I saw the faithful dog going around a tree top
full of dry leaves, which had been left after the log had been cut off.
I saw him turn his head to one side, ears forward, and then I heard a
mighty hiss and I saw a snake strike at him and still hiss. I knew by
the sound that it was a bullsnake, but of what a gigantic size! I ran
away but did not did not dare to leave the cattle. The dog kept at the
snake energetically but could not get hold of him.
In about an
hour Charles came with my dinner and I told him of the size of the snake
and how he acted. He went home and my two older brothers came down. By
this time the snake was somewhat tired but could still strike about four
feet which seemed more to us. Finally George, the oldest of the boys,
struck the snake with a fence stake and the dog grabbed him. The reptile
was so heavy the dog could not shake him, but he was finally killed. He
measured about eight feet and was as large around in the center as a tea
saucer. That was my greatest snake scare. While such snakes were not
poisonous, the memory of that infernal hiss has never left me. I have
seen many snakes since but none as large as this. Since it was late in
the summer, I presume he was well fed and fat.
Then there were
the skunks. Our dog would dig them out. At one time the two Overley
boys, cousins of ours, were there when the dog dug out an old one. I had
no fear when the dog was after it, for their dens were shallow and
short. When the dog grabbed the old one I was closer than I would be
now, for a very good reason. I saw five little kittens as pretty as any
two-week old cats. I grabbed two of them and started for the Overleys to
show them but they never stopped until they got home. That night my
mother gave me orders not to bring such a smell to the house again.
Part 5
Prairie chickens were thick. In the months of March and April, the
writer has seen two large trees with every space on the limbs full of
prairie chickens and the ground for an acre space as thick as they could
stand, but no hunter could get with gunshot of them. Before you accuse
me of exaggeration, ask any man or woman over fifty who lived in eastern
Iowa for verification. Now you can drive all over the state and never
see one. In the month of July their nests could, with a little care, be
found in grass on almost any hill. They had from twelve to sixteen eggs
in a setting. These eggs were about the same size as those of guinea
chickens, but were plain white.
On the Slocum quarter section
next east of our old home there was a buffalo wallow. We called it a
buffalo den. The buffalo had been gone fifty years before the land was
settled but his den in the sixties was still bare of grass on its sides
and was about one acre in area. There was a circular opening on the
south slope on a gradually sloping hill. The banks were about eight feet
deep and very straight up on three sides. It is still plainly visible
but in the early seventies the blue grass came in the country and the
sides were soon covered with it. The hole is still there. It is on the
northwest quarter of the southeast quarter of Section 11, Township 84,
west of the Fifth Principal Meridian, Madison Township, Jones County.
As in all new countries, the people married young. When a young man
attained his majority his work with his father was ended and he usually
went to work for a neighbor by the month, for that was about all the
work there was. A good strong man got twenty dollars per month from
March first till corn was gathered in November following, with only the
Fourth of July out. Most men got less than this.
The wardrobe of
a farm hand consisted of one store suit, a pair of fine boots with heels
as high as the women wear them now, one white, starched-bosom shirt, and
a box of paper collars. This was for Sunday. For every day he had two
homemade hickory cloth shirts, a blouse and two pairs of overalls, plow
boots, two pairs of coarse cotton hose and an old hat or winter cap.
This was the average; some had more, many less.
He got room and
board with the family and washing. If his employer had no cash he was
obliged to wait until something was sold in the fall but he could
usually buy his tobacco and other little things from the village
merchant on time.
The work consisted of chores and wood cutting,
breaking colts and the like till the ground was ready for planting,
which usually lasted from the last of March through April and May. Then
there was plowing corn till harvest and after harvest, threshing,
hauling manure, fall plowing, and husking. Many of the hired men saved
the greater part of their earnings and as soon as they had the price of
a team and wagon they were ready to get married and start farming for
themselves.
The more thrifty fathers of the boys coming of age
gave them such outfits and they married at once. The bride was expected
to have one year’s clothing, furniture for one bedroom, and a stove with
the necessary utensils for cooking, and if her parents were of average
standing, a cow and a calf worth about twenty dollars. The rest of the
relatives usually got them some chickens and other small things. This
equipment was the best, many had much less. The wedding was a small
affair with only a few friends present and a substantial supper. A
charivari was considered almost a necessity, and a couple felt slighted
unless the boys put one on. Boys from twelve years old up and all the
men turned out with everything that would make a noise and with much
prairie lung power. They gave one blast. If there was no response they
repeated this, until the groom came forth with the bride and a treat of
apples, candy, or tobacco.
SCHOOLS
Of course we had our schools. Father was the first director of No. 1,
known as the Wasson school, because one John Wasson lived near it, a
Scotchman by birth and a generation older than the rest of the people in
that district. This house was a frame building, fourteen by eighteen
feet, one story high and built the same as the dwellings. It faced the
east. Along each wall were three desks large enough for two people, the
front of one serving as the back of the seat in front. The desks in the
center were large enough for four pupils. One long bench along the
entire rear wall formed the seat for the back row of desks. These desks
were all of white pine without paint or varnish.
In one corner of
the front of the room was the teacher’s desk. The floor here was raised
about six inches as a mark of distinction. The front of the side desks
and one long desk opposite the teacher’s desk were used for recitations
although the pupils often stood for class work. A large wood stove was
in the center of the front of the room. A blackboard of boards painted
black completed the equipment. Three windows on each side gave light.
The boys were usually seated along the north side—that being the
colder in the winter—and the girls on the south. The little ones sat in
front or in the center section with older brothers or sisters.
We
all carried our dinner in pails made for the purpose. The dinners
consisted mostly of bread and butter, although some had mince pie or
doughnuts or occasionally an apple. There were no warm lunches.
We used McGuffey’s readers and spellers, Monteith’s geographys, and
Ray’s arithmetics and this was about all the books in use. When I was
five years old I went to the summer term which commenced in May and
lasted three and one-half months. The teacher got sixteen dollars per
month and boarded around and usually liked it best where there were
fewest children. I came from a family very apt in books, but I learned
very slowly. It was hard for me to learn the letters or to pronounce
words, and owing to my being the cowboy, I have gone through life a poor
speller and writer.
My first teacher was a Miss Waker. She was a
small woman, from Dubuque, Iowa, blind of one eye and no longer young,
probably thirty-five, but a kind Christian woman. The pupils were: O. J.
Felton, A. N. Felton, Joseph Wasson—the biggest boy, Maggie Ransom,
Allie Dockstader, Clary Heimbaugh, Addie Organ, Anna Lincoln, and Alpha
Clark, Eve Abrams, Ida Homer, and Lester Gilbert. Most of them are still
living but Joseph Wasson is the only one still in the district. He lives
in Onslow and is an old man. In the winter Levi Coder was the teacher
and the school was full of the same names but at that session the pupils
were the older boys and girls. I did not go much, for the winter was
cold and the house crowded.
In 1872 two railroads came through
the country and two little towns sprang up. Onslow on the east took our
school and the building was sold to Nelson Reade. A few years ago it was
still in use as a granary. Then we went to No. 2, known as North
Madison. In those days we were all declaimers and committed to memory
many of the master pieces. Any visitor who could not recite some prose
or poetry selection when visiting a neighborhood school was considered
dumb. We had speaking on the last day and ended with spelling school in
which the best speller won. I never won but my oldest sister, Maggie,
and one brother, A. N., were never worsted. The rule was words in the
McGuffey speller and none other but finally any word in our language.
Our games were Mumble Peg, played with a knife, the loser to pull a
wooden peg from the ground with his teeth and lose it so no one could
find it. Killdeer, or Fox and Geese, was played in the snow around a
home base in the center with four spokes running out as avenues
connected at the outer ends with a circular path. One player, chosen by
lot, was required to catch and hold any he could and pat them three
times. Those caught were then helpers till all were caught. No one could
be caught while in home base and I have seen some pretty rough work at
the last with one of the big boys, but usually the combined efforts
would get him. I Spy and Two Old Cat were other games.
There were
no coaches or other frills and we did not need them.
Part 6
CHURCHES & SUNDAY SCHOOLS
As time went on, the minds of the people were turned to the church. A
congregational Sunday school was opened without any rules, made up of
almost every denomination of Protestant faith or following. It met at
the North Madison schoolhouse. They had a very interesting time and were
the means of much good. Soon a Methodist circuit rider heard of it and
came to preach, the part of the gathering being of that faith. All went
well for a time, but soon sectarianism crept in and strife began. The
followers of Alexander Campbell and the Baptists had to have more water.
The Presbyterians would not permit secret societies. As a result, good
fellowship and true religion were jolted.
The Methodists,
however, kept on in the lead and formed a class. My father and mother,
M. O. Felton and Anna Marie Felton, S. L. Gilbert and wife, and Limon G.
Ransom and wife, six in all, formed the class to which we were added.
Among those who came by letter from their native States were Clark
Martin Nichols, Amos G. Pangburn, Isaac Overley and his wife Mary,
Samuel Alexander, a widower, and Isaac Gee and wife.
Father went
to Monticello and bought a large family Bible and two hymn books. The
hymn books contained mostly Wesley hymns which have been largely
displaced in modern Methodist hymn books much to the detriment of the
books. Father and mother were good singers and I used enjoy hearing them
sing those grand old Wesley hymns. They had taken singing lessons in s
singing school conducted by John E. Lovejoy, a brother of Elijah P.
Lovejoy.
Soon after the formation of the Methodist class the
group decided that they must have a church. I remember that my father
came home and said to my mother: “We are not going to talk about it any
more, we are going to build.” So they went at it and by hard work raised
over two thousand dollars, enough so there was no debt when it was ready
for dedication. Some gave more money than they were able to, even to
selling the last cow. others gave labor. A man by the name of George
Coder was the builder, assisted by his grown boys. The lumber was mostly
drawn from Dubuque, fifty miles away, sills sixteen inches square down
to ten by ten plates. The top was trussed together like an overhead
bridge. The size was thirty by fifty feet, with a vestibule or nursery
in front, for the people were young and had plenty of babies. The church
had three double windows on a side with twelve by fourteen inch panes of
glass, two of smaller size inside the vestibule, and six transit lights
above a double door. There were two smaller doors from the vestibule to
main room with a spire over the vestibule surmounted with a large tin
ball. No bell organ was ever put in this church.
The inside
furniture and arrangement were the same as those in other country
Methodist churches. The seats were white pine with a walnut rail or rim
on top and ends. On each side was a row of seats holding four persons
with a space one-fourth from the rear for two wood stoves surrounded by
seats. The seats in the middle row held six. The pulpit was in the
center of the front surrounded by a railing or mourner’s bench. The
pulpit floor was two decks, a platform six inches higher than the main
floor and the preacher’s stand six inches higher than this. The floor
upon which the pulpit stood was carpeted. The first sofa was stuffed
with springs covered with black hair cloth. It was a great honor to be
allowed to sit on it. On each side of the platform were two seats called
the “Amen corner,” used by the most saintly and hard of hearing.
The old men and all the married men sat on one side and the wives and
older women on the other. The young people might sit in front but the
rough-necks sat in the rear. The decorum was not very good. Shrill
whispering and bad language were sometimes heard during the service,
with some laughter and rebukes from the preacher. Every man from the
preacher down chewed tobacco and spit in the aisles and on the floor.
Nothing was said about it, for it was a general custom. When two men
met, one of them was likely to ask for a chew the first thing. There was
not much smoking, although most of the men could smoke. A pipe might be
passed around in a small gathering in the manner of the red men.
Church service began with Sunday school at nine. We had no lesson
leaves. Some of the older members would announce a hymn and someone
would start the singing and the rest join in. Some of them could sing,
but then as now music brought jealousy and friction. One man, for
example, had not much music ability but liked to sing and he usually got
the wrong key and balled things up. The congregation felt that some way
had to be devised to stop him. My mother’s brother, George Krouse, a
very devout man of German blood with a strong accent, was given the job.
After the speaking in class meeting he said to the would-be song leader:
“you can’t sing and whenever you lead, everybody’s book goes right
shut.” The man never sang in church again. After a prayer, there might
be another song, and some general questions. Sometimes a heavy argument,
not of the best spirit, developed.
Finally it was decided that
classes should be organized. I was in the infant class and Aunt Mary
Overlely, mother’s sister, read from the chapter selected and explained
it as well as she could. The larger children and adults were grouped
according to age, the girls in one class, the boys in another, and the
old folks in a class by themselves. Sunday school lasted until the
preacher arrived and commenced the preaching service. There was no
collection. After the church service was over, a class meeting was held.
It was led by the class leader and here testimony of religious
experiences was given.
On Thursday evening a few of the faithful
met for prayer and for a business meeting concerning the church. At some
of these meetings some ludicrous episodes occurred. On one occasion, a
man about fifty years of age, very excitable and a poor judge of human
nature, got there late. As soon as he was done praying he remarked that
he must go home as the threshers were to be at his house early in the
morning and he must first kill a hog, fix cribs, and notify his help. He
pulled out his knife with a gesture, remarked that the hog must be
stuck—much to the delight of the less pious—and left for home.
Once a year, the four churches on charge had quarterly meetings with the
elder and some other preachers in attendance. It commenced on Saturday
afternoon and lasted until Sunday night. On Sunday the people from a
distance were invited to the homes of some of the nearby brethren for
dinner. Our people, being among the leaders, usually got some of the
preachers. It would be one o’clock before they got home. After that
dinner must be cooked at least in part and the table set. When things
were ready the preachers and the older folks took the first table of
eight or ten, and after a long blessing they would begin to eat, with
much visiting and an hour would be consumed. Then the young people were
seated. They did not take quite so long. After this we children came to
the table to eat what was left on dirty dishes. By that time it was
nearly time for afternoon worship, and we were soon ordered to hitch the
horses for the company. I have been so hungry I wished the whole church
would stop.
In the winter there was always a revival. The old
standbys were soon in earnest; afterwards the ones who had been dancing
or doing other things not in accordance with orthodox training would be
brought in. I have heard the preachers and the rest of the faithful
around that altar singing “Glory to God, Amen” until I was so scared I
hardly dared breathe. And now, though an old man, I have a horror of a
church. There was no shouting—that was before my time—but I have heard
men tell of their misdeeds and short-comings which I thought and still
think should not have been told.
After the meeting a donation
supper was usually held, and such a meal! Everything that the culinary
of the day afforded was to be had, meats of all kinds, frosted cake
trimmed with candy, pies, tarts, sauce, tea, and coffee. The dinner
started with oysters. The oysters in those days came in quart flat tin
cans, sealed and packed in ice. This meal cost seventy-five cents, the
proceeds going to the preacher.
Part 7
This church, the first built in Madison Township, Jones County, was
scarcely finished when one Susan Page, an old maiden lady, passed on.
She was a member of the church and had a sister, Mrs. Livengood, also a
member. It was decided to bury her near the church but not in the yard
and it was partly agreed to buy one square acre from Jacob Vanslike at
one hundred dollars, a very large price compared to five dollars, the
prevailing land value. In this acre she was buried. The preacher, a man
named John Fawcett, officiated and it was the first burying that any of
us younger children had ever seen. Being in early summer there was a
large crowd. I have never forgotten that ceremony, associated as it was
with the dire revelations from the revival. Susan Page had been a good
woman, a sort of neighborhood nurse, very much in demand, and
universally loved.
Some time after this, one Eliphalet A.
Nichols, an eccentric, but good man, conceived the idea that there
should be a village here and he would start it and be postmaster. Being
something of a promoter, he kept the matter quiet until he had bought
from Amos G. Pangburn a ten-acre strip of land cornering on the church
lot, the church being in the corner of John Alexander’s land. Isaac
Overley owned the eighty on the other corner.
This done,
Eliphalet Nichols confided his scheme to his brother, Martin. Eliphlet
was then a Baptist and not connected with our church, but he offered to
deed the church two acres farthest from the church for a graveyard. The
deal looked so good, that Martin took the deed and had the body of a
pauper buried in the plot, the poor farm not being far off, and had his
first wife’s remains moved from a neighboring township. He then brought
the matter before the church board. Amos Pangburn, however, was
naturally angered by the procedure and the two old men of the church had
soon started a church fight. Some of the meetings would have disgraced a
saloon. The quarrel divided the church and families, made enemies for
life, drove people from the fold, and was a very bad example of
Christian brotherhood. It so happened that mother’s family were
neighbors of Martin Nichols and followed him; while father followed
Pangburn and there were many arguments at home not pleasant for us
children. But Martin Nichols’ graveyard was adopted and is the last
resting place of many of the followers of the church.
A Sunday
school was held in most country churches in connection with the church
services during the summer months. The children of the neighborhood were
glad to attend as there were few places where they could go as a change
from every day tasks.
They always looked forward to the annual
picnic, usually held in the fall. One Sunday school would make the
initial move and invite the other Sunday schools in the neighborhood to
participate. The picnic was usually held in a grove owned by S. D. Titus
in Scotch Grove Township. Some of the men folks of the different schools
would go an appointed day to make preparation. They would build a
platform for the speakers and make seats of planks for the audience.
Each Sunday school had a banner bearing a motto which was carried at
the head of it in the grand march or procession that was a part of the
day’s events. Also each Sunday school was called upon to sing a song.
After a few of these preliminaries came the came the dinner which was
certainly a feast fit for a king, for our mothers were very skillful in
the culinary art.
Each Sunday school ate together at a long table
made by spreading table cloths on the ground. I, in my young days, took
somewhat of the nature of a character known as “Picnic Sam” in one of
Will Careleton’s poems. I would look on while the tables were being
spread and would edge in at the one that seemed to best fit my appetite.
After the dinner there was speaking and events to amuse the
children. I remember that on one of these occasions Reverend Manning was
asking easy questions for the children to answer. A number of us boys
were sitting together in front of a tall, spectacled, cadaverous man.
When a question was asked this man would prompt us and we would shout
the answer at the top of our voices, to the amusement of the older
people.
We all had an enjoyable time and then hurried home to see
if the cows had broken into the corn field. We wore our best clothes and
they were paid for as were also the things that entered into our dinner.
In those days deadbeats were rare and were not tolerated in honorable
society.
In 1872 the North Madison Sunday school thought it
should have a Christmas tree. None of the children had ever seen one
although some of them still firmly believed that Old Santa traveled with
his reindeer and came down the chimney in the night. The older of the
Krouses, the writer’s mother’s family, had seen trees in Germany and
directed the affair.
To begin with, there had to be money to buy
presents. My father, who had seen a lot of the world for those times,
and Amos Pangburn, who had been in theaters in New York City, decided to
have an exhibition, a sort of kindergarten theater. The matter was
threshed out, after the Thursday evening prayer meeting. The few
Presbyterians of the old school frowned on it and the Baptists thought
it very bad taste and refused to take hold but some of their older
children helped. After a few weeks practice in rehearsal and some
withdrawals, the grand night came. The church had a platform across the
front with a rough board floor, covered by a rag carpet in the center,
there not being a “boughten” carpet in the township. The curtain was of
calico cloth strung across on a wire about eight feet high. On each side
of the front opening was attached a short stick by which it would be
opened on command by two boys or stage hands. The sides were the
dressing rooms.
The program was opened with a prayer by Samuel Y.
Harmer, the circuit preacher. He was a very stout man and quite a hymn
writer and some of his hymns are still in the Methodists song books.
Robert G. Lyons made the opening address. He had been a student of
Lenox College, a small Presbyterian school at Hopkinton in Delaware
County, and made a very commendable speech. Then John G. Krouse, the
writer’s uncle started the show. He was uncle to the larger part of the
school, for he and a brother, George, and five sisters all liven in the
locality and had big families. Sarah Heimbaugh, the chorister, got the
whole school on the stage and with the aid of Limon G. Ransom’s organ
led us in singing the Evergreen Shore. There were some good singers, but
most of us just spoke. Even that was a great pride to our folks and
friends. There was speaking and dialogues. “The Train Tomorrow” was
played by the writer’s sister, Maggie, Frank Nichols as her boy, and W.
H. Alexander as a railroad man with more dignity than Jim Hill. The
woman, a neighborhood nurse and very much in demand when families were
large and before the modern fad of the hospital came in , wanted to go
to the town the next day on a call. She was handicapped by a badly
spoiled small boy, who carried rod and bait. She asked the railroad man
if this was where she could take the train tomorrow. The answer was,
“Yes, or any other day.”
The boy, being always hungry—like all
other boys—asked for ginger bread. Opening her old fashioned carpet bag,
she began to take out all the homeopathic treatments then known to
science and good for all the diseases in Jayne’s Almanac. She asked the
station agent if he was bothered with any of the ills mentioned to which
he gave short and decisive answers. Finally the train pulled in while
she had all her goods spread on the floor and she went through a great
rustle to collect them and board the train.
After that there was
a song and some tableaux and then the big hit, Dr. Killercure. The
writer’s father was the doctor. Sarah Heimbaugh and Maggie Ransom were
the two main stars. Emily Nichols, Big Emily as they called her to
distinguish her from her cousin Little Emily, was the doctor’s helper.
The doctor laid out the drugs for the various patients telling the
nature of the diseases. The assistant could not read but she remembered
what the doctor said and repeated it to each patient much to their
horror. Maggie Ransom was a good Irish mimic and had good training from
the railroad builders then in the country. She brought a little boy with
a sore head who had been given the wrong salve. My brother, Charley, was
the tot. As he was very shy and only a child, he just looked at that
crowd and grinned with a face as red as a June lily, while Maggie said
her boy’s head kept swelling clear to the ceiling and threatened that
when her husband got in he would blacken both eyes of the doctor. With a
few more stunts the show ended as a first night success with gate
receipts of twenty-three dollars and some cents, and no expenses.
Part 8
Next was the picking of the committee to get the presents. One of the
contestants for this honor was, of course, the superintendent, John
Krouse. For the two assistants, the writer’s mother, Mrs. Felton, and
her sister Mary Overley, wife of Isaac Overley, were pitted against Jane
Nichols, wife of E. A. Nichols, and Jane Krouse, wife of the
superintendent. Mrs. Felton and Mrs. Overley, being the oldest and
having more children to vote, won the day but the contest caused quite a
little hard feelings and family bickering.
The committee all went
to Monticello, the nearest town where any assortment of Christmas goods
was to be found, in the superintendent’s two-seated buggy, as we called
it then, there being no covered rigs in use. The money was prorated as
to age. The infant class, of which I was a member, received the value of
twenty cents, the amount per capita increasing up to one dollar for the
oldest or those about sixteen. I received a one-blade knife and a toy
watch in the division.
Maggie Ransom had been with her foster
parent to Kansas for a part of the year and was docked for time out so
she got only fifty cents worth. The committee, unfortunately, forgot to
rub out the cost mark, and the discrimination was taken as an insult by
both her and her parents. The committee forgot one or two so had to go
to Center Junction to fill in. Elmer Overley was sent to Uncle John
Krouse, the superintendent, to get the money for these purchases and
Aunt Jane Krouse, one of the defeated candidates for the committee, sent
back work that if she had gone there would have been no forgotten ones,
a comment not well received by Aunt Mary Overley.
Finally the
presents were assembled. Next came the tree. It must be an evergreen but
none was to be had short of the pinery hundreds of miles away and the
little cedars on the rocks along the Maquoketa River ten miles away.
Jacob Vanslike, who lived near the church, knew the location of some
trees, for he liked good things to eat and had scoured the whole country
for years in search of blackberries. Now Jacob had a fair-sized family
and lived by the church but he did not attend much nor send his
children, so he had to be paid one dollar to get the tree.
On
this occasion he hied himself to the river in his wagon. As this
particular winter had no snow the ice on the river was thin and on going
over he left his rig behind. Even walking across he broke through and
got well immersed without benefit of clergy. Indeed he was one of those
unlucky mortals who get in all the trouble at hand, careful or careless.
However, he got a tree about ten feet high and some smaller ones and
delivered them to the church. Isaac Overley came with his axe, draw
knife, and brace and bit, redistributed some of the limbs, put in some,
and made a tree as fine as the ones he was used to seeing in old
Kentucky around Flemingsburg where cedar trees grew as large as forest
trees in this country and were used for rails to build fences. The
writer has seen the people in Tennessee taking these cedar rails out of
worm fences, which the natives said the pioneers had laid there, and
selling them to the pencil factories.
The tree being duly placed,
the next problem was its decoration. The neighbors popped corn and
strung it on thread and wound it through the limbs. For lighting they
got twelve little candle sticks to hold wax candles, similar to the big
ones but about the size of a lead pencil half used up. This together
with the glare of the six oil lamps on the side with tin reflectors was
the illumination. When all was ready, the presents were duly displayed
amid the candles lighted. After a song and a prayer, Lew Ellis, an
ex-soldier picked the tree, while Maggie Felton and Carry Pangburn did
the announcing to a tickled bunch of children. I am certain this was the
first Christmas tree in the township
This was the last public
function held in the country church, for the little towns had railroads
and soon had churches or church services. Before long the older children
in the little community began to scatter and go to school and college
leaving only a remnant behind. Finally in 1876 the conference, against
the will of a great majority of the good people who built the church and
had worshipped in it., moved the building two miles east to Onslow. Many
of the members never united with any other denomination or church. A few
on the east went with the church. The writer’s family moved to Center
Junction and the whole family of eight attended the Methodist college at
Mt. Vernon, most of them graduating and becoming professional men or
women. They attended the Center Junction Methodist Church but no church
could ever take the place of the old one. It flourished in Onslow for
years and then because of the death and removal of its members, finally
died of starvation. Recently it has been torn down and made into a barn.
The only people left in the neighborhood of the original church
building site are a cousin of the writer, her husband, and family, and
Mrs. J. N. Smith, nee Rachel Nichols, who lives on the ground and owns
the farm entered by her father Eliphalet A. Nichols, in 1852. This has
been her home for more than sixty years. The home consists of one
hundred and ten acres with buildings, orchard grove, and many
improvements. I think there has never been a judgment tax, sale, or lien
of any description against it or a crop failure.
WAR PERIOD
The township of Madison was very patriotic during the Civil war. It
was almost unanimously Republican and very intolerant of any who
differed from them. One of our neighbors, William S. Slocum, a
Connecticut Yankee school teacher, was a Democrat. He hated the negro
and sided with the Copperheads. His hired man reported in Wyoming that
Slocum had advised him not to enlist and had said that if he were
drafted he would desert and go with the South.
One morning Thomas
Green, with several more men, came to our house with a rope and got
father and went to Slocum’s house for an explanation. Slocum denied the
charge and being a man of good character outside of politics, with a
wife and small girl, and well liked in the community, my father advised
leniency. Slocum recanted, his hired man enlisted, and the matter was
dropped. Madison Township always furnished her full quota and never had
a draft. Father said at one time there were only two single men in the
township of military age not in service.
From the following story
you can see why one of these men remained at home. He once took his
sweetheart to Anamosa to a county fair. They had cube sugar for coffee
and he liked sweets, so he filled his coat pocket with the sugar lumps.
Some of the waiters noticed it and a marshal collared him and marched
back to the table and made him disgorge in public. He was known as
“Sugar________ “ for the rest of his time in the neighborhood.
Because our quota was full, the few Cooperheads in our township were
never called on to go as soldiers but Jackson Township west of us had in
it a settlement of Jackson Democrats and Southern sympathizers, who were
all related through marriage and previous training. Otherwise they were
good citizens and prosperous. So few of them enlisted that a draft was
required to raise their quota.
During the Civil War my father
belonged to a company of home guards that met for drill at Johnsontown.
On one of their drill days Governor Samuel J. Kirkwood inspected the
company and made a speech. he told them, among other things, that there
were a lot of Copperheads in one locality who might need to be shown a
thing or two and if so he might send the company over there. If he did,
they were not to shoot any one unless it was necessary but if they did
shoot to remember that he had the pardoning power.
Part 9
SOME LOCAL CHARACTERS
About 1870 a man by the name of James Courtney came to our community
from eastern Ontario, with his wife and family of five boys and one
girl, Sary. He was of Scotch-Irish descent, leaning strongly to the
Irish, born probably on the old sod. He was about middle age, slovenly
in dress and habits, but ambitious and strictly honest. His wife,
Diantha, was a sister of the Nichols men before mentioned. Courtney had
been a hired man, a trapper and all purpose man in a new timbered
country, but had no fixed abode. His boys were all young men from ten to
twenty years old and like him had grown up rough, profane, and
mischievous, but honest.
This man purchased an eighty acre tract
of land cornering on father’s. It was rolling, with a few scattered
trees on it that had escaped the ravages of the fire. He built a small
house, different from any we were used to. It was boarded up and down,
with a layer of clay lining about four inches thick. Above was a floored
garret for the four boys at home. Then he bought from John McCain the
last pair of oxen in the neighborhood, Buck and Bright, and with the aid
of his boys broke the ground, taking three years to complete this work.
This farm was the only place the writer ever saw wheat cut with a
cradle.
The wife and mother lived only a few years and died of
cancer after which the father “kept batch” with some of the boys a year
or two until they got into a dispute about something and he fired them.
They made arrangements to go to Chadron, Nebraska, at that time as far
from settlement as possible, but before they left, to make things look
well and leave the father in grateful remembrance, they sawed off three
of the best apple trees that were just nicely bearing.
Courtney,
while not a drunkard, would once or twice a year get ‘roarin’” drunk for
a few days. He was not of the fighting Irish, but funny, and he pulled
off many queer stunts. At all times he was profane and foul-mouthed and
would keep men and boys in an uproar and the women and girls guessing
whether to frown or laugh.
He had a neighbor by the name of
Richard Slocum, (a brother of W. S. Slocum mentioned earlier) , a
Connecticut Yankee. Slocum was very nervous and to make things worse,
the first year he was there his team ran away, hit a tree, wrecked the
wagon, and all but killed the man, so that he was a physical wreck for
the rest of his life and often called on Courtney to help him with work.
On one occasion they were butchering. Slocum brought with him a
block and tackle and three pulleys, but the rope had rotted from neglect
and wear. The hog was heavy and after it was scalded and swung up and
Courtney was engaged in dressing it the rope broke and the hog fell into
the mud and dirt. It was hard to tell who swore the most, but Slocum’s
squeaky voice carried the farthest.
Several years afterward,
through exposure and old age, Courtney died. His children being out of
the country, the neighbors took charge of the burial. During life he had
no connection with any church nor any regard for religion of any kind,
yet he had been honorable in his business dealing and had accumulated
some property. The old neighbors felt they owed him a civil burial so
they got the North Madison schoolhouse and one Asahel Bronson from
Wyoming to act as minister. The congregation sang the hymns. For his
sermon text the preacher took the words, “If ye will not repent ye shall
die in your sins.” Our Aunt Esther Pangburn said he just preached the
dead man into Hell.
The Reverend Bronson had been in his younger
days a regularly ordained Methodist preacher in Wyoming County, New
York. Failing in health, he came to Wyoming, Iowa, in 1859, following
his cousins, James A. Bronson, and a brother B. K. Bronson, who founded
the town of Wyoming in 1856. He was small in stature and had a great
deal of energy. In Iowa he soon gained his health and was for years a
regular preacher in the Upper Methodist Conference and filled many
appointments. Finally he settled in Wyoming and lived a retired life,
filling many small offices and preaching in the neighboring schoolhouses
where there was no church within walking distance. He lived to be
ninety-six years old and no man ever lived in the county so universally
loved and honored as he. He married more couples and preached more
funeral sermons than any other preacher of any creed in the county. The
writer remembers hearing him remark in the middle nineties before he
made the opening prayer at a Fourth of July celebration in Wyoming: “I
can say what no other man in this large gathering can say, I am 88 years
old today, My father fought in the Revolutionary War.” His voice was
then strong and had no tremble. The worst roughneck never swore in his
presence, just from the universal respect he carried with him in all
gatherings.
Another character in the neighborhood was John
Brutsman, a grandfather of the wife of the writer. He was a Pennsylvania
Dutchman from Wyoming County, who had come to Dixon, Illinois, in the
forties and was there during the later days of Peter Cartwright and the
Methodist crusade. His wife had joined the Methodists but he had been
raised a Quaker, though he had not worked at it much, and he hated the
Methodists among other things. After he came to Madison Township in
1866, he bought a tract of timber on North Mineral Creek, about ten
miles from his home, for firewood and fencing. The dealer showed him a
very good piece of timber, but deeded him another with scarcely any good
timber on it. At this time timber land was worth four time as much as
prairie land and there were no plats scattered about as there are now.
Only the surveyor’s notes at the courthouse were available. Brutsman
paid for the land and soon commenced to cut and haul logs from the land
he had been shown.
It happened, however, that a man by the name
of J. Stunkard lived in the neighborhood of the timber and owned the
patch being cut. He became aware of the cutting and traced it to
Brutsman, who readily admitted he had cut the trees and explained how he
had purchased the land. As a result Brutsman and Stunkard got together
to fix matters up. Stunkard invited Brutsman and his boy, Jim, to dinner
before they went to survey the cutting that had been done. He was a
Methodist and as the custom was, he asked the blessing before the meal.
In those days the plates were put on the table up-side-down over the
knives and forks. After the meal Brutsman took his son, Jim, out by the
wagon and remarked: “Did you see that old cuss reading that little verse
of his plate?” But the affair was adjusted and Brutsman found his own
timber.
Among our neighbors were Phil and Margaret Allberry. They
were fine people but very illiterate and Phil was a strong Democrat. He
told my father during the Civil War that Lincoln had no right to abolish
the writ of hocus pocus (habeas corpus). In clearing his farm of trees
he would fasten a chain around the tree as high as he could reach, hitch
the oxen to the other end of the chain and while he was digging and
chopping the roots he would urge the oxen to pull. The Allberys were
great eaters and Margaret always had a cupboard filled with good things.
Occasionally when my folks were going to Wyoming they would leave some
of us at the Allberys. Margaret would always give us so much to eat that
we were usually sick for several days afterward.
Our neighbors
generally did not take to education as we did but though they were
ignorant, they developed the community, paid their way, and could be
relied on to do their full duty when the nation was in danger and
Lincoln called for soldiers to defend it.
Then as now, there were
some very small-souled men. We had two of them in our community, whose
names I will not mention. A death was near in each of their families.
Both of them scoured the county before the death to see where he could
get the cheapest coffin.
The earliest settlers of our community
were mostly Yankees, the few foreigners who were there being mostly
Germans, among whom were my mother’s folks, the Krouses.
Part 10
PESTS
We had few pests to destroy the field crops or fruit, but in the
middle 70’s the chinch bugs stopped the cultivation of wheat. They were
little insects about the size of a gnat with white wings and black
bodies. The old ones did no damage, but the brood so thoroughly sapped
the straw that the grain did not fill out. You could first see small
patches of grain turning white and then in a day or two the whole field
whitened. Then the chinch bugs would leave the wheat fields and go into
the oats or corn and take a strip from ten to twenty rows. After that
the farmers stopped trying to raise wheat and they disappeared.
About the time of the Civil War, the Colorado potato bug got to us and
they were such pests that we had to go over the vines every day, and
pick of the bugs, and destroy the eggs. When grown, these beetles were
red and black and about twice the size of a lady bug. They deposited
their eggs in clusters on the under side of the leaves. The eggs hatched
in a day or two and if left alone the larvae would eat leaves, vines and
all. That was the most dreaded job on the farm, but people raised only
what they could consume at home, for there was no market for potatoes.
Finally the lady bug came and lived on the eggs of the Colorado beetle
and for a great many years there have not been enough to bother. Many
other pests, however, have followed so spraying has to done, a remedy
not thought of in the old days.
The currants were never bothered
nor the gooseberries, and there were no apple worms, cabbage worms, or
leaf roll or plant lice. I think the wild land raised enemies that
destroyed these pests.
There were two kinds of squirrels: small
striped ones which were very numerous and the large grey ones, about the
size of timber squirrels. The squirrels would follow up the rows of
planted corn and dig up the seeds as long as there was any of the kernel
left. We trapped them and, if there was any corn left, fed them for a
while.
When the first cherry trees began to bear, the birds took
many of the cherries. Some people shot the birds but for the most part
they tried scaring them. L. G. Ransom shot many birds and soon after had
a very bad knee. His neighbor, S. Dilley, thought it was a judgment sent
on him.
SIGNS
It has been a weakness of the human family from the earliest dawn to
believe in witches, signs, imps, and the like. We, being drawn from many
nations, have some of the superstitions of them all. Every new country’s
first settlers retain some superstitious beliefs and ours was no
exception.
The Overleys, Arnolds, Lightfoots, and Basingers from
Fleming County, Kentucky, were strong believers in the Twelve signs of
the Zodiac. They consulted it, as a sailor his chart, for all farming,
fencing, weather, and similar problems.
The writer’s uncle, Isaac
Overley, came the most to our notice. He weaned his children, calves,
and colts when the sign was in the foot to keep them from crying too
much. He planted potatoes by it, so they would not all go to blossoms,
shingled according to it, so the shingles would not warp, and fenced at
the time indicated, so the fences would not settle in the ground.
The writer was once shown an old goose setting on the prairie at the
home of Elmer Ellsworth Overley, a cousin. I noticed an old rusty axe
lying on the ground near her and picked it up, intending to carry it
away, when Elmer said, “Don’t do that. Pa put it there to keep the
thunder from killing the eggs.”
There were many weather signs. L.
G. Ransom claimed that if the sun went down clear on Friday night it
would rain before Monday noon. Jacob Parks said that if you saw many
whirlwinds in the spring it was a sure sign of a dry summer.
This
was from the Cavalier strain; the Puritan line went mostly to witches.
One woman related that while living in Illinois her mother could not get
the butter to gather in the churn. An old Yankee woman told her to put a
horse shoe in the churn. She did this and got immediate results. The old
German woman was converted to the belief, not realizing that the heat or
cold of the iron did the job, not the driving out of witches.
Horses, then as now, would rub their necks in shedding time. A neighbor
once noticed a colt of ours with stirrups or snarls in its mane and
remarked that the witches had been riding it. For hot, dry summers and
cold, blustery winters there were many and contradictory signs brought
from all climates. some were borrowed from the Indians.
In
August, 1869, there occurred a total eclipse of the sun visible in Iowa.
It was foretold in the almanacs and many visitations of wind and weather
were predicted—frosts, floods, and blight to follow. The eventful day
came. It was about four in the afternoon. Father and George and Alfred,
my two older brothers, were east of the house binding wheat. Mother my
oldest sister, Maggie, then thirteen, Charley, Winnie—the baby—and Aunt
Esther, mother’s sister, were at the house.
Maggie, who had heard
of smoked glass for clear vision, was prepared and as soon as the
eclipse began she kept close watch. The writer did not enjoy seeing that
black disk cover the bright sun with not a cloud in sight. Finally I was
sent to the field to call the men to look at it. Mother and Aunt Esther
were talking about it and when another would occur. Maggie said in
thirty years and mother said none of us would live to see it. But Maggie
said she expected to as she would be forty-three, George would be as old
as father, forty-one, and I would be thirty-six. We all lived to see the
next eclipse and many years after, except Maggie, who was taken by
grippe in 1889.
When the eclipse was complete, the chickens flew
into the trees to roost and the turkeys on the rail fences near their
young. It got noticeably cooler while the sun was covered. When it was
nearly over, Maggie and I were sent to dig the peach blow potatoes for
supper. I scolded as she watched the sun while I dug the potatoes. A
German family by the name of Harber lived a short distance from us at
the time. The man was away and the young woman with the two children got
so frightened they went into the house and shut the door. But the next
morning the sun rose as usual. Father never believed in signs and we
never had that burden of fear to carry. I find there are lots of people
still following those old signs.
Part 11
TREES & FLOWERS
From northeastern Iowa to Des Moines, the state capital, the rivers
are about twenty miles apart. Along these rivers there was usually a
belt of solid timber about two miles wide mostly hilly, then a belt of
solid prairie with no trees or brush, and then a belt of low hills,
mostly clay. In the sixties there were on the tops of these hills some
large oak trees about equally divided among white, black, or red oaks,
as the people called them. The black oak was so named from its black
bark. The red oak was named from its red center, or the heart of the
wood. There was also the burr oak which has an acorn in clusters with a
husk resembling a bur. These acorns fell early and we children used to
eat them raw. They were also good when roasted. The others were very
bitter.
These trees must have gotten started and survived because
the grass on the tops of the hills was shortest or tramped out by the
wild animals and did not make such a hot fire when the prairies burned.
As soon as the top-most limbs got above the fire hazard and the cropping
of the animals the trees were safe and some of them grew to be big
trees, with trunks from ten to thirty inches in diameter. They were
short bodied. The limbs branched out from eight to fifteen feet above
the ground, like those of a well pruned apple tree, and they often
shaded a spot ninety feet in circumference.
Sometimes the trees
grew in pairs, perhaps a white oak and a black oak about the same size,
but mostly they stood singly. There would be from two to ten oak trees
on a forty and about two or three shellbark hickory trees. These usually
bore a very good nut of small size with a thin shell. I knew every tree
in six sections and I never found two trees bearing the same shaped nut.
I got my share and sometimes more. These shellbarks were very rough. The
shells or scales of bark would be about eighteen inches long, ending in
saber points sticking out from the tree, and many a time the writer has
had to stop and pull these shells away by breaking the points off before
he could climb to the limbs. I have often wondered why nature made them
so; there is some reason, but I have never found out why nor been told.
In the summer the cattle and horses enjoyed the shade of the trees
and the travelers on the old trails would stop under them to rest and
eat. The settlers being mostly from the timber states saved the trees
for they still loved them. The hickory trees were left for the nuts as
the children claimed the trees and for years those were all the nuts
they had to eat. The farmers plowed around them and, the modern machines
not being in use, the trees were not much bother.
The farm on
which the Felton family was raised remained the home until 1896 and was
held by deed until 1925. It had several fine trees and was known as Oak
Park Farm. It was the last to surrender these monarchs and the writer
now knows of only one farm where any of the trees of the sixties remain.
That is the old Eliphalet Nichols home where his youngest daughter,
Rachel Nichols Smith, still lives. For four generations—since 1852—the
people on this farm have enjoyed the shady oaks. Then the farms began to
be sold and rented in the eighties, the German tenants cut the trees and
turned the orchards into asylums for ailing beasts, calf pastures, and
the like, which soon destroyed both shade and fruit trees.
As
soon as the majority of the land was tilled and the fires were
controlled the heads of ravines soon grew timber. Stumps of oaks which
had been burned to the ground sent up vigorous shoots that in twenty
years made good posts and much firewood. These sprouted trees occasioned
much hard labor to grub. The writer when in his teens had many hard days
work getting them out. The tool was a mattock with a narrow axe on the
one side and a stout hoe on the other, on a straight handle. After the
fire hazard was past the soft wood got started and soon the cottonwood,
elm, and balm of Gilead, locally known as quaking asp, shot up in fence
lines and road sides.
As soon as the frost went out in the
spring, flowers began with the grass. The first to come were the
cowslips. These grew in the sloughs. The cowslip plant had a large flat
leaf, a juicy stem, and yellow flowers. The leaves were gathered for
greens by the early settlers, for there were no dandelions in the
country at that time.
Then there were the johnny-jump-ups or wild
pansies in three or four colors. Also the Indian tobacco, with its
pallid flowers. We chewed the leaves, hence its name. The sheep-sorrel
with pink flowers grew in clusters. The Indian head or bloody-butcher
grew on a single stem. In June came the pinks. This was a wonderful
flower of rare beauty, growing in the meadows. It had yellow flowers in
a cluster on a stalk about a foot high.
In July came the
ladyslippers. The yellow ones were quite common and grew on a single
stem about a foot high with one flower shaped like a slipper. White ones
with purple markings grew on some of the knolls. The writer had not seen
one of these white ladyslippers for more than fifty years, until he
found some in the spring of 1930 near Hopkinton. I think it was the
prettiest wild flower of them all.
The dry land lily grew on a
stalk with bright red flowers in irregular formation. The slough lily
had several flowers on a stem. Its petals were curved with black dots.
One kind of prairie thistle grew about a foot high with three flowers
about the size of a round house paint brush. It was a beautiful flower
and very rare. These flowers are now found only on the railroad right of
ways that have never been plowed.
LECTURES
About 1875 a spasm of lecturing spread over the whole country similar
to the Chautauqua. The older children were attending the small
denominational colleges and bringing home reports of the school lectures
by the professors and preachers. The idea spread. At Center Junction,
for example, a club was formed to establish a lecture course. It was
headed by Z. G. Isabell, the local Nasby, a man past middle life, who
was also a Methodist preacher, a registered M. D., and a druggist. Dr.
Carlisle A. Cary, Amos Pangburn, S. McGinty, M. O. Felton, Jess Houser,
the local merchant, and a few more of equal note made up the membership.
The field was well supplied from Henry Ward Beecher, Robert G.
Ingersoll, Henry Watterson, and Schuyler Colfax down to the ground,
covering all subjects, in title at least.
This club decided on
three lectures. For the first they took a humorist named Ely Perkins.
The Methodist Church was selected as the hall for it was the largest
meeting place, seating about two hundred and fifty. The crowd gathered,
made up mostly of the most devout Methodists and Presbyterians of the
county and their families, except the baby which they had been ordered
to leave at home. They gathered in solemn order as if at a memorial
gathering, expecting to hear an orthodox sermon on the sin of a smile.
Dr. Isabell in his ministerial clothes rose from behind the pulpit and
proceeded to introduce the speaker. He said, in part, that the good
people of the town and vicinity had decreed that they would not have any
one-horse lecturer, so they sent to New York City for one.
Then
Perkins, after a few words of praise for the group, launched out with
funny stories and some bantering of the crowd. He had brought some
drawings by way of illustrations. Among other things he said that his
Uncle William was a very temperate man and had never drunk anything but
whiskey and water but got to feeling bad so he quit the water
altogether. At this some of them reached for their Bibles, other cleared
their throats, and the atmosphere cooled perceptibly. A little later he
got to the Englishman. He said it took a Yank two seconds to get
anything through his head but it took an Englishman two weeks. The
Methodist preacher who was sitting in front of him was English. This
again iced the Methodists. At last the speaker looked at his watch and
announced that he had been talking for an hour and a half and came to a
close. I was much interested in the talk, especially the stories, and
drank in all of it and remember it to this day. But the audience—there
was never a more disgusted gathering left the church. They got the kind
of lecture they paid for but not the kind they wanted. This ended the
lecture course and goes to show that the mind of man is directed by
prejudice more than by thought.