Old Settlers' Stories
by Eleanor Bremer
The town of Ocheyedan was only five years old when I was born
on July 4, 1895.
My dad, Fred Meyer, had a blacksmith shop on Main Street, we
kids spent much of our time playing near by and were able to see
most everything that was going on, some of which I remember
very well.
My parents came from two separate villages in Germany, but had
not met until they were here in America. Dad came in 1887,
and worked for the railroad to make enough money to build a
house. This little shack was our home and Dad had a
blacksmith shop. There was nothing but prairie south of the
shop. Mother would tell about when they first came here,
how the buffalo would come right up to our house.
I remember the tornado that rolled this little house and set
it back upright some distance from where it originally
stood. They left it there, straightened it out and
continued to live in it. As the family grew, more rooms
were added. When the tornado hit, Mother was standing at
the window watching a dove flying against the wind. On the
floor were five big sacks of potatoes, ready to be taken to the
cellar. There was a door in the floor that opened up to go
down to the cellar. Anyway when the house rolled over, the
baby landed between the sacks of potatoes. A pendulum
clock, brought from Germany, and a footed glass dish also landed
among the potatoes. Everything else was gone. The
baby was not hurt, but Dad had a big gash on his thigh.
There was lard and syrup mixed together all over
everything. It was a mess.
Dad had a pitch fork in the shop, which he displayed for a
long time. During this storm a sliver of wood from the town
hall went through the wall of dad's shop and right through the
center of this pitch fork.
John and Mary Graves had the first grocery store in
town. I remember her wearing a long skirt with large
pockets. She always kept money in these pockets and all the
kids knew it. Later on Gole's had a grocery store, there
was a small meat market, Mr. Bowman had a saloon and the Tatums
had a furniture store. Al Fritz built a building a couple
of doors up from Dad's shop. Mr. Fritz called this building
"the dream of his life". There were no
sidewalks at first, then board sidewalks were built.
After the tornado rolled and moved our house, Dad built a new
shop on Main Street. The large lawn between the shop and
our house gave us a good area to play in. Every night the
curfew bell rang from the town hall, which was also used for the
fire bell. The kids had to be off the street by 8:00 in the
winter and 9:00 in the summer, but since we lived right there on
Main Street we were able to see everything that was going on
after the curfew. Another thing we did after the curfew
bell rang was to play on the hitching racks. They were
located around town for the farmers to tie up their horses when
in town. Tom Cramer, the town marshall, was a good natured
guy and all the kids liked him, he let us play there, for we were
quiet and didn't bother anybody even though the curfew bell had
rung.
My brother Fred helped to build the new water tower in
1910. He was 17 or 18 years old.
Ocheyedan was just like the old western movies you see on
TV. One time there was a group of men standing around in a
circle down near the saloon. We kids went over to see what
was happening. Two men were on the ground fighting.
One hit the other on the head with a rock, blood was running out
and nobody stopped them, everybody just stood there
watching. The old time movies are not fairy takes, things
like this actually happened.
Will tell about the school burning down. It was my first
year at school and my class was writing at the blackboard, when
there was a terrible noise. My teacher, Lucy Smith, ran to
the door, opened it and as she did thick, heavy green smoke
filled the room. She told us all to run outdoors and she
went to the cloak room and carried all of our coats outside.
In one of the classrooms, two boys were acting up, the teacher
was going to walk over and straighten them out, she stopped short
and saw the boys sitting there fanning the smoke that was coming
through the cracks. The fire had gotten such a start in
this wooden building, it went up like a cracker box. I was
in the southwest room, while my sister Theresa and brother Fred
were in the northeast room. All ran out and within five
minutes after they got out of their room, the floor went
down. It was 30 below zero and the wind was blowing so
strong that it was blowing the kid's caps and scarfs down the
road. We then held classes all over town, in the Methodist
Church, town hall and even in the old saloon building. From
then on we had fire drills.
Trains came into town every day. We played on the tracks
and put safety pins, washers and whatever on the tracks and
waited for the train to run over them and smash them. I
will never forget when Leo Miller caught his foot in the cow
catcher. He was in my third grade class in school.
The family lived north of the tracks. His mother heard the
train whistle blow and blow and wondered why. Soon after,
they brought her son home on a stretcher without his leg.
In the winter all the kids and some of the young married
couples would walk out to Rush Lake and skate all evening
and then walk back to town. We also walked out to the
Ocheyedan Mound. There was an old foundation in the
northwest area of the Mound and we kids from town played around
it many times. Mr. Shuttleworth started to build a tile
factory there, but was not permitted to finish building it,
because it was found to be the highest point in Iowa, and
building this factory would rein the Mound. The foundation
was left there for a number of years. Many people did take
gravel from the Mound for roads and yards.
The Gypsies would come into town with their wagons loaded with
kids. They would be all over town. The women went
into the stores and harassed the store keeper. One of the
women got into trouble with Tom Cramer, the town marshall, he
just walked away from her and wouldn't talk to her anymore.
The men would take their gallon tin pails into the saloon and get
them filled with beer. The kids would run all over town
begging and some of them stealing things.
Our house was behind the shop and we had a sidewalk built from
the front out past the house to the wood shed. We had some
old boots and overshoes out there that were to be burned or
destroyed. This little boy went in there, picked them up
and looked them all over, now if he had been a little Gypsy boy
he would have taken them and ran, but he came to the door and
knocked. Oh, he had the whitest skin, well, he came and
knocked at the door and said, "could he have some of those
overshoes if he would sing a song for us?" So we told
him he could, we just wanted to hear him sing. So he sang a
song for us and went on and took what he wanted. No one can
tell me he was a Gypsy boy, you know there were stories of how
they used to kidnap little children. He was such a nice
acting little boy. I'm sure he was not a Gypsy boy.
When word would come out "the specked apples are in
town" everybody took their baskets to a little building that
was located behind the Corner Cafe and get specked, bruised
apples. Nobody in town had any apple trees yet, in fact,
there were very few trees of any kind, so when a carload of
apples came in we all had apples to eat, peel and can.
There was a lady named Lottie March who lived in a tiny house
north of the old Methodist Church. She liked to have us
kids come to her place, because we would do things for her.
She would come up town pulling her little coaster wagon to sell
cookies and all kinds of things like that. First thing she
would do is stop at our house and the door would open and we
would hear her say, "Can I use your privy?" We all got
a kick out of that.
My older sister, Pauline (one of the twins), worked in the
home of Mrs. Tatum. The Tatums had the furniture
store. We were still in that small house when my sister was
to get married. No way did Mrs. Tatum think my sister could
have a wedding in our small house. Mrs. Tatum insisted on
the wedding taking place in her house, but the fellow my sister
was to marry, who was an Englishman, said "We are getting
married in this small house even if the preacher has to stand
outside and marry us through the window". I always
gave him credit for that, he was a very nice guy.
There was always some pranks done on Halloween night.
During a storm one night the wind blew the steeple off the
Methodist Church and that left those four bare corners up
there. The morning after Halloween there was a beer keg on
each one of those corners.
Oh, and then there was this very large lady living in the east
part of town. She was an old maid and wore large
bloomers. Roy Underhill and my brother Paul were about the
same age and went halloweening together. This Roy Underhill
watched her clothes line and when he had a chance, swiped a pair
of bloomers from the line. The morning after Halloween, a
large pair of bloomers was seen hanging from one of those large
telephone poles that were in front of Dad's shop. The wind
was blowing and they hung there until the wind whipped them to
pieces. Word got out and of course everybody knew whose
they were, but nobody knows how hard those boys worked to get
them up there.
On Memorial Day there would be a service at the cemetery to
honor the Civil War Veterans. We would all meet up town,
get lined up and march to the cemetery behind someone who carried
the flag. I recall speaking a piece at one of the services.
The Meyers children are: twins Paul and Pauline, Meta,
Fred, Theresa, Eleanor, Stella, Bill, Fran, Henry and Herbert
(Pete).
The house that was home to the Meyer's family is no longer
standing, but was located directly north of where by niece, Sibyl
Seymour lives.
Eleanor married Chris Bremer in 1917, and lived on the farm
now occupied by Eldon Heetlands.
The fall before we were married, Chris ordered a house from
Sears and Roebuck. He hired a carpenter, Carl Lunsman to
help us put it up. Many people came to see this Sears and
Roebuck house. We later built a barn, corn crib and garage
on the farm. Planted many trees and had a big garden which
extended out to the road. My Dad was a gardener in Germany,
and this was to be my first garden. Well, out near the road
was this rare looking plant, I hoed around it and watered it,
then didn't get out to that end of the garden for some time and
when I did I found I had the most beautiful thistle.
With four little girls, I had a lot of clothes to wash.
They always wore dresses, for we didn't have slacks in those
days. I put the white clothes in a boiler of hot water on
the stove.
We lived on this farm for ten years, then moved to a farm near
May City, from there to Worthington until 1972, when Chris had a
light stroke and then we moved to Hartley, to be near our
son. Chris is deceased.
I, Elenor, celebrated by 95th birthday, July 4, 1990, in
Hartley.
The children are: Gwen is deceased, Muriel lives in
Colorado Springs, Stanley lives in Hartley, Joyce lives in Des
Moines, and Virginia graduated from Ocheyedan with the class of
1950, and resides in Oakland, California.
-Transcribed by Roseanna Zehner
Osceola County Iowa Genealogy - The IAGenWeb Project