1951-58 Wauneita McConnell, Associate Pastor
In February of 1951, Wauneita
McConnell was appointed as Associate Pastor. While at Clarinda, she also served the
Shambaugh
Church
.
Her work in Clarinda centered
on youth involvement. Her enthusiasm was
of great importance as the youth in the church became more and more
involved. She calls here years in the
ministry a “great, wonderful, awesome time”.
Some of those young people with
whom she worked particularly remember that she had the first car that they had
seen with an automatic dimmer. Hayrides
at the Louden farm and other farms were fun activities.
Hugh and Maxine Louden remember
that she often said, “God only has our hands and feet to do his work.”
After leaving Clarinda Rev.
McConnell served churches in
Moravia
and
Maryville
, Missouri., and
Russell
,
Iowa
. She retired in 1984 and in 2003 resides in
Indianola
,
Iowa
.
1958-62 David W. Ash
After being a collegiate
associate in
Ames
, Rev. Ash served churches in
Minburn and
Nevada
.
Rev.
Ash began his pastorate in Clarinda in 1958. After the popularity of the
Greenwood
pastorate, it was a difficult role to fill.
Rev. Ash was
fascinated by farm life and several parishioners report how he loved to visit
their farms and the farms of congregation members.
Rev. Ash was challenged with
kicking off the fund raising campaign for the educational unit. The story is told of how surprised he was at
the kick-off dinner to learn that one faithful parishioner (Bill Markle) had
left the dinner and was already making his calls. He was also surprised one Sunday when the
ushers did not bring the offering plates forward.
In
1959, the Ash family Christmas card included infant daughter Susan Louise. Her birth is the only record of a child born
to a pastor’s family while they were serving the Clarinda church.
Mrs. Ash directed the
choirs. His mother-in-law was church
secretary. Jennie Schenck was W.S.C.S.
President when a group of women worked all day to prepare the parsonage for the
Ash family. Jennie remembers that the
day after they moved in a full page of additional work to be done was given to
the women.
The following excerpts are from
Rob Ash, son of Rev. Ash. Rob is the
head football coach at
Drake
University
:
“I'm sorry to tell you that my
dad passed away in August of 1998 with complications from Alzheimer's. He had been in pretty tough shape for 3-4
years, and had been living in Wesley Acres in increasingly more dependent
condition each year. My mom died in 1989
of cancer and dad had remarried the widow of a former Methodist pastor in 1991,
but unfortunately they didn't have much quality time together before dad
started having serious medical problems.
I can remember a lot about the
days in Clarinda. Of course we had the
terrible fire that destroyed our detached garage, including our car and our
Nimrod camper, along with dad's workshop and several bicycles, on a Saturday
morning just one day before we were scheduled to take off on our annual August
camping trip for four weeks. The trailer
was loaded with sleeping bags and camping equipment, and we had already packed
in boxes of canned food for the trip. As
I recall, dad went ahead and preached on Sunday, then we put out the
"all-call" for help. My uncle
from
DeWitt
,
Iowa
loaned us his station wagon, and
various members of the congregation pitched in with a tent, sleeping bags, and
all kinds of gear, and we left as scheduled on our camping trip with the garage
still almost
smoldering! What an incredible outpouring of sharing that
was!
(You know, we had an
incinerator out back of the parsonage where we burned a lot of our trash -- I
had almost forgotten that we all used to do that -- and the day the garage
burned down it was very windy and we always figured that some burning trash
blew out of the trash can and over into or on top of the garage to start it on
fire. We were sitting at the breakfast
table on Saturday morning, eating breakfast when we heard the fire sirens and
we said to each other -- wonder where the fire is? When the trucks turned down the alley by our
house, we knew it must be close, and of course when we got up to check we were
amazed to seethe garage in flames. The
garage was totally destroyed.)
As kids, we used to love
playing on the big front porch of the parsonage. We would sit in the porch swing and watch for
cars (there were quite a few on Washington street) and when a car would reach
the street at the bottom of the hill, we would try to run off the porch, around
a tree in the front yard, and then back up on the porch swing again before the
car got to the corner at the top of the hill (the boulevard street). It didn't take much to amuse us, but at
least we weren't watching TV or playing video games! (We also made the back
yard an ultimate playing field -- we had a baseball diamond and a football
field laid out between the church on one side, the back of the house, the hedge
and the alley on the side opposite the church, and the short white picket fence
along the back. In fact, the incinerator
can was both second base and the goal post.)
I also remember many, many
projects, such as scraping and painting the Sunday school building that was on
the opposite side of the parsonage from the church. As you recall, it was a rambling old
structure and it wasn't in the best of shape, but we worked and worked to fix
it up and make it look as good as possible. I remember scraping off the old white paint on the outside walls of the
building and some of the wood would come off with the paint because it was in
such disrepair. But I also remember some
great Sunday school classes in those old sitting rooms!
There also was a terrific
snowstorm that just buried the town and I remember dad was concerned about all
of the snow on the roof of the church offices. We actually got up on the roof of the church (not the highest roof, but
the roof over the office area) and shoveled the snow off of the roof onto the
ground below. Of course, the next game
was to jump off the roof into these fabulous snowdrifts! One tragic occurrence that day happened when
dad was finished shoveling and he tossed his shovel off the roof before he was
going to climb down. At the moment he
let go of the shovel, a young man who was staying with us walked out of the
door below and the flying shovel hit him right in the forehead, causing a huge,
scary
cut but no life-threatening
injury.
Only four short years, but they
were great years. I got my name
"Rob" in Clarinda because my best friend was Bob Sinn and we didn't
want to have the same name, so I shortened my Robert to Rob and he took the
Bob.” --Rob Ash
Rob also forwarded some notes
from his sister Sheryl who lives in Connecticut, is married to an educator,
works for an executive search firm, and has 13 and 16 year old sons:
“I remember Dad organizing kickball games for the youth groups in the
backyard right next to the church. I
don't think it was a very big back yard, but somehow we made it work and tried
not to hit a church window.
I remember you and I helped Dad on Saturdays at the church -- It was
our job to fill the pews with newly sharpened pencils and pads of paper, or
fold bulletins for Sunday service, or count the coins from the collection
plates and put the coins in coin rolls.
I remember LONG mornings of endless church services on Easter, starting
with a 6 a.m. ecumenical sunrise service at the drive-in movie theater. The pastors from all the local churches were
on the stage in front of the movie screen, and everyone sat in their cars and
listened through the drive-in movie speakers. Then we went back to the church and had some sort of Easter breakfast
there and put on new clothes and went to 2 more church services, usually to
sing in the choirs, which Mom directed. Looking back, I wonder how she got 4 children (including a baby) up and
dressed for 3 church services, then directed the combined adult and children's
choirs in performances of elaborate Easter day music, then came home and one
hour later had a full roast beef or ham dinner ready for the family. She was the ultimate pastor's wife, doing it
all.
I remember the wonderful candlelight Christmas Eve pageants that told
the story of Christmas through a moving tableau of costumed angels, shepherds
and wise men. As a little girl I looked
up to those teenagers who were angels and longed to be one someday, because
they were so beautiful in the candlelight with their white dresses and
glittering halos. You were probably a little shepherd boy around that
time. Those pageants were one
thing Dad instituted at every church he served.
I remember that in a small town, everyone seemed to know my Dad. One Memorial Day, when relatives visited with
a big family of children, we left our cousin Sarah at the cemetery where we
were watching the parade, not noticing that one was missing. . .A policeman
came to the door with her a while later (she still hadn't been missed) and
said, ‘She says her name is Ash, but I know she's not one of yours, Rev.
Ash.’ He knew us all.
I remember I liked our house, but I can only remember the downstairs
right now. I can't remember what my
bedroom was like. The parsonage had big,
high-ceilinged rooms downstairs (at least it seemed so to me), perfect for
laying out card baseball games or having birthday parties, or setting up a
playpen or a big table for Sunday dinner.
I remember going to lots of potluck dinners. In my kitchen, I have my Mom's recipe box
full of casseroles and jello salads collected in five different pastorates,
with notes in Mom's handwriting like "Chicken Recipe – Ruth Seabrook"
or "Noodle Hot Dish - Alice Lubke." Chicken was the clear winner: there is "Chicken Casserole - Lois
Miller" and "Chicken Supreme for 8 - Mrs. Fossem" and
"Chicken and Broccoli - Helen Larson (Hardy)." I see three recipes
from Hyldred Reese ("Bazaar Stew," "Dried Beef and Noodle
Dish," "Tuna Casserole.") and that brings back memories of a
wonderful Clarinda woman. We children
spent many hours and even some overnights at Hyldred's house when Mom and Dad
were busy with church business or out of town at a conference. She was a warm and affectionate babysitter
and friend - always greeting us with big hugs and fresh baked cookies. When my best friend lost her father from a
surprise heart attack, Hyldred kept us both at her house that first awful night
after.
That's all I remember right now but perhaps a few of these memories
will be interesting to Clarinda.
By the way, I do think the fire was the most notable thing that
happened while we were in Clarinda.
What I remember is hearing the fire sirens. I watched them come up the street and then my
heart started to pound when I realized they were turning into that alleyway or
little street by our house. And I
remember the smell of burned things lingered in the house for a long time
after. I remember that we rescued all
the canned goods that had been packed for the trip, but
the labels were burned off, so for weeks after, Mom would reach for a
blackened can from the pantry and not know if she was opening pineapple chunks
or soup.” -Sheryl Ash
Rich Ash is an actuary
with Jackson Insurance in
Lansing
,
Michigan
. Sue Ash is the only child we have record of
who was born while a family lived in the parsonage. She is an artist in
Minneapolis
.
During the years of Rev. Ash’s
pastorate, Nelson Crow built a youth choir that was the envy of other
churches. A large group of young people,
sometimes numbering up to 30, performed faithfully every Sunday morning at the
early service. During Christmas break it
was a tradition to ask college students to rejoin the group for a special
Sunday performance.
Some parishioners still recall
the controversy over the virgin birth which was debated at length with Rev.
Ash.
As Rob mentioned, it was during
Rev. Ash’s ministry that elaborate Christmas pageants were developed. Ruth Tarrant fondly remembers the fun time in
Fellowship Hall making angel wings. Pieces of those costumes can still be found in the third floor
“archives” of the church. After the
Clarinda assignment, Rev. Ash served churches in
Ottumwa
and Decorah. He retired in 1988. |