Recently a friend posted on Facebook the following
quote: “I’m so old that I’ve actually
dialed a rotary phone before, while listening to an 8-track, next to a black
& white TV with aluminum foil on top of its rabbit ear antennas!”
To this I replied:
“I used a crank-box phone while listening to a hand wound Victor Talking
Machine playing wax pressed 78 rpm platters sitting next to a 3-dial tuner
Marconi radio using electricity generated from a farm windmill.”
This started a brief exchange with another friend who had
similar experiences to mine. The
reality is there was a time in America before Smart Phones, High
Definition, Internet, and Computers. I don’t want to go back to the way things
were. Yeah, I remember these things,
and they make fun memories, but that’s about as far as it goes.
My great-uncle John and his wife Gertrude were farmers, and
I really enjoyed visiting with them. At
least it was a break from the farm my grandparents owned. Uncle John lived in a very complex world
often referred to as ‘the simple life.’
But it was anything but simple.
Every day John would have to replenish the woodpile next to the kitchen
door so Gertrude would be able to fire up the old cast-iron wood-burning cook
stove. She would spend all day working
in the kitchen (literally from about 4am until 7pm) just so they could have
cooked meals. John would work the
watermelon fields and maintain the farm animals (again from about 4am to 7pm). And in their spare time they would retire to
the ‘parlor’ to relax, watch the radio, dance to some music from their old
Victor Talking Machine, or just fall asleep reading a book.
I would visit the farm a few miles southeast of Fort Worth
for a couple of weeks each summer from the time I was about 8 until John passed
away just before my 13th birthday.
I would work in the watermelon fields just as the harvest was beginning,
and it was not easy. Some of the melons
would weigh in at 60 to 70 pounds. But
then again, I got paid real money for my contribution.
There were days when we quit working the fields about noon
and spent the rest of the day cleaning out barns, feeding animals, repairing
fences, cutting and stacking wood, collecting eggs, milking cows, and several
other things that couldn’t be neglected.
I suspect there were a few things, such as fence repair, that were
neglected until I came for my summer visit, but that was okay. I sort of liked the fence repair.
Uncle John was about seventy years older than me, but still,
he could keep up a work pace that would drop a mule. I do believe he would have worked longer days if the sun had
stayed up a little longer. In fact,
during full moons he would often work into the night because of the extra
light.
This is not to say all I did when I visited was work. I had time to explore his old barns and look
over items stored in them untouched for maybe a hundred years. I opened a cabinet and discovered a cache of
muskets from the Great War for Southern Independence. I found a large number of pistols and swords from that era as
well. John told me he purchased the
farm in 1911 from a civil war vet, and he had heard rumors that the place had
once been used for meetings to stage another uprising. He had also heard the place was used to
store contraband weapons, since firearm ownership was outlawed in Texas from
1865 to about 1870. He thought these
were just rumors.
I asked why he had never opened up any of the boxes and
cabinets in the barn before now, and he replied he never had the time. There was always too much to do. But he decided to join me for a day or so
and just go through some of the old stuff.
There were built-in cabinets along one wall that yielded
more than sixty rifles and muskets.
More than a dozen boxes contained pistols of varying types, and we found
several trunks packed with old gray uniforms (mostly rotted). Four or five crates of swords of several
types and designs. And under a pile of
canvas tarps was a cannon. It wasn’t
enough to outfit a regiment, but it was far more than most people had lying
around. There was no powder for the
weapons, but we did find a large box filled with shot canisters for the cannon.
The next morning John called someone at a museum to come out
and look at this stuff. I remember it
was a long process of connecting through multiple operators to reach the museum
less than 20 miles away. .
My summer with Uncle John was over before the museum person
came out to visit, so I never got to find out what happened with all those
items. I left with my family for a
visit to Roaring River State Park in Missouri for a week, and when we returned,
we found out Uncle John had been killed by falling through the roof of a barn
he was repairing. A few years later I
went to the museum to inquire if they had purchased the war items from my
uncle, but they had no record. Aunt
Gertrude also never answered my questions about them.
I’ll never forget the farm.
Candles, kerosene lamps, wood burning stove, windup record player, crank
box telephone, outhouse (complete with bugs, spiders, snakes, and wasps),
working from dark to dark, caring for animals, raising watermelons, etc. And they called it the simple life.
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