Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Have I mentioned the snow?


Or the ice? Or the extreme cold? I suppose so. The red pickup (above) lives outside in Mason City and doesn't seem to mind. There are days when I do. We had about six more inches of snow overnight, so I've taken the preliminary steps needed to get moving (sweep some of the snow off and shovel a foot or two so I can back out into the driveway (the guy who clears the paths and the parking came while most of us still were parked). The next step will be to start her up, let her run for a while and then I should be mobile again.

It is -5F here right now. That translates to -21C, so perhaps we can feel a little warmer in Fahrenheit than Celsius and be grateful the U.S. has resisted urgings to switch. Sadly, -24 (-31C) is predicted overnight. Since the sun was out earlier today than predicted, it could get colder I suppose.

A warning that Interstate 35 was closed north of Webster City kept me home in Chariton for an hour longer yesterday morning, but that turned out to be pointless. The blockade actually had been in southbound lanes only due to a crash just where the great diagonal north of Blairsburg begins. By the time I got there, only a sedan in the configuration of a pancake (probably after rolling several times) and a few of the vehicles it had taken with it remained scattered in the median and beyond.

Actually, I counted only 20 vehicles in the ditch between Des Moines and Mason City, so it hadn't been a bad night accountable most likely to the fact the blizzard lasted only a couple of hours rather than the predicted several. We had about two hours of early-evening blizzard in Chariton after perhaps three inches of snow Monday morning followed by a warming-up period in the afternoon when it was possible to shovel it all comfortably away (of course it blew back Monday night).

It grew progressively colder as I drove north: 0 in Chariton, -4 at Dows and -6 in Mason City. Now I'm going to go start the truck and think warm thoughts.

Saturday, January 10, 2009

Week that wuz: Good riddance

I drove nowhere yesterday, since I always walk to and from work, so now comes the job of sweeping the snow off the truck, firing it up and going out to do what needs to be done. Chinese snow torture continues: One flake at a time.

The day that began with snow ended (for many at the office) with a really uncomfortable confrontation between two of the participants at the late-afternoon meeting. Why is it, with at least eight hours in a work day, looming disputes cannot be resolved earlier and in private? When they're not, two peoples' unhappiness suddenly spreads to include several uncomfortable witnesses.

These are not good days in media-related businesses, especially newspapers, because of the general financial mess complicated for us by a corporate master teetering on the brink of Chapter 11 after having shot itself in the foot financially by being the rabbit who tried to swallow the elephant some years ago. So everyone's on edge to begin with.

I usually don't worry much about the important stuff like that and spend my time obsessing about inconsequential things --- like why I couldn't find my glasses a while ago after putting them down in a place I usually don't. It's not complacency, but in the course of a middle-aged life I've managed to wobble through Vietnam, the AIDS pandemic and good deal of other gloom, doom, death and destruction. So in all likelihood I'll make it through this, too, as will everyone else.

The third health-related shoe also dropped Friday in the circle of people I'm concerned about. First it was surgery to repair an ankle bone of a guy who while on a routine visit to his doctor said "Oh, by the way" and discovered that the bone apparently had just broken spontaneously. Then a trip to Mayo for the gal who had a benign tumor removed there a couple of years ago, then received a troubling report after a scan. No major problems turned up in either of those cases. But the capper is impending colon cancer surgery for another friend who already has survived breast cancer. Sheesh.

So there's my gloom and doom report. Now I'm going forth into the snow!

Friday, January 09, 2009

Freedom at last


More snow in Mason City (darn it) overnight and this morning, so I'm still breaking my only new year resolution so far --- get a haircut --- and fiddling around here. It's not that bad. I just don't feel like going out in it until I have to.

Someone at a newspaper I know of decided to conduct an online poll asking North Iowans what their favorite winter-time activities were. Snowmobiling? Ice fishing? Cross-country skiing? As it turned out the overwhelming majority favored staying inside, off the ice and out of the snow as often and for as long a time as possible. I can identify with that, although I don't mind being out in snow. It's the ice underneath that concerns me. I used to bounce when I fell down. Now it's more of a splat.

I had two errands out at Freedom Cemetery Monday, so this will be a little about the other one. But speaking of Freedom, isn't that a great name for a cemetery? I'd never really thought about it before, since those of us native to Lucas County for the most part know that the name "Freedom" actually comes from a little town there that made it onto the maps only briefly before drying up and blowing away. So our thought processes never move much beyond that, or Freedom Bible Camp just up the road west, still active and used by several Iowa congregations, that also owes its name to that once-upon-a-time little town.

Another of my favorite cemetery names is Eureka (after the Greek, "I have found it!") down in Marion County, where several of my Brown relatives are buried.

Back on track: The photo up top is of the tombstone of Barbara (Teas or Tease or Teese) Tuttle, first wife of Noah. Noah is the most prolific patriarch buried at Freedom with 14 children by two wives to his credit. Barbara was his first wife, daughter of Joseph and Sarah (Hartley) Teas (or one of those variant spellings). Barbara came to Benton Township with her mother, Sarah, and stepfather, Levi Fox. Somewhere around here there's a post entitled "Fox Hunting at New York" that was in part travelogue but primarily directions intended to guide Fox descendants to Levi's and Sarah's graves in the New York Cemetery.

Barbara married Noah on 8 February 1855 in Lucas County and they settled down on a farm just south of the Lucas/Wayne County line and produced a family of eight children before Barbara's death on 21 November 1871. So this photo is for the Fox descendants who didn't make it out to Freedom on their visits or who haven't made it back to Lucas County at all (are you reading this, Roberta?).

Some years after Barbara died, Noah married Margery Williams and they produced a family of six, one of whom was Guilford Tuttle who married Augusta "Gusty" Schreck, a Redlingshafer/Rosa descendant who, so far as I know, is my only kin at Freedom.


My favorite given name at Freedom is Gatsy, as in Gatsy Tuttle, wife of Benjamin and mother of Noah, whose tombstone you see here. It's a unique name in Iowa, at least, and when I plugged it into the Ancestry.com search engine to see just how unique it really was I discovered that a majority of the Gatsys in the world came from North Carolina. As you might guess, so did Gatsy Tuttle and her brood.

There are two Gatsys at Freedom, although Gatsey (Tuttle) Mitchell has an "e" and her grandmother apparently didn't, if her tombstone is to be trusted. Gatsey-with-an-e was Gatsy's granddaughter, daughter of Noah and Barbara.

Thursday, January 08, 2009

Arthur Lillly Revisited


I wanted to use the title “Arthur Lilly Redux” here, but some folks are fussy about that word “redux” and heaven knows Arthur Lilly already has generated enough controversy.

In February of 2008 I wrote about Arthur’s death and burial in a piece entitled “The Contentious Passing of Arthur Lillie,” which you can find here if interested. If not, here’s the summary:

Arthur was something of a hermit who lived during the 1860s and early 1870s in a cabin just northwest of where the New York Road and the Lucas-Wayne county line intersect in far south Benton Township. Born in Ireland and far from kith and kin, he had neither known relatives nor intimate friends, only good neighbors --- including the Levi and Sarah Fox family and my own Myers ancestors and their extended family.

In late May, 1875, neighbors who knew Arthur was not in the best of health and who hadn’t seen him out and about for a few days investigated and found his decomposing body on the floor of his cabin. They built a coffin and buried him near the cabin, then turned his assets, roughly $70, over to the Lucas County courts.

There it might have ended had this footnote to Benton Township history not caught the attention of an anonymous source with the pseudonym Alba Owen who poison-penned a report to The Chariton Leader alleging that Arthur appeared to have been strangled, that those who buried him ransacked is body and cabin and made off with his treasure and then addressed the deceased as follows, "You lived like a hog, and we will bury you like one," as they unceremoniously buried him. That report was published June 5.

This report caused considerable unrest among the neighbors whose reputations it blackened, and on June 12 The Leader published a somewhat red-faced retraction, then went on to recount what really had happened.

I ended that piece a year ago convinced that Arthur’s unmarked grave still was out there somewhere on those 40 acres that he claimed. But I was wrong, as my cousin Frank Mitchell kindly pointed out a few months ago.

I had violated Rule No. 1 to follow when dealing with folks who are buried in Lucas County: Check the Lucas County Genealogical Society’s 1981 compilation of county tombstone inscriptions first before sticking one’s foot in one’s mouth and chomping down.

Frank, out at Freedom Cemetery last fall on a Tuttle-related errand (Freedom is a Tuttle boneyard), noted a tombstone way off by itself in the far northeast corner of the cemetery, walked over to examine it and lo and behold, there was Arthur Lilly. He checked the cemetery book, and yes --- there was a recorded, if not quite accurate, Arthur Lilly inscription. The actual inscription on the stone reads,


ARTHUR LILLY
Died May 21, 1875
Aged
60 years

The odd thing about Arthur’s grave at Freedom is this: It is barely inside the cemetery fence (although that fence dates from long after 1875) and a considerable distance from any other marked grave in the cemetery. Look carefully below and you can barely see the tombstone in the middle distance, right against the north cemetery fence.


So how did this all come to be?

Frank speculates (and I agree) that Alba Owen’s poison pen stung Arthur’s Benton Township neighbors so badly that they decided to deal unambiguously with anything that might be perceived as a wrong. My guess would be that Michael Reynolds, who The Leader reported had been named Arthur’s executor, ramrodded the project.

In all likelihood, Michael (who lived closer to Freedom than he did to either Salem or New York, the other cemeteries in the vicinity) probably obtained a gravesite at Freedom and the neighbors who buried Arthur in the first place disinterred his body, perhaps the following winter, and reburied it there. The $70 found among Arthur’s possessions when he died probably bought the tombstone.

Since cemetery lots in those days usually were quite large, Michael would not have wanted to buy a full lot for a single burial and because he apparently was Roman Catholic, probably would not have been interested in purchasing a lot of his own in a Protestant cemetery on which Arthur might be buried. So he probably obtained a site for a single burial in what was considered the “public” area of the cemetery, set aside usually for those who lacked enough money to purchase a burial plot.

Inscriptions from Calvary Cemetery in Chariton, Lucas County’s only Catholic cemetery, show a Michael Reynolds, born 4 March 1816, who died 4 March 1876, less than a year after Alfred did. If this is our Michael, then he outlived Arthur by under a year.

Most likely the date of Arthur’s death on the tombstone, May 21, and the age, 60, are best guesses.

Whatever the case, it’s good to know that Arthur Lilly’s whereabouts are known and that he’s not lost out there somewhere in Benton Township in an unmarked grave.

These photos were taken out at Freedom Monday. As you can tell, all but a few scraps of Lucas County's snow and all of its ice have melted. I wish that were the case in Cerro Gordo County.

Salem Cemetery Update: Daniel Ragsdale lot


I'm back on track now after holiday hiatus, I think, at this blog's sibling, the Salem Cemetery site. An e-mail from a descendant of John Houston, buried in Lot No. 31 with his daughters Margaret (died unmarried in 1857) and Sarah J. (Houston) Ragsdale as well as several members of the Ragsdale family, spurred me into action. So that lot now has been added and may be accessed here by anyone interested.

The photo up top is of John Houston's tombstone. I also posted Margaret's, but will have to wait until the weather improves a little before getting back out to Salem to adequately photograph the rest. A good tombstone photo depends upon arrival at a cemetery when the light is just right --- and I've not managed to do that yet with the Ragsdales.

Wednesday, January 07, 2009

Death and Texas


I've been following for perhaps a year the relatively new LDS FamilySearch effort to index (using volunteers) and then make available free the gazillion microfilmed records from around the world held by the Genealogical Department of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. It's an exciting project and early results (this is project that will take decades) come online for use on a regular basis at the project's beta site. If you're not familiar with the project, you can read more about it here as well as access (after free registration) the search engine and available records.

I used "Texas Deaths, 1890-1971" last week to track down the mortal remains of Granville B. Boswell, a first-cousin of my great-grandmother, Chloe (Boswell) Prentiss/Brown. Digital images of death certificates or death records are available here (as are similar records from other states, including Michigan, Ohio and Arizona), so that makes it especially nice for obsessive-compulsive people like me who don't quite trust transcriptions and feel more secure after they've seen the record themselves.

Tracking Granville down involved dealing with some of the pitfalls that face genealogists, so I thought I'd talk a little about the process.

The first problem is Granville's name. Although his parents, William M. and Eliza Jane (See) Boswell --- brother and sister-in-law of Peachy Gilmer Boswell, my great-great-grandfather, named him Granville B. when he was born in Wayne County, Iowa, he picked up the nickname "Macalola," often shortened to "Mac," early in life. Heaven only knows why.

So in order to track down scattered references to Granville, who moved from Wayne County to Chariton with his family in the mid-1860s and then as a young adult to Texas, it's necessary to be aware of all his names. Since he didn't marry or have children to tell his stories, the references are few and far between. But he seems to have worked nearly all his life as a printer, at times as a partner with others to publish weekly newspapers in Texas, so there are some. You'd have to know that he was called "Mac" in order to discover that he also went to Alaska during the gold rush, however.

In any case, I started the Texas death records search with "Granville" Boswell, then switched to variant spellings of that name, then to "Mac" and finally found him as "G. B. Boswell, the name apparently supplied to the coroner by Granville's brother, John C. Boswell, with whom he spent much of his life and who is listed on the death certificate as "informant."

The certificate told me that Granville died on 7 May 1924 of a heart attack in San Antonio at the reported age of 67 and was buried in "Mission Burial Park."

But there's a problem here with his age. The death certificate gives his birth date as Feb. 21, 1857. However, all census records, 1860 through 1920, suggest that he actually was born in 1859, not 1857. And when the 1900 census of Texas was taken, Granville told the census-taker that he was born in January 1859, not February.

The discrepancies probably result from John C. Boswell's faulty memory. Someone in his 60s in the 1920s who was not a military veteran and lacked a wife and/or children ran risks like this. Granville may not have been asked to state his birthday for official purposes after 1900. He wouldn't have had a driver's license or Social Security card, for example, nor would he have applied for a pension.

After fussing for a while about how to enter his birth date in my records I used the day, 21, provided in the death certificate, but the month and year, January 1859, from the 1900 census, since that was as close as I could get to a date straight from Granville's mouth. Then I footnoted the reasons why I'd done this, so that anyone who cared to reach another conclusion could.

In a way all this caution will prove fruitless, since someone somewhere will find the date 21 January 1859 in my online database and add it to his or her database without the footnote and my conclusion will become definitive. But I've done the best I could do given what there was to work with.

WALKING WOUNDED

We had ice in Mason City on Saturday, the kind generated by a light freezing mist that just went on and on, coating streets and sidewalks already messy because of previous snowfall. At least 30 folks ended up in the emergency room at Mercy with broken bones, head injuries and the like as a result. It was as slippery as I've ever seen it by nightfall.

I went down twice, once walking back to work Saturday night on the First Christian sidewalk which had a long stretch of rough ice before the new ice came --- damn Christians and their damn sidewalks. Then again with only myself to blame when I got in a hurry heading into church Sunday morning and crash landed in the street just before I reached the salted and sanded Episcopalian sidewalk.

No permanent damage and the aches and pains have for the most part gone away, other than a pain in the wrist when I type too much, so that suggests I'd better stop typing for now.

Friday, January 02, 2009

We still need a little Christmas, darn it!


So I thought I'd start off the new year with a fuzzy photo of the Christmas tree that sits in a corner here in Mason City and never goes away. Fuzzy because I'm too lazy to do what I'd need to do to get a nice crisp entirely-in-focus shot into that dim corner.

Never goes away for the most part, too, because I'm lazy and it's a time-consuming task to decorate and undecorate this heavily-decorated little fake. So its lights comes on year-around when I flip on the living room lamps and in general it makes me happy --- although it does have to be taken apart and dusted every year or so.

Besides, the big plants on steroids I used to keep in this corner before the advent of the tree always died, and this is cheaper. And I have a hard time giving up on Christmas any way.

One friend in Chariton at least waited until the day after Christmas this year before yanking the family tree down and sending it to storage (it's rarely survived Christmas afternoon in the past). Another neighbor was disassembling and boxing up his outdoor display as I drove away Tuesday morning.

But I'll still turn on the outside lights and light the lanterns on the front steps until Epiphany, then we'll see. The (indoor) Nativity set will stay up, too, for at least a while since (a) it looks nice and (b) it was joined by an three-piece angelic ensemble this year --- on lute, harp and violin --- and I want to admire the whole thing for a while longer.

I'm never quite sure why we want to plunge so quickly into January's chilly gloom, making resolutions we'll not keep and leaving the bright lights behind. Having put Christ into Christmas I say we should now put more of the pagan back into Xmas and dance around the fire for a while longer.

THIS WAS THE YEAR Iowa's skittish weather punctuated the season. I drove south the Sunday before Christmas in a blizzard (not a stunt to try at night or on two-lane roads --- when the DOT says "no travel advised" they mean it). I waited until the no-travel advisory was dropped, but it was good to have most of the Interstate to myself since visibility sometimes was a problem.

After two feet of snow up here it was nice to find just a skim of ice covered by a couple of inches of snow capped by another layer of ice down there. Then it snowed some more. With help from Nash, the accumulated mess on the the driveway was chipped away Christmas Eve. The day after Christmas, spring arrived and I spent a neighborly morning helping to chip the mess off Lee's driveway. Then everything melted. By nightfall, there was nary a scrap of snow to be seen. But on Saturday we had another ice storm. On Sunday and Monday, however, that went away, too. And so it went.

I WISH I HAD reports of a really exciting holiday week to report, but I don't. Lots of visiting, lots of weather, lots of reading --- it was great!

Plans for a quiet New Year's Eve turned really quiet when I made the mistake of going into the office Wednesday afternoon do do a few necessary things, then inadvertently agreed to post the online edition. So there I sat as 11 p.m. approached awaiting the results of a local hockey game. At 10:45, the results came, I posted, turned out the lights and went home with no complaints at all.

So here I sit without a resolution to my name. Guess I'll think one up real quick then go out and break it immediately and be done.

Saturday, December 20, 2008

Lime green to bright red: Blizzard warning


That ominous lime green "blizzard watch" over northwest Iowa turned bright red ("blizzard warning") overnight and expanded itself to cover Mason City, so we may or may not be in for it today, tonight and tomorrow.

We had a mildly cranky discussion at the office last night about exactly what a blizzard is (some thought merely heavy snow, but it's more than that). A blizzard involves the combination of snow and strong winds in excess of 35 mph. It's a nasty business resulting in zero visibility (stay off the roads) and extensive drifting (stay off the roads again). When combined with extreme cold, also predicted, a blizzard can be and often is deadly.

This part of the state is especially prone to blizzards since it started out in large part as prairie and there's really nothing between here and Wyoming and Montana (other than the Black Hills) to stop or slow down that darned wind --- and the Black Hills are a long day's drive away. So hold onto your hat (and parka and boots).



I UNDERESTIMATED the volume of the Thursday-Friday overnight snow --- actually about eight inches came down here, but most of that's been pushed out of the way by now and we're back in business for the moment. Here's a look at the pile of snow pushed off the small parking area along the north side of our office building and obscuring the newsroom door (the main entrance is around the corner almost a block away). Usually this sort of pile doesn't develop until January, so it's supposed to be hauled away today to make room for more.



Since I was out this morning, I took a quick photo of one of my favorite houses in this neighborhood, a grand old Queen Anne that hasn't exactly fallen upon hard times but certainly is in a gentle decline. That's the house at the top of this entry. And here you can see the rods the fire department installs at fireplugs so that they can be found if and when the snow buries them. Woe unto us if the snow gets that deep.


FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH (Disciples of Christ) is my next-door neighbor in Mason City and I have an uneasy relationship every winter with this rather odd example of 1920s triumphalism. The difficulty is, the Christians never attend to the sidewalk along the north side of the building, which I walk at least four times daily going to and from the office and that many others use since this is a mixed (and quite nice) neighborhood where all sorts of people live, including a good number who do not drive.

They've done much better this year, but I'm waiting to see if it's only because they've had a series of public events planned (a pre-Christmas bake sale today, for example). I'd never thought too much about it, since I'm entirely capable of taking to the street and walking around it, until a winter or so ago when I came across walking home at night a then-neighbor who was paralyzed and had no way to get around other than a sort of all-terrain wheelchair. He'd slipped off the damned Christians' unkempt sidewalk into snow and was stranded on a chilly night. I got him going again, but that's caused me to wonder since about what sort of message is being sent here. I realize this is now a smallish congregation in a largish building and finances probably are tight --- but still. There now, I've had my self-righteous moment for the day (very gratifying) and can move on.

I'M TAKING Christmas week off (something not done in years and years) and heading to the land of no Internet connection (Chariton, and most actually are connected there; I just enjoy being away from it for a while so never have bothered). But now with the blizzard warning and all, I'm not so sure when I'll leave. At least with time on my hands I don't feel pressured to hit the road when I shouldn't. But since the predicted low here for Sunday night is -16F I'd better go gas up the truck and get a few extra groceries just in case I'm here. Then I'll be off to the office, since this kind of weather almost always results in early deadlines.

Friday, December 19, 2008

Weather report and another blog

As often happens, the great storm didn't quite live up to the forecasts --- fine by me. From inside looking out, and I won't go out for another hour at least, we have maybe 5 inches of new snow here just sitting around waiting for the wind to kick in, but it hasn't done that yet. There is an ominous lime-green blizzard watch over in northwest Iowa, more snow is predicted tomorrow and Sunday and gusts in the 40s mph forecast here. Could have been worse, and may well be yet.

The McFarland News Service report from Chariton concerns ice and general slipperyness (but my garbage container made it safely out to the curb, thank you very much), but so far no downed limbs, branches (or power lines). Here's hoping there won't be.

It's always entertaining to watch the quiet frenzy mount around here as the forecasters become more and more shrill --- and at one point last night 8-12 inches of snow were predicted for Mason City. Everyone wants to get home fast, anticipating that hazard-filled 12 block drive to the east side of town. Multiple scanners bounce off each other from odd corners of the newsroom day and night. So about 9 last night someone caught the end of scanner conversation and asked, in alarm, "did they just say the Interstate was closed?" Well, it hadn't started to snow here yet, and didn't until just after I walked home at 11.

Like I said, I like to read about farming and ranching and the Internet has no geographic boundaries, so here's another favorite:

Musings from a Stonehead: Stonehead here refers to Stonehead Croft near Insch in Aberdeenshire, Scotland. This guy who lives with his wife and children on and farms the croft (a smallholding that Iowans accustomed to hundreds if not thousands of acres would think very small indeed) subtitles the blog, "The trials and tribulations of a modern crofter." They raise hogs (Berkshires), chickens (Scots Grays and ISA Browns), sheep and vegetables, working to become as self-sufficient as possible. I really enjoy the running commentary of the head of this household --- and the recipes, too. This week we've had toad-in-the-hole, mincemeat and roasting pork the Stonehead way.

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Blogs I read

Iowa's just sitting here this morning like a duck stuck in pond ice waiting for the next storm. You never know with the weather, but the latest forecast predicts a major ice storm across the south of Iowa and major snow across much of the rest. Merry Christmas from Mother Nature. I guess we'll just wait and see.

While waiting, I'm going to start replacing the "Blogs I Read" list over to the left. It'll take a while. A big problem with lists like this is that bloggers often stop blogging and links become dead ends. I went in several months ago to remove one of those dead ends from the previous incarnation of this list and accidentally removed the whole thing, then never quite got around to putting it back.

I read a lot of blogs and a lot of my favorites turned up as links on other blogs, so that's the reason for this list. Many of the blogs I read are rural. I've never farmed, but am in the first generation of my family not to (and now hardly any family members do), so I still think in farm/ranch terms much of the time and get up way too early in the morning even though there are no cows to milk or horses to feed. I think the world would be a better place if more people farmed or ranched, but on the other hand get cranky when city folks buy that little (or big) place in the country and clutter up the scenery with their outlandish houses.

I hardly ever read the blogs of people obsessed with politics (who seem to write the same thing over and over again) or of people who are angry all the time (ditto). Sporadic anger is fine, however. Many of my favorite blogs are written by people who share neither my political and religious convictions nor my sexual orientation. You never learn stuff if you only associate with people you agree with all the time. The point of the exercise is to learn how to get along amicably with people you disagree with.

So here starts the list, and if I carry through with this, "Blogs I read" will keep popping up on this side of the aisle as I add favorites over there.

Riverbend Journal: Ed Abbey (not that Ed Abbey) is a southern Iowan, too, although of a slightly more eastern persuasion. He's a native of one of the Iowavilles and you know how I feel about Iowaville. Ed started blogging as "Recycled Thoughts," but the problem there was that his thoughts tended to be original rather than recycled and quite intelligent and perceptive, too, so he closed that blog out and began again as "Riverbend." We share an interest in family history. It's hard to characterize Ed's blog, so you'll just have to see for yourself.

Sugar Creek Farm: Kelli Miller along with husband, Matt, and their children, live on a small farm not far from Osage in far North Iowa's Mitchell County. Since lots of what they produce on the farm is sold at farmers markets in the region during the season, you're liable to run into them. This is one of the friendliest, positive presentations of life on a smallish Iowa farm that I've come across, always a pleasure to read.

The Beginning Farmer: Like I said, I like to read about farming and ranching. Ethan Book and his family (wife and two young children) recently bought a farm with no buildings on it out there somewhere southwest of Knoxville toward Melcher-Dallas and built a simple home where they live now and are establishing a herd of Dexter cattle (I prefer black Angus). He also is associate pastor of New Covenant (Baptist) Church in Knoxville (that's Marion County in God's country --- southern Iowa).

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Enough snow already!


By now we've seen enough snow around here to do for a while, so here's the upstairs Christmas cactus instead, blooming its little green heart out. There are two of these, one up and one down, but the downstairs version --- a different shade of pink --- hangs in an odd place and because of that is not as photogenic as this one.

I've posed the cactus (temporarily) on the old banged-up piano stool that's held a Christmas cactus for generations. I remember it sitting in the east window of Granddad Miller's downstairs bedroom out at the farm with his mother's cactus on it. I wonder what became of that plant (thrown out, I'll bet). My great-aunt Easter wanted it and Granddad gave it to her, but most if not all of her descendants moved someplace other than Chariton and I'd guess no one took it along. It was an old one, planted in a big enameled cooking pot that had rusted through and been recycled (waste not, want not). Since it predated the hybrid craze, it's blossoms were not as elaborate as these, but I wish we'd gotten a start off it anyway.

IT'S BEEN COLDER than the dickins here, but the deepest snow is in north Iowa where we had about a foot by the time it warmed up slightly last week, and now a fresh coat has been added and we're poised on a cold, sunny day between storms. The warnings are out statewide for that one, which seems predisposed to deposit ice in Lucas County and snow, in Cerro Gordo. Hopefully, we'll not have a rerun of last December's ice storm down south.

I timed yesterday's trip north just right, so felt safe taking the back roads. It had just started to snow in Chariton and since it was extremely cold the snow was light and dry and the wind wasn't strong enough to hinder visibility. It turned out to be a beautiful drive, all three hours-plus of it, with snow all the way, blowing off most of the north-south roads I traveled. Just like that Christmas card, as we sometimes say. Only between Union and the hills south of Eldora, where there's lots of shelter, had snow accumulated much on the roads and even then it wasn't slippery.

BUT COLD, oh yes. I finally got around Monday to going out to the cemetery to exchange (I thought) fall for Christmas flowers --- I know, I know, it seems odd to some but it's just one of the things we do around here. The dead quite often are as much with us at the holidays as not, so it seems nice to remember them this way.

Salem is one of the coldest places in creation come winter because there's nothing there where the prairie begins to break toward the Chariton River bottoms to stop the wind. There's been a lot of wind lately and that had scattered faded floral tributes, including my own, far and wide across the farm field to the north so there wasn't much use for the garbage bag I took along.

Used to be, the cemetery had a north fence line full of brush and stuff that stopped most of what was blowing around the cemetery and I could bag the debris and take it away. But now, in a fit of greed, the megafarmer who crops the field to the north has taken the fence row out so he can plant a row or so closer to the graves and there's no stopping anything when the wind's in the south. Kind of hope some of those wired flowers plug up his equipment come spring, the greedy bastard.

Anyhow, I accomlished my mission although it seemed for a minute or two when I stepped out of the truck and into the wind that I might be found there in the cemetery frozen solid with a plastic (silk actually) poinsettia clutched in my cold, dead hand. But I made it out and back, although I surely didn't linger.

Now I guess it's time to get back to the Christmas cards.

Friday, December 12, 2008

The Christmas Desk


Dickens knew the role of ghosts at Christmas best, and his lessons --- and theirs --- have resonated among us since that story of Scrooge and three night visitors first was read around open fires in the winter chill of London in December 1843.

Those ghosts, along with our own, still are with us in this troublesome year of our Lord 2008 as Advent moves toward the certain star of Christmas, but uncertainty beyond.

Now, as then, it is the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come we fear.

But given our inability to do more than anticipate the future, it is the ghosts of Christmas past from whom those of us still writing our own Christmas carols can learn.

I THOUGHT AT FIRST that I would not tell this story of the Christmas desk. It seemed too full of the sorrows of 128 years, inappropriate in a season expected to be full of joy.

But this I think is only a perception built because we often dwell on the sorrows that punctuate life and lose track of the joy that came before and will follow if we allow it.

So I will tell you these family secrets and sorrows, as well as joys, hoping that you will recognize dark threads as only that, counterpoints in a larger and largely joyful pattern.

ALTHOUGH IT IS FADING and difficult to decipher now, there is an inscription on the bottom of the Christmas desk written boldly in black ink in a strong and graceful hand that I recognize as my Great-aunt Emma’s: “Emma Prentiss, Columbia, Iowa, Dec. 25, 1880.”

Emma, 16 in that year, also was the great-aunt of all reading this who are my Miller first-cousins, an elder half-sister of our grandmother, Jessie.

She was born on the 12th of September, 1864, on a small farm of woods interspersed with prairie along Wildcat Creek just north of Corydon in Wayne County, Iowa.

Her parents, who had settled here in a log house 10 years earlier, were Chloe (Boswell), born in Virginia, and Moses W. Prentiss, native to Ohio. Emma had three older sisters, Eva, Laura and Sarah. Living nearby were her maternal grandparents, Peachy Gilmer and Caroline (McDaniel) Boswell, and other Boswell kin.

When Emma was not yet a year old, on the 6th of July 1865, her father was killed when a boiler used to power a sawmill exploded --- an explosion still talked about a century later by my grandfather and distant cousins who had carried the story down.

There were no welfare programs in that time other than family, and remarriage was a widow’s hope. But who would take on a woman with no money and four young daughters?

It took time, but five years later, Joseph Brown, my great-grandfather, did just that. Born on the 4th of July 1811 in Ohio into a Scots-Irish family of fierce Presbyterian sensibility, he was 59 and Chloe, 37, more than 20 years his junior, when they married at Corydon on the 17th of November 1870 in the year that Emma turned 6.

Joseph, widowed first in 1850 when his first wife, Hester, died, had raised single-handedly a family that included seven children and while doing that moved all save one to Iowa. He had waited until they were grown before marrying again --- in September of 1869 to the widow Penelope Dawson who was of his own generation. She, however, died less than a year later in Washington, Iowa, and wasting no time --- this time --- Joseph married Chloe four months later, soon after they were introduced by her aunt, Mary (Boswell) Brown, who was the wife of his brother, Archibald.

Joseph was a small and compact man with a wispy beard and sparks in his eyes, respected and for the most part loved by children and stepchildren alike. I suspect, but do not know, that my Uncle Owen Miller might have been closest to him is size and disposition. Chloe was larger, and calm. Fire and water.

If Great-grandfather had a fault, some say, it was only that his fierce Presbyterian convictions sometimes caused him to come down on the near side of charity when the sins of others were considered.

In the spring of 1871, Joseph and Chloe, Chloe’s four daughters, including Emma, and Chloe’s mother, Caroline, loaded their belongings into wagons and moved the width of Lucas County north to Columbia, located just where prairie meets the woods near the Lucas-Marion county line.

There, two more children were born, Joseph Ellis Brown in 1871 and my grandmother, Jessie, in January of 1875 --- when her father was 64 and her mother, 41.

There were, if my grandmother’s stories are to be believed, far more happy than unhappy days in that trim white clapboard house, four rooms down and two up, at the principal crossroads in Columbia. Great-grandfather owned the northwest quarter of that town and sold off lots bordering the streets so that the May Store, other businesses and homes could be built. There was always something going on there.

It was here, two months after her 16th birthday, that Emma received the Christmas desk, although I do not know who gave it.

This surely must have been a remarkable gift at a time when Christmas presents were minimal and tended to be made by hand or edible.

Although not elaborate, this was store-bought --- it’s exterior hand-grained to simulate a grander wood with gold “hardware” carefully painted on. It had (and still has) a lock and key, so privacy would be possible. Fully open, it forms a sloped felt-covered writing surface not really convenient in a lap (although it is called a lap desk), more appropriate for a table top. The hinged writing surface opens to two compartments where writing paper and treasures could be stored and a small lidded pen try is flanked by recesses where ink wells could be placed.

Many of the items Emma placed in that desk during her years as its custodian remain there.

In the years that preceded and followed that Christmas, Emma’s sisters married, Laura to Alpheus Elkanah Love, a Carolina man with great musical and artistic talent but little ability to make money; Eva, to John Rush West and Sara, to Samuel McCorkle, husbands who died far too young. Sarah and Sam moved to Nebraska where he was struck and killed by lightning as he sought lost sheep on open prairie where there was no shelter.


EMMA, HOWEVER, DID NOT HURRY to marry, and was the last of Chloe’s first family to remain at home as the 1880s advanced. She was a fine seamstress who sewed for others, often staying in their homes while she outfitted children for school or crafted Sunday-go-to-meeting clothing for entire families.

By the early summer of 1887, when she was 22, Emma was expecting a child although she was not married.

Now a child born out of wedlock today most likely will be received graciously and generously and the mother will not be scorned, but that was not necessarily the case a century ago. And it is at this point from the perspective of 2008 that I would have a bone to pick with my great-grandfather.

According to the story-tellers, Joseph forbade Emma and the father of her child to marry, although they wished to do so, because of what he perceived to be great wickedness in their child’s conception.

That account of things may or may not be accurate, although surely there is some truth in it. It may have been that Joseph knew things about the father I do not and that there were circumstances lost to time, so benefit of the doubt remains and it can do no harm to extend it now.


WE DO NOT KNOW who the father was, but when Verna was born on the 17th of October 1887, her name was entered as “Verna Jones Prentiss” in a family Bible. Someone tried later with many strokes of a pen and black ink to obliterate “Jones.” But time and fading ink had made the name visible again by the time I saw the record among my grandfather’s papers.

So it seems that Verna’s father was a Jones, but I have never made an attempt to find him. Was he Welsh? Perhaps among the coal miners then at work in nearby Pleasant Township? Jones is not a Columbia name. Most likely we will never know.

It is Verna who is important here, however, not her father or the circumstances of her conception and birth.

Just as the Christmas desk was a special gift to Emma, so Verna was a special gift, unrealized then, to those of us who in the course of her 91 years would love her and be loved in return.

I will not try to fool you into believing that Verna had an easy life. That would make this an easier Christmas story to tell and ensure a happy ending. But she did not. Her life would have defeated many of us.

When still a toddler, Verna was stricken by polio, then known as infantile paralysis. As a result, her body was twisted and it always was a challenge for her to walk, more so as she grew older. In the years that I knew her, she had difficulty unless holding onto someone’s hand or supported by a succession of chairs on wheels that she pushed about the house as she cleaned and kept nearby as she cooked.

The polio also affected her ability to speak clearly, something that those who loved her didn’t think about but strangers sometimes found disconcerting, akin to conversing with someone whose English was heavily accented by another more natural language.

Within that somewhat battered small container, however, was a great spirit and a razor-sharp mind; and she became the repository of family lore stretching back a century or more that she gladly shared when asked to do so. Her mind, ears and heart always were open.

When Verna was 6, her mother, Emma, died --- on the 14th of January 1894 at the age of 30.

Emma and her younger half-brother, Joseph Brown Jr., visited in late summer 1893 his much older half-brother, Jonathan Edwards Brown, a stonemason and builder of fine barns, at Durham, a Marion County town that by now has vanished.

As they were leaving in a horse-drawn buggy, a train whistle spooked the horse and it bolted. Joseph and Emma were thrown, Emma onto a pile of posts. Although she recovered sufficiently to travel that fall to her sister’s, Eva’s, home to sew for nieces and nephews, Emma’s health began to fail and it became clear that there had been undetected injuries by then untreatable.

In this manner, Verna was grafted onto my immediate family and became inseparable from it. Raised in Columbia by her Aunt Jessie, Uncle Joe and Grandmother Chloe (Joseph Brown Sr. died of old age on 4 December 1893, a few weeks before Emma’s death), Verna took the name Brown, although that was not formalized until in extreme old age when a government agency uncomfortable with ambiguity demanded proof that she existed.

My mother could have told you of the challenges involved in demonstrating to bureaucrats the existence of the person, Verna Brown, then seated before them, when a birth certificate had never been issued and the Bible record had been misplaced.

When Verna’s Aunt Jessie married my grandfather, William Ambrose Miller, in 1905, Verna was part of the package, as was Chloe, and they came along. Verna became an integral member of a rollicking household in English Township, Lucas County, that included six lively children, including my mother.

After 40 happy years, Jessie died in 1945 at 70 of diabetic complications before I was born, but there was never a doubt that Verna would remain with Grandfather, whom she called “Dad,” as his companion, housekeeper and conscience (he had always been a difficult man to manage), and as surrogate grandmother to his grandchildren, few of whom had the opportunity to know Jessie.

Many more good years followed the sorrow of Jessie’s loss, but eventually, in her 80s, Verna’s health failed and my mother began to fight her battles for her --- which is why Emma’s Christmas desk of 1880 became a gift to my mother in the 1970s. It was one of few items of a physical nature that was Verna’s to bestow.

I am now its custodian by right of inheritance and the desk still is filled to brim and overflowing with turn-of-the-20th-century postcards, Emma’s autograph book, a few of her writings, locks of hair tied up in ribbon and string, a tiny corked vial filled with a mysterious powder, dozens of inch-square photographs of people long dead who were Emma’s friends and companions.

When my mother was a girl, the Christmas desk was brought out of safekeeping and given to children sick abed to keep them amused as they examined its contents carefully, one by one. Some items I suppose were removed over the years, others added. My mother removed a small glittering crystal paperweight she found there and put it where it caught the light.

I do the same sort of examination now and then, marveling that such things should have survived so long.

But although I value the Christmas desk for its beauty and its associations, I value the memory of Verna more.


AND SO THIS CHRISTMAS, in a season that may precede a challenging year, I want to hold Verna’s memory up before you --- not like a pale ghost of Christmas past --- but like a bright candle still burning against the darkness of adversity and the unknown. Her spirit was never extinguished by despair, she was grateful for the simplest of gifts and remained full of hope and faith and grace until the end of her time among us.

May these gifts be yours, and mine.

Merry Christmas!

Saturday, December 06, 2008

Family history-related updates

Lots of my spare time lately has been spent over at the Salem Cemetery site or adding information to my online family history file at RootsWeb. Both of these are linked at left.

The Selders and Risbeck lots at Salem, Nos. 44 and 45 respectively, were added to the Salem site this week, although they're far from complete. Since the Risbeck family is related to my Redlingshafer family in a distant and obscure sort of way and the Selders were neighbors of my Myers great-great-grandparents at New Florence in Westmoreland County, Pennylvania, I keep going off on tangents when I work with them, which occupies more time than usual. Last week, I added the Calvin E. Hatfield lot (No. 50), but need to collect a couple of tombstone photos and obituaries to complete it --- since Salem is snowed under right now, that will be a challenge.

I've uploaded an update to the family history file, something I intended to do regularly, but neglect. I spent a little time this week adding information about the family of Martin and Anna Mary (Redlingshafer) Banschbach, who lived at DePue in Bureau County, Illinois. Anna Mary's mother, Doratha Redlingshafer (my great-great-great-grandmother), is buried at Salem.

The family history file is at RootsWeb rather than, say, at Ancestry.com for a specific reason. RootsWeb is free and open to all, while Ancestry is a subscription-only service, and the only point of having this material online is to make it available to others.

Still, what I consider misuse of the information aggravates me sometimes. Misuse in my opinion involves adding extensive information to one's own family file from someone else's without noting where the information came from. In the first place, it's good manners to give credit where credit is due, but of more consequence --- folks who happen upon material online need to be able to tell where it came from so that they can judge its authenticity and accuracy or track it to its original source if they care to do so.

Then there are folks out there who create trophy family history files containing tens of thousands of names (a curse be upon them) for no reason other than the fact that they can, in many cases "merging" others' files automatically with their own --- slob genealogy, in other words.

Online genealogy is a blessing (bringing sources that only a few years ago would have taken years to access as close as a mouse-click and connecting cousins who wouldn't have met in any other way) and a curse --- misinformation spreads like wildfire once published online. I may complain about it now and then, but would be hard pressed to live without it.

Thursday, December 04, 2008

Jolly old St. Nick(s)


Seems like we all need a little more Christmas than usual this year, so I've pulled out all the family Santas I can find and marshaled them on the pie safe to await deployment.

A few still are missing, but will turn up. I'm anxious to find Santa as Uncle Sam waving a flag. I can't remember if he's musical (a music box in his base), or just stands there. So I'll keep looking. Then there's the tall homemade wooden job with "Peace" stenciled down his front. He'll turn up. Lord knows we need a little more peace than usual this year, too

My favorite here is the guy on the right holding a book. Although you can't see it, he's got a book bag on his back. That was a gift years ago motivated by the unruly stacks of books I live with.

I've known folks who are downright Ebenezer-Scroogish about old Santa, but it's probably a good idea to lighten up and rise above all that. I wonder what the original St. Nicholas, 4th century bishop of Myra, renowned for his gifts to the poor, would make of his continuing popularity.

Wednesday, December 03, 2008

Happy New Year!


We've been obsessing lately about the end of things --- of the economy as we've known it, of summer, of war, of autumn's long and gentle drift to snow (which is falling here this morning). In doing that, it's easy to lose track of beginnings, of new years and fresh starts, and hope.

I got to thinking about that yesterday after walking into a room that had been filled with conflict earlier in the day related to nothing more than bad temper related to the weight of the world on various shoulders. I'm grateful not to have been there for it.

The start of a new year now nearing on our western Gregorian calendar, Anno Domini 2009, is one way we we use to break the old off from the new and try to leave the debris behind, usually without much luck. That will be a Christian calculation, of sorts, but by no means a religious celebration on 31 December/1 January.

Of course it's not the only new year observance out there. Jews marked the start of year 5769 on Rosh Hashanah, observed from sunset on 29 September until nightfall on 1 October.

The pagans among us (and Christians, too, since we've never been shy about adapting pagen rites and turning them to our own uses) are entitled to celebrate at 6:04 a.m. Central Standard Time on 21 December, the winter solstice --- sun at its greatest distance from those of us in the northern hemisphere, shortest day of the year, longest night, beginning of winter --- but the turning point toward spring.

Come 26 January, the Chinese (or lunar) new year, called Tet in Vietnam where I once celebrated it.

But I prefer the beginning of Advent, which occurred on Sunday, the end of what sometimes seems the endless season of Pentecost and the start of a new church year and of the season of expectant waiting that will end with another new beginning on Christmas Eve.

Advent especially, because it begins with the lighting of a single candle around the world against the physical darkness that is closing in upon us.

Remember Eleanor Roosevelt's words? “It is better to light one candle than to curse the darkness.”

Happy new year! Light a candle. Let your light shine.

Friday, November 28, 2008

The shape of things


An opportunity to see the shape of things is something I like about this time of year, especially the shapes of oaks like these along a ridge inside what's known as the Whitetail Loop at Lime Creek. I also like the color scheme --- an infinite number of shades of brown, blue, gold and muted green. After the colors of spring, summer and early fall it's good to rest the eyes. Subtleties that might be lost in another season --- blue cedar berries and the shape of a pinecone --- stand out. All in all, it's a good season to be alive (but then aren't they all?)




It was good to have the place all to myself first thing today, the day after Thanksgiving. I hope everyone else was part of the mob at the big boxes spending money they didn't have on things they didn't need --- all for the sake of the economy. We've got to jump-start that sucker you know.

+++

I've been mildly under the weather for the last couple of weeks, the office flu that this fall has involved a few days of wracking coughs before it somehow moves into the digestive system. Nothing painful, messy or debilitating: Just aggravating. Since I had the flu I couldn't have the free flu shot offered at the office where I'd caught the flu in the first place. Life works that way sometimes.

My now dissapating disease caught up with me as the week was ending that had included an election-night marathon followed by a few 12-hour-plus work days involved in a project that required constant attention and a good deal of precision. I'm superstitious about weeks like that, expect to get sick --- if I'm going to get sick --- immediately after them and was not disappoined.

Since I'm not often sick, I spend time when I'm entirely capable of doing useful things wallowing in self-pity. The wallowing often is punctuated by severe bouts of hypochondria. I awoke in Chariton early one morning, turned on the bedside lamp and started scratching the back of my left hand. It occurred to me then that I was the victim of flesh-eating bacteria. But before the first cup of coffee I'd remembered that the itching spot actually was the aftermath of a small deep burn I'd self-inflicted during a moment of carelessness with the oven door.

+++

I worked Thanksgiving afternoon and evening, something I don't mind doing. Plus being in Mason City on the holday gave me a chance to attend the Thanksgiving Eucharist at St. John's Thursday morning. I had planned to just sit there like a lump being thankful, but suspected I was in trouble when the rector came down the aisle with a gleam in her eye. As a result, I ended up serving both as lector and intercessor.

I've already complained about the trials of Old Testament lessons and the need to practice, but fortunately there were no linguistic traps for me to fall into writhing before the assembled congregation. Just nice words from Deuteronomy. Although I did end up huffing and puffing my way through them.

I'm a Rite I man, and this was a Rite II service. If you're not familiar with the Book of Common Prayer, Rite I was included in the 1979 reworking of it to preserve traditional language (think King James Version --- thee, thou and it is meet and right so to do) while Rite II moved very conservatively into more contemporary language.

Because Rite I services usually are earlier on Sunday mornings and involve fewer people, the beautiful shape of the language generally is allowed to carry the service and music is not a part of it. Rite II, on the other hand, involves all the bells and whistles --- rousing hymns, a certain amount of sung liturgy, and so forth. So after a rousing hymn with additional singing on the side, I arrived at the lectern breathless. By the psalm, however, I'd caught up with myself and all else proceeded smoothly.

+++

The major story of the day on Thanksgiving was the horrific terrorist attacks in Mumbai --- once known to most of us as Bombay.

Our holiday reporter, Mary Pieper, did a terrific job playing telephone tag on a busy holiday with several North Iowans who were born and raised in India and still have family and friends there. The comments of one, who has lived in this neck of the woods for about 15 years, struck me especially (her family and friends in Mumbai were safe).

Upon arriving in Iowa, she said, she was astonished that no one had protective grilles over their windows --- needed in a part of the world where terrorism is frequent. She has never felt so safe in her life as she has in Iowa, she said.

Now how's that for a blessing to count? Happy Thanksgiving, even if I am a day late!

Friday, November 21, 2008

Noise

One advantage I think to living alone is the opportunity to appreciate silence. Other than briefly on Monday and Tuesday mornings and during broadcasts of both the British and U.S. versions of "Antiques Roadshow" I do not watch television. Nor do I listen to the radio as a rule. But this was one of those mornings when I did both.

My ISP, as it seems to do once a year, decided to change the telephone number the computer must dial to access the Internet, where I do spend a good deal of time, in the antiquated slow-moving way I prefer. Difficulty was, the new number did not work; nor did the old one when I went back to it.

So I could not arise at 6 and peruse The Des Moines Register's obituaries, then move on to MSNBC to reassure myself that nothing of import had been blown up overnight. Since there is a radio here beside my desk, I decided to turn that on --- to the NPR station it is set at.

That was distressing enough. The same bad-news economy stories repeated over and over with overkill analysis following; then a call-in show of some sort. Finally at 8 when the technical-support people arrived at their office, we solved the minor problem and I was back online, touring silently a nice selection of Anglican churches in Suffolk.

Then came a season in hell --- at Lyons' Toyota-Dodge, where it was necessary to go for a long overdue oil change. Lyons' service department is wonderful. You drive up, the door opens, your vehicle is taken away and within an hour all is said and done and you're on your way.

But during the waiting period, it's necessary to sit in the waiting room with a large television set apparently intended to keep the natives from getting restless while the mechanics are at work. This morning it was tuned loudly to a news channel: The same bad-news economy stories I'd heard earlier, pontification about Hillary Clinton as secretary of state and an especially annoying segment repeated four times during 40 minutes about a verbal tiff between the odious Rosie O'Donnell and Barbara Walters, equally odious perhaps but with better manners.

I've rarely been so glad to see the guy bearing my bill and keys come through the door from the service department so I could pay up and drive away --- in silence.

Saturday, November 15, 2008

Say "Wadi Kishon" ten times real fast

Around the globe today in congregations that use the Revised Common Lectionary and as the 27th Sunday after Pentecost approaches, there are lectors (including me) quaking in their boots with their noses in Bible dictionaries online or otherwise practicing pronunciation. What were we thinking of when we abandoned the lectionary in the Book of Common Prayer that specifies a pleasant Old Testament reading from Zephaniah?

Instead, we have this from Judges (4:1-7): The Israelites again did what was evil in the sight of the LORD, after Ehud died. So the LORD sold them into the hand of King Jabin of Canaan, who reigned in Hazor; the commander of his army was Sisera, who lived in Harosheth-ha-goiim. Then the Israelites cried out to the LORD for help; for he had nine hundred chariots of iron, and had oppressed the Israelites cruelly twenty years.

At that time Deborah, a prophetess, wife of Lappidoth, was judging Israel. She used to sit under the palm of Deborah between Ramah and Bethel in the hill country of Ephraim; and the Israelites came up to her for judgment. She sent and summoned Barak son of Abinoam from Kedesh in Naphtali, and said to him, "The LORD, the God of Israel, commands you, `Go, take position at Mount Tabor, bringing ten thousand from the tribe of Naphtali and the tribe of Zebulun. I will draw out Sisera, the general of Jabin's army, to meet you by the Wadi Kishon with his chariots and his troops; and I will give him into your hand.'"


It's one thing to read this passage or others silently to yourself in your living room or favorite pew; quite another to ascend to the lectern and suddenly realize, looking out over the congregation, that you have no idea how to pronounce THAT word. Like "Harosheth-ha-goiim."

I know another lector who when completely flummoxed, just spells it out. Most of us make up a pronunciation and use it decisively, right or wrong. At St. John's it also would be possible to feign a faint, drop gently beghind the solid wood lectern rail, crawl out through the choir loft then exit through a side door into the courtyard and drive away.

I'm sure we'll all be fine. The Word of the Lord? Thanks be to God for pronouncing dictionaries!

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

On Eagles' Wings


Driving north toward Knoxville on Highway 14 on Tuesday, Veterans Day in the morning, I noticed that Al Pearson out at the Williamson turnoff had turned his flag right side up. Al has been flying his flag upside down and at half mast since the election, expressing angst I suppose, so right side up though still at half mast was a decent gesture.

By rights, however, no matter how distressed one is about politics, it’s appropriate to honor those who have served, Republican and Democrat alike, by flying Old Glory at full staff on Nov. 11.

Surely we know the story by now. Originally Armistice Day, marking the official end of World War I on the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month, 1918, Nov. 11 became a day to honor all veterans, both living and dead, in 1954. We celebrate the fact that those who died for us in our wars once lived and honor all others who served us, living and dead, in war and in peace.

Iowa officially honored all its veterans earlier this year with the opening of the Iowa Veterans Cemetery a few miles west of Des Moines at Van Meter. There, I guarantee you, there will be no manipulation of the flag that belongs to us all to make political statements.


It is a lovely and peaceful place, high atop a hill with busy Interstate 80 surprisingly silent at the base of its north boundary. I was surprised by that, expecting to be distracted at least a little by passing traffic. Instead, it seems appropriate and is moving to look out along this early row of graves toward the flag on the cemetery’s highest point, then beyond to the ribbon of highway stretching endlessly to the west beyond the Raccoon River valley.

The cast bronze eagle up top, donated by the Iowa National Guard Officers Auxiliary, stands near the entrance of the columbarium plaza at the cemetery.



The cemetery also is the site of Iowa's official memorial to its dead in the War on Terrorism, three polished black granite panels at the western edge of the hilltop. The central panel contains a laser engraving of a painting by David Rottinghaus of Nora Springs, inspired by North Iowa's own 1133rd Transportation Co., now undergoing final training before its second deployment to Iraq.

The painting struck a chord with many Iraq War veterans and families, especially those who have lost loved ones in the war, and now hangs in the State Capitol.


Another panel contains the names of Iowa's dead, including North Iowa's own Spc. Josh Knowles, of the 1133rd, killed during a mortar attack in Baghdad shortly after Christmas during the unit's first deployment, a death that many of us remember vividly.


I believe that about 180 interments already have taken place at the cemetery and that nearly 2,000 places have been reserved. A majority of the remains interred here to date have been placed in the columbarium plaza or a nearby area reserved for those who wish to have cremated remains buried instead.


There are only two buildings on the cemetery grounds. In the foreground is a glass-enclosed shelter where committal services are held and, in the background, the cemetery's administration and maintenance building.

Just outside the shelter is this bronze relief of hands holding a folded flag, a ceremonial gesture performed often here at this place where every day is Veterans Day.



And He will raise you up on eagle's wings,
Bear you on the breath of dawn,
Make you to shine like the sun,
And hold you in the palm of His Hand.


Michael Joncas, based upon Isaiah 40:31

Saturday, November 08, 2008

What a week! The election, first snow, etc.


For what it's worth, my first snow of the season came here in the north of Iowa overnight Thursday-Friday following several days of shirt-sleeve weather and continued off and on for most of Friday and again overnight. Much of it disappeared, but this morning there's snow in the grass and windshields are covered. I say "my" first snow because it snowed up here a week or so ago when I was elsewhere, and I'm not at all sorry to have missed it.

Obviously, I was delighted with the outcome of Tuesday's election --- Barack Obama as president-elect, a wider Democrat margin in both Congress and the Iowa Legislature --- but didn't have much time to celebrate. After the usual election night madness in the newsroom came the three consecutive 12-hour days at the office needed to produce an annual complicated fall report for one of North Iowa's most worthy non-profits. It's been the kind of week that wears on a person.

Watching Barack and Michelle Obama and their two daughters come onstage in Chicago after Tuesday night's victory was an awesome experience --- realizing that the next occupants of the White House, built in part by slave labor, will be a black family. Just think of it. What a triumph for the Obamas --- and for the rest of us, too; a triumph that has little to do with politics.

I suspect Obama will take very seriously his commission to be president of us all, so don't expect anything resembling a campaign to implement a "liberal agenda," however that might be defined. I do want to thank those folks news reports tell us are running out to buy guns in anticipation of strict control legislation for boosting the economy, but doubt they have much to fear. Working to solve our economic dilemma is going to be a full-time job, plus.

I still like John McCain and appreciated his concession speech, but do think Sarah Palin as a vice-presidential candidate was a factor in the scale of the Obama victory. It's always useful to remember, however, that none of this was her fault. She was chosen by cold-blooded GOP strategists for cold-blooded reasons, and neither mocking from the liberal front nor scorn from the conservative front is justified. Perhaps she'll be back one day with more experience and more knowledge and we can judge her on her own merits then rather than on those imposed upon her.

Proposition 8, which defines marriage as a state-sanctioned relationship between a male and a female, became part of California's constitution, something that's causing a good deal of distress for my gay and lesbian brothers and sisters there and elsewhere. Similar measures were passed in other states. None of this is surprising, although many in laid-back California apparently were surprised.

A coalition of conservative Christians is claiming, with justification, credit for the success of the amendment. They were perfectly within their rights to do that, and that reinforces some useful lessons.

I always try to remember, sitting in church on Sunday mornings, that my presence there is conditional and that institutional Christianity is not my friend, although individual Christians may be and the guy after whom the institution is named most certainly is. Never hurts to remember that --- especially the last part.

I also found it interesting that three state measures to limit or disable access to abortion, including a parental-consent measure in California, were soundly defeated.

One way of looking at the culture wars on the election front might be to conclude that heterosexuals, having botched marriage pretty badly over the years, need those constitutional reassurances so they can feel better about themselves before going out to produce offspring willy-nilly without benefit of the institution, practice serial polygamy (divorcing inconvenient spouses at a rate approaching 50 percent) when they do marry and aborting at will the usual product of heterosexual coupling.

I say give us queers a chance. We couldn't possibly make more of a mockery of marriage than straight folks already have.