Thursday, December 18, 2008

Electra, Texas


Electra owes its existence to three things:

•the huge Waggoner Ranch.¹ Headquartered in nearby Vernon, the half-million acre ranch is said to be the basis for the Reata Ranch in Edna Ferber's book Giant and the movie of the same name. The town was named after W. T. Waggoner's daughter, Electra (1882-1925).


•the arrival of the railroad. W. T. Waggoner successfully lobbied for a depot and switching yards to be built in Electra which allowed for the transportation of the ranch's cattle and provided jobs.

oil. The area needed water. W. T. Waggoner would have water wells dug, and as luck would have it, keep finding oil. But it wasn't until April Fool's Day, 1911, that Clayco No. 1 struck a gusher and the Electra Field began.

In 2001 the Texas Legislature named Electra the Pump Jack Capital of Texas.


The population fluxuated. It never became more than a town. The Handbook of Texas Online says that the population of Electra was about 500 in 1907, 1000 by 1910, 5000 just a few months after oil was discovered, 6712 and the most populous in 1936, 3599 in 1988 and 3168 as of the 2000 census.

Today water remains scarce. Three gas stations/convenience stores are the closest things to a grocery store there. The church where A. G. Abbott ministered has folded. The Texas Almanac describes Electra as a commuter town to Wichita Falls though it also mentions the annual goat barbecue. Blogs discourage people from moving there. One woman's account of Electra begins with a very unflattering title: A Fading Town...

My memories of Electra are not all that kind either. The wind and the red sand gave concrete an almost pinkish hue. Before the bypass was built, Highway 287 ran through the center of town, parallel to the railroad tracks. There were two traffic lights. One was odd and probably illegal today. On 287 the light was typical with red at the top and green at the bottom. On the side street,however, green was at the top and red at the bottom. Example. This saved money as only three bulbs were needed. There was the Oil City Barbershop, a one-screen movie theater and a furniture store downtown.

A. G. and Beth Abbott lived at 102 W. Wharton. See google map, and be sure to go to "street view." Their house was the second one from Main Street and faced downtown. The street was paved with brick. As was common in those days, the house had white asbestos siding. Each piece of siding was about 24" long and 12" high with a wavy bottom. They are, of course, illegal to make today and have largely been replaced by the James Hardie brand. The roof was green composite shingles. Air conditioning consisted of one window unit evaporative cooler , a black oscillating fan, one box fan and open windows. In the winter heat was provided by three individual room gas stoves (which sat on the floor and could be stored in the summer), the typical built-in bathroom gas stove and the kitchen oven when in use.

You entered the house into a foyer, large enough to greet guests yet too small for furniture. To the immediate left was what could be called a study. It was used to store A. G.'s books, a chest with his old army uniform and quilts, and sundry items that had yet to find a more permanent place in the house. To the right as you entered was the living room. It contained a green, somewhat uncomfortable sleeper sofa, swivel rocker, a television set that recieved three channels (channel 3, channel 6, and on a few days channel 7 out of Lawton), upright piano and a mantle clock that had a constant ticking and a bell that went off each quarter hour.

Directly behind the living room was the dining room. This was where the evaporative cooler was, and it blew directly onto the six-chair dining table. There was also a waist-high hutch to hold the china, silverware and fine dining linen.

Walking from the living room through the dining room was the kitchen. Upon the linoleum floor and in the center of the room was a 1950s era kitchen table and four chairs. The metal was chrome and the table top along with the chairs' vinyl or plastic seats and backs were red. The stove, Frigidaire refrigerator and double sink were white. The countertop was quite small but proportionate in size to the kitchen. There was a small pantry near the back door. Inside the refrigerator was a bottle of cooking wine which had only been used once. Breakfast was always eggs — poached, fried or scrambled to order, sometimes bacon or sausage and toast with preserves or the ever-present store-bought apple butter. Pecos cantaloupe was served at other meals when in season and Jello was always on the menu. It was in that kitchen that, at age 12, I learned to drink coffee — no cream, no sugar. The drink of everyone's choice at other meals was iced tea with a bit of mint which grew wild on the shaded side of the house. Other than that lonely bottle of cooking wine, alcohol was never available. I believe that wine was finally introduced to the drain.

To the left of, and with entrances from both the dining room and kitchen, was the hall. The only thing of significance there was the black rotary dial telephone sitting in a recess built into the wall. The norm of the day was party (telephone) lines. Incoming calls rang at all four households, but each with a distinctive ring. Local calls required dialing only four or five numbers. Long distance calls were considered expensive and often limited.

The hall connected the two bedrooms, with the bath inbetween. Due to age and the sleep difficulties associated with it, A. G. and Beth maintained separate bedrooms. Each bed was full-size. A. G.'s bedroom was toward the front of the house and had maple furniture. Beth's bedroom was at the back and had cherry furniture.

With the exception of the kitchen and bath, the house had wall-to-wall carpeting. I do not remember much artwork on the walls.

Just to the east of the house was a paved driveway. As was typical of the day and to save costs, the driveway consisted of two concrete runners to accomodate car tires. Between them was sparse grass. As the lot was narrow, the two-car garage was behind the house. The garage doors hung on rollers from the top and moved side-to-side, meaning both could not be open at the same time. At the front of one car space and on the concrete floor was an upturned kitchen sink meant to tell the driver how far to pull in. Since A. G. did most of the driving he generally drove the newest car. Beth seldom drove outside of town and had a copper colored 1957 Chevy Bel Air 4-door.

The kitchen had a back door that led to a small concrete porch with two or three steps. The back yard was a mixture of grasses while the front yard was primarily St. Augustine. At the far back was an alley where the trash was collected. The cicada was a common summer neighbor.

A. G. died in 1964 when I was 14 years old. Soon after, Beth moved to Sherman. Except for a quick drive through town around 1974, my memories of Electra ended with Beth's final 144 mile trip east.

¹one link

another link

yet another link

one last link











Monday, December 15, 2008

Psalm 23:6

Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life; and I will dwell in the house of the Lord for ever.

(Newspaper article¹)

REV. A. G. ABBOTT FATALLY INJURED IN WICHITA FALLS AUTO CRASH WED.

Rev. Arthur Guy Abbott, 76, of Electra was fatally injured in a two-car accident in Wichita Falls Wednesday morning in which three Oklahoma residents were injured.

The accident was reported to have occured about 9 a.m. on the Seymour Highway at Farm Road 369. Abbott was taken to Wichita Falls General Hospital where he died about 10:30 a.m. of multiple head injuries. He was alone in his car at the time of the crash.

Three occupants of the other car, Mr. and Mrs. O. V. Crass of Stroud, Oklahoma, and Mrs. Bonnie Wilson of Ada, Oklahoma, were injured.

Abbott was reportedly driving south on Farm Road 369 and was struck broadside by the auto driven by Crass which was headed east.

A retired pastor of the First Christian Church of Electra, Abbott resided in Electra at 102 W. Wharton. He retired in 1954 after serving the church here from 1944 to 1947 and then serving seven years as a state evangelist; however he had continued to serve churches at Truscott and Roaring Springs on alternate Sundays.

Rev. Abbott was born November 27, 1887, in New Market, Iowa. He entered the military service from Fort Worth and attended Texas Christian University before entering the ministry.

Before coming to Electra he served at Quanah, Rule, Pecos and in the San Antonio area. His wife, Beth Ann, is a teacher at Dinsmore Elementary School in Electra where she is in her twentieth year of teaching.

Also surviving are one son, Roger Abbott of Longview; one daughter, Mrs. Homer Grigg of Sherman; and four grandchildren.

Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Friday from the chapel of the James B. Totten and Son Funeral Home. Burial will be in Crestview Memorial Park in Wichita Falls. Members of the Electra Ministerial Alliance will serve as pallbearers.

(Hospital paperwork²)

ATTENDING PHYSICIAN'S STATEMENT

1. Name of deceased in full? Arthur Guy Abbott

Residence at time of death? 102 W. Wharton (P.O.Box 472), Electra, Texas

2. How long had you personally known deceased? 9/30/64

3. What was the apparent height, weight and age of deceased at beginning of last illness? Unknown

4. Date of your first visit, consultation or prescription in last illness? 9/30/64

5. Date of your last visit? 9/30/64

6. State cause of death as given in official certificate of death. If no such certificate was furnished, state disease which caused death.
Multiple injuries of head, abdomen, chest, laceration of scalp.

7. When and where did you receive your medical diploma? University of Oklahoma, 1958

8. What is your office address?

Street and number 1518 Tenth St.

City and state Wichita Falls, Texas

I do hereby affirm that I have carefully read the above questions and have written the answers thereto; that each and every one of said answers is full, complete and true to the best of my knowledge and belief; and that there are no material facts in the case which are not disclosed.

Date 10/17/64

Signature (possibly P. L. Stephenson MD)
Attending Physician

(Obituary)

See A. G. and Beth Abbott post.

(Death benefits)

Pension Fund of Disciples of Christ
Indianapolis (4), Indiana

Proof of Death and Claim for Widow's or Orphan's Pension or Death Benefit Under Pension Plan

CLAIMANT'S STATEMENT

1. Name of deceased in full? Arthur Guy Abbott

Residence at time of death? 102 W. Wharton (P.O.Box 472), Electra, Texas

2. Date of birth of deceased? November 27, 1887

3. Name of widow? Ann Elizabeth Abbott
Date of birth? February 15, 1900
Residence? 102 W. Wharton (P.O.Box 472), Electra, Texas

4. Date of marriage? November 24, 1921
Place of marriage? Fort Worth, Texas

5. Children: Name and date of birth of each?
Ida Margaret Abbott Grigg — October 5, 1922
Calvin Roger Abbott — June 5, 1925

6. Place, date and cause of death?
Place Wichita Falls, Texas
Date Sept. 30, 1964
Cause Automobile accident

¹most likely from the Electra Star News

²attached to the Pension Fund statement

Friday, December 12, 2008

Trivial Repute

This post is of little historical value. Hence the word Trivial used in the title. The letters, however, reflect upon the character of A. G. Abbott. Hence the word Repute used there also. It's simply a catchy title to help remind you to return to this post after you have examed most of the others. They are transcribed as written. My comments are in italics.
— — — — —
CITY OF SABINAL
SABINAL, TEXAS

A RESOLUTION OF THANKS.

At a meeting of the City Council Tuesday night December 5th the following resolution was passed.

1. WHEREAS WE: The Mayor and Aldermen of the City of Sabinal, and the President and Directors of the Chamber of Commerce desire to express our deep appreciation to our friend and Brother, A.G.Abbott for the many services rendered the public as distributor of Red Cross supplies, and other civic activities while in our midst, and to wish him success and happiness in his new home.

2. That this resolution be published in the Sabinal Sentinel, recorded on the minutes of the City Council and Chamber of Commerce, and a copy given Mr Abbott.

Signed,
Mayor, W.E.Heard
Aldermen, K.T.Biggs
Frank Sutherland
G.W.Proctor
J.M.Fowler
J.P.Cullins
W.M.Fowler.

Pres Chamber of Commerce, H.G.Peters
Vice Pres H.M.Waldrip
Directors C.A.Griffin
W.O.Woodley
G.W.Proctor
H.L.Stuckey
Frank Sutherlan
Mrs Rosalie McCaule

A copy of the envelope apparently used to mail the copy to A. G. is at the bottom of the copy of the letter. The postmark is Dec (?) 1933. Postage was 1¢. The address was simply:
Rev. A.G.ABBOTT.
SABINAL TEXAS.
— — — — —
CAMPBELL & CAMPBELL ¹
Furniture & Undertakers Supplies

SPUR, TEXAS

March 6/30.

Mr A.G.Abbott:
Sabinal TExas:
Dear Preacher:

Dont kno of any one that might have left here, that I could miss more that I do you, it is lonesome, now more so that ever for when you were here, I always did look forward to your little visits to the Store, for they were always a pleasure.

I want to thank you for the many time that you have helped me, in kindness, deed, an they way you lived your life, you not only Preached it, but you lived it, an that is what we are needing now in this old world, more that any thing else, (A MAN THAT WILL PREACH, AN LIVE WHAT HE PREACHES.

I want you to kno that I valued your friend ship more maby that you thot for. I have not been around much, but I believe I kno a man when I have lived around him, as much as I did you.

Am sorry that you had to run into all of that bad weather, but Preach, it just stayed cold out here, an I thot several times, I did not kno wheather I could make it or not. For more than two weeks, I carried water from town out home, our mains froze up on us.

If I ever get down that way, I will see if you can remember, what you said about a few days on the river. Telll Rogers Howdy, give my best regards, to you an yours,

Yours, Webber.
(signature, possibly ?. B. Williams)

A copy of the envelope used to mail the letter to A. G. is at the bottom of the copy of the letter. The postmark is Mar 7 1930. Postage was 2¢ and the envelope had the postage printed on it rather than a stamp. There is no explaination as to why postage was more on this one than the letter mailed 3+ years earlier.
— — — — —
Except for the letterhead, this final letter is handwritten. It is transcribed as best possible. The date is unclear.

LEON F. HEARD
HARDWARE — HOUSE FURNISHINGS
COFFINS — FUNERAL SUPPLIES

Sabinal, Texas______________________192__

To Whom It May Concern
Bro & Sister Abbott have been with the Sabinal church nearly four years will be four years in Jan. Their work has been a successful one from the very first and today is in splendid condition. Our Midweek Prayer Meeting has for the entire time run well above fifty in attendance - This is about one third of the Membership. On those Meetings Mrs Abbott has with her group of teachers taken care of the young folks and children where they all were given splendid instruction in the Bible. Bro Abbott had charge of the adults
Bro & Sister Abbott are popular in the church and out of the church and are highly regarded by all for their honesty & (unreadable) service to the church and community.

In my opinion this is a (undecipherable) couple for work. They seem to never tire and today though planning on making a church are as attractive to the work as they have ever been. Frankly the church and town do not want them to go but our finances are growing bad on account of several contributors becoming unable to keep on. And we would not ask a further reduction in salary.

(unreadable) F. Heard
Chairman of the Board

¹http://www.spurtexas.com/

A Minister's Salary

Four photocopied documents were provided by the Disciples of Christ Historical Society. They are printed forms with pertinent information handwritten in ink. One form, "Service Information," contains no added information. One form, "Information Schedule," is dated Nov 30, 1925, shows the address of Arthur G. Abbott as Rule, Texas, shows his Present ministerial position as pastor and shows the dates of birth of the four family members and the date of marriage which are all detailed elsewhere.

A third form, "Record of Ministerial Service," is also dated Nov. 30, 1925, and has the same person's handwriting as the one mentioned above. It lists the locations served, dates and salary. It is easily assumed that the salary is annual. One sentence of importance in the document is, In calculating salary, count the parsonage, if any as a 15% addition to the cash salary.
•Oil Field Church — Wichita Falls, Tex — $900.00 — Nov. 1919-1920
•Handley, Tex — $1200.00 — 1920-1921
Justin, Tex¹ — $1500.00 — 1921-1922
•Rule, Tex² — $1680.00 — 1922-

The fourth form, "Pension Fund of Disciples of Christ," is dated Sept. 8, 47. By this time A. G. and Beth were living in Electra, Texas, position listed is Evangelist, serving Texas Christian Missionary Society — Fort Worth, Texas. Salary listed is $3600.00 and No Parsonage is furnished.

¹This is the only mention of A. G. ever ministering in Justin.

²A parsonage was provided in Rule.

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Why Attend Church?

The following is a one-page printed article, date and name of publication unknown, as provided by the Disciples of Christ Historical Society. The copy appears to be the recto page of possibly a small pamphlet. Its significance here is that it was written by A. G. Abbott.

WHY ATTEND CHURCH?

TO WORSHIP GOD — We go to Church to wait quietly, thoughtfully in the presence of the Eternal. There one recognizes the Greatness and Goodness of God as our Creator, Preserver, Benefactor. Through Jesus Christ one sees in God a forgiving Father and in His presence he humbly bows in reverence, devotion and worship.

TO LEARN OF GOD — There is a certain knowledge of God that comes through study — the study of nature for "the heavens declare the glory of God;" the study of the Scripture for the Bible is God's revelation of himself; but there is a knowledge that can come only through experiencing God. A thoughtful, reverent service of worship helps us thus to know Him, "whom to know aright is life Eternal."

FOR INSPIRATION — This is not an easy world in which to live with honor, to keep one's heart high, do one's work well, face the rebuffs of fate and the blows of sorrow, and at last fall asleep unashamed. Only through the inspiration that comes through the association and fellowship with earnest people in the worship of God can one hope to receive power and strength for life's testing problems.

FOR SERVICE — The purpose of Church worship is not only that one may know God, but that through that knowledge and experience he may go out to serve mankind. "For the Son of man came not to be ministered unto, but to minister and give His life as a sacrifice for others."

— — — — —
"Forsake Not the Assembling of Yourselves Together." — Hebrews 10:25
— — — — —

Rev. A. G. Abbott, President of Quanah Pastors' Association

The space for this message contributed by Joe H. Anderson Sheet Metal Works in appreciation and cooperation with the Quanah Pastors' Association in THE CHURCH ATTENDANCE MOVEMENT.

Disciples of Christ Historical Society

I emailed this group requesting information on A. G. Abbott and received 18 copied pages about him from their files. Some of this information will be condensed as posted but all will be entered. This research sent by:
Sharman Hartson, Curator
Disciples of Christ Historical Society
1101 19th Avenue South
Nashville, TN 37212
615.327.1444
hartson@discipleshistory.org

Their file began with a letter dated April 26, 1990, written by Margaret Abbott Grigg, daughter of A. G. and Beth Abbott.

Mr. James M. Seale, President
Disciples of Christ Historical Society
1101 Nineteenth Ave., South
Nashville, TN 37212

Dear Mr. Seale:

I am enclosing my check in the amount of $15.00 for a Regular membership in the Disciples of Christ Historical Society.

I was with a tour that visited your headquarters a few years ago, and I thoroughly enjoyed the visit. I was very impressed with your method of preserving our religious heritage.

In looking through your individual files, I did not find one for my father, Rev. A. G. Abbott. He was a Disciples of Christ minister for more than 50 years, beginning as a Timothy¹ from the First Christian Church in Wichita Falls, Texas. He served as student minister in Handley, Texas, then served as full time minister at the following Texas towns: Rule, Spur, Sabinal, Pecos, Belton, Taylor, Quanah, and Electra. He ended his full time ministry serving as the Rural State Evangelist through the Texas Christian Missionary Society. Following his retirement he served the churches in Truscott and Roaring Springs on week ends. He was killed in an automobile accident on September 30, 1964.

While I was touring your facilities I asked one of the employees if there could be a file established for my father. She suggested that I send some papers concerning his ministry. When I returned home I immediately began searching my files for appropriate items. I found a few, and had planned to search for more. As often happens with good intentions, these were put aside and forgotten until I was reading a recent issue of Discipliana. I decided I would at least send what I had found about my father, and then if you feel it would be appropriate, I would look for more.

Although my father did not serve large churches, I believe he was a very positive influence to those who knew and loved him. He and my mother both took the ministry seriously, and were full-time Christian servants.

I trust the enclosed items may be of interest.

Sincerely,
Margaret Abbott Grigg

¹The closest reference I can find to a "Timothy" is this link:
http://www.timothycc.org/AboutUs.dsp

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Perplexed, Confused, Bewildered

This one-page typewritten account had me stumped until I read it a few times. The Loretta Abbott Williamson mentioned here appears to be the same as Luretta Abbott Williamson mentioned in Long Ago & Far Away and other references, so the assumption can be made that Luretta is the correct spelling. She is the daughter of Isaac C. Abbott, who is the grandfather of A. G. Abbott, thus making her the aunt of A. G. Abbott.

The last sentence (?) does not end with a period so there may have been more to this account. True or embellished, the last paragraph is interesting reading. The Mary Jane Jenkins mentioned was the paternal grandmother of A. G. Abbott and Jenny Cunningham was his great grandmother.

(Information concerning Abbott history, from Dorothy Salomon. She stated that Loretta Abbott was our grandfather Abbott's sister. The following information was sent to Kenneth Abbott by Mrs. Edwin Allinger (834 Lakeview Drive, Redding California 96001), who was a niece of our grandfather Abbott.)

The following information is from Mary Salisbary who is Loretta Abbott Williamson's granddaughter.

Loretta Abbott Williamson was born Sept. 25, 1847 in Ohio (probably in or near Cincinatti). Died Dec. 27, 1912 at Hillsburo, Iowa where she is buried.

She had a daughter (Mary Salsbury's mother) Laura Emma Williamson Kelly who was born at Caly Grove¹, Iowa, Jan. 25, 1869. Died at Mt. Pleasant, Iowa Jan. 5, 1953 and is buried at Houghton, Iowa. Married James Samuel Kelly who was born at La Crew, Iowa, Jan. 7, 1869. Died Oct. 4, 1943 at Iowa City. Buried at Houghton, Iowa.

The children of Laura and James Kelly:
James William, born at La Crew, Iowa Oct. 25, 1892
Samuel Oran born at La Crew, Iowa Oct. 7, 1896. Died Oct. 12, 1970 at Davenport, Iowa.
Mary Emma Hattie Kelly Salisbury, born at La Crew, Iowa, Nov. 16, 1900.

Some of the remembrances of Abbott family of Mary Salisbury are:

The name "Emma" that Laura and Mary both have was after a relative — Emma Abbott, a great singer in the East when Laura was born (1869).

Hearing that Isaac Carson Abbott came from Mass.² to Ohio and bought considerable land in Ohio for $1.00 per acre which is now part of Cincinnati. He leased it for 99 years and she recalled hearing that the lease was up a few years ago and that the heirs were unable to do anything about it. She also thinks that her grandmother said she was the youngest of the family. She recalls hearing that Isaac Carson owned a small farm at Houghton, Iowa.

Mary Salisbury relates the following very interesting story concerning Mary Jane Jenkins' background. I had not heard it before and wonder if any of you heard this.

Mary Jane Jenkins' mother was Jenny Cunningham, daughter of the Earl of Edinborough³ of Scotland. She married Jenkins who was of Royalty of Italy. He was the oldest son and was supposed to marry, but he wanted to be a Priest so he was exiled and went to Scotland and became a gardner in the Earl's gardens. He met Jenny and they fell in love and were secretly married. Then both were exiled and came to America. Jenkins did not live long after they came to America. Mary Jane was very small when he died. Then Mary Jane's mother married a man named Reed and they had a son, P. Risher Reed who became an artist and poet. The night of the great Chicago fire, he was to open his own Art Gallery. He had sold thousands of tickets to it. He had a big house on Chicago Gold Coast. He fire burned most of his pictures and poems. Only what was left in his home were saved. He then sold his home and his poems to well known poets of his time who used them as their own. He also wrote the first drawing book used in the Chicago schools. After the fire, he went up in the mountains of Colorado and had a waylay station. He stayed there until death. He is buried in Burlington, Iowa. He was Mary Jane's half-brother

¹most likely Clay Grove.

²Don't get your hopes up before going to this link. Isaac C. (grandfather of A. G. Abbott) was born in 1810. His father, Josiah, was born in 1770. However, people in those days were likely to name their children after relatives. Link to another Isaac Abbott:
http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-7704410.html

³I can find no reference on the Internet to the Earl of Edinborough or the Earl of Edinburgh.

Monday, December 8, 2008

Long Ago & Far Away

The following was found among family papers. It was typewritten and has been transcribed as it appears. The original document was most likely handwritten. Edward Fredrick Abbott was the second oldest brother (by 21 years) of A. G. Abbott.

HISTORY OF THE ABBOTTS

Tulsa, Okla.
November 12, 1919

With the assistance of my Father¹, Isaac W. Abbott, of New Market, Iowa, and his only living cousin, Sarah Jane Abbott, of Sterling, Mass., I will as best I can write a history of the Abbott's.

Beginning with my Great Grandfather¹, Josiah Abbott of Mass. who was as near as I can tell, born about 1770 just a few years before George Washington, our first President, took the presidential chair. He died in 1826. There were 10 children in his family but I am unable to secure the names of only 6 of them. Warren, Isaac C., Joseph, Eunice, Olive, and Fredrick A. Abbott. The oldest, I am unable to locate any of his decendents. Isaac C. and Joseph were twin brothers. Isaac C. being my Grandfather¹. I will give his history later. There were 3 children in Joseph Abbott's family. Warren, of Boston Mass., Waldo L. of Lynn, Mass., and Josephine of Lynn Mass. The above are the last address I am able to secure.

Eunice married a man by the name of Bell, and Olive married a man by the name of Davis.

Now I will take up Fredrick Augustus Abbott. He was the youngest son of Josiah Abbott and was born in 1816, died at Sterling Mass. in 1896. In his family there were 4 children. Charles F. the oldest, was born in 1843, Henry A., 1845, Sarah J. 1847, James Warren, 1848.

Until I wrote to Sterling Mass. in search of some of the Abbott's, Sarah Jane thought she had no living relatives. She had lost all trace of her Uncle Isaac C. Abbott, who was my Grandfather and of whom I will now give a brief sketch of his early life.

He was born in Andover, Mass. 1810 and died at New Market, Iowa, in 1876. Grandfather was a carpenter by trade. When quite young he married a Miss Jane Epps, and a dear woman she was. To this union there were born 5 children. The oldest, George A. was born at Boston, Mass. in 1836. A few years later Grandfather moved west to Cincinnati, Ohio, he being the only Abbott I have any record of ever leaving Mass. At Cincinnati in 1842 the second son Isaac W. was born, then Luretta Abbott Williamson, Joseph R. and William H. After living at Cincinnati a few years he moved to Indiana, then to New York City, thence to Eastern Iowa at a little village called New London, living there a few years, then to Taylor County, Iowa where he died.

There were 5 children in the family of George A. Abbott. Ida, Eva, Monnie, Arthur and Fred, all living somewhere in Iowa.

Luretta, the only daughter of Isaac C. married a man by the name of John Williamson of Hillsboro, Iowa, and to this union there were born 8 children. Laura Kelly of Davenport, Iowa, Sam—dead, John—dead, Belle Benn of Hillsboro, Anna, Mayme, Fred, and Bennie all of Hillsboro, Iowa.

Joseph R. Abbott was married to a Miss Thompson, and to this union there were 3 children. Bertha, Ethel, Joseph, Jr., who now live at Malvern, Iowa.

William H. married a lady by the name of Baker. There were 5 children to his family. Elmer, now of Salem, Oregan, Jessie, Grace, Willie, and Ethel. William H. now lives at Seattle, Washington. He and my Father are the only two members of Isaac C. 's family left.

Now that the younger generation may know something of my Father's early life, as stated, he was born in 1842, and while yet in his teens his parents moved to Iowa. When a young man, only 21, he joined the Union Army and fought under the Stars and Stripes, the flag that has never known defeat. While there were many Union men cap captured during this bloody conflict, Father escaped capture, but shortly before joining the army he was captured by a Miss Elizabeth Hayes, the dearest woman in all the world, and she has held him captive ever since. To this union there were born 14 children, whose names, year of birth, and present residing place I will now give.

Frank Warren, 1864, Coal Creek, Colo; Edward Fredrick, 1866, Tulsa, Okla.; Mary P. Gardner, 1868, New Market, Iowa; John Isaac, 1870, Baxter Springs, Kansas; Charles Eagan, 1871, Kansas City, Mo.; Daisy Bell Pinkerton, 1874, Shambaugh, Iowa; Waldo Lovejoy, 1875, Loveland, Colo.; Clarice Lola, 1877, Loveland, Colo; Lillian May, 1879, died 1880; Luretta Josephine, 1881, died 1883; Rosa Bird, 1883, died 1909; George Aubry, 1885, Santa Barbara, Cal.; Arthur Guy, 1887, Fort Worth, Texas; Vesta Winnifred, 1892, died 1893.

Back now to the close of the war. Soon after returning, Father entered the mercantile business by opening up a little cross road store in Lee County, Iowa at a place called Clavs (Clays ?) Grove, on what was the old plank road between Mt. Pleasant and Keokuk. It was there I was born. When I was 2½ years old, Father sold out and took what was called the Prairie Scooner route for South West Iowa. For fear the younger generation does not fully understand what the Prairie Scooner Route is, I will state, it where they hitched either Oxen or Horse to a covered wagon and made their way West to grow up with the Country. Some wagons had this motto printed on the side — that is, the ones that tried it farther west than Father would attempt to go — it read like this: KANSAS or BUST. A year or two later some of them were seen wending their way back East with the following motto, BUSTED by GOD. One wagon read like this: In God we Trusted; In Kansas we Busted, now we are going East to see our Mother-in-Law. But Father stuck it out. He settled on an 80 acre ranch in the western part of Taylor County, Iowa, in a log house 16 by 18 feet. This log house had waht was called a Clabbord roof for shingles, and they did not fit together like the nice sawed shingles of today. Many a morning I woke up and found the snow drifted clear across the bed. You, of the younger generation would think it impossible to try and live like we did then, but those were happy days. In the evening time, how I would love to hear my dear Mother¹ sing such songs as only a Mother can sing.

When Father settled there, the losest Railroad was 90 miles away.

Our principal rations were corn bread and sorghum molasses. Very seldom did we ever have wheat flour, but when we did Mother would always make us some biscuits and doughnuts. Gee! How fond I was of those doughnuts.

We often used sorghum molasses to sweeten our RYE coffee, as that was the principal drink of those days. When Father would go to the mill, he would jump astride one of the horses, put a sack of corn on in front of him, and off to the mill that stood by the dam site he would go, and wait his turn for the grinding of the corn. Many a time he would not return until way in the night, but Mother always kept the light burning, and by the way, it was not an electric or gas light as most of us use today. It was a twisted string in a saucer of tallow set up on a tin can in the center of the table. That was the first light we had. A little later we got some candle molds and made our own candles. Then later we got a glass lamp — a small one — with a handle on the side.

Our meat was principally wild game, such as Prairie Duck, Quail, Rabbits, and occasionally a Deer if Father did not get the buck argue when he sighted the deer. But we got through all right and are today stout and hearty.

As to our clothing, I never had a store suit until I was 15 years old. We wore in those days, Jeans pants and hickory shirts both made by Mother or Grandmother. Our summer hats were braided out of wheat or rye straw, and winter caps and mittens were made out of Jeans.

Father had a trade that he worked at about six weeks each fall. That was making sorghum molasses. He had two apprentices, brother Frank and me. Our part in the work was feeding the cane mill while Father boiled the juice. When winter came, we would take molasses and trade them for groceries, clothing, and foot wear.

Well do I remember my first pair of boots. They had red tops with a picture of a silver horse on them, and brass caps on the toes. Gee! but I did step high.

Each year Father took us to the Circus. In those days, the circus did not travel by train but by wagon route from one county seat to another. Usually about one dozen wagons, and if they got stuck in the mud, old Jumbo the elephant, had the pleasure of having a chain attached to her hind legs. Then soon the wagon was on solid ground.

In my early school days we used a chart on the wall, and the seats were only a board about a foot wide with four legs. No desk to put our books in, and also, there were no backs to them. Gee! but we would get tired. I did not get much of an education as you can tell by the way I have written this history. When I was 17 years old, Father moved to New Market, Iowa, and soon after moving there he entered the Merchantile business, and under his supervision we all got a business education. He kept all the children with him until 1899 when he sold out, and as you will note by this little history, they are pretty well scattered out.

The younger generation of our immediate families are as follows: Cordia Lucile, daughter of Edward Frederick² Abbott, Tulsa, Okla.; Lura and Ruth, daughters of Mary P. Garner, New Market, Iowa; Kenneth and Dorothy, son and daughter of John I. Abbott, Baxter Springs, Kan.; Waldo G., son of George A. Abbott, Santa Barbara, Cal.

I trust the younger generation will preserve this history. I remain,

Your truly,
Edward Fredrick Abbott
Tulsa, Okla.

¹All references to father, great grandfather, grandfather and mother apply to A. G. Abbott as well.

²Transcribed as written. Correct spelling is Fredrick.

Thursday, December 4, 2008

Warts & All

Evidently Ben¹ and Norma Muir took a trip to Kentucky to do research on the Muir family. Of special interest is the information on George Thomas Muir, father of Ann Elizabeth (beth) Muir Abbott. There is one page on W. J. Redford, father of Ida May Redford (who married George Thomas Muir) and therefore the grandfather of Beth Abbott. My comments are in italics. Their writing is in regular type and is transcribed as written, complete with spelling and grammatical errors.

THE HORATIO RAINEY MUIR FAMILY

The Horatio Muir family is one of the saddest family this writer has come by in a long long time. It was a family that was the sign of the times, or era

Horatio Muir was born in Alexandria, Fairfax County, Virginia in 1797 to John R. and Ann R. Barker Muir. When John R. Muir received his land for his participation in the Revolution War as midshipman. He took his land 2666 acres in Kentucky and moved his family to Lexington, Fayette County, Kentucky. There he raised his family.

In the meantime when the two brothers (Esley and Horatio) went to Todd County, Kentucky to seek their fortunes and settled on adjoining farms and bought more and more land and February 13, 1827 Horatio went back to Fayette County and married Dorenda Marshall, who was the daughter of Robert and Mary Ann Foster Marshall. Esley also married Dorenda's sister some time before Horatio and Dorenda married.

The first child of Horatio and Dorenda Muir was Horatio, Jr who was born at the end of the year 1827. He married Mary Elizabeth McElwain. Elizabeth and Horatio, Jr. had several children. Horatio Jr. died Died Dec. 1880. Both he and Elizabeth and several children are buried in the Muir Cemetery which is on the old Muir land. One of Horatio Jr. Muir's daughter was Mattie Muir Page. Mary Elizabeth was known as Molly Muir.

The second child was Robert M. I am sure that this child was named from Dorenda's father Robert Marshall, Jr. Robert M Muir was mentally ill from birth.

The third child was John W. Muir, born about 1831 was married To Josephine R. I do not know her maiden name. This was the Aunt Josie who raised George Thomas, John W. Muir Sr. and Josie was the parents of Rainey Muir, who lived in Tarrant County, Texas and is butied in Oakwood Cemetery in Fort Worth, Texas.

The fourth child was Mary Ann born about 1833 and was married to James Samuel Coleman and she died 1865 in Todd County, Kentucky She is buried in the Coleman family Cemetery. Samuel Coleman is a decendant of Esley Muir.

The fifth child was Margaret M. born about 1835 and married a man named Mr. Wisdom. She is buried in the Widsom family cemetery in Todd County, Kentucky which is owned now by private individual. This cemetery is in some woods and very difficulty to get to this cemetery. Margaret had no children.

The sixth child was June. She was born in about 1837. There is no mention of her in her fathers will and I presume that she died.²

The seventh child was Martha V. Muir. She was born about 1840 and she is mentioned in Horatio's will and was living with James S. Coleman and Mary Ann in the 1860 census. James S. Coleman was guardian to Martha V. and Margaret, and his wife Mary Ann when their father died. I do not know at this time who Martha V. married.

The eight child was Benjamin F. Muirborn to Horatio and Dorenda Muir. He married Mary Elizabeth Watkins on March 25, 1867. He was also underage when Horatio died. as Horatio, Jr. was his guardian. Benjamin shot himself March 25, 1872. Mildred Coldman Standard who lives in Elton, Kentucky told me that her grandmother told her this. In his note or will verifies that he did kill himself. I do not have a copy of his will.

The ninth child was George Thomas. He was born Nov. 18, 1849 and was only 5 or 6 years old when his father died. Evidently Dorenda died somewhere between 1850 and 1855 as she was not mentioned in Horatio's will. Anyway, George Thomas was just a baby with no parents. Horatio, Jr was his guardian and in 1870 he was living with John W. Muir and Josie Muir. At that time George had quite a sizable fortune as to money and land. In the late 1870's George Thomas bought $4,000 worth of land from John W. Muir. May 26, 1880 George Thomas was committed to the Western Kentucky Asylum [pictured at the top] along with his older brother Horatio Jr. who was committed March 8, 1880. George stayed at this hospital for two years being released May 19, 1882. He then evidently made a quick trip to Texas (see attached copies of official documents referring to this statement)
Horatio Jr, died in this hospital Dec 23, 1880 from Pnewmonia.

There are two letters written by George Thomas in 1884 asking Thad Coldman (James S. Coleman's son) to ask Judge Reeves for the money for his estate so he could buy land in Texas. From all accounts Judge Reeves kept the land and money and George Thomas got nothing. There might be a question as to whether if George Thomas was afraid to go back to Kentucky as he might be sent back to the hospital again.

To go back in history there were so many large landowners bought Confederate Bonds and lost all they had when the Civil War was over. I don't know whether Horatio Sr had bonds but he did have stock in several banks. He had 38 slaves* and was a very large land owner. in both Todd and Logan Counties, Kentucky. At the time of his death Horatio Sr. and Esley had purchased a large block of land and was paying for it. John R. Muir, son of Esley Muir purchased Horatio Sr's part from the heirs. The inventory of Horatio,Sr estate taken after his death in 1855 took 21 pages to record. We have the zerox copies of this instrument. They are legal size.

All of Horatio Muir;s children had grown up not to lift a hand to do any work at all. They were waited on hand and foot and did not know how to do any kind of work and so like so many of that era could not make a living.

When George Thomas was sent to the hospital Judge Reeves was the guardian of his assets which was considerable, both money and land. He was supposed to buy George Thomas Muir's land. From all accounts he kept all the money and land and sent nothing. At that time in many states a well to do person could get together with the court and have someone committed and take what ever was this person had. Both George Thomas and Horatio, Jr. was well to and they were committed a little over a month apart.... You draw your own conclusion. Mine was these fellows were railroaded/////

George Thomas came to Texas along with John W. Muir, Jr and Josie and Rainey. John W. Muir Sr. had died. From all accounts they came fast from Kentucky to Texas.

In the White Settlement area, which is a part of Fort Worth was a settlement from Todd County, Kentucky and there is where they came. They probably came by train.

Horatio Muir, Jr. was committed from Logan, County Kentucky. This is land he had inherited from his father. Russellville is the county seat of Logan County

I found a Beal Muir who married a Mary Ann French in Hopkinsville, Kentucky (Christain) County. Beal was the brother of Horatio and Esley Muir.

Need two weeks Hope to go back soon

Normaleene M. Muir genealogy 1987

G. T. MUIR COMMINTMENT

May 26, 1880 -- Court Order Book L Page 213

Court met pursant to adjournment
Present Hon. Ben J. Perkins, Judge

On motion of the county Attorney, it is ordered that a writ De Lunatico Inquirendo issue in the case of G. T. Muir, a lunatic, returnable immediately, to inquire into the the State of mind of said Muir, and it ordered that Ben F. Perkins, Jr to appoint counsel for said Muir.

Whereupon comes a Jury S. A. Rice, G. P. Lewis, G. D Brockman, W. D. Hoover, G. M. Mimms, J. E. Goodman, J. W. Lewis, J. M. Hoover, Joe C. Russell, B. G. Davis, J. W. Rickman and N. Tobin who being sworn according to law returned the following verdict tout: We the Jury impannelled and sworn under a writ from the Todd County Court, directing us to inquire of G. T. Muir of said County to be of unsound mind and having had a view of said Muir in open Court, and having heard evidence in relation to the condition of his mind, as well as estate, do find that said Muir is a lunatic, is about 33 years of age; that he resides in the County, that he was not brought into this state for the purpose of becoming a charge upon the Commonwealth, that he lost his mind recently and the cause heredity; that he was born in this county; that he has no property in possession, Reversion, that his parents are dead; that he is not capable of laborin in whole or part for his support. S. A. Rice, G. P/ Lewis,G. D. Brockman, W. D. Hoover, G. M. Mimms, J. E. Goodsman, J. W. Lewis J. M. Hoover, Joe C. Russell, P. G. Cavis, J. W. Rickman, N. Torin

It is therefore ordered by the court that the said G. T. Muir be sent to the Western Lunatic Asylum of Kentucky at Hopkinsville, and that M. C. Christain be andhe is hereby appointed a committee to convey said Muir to the Asylum aforesaid.

— — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — —

This page is a poor photocopy of what's described as Court Record Book L page 213 — Dated May 26, 1880 — Todd County, Kentucky. It is handwritten in a very formal, cursive (almost calligraphic) style. This copy is illegible.

— — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — —

This page is a photocopy of three 3"x5" index cards marked
ARCHIVES 1968
WESTERN STATE HOSPITAL
HOPKINSVILLE, KY 42240
On the copy and next to the top card (Muir, Willis) is a handwritten note: Need to check as to who he was - BM

Name: Muir, Willis
Hospital Number: 7
Age: 45
Ward:
Type Of Commitment:
Date Admitted: 10/25/1893
County: Todd
Handwritten is: Expired 9/22/04

Name: Muir, Horatio
Hospital Number:
Age: 50
Ward:
Type Of Commitment:
Date Admitted: 3/8/1880
County: Logan
Handwritten is: Expired 12/23/1880
Pneumonia — cause of death

Name: Muir, George T.
Hospital Number:
Age: 33
Ward:
Type Of Commitment:
Date Admitted: 5/26/1880 — 5/19/1882
County: Todd
Note: the — 5/19/1882 is handwritten as though added after the original index card was typed and may indicate date of release.

— — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — —

This final page is transcribed as written.

W. J. Redford Family

While we were in Todd County, Kentucky in the court house we also look for the Redford family.

we did find some things of interest.

1. We found the guardian of the Redford children by John Y. Fox. It stated that these children of Edward and Elizabeth Redford who were both dead. So that leaves out the theory that Grandfather Redford after Elizabeth died went to West Virginia to have some more children.

2. Edward Redford who was the father of William Josephus Redford came from England.

3. The Redford family came to Trenton, Todd County, Kentucky in 1843 from Virginia. W. J. was 11 years old. Evidently he was named after his grandfather Fox as his name was Joesphus. They were all from Louisa County, Virginia. Louisa is the county seat. That is next to Lynchburg. So it is possible that William Redford was actually born in Lynchburg. All the records are in Louisa for the Fox family.

I have a copy from the court that John Y Fox released his guardian from these children.

4. I have a copy of the will left my James M. Terry the father of Cornelia Gilmo Terry Redford. He died in 1870 in Todd County, Ky.

4. I have a copy of the will left by John Terry who was the brother of Cornelia Gilmo Terry who died In Russellville, Logan County, Ky. There is a copy of his obituaries in Cornelia Gilmo Redford;s bible.

If any of you wish to get together and you can see all that I have. and I think that you will like the information. Ruby said that we all get together more often as none of us are getting any younger.

Hope all of you are well.

Love Ben & Norma Muir



¹Ben is the grandson of George Thomas and Ida May Redford Muir, who are the parents of Ann Elizabeth (Beth) Muir Abbott.

²I can't help but add this note: Those last two sentences made me laugh. If she was born about 1837, I, too, presume she died!

*See comment of December 6, 2008.

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Margaret's Childhood Recollections¹


(click above to see the entire map, then click the "Back" button to return to the post)

Fort Worth, Texas

I was born in Fort Worth, Texas, on October 5, 1922. My parents, Arthur Guy Abbott and Ann Elizabeth (Beth) Muir Abbott, had married on November 24, 1921, and had an apartment in my grandmother's² house at ___ N. Roosevelt Street in north Fort Worth. My father had left his work with a Chevrolet company in Wichita Falls, Texas, to live in Fort Worth and prepare for the ministry. My mother was attending Texas Christian University, planning to enter full time Christian work. She led singing in revivals during the summer. Also, she taught school for a year prior to her marriage. Both were students at TCU during the fall of 1921 and spring of 1922, but mother was unable to continue since her "condition" made it obvious she was "with child." Pregnant women did not appear boldly in public in those days.

My father was a student minister in the Handley Christian Church, just east of Fort Worth. This continued until I was 13 months old. Then we moved to Rule (a small town in northwest Texas). That was in November, 1923.

Rule, Texas

My first memories are in Rule. Although I do not remember our first apartment, I know that we lived in an apartment in a house owned by two sisters — Miss Nora and Miss Sarah. They evidently were very sweet, and very good to my mother. However, the apartment was small and very inconvenient. Soon after we moved there I burned the palm of my right hand severely. I was just beginning to use my hands to draw, eat, etc. After I burned my hand I began to use my left hand, and my mother often has said this accounted for the fact that I am left handed. I turned out to be ambidextrous. I write, eat and sew left-handed, and do everything else right-handed.

The church in Rule was small. As I recall, it was a white wooden building, built as a majority of churches in those days, with pews in a semi-circle around a pulpit, and the baptistery was under a moveable floor near the pulpit. Soon after we moved there, the congregation built a parsonage on the same block with the church. There was a vacant lot between the two. The house was small, but probably seemed quite adequate to my parents after living in the crowded apartment. There was no indoor bathroom, but that was normal at the time. There was indoor water, however. The once-a-week baths were taken in a large wash tub, with water heated on the stove. The house had two bedrooms with a double closet opening into both bathrooms. When I was two years old I received a "kiddie car" for Christmas, and I used to ride it (using only foot power, not pedals) through the living room, front bedroom, closet, back bedroom, and back into the living room. My father liked to pretend I was chasing him, and when he entered the closet he would climb up high enough for me to ride beneath him. I would "lose" him, and I don't think I ever understood where he went. It was years later that mother and I were discussing our events in Rule, and she mentioned this incident. I remember riding around the house, but I hadn't thought about what happened to dad when I was chasing him.

My first real memory of Rule was the day my brother, Roger, was born, on June 5, 1925. I was 2 years, 8 months old at the time. I was sent to the country to visit our very dear friends Mr. and Mrs. Vick. We used to spend much time with them, because Mr. & Mrs. Vick took the place of family for us. It was the first time mother had been away from home, so Mrs. Vick was a second "mother" for her. I remember when dad came after me I was playing in the Vick's yard with the Vick's teenage daughter. I have a mental picture of the vines along a fence that surrounded their house. Dad and Mrs. Vick came up to tell me that I had a new little brother. I was thrilled, but I wondered where he came from since he wasn't there when I had left in the morning. I was told the doctor brought him. That satisified my curiosity.

I have other memories of Rule. Probably most of them happened after Roger's birth. My first experience with a tornado ( or cyclone as they called it) was there. The wind was very strong, and everyone was urged to go to a storm cellar. We didn't have one, of course, so we went to one at a neighbor's house behind us. The cellar was dark and there were spiders down there. I was afraid of both darkness and spiders for many years afterward. The tornado didn't do any damage after all.

Another memory was very vivid for many years. I was playing in the yard near the vacant lot. I saw a man running from the front of the church toward our house, yelling for my father. Dad came outside, and I overheard part of the conversation. A man had been run over by a train, and for some reason I thought that this man had been "cut in two" by the train. I just couldn't understand how a train could cut a man in half and the the man could get up and run around like that.

I received my first "lesson" in sex education in Rule. I was playing in the back yard with several neighbor children. One little boy needed to "go to the bathroom" so instead of going to the outhouse nearby, he stood up and relieved himself. I thought this was quite handy, so the next time I needed to "go" I stood up and "used the bathroom." I don't remember whether I was punished for getting my dress and panties all wet, but I did learn the difference in little boys and little girls.

Some time during the years we lived in Rule my grandmother came to live with us. Her oldest son, Guy, took care of her business for her. Her husband (my grandfather) had died when mother was about 15 years old, and probably about that time they moved from the farm in White Settlement to town. Grandmother bought the house on Roosevelt where later I was born. I don't know exactly why, but Guy decided to sell the house for grandmother, which meant she had to stay with her children. It was very common then for generations to live together. She spent most of her time with us, which pleased mother since she was in very poor health after Roger's birth, and grandmother was a big help with the care of Roger and me.

When Roger was about a year old we went to Colorado to visit my grandfather Abbott. All five of us (mother, dad, grandmother, Roger and I) were loaded into the car, along with luggage, tent and food. There were two things I particularly remember about the trip. First, we camped in a school yard one night, and I thought it was such fun to be able to play on the swings and things in the school yard. (I don't know where we spent the other nights, but it probably took two days to get there and two days back.) When we got to Colorado, we stayed with an uncle in Colorado Springs. The only thing I remember there was that my grandfather was a very handsome old gentleman, with a white beard and white hair. He, my uncle, my father and I went to a restaurant in Colorado Springs. I guess mother, grandmother and Roger stayed with my aunt at her home. I was fascinated with the fact that my grandfather could put a toothpick in his mouth, make it disappear, and then stick it out of his mouth again. This was my only visit with my grandfather. He died a few years later.

Our house in Rule had a front porch all the way across the front of the house. The house faced west, so in the summer my mother and grandmother planted beautiful blue morning glories that ran up a wire fence that dad placed from the ground to the roof. This made a cool place to play in the heat of the summer. There was no air conditioning. No one had it in those days.

Spur, Texas

I don't remember just when our family moved to Spur, but it was probably during the late summer or early fall of 1926 — just before my 4th birthday. Spur is about 75 miles northwest of Rule. The town is slightly larger than Rule, but it was quite small compared to the area where mother grew up. Dad seemed to like West Texas, but mother never did adjust to the climate, wind, dust storms, etc. The church in Spur was larger than Rule — both in membership and in the building. Instead of the semi-circular pattern of the pews, they had the more straight auditorium. The baptistry was behind and above the pulpit, and was permanently in place.

During the time we lived in Spur, I had all the usual childhood diseases — measles, chicken pox and whooping cough. I remember having to stay in a dark room while I had the measles. Chicken pox made me very uncomfortable, and I was very sick with the whooping cough. There were no shots at time to keep children from taking these diseases. Of course, Roger took them from me, so we had to stay in much of the winter and early spring when I was four and five years old.

I was very eager to learn to read and write at a very early age, so mother and grandmother spent much time with me as I learned at home. Mother's experience as a school teacher helped, and since I tended to use my left hand in holding a pencil or crayola, she encouraged me to turn the paper in such a way that I didn't write upside down as so many "lefties" did at that time. The education laws in the state of Texas at that time required a child to be seven years old on September 1st in order to start school. There was no public kindergarten, so when a Miss Whigham opened a private kindergarten that met in the high school building several afternoons each week, they let me enroll. This was in the spring of 1929 when I was 6 years old. It was more of a "play school" but it did give me the opportunity to be with other children my age. I remember being in a program where I had to give a "reading" all by myself. It was about a little stuffed doll. I was scared, but I managed to get through it.

I was still only six years old when school started in the fall of 1929. I was very ready to go to school, so by paying tuition I was allowed to enter the first grade. The school was only a block from my home, so I was able to walk. I loved school, and Miss Whigham, the woman who had the kindergarten the spring before, had been hired as the first grade teacher. I loved her. I was so fortunate to get a good start in school. I was very shy, but I managed well in the classwork.

There are several memories of my years in Spur. After church on Sunday dad used to walk to the drug store to buy the Sunday paper. I would go with him, and he would buy me an ice cream cone. Then we would walk home for lunch. Of course, I wasn't hungry after the ice cream. Yet I didn't understand why mother was "mad" at dad for buying the cone for me.

Dad had given mother a beautiful engagement ring — a diamond solitare. The wedding band was a plain gold band to match the engagement ring. Evidently the engagement ring was a little large, so mother had the habit of removing the ring when she was at home. Sometimes she would wear the wedding ring behind the diamond in order to keep it from slipping. One spring afternoon she was helping the other mothers of the church hide Easter eggs for a children's party. Later that evening she missed her ring, and she felt she had lost it in the field where we had the party. We spent hours, and days, looking for the ring. We went at night, hoping the flashlight would pick up the sparkle, and we looked in the daylight, hoping the sun would shine on it. It was never found, and mother was heart broken. It was more than thirty years later before dad could afford to give her another diamond. I was too young to remember the first ring, but it must have been beautiful.

Dad held a revival at the church during the summer of 1929 — when I was six years old. I had heard Bible stories all my life, and had never missed church and Sunday School except when I was sick, so I felt I wanted to join the church. I talked it over with my parents, and they said they felt I was ready, so on the last day of the revival I went to the front to make my confession. Many of us were baptized the following Sunday.

There were several children in the church who were my age. My best friend was Peggy Glover. Others I remember were Ouida and Shirley Glen. Both of those names were fascinating to me. I couldn't understand why Ouida was pronounced "Weeda." I thought Shirley Glen was a beautiful name, but mother told me "Glen" was a boy's name.

Although Spur was far away from "civilization," we did have company several times. My aunt and uncle and cousins from Wichita Falls visited once — Mary and Earnest Durrett and Mary Lou and Mildred. I thoroughly enjoyed playing with the girls. Another time dad's nephew Kenneth Abbott and his family visited from Brownfield. They had a little girl about my age and we had fun.

I remember going to Lubbock one time when we lived in Spur. I don't know why we decided to go there for the day — maybe just to have a picnic. The town wasn't very large at that time. I remember going to a park, and people were swimming in a river that ran through it. Mother helped me change into my swimming suit, and then afterward when I changed back into my clothes they left my suit on the car to dry while we ate our lunch. I don't know whether the suit was stolen or whether it fell off the car when we drove off. Anyway, I didn't get home with it.

Evidently the communion bread for Sunday services was all homemade, and mother took her turn in preparing it. On those Sunday mornings she would make pie crust and "score it" so it could be broken more easily. I don't remember how it was done in other churches we served, but in Spur it was made by the members.

Dad liked to raise chickens — both for the eggs and for food. One time when we had baby chickens I was in the back yard having lots of fun. Mother heard me laughing and screaming as I picked up the chicks, kissed them and threw them in the air. Mother came out to investigate, and the fun came to abrupt end. I'm sure I received a severe paddling, because many of the chickens lay dead.

The house in Spur was a little larger than the one in Rule. It had an indoor bathroom making it much more convenient. The living room was fairly large, and in the winter time the house was heated by a coal stove that was in the living room.

Evidently Roger and I were both bothered with sore throats, ear problems or something. The doctor told our parents we should have our tonsils removed, so I remember going to his office early one morning. We were both in our pajamas. He took us one at a time, and we were given ether and then our tonsils and adenoids were removed. We stayed in a bed in his office for several hours, and then mother and dad took us home. The best part of all of this was getting to have ice cream.

Sabinal, Texas

We moved to Sabinal right after the first of the year in 1930. It was a small town about 65 miles southwest of San Antonio. The church was very active, and the building was a cream colored brick building near the downtown area. The parsonage was about 10 blocks away, on a dirt street just across from a railroad. It was about the same size as the one in Spur. Again, it was heated with a coal stove placed in the living-dining room.

The happiest times of my life were in Sabinal. I was in the first grade when we moved, and although I hated to leave my beloved Miss Whigham, I immediately fell in love with my first grade teacher in Sabinal — Miss Bell. She was an older woman who "mothered" her children. I continued to enjoy school, and it was easy to make excellent grades. We lived there for almost four years, and all the teachers were wonderful. I was so fortunate.

My very best friend was named Myra Nell Peters. She and her parents and younger brother lived with their grandmother in her large house several blocks from me. There was no fear of walking alone in those days, so many times I would walk to her house to spend the day, or she would walk to mine. Myra Nell was just four months older that I. She was blonde and I was brunette. She was very talented musically, and played the piano and violin. We enjoyed playing in the huge fig trees in her back yard, and we had play houses under the branches. We spent many contented hours with our dolls and make believe. The house had a huge attic, and on colder days we would play up there.

Mother's health continued to get worse, and soon after we moved to Sabinal she had to have a hysterectomy. This was done at the Nix Hospital in San Antonio. Grandmother was with us, so we were kept in school without interruption. We did get to go to San Antonio to see her, and that was quite a treat to ride the elevator, see the sights of the big city and go to a movie. I didn't realize how serious the surgery was.

I had many friends in Sabinal. Besides Myra Nell, there were Sarah Sue Fowler, Louise Ligon, twins Maxine and Maurine Shane, Lucille [last name not provided].

The family next door had a girl my age — Evelyn Hill. They had several younger children also. One day I was at their house and I noticed her mother awfully fat under her apron. I didn't think much about it then, but I did wonder why she got so much smaller a few weeks later. Also, they had a new baby boy. That was my first experience in observing a pregnant woman.

My father had begun to gain lots of weight, and he was large enough to make an ideal Santa Clause when we were in Sabanal. I still didn't know for sure about Santa, but I began to suspect something when dad didn't go with us to the community Santa party. We were at the church afterward, and Roger accidently opened the door of a classroom after dad had changed from his Santa suit. He was very excited to find that Santa had been there, but of course he never suspected anything. I finally knew for sure when the doll that was under the Christmas tree had my name on it, but it was in mother's handwriting. I was eight years old.

The highway from Sabinal to Uvalde, just to the west of Sabinal, had to cross three rivers — the Sabinal, Frio and Leona. They didn't have high bridges, but the highway followed the contour of the land, with a deep chasm going down to the river. One summer there was a flood which knocked out the highway at all three places. It took months before travel could be resumed between Sabinal and Uvalde. I thought it was fun going on the highway as far as we could, just to see how far the river had risen, and then to see how much it had gone down.

Concan, near Sabinal, was on the Frio River. Now there is a state park in that area. It was quite a resort when I lived there in the early 30's and many people had cabins on its banks. We used to take church groups up there for picnics. Swimming was great. There weren't any city swimming pools then, so it was a real treat to get to go swimming in the river. The large cyprus trees were beautiful.

We went to Corpus Christi during one of our summer vacations. We found a cabin on the gulf, and spent a few days swimming in the salt water and relaxing. One time we were driving around and stopped for a soft drink just before going out on the causeway to one of the islands. As we returned from the island, a woman from the restaurant stopped our car and asked if dad was Rev. Abbott. He had left his billfold on the counter when he paid for the drinks, and she thought she could catch him as we returned from the island. We were so thankful that she was an honest waitress.

The stock market crash of 1929 had occurred just before we moved to Sabinal. The economy went from bad to worse, and many people were out of work. Men began riding the freight trains from one place to another trying to find something to do. When the train stopped, they would get off and ask for food at the various houses in the area. They seemed to have a secret code, passed from one to another. Since we lived across the street from the railroad, they headed straight for our house. The Depression had hit us also, but we always gave them something to eat — even if it was just bread and butter. One time we had watermelon, and offered a slice to one of the men. Soon another man came and asked if he could have a slice.

Dad had his usual chickens in Sabinal, and this time he also had a cow. One of our neighbors, a Mrs. Adams, owned quite a bit of land behind us. She let us keep one of her cows and we were able to have fresh milk. We also had a garden, so we had milk, eggs and fresh vegetables. That helped since money was so hard to get.

Mrs. Adams gave me my first real pet — a beautiful long-haired cat. I officially named her "Fluffy," but soon was calling her sugar-pie. This changed as I talked baby-talk to her, and became "Dubi." She was the love of my life. Of course, she did "what came naturally" and had a litter of kittens a couple of times a year. She made all of the moves our family made (once with kittens), and finally died at the age of 17.

Hoover, a Republican, was president at the time of the stock market crash. My father was a faithful Republican, so when Roosevelt, a Democrat, was elected he was sure our country was ruined. Nothing that Roosevelt did pleased dad — especially when he closed the banks. We didn't have any money to lose, but those who did lost a lot. Roosevelt's New Deal brought many government programs, but the economy didn't recover very quickly. Soon the church was having financial problems, and could no longer afford a full time minister. We loved Sabinal, and they seemed to love us. Mr. Leon Heard, his daughter and son-in Lois and Clarence Crane, and many other leaders did all they could to keep the church financially stable, but the time finally came when dad had to look for another church.

Pecos, Texas

During the Thanksgiving holidays we moved to far west Texas. Pecos was the worst place we ever lived. Mother thought northwest Texas, but it was nothing compared to Pecos. There was white alkali soil that made the water taste terrible, no trees, and the wind blew constantly. One of the few good things about the area was that they grew delicious cantaloupes. The alkali seemed to add to their flavor.

My father liked to see to it that we made certain records. We had moved from Spur to Sabinal right after Christmas, so I didn't have to miss any school. This move was during Thanksgiving, so again I didn't have to miss school. I had had the early childhood diseases before I started school, so I began a record of never being absent or tardy. Also, since I was a good student, he wanted me to excel in everything so I could be valedictorian. Mother wanted me to take music, so I was busy trying to be perfect in both fields. It really didn't bother me, though, since I enjoyed school and music.

I didn't have any close friends in Pecos. Shirley Glasscock was my age and with me in school and church. We had fun together, but she became interested in boys at an early age, and I was not yet ready for that. For that reason we soon drifted apart. Also, the Depression seemed to affect our family. I remember having two school dresses and one Sunday dress. I don't remember going hungary, but I probably didn't have very nourishing meals. I began growing tall, but I was skin and bones. I was quite self-conscious.

During each summer that we were in Pecos, we took two trips that were enjoyable. Each June we went to Carlsbad Caverns. I thoroughly enjoyed those all-day trips — especially the walk out of the cavern when we would first see the sun shining into the cave.

Each August we spent a week at the Boys Camp Meeting in the Davis Mountains, a non-denominational church meeting.

We camped in tents, attended services in large open air tabernacles and ate with a group of people of our denomination. There were several denominations represented, and each had their own kitchen area. Some of the wealthy ranch owners provided the food, and the people paid what they could afford. Although there were church services three times a day, I didn't have to attend all of them, and I enjoyed playing with the other children. The last time we went, however, was a most unpleasant experience. To begin with, mother finally had materal to make a new dress for herself. She made it especially to take with us to the camp meeting. After it was finished, I was pressing it and I accidently left the iron on it and scorched it beyond repair. We were both heart broken. We packed our things and had to tie most of them on the running boards of the car since there wasn't enough trunk space for the tent and everything. On the way to the camp meeting, there was a terrible flood and many cars were marooned in the mountains until the waters went down enough to ford the streams. We had to spend a night in a motel, and found that most of our clothes were soaked. When we got to the camp meeting, there wasn't a good place to camp so we had to take what was left. This was an experience we all wanted to forget.

Another experience in the Davis Mountains happened with dad and Roger. To celebrate his birthday one June, dad took Roger and a few of his friends to the Davis Mountains for an all day outing. They cooked outside and roamed around the area. They noticed a cloud, so decided to come home a little earlier than planned. Summer floods would come without warning, and since the roads in the valleys had to ford the streams many times, it could get quite dangerous. They packed up and started home, but suddenly realized the rains had already started upstream. They had to drive fast to keep ahead of a wall of water that was coming toward them. Fortunately they got out just in time, but it was quite a harrowing experience for all of them.

Living in Pecos was hard on all of us. Dad, a staunch Republican, was unhappy with the political turn of events. Also the church situation was getting bad. The Church of Christ denomination had broken away from our church and they wanted to argue the scriptures with anyone from our denomination — especially the minister. They were of the opinion that anyone who was not a member of their church was going to hell. I can remember times when the minister of the Church of Christ would come to our house to argue with dad. This was very upsetting to all of us.

Most of my friends had bicycles, and I wanted one very badly. However, there was no way my parents could afford one, so I received skates that Christmas instead. I did enjoy skating, but I thought life would be much happier if I could have had a bike.

Grandmother was with us part of the time we were in Pecos, but she stayed with some of her other children most of the time we were out there. During those years, mother and Roger and I would entertain ourselves with games, long walks, etc. When dad had time, he would join us for table games. Roger and I enjoyed each other more in Pecos than other towns. In Sabinal, he was too young, and after I was in high school, he again was too young. Here, though, we seemed to need each other and enjoyed playing "make believe" in our large yard.

We both learned to swim in Pecos. There was a city swimming pool, and they let the ministers' families in free. We both became quite good swimmers, although he was better than I. We went to many movies, also. This was the first town we had lived in that had a movie theater, and fortunately they too let ministers and their families in free. We went nearly every Saturday afternoon and thoroughly enjoyed the cowboy serials — wondering from week to week if the hero would die after falling from the cliff, riding a run-away horse, etc.

I was quite a tomboy, and liked to play outside in tree houses, on swings, etc. One summer soon after school was out I was swinging on a one-rope swing. I would swing from a saw horse in order to go higher, and then catch myself on the saw horse when the swing came back. Once I missed the saw horse, and scraped my skin to the bone. I should have gone to the doctor, but instead dad tried to doctor it himself. It got worse over time and soon became infected. I had to stay in bed and could only walk with help. Finally, I was taken to the doctor, but it was too late for the doctor to take any stitches. Therefore, I have always had a large scar on my right leg. It finally got well, but it took all summer.

During the summer mother and I would take long walks. Daddy was busy with church activities, and Roger was playing softball with his friends. She and I would walk and talk several evenings a week. These were some of our happier times in Pecos. I enjoyed hearing about her childhood. I just wish one of us had put it all on paper.

There was an "ice cream war" one summer while we lived in Pecos, and we could buy a triple dip cone for 5¢. About once a week we all went to the ice cream parlor and had a huge cone. The only flavors were vanilla, chocolate and strawberry — and sometimes banana nut. My, that ice cream was delicious.

One of the church members loaned us her piano, so at last I was able to take real piano lessons. Mother had taught Roger and me some music by using pianos at the churches in Sabanal and Pecos, but I had had no formal lessons. I enjoyed this experience, although I soon became tired of all the practicing it required. There was a radio station in Pecos, and one time some of the pupils performed on the radio. I was scared, but evidently I did all right. The recital at the end of the school year was very exciting. Grandmother was with us at the time, and somehow we were able to find the money to buy material for a new dress for the recital. Grandmother was an excellent seamstress, and my dress was one of the prettiest I had ever had. Also, she made a new dress for me for the elementary school graduation. Two new dresses in one month was quite a treat.

I finished the seventh grade in Pecos. This was the last grade in elementary school, and we had a formal graduation ceremony. It was in 1936 — the Texas Centennial year. Our theme was Davy Crockett's saying — "Be sure you are right, then go ahead." Dad had pushed me to make perfect grades so I could be valedictorian, but another girl had perfect grades also. Since I was a transfer student (I moved there when I was in the fifth grade), they made Ruthie Reeder valedictorian and I was salutatorian. We both had to make a speech at graduation, and my speech was on "Public Education in Texas." I did a lot of research, using some of my neighbor's encyclopedias, and I practiced long and hard. Ruthie's speech was short, but mine was longer, and well prepared. I received a standing ovation, and then someone (probably the neighbor who had let me use her encyclopedia) sent me a bouquet of flowers. I felt coming in second wasn't so bad after all. Many of the families in the church gave me gifts after the ceremony. It made me feel very special.

Although I disliked Pecos in general, there were some wonderful people who lived there, and they were very kind to our family. Mr. & Mrs. Wilhite and their daughter, Golda, were wonderful to us. They lived across the alley and were very supportive. Golda was the choir director, and her parents were church "pillars." Dr. & Mrs. Jim Camp, Mr. & Mrs. Collier, and the Glasscocks, were other church and community leaders.

One enjoyable experience came the second Thanksgiving we lived in Pecos. Dad decided at the last minute to take us to El Paso. He always liked to decide suddenly to go somewhere rather than planning ahead, which made it very hard on mother getting clothes packed and food ready. However, I thought it was exciting, and I was always ready to jump at the chance for adventure. We spent the night in a motel in El Paso, and the next day we went across the border into Juarez for a few hours.

Since grandmother wasn't with us much of the time in Pecos, I learned to cook and take care of the house in order to help mother. She was never able to do much heavy work. I enjoyed cooking, and I learned a lot that would help me later in life.

Dad began to wonder if he should leave the ministry. Although many of the members were wonderful, he didn't have the general support for the church programs. The economy was very bad, and there wasn't much financial support for the ministry. He discussed going into the grocery business with the financial backing of one of the church members, but that didn't get much farther than the discussion stage. I think the deciding factor was that the government decided during the summer of 1936 to give a bonus to the World War veterans. That gave us a little money to live on for a couple of months, so he resigned from the church in Pecos, and we left without any definite destination ahead of us. Our furniture was stored in the Wilhite's barn across the alley, and we took our few clothes and headed for Fort Worth. We stayed with my aunt and uncle (mother's brother) and their new baby, and also visited with other relatives.

Texas was celebrating the Centennial, and they were having special events in both Fort Worth and Dallas. We attended the event in Fort Worth, and then our family joined the Durretts (mother's sister and family from Wichita Falls) and rented a large room for the eight of us just across from the State Fair grounds in Dallas so we could attend that special Fair. Roger, the Durrett children (Mary Lou and Mildred) and I thoroughly enjoyed ourselves with rides on the midway and other fun programs. The very best part of the Centennial was the "Cavalcade of Texas." They had a huge open air arena and the drama presented the history of the Lone Star State. The curtain between the acts was a wall of water, with colored lights shining on it. There was a cattle stampede and many other exciting stories depicting the taming of the west. I still have a program of the Cavalcade.

Belton, Texas

During the latter part of August we moved to Belton. Dad had contacted the Texas Christian Missionary Society while we were in Fort Worth, and had made arrangements to become minister of the church in Belton. This was an exciting time because at last we felt we were moving back to "civilization." Central Texas was beautiful, and the church was fairly active. One difficulty, though, was that the church was supposed to send a truck to Pecos to bring our furniture to the parsonage in Belton. They sent a small truck, which wasn't nearly large enough for a house full of furniture. Instead of asking them to make another trip, dad just sold the furniture that couldn't be loaded on the truck. Of course, he didn't get much money for the second hand furniture, and he wasn't selective in the furniture he brought back with him. One chair, in particular, was sold that had been mother's favorite. It was a small rocker without arms that had been ideal for rocking Roger and me when we were babies, and it was nice for her to use as she sewed and pieced quilts.

Since we didn't have enough furniture, dad used the rest of the money he had received as the War bonus to buy furniture for us. We not only had the necessities (bedroom furniture, etc.), but he also bought a desk for Roger and me, a new dining room suite an a small piano. I was very excited. Mother was still unhappy about the necessity of buying so much new furniture, but she didn't say much. In those days men made most of the decisions for the families without discussing things with their wives or families.

The parsonage in Belton was a very old solid brick house, but the church had completely remodeled it. It had new wallpaper, and the kitchen had a nice kitchen cabinet — the first one we had had. The house was rather inconvenient, but it was fairly comfortable. There was a small entrance room which they had made into the living room. The room to the right of it had originally been the living room, but they added a closet and it became my room. Behind that room was the dining room, and then the kitchen. Mother and dad's bedroom was behind the living room, and then Roger's room. There was a back porch, and the bathroom had been made from part of the porch. The house, of course, had been built before there was indoor plumbing. Since the bathroom was an "add-on" it meant it was quite cold going to the bathroom in the winter as the back porch was screened in.

There were many girls my age in Belton, and it didn't take long to make close friends. We were all within walking distance since the town was rather small. Charline Cook (now Mrs. Leonard Kimsey) lived one block from the school, so most of the time I would go by her house and we would walk together. Other friends were Doris Giles, Lois Durham, Norma Green and Eleanor Metcalf.

Eleanor had a car, and we often went riding with her. She liked to go to Temple, and we would go to a drive-in and order a hamburger, cold drink or something. The hamburgers only cost a nickel, so I was able to participate in this activity. By this time dad had a little extra change to give to Roger and me for doing chores around the house. I was very careful in the way I spent my money, but I was able to go to a movie (for only 10¢), get a coke, etc. with my friends.

Charline and I became close friends. One of our favorite activities was making candy at my house. Neither of us had a bicycle, but we were able to borrow bikes and would take long rides in the country. The young people seemed to congregate at Charline's house on weekends, and I spent many enjoyable evenings there with a bunch of boys and girls.

I had learned to drive the car while we were in Pecos, but I didn't get to drive alone until we moved to Belton. It was so exciting when dad told me to go on some errand "by myself." I was only 13, but at that time there was no age limit and no test to take. In fact, a driver's license wasn't required until a few years later, and I didn't have to take a test to get it.

It was almost time for school to start when we moved to Belton. I was in the eighth grade, which was a freshman in high school (there were only eleven grades in public school at that time). Everyone was assigned a place at a double desk in the combination auditorium-study hall. This assignment had been made at the close of school the spring before, so I didn't have a place to sit. I was very fortunate, however, to be placed with a girl who was a member of our church. She was a year older than I, and a grade ahead of me. However, I felt very fortunate to be placed with such a nice person.

I always loved going to school. The teachers seemed to think I was a good student so they asked me to help put things on the blackboard, run errands, etc. I was elected as a freshman representative to the student council, and also I was asked to work in the library during study hall.

I discovered boys in Belton, although nothing serious. There was one boy, Walter Roy Cole, who seemed to like me and kept wanting me to go out with him. I was quite reluctant, however, to date him alone. I had much rather be with a group of boys and girls. We had lots of parties at our house sponsored by our church. There were some wonderful people in Belton.

My grandmother lived with us the first winter in Belton, but in the fall of 1937 my father's sister, Aunt Daisy, stayed with us for about eight months. She was from Iowa, so it was a treat for her to get out of that extremely cold weather. I enjoyed her very much. I remember in January 1938 mother and dad had gone to Fort Worth for the annual minister's week, and she and Roger and I were home alone. Often during minister's week the weather would get bad, and we happened to have a severe ice storm the day they were to return to Belton. I knew dad was a good driver, so I wasn't too worried, but Aunt Daisy was "pacing the floors" she was so worried. Fortunately, mother and dad got home just fine, but it was extremely difficult driving for them since they didn't have a defroster and their heater wasn't adequate. Now that I am grown I can understand more fully Aunt Daisy's concern. Then, I only knew dad always made it home in any kind of weather.

Taylor, Texas

All good things come to an end, however, and our life in Belton seemed to come to an abrupt halt. In the spring of my sophomore year dad accepted a call to the church in Taylor. This was only miles southeast. In fact, the Taylor Ducks played the Belton Tigers in football. I felt the world had ended, though. I was almost as happy in Belton as I had been in Sabinal.

When I enrolled in school I found that students in my first-year Spanish class were already studying things that weren't offered in Belton until the second year. Other classes were acceptable — but since I was used to having perfect grades I was devastated. Fortunately, I had a study hall during my Spanish teacher's off period, so she worked with me each day until I caught up with the other students and I finished the year at their level.

I thoroughly enjoyed Homemaking (or Home Economics as it was called then). During my senior year I went to the state meet in Dallas to show off my dress. Our teacher and three other girls went also. We had a wonderful time in the "big city." We stayed at the Adolphus Hotel and saw many sights that were unfamiliar to a "country" girl like me.

(Click image below to see the entire postcard, then click the "Back" button to return to the post)

I had my first experience in being "rejected" when I applied for admission to a club in high school and was not elected. There were only a limited number being accepted for membership, and my friends told me I probably wasn't elected because the older girls (seniors) didn't know me. I was a junior by that time. I tried not to show my disappointment and didn't say much about it at home. However, I feel sure mother and dad talked to the principal about having clubs in high school that limited membership. The next year this club was outlawed and other clubs that had "open membership" were organized.

Dorothy Campbell became a very close friend. She and I were the same age, and her parents and sister were all leaders in our church. Other friends were Shirley and Lucille Johnson, Dorothy Cornforth and Novis Bozarth. We would get together on Saturday nights in someone's home rather than going on dates. Some girls dated, but most of us just enjoyed getting together without pairing up.

As usual, we didn't have any money to spare. Ministers in those days were usually quite poor, and we were among the poorest. The country was still trying to recover from the Depression, and no one had much money to spare. My senior class ring cost about $12.00, but I wasn't able to order one during the first order. When they sent off the second order, I asked if I could get one, and was told it might still be impossible. Then a strange thing happened. The Lord probably had a hand in it. The radio indicated that someone would visit people's homes, and if the housewife had a carton of Meadowlake Margarine in the refrigerator, she would receive $10.00. That was the brand we used (we couldn't afford butter). Fortunately, the person came to our house and presented mother with $10 when she produced the carton. I was able to order the ring.

Another time we received an unexpected and much needed gift of money was at Christmas, 1938. Grandmother was staying with some of her family in Fort Worth, and her health was quite poor. Mother was quite depressed for many reasons: we had little money for Christmas gifts for our immediate family, mother's health was getting worse, and she also feared grandmother wouldn't be here much longer. She wanted so badly to go to Fort Worth to see her. One of the men from the church came by during the holidays and gave dad a gift of $10.00. That was enough to buy gasoline for the round trip to Fort Worth (gasoline was only about 20¢ per gallon). We stayed with relatives and had a nice visit with grandmother. It gave us all a much better Christmas.

Grandmother died in the spring of 1939. I had never missed a day of school in my entire school years until that time. Grandmother died on Saturday, and they couldn't have the funeral until Monday. That meant I would miss school on Monday if I went to the funeral — but there was no question about it. I would stay for the funeral and give up any goal of perfect attendance during my entire 11 years of public school. Dad, however, was called to Taylor to preach another funeral on Monday afternoon, so he and Roger and I left immediately after grandmother's service at the church so he could get home in time for the church member's funeral. I always resented that, because I felt he should have considered his own family's feelings and should have stayed in Fort Worth for grandmother's burial. Mother had to come home alone on the bus.

I finished high school in 1940. Dad had urged me for years to work hard in school so I could be valedictorian and get a scholarship for college. He knew it would be difficult for him to send me off to school without some help. I realized in my senior year that it would be almost impossible to finish first since there were so many other students with excellent grades. I became quite depressed, and wondered what would happen if I didn't get that scholarship. When grades were announced, I had finished second. There were about five of us who were so close together it was hard to determine the winner. My grade point average was 93.75. The highest was 93.79. She received the scholarship for the girls, and a boy who had finished fifth received the scholarship for the boys. I received recognition, but no monetary reward. I was glad it was over because it had been quite a struggle.

San Marcos, Texas

I did get to go to college, however. Somehow I was able to enroll in Southwest Texas State Teachers College in San Marcos (now Texas Satate University). Dorothy Campbell was my roommate. I had thought all my life that I would be a school teacher since I loved children and I loved school. However, I changed my mind after a few months of school. Chemistry was very interesting in high school, and I was enjoying it as a freshman in college, so I decided perhaps that would be my major. I found that I changed my mind several times during the two years I was at San Marcos.

I was supposed to have a job at the school to cover my tuition. Dorothy was also promised work. Several weeks went by without the expected employment. Finally, I went to work in the school library, and Dorothy became secretary to one of the professors. We were both pleased with these assignments. Our dormitory was quite a "fire trap" but we didn't realize how inconvenient everything was. We were so happy to have a place to stay. This was an old wooden dormitory — probably built when the college began. It was called "The Annex." The girls were all very nice, and most of us were freshmen since upper classmen were given rooms in the new dormitory.

Since this was my first time away from home, I was very home sick from time to time. It was good to have Dorothy as my roommate since we had been best friends in high school. She soon had a boy friend, and although I still wasn't interested in "real" dating, I did go out with her boy friend's best friend. At least it made it nice to have someone to go with to football games and other school activities.

During the spring of 1941 my parents told me that dad was going to resign from the church in Taylor. I wasn't to tell anyone — not even Dorothy. This was a terrible strain on me since I was still bothered with homesickness from time to time. I didn't need this extra burden of secretiveness. Also, mother's health was very bad, and after dad had accepted a call to the church in Quanah, mother learned she would need immediate gall bladder surgery at Scott & White Hospital in Temple (just north of Taylor). Also, Roger didn't want to leave Taylor at the end of his junior year since mother would be unable to join dad in Quanah when he moved. Dorothy Campbell's parents agreed to let Roger live with them and finish school. Some of mother's dear friends — Zaida Brown and [first name not provided] Jones — looked after mother during her surgery and recovery. That meant all four of us were in different places those several weeks for mother's sugery and recovery. (She was in the hospital for almost three weeks.) Dad came back for us when school was out, and the four of us went to our new home in Quannah.

Both mother and I disliked West Texas. It was o.k. for Roger, because he seemed content wherever he was. Dad seemed to like West Texas fine. At least it was a little better than Pecos.

I was afraid I wouldn't be able to go back to school in the fall, but fortunately they were somehow able to find the money to send me. I was able to work in the cafeteria during my sophomore year, and this covered all room and board.

There wasn't anything outstanding that I can recall about the fall semester (1942), until December 7th. I was walking back to the campus after Sunday School in order to get ready to go to work. When I reached the dormitory, they were just getting the first news about Pearl Harbor. That was a day I will always remember. All activity seemed to stop, and everyone was listening to the radio. I really didn't understand the full impact of the meaning of the attack, but by the next day boys on campus were lining up to volunteer for service. Campus life would never be the same.

¹From a seventeen-page typewritten account titled, "LIFE OF IDA MARGARET ABBOTT GRIGG ATKINS." It is a personal reflection of her childhood and meant for her children, but its importance here is in providing a timeline of the numerous moves the family made. In fact, the various segments are titled by the towns in which they lived.

²All references to "grandmother" are to her maternal grandmother, Ida May Redford Muir.

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