From today's Arkansas Democrat Gazette: a reporter's visit to the sites and sets of "Mud," a film set in part on the White River and the Crockett's Bluff, DeWitt, and St. Charles areas.
http://www.arkansasonline.com/news/2013/may/16/lower-white-river-more-mud-country-20130516/
Thursday, May 16, 2013
Monday, March 25, 2013
Crockett's Bluff: Image From the Past
Yet another marvelous image from Crockett's Bluff from the Prange Family archives.
What an amazing life-filled image from perhaps the early 1930's -- or earlier?
From the bats on display and Richard's mitt, one can assume there had been a ball game, followed by a the assembly for a picture of all the participants.
Thanks to the efforts of James Prange and Hallie Keithley (Hallie Gosnell above) we've identified most of these folks. With luck, we will identify the "unknowns," here as well as the background of this scene and its approximate date. I find particularly interesting the mysterious female figure in the back, part of whose face can be seen between Hallie and Richard, appearing to be making a "finger-thumb lens" with her right hand.
Those who view this picture and are able to identify (or are willing to hazard a guess) the individuals assembled, simply post your information as a "Comment" at the end of this post. I'll then be please to list the identities of those pictured.
Tuesday, March 19, 2013
Friends of My Childhood
This image was forwarded to me by my St. Charles classmate Eunice Ward Brown (front row second from left -- embraced on her right by May Krablin and on her left by Bob Knowlton). I cannot recall haven't seen it. Yet there I am (fourth from the left middle row) next to Liz Dupslaff, one of my earliest childhood friends and apparently my guide. We're in fifth grade [1945 or 46] and I've just returned from being away during the war years at Little Rock, and I suspect, though don't remember, she was assigned to watch over me because she knew who I was.
I was astonished by this picture. I was, I think, the only person from Crockett's Bluff. So many of these (those of us in fifth grade) friends and classmates reflect histories that startle me still. And here we are in fifth grade, not yet in those days, even in the midst of puberty. Unlike perhaps some of the sixth graders pictured with us. I say this because the lovely figure just behind me is Irene Hudson, one of the most beautiful females I could envision in those days is still, even in the most distant of memories, the subject of one of the most erotic encounters of my recollected youth.
1st Row: Mae Krablin, Eunice Ward, Bobby Jerrel Knowlton, Richard McKinley, Arthur Krablin, Jr., Jo Ann Browning, Mary Dawson, Mora Faye Duty, Robert Almond, Frank Caple, Charles Donald Crabtree, Millard Carver, Weson Adams, George Dobson.
2nd Row: Frieda Shumate, Louise Thornsbury, Helen Smith, Dale Woodiel, Elizabeth Ann Dupslaff, Kay Terry, Mae Dale Dillon, Gladys Bowermaster, Nellie Ann Crabtree, Bobby J. Bullock, Joyce Jones, Cora Mae Dewease, Joe Currie, Garland Long, Billy Dawson, Issac Prater, Mrs. Cora May Burrell, Teacher.
3rd Row: Deliah LeHue, Norma Jean Smith, Mary Helen Eason, Irene Hudson, Georgia Lee Simpson, Audrey B. Dunn, Sarah Dawson, Bette Lou Maddox, Edna Mae Shadwich, Henry Lee, Edward Early Jones, Troy Wages, Mack Smith.
Here we are a few years later in eighth grade in 1949. We've lost some classmates, their having moved away, but we've acquired one noteworthy member, Peter Van Huesen, who would become a good friend and who brought to the class some other-world style and "folkways" somewhat strange to the community of St. Charles, not to mention Crockett's Bluff, Ethel, and all that prairie space in between.
I should note with the image below the greater part of our group in New Orleans all dressed up for dinner at The Court of Two Sisters, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Charles Downs, our Principal, and Mrs. Malcolm Browning, whose daughter Jo Ann was a member of our class. This was, to my knowledge, the first "class trip" in the history of St. Charles High School, thanks, in part, to the creative imagination of Maurice Dunn who taught us science, among many other things (whose car was one of those that transported us to NOLA that lovely spring week of 1953).
Friday, March 15, 2013
Crockett's Bluff in the 1920s: Memories and Images
I'm indebted, once again, to James Prange, the son of one of the elder sons of Adolph and Edna Prange -- and, from his testimony, the unofficial Prange family historian -- for the following images and information. In addition to a youthful image of his father, the elder James, he has "unearthed" an obviously priceless photograph of the rice chute and the Prange-Tindell warehouse above the Bluff itself, along with a delightful item of Crockett's Bluff news from the August 7, 1924 edition of the DeWitt Era Enterprise.
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The River Boat "Lillian H" receiving bags of rice down the warehouse chute. |
The Woodiel house where I and my younger siblings Neil and Maureen were born was located north along the river from what one would have called the center of The Bluff. At the end of our lane stood the Lutheran Church and behind and beside it the Adolph Prange residence and the Prange Store that overlooked the White River. By the time I was old enough in the late nineteen thirties and early forties to venture alone as far afield from our house southward to where Rt. 153 made its turn toward DeWitt and St. Charles, scenes such as the one above were long gone. But the warehouse remained, and I remember it vividly.
After the war years the landmark Prange Bros. Enterprises water tower remained and was visible from five or more miles away across the prairie. The largely inactive August Prange company store remained during the post war decades along side Schwab's Store, that by the end of World War II had become the sole center of activity. The Adolph Prange family had closed their store in 1944 and moved to California.
By 1945, across the road but in the shadows of the water tower, "Doodle and Eddie"Schwab had developed a general store with a capital G -- the center of The Bluff. To the east a few hundred yards resting in the oak trees beyond the "Ida Carolyn Park" picnic area lay the largely vacant warehouse. To reach it one had to cross the bridge of the Prange Farm canal whose water was pumped from the river below the bluffs to drift southward along its banks to the vast rice fields that spread across the prairie beyond.
I remember the warehouse as large and open and quiet, save for the constantly fluttering sparrows, and although it was rarely filled with grain of any sort, unlike the Prange Farm's smaller barns a mile or so away, it maintained a distinctive aroma that must have been retained from years like the one pictured above when tons of rice and perhaps other grains, dried not yet from "dryers" but from having been left in shocks in the fields to dry in the sun, before being sacked and slid down the chute to be neatly stacked on a barge of the likes of The Lillian H.
Both the Adolph Prange store and the family residence were dismantled by the late 1950s; the water tower a decade or so later. After the war when the Lutheran Church had lain vacant for years, its primary seating area, minus the bell tower, was moved westward down Rt. 153 six miles or so where it remains today the meeting house of the Poplar Creek Baptist congregation..
This image of the chute from the warehouse might well be the only remaining visual record of this activity.
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James Prange early 1920s |
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Houseboat on the White River, perhaps John Johnson's |
DEWITT ERA ENTERPRISE, August 7, 1924
Judges for election in Crockett Township are Shelton Herring, Will Mason and Cecil Inman. Clerks named were Adolph Prange, U.A. Rowe, Harmon Turner.
Peaches are drying in the trees; corn is ruined; rice needs more water; pasturage is getting scarce, but still we wait for rain.
Prange Bros will soon be able to increase pumping capacity of their plant to about 4,000 gallons per minute. A third pump, driven by a large Fairbanks Engine, will be be put to work this week.
While visiting with her daughter, Mrs. Adolph Prange, Mrs. Burroughs came very near being seriously injured. A stray yearling attacked Mrs. Burroughs, and before anyone could come to her rescue, it succeeded in knocking Mrs. Burroughs to the ground and butting her severely.
October 2, 1924:
The thief who recently carried away two loads of bird shot from the Prange Mercantile Company, will be presented with buck shot at his next appearance.
Crockett's Bluff School opened on September 15, with an enrollment of 30.
Wednesday, February 6, 2013
Wooddell, Woodell, Woodle, Woodiel
What's in a Name?
The names above were used -- for just reasons -- as a title by our cousin Alice (Woodiel) Craft for Volume I [West Haven, Utah 2001] of "A One Name Study," her history and record of the Woodiel family that we know today.
When I began my personal search for the genealogical trail back through my surname Woodiel in the late 1970s I quickly discovered there really wasn't a trail. Of course there was no Google to consult in those days, nor were there extensive and elaborate ancestry sites anywhere, save it certain volumes to be found in certain libraries. I found very quickly that just about every Woodiel mentioned in any of these books was probably directly related to me, and I probably knew them. Where were my ancestors? Obviously the name had been changed -- from, one assumed, a similar name. But what? Woodward? Woodson?
So, after mulling about for a lead in local libraries in Connecticut and finding little or nothing, I spent my school's spring vacation in 1979 in Washington, D.C. at the National Archives. I had decided to go where, if it existed, what I wanted to know had to be. It was there, thanks to the dedicated assistance of a librarian in charge of what in those days were vast rooms of microfilm readers, that I found, among his Civil War records, my great grandfather, a man of many names indeed.
I should note that the only potentially worthwhile lead I had was the story that had come down through my family, often repeated at family gatherings, that my father's grandfather Tom had grown up in Alabama and had been a Confederate soldier in the Civil War where he had had one of his ears shot away (or, in better versions, cut away). This is all I had to offer the library assistant.
After following for several days a C.R.P Woodle and a James Woodell and a J.A. Woodel and others, all of various Alabama Infantry units, I returned to the Archives one morning to the microfilm room to find the kind assistant waving to me from across the room as I entered. "I think," he said, "I've got your man."
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Copy of Tom's enlistment document |
And on yet another record a note verifying that on May 16, 1864 T.J. Woodial of the 43rd Alabama had been admitted to the General Hospital, Howard's Grove, Richmond, Virginia: Disease: "VS Right Ear neck (severe) shoulder." Evidence enough for me that I had found my great grandfather Tom.
But why all the different names? The answer was there all the while in a usually modest "x' where each of the documents required a signature. In many later documents I was to locate underneath the "x" would be in parentheses (his mark). Tom was, like his forefathers I would later discover, simply illiterate -- unable to spell or write his name. I imagine him just muttering it in his Alabama twang, no doubt, and some sergeant writing down on his pay slip what he thought he heard.
The confusion of the varied spellings can be easily eliminated if one simply envisions the last three letters in a world before the typewriter. What you actually have in written script are three loops. Depending on the scribe, you have "iel" or "eel" or "ele" or "ell," etc. Consequently, the various spellings.
Tom's great grandfather, John Waddell, was born in Donegal County, near Londonderry, Ireland, on or before 1736. His parents were Scottish people who had settled in Northern Ireland and were what is known in this country as Scotch-Irish. Stories vary as to why he left there for America. However, it is generally believed he came to America in about 1750 probably as an indentured servant and settled in the Philadelphia area before eventually moving southward to northwestern North Carolina near where his older brother (according to some reports) had settled earlier. What is clear is that John eventually crossed the Smoky Mountains to settle in what was then called Washington County North Carolina, later to become the state of Tennessee.
He was illiterate to his dying day, as were his son Jonathan, his son John, and Tom himself. The familiar "his mark" appears on his fascinating will. William Lafayette, born in 1871 and his siblings were the first literate members of the Woodiel clan in America. Most of us have become fairly literate since, I think it's fair to say!
So, how did "Woodiel," of all the other options, rise to the top. Well, as usual in such matters, apparently a combination of chance and circumstance. Part of the credit goes to a Confederate Captain named (it appears) J.S. Duerewall who signed furlough papers for Tom about a week after he was admitted to the hospital in Richmond. He was paid forty-four dollars and apparently sent home. He writes Tom's signature along with "his mark," but he clearly spells it Woodiel.
I remember discussing this with my father and mother, and they concluded the current spelling of Woodiel stuck because his widow Winnie, after Tom's death, was entitled to a small "veteran's pension" which required her to sign the name on perhaps the last official paper he had, his furlough certificate. Perhaps it was she who then decided it would be spelled as it is by her children as they (unlike their ancestors for who knows how long into the past) ventured off to school.
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Tom's medical document. |
The confusion of the varied spellings can be easily eliminated if one simply envisions the last three letters in a world before the typewriter. What you actually have in written script are three loops. Depending on the scribe, you have "iel" or "eel" or "ele" or "ell," etc. Consequently, the various spellings.
Tom's great grandfather, John Waddell, was born in Donegal County, near Londonderry, Ireland, on or before 1736. His parents were Scottish people who had settled in Northern Ireland and were what is known in this country as Scotch-Irish. Stories vary as to why he left there for America. However, it is generally believed he came to America in about 1750 probably as an indentured servant and settled in the Philadelphia area before eventually moving southward to northwestern North Carolina near where his older brother (according to some reports) had settled earlier. What is clear is that John eventually crossed the Smoky Mountains to settle in what was then called Washington County North Carolina, later to become the state of Tennessee.
He was illiterate to his dying day, as were his son Jonathan, his son John, and Tom himself. The familiar "his mark" appears on his fascinating will. William Lafayette, born in 1871 and his siblings were the first literate members of the Woodiel clan in America. Most of us have become fairly literate since, I think it's fair to say!
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First spelling of Woodiel: Tom's furlough paper |
I remember discussing this with my father and mother, and they concluded the current spelling of Woodiel stuck because his widow Winnie, after Tom's death, was entitled to a small "veteran's pension" which required her to sign the name on perhaps the last official paper he had, his furlough certificate. Perhaps it was she who then decided it would be spelled as it is by her children as they (unlike their ancestors for who knows how long into the past) ventured off to school.
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My timeline for establishing the sons of sons. |
One final note re the Tom of many names: There is a story apparently passed down in the family by my uncle and namesake Paul Woodiel who related he had heard that Tom returned home from the war and married very soon afterward and joined his brother and his bride heading westward as far as the Mississippi River where they separated, his brother and his wife waiting on the bank while Tim and his new wife Winnie somehow floated their ox team and wagon across to the western shore, after which there was an exchange of waves to one another before the brother's wagon ventured southward down the eastern bank as Tom and Winnie headed west to the Ozarks eventually to settle around Marshall, AR. The two families would never see one another again.
I continue to wonder, as I reflect on this piece of family history, how Tom, recently wounded, got home. There certainly was no train, the war being nearly over, or, for that matter, a horse. I suspect he, like Inman, the protagonist in Charles Frazier's Cold Mountain, the best selling novel of a decade or so ago, simply walked home. Of the details of that venture we can only speculate, but, unlike Inman, he survived. He made it home, and he married Winnie who must have been a pretty hearty soul, or most of us wouldn't be around.
************************
To the Memory of W.T.J. Woodle (His Mark)
I'm thinking of you Tom! You've impressed me during
the past four days while I've searched for you.
Your name is everywhere -- and nowhere -- in many forms:
Thomas,Tom, William T.J., W.T.C.
I have searched for you from a sense of history and out of
respect for your legend, and respect for you and my father
and his father who have, in part, come from you.
Your memory awakens in me a sense of history: the past,
my past, and yours!
Since "your mark" was the sign for what you did not know
about writing (and reading, I suppose), how did you know
why you were at Chickamauga?
How did you justify the pain and anguish of your wounds
at Drewry's Bluff?
What did you stand (and fall) for Tom?
In the sun here near the shadow of the U.S. Capitol
(that symbol you were bent on putting down)
I sit and wonder what you stood for, and why.
After the first for the prophet Levi, I know
you were to name your second son Lafayette!
Was this your sense of history?
I'm thinking of you Tom. Your progenitor knows
you were here, cause you're on the record
in the U.S. Archives.
DPW
Washington, D.C.
April 26, 1977
Wednesday, September 5, 2012
Myrtle Elmer Image: 1929?
I owe Hallie (Gosnell) Keithley, pictured below, for this picture.
Back Row L/R: Abbie McGrew, Hallie Gosnell, Addie Pool, Dorothy Pool
Front Row L/R: Jewel Elmer, Bobby Pool, O.V. Gosnell, Riley Pool Jr.
Image taken by Myrtle Elmer (Mrs. Tony), mother of Jewel, pictured above in the dark dress.
My Dad: the School Teacher
Throughout my childhood I met adults from time to time throughout Arkansas County who, regardless of the purpose of our encounter, would some time during our conversation insert the still memorable phrase: "I went to school to your father" or "I went to school to Mr. Woodiel."
A remark that seemed to me a mixture of both pride and accomplishment. During their childhood they had, along with a dozen or more of their neighbors, walked varying distances in all kinds of weather "to school" in a one or two room structure in rural Arkansas County to classes taught by my father, the school teacher.
The image below was sent to me in 2005 before I established this site by Lottie Mae (Vernor) Forrest, a high school classmate of mine of the class of 1953 at St. Charles. It belonged to her mother-in-law, the lady in the polka dot dress near my father Allie Woodiel who stands, his hands behind him, at the right.
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Members of the 4H Club, Forrest School, Ark. County, AR 1938 |
From Lottie's note dated May 7, 2005 that included the above image:
Dale,
We were going through some old pictures that Johnnie's mother has last Thursday and came across this one. If Mrs. Forrest lives 'til June 12, she will be 100. Good mind -- just hard of hearing. This picture was made at Forrest School in 1938. It is a 4-H Club group and Mrs. Forrest doesn't remember why she is in the picture, but I'm thinking maybe she was a sponsor or leader. She is the one in the polka dot dress with white collar. She said Mr. Woodiel drew her name at Christmas and gave her a green pitcher which Johnnie's niece has. I just thought you might enjoy having a copy. Old pictures can certainly bring back lots of memories.
A friend,
Lottie
During the 1930s my father taught in several Arkansas county schools. These rustic institutions served their purpose in ways that, no doubt still relevant, might well ring true to sensitive classroom teachers here in these beginning decades of a new century.
The image below is clearly my father with another group at perhaps another school. Although I have no information about this image, other than its obviously him in one of his more dishevelled states, perhaps -- from the number of children wearing rubber boots -- a cold or perhaps rainy day.
Which brings to mind a story recently told to me by my sister Maureen -- she having heard it from man who had, as a young boy, "gone to school" to Mr. Woodiel. He recalled a rainy day when my father's Model A Ford had become stuck in the mud on the dirt road leading to the school. The older boys were enlisted to push the car out of the mud, and, though too young to participate in this effort, he joined in the effort and, in the process, caught the strap of his over-alls on the car's rear bumper just as it was releasing itself from the mud, dragging him along with it. After being dragged through the very muck that had stuck the Ford, a rain of shouts from the muddied assistants brought my father's Ford to a stand still, releasing the youth muddy but unhurt.
Labels:
Arkansas,
Arkansas County,
Forrest School,
Lottie Forrest,
S.A. Woodiel
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