The
farm where he grew up had no electricity or running water and the farm operated
with horses, kerosene lamps or gasoline lamps.
One of the chores he had as the Saturday work was to polish the
reflectors on the back of the lamp holders in each room. The house was small, in fact two very small
houses put together in a “T” formation.
The boys (six of them) slept in two beds in one room and the girls in
another.
His
house was heated by only a couple of stoves, one in the small living room and
the cooking stove in the kitchen. The
chimney for each stove ran through the ceiling of the bedrooms and at night the
fire would go out except for a banking (covering the hot coals with ashes) of
coals that were used to start the fire in the morning.
He
still remembers his mother stoking the fires early before anyone else was up to
get some heat into the house before school and breakfast. His mother was always
was up early, as was his dad. The cold in the winter would seep into the house
and the water pail in the kitchen would freeze solid. During the blizzards that
came, snow would blow in and the stairs would be covered in snow, this tells
you the temperatures in the house in winter.
All
chores had to be done before going to school like picking the eggs and feeding the
chickens, getting the cows in and feeding and milking them. These chores were done in the dark and at
only five or six years of age, there were many opportunities to conjure up
things that only appear in the dark.
**************
Learning
to Drive
By
the time war was declared in 1941, he had grown to be quite a young man of
seven and once when the parents went off to the big city with a neighbor, he
felt it was an opportune time to try out the old 35 Ford.
The
first thing was to find out was how the cigarette lighter worked. He found that
by placing a piece of metal wire against the middle of the socket and touching
it to the outside, the wire became extremely hot and it did not take long to
learn the effect of electricity and what wire conductivity was. This project was quickly dropped in favor of
driving the car.
You
must understand, at this juncture, the little boy, could not even see over the
dash, but what he didn’t know, when he started the car, it probably wasn’t
going to go that way anyway. He placed
the key in the ignition, turned the pretty chromium switch on the steering
column to on, and while pressing the accelerator, he pushed the starter button.
The
excitement of seeing him shoot full speed backward across the yard for about
150 feet just astounded those who had the opportunity to witness this
monumental event. Then having gained
his senses got his foot off the accelerator and onto the brake. His first driving experience caused a huge
problem.
How
to get the car back where it was and how to cover the deep tracks the spinning
wheels had made during the adventure.
Well, the others being impressed at his prowess with the car, helped him push the it back to the starting point and
then the task of covering the tracks was another problem. They did their best
to fill in the dirt but the grass just could not be replaced.
The
real mystery of the story is that, the adventure never was discovered by the
shopping parents. It was a true boys adventure that stood him in high esteem by the siblings
for many a week. It did, however, teach
him that he should wait a while before trying to drive and should not fool
around with electricity until he knew more about it.