The Little Red Haired Boy

by James Schubbe


Formats

Softcover
£7.67
Softcover
£7.67

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 11/03/2004

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 100
ISBN : 9781414061832

About the Book

This book tells the real story of growing up on a small farm during a time of early settlers. A time of innocence that will not be seen again. A time when life was simple, families lived in harmony with the world around them and the tight knit dependence on one anther, their parents, their church and community to survive.

It tells the stories and what can be learned from them, not fiction or embellishment but the raw truth about why so many families from this time became strong leaders and successful people in their communities.


About the Author

Jim Schubbe is a successful businessperson, who grew up in a small town in Minnesota.  He was the middle child of nine.  He and his siblings were all born in eleven years on a little 80-acre farm.  This farm was with out electricity, running water of central heating.

He started his education in a little white one-room schoolhouse nestled in the woods beside a little lake.  The walk, about a mile and a half, gave plenty of time to enjoy each other and the natural things around them.

There were few of today’s diversions and therefore plenty of time to be creative in the things the nine had to do to entertain themselves.  Even though this was a time of depression recovery and WWII, this family knew only that there was plenty of work, a warm home, clothing and food.  Those were the essentials that he built his life upon.

The stories in this book are about some of those experiences and the things the little boy learned from them.  Things that helped him go beyond what was expected in that time and build a successful career.  This time helped him finish high school, service to his country, college and succeed in his career.

Failure was never an option and there was always a way to get up and go on in the face of a lifetime of challenges.  This held true for him and for all of his siblings.