Showing posts with label Mildred. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mildred. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 27, 2017

A fun time had by all x 2


Fri., September 6, 1935 - Howard came early tonite.  We went to "The Womanless Tea" at Hoskins given by the American Legion.  It was a scream.  During the play the rain just came down in sheets.
Sat., September 7, 1935 - To Wayne on the train this morning.  Aunt Mildred was going to Wayne.  Miss Sewell told me that she's left Uncle Chris!  Rainy all day.
Sun., September 8, 1935 - Ray came home last nite.  Ray, Mom, Alma and I went to the Rebekah picnic at Pete Christensen's.  Everybody ate too much, I believe.  Howard brought me to Goodling's tonite.

The best I can find out, "A Womanless Tea" is a production involving men dressed up as women.  Whether there's an actual story, or more of a fashion show of sorts, I can't tell.  It puts me in mind of the Winside centennial when guys, most of whom were also in the "best beard" competition, dressed up as ladies and paraded around the bandstand.  Anyone who was there likely remembers it as well.

Here's how a newspaper in Texas described it:

A "Womanless Tea" was given by the P-TA in the grammar school auditorium on the evening of March 13, 1931.

Thirty-eight business and professional men in Rising Star made up the cast, each dressed in "ladies garb".  There were flappers, demure maidens, dignified matrons, and famous characters.

F. W. Roberds represented Mrs. Al Smith; Martin Joyce was "Ma" Ferguson; the late Sam Johnson and Hubert Jones were bathing beauties; Hugh Childress was a hula dancer; the late Wm. Koonce and Cecil Joyce acted as maids; Babe Wood was the hostess, a charming and gracious one, assisted by her "daughter", Dallas Dill, who did much to help her mother in entertaining guests.  School Supt. Dawson, Ray Agnew and Clark Crownover were among the most charming flappers.  Among the cast were F. V. Tunnell, R. O. Jacobs, Ray Agnew, W. E. Tyler, Cecil Shults and Fred Eberhart.

The "tea" was well attended and afforded much merriment as well as a substantial financial boost for the P-TA."

The references to deceased members must strike you, dear reader, as a bit odd.  The article I found was in a newspaper printed in 1966 from a column that is a sort of "this day in local history" kind of thing.  So, the late Sam Johnson and the late Wm. Koonce must have passed between 1931 and 1966, not between the time of the event and the short period until it was reported first in the newspaper.  I hope so, anyway.

Tuesday, July 25, 2017

Down a different path


Tues., June 11, 1935 - The losing side of the card club met at Walker's tonite.  We're going to give the others a dance in Pete's barn June 22.  Each person is supposed to invite 2 guests.
Wed., June 12, 1935 - Waved Mom's hair this morning.  Mom went to Ladies Aid this p.m.  Tonite we went down town to the free movies.  It was a western picture with Buck Jones.
Thurs., June 13, 1935 - I went to Wayne on the train this a.m.  Took my fair work to Miss Sewell's office and then went to Aunt Mildred's.  Spent the rest of the day there and came home on the evening train.

As is my habit with these posts, I went in search of a western starring Buck Jones made in or around 1935 so I could have a movie poster for my photo.  I found several to pick from and did not want to guess which one Grandma saw.  So, I decided to learn about Buck Jones himself which led me to a wikipedia article about the nightclub fire in which he died at age 50 years.  The article is much too long to post in its entirety, but I selected some rather interesting portions.  The following may not be coherent as a whole since I am picking and choosing bits and pieces.

     "The Cocoanut Grove was a premier nightclub during the post-Prohibition 1930's and 1940's in Boston, Massachusetts. On November 28, 1942, it was the scene of the deadliest nightclub fire in history, killing 492 people (which was 32 more than the building's authorized capacity) and injuring hundreds more. The scale of the tragedy shocked the nation and briefly replaced the events of World War II in newspaper headlines. It led to a reform of safety standards and codes across the US, and to major changes in the treatment and rehabilitation of burn victims internationally.

     The club had opened in 1927 as a partnership between two orchestra leaders, Mickey Alpert and Jacques Renard. (Although neither held an interest in the club by 1942, Alpert was leading the house band the night of the fire.)  Alpert and Renard's mob-connected financiers gained control and opened a speakeasy in the complex, and it gained a reputation for being a gangland hangout. Gangland boss and bootlegger Charles "King" Solomon, also known as "Boston Charlie," owned the club from 1931 to 1933, when he was gunned down in the men's room of Roxbury's Cotton Club nightclub in 1933.  Ownership passed to Solomon's lawyer Barnet "Barney" Welansky, who sought a more mainstream image for the club while he privately boasted of his ties to the Mafia and to Boston Mayor Maurice J. Tobin.  He was known to be a tough boss who ran a tight ship: hiring teenagers to work as busboys for low wages, and street thugs who doubled as waiters and bouncers. He locked exits, concealed others with draperies, and even bricked up one emergency exit to prevent customers from leaving without paying.  Coincidentally, on the night of the fire, he was still recovering from a heart attack in a private room at Massachusetts General Hospital, where some of the victims would be sent.

     Originally a garage and warehouse complex, the brick and concrete buildings had been converted to a one-and-a-half-story meandering complex of dining rooms, bars, and lounges. The club offered its patrons dining and dancing in a South Seas-like "tropical paradise" and a roof that could be rolled back in summer for dancing under the stars.  The decor consisted of leatherette, rattan and bamboo coverings on the walls, heavy draperies, and "swanky" dark blue satin canopies and covering on ceilings. Support columns in the main dining area were made to look like palm trees, with light fixtures made to look like coconuts. That theme was carried over into the basement Melody Lounge, with what little light there was provided by palm tree light fixtures.

     Wall coverings and decorative materials had been approved on the basis of tests for ordinary ignition, which showed resistance to combustion from sources such as matches and cigarettes. Decorative cloth was purportedly treated with ammonium sulfate as a fire retardant upon installation, but there was no documentation that the fire retardant treatment was maintained at the required intervals. Since the US entry into the war, air conditioning systems had been serviced and the freon refrigerant was replaced by methyl chloride, a flammable gas, due to the wartime shortage of freon.

     It is estimated that on that Saturday night more than 1,000 Thanksgiving weekend revelers, wartime servicemen and their sweethearts, football fans, and others were crammed into a space rated for a maximum of 460 people.

     Official reports state that the fire started at about 10:15 pm in the dark, intimate Melody Lounge downstairs.  The lounge was lit by low-powered light bulbs in coconut-styled sconces beneath the fronds. A young man, possibly a soldier, had unscrewed a light bulb in order to give himself privacy while kissing his date.  Stanley Tomaszewski—a 16-year-old busboy—was instructed to put the light back on by tightening the bulb. He stepped up onto a chair to reach the light in the darkened corner. Unable to see the bulb, he lit a match to illuminate the area, tightened the bulb, and extinguished the match. Witnesses first saw flames in the fronds, which were just below the ceiling, immediately afterward. Though the lit match had been close to the same fronds where the fire was seen to have begun, the official report determined that Tomaszewski's actions could not be found to be the source of the fire, which "will be entered into the records of this department as being of unknown origin".

     Despite waiters' efforts to douse the fire with water, it spread along the fronds of the palm tree. In a final desperate attempt to separate the burning fronds from the fabric-covered false ceiling the decoration was pulled away from the corner, taking with it a triangular plywood panel at the ceiling level and opening the enclosed space above the false ceiling. Coincidentally or not, that was the point at which the fire spread to the false ceiling which burned rapidly, showering patrons with sparks and burning shreds of fabric. Flames raced up the stairway to the main level, burning the hair of patrons fleeing up the stairs. A fireball burst through the front entryway and spread through the remaining club areas: through the adjacent Caricature Bar, down a corridor to the Broadway Lounge, and across the central restaurant and dance floor as the orchestra was beginning its evening show. Flames raced faster than patrons could move, followed by thick clouds of smoke. Within five minutes, flames and smoke had spread to the entire nightclub. Some patrons were instantly overcome by smoke as they sat in their seats. Others crawled through the smoky darkness trying to find exits, all but one of which were either non-functioning or hidden in non-public areas.

     Many patrons attempted to exit through the main entrance, the same way they had entered. The building's main entrance was a single revolving door, which was rendered useless as the crowd stampeded in panic. Bodies piled up behind both sides of the revolving door, jamming it until it broke. But then the oxygen-hungry fire leaped through the breach, incinerating whoever was left alive in the pile. Firemen had to douse the flames to approach the door. Later, after fire laws had tightened, it would become illegal to have only one revolving door as a main entrance without being flanked by outward opening doors with panic bar openers attached, or have the revolving doors set up so that the doors could fold against themselves in emergency situations.

     Other avenues of escape were similarly useless; side doors had been bolted shut to prevent people from leaving without paying. A plate glass window, which could have been smashed for escape, was boarded up and unusable as an emergency exit. Other unlocked doors, like the ones in the Broadway Lounge, opened inwards, rendering them useless against the crush of people trying to escape. Fire officials would later testify that had the doors swung outwards, at least 300 lives could have been spared.

     From nearby bars, soldiers and sailors raced to assist. On the street, firefighters lugged out bodies and were treated for burned hands. As night deepened, the temperature dropped. Water on cobblestone pavements froze. Hoses froze to the ground. Newspaper trucks were appropriated as ambulances. Smoldering bodies, living and dead, were hosed in icy water. Some victims had breathed fumes so hot that when they inhaled cold air, as one firefighter put it, they dropped like stones.

     Later, during the cleanup of the building, firefighters found several dead guests sitting in their seats with drinks in their hands. They had been overcome so quickly by fire and toxic smoke that they had not had time to move.

     Coast Guardsman Clifford Johnson went back in no fewer than four times in search of his date who, unbeknownst to him, had safely escaped. Johnson suffered extensive third-degree burns over 55% of his body but survived the disaster, becoming the most severely burned person ever to survive his injuries at the time. After 21 months in a hospital and several hundred operations, he married his nurse and returned to his home state of Missouri. Fourteen years later he burned to death in a fiery automobile crash.

     Barney Welansky, whose connections had allowed the nightclub to operate while in violation of the loose standards of the day, was convicted on 19 counts of manslaughter (19 victims were randomly selected to represent the dead). Welansky was sentenced to 12–15 years in prison in 1943. He served nearly four years before being quietly pardoned by Massachusetts Governor Maurice J. Tobin, who had been mayor of Boston at the time of the fire. In December 1946, ravaged with cancer, Welansky was released from Norfolk Prison, telling reporters, "I wish I'd died with the others in the fire." Nine weeks later, he was dead.

     In the year that followed the fire, Massachusetts and other states enacted laws for public establishments banning flammable decorations, inward-swinging exit doors, and requiring exit signs to be visible at all times (meaning that the exit signs had to have independent sources of electricity, and be easily readable in even the thickest smoke). The new laws also required that revolving doors used for egress must either be flanked by at least one normal, outward-swinging door, or retrofitted to permit the individual door leaves to fold flat to permit free-flowing traffic in a panic situation, and further required that no emergency exits be chained or bolted shut in such a way as to bar escape through the doors during a panic or emergency situation.[citation needed] Municipal licensing authorities ruled that no Boston establishment could use "The Cocoanut Grove" as a name thereafter.

     Commissions were established by several states that would levy heavy fines or even shut down establishments for infractions of any of these laws. These later became the basis for several federal fire laws and code restrictions placed on nightclubs, theaters, banks, public buildings, and restaurants across the nation. It also led to the formation of several national organizations dedicated to fire safety.

     Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) and Boston City Hospital (BCH) took dozens of burn and smoke inhalation victims, and the event led to new ways of caring for both. Surgeons Francis Daniels Moore and Oliver Cope at Massachusetts General Hospital pioneered fluid resuscitation techniques for the burn victims, whose wounds were treated with soft gauze covered with petroleum jelly instead of tannic acid.  Although BCH was able to achieve a survival rate of only 30% one month after the fire, all patients treated for burns at MGH survived.  The event was also the first major use of the hospital's new blood bank, one of the area's first.

     The survivors of the fire were also among the first humans to be treated with the new antibiotic, penicillin. In early December Merck and Company rushed a 32 L supply of the drug, in the form of culture liquid in which the Penicillium mold had been grown, from New Jersey to Boston. The drug was crucial in combating staphylococcus bacteria, which typically infect skin grafts. As a result of the success of penicillin in preventing infections, the US government decided to support the production and the distribution of penicillin to the armed forces.

     Erich Lindemann, a Boston psychiatrist, studied the families and relatives of the dead and published what has become a classic paper, "Symptomatology and Management of Acute Grief", read at the Centenary Meeting of the American Psychiatric Association in May 1944, and published in September of the same year. At the same time Lindemann was laying the foundation for the study of grief and dysfunctional grieving, Alexandra Adler was working with more than 500 survivors of the fire and conducting some of the earliest research on post-traumatic stress disorder."

So, while the event was a horrible tragedy, there were good things that came afterwards with ripple effects surviving well into the future.


Thursday, July 20, 2017

Interesting history


Sun., June 2, 1935 - To S.S. and church.  Worked on quilts this p.m.  Ray and Willie here this evening.  I went to Hoskins to a dance with Rews and Iversens.  An old-time German orchestra played.
Mon., June 3, 1935 - Got a letter from Mildred Andersen saying she was going to be married Wednesday and they are giving them a dance Thursday.  She asked us to come to the dance.  Mom and I went down town to call up Ray.  We met Howard and he brought us up the hill.  He said he'd take us to the dance if Ray couldn't.
Tues., June 4, 1935 - I went to Alma's party tonite.  We played Michigan Poker.  Lydia Kant won high prize.  The other guests were Tillie and Elsie Eckert, Gladys Mettlen, Lena Nieman and Edna Podoll.  Ray was here while I was gone.

I wonder what Mildred Andersen's new last name was.  I do not think I have very much information on her via Ancestry.com to know how the rest of her life turned out.

Here's 1910, where I last left off with Winside history.  It must have been a busy year and I will break this up into two posts:

     January 13, Brune and Co., have secured the agency for the Brush Auto, Gabler Bros. will continue to sell the Cartercar, Bolander and Woodward the ABC and now that Laase has the Ford, competition out to be fierce.
     January 27, A. Woodward sold out today to Aspengren and Strand.
     February 3, A. C. Lantz bought the F. F. Ware drug store.
     February 7, Eddie Weible won the new buggy given at the Brune and Co. grand opening of their new building.
     March 3, Ed. Krause is moving to town into the residence he bought of Dr. A. B. Cherry.
     March 16, "Union Depot for a Day" was given by the Woman's Club to help raise money for the library.
     March 17, W. G. Archer received word today his pension had been raised to $15.00 per month.
     March 24, David Koch was the first man in Winside to receive $10.00 per hundred for his hogs.
     April 7, $1435.00 was paid Winside merchants for eggs the past month.
     April 17, Frost killed the fruit this year, all of the leaves and blossoms are black.
    April 28, Dr. Cherry went to Sioux City after his auto today, which had been taken there for repairs.
     May 5, Woman's club received a $25.00 order of books.
     May 12, Nebraska is the first state in the Union to declare, through Governor's proclamation, observance of "Mother's Day.'
     May 19, the Alumni banquet will be held at the Cavanaugh home.
     June 16, Charles Unger has started to build a brick house on his residence in the east part of town.
     June 30, the fire bell was taken down from its location at the rear of the Merchants State Bank and placed on top of the town hall.

A couple of things:  I never heard of a Cartercar before and had to look it up, hooray for Nebraska on the Mother's Day proclamation, and just how many eggs did Winsiders eat in March 2010??  That's the equivalent of $34,000 in 2015.  Perhaps the Winside history book contains a typo?


Thursday, May 18, 2017

Tonsils?


Fri., March 22, 1935 - D.W. back to school again.  Mr. G. brought me to town after supper.  Cora Brodd and Miss Nuss up to invite me to a shower for Irene Weible a week from Sat.  Went to see Miss Mettlen about going together for a present.  Attended lodge tonite, too.
Sat., March 23, 1935 - To Wayne on train with Mom.  Got a new hat in Wayne.  Benthack says I have a mild case of sciatic rheumatism most likely caused by my tonsils.  Home at noon.  Gormely examined my teeth and found one small cavity.  Ray and Willie in this evening.  They are going to Bennington next Sat. nite.  If I want to go along and stop at Mildred Andersen's I need to be ready at seven o'clock.
Sun., March 24, 1935 - To church and S.S.  Howard came up this afternoon.  Mom, Howard, and I went out to Ola's and I took some pictures of the kids.

Tonsils can cause sciatic rheumatism?  News to me, but I'm not up-to-date on such things.

New names for me . . . Cora Brodd and Miss Nuss.


Thursday, August 18, 2016

A few questions


Sun., August 20, 1933 - Cloudy and rainy.  Alma came up this a.m.to explain her absence last nite. She had been to Rabe's and they thought it too muddy to come to town.  Howard came about 11:00 causing me to rush to get ready to go on the Rebekah picnic.  We went to Norfolk to the park south on 13th Street.  Started raining just as we finished dinner.  We went to the Walkathon Marathon this afternoon.  It's disgusting to me.  All they did was walk 45 minutes and rest 15 minutes and so on.  At different times the contestants would sing or talk a few minutes.  I got home about 7:30 this evening.
Mon., August 21, 1933 - Still cloudy and rainy.  I found my flower garden quilt and started working on it again.  Aunt Emma, Uncle Max, Sophia, Hilda, Ola, and Louis were here this afternoon.  Aunt Emma brought some cucumbers and we gave her come tomatoes.  I got a letter from Mildred Andersen today inviting us to a wedding dance they're giving for Walter Nelsen this Friday evening.
Tues., August 22, 1933 - We had quite a bit of rain today.  Mom went to Koch's to do some canning this morning.  I worked on my quilt.  Mom and I read this evening before going to bed.

I have some questions here:

1.  Grandma apparently misplaced a quilt she was working on?  That seems a bit hard to believe.  I thought at such a tender age, that she would be quite organized and totally incapable of losing a quilt-in-progress.  She would have to be my age, at least, before she started misplacing things.

2.  I wonder who Walter Nelsen was marrying since the dance was apparently only for him.  (I'm being silly on this one.)

3.  Wait.  What?  Grandpa was early, or Grandma was late getting ready for something?  Sorry, but neither of those situations makes any sense to me whatsoever.

Wednesday, August 10, 2016

Back at it, sort of


Thurs., August 3, 1933 - Cleared up a little today. I
Fri., August 4, 1933 - Still cool enough so I had to wear my jacket to school today.  This evening Uncle Chris, Aunt Mildred, Gerald and I played Bridge.  Uncle Chris and I won 2 games and the others won 2.  I made some fudge, after that Gerald and I stayed up until 1:00 putting a jig-saw puzzle together.
Sat., August 5, 1933 - Really hot today.  I worked in the library until 5:00.  Mom met me at the train.  Howard came up this evening.  We went out to Ola's for a few minutes then started to a dance south of town.  It started to rain hard when we were a mile south of town; we turned around and when meeting a car just about slid into the ditch.  Howard had to put chains on before we could go on.

Grandma apparently was so unused to writing in her diary after her short hiatus that she quick before finishing her second sentence.

I looked up Bridge to see if I could find anything interesting to share, and I did not.  Lots of information, to be sure, but none particularly fun.  To me, anyway.

Friday, July 29, 2016

Sweet


Fri., July 21, 1933 - The Dinette is gloomier every day.  I was up to Marjorie's room again this noon.  I studied late at the library.  Tonite John, Gerald, Uncle Chris, and I played Pinochle on the front porch.  The bugs and mosquitoes just about ate us.
Sat., July 22, 1933 - Today doesn't seem like Sat.  I went to dinner with Marjorie at the Campus Inn. Virgine went to Freshman English with me.  Aunt Mildred wasn't feeling well so I stayed and got supper for her.  After supper Uncle Chris started to take me home but it rained so hard we had to turn back.  We played Pinochle until about 11:00.
Sun., July 23, 1933 - Was up by 10:00 this a.m.  Aunt Mildred and Uncle Chris washed clothes this a.m.  I washed the frigidaire.  Howard was here about 3:00 to see why I didn't come home last nite.  We had milk and dumplings this evening.  Howard was here again in the evening.  I got to bed late!

Perhaps I am just a big ol' softie, but Grandpa coming to check on Grandma and then coming back again in the evening is sweet enough.  But Grandma following the remark that he came in the evening with one saying she stayed up late (with an underscore AND an exclamation point) conjures up the vision of a long, youthful, your-whole-life-before-you conversation between the two of them.  For all we know they talked about totally mundane things, but I'm holding to my sappy interpretation.

Monday, July 18, 2016

What baby?


Tues., June 27, 1933 - We had a history test this morning.  I had a headache this afternoon and didn't wait for Alma.  When I got home I took a nap until supper time.  Alma and I studied and talked on the back porch this evening.  A lot of folks were here tonite to see the baby.  Alma and I went to bed at 9:30.
Wed., June 28, 1933 - Warm!  Hot!  Hotter!  Hottest!  Alma and I went down town after school.  I had steel taps put on my white slippers.  We went to bed at 10:00.  Gerald came home from Carroll last nite after we girls had gone to bed.
Thurs., June 29, 1933 - Looked like rain this a.m. but that was all.  I had a shampoo and finger wave at Mrs. Gifford's.  We had a Theory test, true & false.  Mr. Griffin yawned several times while giving it.  Alma, Gerald, and I played Pinochle tonite.  Alma and Aunt Mildred sang, too.

I am guessing Alma and Grandma are staying at Uncle Chris and Aunt Mildred's, but I am not certain at all.  Does the mention of a baby help anyone out that is in the know?  Also, Gerald.  Did Uncle Chris have a son Gerald, or did Aunt Mildred have one before Uncle Chris entered the picture?  Inquiring minds are inquiring.

I like that Mr. Griffin yawned through giving a test; perhaps he found theory not all that exciting?

The photo is from the Wayne County History book, and as advertised, is the Wayne State Teachers College in 1937.  Just look at all the wide open spaces around it.