Archive for the ‘Iowa’ Category

Rolfe, Iowa, Basketball: It All Started in Junior High (1966-67)

March 22, 2011

Below is a photo of Rolfe’s 1966-67 girls’ junior high basketball team. I’m including it in preparation of a celebration that will take place in Rolfe on April 16th, 2011.

That celebration involves everything “community” regarding the Rolfe girls’ basketball team qualifying for the 1971 state tournament.

In 1971 when we (the Rolfe girl’s BB team) went to State, many of these ’66-’67 players (in the photo below) made the trip to Des Moines as supportive members of the student body; others made the trip in the following roles: Joyce Baade (starting junior guard), Laurie Brinkman (starting senior forward), Cheryl Rickard (senior manager), Paula Sinek (senior cheerleader), Debbie Zeman (senior cheerleader), Jill Brinkman (senior manager), Karen Brinkman (starting junior forward) and Carol Wiegert (starting junior forward).

1966-67 Rolfe Girls' Junior High Basketball Team. Front row L to R: Joyce Baade, Cynthia Lanning, Barbara Wolverton, Laurie Brinkman, Cheryl Rickard, Paula Sinek, Debbie Zeman, Jill Brinkman. Back row: Linda Lopour, Jann Brinkman, Connie Seward, Judy Delling, Lois Vaske, Cheryl Trimble, Karen Ripperger, Carol Wiegert, Coach Lyle Foster. (Click on image to enlarge.)

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Below is the 1966-67 boys’ junior high 1966-67 team. Both of the teams were coached by Lyle Foster.

1966-67 Rolfe Boys' Junior High Basketball Team. Front row L to R: Robert Wiegert, Bill Shimon, Tom Winkleblack, Mark Feldman, Mike Marine, David Loxterkamp. Back row: Paul Kipfer, Brent Hilton, Jim Jordan, Donald Buck, Bob Allen, Darwin Kuchenreuther, Jay Pomerenke, Coach Lyle Foster. (Click on image to enlarge.)

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In my next post I’ll include photos of more Rolfe junior high basketball teams. For those of you who have no interest in Rolfe girls’ basketball, please bear with me. Before April 16th most of the posts will be about basketball. After the 16th I’ll get back to posting about a variety of topics, including Mother’s watercolors.

On April 12th I will have a post relating to the Chicago Cubs. Something you’ll never find anywhere else!

(Click here to go to Louise Gunderson Shimon’s blog’s home page.)

Rolfe, Iowa, Basketball: It All Started in Junior High (1965-66)

March 20, 2011

In preparation for the April 16th celebration in Rolfe, I am posting pre-1971 photos that include members of Rolfe’s one-and-only girls’ state tournament basketball team.

When the Rolfe, Iowa, 1971 girls’ basketball team played in the state tournament, we had just one senior teammate. She was Laurie Brinkman. She is pictured below as a member of the 1965-66 Rolfe girls’ junior high basketball team.

On that same’65-’66 junior high team was Jill Brinkman. Like Laurie, in 1971 Jill was a senior. Jill was also one of our team managers when we went to State in 1971.

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Rolfe's 1965-66 junior high girls' basketball team. Front Row L to R: Laurie Brinkman, Barbara Shimon, Nancy Vainreb, Jill Brinkman, Nancy Pedersen, Ruth Rickard. Back Row L to R: Coach Allan Gilbertson, Cheryl Wilson, Becki Wood, Janis Ferguson, Diana Smith, Vicki Trimble, Linda Lopour.* (Click on photo to magnify image.)

In Rolfe we didn’t have AAU or other organized year-round basketball. If I recall correctly, the closest we came to year-round ball was practicing in barns on the farms were many of us lived. Some of our more dedicated 1971 team members (Laurie and her sister, Karen, and maybe others) also attended summer basketball camps. I don’t think I had the work ethic to attend summer camp. Also, the thought of summer camps intimidated me. My fuzzy recollection is that I didn’t have confidence in my stamina or talent to survive what I assumed to be intense summer camps.

After seeing the girls’ picture, I was curious to see the picture of the junior high boys’ team from the same ’65-66 year.

 

Rolfe's 1965-66 junior high boys' basketball team.L to R: Duane Anderson, LeRoy Mann, Tom Winkleblack, Mark Feldmann, Don Marine, Dennis Ricklefs, Douglas Post, Mike Hood, Mike Pedersen, John Brinkman, David Loxterkamp. Kneeling: Mr. Elder. (Click on photo to magnify image.)

Within the next few days, I’ll include photos of Rolfe’s 1967, 1968 and 1969 junior high girls’ teams. I think I also have a photo of the boys’ team from at least one of those years.

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Both photos are from the 1965-1966 Rolfe school yearbook.

The yearbook lists Mr. Gilbertson’s responsibilities that year as, “Biology, Sr. Math, Geometry, Girls’ Athletics, Sophomore Sponsor.” Mr. (Eugene) Elder’s responsibilities that year were, “Industrial Arts, Eighth Science, Boys’ Athletics, Sophomore Sponsor.”

*The girls’ names in the caption are from the yearbook. They do not reflect any name changes.

(Click here to go to Louise Gunderson Shimon’s blog’s home page.)

An Overview (through 1960) of Rolfe, Iowa, Girls’ Basketball

March 16, 2011

This post is a part of the lead-up to a celebration of the 1971 Rolfe girls’ basketball team’s (and community’s) road to the 1971 state tournament. The agenda for that celebration (on April 16th, 2011) and also a listing of prior posts related to the celebration are included on this blog.

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In a previous post is a photo of a Rolfe girls’ basketball team from 1908-09. I assume that team was associated with the then Independent School District of Rolfe.

According to Centennial History, Rolfe, Iowa, 1863-1963, “Rolfe High School offered girls’ basketball from 1910 until 1920, the 1912 team being undefeated. The sport resumed in 1959.” (Photos of the 1959-60 team are below.)

OVERVIEW of ROLFE SCHOOLS PRIOR to 1959

The first public school in Rolfe was established in December, 1881.

In January, 1884 the Independent School District of Rolfe was established. In 1908 or 1910 (depending on if you go by the 1908 photo or the Centennial History) through 1920, the Independent School District of Rolfe had a girls’ basketball team.

The Independent School District of Rolfe was dissolved in 1947 when the Rolfe Consolidated School came into being.

The sport of girls’ basketball resumed in Rolfe in the fall of 1959 while the name of the school district was still Rolfe Consolidated School.

WHAT HAPPENED in 1959?

In the middle of the 1958-1959 school year (the year before girls’ basketball resumed in Rolfe), movement began toward the reorganization merger of the Des Moines Township (DMT) and Rolfe districts.

In January 1959 action was initiated to effect a reorganization merger of the Des Moines Township Consolidated School and the Rolfe Consolidated School; threatened court action held up the reorganization so that it did not go into effect until July 1, 1960.

When the DMT and Rolfe boards met in January of 1959, they made a specific recommendation regarding girls’ basketball. The January 22, 1959, Rolfe Arrow says, “It has been agreed by the joint boards [DMT board and Rolfe board]: to recommend to the board elect that girls basketball be included in the girls physical education program. Also that a schedule of interscholastic games be played.”

According to the Centennial History, the Des Moines Township Consolidated School District “tuitioned its high school students to the Rolfe Consolidated School during the [following] 1959-1960 school year but continued to operate as a kindergarten through grade eight unit.”

In the recent years before this tuitioning of DMT students, Rolfe did not have a girls’ basketball team; however, DM did.

It must have made sense, since DMT already had a girls’ basketball team and was going to tuition high school students to Rolfe for at least one year, that the Rolfe district once again adopt girls’ basketball. (Wouldn’t it have been kind of awkward not to do so, especially since the DMT team had been winning games?) For that one year (1959-1960), the Rolfe girls and the DMT girls, still from two different operational districts, were teammates on one Rolfe Consolidated School interscholastic basketball team.

Pictured is the Rolfe Consolidated School 1959-60 Girls' Basketball First Team, comprised of girls from the D.M.T. and Rolfe districts. L to R: Nancy Bennett - Manager (Sr), Marie Turley (Jr), Rose McIntire (Jr), Judy Helmke (So), Sandra Ives (So), Helen Gunderson (Fr), Georgia Ryen (So), Linda Hughes (Jr), Shirley Bennett (Fr), Mary Jane Truelson (So), Betty Jo Marine (So), Gwen Heathman (So), Carol Jean Bennett (So), Coach Wayne Brown. (Click on photo to enlarge.)

In 1960 the reorganized district (i.e., the DMT district merged with the Rolfe Consolidated School) was named Rolfe Community School District. The 1960-1961 school year was the first year of the reorganized district comprised of Rolfe and former DMT students; it was the first year the just-formed Rolfe Community School District had its own (no longer technically shared by two districts) girls’ basketball team.

The Rolfe Consolidated School 1959-60 Girls' Basketball Second Team. L to R: Pam Jordan (Sr), Judy Truelson (So), Judy Jordan (Jr), Karen Dailey (So), Nancy Bennett (Sr), Gloria Bennett (So), Diane Callon (Fr), Darlene Nielson (sp?) (Fr), Joann Bennett (Fr), Linda Leadley (Fr), Coach Wayne Brown. (Click on photo to enlarge.)

The Rolfe Community School District continued to have its own girls’ basketball team through the 1986-1987 school year. During the next two years (’87-’88 and ’88-’89) Rolfe shared girls’ basketball with the Gilmore City-Bradgate District. During those two years the teams were known as the River Valley Rebels. In 1989-1990, the year of Rolfe’s last graduating class, students from Rolfe shared sports, including girls’ basketball, with Pocahontas students.

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Centennial History, Rolfe, Iowa, 1863-1963, p. 36+

“Items Discussed in Re Proposed School Merger.” Rolfe Arrow 22 Jan. 1959.

The two photos and the players’ names (but not the players’ year in school) were taken from a 1959-60 Rolfe yearbook.

(Click here to go to Louise Gunderson Shimon’s blog’s home page.)

AGENDA for the Saturday, April 16, 2011, Celebration of the Rolfe, Iowa, Girls’ Basketball Road to the 1971 State Tournament

March 11, 2011

In a previous post I included a photo of Rolfe’s 1908-09 girls’ basketball team. Also included is a photo of Rolfe’s 1970-71 team that played in the Iowa girls’ state tournament. On Saturday, April 16th, 2011, the 1971 team and Rolfe community will celebrate their 40-year state tournament anniversary.

The celebration agenda includes something for everyone.

The agenda* for the day includes several sit-back-and-enjoy options open to the public at the RAM Event Center (former Rolfe, Iowa, school building).

  • 6-on-6 scrimmages at which anyone may observe or participate
  • fundraiser meal designed for mingling (Raised funds will stay in Rolfe.)
  • evening program regarding 6-on-6 basketball and Rolfe, certain to be entertaining and educational

Most of the 1971 team will be in attendance, including managers and a few cheerleaders. Also attending will be several faculty members from the 1971 era. In addition, the RHS class of ’71 will get together with the rest of us.

Not included in the “official” celebration agenda, but also open to the public is evening entertainment. Beginning at ~9:00 p.m. on April 16th, Al Sroufe (RHS ’75) will provide musical entertainment at Wes’ Place in Rolfe. Wes’ Place is kitty-corner from the funeral home in Rolfe (i.e. across the street to the east of the grocery store).

Contact Information and Updates

If you have questions or comments, feel free to let me know. mariongundersonart@gmail.com

Between now and April 16th I’ll frequently post here about the 1971 team’s road to State. This will include articles, photos, and the radio broadcast from at least one of our games.

We would appreciate your help in spreading the word about this celebration.

This agenda is exactly the same as the agenda in pdf format at the link in the second paragraph. (Click on this page 1 of the agenda to enlarge the text.)

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The blue links in this image won't work by just clicking on them...because this image is a picture. However, if you click on the link in the second paragraph of this blog post, it will bring up a pdf of the same agenda. Clicking on the links there will work. (Click on agenda to enlarge the text.)

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*The detailed agenda at this link is in pdf format and typically is easily printable.

(Click here to go to Louise Gunderson Shimon’s home page.)

“On to State! On to State!” ….. “See you in Rolfe! See you in Rolfe!”

March 4, 2011

As I write tonight I’m watching the Iowa girls’ high school basketball championship. Ar-We-Va is losing to Martensdale St. Marys by almost 20 points. As subs replace the Ar-We-Va starters in the final seconds of the game, the starters’ disappointment in such a loss is obvious.

Pictured is part of the curtain from Rolfe's former school auditorium. Pictured below are two Rolfe girls' basketball teams...62 years apart.

I can so relate. In 1971 the Rolfe, Iowa, girls’ basketball team (of which I was a part) was the only Rolfe team to ever qualify for the Iowa girls’ basketball state tournament. The team and community were thrilled when the chant of “On to State! On to State!” during the regional final game against Manson became a reality.

In 1971 there was no classification dependent on school enrollment. All sweet-sixteen qualifying teams were seeded with only one eventual champion.

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In the first round of the 6-on-6* 1971 state tournament we lost by 28 points to Mediapolis. I remember being so humbled when, early in the game after Mediapolis made a basket, Mary Schulte hollered to her teammate Barb Wischmeier (whom I was guarding), “We’ve got a little one, Wisch!”

In the first moments immediately following the game we felt pretty dejected losing by so many points, especially with comments like Mary’s. However, to this day people remind us what a top-notch Mediapolis team we played, and how honored we should feel to have earned a berth at the state tournament. How true those words are.

FORTY YEARS LATER

On Saturday, April 16th, 2011, at least nine of our 12-member varsity team will reunite in Rolfe to celebrate our trip to State! Our assistant coach, other faculty, team managers and a sprinkling of JV teammates and cheerleaders from 1971 will celebrate with us. If possible, if you have ties to Rolfe (or even if you don’t) we hope you will join us that day.

We will meet at the former Rolfe school. An open-to-the-community meal will be served there from 4:00 until 6:00 PM. We’ve purposely structured the day so that we not only reunite with the team; we also want to reunite with our hometown community.

Additional festivities are planned for before and after the meal. Within the next couple of weeks I’ll post the details. If, in the meantime you are anxious to know more about the day, feel free to email me. mariongundersonart@gmail.com

For now…

Immediately below is a photo of the 1908 Rolfe girls’ basketball team. The Centennial History of Rolfe, Iowa, 1863-1963 says, “Rolfe High School offered girls’ basketball from 1910 until 1920, the 1912 team being undefeated. The sport was resumed in 1959.” Unless I’m misunderstanding, the photo of the 1908 team and the centennial book information contradict each other.

1908 and 1971: Who is related to whom?

1908

(Click on photo to enlarge.)

There are connections between the young women in these two photos. Ruth Gunderson (above) was my fun great-aunt. Sisters Anna Brinkman Vaughn and Mae Brinkman Caffrey and also Lena Wiegman Vaughn (all pictured above) are related to the two sets of sisters on the 1971 team (below): Laurie and Karen Brinkman and their second cousins, sisters Julie and Jean Brinkman.

1971

Front row L to R: Michele Pomerenke, Joyce Baade, me (Louise Gunderson), Carol Wiegert, Karen Brinkman and Laurie Brinkman. Back: Assistant coach Dennis Duerling, Jean Brinkman, Lynn Robinson, Linda Pedersen, Lynn Neugent, Julie Brinkman, Jeanell Winkleblack, Coach Al Van Houten. (Click on photo to enlarge.)

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Between now and April 16th many of my posts will likely be about girls’ basketball, more specifically Rolfe basketball. I’ve got memorabilia, at least one radio broadcast, and video footage from a few of our games.

Whether from 1971 or another time period, if you have memories about Rolfe and/or girls’ basketball, if you feel so inclined, I hope you’ll share.

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* At the time, all sanctioned Iowa girls’ high school teams were 6-on-6 teams.

(Click here to go to Louise Gunderson Shimon’s blog’s home page.)

Population Trends for Pocahontas County and Rolfe, Iowa

February 24, 2011

In case you didn’t see it already, DesMoinesRegister.com published an interactive map indicating the population changes for each Iowa county  as indicated by the 2010 census. Of all 99 Iowa counties, Pocahontas County had the biggest percentage drop — minus 15.6% — in population. Rolfe, Iowa, my hometown, is in Pocahontas County.

In my dad’s 1976 Bubbles in the Wine column (below) about population trends, he referred to Pat Wood. Since Pat was a former mayor of Rolfe and longtime businessman there, I thought it would be fun to include a couple of photos of him. Pat passed away in 1987.

This photo of Pat was taken in 1976 by, I assume, my mother (Marion Gunderson). During that year of our nation's bicentennial, my mother photographed nearly every Rolfe community member. All of those photos are in albums at the Rolfe Public Library. (Click on photo to enlarge.)

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POPULATION TRENDS

Bubbles in the Wine — Rolfe [Iowa] Arrow weekly column

September 23, 1976

by Deane Gunderson


Several years ago the Register had an article on the projected population growth of different Iowa areas to the year 2020. The Skunk River valley area — Ames, Newton, etc. — was predicted to have the highest growth (0.45 percent per year). Our area, the Des Moines River valley was predicted to have an increase of 0.35 percent per year. The lowest was southwest Iowa, I believe.

I visited with Mayor [Pat] Wood a few days ago. He told me that whereas the town of Rolfe had an official census of 767 in 1970, the population, according to the count taken in February, 1976, was 838.

That’s a nice gain and it has been gratifying to see a number of your  young people come back to Rolfe as well as others that have moved into town.

Projecting from the figure of 838 at the rate of 0.35 percent per year, we come up with a figure of 976 in the year 2020. Or using the 6 year growth rate from 767 to 838 (and assuming it would continue) we would come to a figure of 1359 in the year 2020.

We would like to think that if the town did get to one of those figures it would mean that the Rolfe School would have a substantial gain in enrollment. That will probably not be the case as the percentage of old people is increasing, the young ones decreasing. That is substantiated by there having been a school enrollment drop averaging 8 per year for the last 5 years, the heaviest being the last two years — even with the town population increasing as mentioned. The 1976 census shows only 247 people age 0 to 20. The drop in farm population is no doubt a factor also.

The influx of population to Rolfe seems to be primarily retiring people  and people that are using Rolfe as a bed room town and working elsewhere. The latter is probably the greatest hope that we have to continue to grow some. It seems that we haven’t had much sound interest by anyone in locating an industry here — and apparently the same is true in other towns of our size.

It’s easy for me to understand why there hasn’t been a lot of interest in locating industries in smaller towns and why there probably won’t be in the future. This writer attended a meeting in a larger town outside the county several years ago and listened to the executive director of the Chamber of Commerce tell what all they were doing and offering to find industries that might locate there. The extent and the detail of their research amazed me. My feeling ever since that time is that with all the bird-dogging by the larger towns and cities, there would be very little chance of industries coming to the smaller towns.

This photo of Pat Wood and Tom Diggs is taken from the November 19, 1970, edition of The Rolfe Arrow.

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(Click here to go to Louise Gunderson Shimon’s blog’s home page.)

Pocahontas, Iowa, in the Summer of 1949 (Part II)

January 23, 2011

To make sense of this post, it would probably help to refer to Part I. While Part I definitely is about the summer of 1949, this Part II post is more of a potpourri about the general location (past and present) of Arlene Brockney’s story of when she was a teenager in 1949. Also, referring to the post titled Pocahontas, Iowa: One Subject Equals Two Paintings will explain about Mother’s (Marion Gunderson) almost identical watercolors of the Pocahontas grain elevator, painted the same year as Arlene’s story…1949.

This is an eBay photo of Pocahontas, Iowa. The camera is at the east looking basically to the west. In the upper left corner is just a tad of Highway 3 with what looks like one car on it. Also at the upper left is what I'm thinking is a gas station at the location of the current Pocahontas branch building of the Rolfe State Bank. The water tower in this photo no longer exists. The grain elevator annex (the 2nd tallest large building in this photo) was not present at the time Mother (Marion Gunderson) painted her two Pocahontas grain elevator watercolors. According to the Pocahontas County History (1981) the 200,000 bushel annex was built in 1954. Also according to the history, a new 400,000 bushel silo (not in this photo) was built in 1970. From that, I assume this photo was taken sometime between 1954 and 1970. You can also see the car dealership in the bottom center of the photo. The train tracks in this photo run from southeast (lower left) to northwest (upper right) along the southwest side of the grain elevator. After looking closely at Mother's watercolors of the Pocahontas grain elevator, I see that the railroad cars were between her and the grain elevator. With that in mind, I'm assuming Mother painted her Pocahontas Grain Elevator watercolors at a vantage point south or south-southwest of the grain elevator. (Click on photo to enlarge.)

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My research about Mother’s vantage point for her two 1949 Pocahontas grain elevator watercolors included my talking with Bob Bellows, Rolfe State Bank Vice-President. Bob works at the branch office in Pocahontas. On my behalf, he conducted research of his own. According to Bob’s source, there had been a double-wide trailer where the Rolfe State Bank branch building now sits. Bob and I are assuming it is the same trailer in which Arlene Brockney lived. (Arlene’s story is in Part I.)

Bob also said there was a DX station (as Arlene also mentioned) closer to Highway 3. The DX station was owned by Jerry Hotovec. The DX station was sold and another building built at the same location in the mid-’60s. This building was the Superior 400, which later became a Gulfstream station, and then was the Pro Coop’s cartrol (i.e., credit card-only station.) The former location of those businesses is now the location of the current bank branch parking lot. It is sandwiched between the Highway 3 and the south side of the branch bank building.

The Rolfe State Bank branch in Pocahontas opened in September of 2001…in a trailer (different than the one Arlene mentioned) which was to the south of the current RSB building. On March 1st of 2004, the Rolfe State Bank moved from the trailer into the present branch building.

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(Click on photo to enlarge.)

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*In case you missed it, here is my oldest sister Clara’s comment from Part I about Mother’s watercolors of the Pocahontas grain elevator.

I remember going with Mother once when she painted the Pocahontas elevator. Although we probably were with other members of the Barr Art Association, I don’t remember if they were there or it was just Mother. Nor do I recall how old I would have been, but if it was this painting, I was probably seven.

One thing that we didn’t discover until recently is that sometimes Mother created more than one painting of the same thing. We think it’s the same, but when we look closely we discover differences. That’s true with this elevator painting. We don’t know if Mother was so intrigued with the painting that she did another, if she was trying to correct a flaw (she always thought of something that could be improved), or if she was creating another painting for someone else.

(Click here to go to Louise Gunderson Shimon’s blog’s home page.)

Pocahontas, Iowa, in the Summer of 1949 (Part I)

January 20, 2011

In November of 2009 the Des Moines Register published an article about Mother’s (Marion Gunderson) work and her watercolors. The timing of the article coincided with the open house at Bill’s and my Perry, Iowa, home. At that open house, prints of Mother’s watercolors were sold with the profits going to the Rolfe Public Library Trust.*

Pocahontas Grain Elevator II Prints are available in three sizes: Medium (Limited Edition, 10" W x ~12.3" H, $25), Grand (~18" W x 22" H, $50), and Largest (20" W x ~24.5" H, same size as the original, $70). (Click photo to enlarge.)

The watercolor featured in the Register article was that of the Pocahontas, Iowa, grain elevator, shown at the left. The article caught the attention of Arlene Brockney of Waukee who lived in Pocahontas in the late 1940s and is the daughter of Viola Jacobson.

Arlene’s recollection of the grain elevator construction is as follows.

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Pocahontas Elevator, Summer of 1949

My family lived west across the street while it [the grain elevator] was being built. They worked all day and night pouring the cement. For the workers there was a huge night-light that was also great for evening walks.

My mom went to work at the Ideal Cafe at 5 o’clock in the morning. As she would leave the house for work, the construction crew would holler down to her their orders for breakfast. That way, hot food was ready for them when their shift was done.

When the elevator was finished, my mother and two sisters rode to the top and waved at me. Our lot is now in the approximate area of the parking lot for the branch office of the Rolfe State Bank.

 

The building in the foreground is the Pocahontas, Iowa, branch of the Rolfe State Bank. As a teenager, Arlene Brockney lived in a trailer that, in the 1940s, was in the vicinity -- just north -- of what is now the location of the bank building. The grain elevator that Mother painted is behind the bins in this photo. The street at the far right is Highway 3 running east/west. The camera is pointed primarily east. (Click photo to enlarge.)

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Arlene said she was 14-years-old and detasseled corn that summer of 1949. She said that the night-light for the construction crew was like a helicopter hovering. Arlene chuckled when she said that the light did not allow for privacy, making her glad that the elevator construction was completed by the time she started dating!

In the midst of the breeze of the summer nights, while on the ground, Arlene could hear the construction workers above talking. Well, actually mumbling with people below not knowing exactly what the workers were talking about.

At that time, Arlene’s family lived in a trailer on the Pocahontas property that is now owned by Rolfe State Bank.

(Click here to view Part II including what I think is a 1950s or ’60s aerial photo of the Pocahontas grain elevator.)

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At this link you’ll see information regarding prints of Mother’s watercolor (shown above) as well as where you may purchase them in Rolfe. Prints may also be ordered online. Mother also painted the Rolfe grain elevator and train depot (two watercolors) and Gilmore City grain elevator and depot (one watercolor).

*All profits go to support the digitizing of 101 years of Rolfe newspapers so they will be accessible online. Hopefully they will be online in March.

Click here to go to Louise Gunderson Shimon’s blog’s home page.

Corn Harvest 2010: Section 13, Roosevelt Township, Pocahontas County, Iowa

October 13, 2010

Yesterday and the day before (October 11 and 12) I had the back-to-roots glorious experience of being in the midst of corn harvest. The video (below) is from yesterday. The vantage point is Gunderland, the farmstead between Rolfe and Pocahontas where I was raised.*

In the first 2 1/2 minutes of the video, the John Deere combine and tractor move at a snail’s pace along the horizon. During that portion they look like a slow-moving dot.** They still look like a dot when the combine dumps corn on-the-go into the moving grain cart out in the field. At about the 2 1/2-minute point, the tractor and combine separate.

Then the footage gets close-up and more interesting (i.e., worth waiting for). The grain gets hauled to Gunderland and dumped there into a holding wagon. An auger then maneuvers the grain upward to the top of the grain bin so it can be stored in that bin. Even though I grew up on a farm, I found it fascinating to watch this process, especially the mechanics of the machinery.

Update: I tried to repost the video with the first 90 seconds removed. Because, in the editing/exporting process, the video lost a lot of its clarity, I stuck with the longer/original version. If you want to do something else during the first minute or two until the tractor leaves the field and then watch the last four minutes, you’ll see the most illustrative portions.

*My mom (Marion Gunderson) and dad (Deane Gunderson) moved to this farm site in 1945. They had the existing home built in 1955-56 and moved in in early 1956 when I was a few months old.

**I took the video with my pocket-sized Canon ELPH, so zooming wasn’t a viable option.

(Click here to go to Louise Shimon’s blog’s home page.)

Need Fantasy Football Predictions? Today’s NY Times says my nephew offers the best!

October 1, 2010

Except that I know people draft certain players based upon the drafters’ predictions, I basically know nothing about fantasy football.

About the closest I’ve come to involvement with football was being a baton twirler* at Rolfe High School football game halftimes. I dropped my baton a lot, but Mother — Marion Gunderson — was always just past the sidelines with a beaming smile, encouraging me to exhibit the same.

BUT…..


Josh Moore

BUT….. (drumroll) today’s New York Times announced that, based on the first three weeks of the season, my nephew, Josh Moore, (Peggy’s older son) is the “Most Accurate Fantasy Expert.” This is based on tracking the accuracy results of 39 fantasy experts, which equates to about 200,000 predictions. (See article link, below.)

Josh’s fantasy football (subscription) site is here:

4for4.com

Facebook (free):

http://www.facebook.com/4for4football

Twitter (free):

http://www.twitter.com/4for4football

The New York Times article is here:

http://fifthdown.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/10/01/the-most-accurate-fantasy-experts-after-3-weeks/

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*This fall-1970 photo (immediately below) is of the Rolfe High School marching band when I was a sophomore. The photo is from the 1971 The Ram yearbook. Click once on the photo to enlarge the detail; click twice to enlarge it a lot.

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(Click here to go to Louise Shimon’s blog’s home page.)