MY STORY
By
LELAND G. DENTON
PRE-SCHOOL YEARS
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| Mom and Me |
Before I forget about it,
I will put these pictures of me and my cousin Russell Denton:
Leland on our Patio Leland playing with Russell
Leland at about eighteen months.
Fall was the time I remember
when Mom and Grandma prepared for winter by canning fruits and vegetables for
the winter months that were not too far away. It seems to me that we managed to
have a garden and fruit trees around. I remember Apples, Pears and Peaches were
the fruits we had a lot of in the winter. We always had a supply of canned
fruits and vegetables, as well as preserved meat. They would start by getting
out the old copper cloths boiler and put a wooden rack in the bottom of the
boiler. They filled the boiler up with water and placed it on the wood burning
stove. When the water was boiling, the jars were placed inside to make them
germ-free and ready to put the fruit or vegetables to be sealed in jars and stored
in The Cave Cellar.
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| Grandpa and Grandma Denton |
This
picture had to have been taken sometime before 1920. I was unable to find the
exact date on which it was taken. At the
time I saw Grandma, she was very sick with tuberculosis. I must have been about
three years of age.
Grandpa Ephriam Denton
The
weather was still warm, and I remember being barefooted and running down that
dusty road, I would guess about a quarter of a mile, to Aunt Kate’s house. I
still don’t know why I liked to do it, because it was to get a glass of warm,
just separated milk to drink. They had a separator that was used to get the
cream out of the fresh milk so that the cream could be sold for money for
purchasing groceries, etc. It is a mystery to me why anyone would want to drink
a glass of that warm blue john milk from that separator, but I did. I really
did make a lot of trips down that road to do that very thing. Not too picky
about what I drank, I guess.
One of my early favorite memories
is this one: as the weather got cooler and a little bit snappy, it was time to
butcher our winter supply of meat. Grandpa Thompson, Dad, Uncle Bill Williams,
and Uncle Charlie Denton would prepare to butcher their hogs and steers. Large
oil drums were filled with water and heated to boiling over a large wood-burning
fire. After the animals were killed, they would be lifted by block and tackle
devices and lowered into the hot water so that the hair could be scraped off,
and the butchering and dressing the meat would begin. This was a big task--at
least it sure looked that way to me. After the meat was cut up, hams were
brined and put in the smoke house to cure, and the tenderloins and chops were
fried down by Mom, Grandma and Aunt Nettie, mom’s sister. When that was done, they would place the
cooked meat in a ten-gallon crock jar, the drippings were poured over the meat
to seal it, and a weight was placed on the top to keep it all compressed in the
jar, and they stored it in the cellar with the canned fruits and vegetables.
The beef would be cooked and canned in large half-gallon jars. There were
probably other things done, but I really don’t remember what that might have
been. So you can see, we depended on the cellar just about the same way that we
do the refrigerator now days. This must have been a very important time for our
families. As a small child, I do remember how hard they all worked these two or
three days, at least. One of the last things from the butchering operation was
when the lard was rendered and stored. A large part of it was made into soap--lye
soap. You have probably heard of Grandma's lye soap. Well, that’s what it was: soap
made by grandma in the old iron kettle over a wood fire. I wish that I could
remember a little more about it, but I don’t--must have made a great impression
on me. I do remember that the fire was very hot, and the fat was bubbling
pretty hard. Then at some point in the process, they poured in the lye, and it
did its thing. The next part of the process was to pour the mixture into large
pans three inches deep where the mixture hardened, and then they would cut it into
bars of soap. Now that is a very scientific explanation of Grandma’s lye soap.
I hope that now you can now make your own soap and save a lot of money.
Grandpa John Thompson, Uncle Charlie Denton and Dad, Robert B. Denton.
I must be
about five years of age now. I believe that it would be close to March 1929. I
say this because, in those days, farmers generally would change their location
in March because new crops would be planted during this time. It just starts the farming cycle over each
year. Uncle Dan Dillman, that is the husband of Dad’s sister Aunt Nora, lived
in Iola , Kansas, and worked for the American
Service Ice Company as an engineer. His
boss was Mr. Grover, who owned a farm just west and south of Iola, and he
needed someone to farm that land for him. Uncle Dan got in touch with Dad, and
away we went to the farm in Iola. When
you go west out of Iola and cross the Neosho River bridge, right at the end of
that bridge was a dirt road that went south about a mile of two. At the very
end of that road, there was our house. It was a four room home. Bobby and I
slept in one room, Mom and Dad had a bedroom, and that left a living room and a
kitchen.
As I remember, on this farm, we
had four big brown mules, two
Bobby,
Dad, and Leland
While Dad was doing the farming, we were around the house
playing with our dog, a German Shepherd, and Mom alone would know what else we
did. Dad had purchased pocket knives for us, and they fastened to the bib of
our overalls. As the picture on the above shows, they are dangling from the
bibs. We really thought we were big guys. The house that I mentioned in the
above paragraph is shown in the background of this picture.
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| Bobby, Leland, and Thunder |
These pictures were taken about 1929
or the mid 1930’s. I would have been about six and Bobby three. See the patches
on the overalls. We thought that was really great because it looked like Dad’s.
This was about the time of the market crash, and we sure didn’t have much to go
on: corn meal mush for supper and fried mush with sugar syrup for breakfast,
but it was still good. If we had a little salt pork, rabbit, or a squirrel, we
were really living high on the proverbial hog. Now the time is about mid-1930,
and everything is drying up. Dust Bowl days had arrived in grand style. Wells
were going dry as well as the ponds and small streams. Mom would put a wet
bandana over our mouths and noses to
keep the dust from our lungs. When the dust came, you could see it coming from
the southwest. It looked like a huge black wall coming, and when it arrived, it
was like night. We had kerosene lamps, and I do remember Mom lighting them up
so that we had light to eat supper.
It was about this time in my life
that I got to know Grandpa Thompson pretty well. He came to Iola one time to
help Dad with the crops--what there was left of the corn crop. Dad used the mules on the cultivator to take
the weed out of the rows of corn, and Grandpa followed up with a hoe to get the
weed out from between the stalks of corn.
When he came in from the field, we would set on the well curb and have a
cool peach that we pulled up out of the well where they were hung to keep cool.
The well was used like a refrigerator so that food would stay cool and not
spoil too soon. He was always soaked with perspiration, and of course dust
covered him from head to toe. That was
always a special time that I think that I shall always have in my memories.
August 26, 1930, brother Elmer
arrived on the scene. This was another exciting time in our lives. Bob and I
were so happy to have a baby brother to play with. He even got a new baby crib
to stay in. Bobby and I thought that was really neat. It was during this time
that dad had trout lines set in the Neosho
river. It was about three-fourths of a mile south of the house. When Dad went
to run the lines, Bobby and I would go alone. Well, as you might expect, we
generally would catch some snapping turtles, and Dad would take them off the
hook and release them into the boat. That’s not bad in itself, but Bobby and I
were bare footed, and to have two or three turtles coming toward you wasn’t
much fun. However, we did survive with all our toes intact. We nearly always
caught some catfish and maybe a carp or two. Our meals were made up of our
catch, and it was always good. Most of the time when we had fish, Mom would
call Aunt Nora and Uncle Dan, and they would come out for supper with us. I
mention this because they were very important in our lives during these times.
Aunt Nora would come out to the farm once or twice a week. She took me to see
my first movie. It was one of the first talking movies and it was call “Skippy”
a film made in the likeness of the cartoon strip called “Skippy.” That was
really something to see, that big silver screen, and it talked to us, Wow!!! Also, it was about this time that Dad informed
us that Christmas was going to be a no show for Santa Claus because of the
financial conditions at that time. Christmas morning came, and almost before we
out of bed, there was Aunt Nora with a drummer boy for me and another toy for
Bobby. I will never forget that time and how, in retrospect, important that was
to Bobby and to me.
In September 1931, I started to
school at Union District No. 1. The school was about 4 miles west of Iola on Highway
54. My teacher was a Mrs. Schuester and I got 100% on all my subjects. You
might say that I was a very model 1st grader. Well, as you might
expect, March 1st was coming up, and you are correct: we got to move
again. This time, we moved to a home on Highway
54 about ¾ of a mile east of my school. Classes would be out in April, and my
teacher was going to take a vacation away from Iola. She had three goats and
asked for someone to take care of them for the summer. Of course, good ole’
little Leland volunteered to do the task. Needless to say, Dad wasn’t very
happy about that executive decision which I made. He said, "OK! You milk them and take care of the three goats.
It will be your responsibility." Fair enough; I would be happy to do that.
Everything went well, and in late summer, Dad put hay in the hay loft, and we
had a ladder that went up to the door in the loft. Low and behold, those goats scampered up that
ladder to get to the hay. Guess what? I couldn’t get them down before Dad came
home. My, but that wasn’t a real happy time. Fortunately, there was a big door
on at the end of the barn where there was a hay fork that was used to lift hay
into the barn loft. Dad made a sling out of burlap sacks, wrapped them around
the goats, and let them down on the hay hook one at a time. Now that’s probably
the only reason that I am able to write this little episode. I did all the
milking of the animals and was surprised that those rascals would actually turn
their heads around and spit on me. What a mess to contend with. Anyway, we all
survived and all lived happily ever after. Needless to say, after that, I never
volunteered to take care of anyone’s goats again.
I started my second year there, and of course
March1932 came, and we moved again. This time we moved to Swartz, Mo. It is just a few miles from Garland and not far from
Grandma Thompson and Aunt Nettie (Mom’s sister). I began school in another one
room school not far from our house. Dad went to work for a Mr. Rutherford, who
was a cattle man, and Dad took care of the cattle. I did my second grade class
in that school. It was in that year that I fell in love with a very pretty
little girl named Bernita. Unfortunately, another bruiser did, too, so
naturally I had to defend myself. This is the first and only time that I ever
had a fight with someone on the playground--probably because I had to stay
after school and write on the blackboard “I
WILL NOT FIGHT ON THE PLAYGROUND AGAIN” one hundred times, though since I
was the teacher's pet, I only had to do fifty. But, I had to go home. There’s
where it really hit the fan. Dad was pretty handy with the razor strop. He
always folded it up so that it made a lot of noise when landed. So I survived
that ordeal, but I didn’t have a girlfriend anymore. There were no more events
other than the normal kid stuff. It was winter, and we lived in a two-story
house, and our bedrooms were upstairs, and it was cold. Mom would heat up the
irons on the stove, wrap them in towels, and put them in bed with us, cover us
up with big goose feather comforter, and we were quit cozy. At least we thought
we were ok.
In the spring of 1933, we moved
into Garland, and I went to the Garland
school for my 3rd & 4th grade classes. Also, we now
were close to Uncle Henry & Aunt Annabelle’s home, so we could play with
cousins Homer, Don, and Nadine Denton. We did have some very enjoyable times.
My grandkids oft times asked "What did you play with?" We didn’t have
cell phones, I-Pods, radios, computers, etc., but we were good at making our
own toys. We had coaster wagons and tri-cycles, but our best ones were those
toys we made for ourselves. One of them was when we took a board, usually a
lathe, cut it about 32” in length, then another piece cut about 10” long and
nailed it to end of the longer piece. This made a T-shaped handle that could be
held at the opposite end of the crosspiece. We would then find a wagon wheel or
some other small wheel, set it on its rim, and roll the wheel down the road. By
twisting our hand, we could turn the wheel in all directions. Now we could have
contests, races, obstacle courses, and other neat activities with our wheel
pusher. Another thing we did was have rubber gun fights. Using lathe once more,
we would cut a piece about 12” long for the barrel of the gun, then cut pistol
grips to fasten to one end, and then we fastened a clothes-pin on the pistol grip.
We always had a lot of inner tubes that were not usable on the car any more,
cut them to form rubber bands about ¼ inch wide, place the band over the muzzle
of the gun, and stretched and clamped it into the clothes-pin. Now all you had
to do was find your victim, squeeze the pistol grip and zip, the rubber band
would fly right to the target. Now, doesn’t that sound mighty exciting compared
to the play things of this day and age? I wonder what the next seventy years
will do for toys, etc.
In the later part of 1933 &
1934, Dad worked on the WPA (Work Progress Administration), Roosevelt's version
of Obama’s stimulus package. He helped
build the Million Dollar Highway. That is US 69 between Ft. Scott &
Pittsburg, Ks.. He made a $1.00 a day doing this construction work. Needless to
say, it was pretty tough going for all of us. We still did a lot of fishing and
hunting to put food on the table. Our home was next to the railroad, and we
boys would go down the tracks where there were wild straw berries and lots of
gooseberries on the shoulders of the right of way. We picked greens for salads,
and things of that kind were there, also.








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