Wednesday, November 10, 2021

November 1, 1948 Memories...

This blogpost is the transcription of some email messages shared between James and Edna Groves' 5 children in November 2021.  It started with Linda sharing some entries from the diary of her mother, Edna, which had been written as James and Edna and their 4 children moved from Viroqua, WI to Fountain City, WI in November 1948.  These memories are shared in the hopes that future generations will find some information about earlier generations, who they were, how they lived and what their lives were like.

****************

Linda Groves Worden begins the email she sent to her four siblings and their families. 

Nov. 1, 2021

I want to remind us about the day our parents moved themselves and four of us from the farm in Viroqua which was owned by Minnie B. Cox Groves to the farm Dad and Mom bought and that we remember the most about near Fountain City.

While I was visiting the Berndts in La Crosse in June, we got out some boxes the Berndts are storing that have items which belonged to Dad and Mom.  We went through things and disposed of items in a few different ways.  As I prepared to leave, I asked Marge if it would be OK if I took Mom's diary that covers the years 1946-1950.  I had never read any of Mom's diaries and wanted to read about 2 major things - the 1948 move to Fountain City and the Jan. 1949 car accident when I had 6 baby teeth knocked out.

Today I am going to share about 2 weeks of entries made from Oct. 26, 1948 - Nov. 7, 1948 + a few extras...

Oct. 26 Tues 1948  A memorable day! Nellie &  I dressed 12 chickens. Put 10 in deep freeze.  Paul & James picked up corn.  All men & Uncle Harvey came & we settled with Gram.  She owed us $832.38.

Oct. 27 Wed 1948 Went to town in a.m. & tended to business matters.  James went to Foun. City. Took inlaid linoleum up.  Hazel Morrison had a party for Gram.

Oct 28 Thurs 1948  Scott, Thelma, Henry (or Harvey) & Iiva McClung & I went to Foun. City & laid inlaid linoleum.  Scott had been very ill yesterday with v.b. nose bleed.  Got home about 9.  James took a truck load up.

Oct 29 Fri 1948  I got our clothes in order to go to Halloween party & farewell for us at the School house.  Nellie helped pack.  Party collection $18.69.  ($18.69 in 1948 is worth $212.73 today.)

Oct 30 Sat 1948  Helen & kids came down & Gen, Norma & John also.  All packed Gram's things & James took them out to Gen's.  Rainy dreary day !

Oct. 31 Sun 1948 Had to work all day in order to get ready to move.  Washed clothes & did quite a bit of packing.  Fuel pump went bad on Pick-up.  Had to get a new one & put on.

Nov 1 Mon. 1948 Got up at 4:10 a.m.  Got all our things packed & were ready to leave about 11:30.  Jas & I had dinner at Tryggestad's.  Zube's took children to F.C.

Nov 2 Tues 1948  Tried to straighten up the kitchen a bit.  Gas man came & installed the stove in afternoon.  I took Jimmy to meet his new teacher.

Nov 3 Wed 1948  I was exhausted!  Felt terribly dizzy & weary so slept 2 hrs. when kiddies did.  James went to Viroqua & divided the cattle.  Olaf Walby & Uncle Harvey helped.

Nov. 4 Thurs 1948  Semi brought 27 head of cattle.  Had fuel pump trouble. Bad rainy day.  Half died on the way.  Others were down & almost died but revived when they got air. Jas. brought a load of hogs.

Nov 5 Fri. 1948  Bad, rainy day.  James had to leave the Ford truck in Winona last night so I took, him down today to get it.  Put linoleum on table top & ledge in pantry. 

Monday, February 22, 2021

The Fountain City Farm 1948 - 1978...

James, Edna and their four young children moved from a farm near Viroqua, WI to a farm near Fountain City, WI. in November 1948. Recently a photo of the farm house and another photo of the barn as they looked in 1948 have been located and are shared here.  Though our parents, James and Edna Groves are no longer living, their five children are all still alive and are sharing thoughts and memories about these photos.

 Jim says:  "MAN!!  Some of these photos are more than 70 years old!!"

 Groves Family Farm Barn as it looked in 1948.  Linda notices the hog shelter, no silo, no electricol poles or wires, no flag pole.  Can't tell what is on the far left where there was a chicken coop which maybe that is but not sure what that is.
 
  

Backside of the above barn photo. One of the very faint things you can read on the back of the barn photo is: 74 x 34, that's the dimensions of the barn in feet.   It also says 'drinking cups' below the dimensions.

 



   

Milk House designed by Dad being added in 1957 with help of Ludvick Matson, Mom's father.
  

Jim:  "Sometime later I will talk about the two old photos of the barn; one with the new milk house and one without.  I remember well when grandpa Matson stayed at our place for several weeks one fall to help dad build the milk house onto the barn.  Dad was always so grateful that it was a late, dry fall that year so they had good weather and the time needed to finish the construction before winter set in."

Barn as it looked after James and Edna retired and sold the farm in 1978. 
Jim:  "Some of the pictures of the barn and house must have been during the time that the Frieds lived there after Mom and Dad sold it and moved.  I never saw the place when it looked like that with that huge lean-to added to the side of the barn..."

House in 1948
Backside of 1948 house photo.  Not sure who the people are in the front yard.



Jim:"...and the tall arbor vitae out in front of the house with the concrete steps all breaking apart.  Wow!"


Jim:  "When I have more time, I will talk about noon-hour shenanigans taking long hikes down into Lemmer's woods, even all the way over
into Duehlman's woods and fields, only to hear the school bell ring a mile away across the wooded valleys!  Boy, we were in 
big trouble!"
Cross Ridge School being used as Township Meeting Hall
  
Cross Ridge School with bell tower and 4 windows on this side.

Linda:  "This is a photo of Mrs. Marvin Deurkop who was my first and second grade teacher at Cross Ridge School.  She resigned after that year because she was pregnant and had her first child - a baby boy.  I have a very wonderful memory of the piece of Fondant candy she put into the box of Christmas candy each student received each year.  I thought it was the most delicious thing I had ever tasted."
This Merry-Go-Round was on the playground of Cross Ridge School before the school closed in 1959.  This Merry-Go-Round is now in a park in Fountain City, WI at the South/East end of town.  Having fun there are Linda, Jamie and Sarah Worden in the mid 80's.

Cross Ridge School in 2016

Margelyn Groves Berndt, Linda Groves Worden, Sarah Worden in 2016.  Notice that the windows on this side of the building have been removed and a wall constructed in their place.

Jim:  "Ahh, memories of the past.  Isn't the human brain an amazing invention!!  Just think of the incredible mental pictures of objects,
sights, sounds, smells, etc. we experience with memories.  Speaking of smells, do you remember the smell of winter boots drying
on the furnace radiator in the center of the schoolhouse?"
 
Linda:  "My memory is more about our mittens drying on that wood burning furnace radiator and how warm they would be when we put them back on later.  But I don't think we were allowed to cover up the register with too many items."



 

 

John Isaacson - March 12,1840 - November 2, 1919... + Amanda and William Groves...

A first blogpost about John Isaacson, my paternal Great-Grandfather, can be found here.

I have found more photos which would have been taken when John and Carrie Isaacs were celebrating their 50th wedding anniversary.  They were married December 25, 1865 after the Civil War ended.  He was not mustered out immediately but remained in TX until August 15, 1865.  

I have also included photos of Amanda Sophia Isaacs Groves and her husband, William Floyd Groves who are the parents of James Burton Groves.

John and Carrie Olson Isaacs - March 1915 - 50th Anniversary.
Amanda Sophia Isaacs Groves in the white blouse.

Amanda in white blouse with sons Vernon, 3, and James, 17 months, on her lap with husband      William F. Groves 2nd from left on top row.
 
The John Isaacson Family home in Forest City, IA where the family lived most of their childhood lives.

Family home in Forest City, IA where the family celebrated the 50th wedding anniversary of           John and Carrie Isaacson 1915.

Wednesday, March 18, 2020

JOHN ISAACSON of Forest City, Iowa

Sign at south entrance in March 2020
Sign at north entrance in March 2020


 On March 8, 2020, my husband, John and I along with our daughter, Sarah Worden, drove around Forest City as we were traveling back to TX after attending the wedding of my nephew, Jonathan Berndt to Courtney English on March 7, 2020.  We just passed through as we had no names of any of my maternal Grandmother's relatives that may still live in the area where she was born.

I add another article which my brother-in-law, Robert Berndt, has been able to find in his research of family members who lived in Forest City, Iowa.
JOHN ISAACSON
John Isaacson, justice of the peace of Forest City, a veteran of the Civil war
and a retired business man and farmer, has in many ways left the impress of his individuality upon the history of Winnebago county, where he has ever stood for those things which are most worth while in the life of the community. He was born in Norway on the 12th of March, 1840, a son of Knud and Mary (Berg) Isaacson, who came to the United States in 1855, settling in Dane county, Wisconsin, where they resided until called to their final rest.

Friday, September 8, 2017

Edward King Isaacson 1857 - 1926

There has been a memory that some members of my Grandmother Amanda Isaac Groves' family have had which has not been knowledgeably confirmed until now in my case.  I had heard that an Isaacs relative was the "greatest penman in the United States" in about the mid nineteenth century.  I did not know the name of this man nor how he was related to our family.

Amanda Isaacs Groves was my paternal grandmother.  My father was her second child.  Her oldest child was Vernon T. Groves.

I recently listened to a presentation my Uncle Vernon  had made at an Association of Christian Recovery:  The Next Step Conference which was held in Costa Mesa, CA Aug. 1-3 (year unknown) which had the theme "Sharing the Healing Journey."  His 80 minute talk was titled:  A Scriptural Response to Perfectionism.  Dr. Groves shared some scripture and much of his own personal experience with Perfectionism and Depression.  In that talk, he sites a memory he has of his mother telling him about "Uncle Ed, the greatest penman in the United States."  She also showed him copies of a journal which featured articles written by Uncle Ed.  As a young boy, Uncle Vernon didn't pay much attention to what his mother told him about Uncle Ed, but during a counseling session in which his counselor told him his Perfectionism had not come from something that happened during his lifetime but from generations before that and had most likely been passed on to him from the generations before him.  This is when he remembered what he had been told about Uncle Ed and decides to do some research to find out more about him.  He is able to visit Valparaiso University and find in the archives some of the same journals with articles written about penmanship by E. K. Isaacs that he had seen as a child.  The archivist told Uncle Vernon that E. K. Isaacs was the greatest penman in the United States - the same words that his mother had used when he was a child.

Uncle Vernon's talk was on a cassette tape I've had for many years but had never listened to until this week.  When I learned the name of this man, I still did not know exactly how he fit into the family.

Fortunately, Bob Berndt, a brother-in-law with a membership in Ancestry.com, began to search.  He has been able to learn quite a bit about E. K. Isaacs and I share that here.

From Gaskells Gazette
From Bob:
The first link, if you scroll to page 9, has a picture and some info on him. He was in Indiana and teaching. 
 https://books.google.com/books?id=PI7gAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA9&dq=E.K.+Isaacs+greatest+penman&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjeuMuawpTWAhVGzIMKHW1lCA8Q6AEIKDAA#v=onepage&q=E.K.%20Isaacs%20greatest%20penman&f=false

If you scroll through the second link,  you will find E. K. Isaacs writing supplies. This info comes out of the Penman's Gazette in April 1884,
Just searching E K Isaacs and penman gets all kinds of hits.

https://books.google.com/books?id=LMsBAAAAYAAJ&pg=RA1-PT21&lpg=RA1-PT21&dq=E.K.+Isaacs+was+the+greatest+penman+in+the+United+States&source=bl&ots=jVybFXc8rQ&sig=6go2z07lnrfd5UsdHaIthnDyhms&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjW7OaYwZTWAhUh5YMKHb7WALYQ6AEIKjAA#v=onepage&q=E.K.%20Isaacs%20was%20the%20greatest%20penman%20in%20the%20United%20States&f=false


Tuesday, September 5, 2017

John Isaacson - March 12,1840 - November 2, 1919 + Uncle Vernon Memories...

Bob Berndt has recently been doing some research on Ancestry.com.  He found an obituary for John Isaacson who is the father of Amanda Isaacs Groves.  Amanda is my paternal grandmother so John Isaacson is my paternal great-grandfather.
From Bob:
Hello all,

A little family history if you are interested.  I just came across this through Ancestory.com. This is the obituary for John Isaacson, who is Amanda Groves's father. So for all of you his descendants, he is either your great, or great great, or great great great Grandfather.  Especially interesting to me anyway,  is his Civil War experience. 

Bob


John Isaacson, one of the enterprising business men of Forest City, was born in Norway, March 12, 1840. In 1855 his parents emigrated to America, landing in Quebec, and from there went to Dane co., Wis., where he was reared as a farm boy, 
receiving a limited education in the common schools. In 1862 he enlisted in the 27th Wisconsin Infantry Volunteers, company H. Entering the army as fourth sergeant and afterwards promoted to orderly. He participated in the capture of Vicksburg, Miss., Little Rock, Ark., battles of Saline River, Prairie D'Ann and Camden, Ark. In the siege of Spanish Fort and capture of Fort Blakely and Mobile, Ala., from there to Brownsville, Texas. He was then promoted to 2d lieutenant. Soon before the war closed he was mustered out at Brownsville, Texas, in September, 1865, and returned home, and again engaged in the occupation of farming until 1874, when he removed to Madison, Wis., and clerked in the store of Dunning & Sumner, where he learned the business. In 1880 he removed to Forest City, Iowa, embarking in the mercantile business, carrying a full line of dry goods and groceries, boots, shoes and clothing, in fact everything usually found in a first-class store. In 1865 he was married to Carrie Olson, of Oconomowoc, Wis., by whom he has had nine children - Clara, Delia, Charles, Elmore, John, George, mable, Amanda and Sumner Elsworth. Mr. and Mrs. Isaacson are members of the Lutheran Church. He is also a member of the G.A.R. Mr. Isaacson came to this country a poor boy, but by fair dealing has accumulated a comfortable property. 

History of Kossuth, Hancock, and Winnebago Counties, Iowa
Springfield ILL: Union Pub. Co. 1884 
I think this is John Isaacson
Far right couple is John & Carrie Isaacs - 50th Wedding Ann. 1915 - Forest City, IA

Closer view of Isaacs family in 1915 - not sure if Amanda is in this photo.  She lived in Ryegate, MT 1910-1915.

John Isaacson 1840–1919 
Birth 12 MARCH 1840 N. Aurdal, Svennes Parish, Valdres, Norway 
Death 2 NOV 1919 Forest City, Winnebago County, Iowa, US
***********************************
Added notes from me, Linda Groves Worden:
I am very pleased to get this obituary as it clears up some things I have wondered about...
  1. Which generation was born in Norway?
  2. Why did I have a Great-Grandfather serve in the Civil War from WI?
  3. When and where did my Great-Grandfather serve?
  4. G.A.R. Grand Army of the Republic
  5. How and when did my Dad's mother get to Forest City, Iowa?
The obituary answers these questions and gives additional interesting information.

During my years of teaching 6th Grade Language Arts in Kerrville, TX, I had my students read a historical fiction book called ACROSS FIVE APRILS.   It is the story of a family whose son serves in the Civil War.  The family lives in Illinois, close to the border with Kentucky.

I knew I had a Great-Grandfather who had served in the Civil War from WI but I knew little more than that.  Somehow during my years of teaching, I learned that my Dad had some copies of letters that his Grandfather, John Isaacson, had written to the girl he would marry, Carrie Olson.   I was able to make copies of my Dad's letters which I mounted on poster board and laminated in order to use on a bulletin board in my classroom while we read the book.  I still have these copies.  There are 9 letters which start Dec. 1, 1864 in Bayou Meter (probably near New Orleans) and end in Perry, WI Dec. 4, 1865.  His places of service stretched from Mobile, Alabama to Brownsville, TX before getting back to WI.

I will scan the letters and share them in future blogposts so other family members will have access to these historical items and the information learned in them.

In response to Bob's email and information, a question was raised as follows:  "...aren't we related to another Isaacson who was known to be "the best penman in America?"

This is something else I have heard about but couldn't exactly confirm UNTIL I listened to a cassette tape I found in my saved collection of old cassette tapes!!!  The 80 minute tape is a talk by Dr. Vernon T. Groves entitled:  A Scriptural Response to Perfectionism.  The talk was given at an Association of Christian Recovery:  The Next Step conference in Costa Mesa, CA.  That event titled "Sharing the Healing Journey" was held Aug, 1-3 (year unknown).  I don't think I listened to it previously but I remembered it existed and recently located it.  Apparently I intended to disseminate some copies of the tape as I have 6 cassette copies ready to give away but I must have had life interrupt so that I am just getting back to this after everyone has moved on with technology and probably no longer has access to a cassette player.

BUT when I listened to the tape (3 cassette players still live in our home) I found there is an answer to the question about "another Isaacson who was known to be "the best penman in America?"  Uncle Vernon relates that he has a childhood memory of his mother telling him about "Uncle Ed - the greatest penman in the United States."  This memory came to him during a session with a counselor he saw for his depression and his Perfectionism OCD issue.  The counselor told him that "Perfectionism tends to run in families and can be passed on from generation to generation."  The counselor suggests to Uncle Vernon that "your perfectionism came from way back in your family and is the root cause of your dysfunction."   It is at that point that Uncle Vernon has a memory of Uncle Ed, who was the greatest penman in the United States.  Uncle Vernon continues to share much insight about his depression, perfectionism and family dysfunction in the talk he gave at that Association of Christian Recovery: The Next Step Conference which had the theme "Sharing the Healing Journey".
From the Gaskell's Guide to Writing
He also shares about a stop he made at Valparaiso Univ. where he saw a wall mounted framed certificate signed by E.K. Isaacs and the man who showed him that said "E.K. Isaacs was the greatest penman in the United States" - using the same words Uncle Vernon remembered that his mother had used.  He also saw journals with articles written by E.K. Isaacs - the very thing he remembers his mother showing him when he was a child. 

The 80 minute talk is excellent - revealing, open, honest, helpful and hopeful.

Perhaps I can find a way to make cd's from the cassette or get the talk transferred to something easily downloadable.  If you have a cassette player, I'll be happy to mail one of those to the first 6 people to request one. 

So now we need Ancestry.com to help with research about Ed K Isaacs or Isaacson...

Following this suggestion, Bob Berndt accepted the challenge and continued  in  his search to uncover more about E.K. Isaacs.  Note here and above insertions from his discoveries.https://books.google.com/books/content?id=LMsBAAAAYAAJ&pg=RA1-PT27&img=1&zoom=3&hl=en&sig=ACfU3U3-wKg2FsjSonCfBgDKeUL-QISKVg&ci=109%2C845%2C850%2C823&edge=0
I would love to sometime have a family round table discussion about perfectionism, depression and its effects on lives in our family.  Uncle Vernon strongly encourages the 12-step program and sharing of stories in order to heal and overcome the dysfunctional aspects of perfectionism.

Since the information about E.K. Isaacs is expanding, I will start a new post to feature just facts and thoughts related to him.  More to come soon...