SPREADING WING
CHAPTER ONE
– THE TWO HEADED MONSTER
Listen to me now. I want to tell
you something. I was a child of The Great Depression. But that was
before your time, you say, well after that catastrophic event was over and
done, and times were back to normal
again.
But those who say this didn't live on our farm, and they didn't see what was in my daddy's
heart. It wasn't the wall street crash, black friday and the like, that hit
those country folk so hard. No, the money was not the main thing. Country folks
were already accustomed to living off what their land could grow, and what
could be reaped from the forests and the river. The real problem was, when the
money left, the rains just chased along behind. And the hot sun brought its
rays to bear and never let up. Dad often told me, the temperature topped one
hundred degrees F. on one hundred days in 1930, though I can't verify those
exact temperatures. And, 1930 had the driest July ever, one hundredth of an
inch. That
I can verify. Seeds lay dormant in the dust. What few seeds found
enough moisture to sprout, and begin to grow, just wilted and shriveled under
that unforgiving sun. The two headed monster; The Great Depression, and the blistering drought. Six consecutive,
very hot, dry years, with a record high temperature of one hundred twenty
degrees F. in 1936, just allowed no time for country folks to recover. And, they occurred at the peak of The Great Depression.
When that two-headed
monster finally pulled out of Wing, a piece of it just curled itself around my
Daddy's heart, and lived there forever.
My Grandfather,
John Wesley Gillum, and his wife, Martha Jane Tucker Gillum, arrived in Wing in
1898. They had a wagon load of young'uns in tow, and more to come. They worked hard
at Wing, and it paid off. Wing was then in it’s glory days. The Gillum’s added
more land, more livestock, and more sharecroppers. Now I didn’t say it was fun.
Hard work is seldom, or never, to my way of thinking, a real fun thing.
Grandpa's new business
venture, producing larger and stronger work mules, did well. John Turner, The
Postmaster and store owner at Wing, and Bob Compton, a stock trader and
Grandpa's friend, were involved in this venture. Two prize Black Mammoth Jacks,
(male donkeys) who were purchased for three thousand dollars, were the heart of
this business. King Leo was purchased out of Texas, for one thousand dollars.
He won first place at the Arkansas State Fair, no small accomplishment. All of my few sources seem to remember all about King Leo. Although
records (not many families have a donkey in the family records) show Pizo, also
a Black Mammoth Jack, was purchased from Spain for $2000, I can find little
mention of him. Pizo, oh Pizo, where did you go? A recent report indicated an
early demise for Pizo.
A mule is a hybrid, produced by the crossing
of a male donkey and a female horse (mare.) Since
there is considerable size difference, even for a Black Mammoth Jack, I
wondered how this was accomplished. So I asked. Turns out, it's just as simple
as can be. Dig a trench for the mare, and the jack’s natural romantic
inclinations will pretty well take it from there, with a little
steering of his valuable-as-gold member by hand. A huge barn was built for this
enterprise, costing one thousand dollars. Now, that may not seem like so much,
but at the turn of the century, it was considerable. By comparison, The three
bedroom house I was raised in cost five hundred dollars to construct.
At the peak of his success, John Wesley died in his early sixties, in
1922. Grandma Martha Jane called Dad back from the oilfields of Oklahoma to run
the farm. Grandma and Grandpa both had said Dad was a better horse trader than
Grandpa, and that's quite a statement because Grandpa was a pro. I'm sure Dad
considered this an honor, getting that call. Martha Jane had other strong and
capable sons, and some were older. Dad was now twenty-nine, a veteran of World
War I, and a strong,
hard and hardworking man in his own right. Dad once told me he
took a job in the boiler room in the oilfields, one that nobody had been able
to hang with. It was just too hot there. Dad took the job, drank only lukewarm
water from the boiler, and made it fine.
Many years later, I had a little experience
in the hayfield that convinced me Dad was onto something there. I was placing
the hay and tromping and shaping the hay stack, Dad was hauling the hay to me.
It was very hot. The cold, cold springs in the creek were nearby, and I started
running and jumping in that cold water between loads. The more times I
jumped into that cold water, the harder it was to go back out and face that
heat again. By the end of the day, I thought I was going to die.
My hardest day ever in the hay fields, and I had many.
Things continued to go well, under Dad's watch, for a time. Dad bought a
car, and spent most of his time running up and down the dirt roads, supervising the sharecroppers, rather than actually working the land
himself. He went in with Uncle Homer, who was a pretty hard and stern man in
his own right, and bought a new herd of cattle.
But it was not to
last. The two headed monster reared it's ugly head, and things started going
bad. Dad soon did not even have the money to put in a crop of his own. Cattle
prices went to
almost nothing, and the cattle had to be ranged out into the
mountains, so they could find forage, or sold outright.
The
sharecroppers could not borrow money to put in their own crops, unless Dad
signed their notes. Now, Dad was never real big on those kinds of arrangements,
but it was that or just turn belly up. The sharecropper's seed just lay there
in the dust. They had to walk, and Dad held the notes. Dad sold off timberland
to the government, at fifty cents to two dollars per acre. He had to sell at
least eighty acres. He had no money to hire a lawyer to negotiate a better
price, so he just had to take what the government would give. Grandma still had
some money, and when she found out about the sale, she insisted Dad buy it
back. But it was too late. The deed was done. That land would become a part of
the Ouachita National Forest.
Those sharecropper's notes took many years to
pay off, but Dad finally did it, somewhere along about the time I made my
appearance in this world. I didn’t know Dad during those years of hard work to
pay off other men’s debts, but the scuttlebutt going around among my older
siblings was, Dad was not really a man one would want to be around during that
time. The word was, a kid just never wanted to put himself into a position of
watching Dad pull off his belt. They just knew no good was ever going to come
of that. Tales of those days pretty well galvanized my timidity around Dad as I
grew up, and I never, ever, saw him pull off his belt while frowning at me. I just
made sure of that.
Those notes extended the tenure of The Great Depression for us many years. Dad had to put his car up on blocks out at
the barn. He could not buy gas. That car sat there, a rusting hulk, until well
after I was born in 1944. A monument to better times, long gone. Someone once
commented on that car, and asked Dad what happened to it.
"The
depression hit it," Dad replied.
My older
brother Harold, a small boy at that time, seeing a rusty spot showing up on the
door, asked, "Is that where it hit it?" Dad never had another
automobile until 1947.
Harold was born in 1931. He was Dad's helper
when Dad was in his prime, and he says Dad was much a man. Afraid of nothing,
or nobody. When the well at the barn went dry, the mules and other stock needed
water. Dad climbed to the bottom of that well on a rope. He lit a stick of TNT,
climbed back out. BOOM! We now had
water.
Once, a mare and a colt
were in the barn lot with the mules. Now, no love is lost between a mule and a
colt. The mules hemmed the colt up by that well, and the
colt jumped into the well to get away from them. Harold saw Dad lasso the
colt's leg, and he pulled it out. By himself. Later, the mules caught the colt
again, kicked it in the head, and killed it.
Dad and Uncle Arthur went in together and bought some land in the Rover Slashes, two miles east of our farm and
down by the river. Then Nimrod Dam was built, and
the government took the Slashes and
other rich crop land. The drought persisted. Soon it became hard to feed a
family. Years later, Dad showed me how to build quail traps and rabbit gums,
and described little tricks for catching fish when the need is great. Those
tricks stay within the family. I still use one occasionally. He told me,
"If a person saw a rabbit cross the road, chased by less that two people,
we knew times were getting better." After the rains returned, I never again
knew of a Gillum eating a wild rabbit. Memories of bad experiences with rabbit
fever during the bad times lasted a lifetime.
Much had been lost
to the Gillum farm, under Dad's watch, through no fault of his own. Dad's
solution to the situation was, just work harder and longer. And work all of us
harder and longer. The depression mindset never left my dad as long as he
lived. Never buy food that we can grow, or reap from the forest or the river.
Buy flour, salt, sugar. Maybe
a little coffee. And sometimes a little tobacco, on a bad crop year. That will about do it. Borrow money as a last resort. Actually, I only
remember Dad borrowing money once. That was when a house on twenty four acres
next to our farm was foreclosed on, and he was able to get a heck of a deal. Store up extra food every year, the rains can go at any time. Always
work as hard as we can, every day, except Sunday.
A large building that was
constructed earlier by John
Wesley and his boys for storing food they produced for long periods of time was
perfect for Dad’s needs now. It was finished around 1920. Dad put a German coin
in each concrete step leading down into the cellar. Why, I could just never
figure out. It was just not like Dad to throw away money. He brought those coins
back from WW1.
This large building had several different
compartments, each perfectly suited for its purpose. A smoke house was always
filled during
the winter with three hogs we butchered each fall. Very little
was wasted. The hogs produced large tins of lard, lye soap, sausage, mince meat
and head cheese. The well-cleansed intestines were even used for storing
sausage. Everything was used except the squeal.
An insulated potato house held hundreds of pounds of
potatoes, with lime on them to prevent rotting. Those potatoes had six-inch
sprouts on them by the time we ate the last one in the spring. The woods were
searched
for fresh poke weed, pokesalit', in the very early spring. These fresh poke
weed sprouts furnished vitamins that had been missing from our diet all winter.
Mom later grew it in her garden.
The cellar underneath held hundreds of quarts of
canned food put up by my mother as she labored over that hot wood stove each
summer. Sometimes close to eight hundred quarts per year. Shelves above the
cellar held many gallon cans of sorghum molasses. The house was underpinned,
and piles of sweet potatoes were stored there. The barn held tow sacks full of
peanuts.
Had it not been for the Two Headed Monster, that building would probably
have soon become obsolete, and the Gillum’s would most likely have bought more
and more of their food, like most people of the time. But with these facilities
in hand, I think Dad just went back to what he knew worked in his boyhood
during the good times, and we stayed there. Growing and storing our
own food, living like the 1920’s in the 1940’s. Everything considered, it was a
good life. Everything, except for the fact that we worked our butts off.
All my siblings, and I mean every last one, as they graduated from
high school, found themselves spreading
wing and moving on to the rest of their lives, far from that farm.
All this, of course, was done in the spare time, working around the
really big jobs of putting up enough hay and corn for the livestock. Plus,
working the money crop, mostly cotton. That money crop began to play out on
that overworked land, and a cotton gin became hard to find, about the time I
was born. I remember riding a load of cotton to the gin only once. I must have
been around two. In my memory, it seems that gin just sucked my cap right off
my head, but I don't believe Dad would ever have let that happen. Power of
suggestion, maybe. I have dim memories of a man kidding with me, and he must
have said something to that effect. Cattle became, more and more, the main
money source as the cotton crop diminished.
Two milk cows not
only produced plenty of milk, but cream, butter, and cottage cheese. During dry
years, bitter weeds were about all that was left for those cows to eat. We just suffered
through bitter milk on those years.
A yard full of chickens, usually ordered from Sears and Roebuck, or
produced by our own settin' hens,
produced plenty of eggs, and mom was a master of wringing the necks (I remember
seeing three or four headless, bleeding chickens flopping about the yard at one
time) and producing a great Sunday change of pace meal, fried chicken. One just
never knew when the preacher would be dropping in for Sunday dinner, and she
was always prepared.
My older brother,
Harold, was, at first, the family wild meat provider. Fish and squirrel, mostly. The deer had
pretty well been killed and eaten around Wing by then. I took over that job at
a very early age. Harold went off to college when I was about four, and
although Dad was always far too busy working to teach me how to hunt and fish,
Harold helped me some. Dad gave me time and the freedom to wander the hills,
bottoms, and the river. I soon figured it out on my own. Never again was Dad's
family to be stalked by hunger, as when the two headed monster prowled the
land.
This was the world, and the mindset, that I
was born into in 1944. The shadow of that two headed monster was ever-present,
hovering over me, until the day I also found myself spreading wing and
leaving the farm, in 1962.
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