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1932 Stories

EARLY EXPERIENCES IN LA SALLE COUNTY

By Giles W. Sullivan, Dist. 12

My father was very glad to relate to me the following experiences of the early days of the Sullivan family, spent in La Salle county. A great many changes have taken place since those early days. A great number of the people living in this community were Irish. Their main food was potatoes, usually cooked with the jackets on. The Irish people believed the potatoes tasted better and were easily digested when cooked that way, and used to say, "We are from Ireland, county Donnigal, where they eat the potatoes, skins and all!"

Times were hard in those days, much work and little play, with very low wages.

My father remembers the old homemade tallow candles used by the family. Usually a lamp was burned Sunday evening or when company came.

It was in 1895 that my father cut poles out of a grove on a farm about three miles from Wenona. They were taken to the old Sullivan farm, seven and one-half miles west of Streator, with wagons and teams. The work of building a new barn began March 12, 1895. Four men were employed on this building. It took three months to do the work. On June 25, 1895, it was completed. It was thirty feet wide and forty feet long. The driveway was eight feet wide. After the barn was finished the neighbors had two old-time barn dances. The first barn dance was given on July 7, 1895. The Hoarty four-piece orchestra, consisting of Tom Hoarty, Sam Hopper, Jeff. Eward and John McDonald, furnished the music. Callers were in abundance in those days for the old-time square dances. Young and old people attended these dances, and all enjoyed themselves. No one was a wall-flower nor no one was slighted; everyone had a chance to dance.

No rain had fallen from March until June. The men building the barn lost no time on account of wet weather. The fields were very dry, the roads were dusty. Rain fell on the first night of the barn dance. There was great rejoicing. No one cared if his new hat or clothes were spoiled. Everyone was glad to see the welcome rain.

This barn had been in service for thirty-four years. On July 15, 1929, it burned to the ground. While the men were threshing oats on the farm, a cylinder tooth threw a spark through the blower and the straw caught fire. The barn and several other buildings were destroyed by fire. I was living with my parents on the farm at the time and I remember well the day the fire occurred. People were running here and there to extinguish the fire and save the out-buildings. The wind was busily blowing from the southeast, so all the work was in vain. Horses hitched to hay racks loaded with bundles of straw, became frightened and were rushing around the yard and down the road. People had to get out of the way to avoid accidents. Luckily no one was injured.

There now stands a modern barn, built by William Ahearn, where the old structure had burned. It is forty-five feet wide and fifty feet long. It has a driveway seven feet wide. It is one of the latest models, containing electric lights, cow stanchions and portable feed boxes.

The young men and boys of those days thought they were kings and princes if they owned a horse and top-buggy. My father owned a fine, beautiful driving horse and a top-buggy. He drove at a fast speed when he first started, but as the horse got tired the speed slackened. They thought eighteen or twenty miles per hour exceedingly fast. Later on automobiles came into use. My father bought one called in those days the E., M. and F., now known as the Studebaker. It was quite hard to get acquainted with an auto after so many experiences with the horse and buggy.

Fishing was a sport enjoyed by the boys. After school closed for the summer vacation, nearly every boy got his hook and line and went to the creek.

I have tried to relate some of the early experiences of the early days in La Salle county. Many hardships and dangers were endured by the early settlers, but they had the strength, courage and good will to carry on the great work they had begun. We, like they, need courage and endurance to carry on the great problems which are facing America today.

CONTINUE to NEXT 1932 story

Extracted 08 Nov 2018 by Norma Hass from Stories of Pioneer Days in La Salle County, Illinois, by Grammar Grade Pupils, published in 1932, page 89.


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