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1932 Stories

PIONEER DAYS WITH GRANDFATHER

By Marjorie Bane, Dist. 5

Mordecai Bane, after marrying Sarah Blodgett, settled at Shaw's Point in Marshall County. George Henry Bane, my grandfather, was born November 6, 1862, the youngest of eight boys and the fourteenth child of a family of sixteen.

His father reaped his fields with a cradle and was one of the best at it in those days. The reapers were in use but were not very common. He and another man, who had a reputation as a good hand with the cradle, reaped a ten acre field of oats in one day. Mordecai had a swath of eight feet. He set out hedge plants for fences around Dana. They would plow the ground where they were going to plant it and then drop in the hedge plants. Some thought nobody could plow a straight line but Mordecai Bane so they always got him to do it.

When George was four the family moved to La Salle County, to a farm which is now about two and a half miles west of Dana. A creek wound around through it. As there was no bridge it had to be forded. The best ford was in such a position as to bring the people who forded it nearly into the yard.

One year it rained very hard near harvest time. So much water stood in the field that the reaper could not be used. George and his father cut the grain with cradles while two of his brothers bound and shocked it. They had to carry it to another part of the field so it wouldn't have to stand in the water.

Various kinds of reapers have come out in George's time. The first was a simple machine. After it had been around, the grain cut had to be removed immediately so the horses wouldn't step on it on their next round. The next reaper had a platform on it. It required two men to run it. One worked the machinery that cut the grain and dropped it on the platform and the other raked it off onto the ground. The next reaper to come out was a self raker. By pushing a pedal with the foot the rake would clear the platform of the grain. The next reaper was a self-binder. It bound the grain with twine. One had been used in Kansas that bound the grain with wire. These self-binders have been supplanted by the combine.

After living there for nearly ten years the family decided to go to Kansas. After getting their tickets at Wenona they got on the Chicago & Alton at sunup Monday morning. Their household goods and stock had been put on a train the Thursday before. It was so slow, however, that they passed it at Kansas City. They reached Hutchinson on Thursday night. The family then settled on a little farm in Reno County outside of Hutchinson.

There was quite a lot of traffic through the town. Perhaps the fact of there being a good road accounted for it. Buffalo bones, picked up on the prairie were taken through to be sold.

George could never get used to Kansas. The sun always seemed to rise in the north for him. Therefore in 1880 he came back to Illinois and on March 14, went to work for his cousin, whose name was also George Bane. There was so much snow on the ground that they could not work in the fields until April 21.

While working for his cousin, George saw a mole ditch dug. A sharp blade about two and a half feet deep with a "shoe" on the end was put into the ground and pulled by oxen. The water would seep into this, down to the hole left by the "shoe" where it would run out into a creek. It was about the same as a tile.

After working for his cousin for two years, George left and went to work for his grandfather, who lived a mile south and three-quarters of a mile east of Dana.

One year everyone had the idea of getting ice. It was cut from rivers in the vicinity and brought to one Robert Pritchett's ice house. Nothing much was ever made of it as the boards of the ice house soon decayed.

After working for his grandfather for six years, George met Lulu Pritchett. They were married at his grandfather's on February 10, 1889. They moved to a farm a mile east and half a mile south of Dana. George prospered as a farmer and became the father of four boys and one girl. He and his wife live there today. They are well-known, respected citizens of Dana, and have recently celebrated their forty-third wedding anniversary.

CONTINUE to NEXT 1932 story

Extracted 06 Jun 2015 by Norma Hass from Stories of Pioneer Days in La Salle County, Illinois, by Grammar Grade Pupils, published in 1932, page 79.


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 81.


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