Tuesday, October 21, 2025

Same Subject Limericks

 


There is nothing profound here…
Fresh lefse brings me on the run
Some like it with sugar and cinnamon
I like thick butter smear
Just watch it disappear
Then I’m ready to grab another one.
At first you roll out the dough
At least that’s what I’ve been told
Make it thin
with a rolling pin
Fry it on the stove and... magnifico!
Lutefisk and lefse - ya, ya, ya
It all follows an ancient formula
Find a church supper
Find words to utter
This is good - ooh, la, la.

Thursday, October 16, 2025

Was it yesterday?

 



The years all run together now... from Oct 12, 2015



He's Growing Up

 My camera caught Lucas lofting a pass. Eleven years ago? He's a sophomore today at Depaul University in Chicago.

11 Years Ago
October 15, 2014 
Shared with Public
My 8 year old grandson lofts a pass last Saturday.


A Sense of the Past

 The recent June 20 tornado in Enderlin had received a rating of EF3 on the Fujita Scale for its tragic, damaging winds. This column recently mentioned that assessment level as an event that would go down in history. Unfortunately, the day I wrote the piece and sent it off to my editor for her acceptance and further forwarding to printing, a breaking news item appeared. The intensity of its force had been upgraded to EF5. Too late, my mistaken words have now appeared in newsprint the way I wrote them. If only I’d have known…


We hold a sense of the past very high in this household. My wife has immersed herself deeply in researching and writing family histories. She just completed a large one named “Country School Education of Immigrant Children in the Wade/Leahy School District.” It will speak to a very small audience. Heavily foot-noted with over 1,000 entries in the index, it will serve as a comprehensive historical record for the future.


I’ve written several hundred articles like this one you now read. In almost every case some aspect of history served as a prompt to research and write them. It’s gratifying to find people who hold a strong sense of history. The title of David McCullough’s book issued after his death is “History Matters.” Peggy Noonan, a columnist for the Wall Street Journal, recently wrote “We Need to Know History, Especially Now.” Howard Zinn said, “If you don’t know history, it is as if you were born yesterday.” Then there is the famous line spoken by George Santayana that I learned long ago and have never forgotten, “Those who have forgotten the past are condemned to repeat it.”


Maybe this is the start of a ramble, but in the aftermath of World War II my little brain was just starting to process and remember things such as the relief people felt when shortages and  substitutes ended and they could  start buying gas, sugar, and coffee again. Wartime coupon books could be set aside; I still have mine. Old synthetic rubber inner tubes did not make good slingshot material; it didn’t stretch well. Cockshutt tractors from Canada were easier to buy than U. S. models that hadn’t resumed production; was it Pierce Implement in Enderlin that sold them? The list can go on and on.


A couple areas of historical interest have taken much of my research and writing time: early statehood and county history. The fact that the territorial capital was located in Yankton and that Mrs. Mary Todd Lincoln  had a relative whose hands guided its politics for a time isn’t included in present day small talk. Neither does today’s visiting over coffee consider the shenanigans that Alexander Mackenzie orchestrated in getting the capital moved to Bismarck.


Ransom County’s story brims with interesting stories. The man named A. H. Laughlin, an early player in county development, hitched a ride to Sheldon on a sleigh in a winter storm. Because the sleigh was loaded full with freight, he had to stand on one of the runners and froze so stiff he had to be carried into the store when they arrived. He recovered and rode the stage into Lisbon the next morning.


Laughlin became the county auditor, and to his office came the report of a gold discovery. News of it spread throughout the region and a gold rush occurred in the western part of the county. The NP train rails had been laid not long before and reports of trains loaded with prospectors filled the newspapers. The promise of riches dug from the ground fizzled out when everyone realized there wasn’t enough gold to fool with.


A lady named Nancy McClure lived on the historical site of Pigeon Point in the eastern part of the county. Being of one-half Indian blood, she could also be called Winona which meant oldest daughter in the family. Her life reads like a novel. She was taken prisoner during the Indian uprising of 1862, witnessed the hanging of 38 Indians deemed criminal for their actions, married a man who scouted for the army when Fort Ransom was built, hosted many travelers who stopped at Pigeon Point, translated the speech of Indian  leaders, and saw her daughter marry into the Eastman family where a brother-in-law was the medical doctor present at Wounded Knee Massacre who tended to the needs of the wounded and dying. 


We take an occasional trip up Standing Rock Hill in the Little Yellowstone area where we can gaze out an expanse of countryside. Joseph Nicollet and John C. Frémont camped within sight of the site on Monday, August 12, 1839 and named it Inyan Bosndata after the standing rock sitting atop the  peak. The state historical society identified four interconnected burial mounds there that date from 100 B. C. to A. D. 600. Glacial ice thousands of years ago had formed the hill by pushing dirt from a few miles northeast of there. It’s a stimulating little side trip off Highway 46 that awakens the historical curiosities.


The story of the Sheyenne National Grassland east of Sheldon and stretches down into the McLeod area holds historical value with just a little research. Commonly known as the sand hills, it furnishes grazing for cattle, but at one time people tried to farm this land. The drought occurring almost a 100 years ago showed the folly of plowing that grass under when the winds blew. During FDR’s presidency, farmers were moved off the area, and grass has taken root again.


Our history is rich with stories. There was the Ransom County Immigration Association, railroad development, harvest hoboes, horses sold to the army in World War I, the Sibley Expedition across the county in 1862, wagon train stranded in a blizzard, Rex the Red, blacksmiths, baseball stories, General Ransom, and more. I am tempted to gather all these  relevant stories to publish into  one volume in time for Christmas giving. Not this Christmas, though, the one in 2026.


Violence of Tornadoes

The memory of the tornado that struck here on June 20 still resonates in the minds of residents and neighbors. The loss of life that occurred remains in the forefront of those memories. An outpouring of volunteer help aided in the cleanup and much of that destruction wouldn’t be detected anymore by a stranger visiting the area. Driving along Highway 46, I noticed one ruined residence has been leveled over and landscaped. However, looking across the highway to the south a large field of broken tree trunks remains to remind us of the power and mindlessness of the twisting storm. The storm claimed three lives, making it the deadliest tornado to hit North Dakota since 1978.


A weather expert, namely Dr. Ted Fujita of the University of Chicago, applied his expertise to come up with a rating system named the Fujita Scale for the power of tornadoes. Using the Fujita Scale, meteorologists rated the primary Enderlin tornado as an F3 with winds up to 160 mph. The second, separate funnel probably peaked at about 135 mph which places it in the F2 category.


Fajita’s prime source of study was the Fargo tornado occurring in 1957 on the same date, June 20, which he rated as an F5 with winds ranging from 261 mph to 318 mph. He coined some of the terminology we’ve become familiar with such as “wall cloud.” I was fifteen years old at that time and was in the barnyard feeding our pigs.  A pervasive feeling settled on me as I looked to the sky and watched that wall cloud moving across the heavens. I’ll never forget the strange green color of the clouds and how deathly still the air became.


News reporting did not occur “on an active scene” like reporters practice today. Instead, it took a couple of days before in-depth stories appeared to tell us a story of what had happened in Fargo. A family of tornadoes (another Fajita coined term) travelled about 50 miles in North Dakota and Minnesota that reached about 500 yards across. Twelve people died with 103 being injured. Only one other F5 has been confirmed in the state, that which struck Fort Rice in 1953.


Recently we attended a program presented as part of the 75th Anniversary celebration for the Institute for Regional Studies at NDSU where two people spoke of their connection to the 1957 tornado. Catherine McMullen spoke first and told of her father, Cal Olson, the well-known news photographer, taking pictures with his Rolleiflex camera. One of his pictures of a man carrying a dead child from the wreckage earned a Pulitzer Prize. That child was one of a family of six children killed in one family.


Jamie Parsley spoke next. He is an episcopal priest in Fargo and also serves as an associate poet laureate of North Dakota. He, by the way, has connections to Sheldon, wrote a book titled Fargo 1957: An Elegy. Not yet born when the tornado struck, he nevertheless took inspiration to write it by recalling the death of  his mother’s cousin and her husband who perished as a result. His writing reminds us of the power of an F5 when he wrote the cousin’s husband “was killed outright, his body found blocks away. Betty was knocked into a coma, from which she never regained consciousness; she died two and a half years later in January of 1960.”


At the gravesite of the six children, one of his poems states “We are temporary,/ the same way clouds are /when they enter the sky, grow full / as our guts, unleash what they have / and then dissipate.”


Between poems he includes numerous pictures of the damage and destruction left in the aftermath of the tornado’s wake. Included is that picture of the young man carrying the dead child. Pictures of crushed cars are accompanied by one of a finned 1957 Dodge that helps my mind date the tragedy 68 years ago. Parsley’s poem “From There,” written through the eyes of his mother validates my seeing green in the clouds: “There I saw the air turn green / and thought / green? have I ever / before / seen the air / turn pea green?”


North Dakota’s tornado count of 80 in 2025 sets it in first place for the most in a year on record for our state. As for pictures, a couple videos of the Enderlin storm will be studied and looked at for a long time. The one video reported to be taken from a doorbell makes a person shudder as it captures what looks to be a thick-stemmed mushroom continuously lit up by lightning. A storm-chaser put himself and his vehicle in danger while following the storm. He’d made himself so vulnerable that the rear window of his SUV was knocked out.


I saw the damage brought by the tornado that struck near Walcott in 1955 that has been rated as an F4. Seeing is believing, and the sight bordered on the unbelievable. A piece carried by Prairie Public in succeeding years quoted one man’s memory. “The roar grew louder. The windmill blew apart. The barn and granary roofs lifted off; the granary tumbled across the yard like a cardboard box, and the barn collapsed in a spray of debris.”


Regarding the recent storm in Enderlin, one can’t wring any positive results from it except maybe to recognize the tremendous spirit of community that rose to aid victims. Perhaps, one day, someone will write a book called Enderlin 2025: An Elegy.


Saturday, October 11, 2025

Weiners and Sauerkraut

 We didn't go to Wishek for weiners and sauerkraut but not to be left out, we fixed our own.




Lunch at the Sons of Norway

 We take an occasional trip downtown to eat noon lunch at the Sons of Norway lodge, and today we ran into quite a large crowd. I hadn’t been paying attention and missed this: it’s the 200th anniversary of the first boatload of Norwegians arriving to our region. Anyway, the menu was a bit different today but good. I ordered a smorbrod sandwich, a bowl of rommegrot, and a Scandinavian almond bar. Tasty! Mary took piece of apple/rhubarb pie, too.



A Dozen Roses

A dozen roses, just because...