In Late fall of 1950,Mother Nature gave us an indication of things to
come. An early Pre-Thanksgiving blizzard set the stage for the rest of
the winter! For a while it was uncertain as if Thanksgiving would come
off at all, but at the eleventh hour the weather cleared and dinner went off without a hitch! Christmas was spent in the usual fashion
with much time spent with family.Being six, I had received a good
supply of loot from Santa including a basketball and a pair of cowboy
boots. Due to the fact I was living in rural Indiana, the basketball was sacred!
December 28th stated as a typical cold winter day, my dad had decided
to raise turkeys the next year and it was nearly time for the chicks to
be delivered so donning my prized cowboy boots I decided to go with him
to the hatchery to see when they would be ready for pick-up.
Most of the heating was done with wood or coal stoves during that
period of time, and due to the fact we had a couple of chimney fires
prior to this , there wasn't much alarm when mom called and said that
the house was on fire. Dad just assumed it was another chimney fire and
it would burn itself out before we could get home.
However after thinking about it for a couple of minutes and seeing
large billowing smoke coming from the direction of our farm it was
quickly determined this was more than a simple chimney fire! Racing for
the car, we were on our way home in seconds! The hatchery sat on a high
hill, the first obstacle in getting home was a state highway at the
bottom of the hill, dad never even slowed up! I knew then it was going
to be a nail biting ride home. Practically flying down this gravel road
the closer to home we got the faster the car went! Sliding around
corners and leaving a dust trail that seemed to stretch for miles we
were making record time. Not knowing what was happening at home and
thinking that mom was still in the house created a real sense of
urgency.
Our car didn't have real good tires and the brakes were worse! As we
approached our lane another crisis arose! Our drive way was at the
bottom of a big hill and the fire truck was coming from the other
direction! Dad had been riding the brakes a lot negotiating tight
turns at high speed, so the brakes were about as useful as a trap door
in a submarine. The fire truck would just have to wait a minute.
Sliding sideways into our lane, the car rolled half way up the hill in
front of our house before it came to a stop.
Thinking mom was in the house we jumped from the car and raced towards
it. My grandparents were already there , so I stayed with them while my
dad went inside, Great, now I have both parents inside a burning
building!
It was about that time I felt a tap on my shoulder, it was mom!
She asked,"Where is dad?"
I responded,"He's inside looking for you."
Mom had lain down to take a nap, waking up and smelling smoke, she
raced for the kitchen and the phone.The fire being too hot , mom ran to
the neighbors a half mile away to call us and the fire department.She
was coming back home and saw us go flying by ,but we never noticed,too
busy trying to keep the car between the ditches!
Luckily about that same time dad came crawling out of the burning house, so everyone was safe.
By that time everyone from 10 miles around had gathered, so there was
plenty of help to put out the fire and salvage what was left. We didn't
have cell phones, instant messaging or Fox news then, but news traveled
faster then it does today!
Luckily the fire had been confined to the kitchen and dining room so
most of our belongings had been saved, except for my basketball! Major
disaster, that was Santa's new job, bring another basketball!
Thankfully, I was wearing my cowboy boots, so they were safe. Having spent the winter meeting my school bus at a country road intersection,spring was a welcome sight.