Bio: Hardrath, Herman Jr. & Elsa Hardrath Hardrath, Herman
Jr. & Elsa (2005)
HAROLD, HOWARD AND
HALBERT "Bud"
REMEMBER:
MOM
AND DAD, HERMAN JR.
& ELSA HARDRATH.
Let us assume that
Emma and August
Lange sent out birth
announcements for
daughter Elsa. The
announcement
probably would have
been written: "Die
Eheleute Emma and
August Lange geben
die Geburt iher
Tochter ELSA MARIA
bekannt Green Grove,
Clark County,
Wisconsin 9.Juni
1892." Our
Grandparents were
born into German
speaking homes and
in turn our parents
were born into
German speaking
homes and it is
likely the birth
announcement would
have been in German.
It is also likely
that Mom and Dad
learned to speak
German before
English.
Our Mom, Elsa Marie
Lange, was born
Thursday, 9 June
1892 in a log house
on her parent’s
farm. Benjamin
Harrison was
President of The
United States of
America. When Elsa
was born, the log
house had been for
only a short time
the home of her
father August Lange,
and mother Emma Kutz
Lange, and brothers,
William and Paul. In
the coming years the
log house would be
the home of Robert,
Louise, Ida, Emma,
Arthur and Frieda.
Children Karl and
Auguste died as
infants.
Our Dad, Herman
Henry Hardrath Jr.,
was born Thursday,
20 May 1886 on his
parent’s farm in
Lowell Township,
Polk County,
Minnesota in a house
we believe was made
of sod. Grover
Cleveland was
President of The
United States of
America. For about a
year this was the
home of Herman Jr.
and his father
Herman Hardrath Sr.,
his mother Emma
Molle Hardrath and
his two brothers,
Arthur and Henry.
About mid 1887
Herman Sr. moved his
wife and children to
Green Grove
Township, Clark
County, Wisconsin,
where they lived for
a few months with
Emma’s parents,
Heinrich and Johanna
Molle. It was while
living with Emma’s
mother and father
that Clara was born.
Herman Sr. bought
the farm next to and
east of his
father-in-law
Heinrich and after
repairs were made on
the house he moved
the family to their
new home next door.
It was here that
Albert, Louis,
Martha, and Esther
were born.
Grandmother and
Grandfather Lange
attended St. Paul’s
Evangelical Lutheran
Church, located from
the farm 2 ¾ miles
east to Bahn’s
corner and 1 mile
north. Mom was
confirmed in this
church. Grandfather
and Grandmother
Hardrath attended
the same church as
the Lange family.
Because the distance
to St. Paul’s
Church, in 1892
Grandpa Hardrath and
two neighbors, Louis
Boettcher and Gust
Klessig organized
the Friedens
Gemeinde Church in
an empty store
building they
purchased from
lumberman Peter
Fritz. The new
church was located
just west of the
Popple River on what
is now County Trunk
K. Our father was
confirmed in this
church. In 1907 the
congregation moved
to a new church a
couple miles to the
east. In 1923 the
congregation moved the church
building to Riplinger and the
church is now known
as St. John’s
Lutheran Church. Mom
attended the Atwood
(sometimes called
Miller) school 2+
miles east of the
farm. Dad attended
the Oak Grove
School, a log
building, 1 mile
south of the farm.
Throughout his life
a constant reminder
of Oak Grove School
was the result of an
incident that
happened at school
during recess. He
was accidentally
poked in the right
eye with a stick,
the injury resulting
in permanent
blindness in the
eye.
As a young girl,
Elsa worked for Anna
and H. A. Bright who
lived in the village
of Bright 2 ¾ miles
west of the Lange
farm. Part of her
duties were in the
kitchen and dinning
room where some of
the workers at the
saw mill were served
dinner at noon.
While working at
Bright she lived at
home and walked to
and from work each
day. - -- - Mr. &
Mrs. Caves managed
the Bright East Farm
which was ½ mile
west of the Lange
farm. Elsa worked
for Mrs. Caves. ----
We have a post card
dated 5 Feb. 1912
that Elsa received
when she was working
in Stratford, Wis.
The card was sent to
her by brother Paul
who was in Black
River Falls, Wis.
In a letter to Bud
from his mother’s
sister Ida, she
wrote, "When Elsa
worked in Austin
(MN); she worked for
a former neighbor
Amelia Kaiser who
was married to
Albert Sprague. They
were expecting a
baby so that is how
come your mother
went to Austin. She
was 16 years old and
the first time to go
away so far from
home. She cried and
Ma said, you don’t
have to go but she
did." (We have a
post card dated 13
March 1909 that Elsa
received when she
was working in
Austin.) Elsa was
not home from Austin
to long when she
went to Milwaukee
and worked. Next she
worked for Mrs.
Bishton who had a
resort in Minocqua,
Wis. and then the
blossoming romance
began with Herman
Hardrath and soon
the wedding
followed." We have
post cards from
September and
October in 1912 that
Elsa wrote to Herman
when she was working
for Mary Jane
Bishton at Mercer
lake Resort at
Minocqua. Mary Jane
Bishton was a long
time friend of
Grandma and Grandpa
Lange. She and her
first husband, Mr.
Johnson, had a farm
next to and east of
the Lange farm.
As a boy Papa did
chores on the farm
that all farm boys
were expected to do.
One of the jobs was
to get the cows in
the barn for the
evening milking. The
problem was that the
cows were not fenced
in and could wander
off into the woods.
Even thought they
had bells on the
cows it was not
always easy to find
them. Frequently the
cows would move off
toward the northwest
along a logging road
to graze in a
clearing that was
about 2 miles from
the barn. For a boy
it was scary to be
in the deep woods.
It seems that they
were most concerned
about lynx and the
crying call they
made. --- Grandpa
Hardrath dug a hole
for a pond behind
the barn that filled
with rain water. As
youngsters Papa and
his brothers played
in the pond. Grandpa
made a pig trough
from a hollow log.
The boys would push
the pig trough into
the pond, get in and
with a board, and
paddle around on the
pond. While Papa was
recovering from a
bout with the mumps
he went for a ride
on the pond in the
pig trough. The pig
trough tipped over,
he got wet and cold
and complications
developed resulting
in an after effect
that he had to deal
with for the rest of
his life. ---- One
event of his
childhood that Dad
often told about was
the beaver dams on
the river that
flowed across the
rear of their farm.
Grandpa Hardrath and
his brothers-in-law,
Fred and Henry
Molle, wanted to
drain the ponds that
the beaver created
with their dams.
They would go in the
day time and open
the dams. At night
the beaver repaired
the dams. They
continued to open
the dams and the
beaver continued to
repair them at
night. They decided
to open the dams and
hang lanterns up at
night to discourage
the beaver from
working. This did
the trick. - - --
Some of the
neighbors who grew
corn, cut it and
stood the stalks of
corn in a shock.
They used a pumpkin
vine to tie around
the shock. - - -When
Dad was old enough
probably age 14, in
the winter he and
his brother Henry
worked in the woods
for their father
cutting trees into
logs and hauling the
logs where they were
sold. Grandpa
Hardrath bought land
in the area and Papa
and Henry spent
their winters
logging the land.
They built a small
cabin on the
property in which
they lived and had a
shelter for the
horses. They hauled
some of the logs to
the Foster Landing
in Bright.
Papa and Henry were
living at home and
working on the farm.
A half mile east of
the farm and a
couple miles south
was an open air (no
roof) dance floor.
Papa and Henry
wanted to go to a
dance being held
there but their
father told them
that they could not
go, that next day
they were going to
have to put in a
long hard day of
work. The family
went to bed and
their father, to
keep Papa and Henry
from sneaking out
put some items on
the steps going
upstairs. The idea
being that if they
tried to sneak out
in the dark of night
they would knock the
items over and he
would wake up. Papa
and Henry waited in
their bedroom until
everyone was asleep,
crawled out of their
second story bedroom
window onto the
porch roof, slid
down the porch post
and were off to the
dance. After the
dance they climbed
the porch post to
the roof, crawled in
through the window
and went to bed.
In the days when our
Dad was young, Horse
Power, HP, meant
just that. Horses
pulled the farm
machines, powered
the equipment on the
farm and were used
for transportation.
In Dad’s own words:
"Old man Price
(Fredrick Preuss,
Sr.) had a hexal
machine powered by a
four horse sweep. Pa
(Herman, Sr.) bought
a horse powered
sweep that was built
for either 4 or 6
teams of horses
depending on the
machine it was being
used on. That sweep
could drive
machinery as large
as a threshing
machine. The Molle
brothers had drag
saw and later on a
circle saw for
cutting fire wood.
Using Pa’s (Herman,
Sr.) sweep and the
Molle brothers saw,
they worked together
to cut trees into
firewood used for
cooking and heating.
The drag saw used a
back and forth
motion and there was
a wooden peg on the
saw where you could
bear down to make it
cut faster."
In 1900 Herman and
his cousin Fred
Price went to North
Dakota to work the
grain harvest. They
took the train to
Cooperstown, ND.
There they met a Mr.
Dorthy who was
hiring workers to
harvest his grain.
They hired out to
Mr. Dorthy and in
the afternoon they
were taken by him
with horse and wagon
to Colgate where he
farmed 17 quarter
sections. Their work
day was 6:00 A.M. to
7:00 P.M. and earned
$2.50/day for
shocking grain and
$3.00/day for
threshing. The
following year
Herman and Fred
worked for the
Delrimple Brothers
who had a 35,000
acre farm at
Casselton, North
Dakota. All the work
was done with
horses.
Dad spent one winter
working with Johnny
Johnson by the
Popple River south
of Riplinger sawing
down Hemlock Trees
and cutting them
into logs. Dad was a
master with the
cross cut saw and
the double bit axe.
With the axe he
could cut a deep
large chip or a thin
slice (leicht
schnitte). He said
you have to hit
where you look.
About the only thing
he did not do with
the axe was shave;
although his axes
were always sharp
enough so that he
could have but why
would he when he had
his trusty straight
razor. The use of a
straight razor
requires having a
razor strop and
because he had good
sons, Dad only used
it to strop his
razor. As a youngesr
he learned to use
the scythe and
mastered that skill too. We much
not forget the
pocket knife, to Dad
the most important
cutting tool. He
preferred two blades
and a leather punch.
Dad’s first task
each morning was
with his pocket
knife to whittle
some wood shavings
and start a fire in
the kitchen stove.
Typical was a Sunday
when Dad’s brother
Louie and family
visited and Louie
and Dad sitting in
the sun whittling
and talking and
spitting tobacco
juice. Dad chewed
Plow Boy (25
cents/half lb. pkg.)
and Louie used
Copenhagen Snuff (10
cents/box). When in
the house Dad smoked
Plow Boy tobacco in
his corn cob pipe.
Dad carried his
pocket knife every
where he went except
to his grave. When
Dad’s brother Albert
died his widow Mary
gave Dad Albert’s
pocket knife. When
Dad died the knife
was passed to
Albert’s son, Albert
Jr. (Sonny).
When young men, Dad
and his brother
Henry each owned a
bicycle. In those
days bicycles did
not have coaster
brakes. This is a
tale Dad told often.
It was a deep dark
night and he and his
brother Henry were
riding their
bicycles home from a
dance. A neighbor
did not fence his
pigs and they were
in the road. In the
dark of night Dad
and Henry ran into
the pigs which
resulted in their
flying over the
handle bars and into
the dirt. In those
days the young men
rode horses, no
saddle, for
transportation. Papa
also drove a horse
and cutter or top
buggy with which he
traveled about for
recreation, dances
and courting. The
horse Dad drove was
named Queen. He
referred to Queen
as his sparkling
(courting) horse.
Driving Queen, he
courted our Mom for
about a year and
after they married,
they continued to
drive that horse for
many years. Papa
said that a good
horse could cover 10
miles in an hour.
With an ordinary
horse the trip to
Loyal took 1 hour to
1 hour 15 minutes.
A new Church was
built to serve the
community along the
township line
between Grove Grove
and Beaver Township
on a plot of land on
the south west
corner of the Fred
Molle farm. The new
church, St. Luke’s
Lutheran Church, was
dedicated in 1912.
On the 26th of
March, 1913, Herman
Hardrath Jr. and
Elsa Lange were the
first to be married
in the church. The
reception for the
wedding was held in
the log house on the
Lange farm and the
wedding dance was
held in the Lange’s
granary. Dad went to
Atwood to Joe
Kraut’s Saloon and
bought the beer and
pop for the
reception and dance.
In 1963, Mom and Dad
were the first
couple to celebrate
their 50th Wedding
Anniversary at St.
Luke’s Lutheran
Church. After the
reception and dinner
at the church, Mom
and Dad held an open
house at their home.
Dad bought the beer
and pop for the open
house at the tavern
in Atwood, the same
saloon where he
bought the beverages
for his wedding.
The new bride set up
house keeping 2
miles south of her
parents on the farm
of the new groom.
The 120 acre farm
that Mom and Dad
called home for 40
years was platted
1st of August 1867
when the U. S.
General Land Office
granted Bounty Land
in the amount of 120
acres to Elijah
Grove, a Private in
Captain Wilson’s
Company,
Massachusetts
Militia, War of
1812. The document
is signed by Andrew
Johnson, President
of The United States
of America.
Subsequent owner
Louis and Anna Brecker Molle in
June of 1892
purchased the 120
acres and in 1903
bought an additional
40 acres. In 1909
Louis and Anna Molle
moved to
Saskatchewan,
Canada. Anna’s
sister Mary and her
husband Adolph Molle
rented the farm for
1 year. On March 22,
1910 Louis and Anna
sold the farm to
their nephews Herman
Jr. and Henry
Hardrath. A short
time later the
Hardrath Brothers
sold to Dave Mandel
the 40 acres that
Louis had added to
the original 120.
When Herman Jr.
married in 1913 he
purchased Henry’s
interest in the
farm. In 1913 the
road coming from the
east ended at the
driveway to the farm
yard and to the west
of the farm was
thousands of acres
with only logging
roads and few in any
settlers. In 1941
Herman Jr. and Elsa
purchased a second
farm, the 160 acre
Jim Vandehey farm
located 1 mile north
of their home farm.
In 1949 son Harold
and his new bride
Dorthaleen Edwards
purchased the 120
acre "Home Place"
from Mom and Dad.
Harold’s son Glen
became the next
owner and is the
current owner. Thus
is was a "Century
Farm" in 1992. When
Harold and
Dorthaleen took
possession of the
farm in 1949 Herman
and Elsa moved 1
miles north to their
other farm. The
changes to the
farmstead of the 120
acre "Home Place"
during the time Mom
and Dad lived there
was building a hay
barn and in 1928 a
new house. Events
that decidedly
affected their way
of life was the
advent of the
automobile, REA and
the tractor. The
automobile not only
gave Mom and Dad
mobility but it
changed their
farming practices
from growing and
selling grain and
hay and breeding and
selling horses to
developing a herd of
milk cows and
selling milk to the
cheese factory. The
REA in the late 30’s
brought electricity
and the telephone to
the farm and enabled
them to modernize
their farming
practices. The
convenience of
electricity made
farm life better and
more productive. HP,
horse power, was
just that on the
farm until 1938 when
Dad bought a John
Deere "H" tractor.
Dad usually had 5 or
6 horses which
included Betty and
Bell. Bell was a
branded western
buckskin bronco that
not only worked as a
draft horse but was
a good saddle horse.
Betty was a pony
that we drove and
rode. When Dad got
the tractor he cut
back to 3 horses and
added three more
cows to the herd. At
the end of the end
of WWII Dad bought a
John Deere "A" and
now with two
tractors it was not
long before he had
no horses. The
remaining horse
stalls were replaced
with cow stalls.
Papa liked horses,
he enjoyed working
and being around
horses and in deep
down inside he was a
horse man to his
dying day. This same
time frame saw the
advent of the small
combine for
harvesting grain and
the end of the
threshing crew. The
chopper ended the
need for the silo
filling crew. The
depletion of the farm
wood lot and the
introduction to
bottle gas for
cooking and heating
oil for heating the
home ended the wood
sawing crew. Farmers
had exchanged work,
you help me, and
I’ll help you. The
long standing
tradition that
brought neighbors
together was now
ending.
A 1913 Scenario; The
new bride decided in
the late afternoon
to prepare Jello-O
for supper.
Directions: Stir
into one cup of
boiling water. She
went to the wood
box, took out sticks
of wood and added
them to the fire in
the cook stove to
boil water. Checking
the tea kettle, it
was nearly empty and
in going to the
water pail, it was
empty. The new bride
put on her coat,
went to the well,
pumped a pail of
water and carried it
into the house. With
the dipper she
filled the tea
kettle and put it on
the stove to boil.
After stirring the
Jell-O into a cup of
boiling water, in
order to get the
mixture to congeal
for supper, the new
bride placed the
dish of gelatin in a
pan of snow. Water
for cooking and
drinking was carried
into the house in a
pail filled at the
well. Water for
washing, bathing and
cleaning came from
the pump at the
kitchen sink, the
pump drawing the
water from the
cistern in the
basement. Providing
a good household for
the farm wife was an
arduous task. Today
in 2006, when anyone
turns on a water
faucet and allows
the water to run
needlessly, you can
conclude that they
never had to carry
water from the well.
And do you suppose
they have any idea
what it means to
"Hang clothes on a
cloths line in the
winter and have the
cloths freeze
stiff."?
During the first
summer Mom and Dad
were married, they
received a circular
in the mail
advertising a circus
that was coming to
Owen. Admission for
the husband was 50
cents and wife got
in free. A quick
check of their ready
cash amounted to
exactly 50 cents.
When circus day
came, they went. One
of the first people
they met at the
circus was a
neighbor who owned
them $20. The
neighbor told Mom
and Dad that he had
raised some money
and handed them a
$20 bill. With their
new found prosperity
they had a great day
at the circus.
Born to Elsa and
Herman Hardrath Jr.
on 17 April 1914 was
Edythe; 9 November
1915 - Harold; 3
September 1917 -
Howard; 24 September
1919 - Harvey and 7
June 1924 - Halbert.
All were born in the
old house on the
farm. On the 16th of
June, 1933, Edythe
gave birth to son
Gilbert Jr.
(Gibbie), Mom and
Dad’s first
grandchild. For
about 15 years
Gibbie was their
only grandchild and
was our pride and
joy. The other 7
grandchildren that
followed are Anita,
Luann, Sue, Sarah,
Lori, Glen and Kim.
An often told story - During the first
winter of their
marriage Mom and Dad
went to a dance in
Riplinger with the
horse and cutter.
They took the
logging road along
the river because it
was shorter and also
warmer as there was
a thick balsam woods
along the river to
shield against the
wind. The horse got
in the wrong track
and the cutter hit a
stump and tipped
over spilling Mom
and Dad into the
snow. They up
righted the cutter,
bushed off the snow
and continued on to
the dance. The next
morning at the
breakfast table
Henry, Dad’s brother
who was living with
them; was laughing
to himself. Mom
asked Henry what he
was laughing about.
Henry told them last
night when he and
Mabel (Henry was
courting Mabel
Raeck) were on their
way to the dance in
Riplinger, they took
the logging road.
The horse got in the
wrong track and the
cutter hit a stump
and dumped them in
the snow. Mom and
Dad chuckled and
told Henry that they
had tipped over on
the same stump. For
Mom and Dad, an
important accessory
in the cutter was
the sorrel horse
hide robe with the
hair and a short
section of the mane.
It was lined with a
dark green fabric
and bound with a
fringe. The robe,
about 6 feet square,
was used to cover
the legs and feet.
Winter gear for Dad
when he was working
with the horses and
sleigh was a dog
skin fur coat with a
high fur collar and
fur mittens. Instead
of buttons the coat
had round wooden
rods about ¾ of an
inch thick and 2
inches that fastened
into a cord loop.
Dancing for Mom and
Dad was a fun time
for them. In those
days "baby sitters"
were unheard of so
going to a dance was
a family affair. The
common period dances
were the Schotish,
Polka, Waltz,
Circle Two Step,
Quadrille, and
Square Dance. Mom
and Dad could dance
all of them. They
were good dancers, so
smooth and they
enjoyed each other.
A couple of the
bands they enjoyed
that were not local
but came to the area
dance halls were
"Whoopee John Wilfahrt" and
"Lawrence Duchow and
his Red Raven
Orchestra". As
written above, going
to dances was a
family affair so it
was only natural
that we learned to
dance the old period
dances. Another joy
for Mom and Dad was
to play Pinochle and
Sheep Head (Schafe
Koph) and other
cards games. When
ever neighbors came
to visit the table
was cleared, cards
were brought out and
the game began.
During the evening
of chatter and cards
they sipped a beer
or a glass of home
made wine. When the
games were over for
the night, a lunch
was served.
We would like to
remind you that the
status of women
today is quit
different from what
it was for our
mother. It is
important to
remember that Elsa
Hardrath was 28
years old and had
been married seven
years before she was
given the right to
vote. Woodrow Wilson
was President. It is
safe to say that she
and Dad voted for
and helped to elect
Franklin Delano
Roosevelt to be the
32nd President of
the United States
and then went on to
vote for his
re-election 3 more
times. Mom and Dad
followed local,
state and national
politics and
probably never
missed a
presidential
election.
Christmas was a big
deal in our
household.
Butchering a cow and
2 or 3 hogs in early
December provided
the holiday with
smoked sausage, blut
wurst, bacon, ham,
fresh lard and fresh
beef and pork. About
mid December Mom’s
sister Emma and her
husband Elmer "Yank"
Witt came over to
our house for
several days of
cooking candy and
baking cookies and
fruit cake. Emma and
Mom were outstanding
cooks. They had the
skill and patients
to make fancy
pastries and
candies. Dad and
Yank helped in
handling the hot
heavy kettles and
pans and wrapping
the caramel candies
and sampling the
good stuff. Dad went
down to the river to
cut our Christmas
tree. The tree was
kept outside and
when we children
went to bed on
Christmas Eve it was
still outside. On
Christmas morning
when we got up the
tree was in the
living room,
decorated and with
presents underneath.
Santa decorated our
tree. Along with the
favorite glass
ornaments and balls
were real wax
candles that under
the supervision of
Mom or Dad we were
allowed to light.
Decoration Day, the
last Monday in May,
was a big deal.
Hopefully the lilacs
were blooming so
that bouquets could
be cut and taken to
the cemetery and
placed on the graves
of the deceased
loved ones. July 4th
was a big deal.
Either the family
got together or
there was a
neighborhood
gathering; food,
fireworks, pop and
beer. Birthdays were
acknowledged but
there was no special
dinner or cake and
no receiving of
presents.
Edison invented the
phonograph and in
1918 Mom and Dad
bought a disc
phonograph made by
the Edison Company,
the records being
about ¼ inch thick.
Songs of the era
were, "I’ll Be With
You In Apple Blossom
Time", "Yes, We Have
No Bananas" and
several written
about women such as
"Sweet Lorraine",
"Sweet Sue",
"Honey", "Maggie"
and "Louise". The
novelty song was
also a part of the
record library. One
in our library was
"Items From The
Paper of Your Old
Home Town". One of
verses went like
this:
Oh they talked about
the weather and they
talk about the
crops; All the
gossip at the barber
shops. They got a
brand new baby at
the home of Hiram
Brown; Items from
the paper of your
old home town.
Going to Owen to
Moving Picture Show
was a bid deal for
Mom and Dad and the
family. It was there
we saw the early
silent films. The
piano, up front and
to the left of the
screen, was played
during the movie by
a woman. Most of the
floors in the
theaters were flat
and so that children
could see, they sat
in the front rows.
"Tarzan of the
Apes", filmed in
1918 was one of the
early silent moving
picture shows the
family went to. In
Owen the family saw
and listened to
their first movie
with sound, the Vita
Phone Impression of
the "Jazz Singer"
staring Al Jolson.
Howard remembers the
family going to the
Adler Theater in
Marshfield to see a
sound movie, one of
the first true
talking pictures.
Howard remembers
"Tip Toe Through the
Tulips" was played
and sung in the
movie but does not
remember the name of
the movie. In the
early 1930’s "Trader
Horn" was an
exciting movie
because most of the
footage was filmed
in Africa. October
5, 1932 our sister
Edythe married
Gilbert Wiedenhoeft
and she andGib
made their home in
Colby. The New Colby
Theater with show
times at 7:00 and
9:00 was now the
theater we went to.
We visited Gib and
Edythe and went to
the 9 o’clock movie
or we went to the 7
o’clock movie and
then went to visit
Edythe and Gib. If
their favorite stars
were headlined in a
movie Mom and Dad
went to see it.
Shirley Temple,
Myrna Loy and
William Powell as
Nick and Nora
Charles in the Thin
Man series, Wallace
Berry when he was
teamed with Marie
Dressler or Marjorie
Main and Joey Brown
for starters. They
liked Fred Astair.
Papa said he could
really dance. They
were fascinated by
the Walt Disney
production of the
animated featured
cartoon movie "Snow
White and the Seven
Dwarfs". They liked
"The Grapes of
Wrath" and Charlie
Chaplin in "Modern
Times" because the
movies dealt with
political issues. We
went to the New
Adler in Marshfield
to see "The Grapes
of Wrath". Westerns
were not their first
choice.
March of 1925 our
brother Harvey was
ill with pain in the
abdominal area. It
was decided that
Harvey needed to see
a doctor so Dad
hitched a horse to
the cutter and took
Harvey to Colby to
the doctor. The
doctor said it was
appendicitis and
that Harvey needed
to go to a hospital.
Dad brought Harvey
home and the next
morning took him
with by horse and
cutter to Atwood
where he and Harvey
caught the Soo Line
train to Chippewa
Falls. The doctor at
St. Joseph’s
Hospital determined
that Harvey had a
ruptured appendix.
The next day, 4
March 1925 at 11:00
a.m., he died of
general peritonitis.
Accompanied by Dad,
Harvey’s body was
returned to Owen by
the Soo Line RR. The
funeral was held in
the house on the
farm. The undertaker
from Loyal carried
the casket bearing
Harvey’s body from
the house to the
Beaver Cemetery in a
horse drawn hearse.
Through all of this
misfortune, sitting
in Dad’s garage was
a 1924 Chevrolet
that Mom and Dad
purchased new. There
was no snow removal
program and the
roads were drifted
deep with snow. The
new car was
useless. Harold,
Howard and Bud
remember all to well
the winter months
with deep snow in
the road. We were
isolated. Traveling
by horse and sleigh
or cutter across
clean white snow
might seem to be
joyous and romantic
but give us the
snowplow and a
heated automobile
with a set of tire
chains and a shovel
in the trunk. Come
spring, the snow
melted and frosted
started going out of
the ground but our
problems were not
over. The roads
became a sea of mud.
They dried to a
crust on top but
underneath the road
bed was soft and
spongy. In some
places the road bed
under the crust was
fluid and became
what was called
sinkholes. In those
areas the car might
break through the
crust and sink in to
the axles and you
were stuck. There
was a bad sink hole
in the County Road
where it passed our
Grandfather Lange’s
farm. Sometimes the
county bridged the
sink hole with two
wooden plank troughs
for the car wheels
to run in. Some
years it was June
before the roads
became firm and
hard.
Another heart ache
for the family was
the death of sister
Edythe. She died 10
February 1958 at the
age of 43 from a
heart ailment for
which she underwent
surgery in
Minneapolis a year
earlier. For both
Harvey and Edythe,
if their illness had
occurred twenty five
years later in their
lives, treatment
would have been
routine with near
certain recovery.
The plot of land
that is now the
Beaver Cemetery and
maintained by the
Beaver Cemetery
Association was
originally the site
of a Methodist
Church and its
Cemetery. The Church
was on the south
side of the plot.
The Cemetery
Association is made
up of people who
have family members
buried there. Harold
remembers that when
he was about 13
(1928) members of
the Association
donated time and
labor to improve the
cemetery. The
grounds were leveled
and seeded, the road
was added and the
perimeter fence was
built. Harold helped
build the fence.
While working on the
cemetery Papa went
to the woods and dug
up a pine tree that
was a couple feet
high and planted it
on the south side of
the plot he and Mom
owned. He said that
he wanted shade over
his final resting
place. The plot had
4 burial spaces, one
of them at that time
occupied by Harvey.
December 2, 1934
Mom’s sister, Emma
died and was buried
in the plot to the
right of Harvey.
Typically the family
gathered in the
living room at night
with Mom near the
light seated in her
rocker. The best
light was from the
Aladdin Lamp that
used kerosene. Their
sales slogan was,
"Save your dear old
mother’s eyes, buy
her an Aladdin
Lamp." Mom used this
time to patch, darn
and sew, knit woolen
stockings and
mittens, crochet,
embroidery and other
needle work. This
was particularly
true after they got
a radio. About 1933
they bought a
console model Magnovox radio that
was powered by a 6
volt wet cell
battery (car
battery) plus "B"
dry cell batteries
and a "C" dry cell
battery. When FDR
broadcast his
Fireside Chats, you
can be sure that
family was gathered
around the radio
listening to his
every word. During
the early years of
Hitler when he was
rising to power Mom
and Dad were
listening to the
radio to a speech he
had made. They were
very disturbed by
his message. Hitler
was trying to arouse
and rally the people
to whom he was
speaking and Dad
translated a part of
his speech. Hilter
asked the crowd, do
you want cannons or
butter and they
replied cannons.
Being of German
descent, Mom and Dad
could not understand
why German people
would have an
attitude like that.
Little did they know
at that time that
Harold would spend 5
years and Howard 4
years in the Army
that defeated
Germany in WWII.
Radio was another
link reaching
outside of Clark
County and Wisconsin
for information and
entertainment. WLS,
Chicago’s broadcast
of the Saturday
Night Barn Dance
featured the likes
of singing husband
and wife duo of Lula
Belle and Skyland
Scottie and the
Hosier Hot Shots, a
novelty band. You
would hear the words
"Are you ready
Hezzie" and Hezzie
who played the
washboard would give
the down beat and
the Hoosier Hot
Shots filled the air
waves with their
music. In the fall
on Sunday afternoon
the Flying Red Horse
(Mobil Oil)
sponsored the play
by play broadcast of
Green Bay Packers
football. Week days
there were soap
operas like Ma
Perkins sponsored by
Oxydol soap powder
and "As the World
Turns" and "The
Guiding Light". From
11:00 - 12:00 a.m.
daily, WTMJ,
Milwaukee broadcast
the Grenadiers, an
orchestra that
played German folk
music. Should we
skip those hogs? At
noon, WCCO,
Minneapolis
broadcast the news
and the market
report which
included the price
of livestock selling
at the stock yards
in South St. Paul.
Friday was a big day
because at 4:00 p.m.
the price per pound
of cheese for the
coming week was
broadcast on radio.
The Shadow Knows,
Lux Radio Theater,
Major Bowes, Jack
Benny and Fibber
Magee and Molly is a
sample on week night
radio. For the
younger set like us,
in the time slot
from 10:00 p.m. to
midnight some clear
channel stations did
remote broadcasts
from ballrooms that
headlined Big Bands.
Noteworthy in the
east was Frank
Daly’s Meadow Brook
in Cedar Grove, New
Jersey where east
coast bands such as
Les Brown and His
Band of Renown were
head liners. In the
mid-west it was WGN
doing remote
broadcasts from the
Aragon Ballroom on
Chicago’s north side
and the Trianon
Ballroom on the
south side. Head
lining were the
bands of Dick
Jurgens and Eddie
Howard. Needless to
say, the Big Band
Sound was not toe
tapping music for
our parents and
their set, just as
the music that our
children enjoyed was
not toe tapping
music for our set.
The next radio was a
table model Zenith
powered by a 6 volt
wet cell battery
that was placed in
the basement of the
house. The battery
was charged by a
Wind Charger, a wind
driven generator on
a tower on the roof
of the wood shed.
Wires ran from the
Wind Charger to the
battery in the
basement. Free wind
provided free
electricity to power
our radio. The last
15 years of their
lives Mom and Dad
enjoyed black and
white TV and with
the new
entertainment media
in their household
came the same old
daytime soap operas
but now with
picture.
It is important to
mention the "Great
Depression" in so
far that with the
price of farm
products being so
low, the farm was
producing very
little money. In
addition to the low
prices for farm
products, Clark
County suffered from
a server drought.
Mom and Dad were not
directly affected by
the crash of the
stock market, Black
Tuesday 24 October
1929, as they did
not own stock. They
were however deeply
affected by the
Great Depression of
the early 30’s. The
price of farm
produced dropped to
a level whereby
there was little
cash coming in from
the farming
operation. Milk was
90cents/100 lbs,
hogs 3 cents/pound
and eggs 18
cent/dozen. To add
to the problem was
the drought that
gripped Clark
County. Unable to
grow enough hay,
grain and corn to
feed the livestock
they normally kept,
the farmers were
either forced to
sell some of their
cattle, buy feed or
rent additional
land. Dad chose to
rent land and buy
hay. Added to the
woes of the
depression and
drought was an
infestation of
grasshoppers in the
late summer. The
grain was ripe and
not affected but the
corn and second crop
of hay came under
attack. A government
agency gave the
farmers a poison
bait that they
broadcast over their
fields to control
the grasshoppers.
Mom and Dad were
good managers and
lived on a close
budget, they made
every penny count.
Other than the fact
that there was
little money for
entertainment, we
had a new warm
house, adequate
clothing and plenty
of good food to eat.
Mom and Dad always
had a big garden and
in spite of the
drought it produced
a bountiful harvest
because Howard made
some wood troughs to
carry water from the
windmill to the
garden. With free
wind and free water
he irrigated the
garden. In spring
rhubarb from the
garden meant pie. We
had a strawberry
bed, red raspberry
patch and a big
orchard that had 4
varieties of apples,
gooseberry bushes,
red current bushes
and white current
bushes. Mom and Dad
picked wild
blackberries,
blueberries, thorn
apples, chock
cherries,
elderberries and
hazel nuts and what
ever mother nature
provided that was
edible. You have not
lived until you have
tasted Mom’s
gooseberry pie or
her thorn apple
jelly or Dads red
current wine or his
elderberry wine. Mom
took us boys with
her to the railroad
track where it
crossed her dad’s
farm. There was a
deep cut through a
hill where we picked
wild strawberries
that grew on the
banks of the cut. It
takes a very
disciplined person
to be a good wild
berry picker. The
tendency is one
berry in the pail
and 5 berries in the
mouth. To be a good
wild berry picker all
the berries went in
the pail and none in
the mouth. The
grocer sold fruits
in season such as
peaches, pears and
cherries. For meat
there was the cow,
hog and chicken. The
flour for bread and
other baking come in
a 49 pound bag for
90 cents. The bag
was made of cotton
prints that could be
used for dish towels
and garments. Dad
owned the equipment
for collecting and
cooking maple sap.
Spigots to put in
the tree and the
pails to hang on the
spigot to catch the
sap and a pan under
which a fire was
built to cook the
sap into maple
syrup. The problem was that he had no
maple trees on his
farm. Charley and
Hilda Witt lived
across the road and
had a fine grove of
maple trees. Dad and
Charley got together
and the Witts and
the Hardraths had
maple syrup for
their pancakes.
By the mid 30’s farm
prices were getting
better and in 1938
Mom, Dad, his
brother Louis and
wife Lula planed the
great adventure of
visiting Louis
Molle. As you may
remember in 1909
their Uncle Louis
and Aunt Anna Molle
moved from Green
Grove to Watson,
Saskatchewan,
Canada. Anna died in
1933. Four people
who grew up with the
horse and top buggy
and at the time had
not been outside of
the State of
Wisconsin in an
automobile were
planning this 2000+
mile trip to Canada
on roads some of
which were paved,
others gravel and
even dirt. What an
adventure and what a
conversation piece
it was for the
neighborhood. They
would drive the 1936
Chevrolet Deluxe
that Mom and Dad
owned. While the
four parents were
away on their trip,
the children of Lula
and Louis were
responsible for the
operation of their
farm and we were
responsible for our
farm. A story Louis
and Dad enjoyed
telling happened
when they were going
through customs to
enter Canada. Louis
was driving, Dad was
in the front
passenger seat and
Lula and Mom were in
the back seat. Louis
rolled down the
window and the
customs agent told
him that he needed
to inspect the car
for valuables. The
customs agent looked
in the back seat
where Lula and Mom
were sitting and
said, "Nothing of
value back there."
They went to Watson,
visited Uncle Louis Molle and their
cousins. On June 6
they were in
Nipawin, Sask.
visiting Cousin
Clara and her
husband Paul Becker
who were farming
there. Nipawin was
as far north as you
could go in that
area of Canada in
1938.
As dairy farmers
know, cows are
milked twice daily
including Saturday
and Sunday and so it
was for Mom and Dad
until Harold was
discharged from the
Army in late 1945.
They made a deal
with Harold whereby
he would live at
home and take over
the operation of the
farm. From then on
life would be easier
and more relaxed for
our parents. As
written earlier,
when Harold married
Dorthaleen Edwards,
they occupied the
"Old Home Place" and
Mom and Dad moved to
their other farm one
mile north where for
the next 20+ years
they would live in
semi retirement in
the community where
they had spent their
entire life. In the
80+ year life span
of Mom and Dad
invention,
discovery,
exploration,
politics and
progress brought new
dimensions to their
lives and words and
phrases such as:
Grain Binder, RFD,
Montgomery Ward Mail
Order Catalogue,
Jell-O, Airplane,
Model T Ford, WWI,
Gasoline Station,
19th Amendment, NBC
& CBS, Zipper,
Social Security,
Star Spangle Banner,
Adhesive Tape,
Penicillin, Atom
Bomb, Rosie and
Riveter, Pearl
Harbor, Hula Hoop,
Korea, Allen Shepard
(1st American in
Space), and JFK
Assassinated.
The first automobile
Mom and Dad bought
was a 1917 Overland
Touring Car with
side curtains. The
car had a 4 cylinder
engine and was made
by Willys Overland
in Toledo, Ohio. The
base price was $795.
The last car they
bought was a 1966
Chevrolet 4 door
Impala. In between
they owned a 1924
Chevrolet, 1927
Cherolet, 1936
Chevrolet, 1941
Chevrolet, 1947
Chevrolet, 1949
Chevrolet, and a
1951 Chevrolet. All
of the Chevrolets
were purchased from
Otto Stock, the
owner of the
Chevrolet Agency in
Loyal.
Dad died the 9th of
May 1970 in Clark
County, Wisconsin
eleven days before
his 84th birthday.
He was buried in the
Beaver Cemetery,
Beaver Township,
Clark County,
Wisconsin 13 May
1970 in the family
plot shaded by a 40
foot tall pine tree.
Richard Nixon was
President.
Mom died the 3rd of
January 1975 in
Atlanta, Fulton
County, Georgia at
age 82 years, 6
months and 7 days.
She was buried in
the Beaver Cemetery,
Beaver Township,
Clark County,
Wisconsin in the
family plot beneath
a 40 foot tall pine
tree. Gerald Ford
was President. Mom
was a saver and
thanks to her we
have letters,
pictures, documents
and clippings that
tell us our family
history.
The relationship
between Mom and Dad
was special. They
could discuss matters
and make decisions
in an orderly
manner. Never did
they raise their
voices toward each
other in anger.
Throughout this
dissertation, memory
had been of material
things such as food,
cars, radio, horses
etc. More important
was the undying love
they gave us. Mom
and Dad, thank you
for a loving home.
The places, people,
events and dates are
we remember them. -
Bud Hardrath -
January 2006 © Every submission is protected by the Digital Millennium Copyright Act
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----Source:
Hardrath,
Harold, Howard, and
Halbert "Bud" (2005);
transcribed by Crystal Wendt
Surnames: Hardrath,
Lange, Harrison,
Kutz, Cleveland,
Molle, Bahn,
Boettcher, Klessig,
Fritz, Bright,
Caves, Sprague,
Bishton, Johnson,
Preuss, Ford, Nixon,
Edwards, Becker,
Witt, Molle, Bowes,
Benny, Magee, Brown,
Jurgens, Howard,
Hitler, Temple, Loy,
Powell, Berry,
Dressler, Main,
Astair, Chaplin,
Edison, Jolson,
Wilfahrt, Duchow,
Roosevelt, Raeck,
Wiedenhoeft,
Vandehey, Kraut
and supported by your generous donations.