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Bennett Family Donates Hitching Post

Bennett Family Donates Hitching Post

Hitching PostDedicated during the 125th Anniversary of Talmage celebration in September, the hitching post was donated by Marvin, Keith and Bob Bennett, sons of Virgil and Ruth Bennett, with a memorial plaque honoring their parents. It came from the Abilene to find its permanent home here in front of the museum.

“ I remember that the hitching post was brought from Abilene about 1920 by grandfather G.M. Bennett when he bought the farm in Cheever Twp. where Anna Hornecker (married name) had previously lived – her father homesteaded there in approximately 1870,” said Keith Bennett, eldest son of Virgil and Ruth Bennett. The farm is now owned by Darin Bebemeyer.

“In searching for the maker of the hitching post another one looking like an identical twin was found in Abilene,” Bennett said. “Probably, several were cast in early 1900’s, most likely in Abilene. My father Virgil thought Buckeye street may have been lined by several such posts before streets became auto traffic only. He was about 5 years old in 1920 when the family moved from Abilene to the farm. The last horse tied to this post, before being donated to Talmage Museum was on our farm west of Salina. Perhaps there have been a horse or two since? I think it weighs about 500 pounds.”

 

125th Anniversary Slide Show

125th Anniversary Slide Show

Click on any of the images to enlarge and view slideshow.

Talmage Celebrates 125th Anniversary

Talmage Celebrates 125th Anniversary

Click on any of the images to enlarge and view slideshow.

Veterans’ Histories Recorded at Museum

Veterans

Veterans were honored at the Talmage Historical Society Museum May 27, 2012.

World War II touched many lives in Talmage and surrounding communities, and six veterans of that war and others unable to attend were honored Sunday, May 27, 2012, at the Talmage Historical Society museum.

“We had a great group of close to 80 people who came to help us honor our veterans,” said Talmage Historical Society Director Verl Coup. “There were a lot of memories shared and history that might have been lost is now preserved in the museum.”

Coup has close to 50 veterans’ histories recorded and seven more names were recently given to him to research.

“I started receiving veterans pictures at the museum, began talking to them, and started collecting their stories as a means to preserve history,” Coup said.

One visitor, who knows the time and effort it takes to initiate and record those interviews, was especially impressed with the community attendance and participation.

“I was really impressed with how the community turned out to honor and visit with the veterans, and I felt like people really learned a lot,” said Bill DeArmond, a writer with an interest in WWII and who is helping with the Dickinson County WWII Writing Project. “I’d like to see more communities honor their veterans. It was a really nice afternoon.”

Verl Coup read the service records of the six living veterans in attendance: C. Wayne Banks, Wichita; Curtis D. Fulton, Salina; Marvin Ledy, Abilene; Lynn Meehan, Abilene; Joyce W. Romberger, Abilene; and Ralph W. Snyder, Abilene.

C. Wayne Banks, US Navy, 1943-46, joined the navy on May 19, 1943. He was at Okinawa when the atom bomb was dropped and at Hiroshima where he saw the devastation.

Curtis Fulton, US Naval Air Corp, 1942-43, joined in 1942 and received his pilot’s license in Lindsborg. He received more flight training in Liberty, Mo., and St. Louis, Mo.

Marvin Ledy, US Army, 738th Battalion, 1943-45, was sent to Ft. Knox for training in radio where he learned morse code.

Lynn Meehan, US Army, 1944-46, was 1 of 42 Dickinson County men drafted in 1942. He was on board a ship where the Peace Agreement was signed and was part of Occupation Forces inside Japan for a year.

JW Romberger, US Army, 1942-45, was drafted in 1942 and was trained in the motor pool as a truck driver and regularly made 500 mile trips to deliver troops and supplies.

Ralph Snyder, Army Air Corp,1942-65, was part of 487th Bomb Group and retired at rank of Lt. Colonel.

Three veterans unable to attend were Melvin L. Brillhart, Holden, Missouri; Dena Huitt, Kalamazoo, Michigan; and Clara Houtz Lawson, Hebron, Nebraska.

An honor roll of deceased veterans was read: Herb Banks, US Army; George Barclay, US Army; Ivan Book; Walter Book, US Army; Lowell Dean Britt, US Navy; Kenneth Ray Coup, US Navy; Bruce H. Freeman, US Navy; Mike Funston; Markwood D. Heck, US Army; William H. Lake, US Army Air Corp; Joe Laird, US Army; John McVicker, US Army; Virgil H. Marsteller, US Army; Calvin Charles Matteson, US Army; Vernon Dale Noel, US Air Force; Paul R. Noel, US Navy; Raymond E. Noel, US Army; Stanley Scripter, US Army; Oliver Simpson, US Navy; Estel H. Snyder, US Army; Orland Arlie Stewart, US Navy; Abram E. Stoner, Jr., US Navy; George Thompson, US Army; Phillip Wallace, US Marines; Delmar E. Watt, US Navy.

Historical Marker Dedicated for Glenwood School

Glenwood School

A marker for Glenwood School can be found at the intersection of Highway 18 and Gulf Road. The school closed in 1948.

A former teacher, nine students and their friends and family gathered June 10 to celebrate the dedication of a historical marker for Glendwood School District #95, one of the prairie schools attended by Dickinson County students from 1879 until it closed in 1948. The marker was placed at the southeast corner of Highway 18 and Gulf Road intersection.

Frances Hartenstein Burdick taught sixth grade at Glenwood when she 17 and 18 years of age during the 1945-46 school year.

“Although I wasn’t much older than some of my students, it was an exciting year for me and I learned a lot,” Burdick said, “including how to control the Bowser boys, who one day went rabbit hunting during school and didn’t return. We had quite a confrontation. After that they knew who was boss.”

Burdick said she sometimes drove a Model A to school, made $120 per month, and had to start a fire before 8 a.m. in the wintertime.

Nine former students–Loren Noel, Helen Lambert Fulton, Maridean Simpson Bebermeyer, Mahlon Engle, Mildred Coup Hansen, Leland Garver, Eldon Noel, Jason Zook, and Lola Zook—recalled school days from the early 1900s.

Loren Noel, whose family was instrumental in making the dedication and historical marker possible, attended the school for eight years beginning in 1923. He recalled that the school was originally named Zook School in 1879 until a later name change to Glenwood.

“Earl Engle told me that Zion Church held meetings at Glenwood while they were building their new church,” Noel said.

Helen Lambert Fulton, who later taught at Flora and Union Center schools, was a student and remembers Glenwood as a wonderful school because the teachers allowed them to perform plays for different groups in the county.

Glenwood Students & Teacher Dedicate Marker

Former Glenwood students and a teacher dedicated a historical marker.

“Teacher Glenn Kready wrote a song, Sparking Peggy Jane, and Mahlon Engle and I sang it,” said Fulton, who also remembered teacher Bill Rock splitting out the seat of his pants during a particularly vigorous recess and leaving the students alone while he went home to change his pants.

Fulton was remembered by the boys, according to Loren Noel, because she came to the school for the first time with a short dress when all of the other girls wore dresses four inches below their knees.

“I assure you,” Fulton quipped, “that was the last time I wore a short dress.”

Maridean Simpson Bebermeyer admits to being a bashful little girl, who enjoyed Red Rover and Tag during recess. She, like many other students, remembered walking through big snow drifts to school, although her father took her to school most days, and then she walked home with the Noel sisters.

Some of the students, like Mahlon Engle and Mildred Coup Hansen, were lucky enough to have a pony to ride to school.

“My two sisters rode with me,” Engle said, “and when the pony had his winter fur, there were three marks in his coat where we slid down off his back. Those days were challenging but joyful times.”

Leland Garver remembers Engle stopping by the school to give he and his friends some basketball pointers.

“There was always some devilment going on,” Garver said. “I also remember that Francis Hartenstein was a real pretty teacher with that long dark hair blowing in the wind.”

The basketball pointers must have helped because Eldon Noel, a Glenwood student from 1935-1943, remembers the success of their basketball team and competitions with Chronister and Pleasant Hill Schools.

“The tournaments started on Saturday and the championship game would be late that night,” Noel said. One of the games won was the 1941 Championship title.

Jason Zook, who attended Glenwood along with his siblings, also remembers basketball success, including winning a championship with only four players.

Some of the teachers remembered along with Hartenstein,  Kready and Rock were Mabel Stoffer, Reba Kreider, Georgia Hale, Flo Knisely and Reva Botz.

Glenwood was one of 114 schools (3 made of brick, 8 made of stone, and 103 made of wood) serving 5,503 Dickinson County students, ages 5-21. The average daily attendance of all of the schools was 2,757, as many students were needed to help on the farm and couldn’t attend every day.

By 1959, the number of county schools dropped to 10.

If you attended a one room school in Dickinson County and would like to dedicate a marker, contact Ron Britt, 263-0807, for more information.

In the beginning: Talmage from 1870 to 1900

Mainstreet looking North

Main Street looking North

(Compiled from Juanita Bathurst’s History of Talmage and Helen Dingler’s Past and Present: Towns of Dickinson County.)

Pioneers came to the sparsely settled northwestern Dickinson County area in 1870 and erected crude homes on their claims.

A homesteader, Robert Wilson, asked an Abilene preacher to conduct religious services in his new four-room home and invited his neighbors to the ecclesiastical meetings.

Thomas C. Iliff also came to the area in 1870. He donated land in the southeast corner of his farm in Willowdale Township (Sec. 1-12-1) for the school. Iliff School, District 29, was oftened referred to as Mud Creek School since Mud Creek was nearby.

In January 1873, Iliff was appointed postmaster at Willowdale. It is assumed the mail collection and dispersal point was located in his home or in the W.D. Fulton general store at the northeast corner of present Talmage Road and K-18.

An 1875 Dickinson County map located Willowdale in Buckeye Township, in the southwest corner of Section 6-12-2. (State Board of Agriculture, 4th Annual Report, Page 107.

An early newspaper reported the Mud Creek Methodist Church was founded in 1879 at the Iliff schoolhouse. A parsonage was built on a tract of this man’s land a mile north of the schoolhouse. The pioneers continued to worship in the schoolhouse until a white frame edifice was erected in 1883 on a slope beside the Prairie Dale Cemetery on the north side of the road in Flora Township (Sec. 36-11-1). Prairie Dale Methodist Episcopal Church was the first church in northwestern Dickinson County.

The school, church, and the Fulton’s general store formed the nucleus of the community of Willowdale until the Chicago, Kansas, & Western Railroad (ATSF, now BNSF) was built through here in 1887, when area residents platted the town of Talmage, registered in Dickinson County in January, 1888.

Main St. looking South

Main Street looking South

Talmage, named after a Presbyterian circuit riding preacher Rev. Dewitt Talmage, was the market and supply center for farmers. Families continued to migrate here, and railroad land was available for purchase and government land was obtainable through the Homestead Act of 1862.

Soon after the railroad track was completed, a depot was built. Elmer Carnine and Hoyt Wolfenburger were agents in Talmage during most of the 85 service years of the station, 40 years and 45 years respectively.

W.D. Fulton’s general store was moved to the west side of Main Street (Fair Road) in the fledgling village of Talmage. Several years later the store building was destroyed by fire. Fulton built the first grain elevator here. A horse powered treadmill manipulated the elevator’s internal machinery.

John Fulton, a brother of W.D., was appointed postmaster on December 22, 1887, and he served 12 years. Other longtime postmasters were Jacob Minick, 19 years; Laura Field, 8 years; Clare Knerr, 15 years; and Frank Coup, 20 years.

Belle Springs Creamery Co. built a station here in the early 1890s. Farmers brought their cans of milk to the station to be separated, and the cream was sold to the creamery while the farmers returned home with the skimmed milk. Tom Parrish was a longtime manager, and the Talmage Belle Springs station churned butter for sale to local customers.

A second creamery, the Fairmont Cream Station, managed by William Koelling was located on the east side of Main Street for several years.

When William Bowyer arrived in town in 1891, there were only six houses in Talmage. At that early day, Main Street was the east boundary of the town. Bowyer lived in the village until his death and was a blacksmith for many years.

Prairiedale Cemetery Directory Dedication Brings Memorial Day Visitors

Prairiedale Cemetery, north of Talmage, was the site of a memorial service and directory dedication on Memorial Day, Monday, May 27. More than thirty-five people were present as Talmage Historical Society Director, Verl Coup, presented a dedication speech.

Members of the Lawrence Brunswick American Legion Post 240 Honor Guard of Chapman, Kansas were present to honor the veterans buried at Prairiedale Cemetery.

Refreshments were served at the Talmage Museum following the ceremony.

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