Friday, October 31, 2025

Bit of History -- October 29, 2025

Halloween in 1914 was a lively night for pranksters. Halloween that year was on a Saturday The boys in the town spent both Friday and Saturday rearranging farming equipment, telephone poles and many other things, placing them on Main Street, blocking anyone from traveling the street. “Main street on Sunday morning had the appearance of a back alley and from the amount of stuff piled on the city's main thoroughfare, it is evident that there were some mighty willing workers abroad. Threshing machines, telephone poles, bill boards, out-buildings, chicken coops, etc, all played a prominent part in blocking the street.”

The writer ended with the wry comment: “It was certainly an enjoyable affair-for those who participated.” All that certainly wouldn’t be a lot of fun for anyone who had to clean up.




Friday, October 24, 2025

Bit of History -- October 22, 2025

As area churches host their annual Lord’s Acre dinners and sales, I wondered how the tradition began.  The idea started in 1922 when Rev. Henry M. Melton asked the farmers in his congregation to donate the proceeds of the harvest from one acre of farmland to the church.  Seven farmers agreed.  When the farmers reported that the acres were unaffected by boll weevils that first year, many others began to commit to the project. (Wikipedia, Lord’s Acre Movement, last edited Jan 25, 2024).  The plan was helpful to farmers by giving them a way to tithe during the Depression years.  In 1930, Jim McClure, the head of the Farmer's Federation of Western North Carolina, and Dr. Dumonte Clarke of Asheville, NC developed this idea into the Lord’s Acre Plan as a way for rural churches to raise money and they began spreading the word throughout the country.  

The movement came to Harrison County in 1946 when area Methodist churches, all part of the Harrison County Larger Parish, began holding meetings to talk about how it could be implemented locally. The first sales were held in the fall.  While an instrumental part of the planning, the Ridgeway ME church didn’t advertise their sale in the local papers and there was only a brief mention in the Ridgeway News column in Harrison County Times that the ladies of the church would serve a “Lord’s Acre turkey dinner at city hall on November 8 at noon.  (Harrison County Times, Nov 6, 1947.)   The sale garnered $800 for the Ridgeway church and over $14,000 for the Larger Parish from all the sales combined. (Bethany Republican-Clipper, Oct 31, 1947.)

Dr. Dumonte Clarke came to visit Harrison County in October 1948, speaking at both the Ridgeway and Mt. Moriah Methodist churches.  He used “pictures showing development of rural church work in many parts of the nation.” (Bethany Republican-Clipper, October 20, 1948).  Thus began a church tradition that continues to this day.  






Friday, October 17, 2025

Bit of History -- October 15, 2025

A couple of interesting items from the front page of the Ridgeway Journal dated October 11, 1934:

Many Ridgeway baseball fans rooted for the St. Louis Cardinals in the 1934 World Series as they played against the Detroit Tigers.  The manager of the Palace Theater rigged up loud speakers at the front of the theater and “the play by play announcements by Tom Manning, Graham MeNamee and other broadcasters at the ball parks could be distinctly beard anywhere along the street in the business section.”   The Cards shut out the Tigers in the seventh and final game in Detroit with a score of 11-0. “Now that the annual baseball classic is out of the way ‘business as usual’ is once more the order of the day.”  

Howard Baker and Buster Goodwin of Ridgeway took a two-week trip to Seattle, Washington to assist Fred Tucker with the purchase of three reindeer.  He planned to use them “in advertising features during the yuletide season”, then return them to Seattle for the rest of the winter.  “Mr. Tucker is owner of a show that ‘makes’ the various towns throughout the midwest.  A number of his players are now in Ridgeway, notable among them being a group of Japanese acrobats.”






Friday, October 10, 2025

Bit of History -- October 8, 2025

In 1911, Ridgeway supported not one but two football teams:  the high school team and a town team.  The high school team played their first game of the year against Princeton, winning 5 to 0.  “It was a very disagreeable afternoon as it had rained nearly everyday last week. it rained almost continually Saturday until about 3 o'clock in the afternoon and then stopped be until about a couple of hours after the game was finished.”  The Ridgeway team made the only score of the game in the first quarter.  

It was a hard fought game:  “The home boys were heavier than the visitors, but what the visitors lacked in weight they made up in speed, keeping the home boys guessing all the time to figure out the plays and get the man with the ball.”  One Ridgeway player, Glenn Neff, quarterback, twisted his ankle in the second quarter and Gee Ragan substituted for him.  “All the boys played excellent football and to give one prominent mention would be to neglect another who pulled off many excellent plays in their different positions.”

Ridgeway also had the town team to root for.  They were to play their first game against Graceland College in Lamoni that Friday. “Several of the boys in the team have never played football before, but but they are learning fast and making a fine showing.”  The high school team and the town team had been holding scrimmages against each other to practice.  (Ridgeway Journal, Oct 5, 1911)





Friday, October 3, 2025

Bit of History -- October 1, 2025

In the October 1, 1914 edition of the Ridgeway Journal, when Ridgeway was just starting to get electric power, there was a short story about something new in town: “The Bartlett Implement Co. have erected an electric sign on top of their store building bearing the firm name. The sign contains eighty lamps and aside from the electrical equipment is the product of home labor.” The sign was built byW. Bartlett, W. L. Perkins, U. C. Eaton and Ross Wiley. It was the first of its kind in Ridgeway and the editors expected that others would soon copy him.

According to the 1914 Sanborn fire map, Bartlett Implement Company was probably located on the east side Main Street about half way between Vine and Walnut. Tracy thought that Shepherd Equipment was located in that area later.

On the same page, Bartlett’s also took out a nearly quarter page ad reminding their customers whose accounts were in arrears that “Oct 1 is here.” They wanted those accounts paid because they had already committed that money elsewhere. “It is not good business for you to let it run over and we have made such commitments that it would be bad business for us to allow it to run over.”