16.10.2014 Views

Louis Philip Trutter Memoir - University of Illinois Springfield

Louis Philip Trutter Memoir - University of Illinois Springfield

Louis Philip Trutter Memoir - University of Illinois Springfield

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong> at <strong>Springfield</strong><br />

Norris L Brookens Library<br />

Archives/Special Collections<br />

<strong>Louis</strong> <strong>Philip</strong> <strong>Trutter</strong> <strong>Memoir</strong><br />

T777. <strong>Trutter</strong>, <strong>Louis</strong> <strong>Philip</strong> (1913-2000)<br />

<strong>Memoir</strong><br />

82 pp.<br />

<strong>Trutter</strong>, architect, discusses his family history, growing up in <strong>Springfield</strong>, job at<br />

Producers Dairy, everyday life in the 1920s and 30s, Lake <strong>Springfield</strong>, attendance<br />

at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong>, architectual work, designing schools, designing for<br />

the handicapped, courtship and marriage, creating jigsaw puzzles, and world<br />

travels.<br />

Interview by Eugenia Eberle, 1995<br />

OPEN<br />

Archives/Special Collections LIB 144<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong> at <strong>Springfield</strong><br />

One <strong>University</strong> Plaza, MS BRK 140<br />

<strong>Springfield</strong> IL 62703-5407<br />

© 1995, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong> Board <strong>of</strong> Trustees


PHILIP LOUIS TRUTTER<br />

MEMOIR<br />

Architect<br />

COPYRIGHT 0 1995 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS AT SPRINGFIELD<br />

All rights reserved. No part <strong>of</strong> this work may be reproduced or transmitted in any form by any means,<br />

electronic ox mechanical, including photocopying and recording or by any infowon storage or<br />

retrieval system without permission in writing from the archives <strong>of</strong> the Univmity~f <strong>Illinois</strong> at<br />

<strong>Springfield</strong>,


ARCWES<br />

OF<br />

THE UNIVERSITY OF UINOIS AT SPRINGFIELD<br />

Assignment <strong>of</strong> Rights<br />

For and in consideration <strong>of</strong> research, management and archival services provided by The<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong> at <strong>Springfield</strong>. We the Narrator and the Interviewer do each hereby assign<br />

and transfer to this institution the right, title, and interest which we may have in taped interviews<br />

done under the auspices <strong>of</strong> the Archives <strong>of</strong> the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong> at Springfkld.<br />

This assignment includes the transfer <strong>of</strong> all right, title, and interest in all tapes used, the contents<br />

recorded on said tapes, all transcripts and copies <strong>of</strong> said tapes and tape contew heret<strong>of</strong>ore or<br />

hereafter made, and all documents appended thereto, including all rights <strong>of</strong> publication, public<br />

distribution, licensing, copyright, donation, and reproduction.<br />

This assignment is made subject to the followiing conditions:<br />

The Narrator reserves the right to review the edited transcript and make any aplendments,<br />

deletions or additions he or she chooses prior to final typing and publication.<br />

Interviewer<br />

Address<br />

Date<br />

-


PREFACE<br />

I<br />

This manuscript is the product <strong>of</strong> tape-recorded interviews with retired ArchiQct, <strong>Philip</strong> <strong>Louis</strong><br />

Twtter, and conducted by Eugenia Eberle for the archives <strong>of</strong> the the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong> at<br />

Spring6eld.<br />

<strong>Philip</strong> <strong>Louis</strong> Tmtter was born in 1913. He gaduated form the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> glinois School <strong>of</strong><br />

Architecture in 1938 and began working for Henry HeImle and Carl Meyer before opening his<br />

own practice. He is also known for many schools thought <strong>Illinois</strong>, his local shools include:<br />

Sacred Heart/ CkifYu, Thomas Jefferson, George Washington and the Ben Fr- Middle<br />

Schools. He has been internationally recognized for the "cottage" design for t)e Hope School. A<br />

strong supporter <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Springfield</strong> Art Association for which he designed the@dition, he has<br />

been an ardent participant in the art programs since he was a small boy and canthues to look<br />

forward to each session, He has been internationally recognized, also, for his inticate jig-saw<br />

puzzles and creative art works. Mr. <strong>Trutter</strong> iravelled extensively throughout $le world with his<br />

wife and recaps his experiences.. He retired in 1945.<br />

Mr. <strong>Trutter</strong> was married to Kitty Wilms, now deceased, and is the father <strong>of</strong> tx+ns Marilyn and<br />

Caroline, has three grandchildren, and is the brother <strong>of</strong> John <strong>Trutter</strong> <strong>of</strong> Chica$o.<br />

Eugenia Eberle was raised in Haverford, Pennsylvania, and matriculated with ~n, athletic<br />

scholarship to the Women's College <strong>of</strong> the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Virginia. She earned her BA degree in<br />

Wistory and is currently pursuing a Masters degree in Public History with em&asis on Oral<br />

Elistory at UIS. This activity has earned her two awards from the <strong>Illinois</strong> Stat$ Historical Society,<br />

She gained experience as a journalist writing for the Arab News and gathered Folk and Fairy<br />

Tales for translations into English while living for six years in Riyadh, Saudi Plvrabia with her<br />

husband, Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> Pediatric Orthopaedic Surgery at SIU School <strong>of</strong> Medicine. She has been<br />

active in a broad range <strong>of</strong> civic activities both in San Francisco and Albuquerque, where she<br />

served on museum boards, fund raising, and in the development <strong>of</strong> the Audub~n Canyon Ranch,<br />

an environmental enclave in Marin County. She is the mother <strong>of</strong> four grown Wdren,<br />

Readers <strong>of</strong> this ord history memoir should bear in mind that it is a transcript af the spoken word<br />

and that the interviewer, nmator, and editor sought to preserve the informal conversational style<br />

that is inherent in such historical sources. The Universtiy <strong>of</strong> lllinois at Springfi(e1d is not<br />

responsible for the factual accuracy <strong>of</strong> the memoir nor for the views express4 therein, these are<br />

for the reader to judge.<br />

The manuscript may be read, quoted and cited freely. It may not be reproducttd in whole or in<br />

part by any means, electronic or mechanical without permission in writing from the archive$ <strong>of</strong> the<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong> at Springbld.


CATALOGUE<br />

<strong>Trutter</strong>, <strong>Philip</strong> <strong>Louis</strong> (1913 - 1<br />

Born and raised in <strong>Springfield</strong>, <strong>Illinois</strong>. A graduated <strong>of</strong> <strong>Springfield</strong> High Schoq, <strong>Springfield</strong><br />

College, he recieved his degree in Architecture fxom the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Dhois 31938. He is best<br />

lolown for his school designs throughout <strong>Illinois</strong>. Local schools are Griffin, Thqmas Je&rson,<br />

George Washington and the Ben Franklin Middle School. He is internationally tecognized far<br />

designing the Hope School "cottage system" and an ardent supporter <strong>of</strong> the Sp$nacld Art<br />

Association for which he designed the addition. He recalls "Old <strong>Springfield</strong>" a 4 elaborates on his<br />

travels throughout the world.<br />

Project: Pbilip <strong>Louis</strong> <strong>Trutter</strong><br />

Tntenkwd by Eugenia Eberle<br />

Open: Open<br />

May 23,25, August 3,9, If, 18,1995<br />

kngth: 4 hours<br />

82 pages


<strong>Louis</strong> <strong>Philip</strong> <strong>Trutter</strong>. Architect. May 23,25, August 3,9 15,18,1995 in his hqpme at 1033 West<br />

Vine Street, <strong>Springfield</strong>, Tllinois, 62704.<br />

Eugenia Eberle, Interviewer<br />

Q. Phil, maybe you can begin by telling me where you were born.<br />

A. Oh that's. . . yes, I'm the apple that hasn't fallen very far from the tree, (Chuckle). I was born<br />

at 838 South ILlinois Street, from there . . .I was born there on July 2, 1913.<br />

Q. Where's <strong>Illinois</strong> Street? Does it still exist?<br />

A. Oh, it's right over here, as he points North. South Grand which used to be, I mean<br />

MacArthur used to be West Grand. We had West Grand, South Grand, North Grand and Bast<br />

Grand and it got too confusing because you had West Grand, you had Southwst Grand and you<br />

had Northwest Grand (chuckle) and then you had South Grand and you still have it and you still<br />

have it and then you had West south Grand and. , ,anyway you moved over to, . . <strong>Illinois</strong> Street is<br />

just west <strong>of</strong> MacArthur. You go to English, Douglas, <strong>Illinois</strong>, Park, or Lincdn and then Park.<br />

Q. Well, you haven't rolled very far!<br />

A. No, so I went from there, 838 <strong>Illinois</strong> over to 822 South MacArther today. It was then<br />

Southwest Grand, and fiom there to 1120 Williams Boulevard, (Chuckle). That's the house that<br />

mother and dad built. Harvey Stephens lives in it today.<br />

Q. That's a darling house.<br />

A. We moved there in 19. . .we went to MacArthw in about 1915 and then over to Williams<br />

Boulevard, mother and dad built that about 1924. Carl Meyer was the architect, by the way, and<br />

he did most <strong>of</strong> the houses around here, and then from there, there was a war which intervened and<br />

stuff and now I'm at 1033 West Vine.<br />

Q. So you haven't moved in between? Did you and your wife live and bring your children up on<br />

Williams Boulevard?<br />

A. NO, no no. We were married during the war. I<br />

Q, So where did you live with your wife and family?<br />

A. Here. We moved in here. . .we came home from Dayton, Ohio. We were ~arried in<br />

Evanston, and then I was working for the air forces, . .


Q. We'll get to that.<br />

A. . . .but by the way, Kitty's aunt built this house in 1923. She had no childreq and when s b<br />

died she left it to Kitty, and Kitty had it rented during the war. Her aunt died about 1936 or 7 and<br />

she rented it and the war came along and, I don't how how deep you want mq to go on. My<br />

father died in 19. , .<br />

Q. Tell me about your father. We'll get back to your childhood.<br />

A. My father was the. , ,where do we start? Let's get his father here fist. Hexame from<br />

Germany and he was one <strong>of</strong> the boys that came over here right after the Civil Var. His name was<br />

<strong>Louis</strong> <strong>Trutter</strong>, and they came. . .these kids all got out <strong>of</strong> Germany about 1867. mat was right<br />

after the war, and Bismarck was consolidating all the little principalities into what was going to<br />

become hssia, so he got 'em all together so they could start another Franco-Wssian war, and<br />

my grandfather, like all the other kids, were sick and tired <strong>of</strong> fighting with the Elrench and so on.<br />

He was a teenager and so these kids all came over here and they had some relalives who were<br />

already here and so they wound up in Sprin&eld.<br />

Q. By ship?<br />

Q, Do you how the name <strong>of</strong> the ship?<br />

A. No, haven't any idea. All I how is he came from the Black Forest area an4 he was a fanner.<br />

They had vineyards there and he came to <strong>Springfield</strong> and went into the meat mket and poultry<br />

business and he was. . .it was down on. . .oh, his place <strong>of</strong> business was down iq. . .was on 1 lth<br />

Street and Monroe, That's where all the business was, down there you know dong the railroad.<br />

Q. Do you remember the name <strong>of</strong> the business?<br />

A. No. But then he got married to a very, very lovely lady by the name <strong>of</strong> Arnqlia IHimmelsbach.<br />

(Chuckle)<br />

Q, Another German?<br />

A. Another German. And the Trubr should really be pronounced Trooter, y& (chuckle)<br />

Q. So was Amelia found here in America?<br />

A. She was here. He didn't bring her over, and they proceeded to have a fady.<br />

Q. Do you know the year they married?


A. No. I imagine my father was born about nine months after they were 4ed.<br />

(ChuckIq) She.<br />

. ,he was number one and they had five boys in a row and dad was the oldest Of thirteen. pat's a<br />

lot <strong>of</strong> kids, but you how in those days. . .after he had the five boys, he decidd he'd go baqk and<br />

be a farmer. It'd be a better place to raise the kids, so they went out east <strong>of</strong> <strong>Springfield</strong> on the<br />

Mechanicsburg Road, about three or four miles from <strong>Springfield</strong> .here. The kids walked to school.<br />

My dad went to St. Peter and Pauls grade school and walked in four miles eve day, and they<br />

proceeded to have more kids and so on, and later on my father was a very pro essive man. He<br />

was a wonderful guy. He said to his father, he said, "Look dad, you have all f ese boys now<br />

come along, let's get some more land," and the father said, "Oh, no". . .he c ad him Paw, and I<br />

could show you a picture <strong>of</strong> the old boy, (chuckle) what a guy, and he said, ''Nope, I have two<br />

hundred acres here, that's five times as much as I had back in Germany and. . except he didn't<br />

equate,. Forty acres <strong>of</strong> vineyards to two hundred <strong>of</strong> grain land in <strong>Illinois</strong>. He was, I guess, a great<br />

old honest man, a hard working guy, Gave me a quarter once.<br />

Q, What did you do with it?<br />

A. I wish I had it today. I was about. . .he died in about 1923 or something We that. That was<br />

grandfather <strong>Trutter</strong>, and my other grandfather died almost at the same time, mdfather Phil<br />

Michler, that was mother's father. But anyway, dad, I think he was twenty two or twenty three,<br />

and he thought 'what's the future here for me?' so he went to <strong>Springfield</strong> loowg for a job and<br />

decided there were no jobs to be had, so he went to. . .he borrowed some money, fifty dollars, I<br />

think from one <strong>of</strong> his brothers, they'd been working, thrashing gangs and stuf$ I don't know,<br />

'what's the future', and so he found out about "operazo" Indiana <strong>University</strong> *ere, and that was<br />

laown as the "poor boys" school. A lot <strong>of</strong> people went there, and prominent Ones, and he went<br />

there and got a teacher's certificate and came back to <strong>Springfield</strong> then and worked the summers<br />

and so on, and he worked his way through, and with his Eifty dollars and the LiMe bit that he had,<br />

and he onetime told me what he had, he said he used to press a lot <strong>of</strong> pants and stuff and cents to<br />

go through school and he came back with the teacher's certificate and started )=aching his first<br />

school. His fnst school was out at Woodside Country School there and then. . .<br />

Q. What did he teach? Was it in a "Little Red School House?"<br />

A. A "Little Red School House" was what it was. He taught them all, and th~se kids got good<br />

educations too cause they all had review from the class ahead and the class bewd until you got to<br />

eight or when you went into one. Then you could only look ahead, but then fiom there he went<br />

over to a school on West Washington Street. It's now been torn down.<br />

Q. What was the name <strong>of</strong> it, do you remember?<br />

A. It was a county school, I don't remember. It probably had a number or sovething, and he<br />

taught out there and I've got a picture <strong>of</strong> it, the school kids stuff here, and thep he won the prize<br />

for the best country school for the county and stuff out there. In the<br />

he decided<br />

he wanted to go for law and so he did what a lot <strong>of</strong> the kids did in<br />

1


almost an apprenticeship or something like that, or like an internship, and you s every afte+on<br />

and evening and whenever you were loose you sat and read the <strong>Illinois</strong> reports $ a law <strong>of</strong>fice<br />

someplace and were kind <strong>of</strong> under the. ..and so he taught school and then there bas a whole,<br />

bunch <strong>of</strong> them, fellows that were doing it at the same time. Mike Ekstein and J p Sneeg. There<br />

were about four or five guys who took the state board exam together and they wsed togetha, all<br />

<strong>of</strong> them. (Chuckle) In the mean time they had girl fiends and mother, my mothq was a very<br />

progressive woman too, and she wanted to go to the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong>.<br />

Q. What was your mother's name? .<br />

A. Francis Mischler ( he speUs it out) and she wanted to go to the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Qlinois. She<br />

applied for a scholarship without her parents knowing it. Now she was a third c$tughter <strong>of</strong> three<br />

girls in an old German family and she got the scholarship and when the notice <strong>of</strong>lit came, she was<br />

just tickled to death and she went waving the letter to her family and that caused a riot. No<br />

daughter <strong>of</strong> theirs, the younger daughter, was going to a state university and gett'ruined."<br />

(chuckle) atty's father said the same thing to her, almost, cause she graduated $om high school.<br />

She skipped.. . that's anorher stmy, but the same thing, an old German family.<br />

Q, The time frame.<br />

A. Yes, but in about 19, ..that would have been in abut 1910 or 11, in there, sqshe went to a<br />

teachers' training school, which they had in <strong>Springfield</strong>, which was quite a very $ne school they<br />

had here, It was out on north 6th Street. There's a school there, just East <strong>of</strong> the Art Club, and it<br />

was on the North end <strong>of</strong> that property, a great big old house, I can st.<br />

see it. C+n probably see<br />

pictures <strong>of</strong> it.<br />

Q. Still standing? It's not a part <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Illinois</strong> College?<br />

A. No, no, no, it's not that far. It was just west <strong>of</strong>. . .I t would have been the 7 or 800 block. I<br />

think the ArE Club is 700 or something and it was just East <strong>of</strong> there on Sixth, Art Club's between<br />

Fourth and Fifth.<br />

Q. So when did your parents meet then?<br />

A. ( Laughter.) I don't know whether I should tell you that story or not. Apparently my mother.<br />

. .these am just stories that the family, that you've heard from the family. Mothq was actually<br />

going with my father's brothers. They'd go to dances that were held at the KnglCts <strong>of</strong> Columbus<br />

and stuff like, that. Of came they were all chaperoned with others, ldds and fan@y, but it seems<br />

that a big dance came up and the river. , . Uncle Charley was the one, he was owthe, out on the<br />

farm there and the Sangamon River, South Fork I think, is at the foot <strong>of</strong> the hill wd you go up the<br />

hill and that's where the farm was, up there, and I can remember the bridge, or @at valley flooded<br />

out whm the river came up. I think there's a sewage disposal plant down therelnow too in that<br />

sort <strong>of</strong> a valley, and you passed that, and you go up past that and you go up on a/ hill, but there


4<br />

was a bridge and this bridge was way up in the air but you had to go up like thi (demonstratqs)<br />

and then you had to get down so the bridge didn't get washed, so there was a b* storm about like<br />

now and Uncle Charlie, the river came up and he couldn't get into town cause had to come in<br />

on a horse and when the automobiles in those days, this had to have been 1908,j9, or 10, some<br />

place in there, and so he called up, I guess they had a phone, and he got word td, mother and my<br />

father, anyway, cause he couldn't get in and that is where it started, (chuckle)*w<br />

Uncle Charlie<br />

was number Ehree boy, and by the way, he never did marry. A lot <strong>of</strong> them neveq married. I guess<br />

3<br />

they were scared about fertility, I mean with thirteen kids, (Chuckle) and they most, it was only<br />

two <strong>of</strong> them who didn't live. One was a nun and she got pneumonia when she as only twenty<br />

two or three. I think she joined the UrsUline nun maybe, the Ursuline order, and she was way<br />

down the line, and the other one. , .no there was Way baby who died. Who bows in the country<br />

there, Diphtheria, Typhoid, or something or other, probably diphtheria or pneumonia or<br />

something. And then there was a boy. . .they had a picnic one Sunday and they ELU went<br />

swimming in the Sangamon River and he drowned in the Sangamon River. He was about<br />

fourteen or fifteen, Course if somebody wanted to write a history <strong>of</strong> a river, tha Sangamon River<br />

and the bodies. . .somebody drowned just the other day, again. Again.<br />

Q. Tell me, what was your father's name?<br />

A. Frank <strong>Louis</strong>. His father was <strong>Louis</strong>.<br />

Q. Did he become a lawyer? Is that what he did or did he teach?<br />

Q. No he was a practicing lawyer and he was an expert on estate work and titlus. In those days<br />

he loved history and he always said abstracts, which we don't have anymore mwh. Abstracts<br />

were marvelous, marvelous family histories from when the land was first acquirtd, however it was<br />

acquired from the government, Indians or whatever. (chuckle) That was his fee.<br />

Q, Then he had two brothers, Charlie and. . .<br />

A. No, <strong>of</strong> the thirteen kids, ten <strong>of</strong> them survived.<br />

Q, When did your father and mother marry?<br />

A. June 27,1912. I came along on July 2,1913 (chuckle).<br />

Q. So you were the first <strong>of</strong> the two? Did your mother teach for several years oc did she continue<br />

to stay home?<br />

A. No she taught. She and Minnie Appleman who became the wife <strong>of</strong> Mike Elrstein and. . .@e<br />

girls all went to the training school together while their husbands were getting stablished. Now<br />

dad probably passed the bar exam in 1909 or something like that and then they bad to get<br />

established so they could pay the rent because married teachers were out in tho* days. It's q


ecently that a female teacher can be married, now it was all right for men, but teaching was more<br />

or less a woman's pr<strong>of</strong>ession and the minute they got married, Out!<br />

Q. Then your brother came along, . .?<br />

A. He came along seven years later. That would have been, . ,He was April $e 18.<br />

What about 1920? Would that be about right? He was 75 last year.<br />

Q. And what was his name?<br />

A. John Thomas,<br />

Q. And your brother is a. . .what does he do now? What has he been doing oyer the years?<br />

His occupation was businessman really?<br />

A. Yes, he was with the telephone company. By the way he graduated from @e <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

IUinois, if you want that. He was going into law and his fourth year <strong>of</strong> liberal pts. . . they had a<br />

six year course in law instead <strong>of</strong> seven and so they combined the fourth year <strong>of</strong> liberal arts, and he<br />

was into that and was a senior when Pearl Harbor came along, Now if they wpt a history. . .<br />

Q. That played with a lot <strong>of</strong> people's lives didn't it? It changed a lot <strong>of</strong> peoplp's lives.<br />

A. He was the guy. He was everything at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong> that they had. Sage and<br />

Mowanda, Scull and Crest, President <strong>of</strong> his fraternity, the all-<strong>University</strong> Dance Committee, the<br />

Student Senate, president <strong>of</strong> that. The only thing he didn't get was to be Chief Illiniwick and he<br />

tried out for that because he's always been interested in Indian lore. (Chuckle)<br />

Q. Now they've done away with that haven't they. They passed a law. . .no, #'s back in?<br />

A. No, no. I think they passed a law the other day that they better keep him q this guy llliniwick<br />

from Oklahoma. . .he's the one causing all this Indian problem Causing all the problem out at. . .<br />

Q, Dixon Mounds?<br />

A. Dixon Mounds, yes. By the way, my father took us to the Dixon Mounds the mid-20's<br />

when it was nothing. . .it had a galvanized iron ro<strong>of</strong> and a bunch <strong>of</strong> poles just qovering it.<br />

remember that very well.<br />

Q, Well Phil, let's go back to your childhood. As a child where did you go to school?<br />

A. I went to the Hay Edwards School in the first grade and. . .


Q. That's about the time your brother was being born too?<br />

E<br />

\<br />

A. That's right, and then from there they decided, I guess, I should get some. , .over to the 6t.<br />

Agnes School so I went to St. Agnes £rom second through the sixth grade with sixty five kid in a<br />

classroom.<br />

Q, How many nuns?<br />

A. One nun to run the classroom with a great big ruler. I shouldn't go into thg.<br />

Q. Did she use it on you?<br />

A. Everybody. One little whisper and whop, whop with those great big rulers.<br />

Q, They really had control in those days though.<br />

A. Yes, they were doing more controlling than teaching, 1 got a good educati~n because <strong>of</strong> my<br />

mother and father and I guess the kids there, a lot <strong>of</strong> them went on to do thingq in spite <strong>of</strong><br />

everything and then they built Blessed Sacrament and I went there in the seven* and eighth<br />

grades and they only had forty in the classroom there.<br />

Q. So you learned more maybe?<br />

A. Yes, and they were cracker-jack teachers. Old father Terrant started that. He hand picked the<br />

teachers to be over there and. . .<br />

Q. So because your brother was quite a bit younger did you play with each oer? Did you know<br />

each otber early on or were you like only c Wen for many years?<br />

A, Well we got along all right, we didn't have the usual fights, I was (chuckle) too much biggerby<br />

seven years. Oh, by the way, my brother there at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong> was the guy. ..he<br />

was president <strong>of</strong> the student senate or something. The day after Pearl Harbor, when the student<br />

body all met, <strong>of</strong> course Pearl Harbor was on a Sunday afternoon, and on Mondsy they all gat<br />

together in Huff gymnasium. They had a big student rally on where were we gping, so he<br />

represented the student body talking to the Ms. I mean he was a big shot on @e <strong>Illinois</strong> campus,<br />

he always had been, and so then he went on and graduated in June. He'd been ip the cavalry, in<br />

ROTC and he probably liked the boots that they wore, the uniforms, and also &at the horses<br />

knew the commands and he didn't have to walk, (chuckle) and it was quite so~eching to be in the<br />

cavalry in those days.<br />

Q, What about yourself? Did you. . .after StAgnes and Blessed Sacrament. . .<br />

A. Oh, one more thing about the dear brother. He graduated with, with one hvd he got a sheep


I<br />

skin and the other, he got a commission in the Army, and he was <strong>of</strong>f and gone d went to. .. he<br />

rattled around the <strong>Illinois</strong> states here while the war got started, then he went tolchina, Burma,<br />

India theater, spent a year in Kumling, China, and he was a Lieutenant Coloneljat twenty three.<br />

(chuckle) That's the kind <strong>of</strong> an organizer he is, and then when he came back hq worked for the<br />

telephone company and had three different chairs as a vice-president and still wrkes for them at<br />

the age <strong>of</strong> seventy five at half time.<br />

Q. Today?<br />

A, Yes, today. At sixty-five everybody up in that upper eschelon is supposed to be out, so they<br />

hired him back<br />

Q. Did ye marry?<br />

A. Yes. He married Weque Woods. Do you know Weque?<br />

Q, Only fiom her friends and relatives.<br />

A, She was Edith English known as Weque and that's only because she was b m in Weque,<br />

Tonsing, Michigan. ( chuckle)<br />

A. That's right, and the spelling <strong>of</strong> that is unusual but I'l get that later.<br />

Q, Is she still living? And do they have children?<br />

A. Yes, they have two.<br />

Q. Two children as well. No big families.<br />

A. A girl and a boy. And he's a hot-shot too. The kid is.<br />

Q. Did he go to the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong>?<br />

A. No.<br />

Q. He sapped out?<br />

A. No, no. OE course they lived in Evanston and he went to. .. he went to Loyolla up there as a<br />

kid and studied Chinese. I think he had seven yeas <strong>of</strong> Chinese &d then he wem to the Univvrsity<br />

<strong>of</strong> Southern California and got his degree in Asiatic Studies and then he got into banking. i<br />

Q. Did he ever work in Asia?


e<br />

A. No, but he did spend quite a bit <strong>of</strong> time in Egypt. Has nothing to do with hina and Meco<br />

since then.<br />

I<br />

Q. But he didn't use his Asian studies?<br />

A, Not that I know <strong>of</strong>.<br />

Q, Is he married?<br />

A. Yes, he's d e d and that's an interesting marriage. ,.we're getting<br />

but, . .<br />

childhood here,<br />

Q. We are, but we have a long way to go.<br />

A, All right, If this is interesting to you.<br />

Q. It's very interesting. The family is obviously, close yes, amd they also have aspirations.<br />

A. Yes, he went to work for the Bank <strong>of</strong> America in California and the First National in Chicago<br />

and stuff and then decided he'd get his MBA, so he went to Northwestern, to Kellogg and it's<br />

supposed to be one <strong>of</strong> the very very top MBA schools. And there he met a yqung lady. Don't<br />

ask me her name other than Guia, and her faanily was Italian. Her father is an pstm-physicist and<br />

he was in charge, to his embarrassment, <strong>of</strong> that Hubble Telescope that went squr. Course he<br />

couldn't inspect every dimension on it but anyway they got it straightened ou4 and at the present<br />

time he is down in Chili, I believe, and they're building a huge new observator)l in the mountains<br />

<strong>of</strong> Chili and that's where he is now. Very interesting guy.<br />

Q. That's Castilian or Spanish, not Italian so obviously he's speaking anothenlanguage. He's<br />

probably multi lingual anyway.<br />

A. Multi, yes. And they were in Spain for a long time and so when he and his wife. . , he's quite<br />

young actually. And Guia, she got her MBA there. I don't know where she went to school fust.<br />

Q. Very interesting family. Now, what happened to his daughter?<br />

A. Now wait a minute. Let me go on about my nephew &st. So he gets his MBA. He goes to<br />

work for Kernper. He worked for a couple <strong>of</strong> banks and then he went to Keflper Insurance and<br />

stuff, and since then he is, since he's gotten his MBA he's gotten a CPA and rlow he's added to<br />

that a stockbrokers whatever it is, so he could go to New York or Chicago and any <strong>of</strong> those. . .<br />

Q. He's not really focused yet, is he?<br />

c<br />

A. Yes, he's a vice president <strong>of</strong> Kempers and he's in charge <strong>of</strong> investing ins ce moneys. You<br />

I


know, more or less today, I don't how what it'll be tomorrow.<br />

Q. It's a big job.<br />

A. Yes, it's a big job.<br />

Q. A lot <strong>of</strong> responsibility.<br />

A. And his wife is at the First. . ,they have two children now and they have a Poliash nanny<br />

(chuckle) whose chased along with them. She's at First National Bank.<br />

Q. And about the daughter.<br />

A. The daughter. (Chuckle) She's done everything and I think she's. . .wheread she graduate<br />

fiom? I think she went to Northwestern and she's also gone to a school in Chicago on Interior<br />

Decoration and Design that's one <strong>of</strong> the top ones. She's very capable and she about thirty nine or<br />

forty now, 1 guess. She's a policewoman. (Chuckle)<br />

Q. She's very different that his son.<br />

A, Yes. She's done everything. She's worked for Marshall Fields and all therest <strong>of</strong> them. But<br />

that's what she is at the moment. Without her parents howing it, she had a cw, a foreign car that<br />

had to be something recalled on it, so she took it out to the dealers, and there were a bunch or<br />

people standing around across the street and a big sign-up, EXAMS or something, and it was the<br />

area police station, and she had time on her hands, walked across the street. . she's not afraid <strong>of</strong><br />

anything, she walked across the street, went in and asked, "what's going on?" They said, "We're<br />

having examinations for the entcance into the Police Academy and we're lookiag for women that<br />

have college degrees. Are you interested?" And she said, "Well, sure, I haven't anything else to<br />

do." She took the exam and passed it, (chuckle) And then they gave her a physical exam and<br />

she'd been a swimmer and all kinds <strong>of</strong> athletics, and so a year ago she went to the Police<br />

Academy up there. They paid her $32,000 a year while she did it. She's bees accepted, as <strong>of</strong><br />

Christmas, and she's out riding a beat (chuckle) at nights!<br />

Q. Where?<br />

A, Well at least it's North and West in Chicago. So she went six months to the Academy and<br />

now she's. . .and my brother said she's just. . .then she told her father and mother, which I guess<br />

they nearly blew a fuse, and my brother had been on the police advisory comflLittee or what ever<br />

they have up there, cause he's in everything. At one time he was on forty org-tions. Have<br />

you ever heard <strong>of</strong> Hull House up there? It's one <strong>of</strong> the great old, old organizations for training<br />

people and things. They've never been in the black until he'd been president <strong>of</strong> it. In a couple <strong>of</strong><br />

years he got the red <strong>of</strong>f there.


Q. Well, he's quite a guy,<br />

A. A terrific guy.<br />

Q. Well, we should get back to you now.<br />

I<br />

I<br />

A. We'll get back to me,<br />

Q, You're very different,<br />

A. Very different, Oh, and by the way, he's a very fie cartoonist.<br />

Q. Now, we have to get back to you.<br />

A. All right. Where were we? We were gating me to St. Agnes or Blessed Sacrament. . .<br />

Q. Then where did you go?<br />

A. <strong>Springfield</strong> High School when there was only one high school except for &ls. The girls went<br />

to convents in those days and never. . .there was only <strong>Springfield</strong> High School, That was it.<br />

About 1800 kids.<br />

Q. Just boys?<br />

A. Oh no,<br />

Q. But you say except for girls. . .?<br />

A. The girls. They had Catholic Schools for what we called the West End Cmvent That's the<br />

Sacred Heart out there and the other one was Ursuline and they were high schools for girls.<br />

Q. So were there fewer girls consequently at <strong>Springfield</strong> High School then boys?<br />

A. No, there were 1800 there or thereabouts.<br />

Q. But you had Griffin too didn't you in those days?<br />

A. GriEin wasn't started yet. It was started right after.<br />

Q. I thought Griff~m was earlier than Sacred Heart, It's,the other way around,<br />

A. They were both going before Gsiffin.


Q. Did you finish high school there?<br />

A. Yes.<br />

Q. You didn't go away to school?<br />

A. No.<br />

Q. Then where did you go?<br />

A, Then I went to <strong>Springfield</strong> Junior College. I graduated from <strong>Springfield</strong> H@I School. . .I<br />

went there from '27 to '31 and then in. . .<br />

Q. Where's <strong>Springfield</strong> Junior College? Is that <strong>Springfield</strong> College? That's right, it was only two<br />

years until just a couple <strong>of</strong> years ago wasn't it?<br />

A. Isn't it still two years?<br />

Q. I think it could be. Then where'd you go after that?<br />

A. Then I went to the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong>. See, those were depression days.<br />

Q. What year did you graduate?<br />

A. High school, June <strong>of</strong> '31 and Junior College, '33, and then I went to the Uaiversity <strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong>.<br />

A, I went longer than that cause I took pre-engineering. Courses out there were pre-engineering,<br />

was engineering, and I'd always been interested in airplanes, model airplanes, I built them from<br />

scratch. That's what I intended, had in mind, but in those days they didn't have. . .at the<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong>, there were two classes in aeronautical engineering in your senior year <strong>of</strong><br />

engineering.<br />

Q. Did you have five years then at the <strong>University</strong>? Did you have three years at the university <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>Illinois</strong>?<br />

A. I went there as a junior engineer in '33 and I. . .the engineering wasn't for me and I was<br />

miserable ahd I had a wonderful, wonderful roommate at the fraternity house, I pledged and<br />

joined Alpha Sigma Phi, and in those days there were no dormitories, there ware dormitories for<br />

girls but not for boys. They had lots <strong>of</strong> fraternity houses so that was the best. . .<br />

Q. But let me get back to this. In a normal college you go four years and if yqu want engineering


you're there for five or six maybe. Now you had two more years basically <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>Illinois</strong>?<br />

A. Yes, then I switched to architecture.<br />

Q. So how many more years did you have &r that?<br />

A. I went to two summer schools in order to pick up stuff, I had too many credits that I couldn't<br />

use for architecture so I got out <strong>of</strong> there in January <strong>of</strong> 1938. So I was over thdre, yes, in about<br />

five years, four and a half but I went to two summer schools. One at the Art Qstitute in Chicago<br />

and the other one at Catholic <strong>University</strong> at Washington.<br />

Q. Have you always been artistic? And your brother as well, obviously?<br />

A. Yes.<br />

Q. Were your mother and father artistic as well? Did you pick that up from ewer <strong>of</strong> them?<br />

A. Mother was quite artistic, yes.<br />

Q, The flair if nothing more,<br />

A. She had. . .<br />

Q. Really drew, . .<br />

A. I've got a lot <strong>of</strong> pictures that she did.<br />

Q, So you carried in the genes, A lot <strong>of</strong> times that doesn't happen. But both <strong>of</strong> you are artistic<br />

with a different style, you and your brother.<br />

A. Yes, he's done a lot <strong>of</strong> nice work but he's more into 'cartooning' or wonderful cartoons.<br />

Q. How old were you when you discovered your art? Were you in college as an engineering<br />

student when you decided to become an architect?<br />

A. Tt was not for me. Engineering was not for me.<br />

Q. why?<br />

A. I couldn't stand it, Them-dynamics. The only thing I had fun in was the foundry and<br />

machine shop in the junior year. Oh, I was wonderful &I the lathes and stuff p e that and in the<br />

foundry making the clay cores for the stuff we were casting. !


Q. That's why you're so good at jig-saws.<br />

A, . . . in other words if you're going to cast a piece <strong>of</strong> something or other, yqu have to have a<br />

core,<br />

'END SIDE ONE, TAPE ONE<br />

linseed oil or something and then they bake it, and it was just like cookies and pou put those<br />

inside. . ,well, take a radiator Like this over here. You had to have a core insi* <strong>of</strong> that and then<br />

you have a mold on the outside and you pour the hot metal in there, it burns @ oil out, and you<br />

shake the sand out,<br />

Q. So the engineer is "structure" and the architect is the "designer"? So you ~bviously had a<br />

design. ..<br />

A. I've always been interested in design and planning and so on.<br />

Q. Have you been happy in that field?<br />

A. Oh, yes I was because I had good partners that I picked up who liked engipeering.<br />

Q. Oh. So you finished architecture in 1938 and then what did you do?<br />

A. Well I nearly lost my mind because my father died while I was in the middle <strong>of</strong> my final exam<br />

week and he died very suddenly fiom a middle ear infection that should have rtally never<br />

happened six months before the sulpha drugs, and somehow or other I went b a after his funeral<br />

and took one more examination in engineering, and how the devil I ever pass& it I don't how.<br />

Q. In engineering?<br />

A. It was an engineering subject in architecture. So then I. . .I mean I could do the engineering<br />

but 1 didn't like it, I mean it wasn't any fun, so then I came back, and the thjg to do was to get a<br />

job. There wasn't any building much in. , .<br />

I<br />

A. In 1938 they had public housing and W A and things like that and so I wmt to work for Carl<br />

Meyer on Washington's Birthday. I mean the real birthday, February 22,1931. (Chuckle) As a<br />

matter <strong>of</strong> information, I worked two months for nothing. About like being in pedicine or<br />

something way back<br />

Q. Now, we've reached the peak <strong>of</strong> your childhood, Let's go back and find ut what you did as


a child.<br />

A. We forgot something in there as a child.<br />

Q. We haven't covered a lot <strong>of</strong> things, I'm sure.<br />

A. We forgot Helen Sterickex's Nursery School. There were no Kindergarted's in those days.<br />

Q. She's not that much older than you? Oh you mean HELEN Stericker?<br />

A, This is old George Stedcker's sister. Dkl you remember the Stericker Hovse there on<br />

Second. The yellow brick house, The family. . .they tore it down recently and made another<br />

parking lot.<br />

Q. They had two houses there. They were entirely different style.<br />

A. Well this was the yellow brick one right on the corner.<br />

Q. More Colonial Style wasn't it? Revival?<br />

A. Yes, that was old Dr. Stericker. The father <strong>of</strong> George Stericker who had built the house and<br />

he had these two kids, George and Helen. Maybe somebody else, I don't know. Helen had a<br />

Kindergaten and she'd been to school up in Evanston there. It's still there. National School or<br />

something or other but that was Kindergarten. She picked us up, us kids at me and a half or<br />

four years old. I'l show you pictures <strong>of</strong> that, <strong>of</strong> some <strong>of</strong> the Eds,<br />

Q. Well, that's great We'll start there then. What kind <strong>of</strong> a youngster were you? Do you<br />

remember? You were a handsome young man,<br />

A. I would say I was fairly shy, really. Kitty took it out <strong>of</strong> me. It's a good tljng.<br />

Q. She brought you out? You were shy? What did you do as a child? Who were your fiends?<br />

A. Built model airplanes, model boats. And what'd I do on Saturdays? Oh, bp the way, the<br />

Kindergasten. . .she came around in an electric car that was like a great big fi&-bowl and the<br />

doors were on the sides and the driver sat on a bench seat in the back with a tiller, like this, (he<br />

demonstrates) and on the end <strong>of</strong> it was the horn and you could roll this, and &re were two<br />

swivel seats up in front and cut glass bud vases, You know about those? And she'd come around<br />

and pick us kids up. . .I went two or three winters. These were winter deals. But she'd go<br />

around and pick up all us kids and crowd us into this and drive us to her home and we'd go up<br />

there all morning and then. . .oh, that was fun. I'll never forget those days. 'Qen Saturday's, I<br />

went to the art Club. Bunch Bunn and I and Paul Barker. We all went out to, the Saturday<br />

classes at the Art Club. We were eleven and twelve years old and I think we W d about this at


the Art Association (Recollection <strong>of</strong> Old <strong>Springfield</strong> January '93) because we'd go down to :<br />

Bunch and say, ''Don't you think we'd better go down and visit Grarnps today{' We didn't bo<br />

every Saturday.<br />

Q. That's the candy store?<br />

A. That's the candy store.<br />

Q. Why was he called Bunch?<br />

A. I don't know.<br />

Q. Well he told somebody. His mother always tweaked his cheek affectionatdy and. . .<br />

A. (Chuckle) Well anyway, that's where I spent my Saturday mornings, at tha Art Club.<br />

I was only eleven or twelve years old. '<br />

Q. Then you were doing art at an early age? Now, who else were your playmates early on.<br />

Whose your earliest friend?<br />

A. My earliest fiiends were down the block fiom me on Lawrence Avenue thqe. Betty Wpods.<br />

I<br />

You know Betty Woods? Her brother, Walt, Walt Taber, and next door, TJ wd Francis<br />

McMurray. The three <strong>of</strong> us. I can show you pictures in the family album <strong>of</strong> all these Idds. put<br />

there were a numbn <strong>of</strong> winters whm they never hew where I was on a Satqday afternoop<br />

because I went to Eva Farrows Dancing School.<br />

Q. Who was Eva Farrow? This is the fist I've heard <strong>of</strong> her.<br />

A. Well, she taught ballroom dancing and stuff like that. I think it was the 014 Redmens H4.U or ,<br />

something. I'll tell you where it was. It was on Monroe Street between fourth and iBh. It was<br />

on the third floor in the middle <strong>of</strong> the block on the north side <strong>of</strong> the street,<br />

Q. Did all <strong>of</strong> you do this?<br />

A. No. I did it but the McMuxrays and Tabers didn't.<br />

Q. So you did it by yourself, really, without the gang knowing about it all thase years?<br />

A. My mother. She was going to make a ~ntleman out <strong>of</strong> me.<br />

Q. But nobody knew. You thought. . .<br />

A. But my friends never knew where I was on Saturday afternoon.


Q, You didn't want them to know you were dancing? ~<br />

A. I was dancing. Oh, my God. And the girls would sit over here and the boys would sit over<br />

there and you'd have a little break between dances and she'd explain: this is a &x trot or a waltz<br />

or something and then you'd go over and select one <strong>of</strong> the young ladies. Now Fese are kids;<br />

eleven, twelve, thirteen years old. You how the boys are not too excited aboyt girls in those<br />

days, at least they don't show it . .and you'd have a handkerchief in your hanaand you went over<br />

and you'd bow and I say, "May I have the nat dance with you?" and she rnigw say yes and she<br />

might say no, and then you'd find another one. But then when she'd get up to Uance with you,<br />

you had your handkerchief over your hand on her back then.<br />

Q. And she was probably taller than you too!<br />

A, Probably (chuckle) The girls always were, But then, those were my Saturc@y afternoons<br />

(chuckle) <strong>of</strong> my childhood days and the rest <strong>of</strong> the time, the three <strong>of</strong> us or the @ur, we had an old<br />

chicken house. . .is this interesting to you, is this what you want?. . .in the bacb yard. . .this was<br />

World War It days, . .eggs in those days were something like 75 cents or a do& a dozen which<br />

was a lot <strong>of</strong> money and so people kept chickens and so on, But any way the vc$r was over and<br />

the chickens were too much trouble. OH, you want some useless information 6om WWI about<br />

food? About eggs? You put eggs up in the wintertime in something called wwr glass. I don't<br />

know what the chemistry is, but you take these old jars that you kept pickles q d sauerkraut in<br />

and you put this water glass in there and then you put the eggs in there and it npde kind <strong>of</strong> a slimy<br />

seal on the shells and you could keep them all winter in that stuff.<br />

Q. Fresh?<br />

A. Well you didn't use them for an angel food cake, the whites wouldn't. . .yw could use them<br />

for cooking and stuff so in the summer and the fall. . .<strong>of</strong> course eggs were not faked as they are<br />

now. . .so that's what you. . .but I'll never forget that water glass and I remember I used to hate<br />

to go down in the basement and reach down in there and grab three or four <strong>of</strong> those eggs that<br />

were real slippery and slimy, yuk<br />

Q. Let alone eat them!<br />

A. Oh; they were all right when mother cooked them She'd wash them <strong>of</strong>f a$l fry them or<br />

scramble them or use them in cooking. Not in nice big cakes because they weqen't that good, but<br />

anyway the old chicken house out there. . .that was our old club house and we pere always<br />

digging caves in the yard there or something and we'd build little fxes out theq and have our<br />

baked potatoes or things like, that in coals.<br />

Q. You were patiem A baked potato would take a long time over coals like<br />

A. I don't bow what all we did but I can show you pictures <strong>of</strong> all <strong>of</strong> us sittin<br />

chicken house.


Q. Who were 'all' <strong>of</strong> you? Bunch, and ... ?<br />

I<br />

C<br />

A. No, no. Bunch wasn't in on this cause he didn't live near us. These guys qed down the<br />

block and we'd. , ,<br />

I<br />

I<br />

Q. Who were some <strong>of</strong> these again?<br />

I<br />

A. This was TJ MacMurray and Francis MacMurray, his younger brother, othfrwise hown as<br />

Sach cause he had a great big bottom on him and they called him 'Sachell" (chqckle) and Walt<br />

Taber, Betty Wood's brother. She was Betty Taber, And her father ran or owped Mauldenr=rs.<br />

The Mauldeners were out <strong>of</strong> it years ahead. Maddeners was a wonderful , w wddl place to eat<br />

and they catered and they made their own candy and ice cream. Their ice crew was. . .<br />

Q, They're still very good aren't they?<br />

A. Yes, but not like they used to be. And <strong>of</strong> course tbey're all gone now. I wan old Walten,<br />

and he had the best fie works on the 4th <strong>of</strong> July and all the kids would go dow in his back yard<br />

and he'd have 20 ball rolling candles and sky rockets and stuff like that.<br />

Q. Now this is Tabers?<br />

A. This is Tabers. And even balloons in those days. They made these paper balloons. You<br />

wouldn't think <strong>of</strong> it today, I don't think, but, , . hot air balloons about this hi* and in the bottom<br />

was a ring, a little ring, probably made in Cbina or something like that and a & across and then<br />

you'd had a about this big around <strong>of</strong> excelcier about so thick, and that soaked In<br />

.paraffin or something that would bum and. . .<br />

Q. Like a hot air balloon?<br />

A. Like a hot air balloon. And you'd get out there and you'd hold the top <strong>of</strong> this hot air balloon<br />

and get this up <strong>of</strong>f the ground and then you'd light the little fire in there and ithmade a lot <strong>of</strong> heat<br />

and pretty soon the thing would all swell out and start to go up and then you'd let go <strong>of</strong> it and<br />

BOOM! up they'd go, and they'd go way out in the country-side and why in cbe devil they didn't<br />

burn down woods! They were supposed to be out when they came down but they went for miles.<br />

Q. Did you all follow them? Did you run around after them or were you too close to town?<br />

Where'd you usually do that?<br />

A. In their back yard <strong>of</strong>f Lawrence Avenue,<br />

Q, Quite an ingenious idea for fun?<br />

A. Oh boy, we kids shot fire crackers <strong>of</strong>f all day long. Why we've got any fipgers at all I don't


how.<br />

Q. Exactly, So what else did you do?<br />

t<br />

A. No wait a minute. Lets move me away £ram the Mac Murray gang. We qved to Williams<br />

Boulevard. Who'd I play with over on Williams Boulevard.<br />

Q. Did you play in the park?<br />

A. No, we played down behind the old Governor Yates house. There was a very low place there<br />

and we tried co dig caves in there, and that's where my brother then had his, later on, had his<br />

Indian tribe down there and they expanded it down there. All the neighborhood kids. Oh, and I<br />

didn't finish why he wasn't Chief Illhiwick. He got out there and danced for @ern and he had all<br />

the equipment, I mean he had all the feathers and stuff. And he went up to Cmp Anaceechee<br />

which was a YMCA camp in Wisconsin for two or three summers and he taught Indian lore up<br />

there so he was a very, very qualified guy for Chief Illhiwick. The only thing is he didn't get it<br />

because he got out these in the middle <strong>of</strong> the stadium and did his Indian war dances and stuff and<br />

<strong>of</strong> course those Indian dances are little foot-steps and Eddie Calb <strong>of</strong> Springfiew came out there<br />

and, I guess he hew a lot <strong>of</strong> Indian stuff, but he got out there and you've seeq them maybe as<br />

they gyrate around, so he got it, and John said, 'But he wasn't authentic", and they said, "We<br />

can't see you from the top <strong>of</strong> the stadium but we can see him, authentic or no^" So that's the one<br />

thing he didn't get at the U <strong>of</strong> I that he wanted.<br />

Q, What a heartache!<br />

A. By the way, was there any interest about my being at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Illisois over there. The<br />

tuition was $45.00 a semester, (chuckle) Special classes might have been an additional $5.00 or<br />

something, and the house bill at the Fraternity House was $52.50 a month and that was twenty<br />

meals a week<br />

Q. Not bad. It was all relative though wasn't it?<br />

A. And bansportation from <strong>Springfield</strong> to Champaign was on the old <strong>Illinois</strong> Terminal Railroad<br />

as we called iE, Inter-Urban. They had a special weekend pass which started Friday noon until<br />

Monday noon and that was $2.00 round-trip to Champaign.<br />

Q. That's not relative,<br />

A. No. And I nearly died when I paid $2.00 for a sheet <strong>of</strong> Watman's paper fac drawing class for<br />

architecture but we worked on it for. . .<br />

Q. During this same time?


A. Dhg this time, that was Watman's double elephant but that sheet was go<br />

<strong>of</strong> work and those art supplies were expensive and so then in my last two years<br />

fraternity house divided up and exchanged meal jobs. Ever heard about those?<br />

Q. For work?<br />

A. You worked for your meals and we did it with other fraternity houses. You gidn't work 51<br />

your own and familiarity or something like that, and I wasn't a waiter anyway, Ijwap a scullion. I<br />

figured out one day that I had either, washed, scrapped, dried, or something or Other 250<br />

thousand dishes or something like that and I only had a half-time job. There we& no rubber<br />

gloves, no dishwashers. The dishwashers are for the three guys who did it and @e waiters<br />

brought the dishes in and the guy who receivad them, he scrapped them and stacked them to a<br />

whole and put them over here. The guy who worked in the hole, that was the double sinks, and<br />

he put the dishes in there and wash them from one sink there. . .or maybe there were three sinks,<br />

back and forth and then put them up here (demonstrates) and tlien maybe somebody else would<br />

dry and when they stopped bringing the dishes in, that guy would help dry and fie cook would<br />

come over and check those dishes every so <strong>of</strong>ten to see that they were clean an# that they were<br />

dry.<br />

Q, Drying them would have been the job.<br />

A. That was old Opal, Five feet tall and five feet around. She was something. I did that. One<br />

week I'd work in the kitchen, the next week I'd go back to our fraternity houses and I'd eat ip the<br />

dining room, the next week I'd work. So I'd have. ..in that way one guy. ..two guys could pay<br />

half and I think we saved about $13 and a half dollars a month for doing that. Gee.<br />

I<br />

Q, You look back and wonder if it was worth it?<br />

A. Oh, and it was perfectly OX. to calI up a young lady and say, "How about a coke date<br />

tonight?" Is this <strong>of</strong> any interest to you?<br />

Q. A coke date?<br />

A. A Coco cola, not the other kind <strong>of</strong> coke. Nobody had any money for that stuff and we didn't<br />

know anything about it anyway, but and we didn't even talk about high school and drugs and<br />

things like that. There weren't any. But you could call up a gal and say, "How about a cok date<br />

after library". . .they had to all be in by 10:30 anyway or in the afternoon befoa dinner or<br />

something. That meant that you had a quarter and that would buy you a fifteen cent package <strong>of</strong><br />

cigarettes and two cokes, Those were the kind that were in an old fashioned coke glass with ice<br />

from the . . . the soda fountain cokes and you could sit there. And if you had 35 cents, boy you<br />

were really good. Each <strong>of</strong> you could have two cokes.<br />

Q. What about the old soda fountains. There was one on the corner <strong>of</strong> Adw and. . .


A. Wd, there's one right now down on Sixth and ...Bachman and Kumlcy's pug Stare.<br />

Q. Yes, with the tile floors and marble at the soda fountain. Yes?<br />

A. I think that's Bachman and Kumley. It's the corner <strong>of</strong>. . . I<br />

Q. It was a Christmas Store for a number <strong>of</strong> years, Enchantments.<br />

A. Oh, no. That was Broadwells.<br />

Q. Oh, that was Broadwells. That was a beautiful place in side,<br />

A. Oh, they had the best malted milks in there.<br />

Q. Did you have dates like that too? Isn't that what you did with your date? You took her to a<br />

place like that?<br />

A. Well, no, we went hamburgers.<br />

Q. Where'd you get hamburgers?<br />

A. Oh, the Sugar Bowl. You haven't heard <strong>of</strong> the Sugar Bowl yet? There %re a couple <strong>of</strong><br />

them<br />

Q. Sugar Bowl. Where were they?<br />

A. One <strong>of</strong> them was over here on State and South Grand. It's now the big smre there. Avenue<br />

Shop. Then Avenue took over this whole thing there later on because this stzpted out as a<br />

theater, and if you'll look up on the top here, Carl Meyer was doing this one vd. . .Peoria. .<br />

.Fletcher Langton was doing the Esquire Theater and one <strong>of</strong> them was. . .youhe pushing me a<br />

little bit to get these names out, but the Fraina had one <strong>of</strong> them and the Karsoti's. I don't know<br />

if that's <strong>of</strong> interest to you or not.<br />

Q. Yes, it is because you see these keep being repeated by those in your age bracket.<br />

A. WeU, what happened you see, they stated those theaters in the late '30's and they decided, the<br />

two <strong>of</strong> them decided that they were in competition with each other,. Karasods is still in existence.<br />

Katasotis has got 150 or 60 haters around town and. . .Frasinas and Karas~tiso that where the<br />

Esquire is now, but there was only one theater there, there was one big one which seated about<br />

900. My <strong>of</strong>fice was up there for fifty years almost on the second floor there.<br />

Q. Oh, so you could walk to work couldn't you?


A. Except I didn't because a couple <strong>of</strong> times I walked to work and then<br />

example I'd run into one <strong>of</strong> the neighbors coming back and they wanted<br />

an appointment at ten o'clock. . .enough <strong>of</strong> that. But where the <strong>of</strong>fxe<br />

Thrifty Drug Store for awhile. . .no, that was a Thrifty and then they<br />

became the Avenue Grocer's Store which started on the corner <strong>of</strong><br />

Alex Caron had it and you could park, drive in diagonal parking and park <strong>of</strong>f 9 street and they<br />

had car hops and they'd come up with a tray that would snap onto the side andfyou'd get your<br />

cokes or hamburgers or sodas or something like that.<br />

Q. Well,what about the "Pill Rollers"?<br />

A. That was Charlie Dungan. He started that.<br />

Q. That was another group?<br />

A. That was a group <strong>of</strong> kids in high school. This is what they don't do today for kids. They<br />

don't know. . . they're all mmhg up and down. . .<strong>of</strong> course we didn't have any cars in those<br />

days. Those are depression days. But maybe one guy or something, he'd buma car. Families<br />

only had one car and they'd have dances once every month or something like tbaL If I were to<br />

look around, I'd find "Pill Rollers", membership card number 16, and it had a little pestle and<br />

morter on it and that was Charlie Dungan, and he kind <strong>of</strong> sponsored these kids md they'd ali. go<br />

in for their cokes.<br />

Q. All right. Charlie Dungan ran the drug store?<br />

A. Yes, he was the druggist. I don't think he owned it, but he was the drug@$ and he liked kids<br />

and so on.<br />

Q. What did you talk about when you were having your 'coke dates'?<br />

A. I don? tow, probably talked about girls.<br />

Q. Or each other?<br />

A, Or each other, or something. Golly I don't how.<br />

Q. Or what to do next?<br />

A. Well, we'd just sit around and just talk about nothing. Kids sit out here on the fenders <strong>of</strong> their<br />

cars in somebody's parking lot. I don't know what they talk about. Of course, you see, o q high<br />

school days were completely different So different it wasn't even . . .I mean 4 coke and a<br />

hamburger. . .you had a dollar to go to a high school dance. Fifty cents for thq dance, oh, you<br />

had that ahead <strong>of</strong> time and then you had a dollar for the evening and you could have a coke or


something and you could go down. . ,<br />

Q. Did you needed a corsage?<br />

A. Oh, that was later, much later. Junior Prom or Senior Ball, but. . .and the SeFor Balls wqe<br />

nothing like today, oh my God. Crazy.<br />

Q. They have lost a lot, haven't they?<br />

A. Yes, But then, we had an hour. The dance was eight to eleven in high scho~l gymnasium,<br />

eight to eleven, and then you usually had. ..I usually conned my father out <strong>of</strong> the family car and I<br />

had a pal, Maury Majors, and we'd double up and we'd go to these dances togqer. Afterwards<br />

you had an hour to get to your car, to get to the Sugar Bowl or something like that, cause you<br />

always had to stay for the last dance which they played "I'll See You in My Dreams," and that's<br />

when you really held them tight cause you'd hope to get a kiss at the door when you took them<br />

up to the door, maybe. Big deal. And then you went and got your. ..oh, maybe we went to the<br />

hamburger stand. There's a Root Beer place down at Fifth and South Grand thae behind the<br />

filling station, the Frosty Root Beer, and you could go in there and get a hamburger for a die<br />

and a Frosty Root Beer for a nickel. They were all covered with ice and you gabbled those qown<br />

real quick and then you went for a ride through the park and maybe she'd sit ower close to y<br />

1<br />

u<br />

and you'd put you arm around her a little bit. And one girl, we used to drive the car togeth r.<br />

Gear shift here (demonstrates) and I'd handle the clutch and the break and one piece <strong>of</strong> the 1<br />

steering wheel and she would do the shifting over here and we would kinda cuddle up together.<br />

Q. What were you driving in those days?<br />

A. Let's see. My father's was a Willis Knight, (spells Knight), yes a Willis Wght. Yes, thqt's<br />

what we drove. Dad had a couple <strong>of</strong> em.<br />

Q. Was it a coup?<br />

A. No, it was a four door.<br />

Q. First I've heard <strong>of</strong> that one. Now, you were raised a Catholic and were you consistently<br />

involved in the church?<br />

A. Yeah, we went to church every Sunday.<br />

Q, And was Sunday a bit <strong>of</strong> a ritual? Did you come home and have dinner at the table, etc?<br />

A. Oh yes. Mother would have, . . our dinner on Sunday was at noon.<br />

Q. Was it chicken?


A. I wouldn't be surprised. Mother was a good cook. Excellent, And there yas one thing we<br />

always had at our house, and that was cake.<br />

I<br />

I<br />

I<br />

I<br />

I<br />

I<br />

1<br />

I<br />

i<br />

i<br />

Q. With h sh eggs? I<br />

A, You're dm right. And in those days there was no such thing as packagedpakes. See my<br />

father died in '38 and having been out in the country there with all those kids ad old cook stoves<br />

and stuff, dad. ..I don't even think he ever had a birthday cake. They were toa busy baking bread<br />

and stuff and so when he and mother got &ed she found out that he was c4e starved and our<br />

house was never without cake. Many a time I'd beat the eggs, you know, withan egg beater and<br />

she'd make angel food cakes that high, chocolate angel food, burnt sugar angel foods, burn the<br />

sugar in the skillet,<br />

Q. My mother used to take a wire whip, It must have taken half an hour for ha to get those egg<br />

whites whipped.<br />

A. And you took it up and when you had a little point, and when it just turnedlover, that was<br />

ready. But on Saturday, she made the white cakes, maybe layered with caramel icing or maybe<br />

chocolate icing or something and she had a cake pan over in the corner on one <strong>of</strong> the kitchen<br />

cabinets and there was always cake under there and the white cakes would kind <strong>of</strong> last till<br />

Tuesday. . ,oh, dad, every time he'd come in he would hock <strong>of</strong>f a piece <strong>of</strong> cab.<br />

Q. And the chocolate?<br />

A. Oh, it didn't make any difference what it was. White icing, strawberries. When strawberries<br />

were in season, she'd mush strawberries up and make strawberry icing and the most marvelous<br />

caramel and then on probably Tuesday afternoon or so, maybe Wednesday morning, she made the<br />

yellow cakes. That's when she used up all the yokes. I think it was thirteen eggs. . .and then we<br />

used. . .<br />

Q. We had a lot more cholesterol in those days didn't we?<br />

A. I guess we did, and so she had what she called a "sunshine cake." It was like an angel food<br />

but it was like+ a yellow cake and had all the yokes in iL Or else we made, or she made her own<br />

mayonnaise. I whipped that with a fork A little bit <strong>of</strong> oil, a little bit <strong>of</strong> oil, an# don't do it too<br />

fast or it'll curdle. . , ( chuckle )<br />

Q. It's great to reminisce isn't it?<br />

A. Oh, kids today have no idea.<br />

Q. No they don't. I think this is one reason I enjoy doing this. To hear the 'old days'. We aU<br />

have the old days, they'll have the old days.<br />

I


A. Aad the wagons over on Williams Boulewd. Why, the city even came by &d picked up dl<br />

the ashes. People didn't have the. . .gas heat didn't come in till the late '20's a@ so you had coal<br />

fired. . .you talk about the air being polluted, that coal smoh. . .and you hand &ed these thi~gs.<br />

Stokers didn't come in until about the middle '20's and oil burners, oh they we* great but your<br />

whole house smelled <strong>of</strong> oil, and then Wy,<br />

it was the late '20's when they brolght in natural gas<br />

but the city <strong>of</strong> Sprinaeld went up and down the alleys twice. They do nothing "Clinkers" they<br />

were called. The coal they would gather together and kind <strong>of</strong> stick in what we called a kind <strong>of</strong><br />

clinker and it'd burn out but it wasn't into ashes and that's why my father gat, be got when we<br />

were over on Williams Boulevard he got Kentucky block coal which was a harQ coal and it had<br />

nice ashes. It wasn't like the local coal here and then he'd mix coke with it and that made easier<br />

ashes because you had to haul the ashes out <strong>of</strong> your basement into the ally in the back <strong>of</strong> the<br />

house.<br />

Q, Didn't you usually have a pit at the base <strong>of</strong> your fireplace? Ah, but that wa$ a furnace thing<br />

wasn't it?<br />

A. This is furnace. And so you'd carry them out to the back and just dump tkm on the ground<br />

and these guys would come back with a team <strong>of</strong> horses and a wagon that had Ibe bottom th#t<br />

would drop out <strong>of</strong> it and they'd come along and shovel the ashes up into that, into those w%ons<br />

and take 'em out to the dump and come back and get more.<br />

Q. They didn't use the ashes for anything else? I thought they re-cycled thosa ashes,<br />

A. Oh, some <strong>of</strong> them they did but that was in the power plant. But, oh gosh, you'd haul time<br />

ashes out and I can remember my mother. My father would go down. ..we had a particulaly<br />

cold, cold winter, It was when we were on MacArther there and dad would s t up at five o'clock<br />

in the marning and start the fire, up again, I mean you bedded down for the night, but you how<br />

he'd get the house warmed up and in the living room . . the stove was one <strong>of</strong> these old grills in<br />

the wall when they had kind <strong>of</strong> a little design on it, and it was so cold up stair$ that I came<br />

downstairs to get dressed and this paticulm morning, I dropped my pajamas and leaned owr to<br />

get my shorts and I got my bottom against that gdl and I had the design (chu~kle) all over it Oh,<br />

I was branded (chuckle). Oh God, he had really fired it up that morning. Peqle don't knaw<br />

what cold houses are today.<br />

END TAPE ONE; SIDE TWO<br />

Q. You talk about cold houses. How did you cool a house in those days?<br />

A. Yo, ha, ho, ho. Well, let's put it this way. You know that warm air rises and cold air falls,<br />

And so what people did in those days, they would put a sheet on the carpets i~ the house and<br />

they'd open up all the windows and doors and stuff and then you'd wear as fqw clothes as<br />

possible. You went out on your porches. There wasn't any air conditioning. The people today<br />

forget that air conditioning was something &r World War 11, and television


I can't remember if we talked about radio or television.<br />

I<br />

I<br />

Q. First, let me ask you. Didn't they have fans?<br />

A. Oh yes, they had fans but nothing like the fans we have today.<br />

Q. Well, you how, people wore so many clothes in those days and during hum(d spells like the<br />

last several weeks, and the starched collars. What did they do?<br />

A. I don't know what they did. They were crazy.<br />

Q. What did you do when you were at, say, work?<br />

A. Work. See my first job was working for the Producers Dairy in the summen time and that<br />

would have been about driving a milk truck. I just had white trousers and a wwte shirt. I could<br />

get pretty perspirous, I mean, I'd walk around in clothes that were wet from haulitlg stuff in and<br />

out and up and down stairways and so on and then what would happen, (chucde) somebody<br />

would want some ice cream that came in these big tin cans. Four gallons <strong>of</strong> ic~<br />

cream in one <strong>of</strong><br />

these big five gallon containers. That's what they put in the soda fountains but why four gallons?<br />

And the top was empty. That's so that you could dig the last <strong>of</strong> the ice cream Ipn the can that was<br />

almost empty and put it on top <strong>of</strong> the new can that went in. So that's the way you bought ice<br />

mam. It was four dollars for four gallons in a five gallon can. I remember w@n there was,<br />

perhaps, half a gallon left in the old container and the ice cream got low, ernpq* then they9s call in<br />

to get one, particularly on Saturday or Sunday. They 'd call for a new one and you'd move the<br />

bottom <strong>of</strong> the old container on to the top <strong>of</strong> the new one sit it made it difficult for us to reach so<br />

far further, deeper, into the can. By the end <strong>of</strong> the day, my shirtsleeves past my elbow would<br />

smell sour and be sticky, I'd carry an unpleasant odor and look messy in our whh uniform<br />

which, incidentally we paid for out <strong>of</strong> our $14.00 a week salary,<br />

Q. And an ice cream cone was how much?<br />

Q. And a soda ?<br />

A. Yeah, I guess a soda was ten cents, But I would go into those coolers to get cans <strong>of</strong> ice<br />

cream to deliver, and I'd come out <strong>of</strong> those coolers which where 10 below zero or more, maybe<br />

YE<br />

20 and I'd have all my clothes that were solid, having Erozen just in the time that I was in . . .<br />

that's when I got flue a couple <strong>of</strong> times from it too. In August,<br />

Q. Were there ceiling fans in those days?<br />

A. Oh yeah. As a matter <strong>of</strong> fact in those days we had the ceiling fans that a* now so pop)llar


and you had these little ones on the floor that would move and, . .<br />

Q, What about <strong>of</strong>fices? They all had that?<br />

A. 0 Lord. I can remember. . .well when I worked for. . .I worked for both Hrjnry Helmle. . .see<br />

I started working on Washington's birthday on 1938. 1 was mid-semester gradpate, I think<br />

we've covered that and I worked for Carl Meyer, and his <strong>of</strong>fice was on the ten* floor <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Myers' Building and he had a comer <strong>of</strong>fice that was West and North, the North West corner <strong>of</strong><br />

the building and we'd open all the windows and get the breeze through as best we could and then<br />

when I worked later for Henry HelmZe, he had the penthouse which was the elwenth floor on the<br />

Fhst National Bank. There was no such thing as air conditioning and you'd ju$ open the<br />

windows and when it was really hot, perspiring, we would take tracing paper a d make cuffs on<br />

ow arms, wrap those, so that we didn't perspire and get the perspiration on OW drawings. That<br />

was a mortal sin to do that because once you got moisture or if we dripped, wa were wore<br />

headbands on there, the paper would kind <strong>of</strong> crimp around it and then you'd h4ve to draw. . .it<br />

was terrible. . .so we were very careful. Our drawing was really slowed down by fighting these<br />

paper cuffs, you know the bacing paper we had wrapped around. We had to s$ck them on with<br />

tracing paper with scotch tape and keep towels and paper towels and stuff arowd, Guess we had<br />

paper towels then.<br />

Q. I don't think so.<br />

A. I don't think so, We're talking about the late W es. But that was the m$n thing, to keep<br />

those drawings dry and it was terrible and you could, oh, golly. . .<br />

Q. What about poUens? Were the pollens as bad? Did people have a problem with breathing the<br />

way they do today?<br />

A. I don't think so. If you did, you didn't hear much about it. I don't know.<br />

Q, The ozone layer right now is very difficult on us, depending who you listep to <strong>of</strong> course.<br />

A. Do you have it too?<br />

Q. Well,everybody. Because the sky is basically clearer and not overcast wilb Mt. Helena's<br />

ashes and that kind <strong>of</strong> thing to mask the sun as it did last year. So they say thq ozone layer is<br />

more damaging to skin and people out in it and so. . .<br />

A. Oh, I haven't had too many breathing problems or anything like that, but I( do do this, When I<br />

get in my car in the morning to go someplace, it's not in the garage, I will the little window<br />

wiper deal that squirts the windshield and give it four or five wipes and surprised at the<br />

pollen and dust that is acquired from the last time I drove it from the<br />

you can see it<br />

collecting to the side when the windshield . . .and that's the stuff


Q. What else do you think the kids have missed?<br />

A. By the way, I worked. . .this was two summers. . .<br />

Q. For the dairy?<br />

A. For the Producers Dairy <strong>of</strong> <strong>Springfield</strong> which was on the corner <strong>of</strong> Ninth @ Jefferson Street.<br />

And I worked on a summer job as a delivery. . .I delivered anything. . .and for sb days a week,<br />

and that included Saturday and Sunday and I worked from seven in the mornin4 until six at night<br />

one week and then the next week I worked from twelve noon until twelve at I)ight. That made<br />

it really rough on you, on Sunday morning yw switched. Saturdays and Sundays was delivering<br />

ice-cream and stuff to the family reunions out in the parks.<br />

Q. Did you have a little car with a bell?<br />

A. No, no. They were on order and they'd have family reunions and stuff and so we'd take these<br />

cartons <strong>of</strong> dixie-cups and whatever they wanted and they were in cardboard boqed but they were<br />

all packed with ice so the stuff really was hard when it was delivered. The maiq thing was to try<br />

to find out where to deliver it. If you went out to Washington Park or Lincoln Park and you had,<br />

say, the "Smith'* reunion there, the best way to find out which one was the f a y reunion without<br />

having to walk dl over the park, to find the group there, or the group there, yoq'd look at your<br />

delivery ticket and decided that if you had fifq dixie cups, so then you'd say, well there's a group<br />

<strong>of</strong> about twelve or fifteen people. That's too many for them and you'd try to tr@ck them down.<br />

And you'd try to. . ,it took a little while to get smart, othewise I walked all ovgr the place to try<br />

to find. . .<br />

Q. You walked?<br />

A. Sure. I mean you parked your truck and then you had to find out where thq group was and<br />

then you went back and got the box instead <strong>of</strong> hauling it all over the place. Wh+n you're talking<br />

about heat, this is a funny night. When I fist got down there, that was in the h+ut <strong>of</strong> the "redlight"<br />

district and a block away was called the Stag Hotel, a little light outside @d the Stag Hotel<br />

and the girls would call into the dairy, that was on the corner <strong>of</strong> Eighth and Jeffbrson. The daixy<br />

was Ninth and Jefferson and. . .by the way tht girls wore evening gowns there, ey were really. .<br />

but they would call in about ten o'clock or so for lunch and go in for milk s h q and pie, cause<br />

they had a soda fountain and stuff, and they delivered it just about a block away and I did that a<br />

couple or three times. But the fist time, that was rare. (Chuckle) I knew what It was. And then<br />

Madame Patton's was just across the street. Those were the high class ones.<br />

Q. Madame Patton?<br />

A. Madame Patton. (Spells it,)


Q. And she was on Eighth Street between Washington and Jefferson on the we/st side <strong>of</strong> the<br />

street, but I didn't deliver there very <strong>of</strong>ten because they had a regular route guy who took care <strong>of</strong><br />

thcm and the, girls were well fed with butter and cheese and ice cream and all tliat, oh yea, but I<br />

never saw any <strong>of</strong> the girls there, but the first the I went to the Stag Hotel therq, I went to the<br />

back door and it had a big porch on the back, you know, with latices on it. Tha: door was locked<br />

and I knocked on the door and I yelled, "Order from Producer's Dairy''and nobody came so I<br />

beat on the door harder and very shortly a mat big woman wrapped in swadag clothes or<br />

something like that, it was almost like a silk curtain wrapped around her. Great big gal came to<br />

the door and her comments. . ,and a dog barking too, a little Boston bull dog (&uckle) she mme<br />

to the door and said, "What blankety blank SOB is hying to beat down the back porch door?<br />

(Chuckle) And I said, "I have an order from the Producer's Dairy, and I'm new on the job and I<br />

just thought I'd bring it to the back door, that I was supposed to deliver there", and she said, "Oh<br />

honey!'' (chuckle) She turned a hundred and eighty degrees and she said, "Oh honey, you should<br />

deliver to the side door. That's where the girls are waiting for it, Go around @ere." And tlwt's<br />

what I did and they had quite a good size vestibule there, and the vestibule was dark and inside<br />

was sort <strong>of</strong> a dance floor and very well lighted and there were two or three gab waiting there and<br />

this one girl, I said. ., what ever her name was. ..and they called her and she c m in, a little<br />

short blond gal and a white evening gown, and she stood in that door and she made the most<br />

gorgeous shadow picture. But she had a full length evening gown which you oould see right<br />

through with the lights behind so they paid <strong>of</strong>f, and I only did that about two or thee times<br />

because they decided 'why waist a truck when we have curb boys.' Let them go a block amy<br />

and haul it down by hand so I didn't have to, . .then one other night (laugh) it was a great tirne.<br />

There was a gal by the name <strong>of</strong> Madge Harnlin and she had a house and she was on Jefferson<br />

Street, They were all right by the police station and it was a hell <strong>of</strong> a hot nighq and I even<br />

remember what was ordered. It was a quart <strong>of</strong> lemon sherbet and I had a nice little box fmd up<br />

with dry ice and I went up there and she was on the second floor, one <strong>of</strong> those string <strong>of</strong> steps to<br />

the second floor. On the second floor there was a screen door up there and I kpocked on the<br />

screen door, "Producers Dairy" and, "order fiom Producers Dairy", and this gpl came to the door<br />

and (chuckle) this was the first tirne I had ever faced or seen a girl in her undenvear, I mean I was<br />

a well protected little boy with no sisters or anything like that not that we wem tenibly modest<br />

around our house but there was this long legged gal and very scanty panties and a very skimpy<br />

brazier and high patent bather shoes on. High heels, I mean really high heels,<br />

Q. No long dress? I<br />

A. No dress on her. It was hot. (Chuckle) Any rate it was quite . . .I only want there onc<br />

was some <strong>of</strong> my.experiences <strong>of</strong> delivering. Oh, gosh.<br />

Q. You had a series <strong>of</strong> interesting jobs.<br />

A. Yeah, I got $14 dollars a week for that.<br />

Q. That was good.<br />

1


A.. Yeah. It was better than the job I had starting for Carl Meyers. I worked *o months fgr<br />

nothing there and then $5 a week.<br />

Q. Did that lead to anything at all. Were you glad to get away from that?<br />

A.. Well the main thing 1 had to. . .I mean I was like an intern in a hospital. 1<br />

Q. It was a job?<br />

A. I was a graduate in architecture through the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong> right? Tben you had to get<br />

the experience in an <strong>of</strong>fice before you could take the state board exam, so I had to do it, at any<br />

price and there was no work in those days.<br />

Q. Let's get back to what else have the kids missed. What do you remember most fondly that<br />

you're sorry that young people are not experiencing?<br />

A.. Well, the difference between the young people in my day and the people today is there" an<br />

automobile. As I understand it, most <strong>of</strong> the kids today, the moment they're Ween they've '<br />

already had drivers training in high school or something like that and all they're ready to do 1s get<br />

their drivers licence and get a car. In my day the family had one car, maybe, ad<br />

it wasn't a bw<br />

one every year either. You could buy in the mid thirties and stuff you could p t Fords and<br />

Chevrolets and stuff for $6,7,800, and that was a lot <strong>of</strong> money. But the fami4y had one c q and if<br />

you wanted to go to a dance in high school and borrow the car from the family, why you cleared<br />

to see if they didn't want to go some place that night and you got the family car, and whenewer I<br />

went to a dance in high school. . . "did I clear this with you?" The tickets were 50 cents at<br />

<strong>Springfield</strong> High School and you may add another fiftv cents and you maybe had another 50 cents.<br />

Q. And you had a coke date. Besides the car, what are tbe biggest changes y ~u most revere in<br />

your past that they won't see today. Do you think the peer group is a larger *tittition than it was<br />

in your time? A larger influence?<br />

A.. Probably, but I would say one <strong>of</strong> the differences is, today the kids have cas. They don't<br />

dress up. The only time you see them dressed up is when they have a wedding and they go out to<br />

Gengridges or whatever you call it and they have the damnest mess <strong>of</strong> monkey suits.<br />

Unbelievably, and I was out one time at one <strong>of</strong> them at White Oaks Mall,and I needed to get a<br />

cumberbund or something and here were a bunch <strong>of</strong> kids and they were in cutq<strong>of</strong>f Jeans and I<br />

don't blame them for being comfortable and stuff but here they were all gettirg fitted up for a<br />

wedding and I thought, Oh boy, in these Jeans. From the sublime to the ridicdous or vice or<br />

versa, I don't know which and so on. But in my day I got. ..I don't know wkther I've told you<br />

this, but when I was a senior in high school, my father and mother gave me <strong>of</strong>ders to go d m to<br />

Meyers Brothers before Christmas and get myself my first twcedo and they h4<br />

specials on @em<br />

and they had tuxedo and shirt and vest and even black sox and even black pa#en leather shoes.<br />

Dancing shoes that weighed nothing, The leather heels on them were even hcflow so I mew you<br />

I


had a heel like this and then underneath was a little thin cap on that so they we# very nice and<br />

light. I happen to know that because I wore them <strong>of</strong>ten.<br />

I<br />

Q. Well you also had vests, and gloves and spats and, .. 1<br />

d<br />

A. I never had spats. Those were not in my day, but I can remember one tim ..and then when I<br />

went to college, they got me tails.<br />

Q. Did you have a top hat? 1<br />

A. No I didn't, I had a Homburg. My mother gave me a Homburg and I had<br />

t"<br />

at a little later.<br />

But I can remember going to, I think it was fourteen dances in one Christmas eason and I had<br />

three stiff shirts. Now there was the really McCoy laundry. They really starch them They were<br />

like a board and wing collars, and I liked those stiff ones, and you'd button thqm in the back I had<br />

those three shirts and collars were at the laundry the whole time. Now all thol;e fourteen dances,<br />

they weren't all, some <strong>of</strong> them were tea dances. Some <strong>of</strong> them were tea dances but most <strong>of</strong> them<br />

at the country club.<br />

I<br />

Q. And you had them in the park at the Pavilion.<br />

A. The Pavilion. Yeah, they had dances the too.<br />

Q. Well, there was pride in those days too.<br />

A, Oh, the girls got dressed up in the evening in long dresses.<br />

Q. Would you repeat that era in your life?<br />

A. Sure.<br />

Q. Would you like to be living that way today?<br />

A. I'm perfectly happy in a dinner jacket and I have all <strong>of</strong> the ones that I ever: had. Still exist in<br />

various sizes. I've got one right now. I got a new one, oh, a couple <strong>of</strong> years ago.<br />

Q, So the Sangarno Club has just announced that they dress more casually.<br />

A. That's for the hot weather.<br />

Q. Only?<br />

A. I think so.<br />

I<br />

I<br />

i


Q. So things are changing because that's one <strong>of</strong> the last in town.<br />

A. Yeah, I think that was because <strong>of</strong> the heat, only. At least a jacket and a tie. Now yesterday<br />

when I had lunch down there. . .it was a Tuesday. . .we had our first. . .kids w b were in hi&<br />

school together who are still around, . .<br />

Q. Who are they? What do you call it? Have you named it?<br />

A, Jim Myers started it<br />

Q. Prairie House Jim Myers ?<br />

A,. Yes. Huh huh, he started it. See we were all in the same graduating class, in '31. And Jim<br />

Myers, Cliff Hathaway. . .there were six <strong>of</strong> us. Lloyd Springer who was not i~# class with us but. .<br />

Q. He's a good friend <strong>of</strong> everybody. He's three or four years younger isn't he?<br />

A. But let's see. Oh, Basil Cutrakons. He's the Judge <strong>of</strong> the, oh, people whg go broke.<br />

Bankruptcy. He's refereeing banlrmptsy and he travels all over. They won't let him retin.<br />

Q. What have you decided to do with this group?<br />

A. We meet for lunch the first Tuesday <strong>of</strong> each month. It's only been going for three months<br />

now.<br />

Q. What do you calk about7 Old times?<br />

A. Whatever anybody thinks about. Old times. New times. Somebody says, "Say what<br />

happened to so and so. You guys remember. . .oh yeah, she married and moved away.<br />

Q, Is that good for all <strong>of</strong> you? Is it a good feeling to have all these old chum around?<br />

A. Yeah, it's kind <strong>of</strong> fun. Of course here's the crazy thing the other day. Qere's one guy whose<br />

name I can't remember. He's new. I can't remember. He's new and been &ere twice now, but<br />

here are six now and maybe I told you before. Four <strong>of</strong> them have hearing aids. The fith one,<br />

Lloyd Springer, should have and I'm the only guy whose got decent hearing@ the crowd.<br />

However all the rest have their knees and legs and stuf€ and (chuckle) I don't have knees.<br />

Q. So you're all breaking down in one way or another but at eighty two wyt do you expect?<br />

I<br />

Q. Oh, I how him fairly well.


A. You how what he did in W? He was a navigator on a B29 and they m+de 36 trips<br />

Japan fiom Taipei, Taiwanp Tinian or one a€ those little islands out there. They would fly<br />

there, bomb Japan, and fly back. Thirty six times and he never got a scratch aql I think he sGd he<br />

used up six airplanes but managed to get them back all shot up with holes in tvm and every(hing,<br />

but managed to get back to home base.<br />

Q. Well, he's a quiet man so you don't hear all this unless you have the opportunity. Did you all<br />

enjoy doing the Reminiscence <strong>of</strong> <strong>Springfield</strong> at the Art Association?<br />

A. Oh, very much. Got a big bang out <strong>of</strong> it. Everybody said the boys were mch better than the<br />

girls. (Chuckle)<br />

Q. I forget who the girls were, Mary Jane Masters, Jo Sane:. . .<br />

A. Can't remember the others.<br />

Q. Time changes our way <strong>of</strong> life. What comes to mind when you think about kt?<br />

A, There's a number <strong>of</strong> things where I can think right <strong>of</strong>f the top. Number o*, we are cerWy<br />

a much more afnuent society. In my day I was in high school during the deprasion. I mea@ the<br />

stock market bust during 1929, 1931 and Gee, people. ..that depression was wrrible.<br />

Q. Well, your father had a job.<br />

A. He was a lawyer,<br />

Q. So he carried through.<br />

A. He carried through fairly well, but golly there was the old expression, "Br~ther, can you spare<br />

a dime?" They sold apples on corners. I man it was. ..<br />

Q. But you see that on street corners today.<br />

A. Yeah, but there were so many. . .the farmers lost their farms because. . .ten cents a bushel<br />

corn and they couldn't meet their mortgages on their farms.<br />

Q. So who bought them?<br />

A. Some guy who had a couple <strong>of</strong> buck laid back and bought them for nothisg.<br />

Q. Not the government?<br />

A, No, no.


Q. So they changed hands and families as well?<br />

A. Huh, huh.<br />

Q. What happened to these people when they lost their farms?<br />

A*. I don't how. That was later when they had the Oakies. Do you rernembw the stories <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Oaldes from Oklahoma. God, I can remember in the summerthm going out. . *what summer was<br />

that in the middle thirties wasn't it or something like that? You could look up st the sky in the<br />

evening as the sun was setting and you could see the yellow soil that was being blown <strong>of</strong>f their<br />

fields out there. The farms were just blown away.<br />

Q. What about the locusts?<br />

A. We didn't have any locusts here.<br />

Q. When you were in high school, there was a great fire, several great fires.<br />

A. Oh, there were some honeys <strong>of</strong> fires, There was the Vrendenburg Mill, pltpling mill which<br />

was a frame building, which was huge, on the corner <strong>of</strong> second and Madison 8treet The NE<br />

corner. It was a huge building, a frame building and it caught fire one night. nat's when I was<br />

in Junior College and that burnt right down to the ground, Oh, you could seerit for miles.<br />

Another one was a mill, a grain elevator that was across from the. . .there wag then the Chicago<br />

and Alton Railroad and then Amtrack on Tlnird, this was on Third and Adamg there. A great big<br />

wooden grain elevator, a huge thing and that went up in flames. I was at that one too. Then<br />

there was the famous Myers Brothers' Building. That was in the late'20 and ;C didn't see that fire.<br />

It was late at night and then there was the old Armory Building. That was inlabout 1930 ur '31.<br />

That's where the present State Armory Building is and that went up in flames. That was a<br />

beautiful old, almost like a castle. Culver had build it and it had round turret$ on the corner and<br />

stuff.<br />

Q. Who was Culver?<br />

A. Culver was the stone mason. I though we maybe had talked about him He was famous for his<br />

stonework around <strong>Springfield</strong> as a contractor. There's still a few <strong>of</strong> them lek and that was a. .<br />

.we were out <strong>of</strong> town. That had to be in August 1930 or '31.<br />

Q. All right now that brings me to the Sangamon River. How did people gwerally feel about the<br />

lake etched out <strong>of</strong> the Sangamon River?<br />

A. Well,number one, the original Lake <strong>Springfield</strong> was supposed to have, to be formed by<br />

dammiag up the Sangamon aver and the Oak Crest Country Club or someding. You h ow that<br />

the golf course that's out on the way to Riverton there. Maybe it's still callqd Oak Crest. That


was put out there and they even designed a great big club house and stuff becaqse they were<br />

going to be on Lake <strong>Springfield</strong> and Carl Meyer even had designed the club hopse for them He<br />

had the picture in his <strong>of</strong>fice there but <strong>of</strong> course the club house. . .they already lpd the golf course<br />

and they took a long look at what had happened in Decatur and Lake Decatur vas formed by<br />

darmning up the Sangamon River over there. The Sangamon River's got the Hod fork and<br />

South fork and so on and they were having trouble with the silting, As a matw <strong>of</strong> fact I thipk<br />

they had already put three or four feet on top <strong>of</strong> the dam and <strong>of</strong> course that m$te all kinds a€<br />

trouble with the shore lines and stuff. But over there, the people owned their Qwn shore lines and<br />

in <strong>Springfield</strong>, as you know, they lease them so <strong>Springfield</strong> tried to control. . .$in= it was a water<br />

supply. Well then they went to the other creeks where they have it now. They abandoned the<br />

idea <strong>of</strong> having it on the Sangamon River and so & fifty years now, they've sp$t a few million<br />

dollars ~rying to dig this silt that's washed into it.<br />

Q. And with the hope that they can maintab aesthetic surroundings, it's very difficult isn't it?<br />

A. Yes.<br />

Q. Was the Electric Power Plant built before or after the lake was built?<br />

A. Before the lake. The Electric Plant and Water Plant were built at the same the as the lake.<br />

<strong>Springfield</strong> got their water from out North <strong>of</strong> the Fairgrounds. If you go Sanpon Avenue,<br />

beside the Fairgrounds, you go Sangamon Avenue and it swings around. If pu go straight on<br />

that road, you go down and run into the river, and down there they had deep weUs for water and<br />

they had a pumping station down h re and that's where our water supply comes kom.<br />

Q, Did they have a filter system?<br />

A. They probably had some kind <strong>of</strong> a filter system. I remember some <strong>of</strong> the great pumps they<br />

had down there with fly wheels to pump it out <strong>of</strong> the ground.<br />

Q. Did you go down and swim there ever?<br />

A, In the Sangamon River? Oh God.<br />

Q. That was a popular place.<br />

A. If you want to write a history <strong>of</strong> tragedy, it's the Sangamon River. To chase down all the<br />

people that have drowned.<br />

Q. That's been kept very quiet.<br />

A. Oh, every once and a while so you'll find somebody. .,but they don't swim in it like they used<br />

to. Before Lake <strong>Springfield</strong>, there was no place to swim<br />

i. They had a. . .


Q. Rope, and they used to take it out over the river and drop themselves someyhere. (Chuckle)<br />

A. I'l tell you this. They had camps on the Sangarnon River, In the '20's, thew was a camp<br />

called Camp Colgan. Now the Colgans were a good Irish Catholic family<br />

money in coal during the World War I and there was movement called the<br />

and it was in competition with the Boy Scouts. Have you ever heard<br />

Q. No.<br />

A, Do you want me to talk?<br />

Q. Sure.<br />

A. So, I can remember the Colgans donated a couple <strong>of</strong> hundred <strong>of</strong> acres <strong>of</strong> l&d for Camp<br />

Colgan out west and a little bit north <strong>of</strong> <strong>Springfield</strong> here. I'm not quite sure I +an find it now but<br />

the Sangamon River ran around it and they had a sand bar. There was a big cu@e in the river<br />

there and there was a sand bar and that's where the kids from the camp went down to swim and it<br />

was, oh, a good block to go down there, and we went down and swam in that damn river and as a<br />

matter <strong>of</strong> fact my father lost a younger brother. They had a picnic. This was ears and years ago.<br />

The kid was 12 or 13 years old, 11 years old, and they had a country picnic. 3h ey lived out on<br />

the east side <strong>of</strong> Springfdd and they had a country picnic out there and one af+rnoon all the kids<br />

went swimming in the river and he drowned.<br />

Q. Was there a rip tide that made it so dangerous or whirlpools?<br />

A. Yeah, whirlpools and there were lots <strong>of</strong> trees and things which fell in the dver and the<br />

swimmers would get caught in them<br />

Q. Was there a waterfall <strong>of</strong> any kind to change the terrain. Was it a rushing fiver? How deep<br />

was it?<br />

A. Shallow and deep. It just depended on where you were in it.<br />

Q. It varied.<br />

4. It varied, yeah,<br />

Q. What size boat could you take on it?<br />

A. Well, how far back do you.want to go? Look at Abe Lincoln who was in a flat boat that came<br />

all the way up there and got stuck in a dam or a raft. They got stuck on the (8am at Petenburg<br />

there. New Salen SQ it was much more navigable than it is today. But thaq Camp Colgan. That<br />

was terrible. My father took me out there one Sunday and then they dumpeQ me there to stay for


Q. Why didn't you like it?<br />

A. Well,you started out every morning. . . I was never a camper anyway, but you started out<br />

every morning by going to mass in the mess hall. It was a very Catholic organiqtion and they had<br />

fancy uniforms with purple epaulets on them.<br />

Q. Did you all feel this way. I mean I always had the feeling that a good CathcQic boy would do<br />

what he was told and go to church and never complain about it.<br />

A. Well, he did for a long long time, pretty much until he got a lot <strong>of</strong> it beaten out <strong>of</strong> him<br />

You're not Catholic are you?<br />

Q. No, I'm an Episcoparian. We won't go into that here! (Chuckle)<br />

A. Alright. Not enough difference really. Depending on which one.<br />

Q. But, the lake.<br />

END TAPE! TWO; SIDE ONE<br />

A. Wayne. 1 don't know his first name, but he was the director <strong>of</strong> it, and they bid to expand it<br />

into a national organization or something but for several years and so on, it suldenly fell apart<br />

because somebody put the finger on the director or master or whatever he waq called. Wayne,<br />

because (chuckle) he liked little boys and that was the end <strong>of</strong> the Catholic Boys Brigade.<br />

(Chuckle) As I remember things about. . .<br />

Q, The lake.<br />

A, The lake, yeah. I, . .<br />

Q. Do.you remember it? Was the town excited with this idea?<br />

A. There was a certain group in town that were so damn excited that we stood out there at the<br />

dam the night the water went over the dam.<br />

Q. The first time?<br />

A. The first time. My father. . .I think I mntioned my father being here for the first flight <strong>of</strong> air<br />

mail. I thinlr I mentioned it, But he was a very very progressive guy for a country boy and he<br />

was very intmsted in Lake <strong>Springfield</strong> out there.


i<br />

Q. There are some wonderFu1 pictures at the Sangamon Valley Room Have yQu seen them?<br />

1934'35.<br />

A. Oh, <strong>of</strong> course. You see, the water went over in '35 I think.<br />

Q. Did it take two years?<br />

A. Oh they. ..the Sugar Creek that went thmugh there would flood up every <strong>of</strong>ten and lhey<br />

just surveyed it. They estimated what the, flow <strong>of</strong> water was and how much it take to fdl<br />

the basin there and where would be the prop place to put the dam. And by $e way, when you<br />

drive across the dam and go to your house, in the middle <strong>of</strong> that dam is a core wall <strong>of</strong> concrete.<br />

Q. A core wall?<br />

A. A core, In other words, they put. . .so that if the earth was washed away<br />

they still had that big concrete wall in the middle <strong>of</strong> the dam underneath the n<br />

highway there. You go over it every day when you go home.<br />

i<br />

lr anything like that<br />

Id. Underneath the<br />

Q. I how bridges like the Golden Gate Bridge had these tremendously deep<br />

That's not what this is?<br />

hore pilings.<br />

A. Yeah. Of course when they put this in that was just farm land.<br />

Q. You have a change in terraine <strong>of</strong> about fifty to seventy five feet?<br />

A. Now you see, I do know a little bit about this because my grandfather had a hundred and<br />

twenty acres <strong>of</strong> land that had been in the family since 1857 or something do- there and it had<br />

wonderful timber on it and all that and it had a house right in the middle <strong>of</strong> this 120 acres. Along<br />

came. ..and he had a marvelous timber there, and God help any tenant who sut down a tree<br />

without his permission. Along came the lake and they wanted 70 acres <strong>of</strong> the 120 and you know<br />

where Virginia Lane is? That was the heart <strong>of</strong> that 120 and the city paid $108 an acre for it. In<br />

other words you had a square like this and they took this piece <strong>of</strong>f here (dem~nstrates) and this is<br />

West Lake Drive over here, down in, and the other 50 from the 70 was in hem and the house was<br />

right in here, and dad had to fight like the devil with the city to keep the hous because West Lake<br />

Drive goes right by it today.<br />

Q. Is it across the road from the Lake? Is it on the edge <strong>of</strong> Lincoln Land Community College?<br />

A. It backs up. . .that's the rest <strong>of</strong> the story. Along came "Lincoln Land" ard they wanted the<br />

balance <strong>of</strong> that fifty acres there and so we fought like the devil. . ,<br />

Q. How did they do that? It was your property?


A. Oh, Eminent domain, You know for the good <strong>of</strong>, they can come in and comiemn it That's<br />

what happens with all these highways. These farmers get chopped in two.<br />

Q. They buy it They do buy it from them but at a low price, right?<br />

A. Well, look at it. $108. I think we sold that 50 acres. . ,we only sold them 49 acres by fighting<br />

and fighting and fighting. We managed to keep the farm house and one acre. And my brother<br />

and I own that now. It's come down to us and it's a little house. ..you how qhere the<br />

maintenance area is on the east end <strong>of</strong> the <strong>University</strong>. It buts right into that ad<br />

this little acre,<br />

one am with a house on it, my brother and I rent this.<br />

Q. What's the name <strong>of</strong> the road it's on?<br />

A. West Lake Drive.<br />

Q, Oh, it is West Lake.<br />

A. 2335 West Lake. It's up high with a lot <strong>of</strong> trees.<br />

Q. So what are you going to do with that eventually?<br />

, A. We rent it. My brother's very sentimental about it.<br />

Q. Does somebody live in it?<br />

A, Yeah, huh, huh.<br />

Q. So let's go back to this.<br />

A. Oh, wait a minute. You see, I remember all about the Lake Spriu@eld because we used to go<br />

out there for picnics and Sugar Creek came right across the bottom. . .if yougo down the hill at<br />

Virginia Lane, you go down to tho water, and right qff their shoreline is some <strong>of</strong> tbe deepest<br />

water in the lake, It's about 25 feet deep but that's where the old creek we* right through there<br />

and we used to go down there and have picnics and gather paw paws and st@ that would grow<br />

there wild. You how what a Paw is? It's kind <strong>of</strong> like a little wild banana.<br />

Q. Why were bananas growing here?<br />

A. They became a Paw. (Chuckle) But you see, I do know about the Me there because <strong>of</strong> that.<br />

Q. How did they determine the size <strong>of</strong> it? . I know it's 56 miles around.<br />

A. Yeah. I think they decided. ., a lot <strong>of</strong> engineering went into it, <strong>of</strong> courge, and sum<br />

Y<br />

g to


establish where the shoreline would be. The average, I think it, what is it, 560 I think, 560 feet is<br />

considered normal sea level <strong>of</strong> the lake.<br />

Q. Mrs. Knudsen came in. Did you remember her?<br />

A.. Sure.<br />

Q, Tell me about Mrs. Knudsen,<br />

A. Nutsen. It's K-N-U-D-S-E-N but pronounced Nutsen. The K is silent.(Ckckle)<br />

Q. Her daughter, Mollie Grey, is still living.<br />

A. Yes, her daughter is living right over here on Williams Boulevard.<br />

Q, Going strong!.<br />

A. Yeah. They lived out near Salisbury. They had a farm out there. Oh, she was a founder more<br />

or less <strong>of</strong> Lincoln Gardens.<br />

Q. With Jensen?<br />

A, Yeah, with Jensen the landscaper. And then before that there was a Cath~lic priest here. .<br />

George Link, and he was a great naturalist, a fabulous character and he was more or less the<br />

founder <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Springfield</strong> Nature League. You'll probably find that in the Gvdens. Now whether<br />

Knudsen got in with him on that or how they got together I don't how, but be had a little<br />

church down in Godfrey or something like that. Not Godfrey. He was orighplly fiom Quincy and<br />

then he had a little parish sort <strong>of</strong>, ..he was in Springkld an awful lot. It waq almost a ..oh, he'd<br />

do one mass a week or something like that or on Sundays, but he had a very very small parish so<br />

he was fairly free to do his nature league work too out <strong>of</strong> the Bishops <strong>of</strong>fice and stuff. Whenever<br />

he'd pop into town, .. we were living on Williams Boulevard over here whe* Harvey Stephens<br />

lives now. Mother and dad built that house and we had a big porch an the bwk <strong>of</strong> that and he'd<br />

load that porch up with all kinds <strong>of</strong>.. ..he'd bring in cages or something. I remember one time he<br />

brought in a cage with little white footed deer mice. Cutest dm<br />

things. You how they have<br />

white tummies and white down here (demonstrates). Cutest dam things.<br />

Q. What did he do with them?<br />

A. Dump them on our back porch. (Chuckle)<br />

Q. Why?<br />

A., Because we'd take care <strong>of</strong> them until he decided what he was going to<br />

P<br />

o with them.


Q. What did he do with them?<br />

A. Oh, maybe take them some place else.<br />

Q. Well if they were caged, they were wild. Why'd he do that?<br />

A. I don't how. Maybe he went around, took them to schools, things like that. That was<br />

1920's and I'l never forget he'd just pop into our house and rnother'd put another plate on the<br />

table. He'd crawl into the bed in the guest room or something and we even took a trip with him.<br />

He talked my dad into. ..dad was quite a naturalist too. We went down to Smgkey Mountains<br />

National Park the year it opened and we took him along. He'd been down the* before, that was<br />

1930, '34. We even climbed the top <strong>of</strong> the mountain down there. Of course G~tlinburg was a<br />

funny little place. It was a little town there and they had a hotel where you could stay. We were<br />

down there for maybe a week or something.<br />

Q. With the priest? Learning all about nature?<br />

A. Oh, we got a marvelous education from him and I'l never forget this the. There was a<br />

particularly interesting book on flowers that he wanted and (chuckle) he was Ways reading,<br />

reading so he talked mother into buying it. So he dropped in and she said, "Faer, we've got that<br />

book you're interested in." And he got it and she called him to dinner and he qme into the dining<br />

room reading the book and sat down at the table and kept reading. Dad served. We always ate in<br />

the dining room over there and he would serve, serve him his dish and he was ritting there like<br />

this (demonstrates) reading, and fmaw motlner. ..I'm not sure that she said, "George", but she<br />

might have, she might have said, "Father Link, we do not read at the dinner table." And he closed<br />

it up or she might. (Chuckle) But he was quite a guy and I think he probably qould have been one<br />

<strong>of</strong> the faunders <strong>of</strong> the Memorial Gardens. He was one <strong>of</strong> the guys who dug tQe ground for it, I<br />

mean got it started,<br />

Q. Was it a coincidence that they use the edge <strong>of</strong> Lake <strong>Springfield</strong> for this? Was it all planned<br />

that way?<br />

A. Well, they were planning all the parks and stuff and that area over there vas a wonderful<br />

wooded wild spot, more or less untouched and so maybe it was the Nam League or whatever it<br />

was, whatever it was called then, conned the city in designating this area for a wild park.<br />

Q. Then when did the properties take hold?<br />

A. When they made the lake.<br />

Q. Was that all part <strong>of</strong> the plan? People would live around the lake? It would be residential?<br />

A. Yeah, they would have various. . .


Q. With Lake two, they have no plans for property sites.<br />

A. No, no. Certain areas were designated as parks and certain areas were desipated for<br />

recreation and parks or fishing areas and stuff, and then for clubs. That was a& set out in the<br />

beginning.<br />

Q. Was George Link responsible for establishing thc Priory with the graveyard at the north edge<br />

<strong>of</strong> the gardens?<br />

A. That was built by the diocese <strong>of</strong> <strong>Springfield</strong>. Now how they leased that ground. . .and that<br />

was built originally as a first and second year seminary for would-be priests.<br />

Q. Have they sold it? Somerhing's changed recently,<br />

A. I don't know if it's an old people's horn or, . .I think the diocese still owns it but I think they<br />

had to abandon it because they didn't have enough guys who wanted to be p*sts.<br />

Q. They're having that problem with the nuns too.<br />

A Chuckle. I could maJce a crack on the &st joke that my kids told us. KiY and I were always<br />

looking for a sense <strong>of</strong> humor which we think is so terribly important in peopld<br />

r<br />

and the kids came<br />

home one night, we were sitting in the kitchen, they'd been out playing and I they were in<br />

seventh or eighth grade and we were having a drink before dinner and the Id said, "Hey, we've<br />

got a couple <strong>of</strong> jokes for you." We said, 'You have?" They said, "Yeah". &~d we said, "Let's<br />

hear them." And they said, "Well, do you know why they build the walls arwd convents so<br />

high? At that time they had a big brick wall at Ursuline Convent out there. ?hey said, "Why'd<br />

they build them so high?" And we said, " Why'd we build wall around convqnts so high?'And<br />

they said, Well, when they say nun, they mean none." (Chuckle) I don't know whether tbey<br />

knew it or not. So we laughed (laugh). Then we said, OX. what's the othe one?'They said,<br />

"What's the definition <strong>of</strong> a monastery?" aod we said, 'What's that?" They &'d, "It's a home for<br />

unwed fathers." (Chuckles) So those are the first jokes we ever got out <strong>of</strong> ur kids.<br />

9<br />

Q. Apparently Mrs. Knutsen was responsible for planting certain indiginou trees around the<br />

lake. So that what they took down. they replaced with a certain variety.<br />

i<br />

f<br />

1<br />

A. Yeah, Now when the city came in, they had to clear lots <strong>of</strong> the lake b there <strong>of</strong> timber<br />

and so people, timber buyers, would come in and I how that the land we s Id to the city there<br />

was some timber that was below the warn line and they had it all surveyed o you knew where<br />

the water line was and before you sold your stuff for $100 an acre, these g s would come in and<br />

buy the tirnk, especially big stuff. Oak and walnut and things like that<br />

Q. Can you remember what it looked liloe before the lake?


A. oh sure. i I<br />

Q. Did you ever go out and watch the process? Didn't they dig parts <strong>of</strong> it out?<br />

A. Well, I can't remember that they dug anything in the lake except to take the mes out andit0<br />

build a dam.<br />

Q. They had horse driven carts to take away diR, I thought, according to photqpaphs in the<br />

Sangarnon Valley Room. Perhaps it was only trees.<br />

A. Oooh. Now you know where Lake <strong>Springfield</strong> is now. To the east <strong>of</strong> them, there's water<br />

over there. You've seen that flooded haven't you? That's the way Lake Sprin@eld was.<br />

Q, So it was low and maybe the perimeter was the deciding factor,<br />

A. I've seen Lake <strong>Springfield</strong> now not quite that full <strong>of</strong> flood waters, like it was on the other side<br />

before it became Lake <strong>Springfield</strong>,<br />

Q. Before the dam?<br />

A. Yeah. Before the dam, and just hold it back. They didn't have to dig it o*. Now they did a<br />

lot <strong>of</strong> construction there for Vachel Lindsey Bridge and for the dam and then &ter came the<br />

power plant, and Carl Meyer designed that first brick building that says. . .it h q great big letters<br />

across the front <strong>of</strong> it. That's the original building with the original generators )n there.<br />

Q. So they've expanded it over the years?<br />

A. Tremendously, The MacDonald enginearing company <strong>of</strong> Kansas City has never stopped<br />

working for the city but the original building was done by Carl Meyer. And Qose letters up there<br />

are about three feet high. When you go buy, take a look at them there.<br />

Q. They're W n for granted.<br />

A. Yeah. That was one <strong>of</strong> my first jobs working for Carl Meyer. The buildizlig was built and<br />

these big aluminm letters had to be put up there and so the letters had bolt hqles on various, all<br />

different, I've forgotten, I've forgotten that. SpringF~3.d. City Power Plant or something like<br />

that.<br />

Q. I'll have to look at it on my way home.<br />

A. But those letters are three feet high and I had to lay those out on a bigger llscale where all the<br />

holes were on the back so they could put there guys up there, drill the hole iM the wall and anchor<br />

those letters up there, so if they're spaced properly, I did it.


Q. What's it like driving around town seeing things that you've done years and years ago?<br />

Is it a good feeling?<br />

A. Yeah. I get a bang out <strong>of</strong> it when I go by Griffin High School out here or t)e Thomas<br />

Jefferson or the George Washington or the Ben Franklin Middle Schools. Go (own to St Jphn's<br />

Hospital there and I think it's an exray building or something. It's on the corncrr <strong>of</strong> Seventh and<br />

whatever the street is in front <strong>of</strong> the St. John's Hospital. There's a red brick building there, bright<br />

red and they had a lot <strong>of</strong> exray stuff in there. Whose in there now?<br />

Q, Across the street? Washington?<br />

A. No, this is on Seventh and. ,.well anyway it's a two story building I did there. Doc Hemdon<br />

built it I think and it was all exray department for awhile and now I think a f d y practice is in<br />

there. There's a little two-story red brick building. . .<br />

Q, You didn't do the Nurses Building which was just torn down?<br />

A, No. Henry Helmle did that. He did all that hospital work there until he died and then he and<br />

his brother did the Mother House in Rivcrton or something. That was the St. James Trade Gchool<br />

out there and next to it was St. John's Sanitmium and the Mother House. Nw the St. Jaws<br />

Sanitarium was for tuberculosis &d for crippled children. That was way bach in the 20's and 30's<br />

and that's when if you got tuberculosis you were flat on your back for a yea or more.<br />

Q. Also a place for polio?<br />

A. I don't know about polio but they had crippled children and they did all mds <strong>of</strong> work out<br />

there. I.think the last doctor around might have been, was it Doctor Trumpy? He was on lungs.<br />

He's retired now. Has been for some time. But they had a tremendous instimtion out there and<br />

the wonderful one was the St. James Trade School which has been expanded to an old mens. .<br />

.called St, James Court today, and it's for alder men or men that are mentally handicapped or<br />

don't have all their marbles or something like that. That was originally St. Jqnes Trade School<br />

and they had a bunch <strong>of</strong> ~erman'brothers in there h t were their teachers and it was a fabulous. .<br />

.and they took kids in there that needed a trade, They couldn't go to college, weren't smart<br />

enough to go to college but they were great for trades, But they had a bakeqy shop out there and<br />

they baked all the bread and rolls and stu£F for the hospital, St. James HospiW and the convents.<br />

They taught the kids to be bakers then they had another one that was their meat. . . They wodd<br />

butcher meat out there and teach the kids to be meat cutters to make sausages, everything to do<br />

with the meat business and I can rernembex way back at the Sangamo Club. Peter Durer was out<br />

there. Tuesday was his day to go out to the St. James Trade School and they'd butcher a black<br />

angus or something like that ' He'd go out and cut the steaks out <strong>of</strong> it, the 8% and stuff. He'd<br />

cut it himself. That was his day to do that and he'd cut his little, whakver they were to the size<br />

he wanted to serve. Maybe he bought a black angus from Wally Oblinger. @s wife was a<br />

legislator. Wally was a lawyer and he'd been with the FBI during World Wfir II. Settled into<br />

I


<strong>Springfield</strong>. She was a state legislator for years and years and her son is now thp county clerk, I<br />

think<br />

Q. Now, that rings a bell.<br />

A. But Wally and his wife had a farm out N d <strong>of</strong> <strong>Springfield</strong> where they raisql black angus<br />

cattle and so Petex Durer would go out there and pick his own or the one he w-d out to the<br />

herd or two, how every many he wanted, and they'd take him in the trade schopl there and they'd<br />

butcher them and stuff and,he'd go and cut what he wanted.<br />

Q. We miss Peter. I think everyone does.<br />

A,. Oh God yes. What else they had out there was wonderful. They taught these kids to do<br />

everything. You name it. A trade. It was their iron work, and oh, there were auto mechanics<br />

too. But all this fancy iron work. They taught these kids to make gates and Wgs like that,<br />

Q. How did they pay them at all? Their roam and board?<br />

A. I think they gave them their room and board They might have given the<br />

money. But what happened was that all there wonderful German brothers<br />

nobody to replace them so the school wanted to put St James Court there<br />

Q. What do you h ow about the Fair Grounds?<br />

I<br />

A. I know that the Sangarno Club used to have a club house out there on the race track. They<br />

could all sit and watch the races and sit and drink. Play rum or whatever they wanted to do.<br />

Q. Did you have anything to do with the design and architecture for any <strong>of</strong> the buildings aut<br />

there?<br />

A. Never did a thing out there.<br />

Q. Who was responsible for those buildings? And why were the Fair Grounds in <strong>Springfield</strong>?<br />

Do you h ow anything about this at all?<br />

A.. I don't know how it got started. How they got all the land for it or anytbing except I guess<br />

somebody decided that the capitol city shdd have a fair grounds and that it's a rural cornunity<br />

and they could show <strong>of</strong>f their aaimals.<br />

Q, 4H?<br />

A. 4H stuff and so on.


Q. Did you attend? Do you remember when it was built?<br />

A. Oh no. It goes way back. I'l tell you, last year. . .<br />

Q, Did you attend all the summer functions?<br />

A. Oh sure. Monday was Children's Day at the State Fair and that when motQers took all the<br />

kids out there and remember when we talked about the street cars, the open smet cars. Those<br />

were wonderful, Of course you couldn't use them today cause you couldn't ga insurance for<br />

them With a conductor wallring up and down on a running board on the outside, all the seats<br />

open, kind <strong>of</strong> on the running board. You got in that way for a nickel.<br />

Q. Did you go back and forth on the street cars?<br />

A. Huh, huh. It was fhe easiest way out there.<br />

Q. How long did it take for you to get there from, say Williams Boulevard?<br />

A. Oh, maybe a half an hour because we lived then <strong>of</strong>f MacArther Blvd. just ~ ff Lawrence<br />

Avenue and you'd go down there half a block, get the street car and transfer.<br />

Q. What do you remember? Has it changed a great deal? Has it gotten largq?<br />

A. I don't think they've gotten any more land there but they've built an awful lot more buildings.<br />

In the early days like that . .oh we were talking about fjxes. I've just remembred, it was called<br />

the dome building or have you had that pop up?<br />

Q. Did you see it?<br />

A. As close as we could get to it. My father w;as on the ball again and I don't know when that<br />

burned. You see, I think that building came £rom the Chicago Worlds Fair ad<br />

I think it was full<br />

<strong>of</strong> ammunition and stuff from WWI. They used it as a supply area which they did with the Fair<br />

Grounds in WWII. They used a lot <strong>of</strong> the buildings out there to supply stuff cause our <strong>of</strong>fice had<br />

FairIield Air Depot. Out in Dayton, Ohio we had a lot <strong>of</strong> these Fair Grounds cause we were the<br />

supply for the air forces but there wasn't much going on at the Fair Grounds until years later. I<br />

mean we had a fair but the buildings weren't used like they are today,<br />

Q. Were the Richardsonian entrances the same? The original main entrance?<br />

A. They were the original. Well, how original I'm not s d , but it goes way back.<br />

Q. Did they have the "ethnic" booths then?


A. That was years later. When I was a kid it was a fair grounds period.<br />

Q, And they're only for fairs?<br />

A. Oh principally for the fairs. They did horses and stuff.<br />

Q. Did they do a lot with children and 4H in those days?<br />

A. Oh yeah. 4H. has been around for years and years.<br />

Q. You were never involved in any <strong>of</strong> that?<br />

A. No. That was for farm kids. I was Boys Scouts.<br />

Q. Did the Boys Scouts do anything up there at all? March or. . .<br />

A. They always had an exhibit out there. One <strong>of</strong> the greatest exhibits I used to go see was the<br />

bees in the machine building. They two or three. . .they had Machinery Hall md then they had<br />

one building that's now on the main drag and then in the back far corner there they'd have a big. .<br />

. the beekeepers had a great big exhibit and they'd have all these glass things with the bees<br />

crawling inside.<br />

Q. So you could watch the activity?<br />

A, You could watch the activity. Then they'd sell beeswax and things like Sat. Of course in<br />

those days you'd need a piece <strong>of</strong> beeswax for your iron. Your electric irons pr, you'd always<br />

have a pjece <strong>of</strong> bees wax in there.<br />

I<br />

Q. It's peat for needles too.<br />

A. Yes and shoemakers <strong>of</strong> course. They all had to have beeswax and that's I made my own<br />

bows and arrows. I made my own bows and arrows out <strong>of</strong> lemon wood.<br />

Q, Lemon wood?<br />

A. kmon wood. Six foot staves about four wide. If I were to dig around the basement, I could<br />

probably find one for you.<br />

Q. Is lemon wood hard or s<strong>of</strong>t?<br />

A. Very hard. I don't know where they got it and with no knots in it.<br />

i<br />

Q. From the West? Maybe from the South.<br />

r


1 I<br />

A. Yeah I suppose. With six foot staves and stuff you made your own bows. You had to<br />

bow strings so you went to where they sold materials for the shoemakers whers they<br />

leather, heels, and soles, everything. And they also sold shoesbhg and you got Irish<br />

12. Something like that. Irish Linen chord and a gob <strong>of</strong> beeswax.<br />

Q. Were you an archer?<br />

A. Yeah, sure. Made my own bows out <strong>of</strong> bmon wood. Then the arrows were made out <strong>of</strong> a<br />

certain kind <strong>of</strong> wood that came from Sweden, I think, There were no knots in it and it didn't<br />

warp. Now you took birch and stuff for arrows and they would warp but thest didn't warp.<br />

Q. Now Indians used birch didn't they?<br />

A. Probably.<br />

Q. They didn't know about lemon wood?<br />

A. Or hickory was wonderful to make a bow out <strong>of</strong> if you could get it. Get r good clear piece or<br />

Osage Orange.<br />

Q. I how what that is. I used to play on one at the Haverford College. It jqt went for ever.<br />

Great bows <strong>of</strong> it. Long long heavy branches. Yes, it's a very rare tree.<br />

A. I know where there are some right now.<br />

Q. Here in this. . .<br />

A. Old hedge wood. They are, . .<br />

Q. Where are they?<br />

A. Take West Lake Drive. If you're going to the <strong>University</strong> and when yoq go to the <strong>University</strong><br />

about where you turn <strong>of</strong>f to go onto West Lake Drive, you're on Shepherd Road then and right<br />

there as the road turns right by the Press Rouse, There's a building out there that has huge trees<br />

in front <strong>of</strong> it. Those are all. . .and if you ever want Hedge Apples in the fa& the, ground is<br />

absolutely littered with them and people say that Hedge Apples are good for water bugs,<br />

Q. Water bugs? How?<br />

A. Roaches or waterbugs. Just put them in ydur basement near the drains, they come ough the<br />

sewers or something and peel them a little bit and they'll get into the milk plat's in thos hedge<br />

apples and they're gone,<br />

I<br />

I<br />

1<br />

1<br />

4<br />

I<br />

48<br />

I<br />

I i


I<br />

Q. You have a great many tid-bits, Phil. ( Chuckle)<br />

I<br />

A, About a year ago last summer in June ox July, the Sangamon County<br />

meeting out at the Fair Grounds on the history <strong>of</strong> the buildings in the<br />

it and it was in the. . .what was the old Poultry Building, it's now the<br />

the horses up there, and that's where they had it. They had a lot <strong>of</strong><br />

smaller building.<br />

Q. Not the extension building?<br />

I !<br />

I<br />

A. No. I could draw you a picture <strong>of</strong> where it is. If you go in the main entrace, turn left and go<br />

past the Colosseum. When you get right at the end <strong>of</strong> the Colosseum, turn left and you come<br />

circle around a bunch <strong>of</strong> barns here and ova here on that point there's a brick building. They've<br />

spent a lot <strong>of</strong> money on it.<br />

Q. I think that's next door to the Extension Service.<br />

A. I suppose, but that's where they had this, but it was an interesting program.<br />

Q. So there's a documented history on it?<br />

A. And that was the history <strong>of</strong> it, and she had slides <strong>of</strong> all the old buildings aad how they<br />

developed and all that stuff.<br />

Q. That's probably in the Sangamon Valley Room too isn't it? Well let me *ow.<br />

A. That was Sangamon County's Historical Society that put on these various! programs,<br />

Q. Well now Phil, you've gotten involved with various things in town over tlje years. Wha .t have<br />

you been most involved with?<br />

I<br />

1<br />

A. Oh gosh. How far back do you want to go? (Chuckle)<br />

Q, I think you were a married man, you had children, and you became civic minded.<br />

A, Well do you want to go back to where I taught soap carving to the. . .<br />

Q. Sure.<br />

A. To the kids in the summer school%t the First Presbyterian Church and they had a summcr<br />

Bible School there. I was in high school I guess at the time, and I was known. ..see there's about<br />

four or five things I was known as. (Chuckle) Let's see, Phil <strong>Trutter</strong>, your Tmtters boy, or<br />

you're marrkd Kitty Wills,and you're the fsther <strong>of</strong> the twins, and do you s<br />

I


And that was quite an art, taking Ivory soap.<br />

Q. Only Ivory?<br />

A. Only Ivory. That's the only one that was any good for it. They'd maJe elephants and aI( kinds<br />

<strong>of</strong> stuff and they used to have a national contest and they gave some whoppin$ great prizes for it.<br />

Proctor and Gamble did it for years and years. Every year they had a soap cwing contest.<br />

Q. Did you ever enter it?<br />

A. No, I never did enter it. Mine were never quite good enough for it, but I Qad a lot <strong>of</strong> fun<br />

doing it.<br />

Q. Did you .ever have a really creative studant?<br />

A. Oh, I've probably got like this (demonstrates) <strong>of</strong> some <strong>of</strong> my carvings thaqI did. (chucqe)<br />

1<br />

END SIDE TWO; TAPE TWO<br />

Q. What happened after that? You got into jig-saws didn't you?<br />

j<br />

A. Jig-saws were much later. I got into lots <strong>of</strong> sculpture work and things that. Remember<br />

that architects think in three dimensions which is what you get into when o soap carvings<br />

and sculpture and things like that. When you're just doing drawings, you width, length<br />

and height Just two dimensions there, but when you get into the sculpture y& have three<br />

dimensions. You have depth and with the other you have to use your shades &d shadows to give<br />

them depth and so on but with the sculpture you have to think in three dimen~ons to carve the<br />

back sides and so on and that's fun too so architects have to think in three dimensions. Just the<br />

front <strong>of</strong> the building, you have the depth <strong>of</strong> it and the back and so on but, oh, 1 got into lots <strong>of</strong><br />

stuff. I got into sculpture at the art club as a kid and on up through the years I've continued<br />

doing it, then I got into jig-saw puzzles accidentally because my daughter bought a house up in<br />

Winnetka and a big sort <strong>of</strong> a French Provincial deal and it bad wings on it and, a great tower on it,<br />

a big octagonal tower on it forty feet high and she had nie look at it with her q d her mothex and<br />

so on when she was just buying it and she asked, 'What did I think?,, and I sa@, Well, it's just<br />

greag but there's just om thing missing. It's like a lady in her basic black dregs with no pearls and<br />

I said, "You've got the big tower there and it needs a nice weather vane to setit <strong>of</strong>f as the jewelry<br />

<strong>of</strong> the house. (Chuckle) She said, "000h' that's a great idea." And Kitty said( 'Why Phil, why<br />

don't you make s weathervane, and I said I'd never made a weathemane in mj life. She sajd "Oh<br />

heck, you could do it" So I said, "Well, I'll try. What do you want. You pic$ the subject pnd so<br />

they kind <strong>of</strong> looked at each other, mother-daughter deal and they hally said cm the same wave<br />

length, "We've always felt sorry for the poor dragon that St George is alwaysl tilling with 4 spear<br />

or something. What about that?" And I said, "Alright, I'll try." So I made, @w up a design or<br />

two and worked it up. It's St. George in his suit <strong>of</strong> armor on his elbows and Wees and his yump,<br />

I<br />

I


kind <strong>of</strong> in the air with great big spurs on the back <strong>of</strong> his heel and his head is<br />

mud and the dragon is rampant with a sword in his hand womping him on<br />

flinches, he'll stick his bottom on the spurs 90 it passed inspection very<br />

great big sheet <strong>of</strong> alurninum and cut it out. The whole blade is five feet<br />

the dragon.<br />

Q. What whipped around? That long tail or sword?<br />

A. No. It's an mow on half <strong>of</strong> it and the dragon is on the other half and so<br />

i<br />

e kids then took<br />

that and they had an old Swedish iron-monger somewhere up there in Winne a someplace, or in<br />

one <strong>of</strong> the suburbs and they got him to make the rest <strong>of</strong> the weathewane. Th post that this fits<br />

on and rotates on and then there's all sorts <strong>of</strong> circles and gold balls and East, est, North and<br />

South on it, It's a very very elaborate thing and this sits right on top and we bad it balanced so<br />

that the slightest breeze would make it flip around but you see, in order to that quarten inch<br />

plate <strong>of</strong> aluminum and cut it, I had to have a jig-saw, so I went down to Blac~s hardware store<br />

and they had one on sale there and I bought a Black and Decker, I think it w about $400- This<br />

was about 1971, '72 and, ., 7<br />

E<br />

Q. Is is a light instrument?<br />

I<br />

A. Oh no. It's huge.<br />

I<br />

Q. So it takes both hands to. . .<br />

A. No, no. Its a machine. It's electric and it has what we call a" throat". 1tIs like a big C. Then<br />

you have your blade that vibrates in there but you can take your big stuff and ' ou can turn it<br />

because.<strong>of</strong> the clearance you have on it.<br />

P<br />

Q. So you're turning the wood. You're not manipulating the blade?<br />

! I<br />

A. No, no. You're not manipulating the blade at all. So, . . I<br />

I<br />

Q. So breaking the actual blade is easy to do isn't it?<br />

A. Oh yes. Easy to do but these were metal blades I used in cutting the dtm&um so I got it all<br />

cut out. The kids. . .<br />

Q, Did you wear goggles when you were working?<br />

A, I didn't. No. Occadonally I have, but, I didn't. So we get the thing all made up for th<br />

and by the way, I'l show it to you in the back hall. It's up above the door. You didn't set<br />

cardboard cut-out which it came from?<br />

I<br />

I<br />

j<br />

I<br />

kids "<br />

the


Q, No, but do you have a picture <strong>of</strong> this particular weathemane?<br />

A. If I look around I have a picm on the house. I took slides <strong>of</strong> it.<br />

Q. So tell me more about your jig-saws.<br />

s the<br />

A. Kitty had hundreds <strong>of</strong> old-fashioned jig-saw puzzles. They were usually TCO. Tuco wa<br />

name for them and you got them at the ten cent store for twenty-nine cents or<br />

those days.<br />

I<br />

Q. They were wooden?<br />

A. No, no. They were cardboard. Thick cardboard, and she had boxes and boxes and boxes <strong>of</strong><br />

those and, oh, several hundred anyway, and she'd do those. They were five ar@ a half or eight by<br />

eleven or something like that, a few bigger ones, and one night she was doing pne and we were<br />

sitting in the kitchen and she said, "Phil, you've got that jig-saw down in the b+ement, Why<br />

don't YOU cut me some jig-saw puzzles out <strong>of</strong> wood. Some decent ones, I'q getting tired <strong>of</strong><br />

these, their just holes and bwnps, squares and. . .so I said, "Well, I suppose I qould." So that<br />

started me out,<br />

Q. How many years ago was this?<br />

A. This was about 1972. So it's been more than twenty years now. .<br />

I<br />

Q. Well now you're <strong>of</strong> national or international fame aren't you?<br />

A. Well more or less. (Chuckle)<br />

Q. You've had a Dutchman visit with you recently.<br />

A. He's the master <strong>of</strong> jig-saw puzzles in Ewope and Ann Williams in Maine whose written this<br />

big, almost encyclopedia <strong>of</strong> jig-saws in the United States and so on. I think she has a couple <strong>of</strong><br />

thousand and one that I gave her, but the Dutch guy came to see me cause sh* had told him that<br />

my method <strong>of</strong> cutting is most unusual having the figures. . .my figures are pecple and things.<br />

Kiw didn't want hard puzzles she wanted interesting puzzles and so that's when I put all the. . .I<br />

made birds and beasts, flowers and geometric stuff. I've got a couple or mor$ <strong>of</strong> designs that I've<br />

made up.<br />

Q. You've desigaed your own stencils so to speak and then you put them on @ painting.<br />

And you use that drawing, don't you. . ,<br />

C<br />

A, Yeah, I get a picture out <strong>of</strong> a magazine or something, Now with Kitty, we had done so much<br />

travelling that she loved to have pictures <strong>of</strong> where we'd been so I'd take the rpagazines that came


out fiom the various countries and whether it was Thailand, Japan or Hong<br />

or something like that and then I would paste those with contact cement. I<br />

way by experimenting, cause I had no training. . .<br />

Q. Trial by error?<br />

A. Yeah. I had no training in jig-saw puzzles at all. I worked it all out by myelf so anyway if it<br />

was, say, from New Guinea why we have a bunch <strong>of</strong> items we brought back @m New Guinea<br />

and I would draw those down to size and would make pieces <strong>of</strong> those for the guzzles.<br />

Q. But you used the picture <strong>of</strong> the puzzle to enhance a particular design by putting the stencil in a<br />

particular spot?<br />

A. Well I guess you can say that. Or I'd take, for instance, Bangkok, or Th@and. I have loads<br />

and loads <strong>of</strong> elephants in there and the barges, the royal barges, they sail up asd down the river. I<br />

had those in there and Balinese dancers and things like that and I'd take my li@e designs and try<br />

to make it so that the parts <strong>of</strong> the picture fit into the little piece that it is. Oh, pnd then <strong>of</strong> course<br />

for birthday cards and people like that I put their names in it. To Kitty or Phyvs or someone like<br />

that. Never sold any. That would take the fun out <strong>of</strong> it. I think there's a story, in mentioning<br />

Phyllis there who is a jig-saw nut<br />

Q. Phyllis?<br />

i<br />

A. Phyllis Brissenden Herndon. She was on a couple <strong>of</strong> trips with us and the one that particularly<br />

involves jig-saw puzzles is when we were in French Polynesia and we were o t on the island <strong>of</strong><br />

Hua Hini which was a very interesting island and you could see Bora Bora th e which is only<br />

twenty qinutes away by air and anyway we were there for a number <strong>of</strong> days Tgether and one<br />

morning we were having breakfast and the manager Tim. . .he was British by fie way. . .and he<br />

was the manager and we got to, . .when he came over to see how we<br />

(chuckle) Phyllis said, 'Tim(and she reached in her pocket and brou<br />

opened the kleenex and in it was a great big cockroach. A huge one.<br />

long.) . . .and she said, "Tim, this was in my bathroom this morning."<br />

he looked at this and he said, "Phyllis, you killed it, you killed it." S<br />

said, "They eat the mosquitoes." and <strong>of</strong> course we all knew he was<br />

said, " the people are about three weeks overdue coming from Pap<br />

here one <strong>of</strong> these days, and I'l tell you what I'll do, you bring me ninetee<br />

round number <strong>of</strong> twenty and I'l give you the biggest rnaitai we can make<br />

"alright" and it took about two mornings, she had twenty more so<br />

brought out the rnai tai and she should have ken smashed as the<br />

a bottle <strong>of</strong> booze in it, but anyway so we got home and I took a map <strong>of</strong> the<br />

was kind <strong>of</strong> consolidated, It was mostly white. Blue for the sea and white<br />

various isles were put together <strong>of</strong> the French Polynesian, the friendly islands<br />

But the main ones, and so (chuckle) I took that puzzle and I cut


mean there were other things but it was a pretty good size. It was more than ejght and a half by<br />

eleven, probably fifteen by eighteen or something like that, 1 don't know. Butt here were al! these<br />

cockroaches. No two could be'inter~han~ed. They just won't fit. You'd havp to have the right<br />

one in the right spot or you're out <strong>of</strong> luck. With all those six legs on em.<br />

Q. Now you were doing this in wood ?<br />

A. All my cutting was in wood. No, no, And after Kitty died, I dug up I beqa five hundred<br />

puzzles that were in the basement and I gave them to Scotty H<strong>of</strong>f out at Memorial Hospital for<br />

their waiting rooms and stuff. I took them out. ..I'd been out there and I not*ed they had a table<br />

in a waiting room, near the operating rooms or something like that just sittingand waiting, so I<br />

took them out to her. I finally emptied our basement <strong>of</strong> all <strong>of</strong> them and she lwed them. Now<br />

those are just the cardboard ones, but anyway she has a couple <strong>of</strong> others that I gave her and then<br />

there are a couple <strong>of</strong> others I did that were ~eally outstanding and we were gwsts <strong>of</strong> the owners<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Grand Hotel up at Macldnac Island in Michigan and we were invited ul) there three<br />

different times with my daughter Caroline and her daughter for weekends andl stuff. All we had to<br />

do was get there and get away and they took care, . .we couldn't pay for anytfLlng and we were<br />

with them, we were t he for the 100th Anniversary <strong>of</strong> the founding <strong>of</strong> the G$md Hotel and the<br />

people who own it today are Amelia and , . . I can't think <strong>of</strong> his first name, . ,yes, Dan Musser and<br />

he's the nephew <strong>of</strong> the man who started it, and they got him to sell it to thempnd they've put<br />

millions in it to restore it to the grand old lxiy that it was as a place <strong>of</strong> outsta@ng vacationing.<br />

Well anyway, we went up for the first time and what do you give people like that, and so I got<br />

home and said how am I gonna say thank you, so I got a map from the Chicago Motor Club <strong>of</strong><br />

Michigan and I got one <strong>of</strong> the Upper Peninsula there, it was big, and cut a jig*saw puzzle out <strong>of</strong><br />

that map. I mounted it on wood and cut it out. There was lots <strong>of</strong> water in it and the island and<br />

stuff. Of course there are no automobiles there. It's all horses and bicycles. You ferry across to<br />

it, and buggies and that and so the puzzle is just full <strong>of</strong> various kinds <strong>of</strong> buggies and wagons and<br />

horses and horseback and boats and fish and typical <strong>of</strong> the place up there. Oh including a little<br />

waiter whose carrying a tray with glasses and a little bottle on it and his coat-tails flying and<br />

things like that. It was a big one. It was something like about 675 pieces in it.<br />

Q. How long did it take you to make it?<br />

A. It took a couple <strong>of</strong> weeks, Especially the design. . .<br />

Q, How many hours would you put into something like that?<br />

A. Oh gosh. Just an ordinary eight and a half by eleven, I'l spend eight or nine hours. 11 s not<br />

the cutting, it's the designing <strong>of</strong> the pieces that go into them and where they go into it. T en so I<br />

taok that up when we went the next time, but I guesrr I took it up and gave3 to them. Tl :y were<br />

tickled to death with it, Of course they wouldn't leave it out in the hotel anyplace figwin people<br />

would swipe the good pieces out <strong>of</strong> it and so then they invited us up again fa<br />

the 100th<br />

Anniversary for the founding <strong>of</strong> the hotel, and so I made another ahead <strong>of</strong> fitpe and took j with


me <strong>of</strong> a different part <strong>of</strong> the hotel and I inserted, I got folders <strong>of</strong> the hotel and fet them into the<br />

map so that it all wasn't all just map, and I took that up and left it put togetherland it was, id had .<br />

two pieces <strong>of</strong> plastic keeping it apart so that I could carry it Likc. They went npts over that one,<br />

and that was about 600 pieces, nearly 700 plces. Those were the whoppers @at were fun. Oh,<br />

I've made lots <strong>of</strong> them that were fun. Oh I've made them for kids, for my gra+d-daughters.<br />

Q. Do you have a portfolio <strong>of</strong> pictures <strong>of</strong> these puzzles?<br />

A. Some. I used to take little pieces <strong>of</strong> cards or something like this that were interesting and then<br />

when my grandchildren were very young, I would cut them so there was a nuxflber. There were<br />

pieces almost square and then I'd have a one and a two and a three, four, five bnd they'd learn to<br />

count that way and the numbers would lock the pieces together. I can show ypu just my tracings<br />

<strong>of</strong> that.<br />

Q. Now you use plywood?<br />

A. Yeah. It's about an eighth <strong>of</strong> an inch <strong>of</strong> clear birch three-ply wood and I flon't know if I can<br />

still get it or not and at the time that I could I bought a lot <strong>of</strong> it In fact I bou$t three big four by<br />

eight sheets <strong>of</strong> it way back. And I still have a little bit left. Not much. I<br />

Q. Well you're not making them much anymore are you?<br />

I<br />

A. Occasionally. I haven't recenily but they're a lot <strong>of</strong> fun and I'm to get the itch to<br />

do one, but I just havc too many things that interfered just like you things. (Chuckle)<br />

But that's kind <strong>of</strong> the story <strong>of</strong> the jig-saw puzzles but dl <strong>of</strong> them<br />

personal.<br />

Q. an all absolutely delightful, Now you have a tremendous collection<br />

in this house. What can you say about that?<br />

i<br />

A. Well, I can say what my brother says about it He says, "Phil, you live in museum bu/ maybe<br />

I should call it a layered archeological dig." (Chuckle) 1t's about right beca e in our tra#ls we<br />

visited ninety countries so many many times, always on our own, we didn't on tours and we<br />

had a lot <strong>of</strong> fun setting up, reading and doing all our homework before we w nt and then some<br />

more homework when we got home to go back again. Because in traveling, ne <strong>of</strong> the rule is to<br />

always leave something that you didn't get to do so you have a reason go ba& to see what you<br />

forgot or didn't to.<br />

Q. What have been some,<strong>of</strong> your favorite places?<br />

A. Well, we always go to London if we couldn't go some place else cause it was cheap in, those<br />

I<br />

days. Go see some shows for a couple <strong>of</strong> weeks, We did have children.<br />

I


Q, It was cheap in those days. The dollar had a reverse value then that <strong>of</strong> toc#iy.<br />

A. Yeah, $250 iould get you a round trip ticket from Chicago from Sprbgfidd even to ~ hdon<br />

and back and rent a car while you were there and run all over the place, boy. Go out and sqe<br />

Stonehenge when you could get in, walk around it, and pat the stones.<br />

Q. It has a fence around it now.<br />

A, I how you can't get in there. It's all fenced <strong>of</strong>f. We tried to . . .Kitty lowd to hunt up old<br />

places so she'd get lists <strong>of</strong> old Inns and stuff, you know two and three hundred years old and<br />

we'd stay in those except when we flally found out in London, a great place to stay was Browns<br />

Hotel until it began to get so much publicity and it was the tourists took over go we went<br />

elsewhere then. When it was dedicated in 1827 I think, Princess Victoria was there, she wasn't<br />

Queen Victoria yet, she was a little girl and she was there.<br />

Q. So what other countries? You talk about your travels a lot.<br />

I<br />

A, We loved the Orient.<br />

I<br />

Q. That's why you subscribe to BEy <strong>of</strong> &, this wonderful magazine.<br />

I<br />

A. It is a wonderful, wonderful, wonderful magazine.<br />

P<br />

Q. Well, tell me about the Orient. You were traveling during the less danger us times.<br />

A. Yeah. For instance, we got to Afghanism before the Russians got there. by the way, Wyllis<br />

Herndon was there with us once, and we just loved the Orient. We got to Ho g Kong, Taipei,<br />

and our f ~st trip to the Orient was 1959 and Kitty and I did a, it was sort <strong>of</strong> a econescence type<br />

<strong>of</strong> trip for three months because she thought that the girls. . . part <strong>of</strong> our twin aughters education<br />

was to see how the rest <strong>of</strong> the world lived and so when they were sixteen, it s 1961, four years<br />

later, we took the twins. They went to two mrnmer scl~ools, and it was the s cond semester <strong>of</strong><br />

their junior year we took them out and went f ~r six months around the world tarting from<br />

Hawaii and on into Tokyo and Taipei and IEong Kong and Bangkok and. . . 1<br />

Q. Why do you suppose you appreciate the Orient so much? Is it you architectural backgr<br />

or the design, the mystery?<br />

I<br />

I<br />

A. It's so unusual in design,<br />

Q. Unusual to. . . the American eye, <strong>of</strong> course, But is theremy other reason?<br />

A. Just appealed to us,


Q. Do you like the way the people Live as well. Do you appreciate their morays?<br />

A. Yeah. You appreciate their. . .we were in India four different times. Nor&, South, East and<br />

West and Nepal twice. We got into Nepal in 1959 right after it was opened tq the public. We<br />

were the first five thousand people to get inho Nepal and. , .<br />

Q. Did you meet the Dalai Lama?<br />

A. No not the Dalai Lama but the China Llama. The China Lama, he was Lama number four.<br />

Oh, we got very well acquainted. He speaks twenty six languages including all their dialects. I've<br />

got all kinds <strong>of</strong> movies <strong>of</strong> them and a pair <strong>of</strong> beautiful Tibetan boots that my ldds bought. We<br />

took them up to see him too and we stayed at the. . .there was only one hotel when we were first<br />

there. It was an old palace. Oh I wish I could name. . .Han Su Yen wrote a book about Nepal<br />

and the Jesuit priest up there. (Chuckle). It's been so long ago, I can't remember all these<br />

names. Later on I'l think about it.<br />

Q. Have you been to Kathmandu?<br />

A. That's what I'm talking about. We've been to Kathmandu two different Ves. Twice, just<br />

twice. In '59 and '61,<br />

Q. It's changed a great deal in the last couple <strong>of</strong> years I understand. I<br />

A. Well I think the hippies and the druggers got there.<br />

Q. It's the Chinese who have taken over Tibet.<br />

A. yeah, well Kathmandu is in Nepal.<br />

i<br />

Q. And Nepal?<br />

A, Yeah. Llasa we never got into. The Cbina Lama wanted to take us ove to TibeL He's quite<br />

a little guy, and you talk about religion being mixed up. His daughter was 'ed to the son <strong>of</strong><br />

the High Priest <strong>of</strong> the Hindu religion up there (chuckle). They're all mixed . The Hindus and<br />

the Buddhas up there and they live very happily together. There weren't y Muslims there.<br />

He lived on a circle in what was a Tibetan village catled Bodenath, just outs' e <strong>of</strong>. ..Kathmandu<br />

is a valley about twenty miles long, maybe eight or ten miles wide like a me platter,<br />

Q. It's really a mesa isn'tit?<br />

4<br />

A. Yeah, Huh huh. It's surrounded with mountains. On one side, <strong>of</strong> courw, you go rig t into<br />

the Himalayas. There's quite a story about the history <strong>of</strong> it and the giant @ the battle at the<br />

head. He took his sword and took a slash at this guy and he hit one <strong>of</strong> the rpmtains an cut a<br />

I


slice in it and that's the way the water. . .that let all the water out <strong>of</strong> the basin @d so we flew<br />

through that in an old DC3 that was unbelievable, and people standing on the qountainside were<br />

waving at us. (Chuckle) Kitty and I grabbed each other's hands and she looked at me and I looked<br />

at her and she said, "Well Phil, it's been fun. Let's hope."<br />

Q. Your life has been something like Hallibwtons, the world traveller who ro* the elephants<br />

through the khybur Pass in the late 19th Century. Do you have any other placss you fondly<br />

remember? What about Scandinavia?<br />

A. Nope. Never got to Scandinavia. That's another story too. Our daughter Caroline and Kitty<br />

and I were in Denmark.<br />

Q. Then you did get to Scandinavia?<br />

A, Well I guess, I always think <strong>of</strong> Scandinavia as Norway, Sweden and F iqd but anyway we<br />

went up to . . .we had a car there. We saw Denmark. It doesn't take very 10% to drive around it.<br />

You've been there? And we went out one morning to see Elsinor, Hamlet's c tle. We went out<br />

there and we didn't know how long it was going to take and we got through ere by about<br />

I<br />

eleven o'clock in the morning and we looked across the way, and they said, " ell, you can take a<br />

pretty fast boat across if you want to spend the day in Sweden." So Kitty and Caroline looked at<br />

each other and said, "Do we go to Sweden or do we get our hair fmed." (Ch+kJe) And the two<br />

<strong>of</strong> them said, "Let's go get our hair washed. It needs it Phil you wander aroynd and take some<br />

pictures and stuff, we're going to go get beautiful." And they did and we neqr got to Sweden.<br />

Q. What about Australia?<br />

A. We were there twice. Australia. Outback to Alice Springs, Ayers Rock. 3jl those days Alice<br />

Springs had a maximum <strong>of</strong> about five thousand people. That's right in the rni1dle <strong>of</strong> Australia and<br />

we got a plane, a little Cessna, I think it was, probably 182 or something like Fat and flew from<br />

Alice Springs up to Ayers Rock. Well you don't think about distance up there like you do down<br />

here. And that would be about the equivalent to getting a, chartering a planetfrom Springjield to<br />

go up to Madison, Wisconsin. It,was about two hundred and fifty miles way out to Airs Rock<br />

which is an absolutely impossible, fascinating thing which looks like the top <strong>of</strong> a loaf <strong>of</strong> bread<br />

sticking out <strong>of</strong> the desert there. And it had rained about two days before we got there and all the<br />

desert flowers were in full bloom Otherwise it was. . .I've got pictures <strong>of</strong> that, and airs rock is<br />

six rniles around the bottom. It's twelve hundred feet high and the Australiam started digging<br />

down to see how far they could, at that time, they'd gone down twenty five hpndred feet and it<br />

was still one rock and you could climb to it if you wanted to. They didn't recqmmend it but if you<br />

wanted to, they had some chains but twelve hundred feet high. , , a few people got killed sliding<br />

<strong>of</strong>f <strong>of</strong> it<br />

Q. Is it a smooth or rugged?<br />

!


A. Oh, I've got all kinds <strong>of</strong> movies flying over the top <strong>of</strong> it and around it, and<br />

the bottom. That's where the aborigines had a manhood ceremony, down in s<br />

and these guys would go in there and take ,the young men and they'd slit their<br />

and then they'd put their wrists against the wall. The wall was all brown from@& old blood.<br />

They did that.<br />

Q. What was the point <strong>of</strong> that? Culture?<br />

A. Culture, Nobody knows why,<br />

Q. Did you see many aborigines?<br />

A. An awful lot <strong>of</strong> them in Alice Springs.<br />

Q. Are they doing anything there?<br />

1<br />

I<br />

A. Some <strong>of</strong> them, yeah, and they had a lot <strong>of</strong> missionaries. Now this was twenty years ago that<br />

I'm talking about. They had missions there and <strong>of</strong> course the "flying doctors." You've heard <strong>of</strong><br />

them The doctors really don't fly, they're actually in Alice Springs mostly aqd there's the Canella<br />

Airlines. Everybody's got radios and stuff out there so. ..and they have a nice hospital there in<br />

Alice Springs and if somebody's sick out thexe, the doctor will get in the plan<br />

i<br />

and fly out with<br />

them and bring them back if necessary. They call them the flying doctors, bu they're not<br />

necessarily the pilots, and as we were flying up to Alice Springs to Ayers Ro , by the way there<br />

were about frfteen or sixteen people who lived up there. The water tastes te 'ble but they have<br />

plenty <strong>of</strong> water but it's full <strong>of</strong> magnesium and they have to be careful how m ch they drink or<br />

they'll spend the days in the johns, also to make it palatable we took up a couple <strong>of</strong> jugs <strong>of</strong> lime,<br />

Roses LZ,irne juice, used for liquor in drinks. Well we took two gallon jugs <strong>of</strong>ithat with us to put in<br />

the water to make it a little more palatable,<br />

Q. But still you had the magnesium<br />

A. It sure killed the taste. (Chuckle)<br />

Q. What was the air like up that high?<br />

A. It was nice and clear and clean. Of course they'd had this little rain, half an inch or something<br />

like that which was just fantastic how that desert suddenly came to life, and they'd been short on<br />

water for so long, and we were lucky to do that. We spent the day there and got back thq night.<br />

Q. Now that was all before the rna@cea symphony hall was built<br />

A. Oh. No, they were building it while we were there and I've got all kinds <strong>of</strong> pictures oi it.


Q. Have you been back there?<br />

A. When we were there the last time, it was not open yet I mean they were &st putting the<br />

finishing touches on, But they were very very unhappy with the guy who won the contest. I<br />

think he was Danish. He was a designer, he wasn't an architect. They had to hire engineers to<br />

take his designs and make the structures for them.<br />

Q. The acoustics is supposed to be superb.<br />

A, Yeah, but the funny thing is, oh sometime when you want to see. I've got! slides <strong>of</strong> the thing<br />

when it was being built. Everyone <strong>of</strong> those slabs that goes into that, it's like a parrots bill or<br />

something like that. Every one <strong>of</strong> them was a different size. It had a left one and it had a right<br />

one to put in it and they were all graduated from the big part down and we were there the day<br />

they put the last slab in. They're magnificent and it was originally designed to cost about eight<br />

miUion Australian dollass and an Australian dollar was a dollar and a half for qs and at that time,<br />

the last time we were there, they had spend almost a hundred million. It was go out <strong>of</strong> line that<br />

they were having national lotteries twice a week to raise additional money to do it and they had to<br />

buy. . .they had all the stage equipment delivered from Europe or someplace where it was made<br />

and it was all out <strong>of</strong> date and they had to scrap it and start over with another @ree or four rpillion<br />

to get all the stage equipment.<br />

Q. So they realized they had made a mistake in hiring this guy?<br />

A. Well, they bit the bullet and they're very proud <strong>of</strong> it. (The original budge9 was 6-8 million<br />

dollars,) It's outstanding. There's nothing else like it in the world and what 1. thought was very<br />

interesting, because they had a building that you could go into, it was up high, and you could<br />

overlook to see how the thing was progressing and they had models inside. D showed how, now<br />

the stages and the seating has absolutely no relationship with the parrot shells outside, That's just<br />

hanging inside there. It's wild, but they had really cashed in on it<br />

Q, What year are you talking about?<br />

A. Let's see, we were there in 1959 and then I think we were there in 1967.<br />

Q. So it was about '67?<br />

A. So it was about '67 when they were finishing it up and then they had all kinds <strong>of</strong> problems<br />

because it was built on the bay, (Chuckle) They didn't have enough space f<strong>of</strong> automobiles.<br />

Q. So how many years did it take them to build that? Nearly ten?<br />

A. Gosh, I don't know, About ten anyway.


Q. Have you been to Europe? I<br />

A. Oh, many times.<br />

Q. What area do you like the best there?<br />

A. Greece.<br />

Q. There's that architectural influence coming out again,<br />

A. Yeah, architecture coming out again. Tried to get to Rhodes three differeq times and didn't<br />

make it. We got down to Crete, spent almost a week there. Delightful.<br />

Q. Rome?<br />

A. Yeah, and oh by the way, we got to Turkey four different times and I. . .we got down to<br />

Epiphysis. You how, St, Paul and his letters to the Ephesians. a tremendous town there. It was<br />

destroyed by an earthquake about 67 BC I believe right in there and they were excavating at that<br />

time a part <strong>of</strong> the old town and they were fantastic. They had sewer systems ip that town and<br />

down in Crete they had clay tiIe like we have in what they call the Bell and spigot, one fits in the<br />

other one at the other end. They had that there. They had it in Crete in the Pqlace <strong>of</strong> Knossos.<br />

Gosh that goes back. The laberinth and all that and gosh, get over into Italy tg Pompeii and that<br />

brings up something some <strong>of</strong> the medical pr<strong>of</strong>ession has kicked around. The yater pipes in<br />

Pornpeii were made out <strong>of</strong> lead and they had brass or copper spigots and stuff turn-ons where<br />

you could turn the water on and <strong>of</strong>f just as we have today. There's no change in them, you knaw,<br />

but the lead pipes are in them and with all the piping in lead that maybe some <strong>of</strong> those people. .<br />

.well maybe they got lead poisoning form the water pipes. That's been kicked around a bit. I<br />

don't think anybody's done anything about the lead in the paint around here. (phuckle)<br />

Q. Well, they did have very intricate water channels for irrigation. David desjgned an elaborate<br />

system through the underground. We just haven't improved those wonderful Foncepts.<br />

A, Here's something for you. You get over into Portugal, north <strong>of</strong> Lisbon. mere's, near<br />

Cueembra, across the River from there, has the oldest <strong>University</strong> still in existence in Europe was<br />

started in ten hundred and something, and the name <strong>of</strong> this town is CONDW. (spells it) It is<br />

an old Roman Palace in tone where they have marvelous, mamelous mosaics b the floor <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Governors Palace there which was the typical Roman house with the atrium iq the middle <strong>of</strong> it<br />

END SIDE ONE: TAPE THREE<br />

*.<br />

with lead pipes and the wabr was brought f om the mountains nearby in the- aqueducts. The<br />

snow waters melting and they brought the water down for the people in this Governors Pailace, a<br />

magnificent big palace, and one <strong>of</strong> the guards around the place will come oveg and indicatq to you<br />

I


they had a little English, and say, "Would you like to see the water run?" They'd turn on a faucet<br />

..the pools in there are not just a pool, they run up and down like this (demon$rates) with<br />

flowers on each side like in the shape <strong>of</strong> a cross or something. The water sprays out and across<br />

like this from each side and it'll be a couple <strong>of</strong> feet in the air and they're all the same height and<br />

everything and then you cross this pond with a few escudoes and he's very happy and we're very<br />

happy and I have movies <strong>of</strong> all <strong>of</strong> this. Now what else was different than this glace was that<br />

Portugal was cold. Much colder than Italy so they had a cenwl heating plant where they burned<br />

wood in this big oven and they had pipes, tubes made out <strong>of</strong> bricks and so on to each <strong>of</strong> their<br />

buildings from the central heating plant. They'd get a big fire going in there ;qd the heat would<br />

go and then it'd have to force it's way out and go to the pipes which would fe~d into these<br />

buildings, in the Governor's Palace and so on and heat them from a central heating plant<br />

(chuckle). I mean, we're not so darn smart as we think we are. The water in the aqueducts and<br />

magnificent mosaics.<br />

Q. Have you been to Dobiaco in Northern Italy?<br />

A. No, we did Naples, Pompeii, Herculanum. Most people don't go to Herc@num, nevezt even<br />

heard <strong>of</strong> it.<br />

A. No. No. And then <strong>of</strong> course we did Rome and went up the old Roman highway up to Perusia<br />

and St. Francis', I can't remember where he was.<br />

Q. Assisi.<br />

A. Assisi, yeah, and then Perusia, and then went on into Florence. We did tbat by bus,<br />

Q. How about Malta?<br />

A. Nope. Never got there.<br />

Q. That's very Middle Eastem Have you been to the Middle East? ~orocc+?<br />

t<br />

A. Oh yeah, we went to Morocco. We've recommended that to friends. Th 's the nearest thing<br />

that we how to the Middle East or to the Orient is to go to Morocco. We w nt there four<br />

different times.<br />

Q. Casablanca?<br />

1. -<br />

A. Oh, sure. Casablanca and Touradant even, down South. That's where t .y had the awful<br />

earthquake, and Marakesh, and Fez, and oh the most important place, I can't think <strong>of</strong> the same <strong>of</strong><br />

it, the big town there, second town. Oh, and Rabat and we went over into @ mountains Qver to<br />

I


the east Golly, I'm having trouble remembering all these names. They'll corn$ to me when it's<br />

too late here. Tibetans, were they the ones, the Bedouins were in the desert w(ren't they. The<br />

Blue Men.<br />

Q. Bedouins are generally out in the deserts living in tents.<br />

A. Yeah, these were people living in the woods and stuff, living in the moundns. They wese the<br />

ones who were the pilots,<br />

Q. Mountain people? Like gypsies?<br />

A. No just Moroccans.<br />

Q. So what did you like about it? Did you like the color, the Middle Eastern Design?<br />

A. Oh we'd go a week or two, get a car and drive all over. We drove Fiteenbundred miles in<br />

Morocco,<br />

Q. Ever ride on a camel?<br />

A. Oh, yes, We did that in Egypt, 1<br />

Q. Would you rather go to Morocco than Egypt?<br />

A. Well, I like them both. Better than France. (Chuckle) Paris, let's put it that way.<br />

Q. You.like the exotic lands?<br />

A. Yeah, but let me tell you, and this came up with that was down at<br />

Tulane in summer school with her anthropalogy. Ancient<br />

her, "By the way,<br />

when you get into anthropology and things like that did<br />

about the cave<br />

paintings in Southern France?'She said, "Oh yes." I<br />

the cave which<br />

is near Clairmont,<br />

Q. You have a book on that.<br />

A. That's the cave, We bought a book on that. She said, "Oh yes, we've slides on. . .I said,<br />

"Your mother was there when it was openad to the public in 1961 and we<br />

airlocks to get into it and they discovered after five years that they had to<br />

because thek breathing was bringing in maisture so we got in there and. .<br />

one <strong>of</strong> thc kids that fell in the hole when his dog, they were out running<br />

hole. It was the very beginning <strong>of</strong> World War TI, 1940 or '41,<br />

French kid fell into this hole, or his dog did, and he went down to get him o<br />

I


they discovered all these caves with those fabulous. . .so they went and reporte4 it to the local<br />

Priest and he went out and down in there with flashlights and stuff and so they 8ot the<br />

archeologists who found they were the finest cave drawings found any place. And we got to see<br />

them One <strong>of</strong> those. . .I'll tell you, Kitty and I had more luck. You talk about @e luck <strong>of</strong> th& Irish<br />

because we weren't Irish, but anyway we had the luck <strong>of</strong> it. When we were in blarakesh, we<br />

were there about four different times and weren't in the hotel that particular time where. .<br />

.Churchill used to go to. . .but we were in another hotel, but we came in from running about<br />

someplace cause we'd just get a car and drive, we walked in and it was about two o'clock in the<br />

afternoon and the girl at the counter said, "Oh, oh, oh, Fantasia, Fantasia." Wq looked at ha, and<br />

she said, "They ride, they ride. Once a year." We said, "Where?" And She said. . .and she told us<br />

where to go and it was outside the wall. There were a lot <strong>of</strong> walls in Marakes4 and we went out<br />

there and there they were, all these guys that had come from all over Morocco, and there are no<br />

prizes, it's just the satisfaction that you can ride better than the other guys and these groups<br />

would be maybe twelve or fileen or as many as twenty-five with their Arabianihorses, beautiful<br />

horses, and old, old trappings on them with old fashioned saddles and guns. neir guns were<br />

ancient, all mounted and silver and long huge things and they had their daggerg, very similar to<br />

this sitting in their belts, (he grabs for a variety <strong>of</strong> small daggers sitting near b$ and these were<br />

young guys and old guys, and what they did, the idea was they were all lined qp at the end <strong>of</strong> the<br />

course there outside the walls there, people just standing around watching them, no grandstands,<br />

nothing like that, Anybody who found out about it, these guys trucked their horses in there and<br />

everything and they'd line up, take their turns and somebody, the leader <strong>of</strong> theigroup, would yell,<br />

and they'd all start running to the other end <strong>of</strong> this place, maybe about a block, a block and a half,<br />

and just before they got to the end, driving with one hand, waving these old bQmderbusses up in<br />

the air and with that, then at a certain moment, the leader would yell and they'fl dl fire their guns<br />

at the same time. Now that was the whole secret that everybody shot their g$s at the same time,<br />

and they had smoky powder in them and they'd make. ..a lot <strong>of</strong> them were &ost like flintlocks<br />

and so o.n, but now, the mortal sin was if one <strong>of</strong> the guys didn't fire at the saqe the the others<br />

did, and if you had this great big BOOM and then a little boom after or one boom ahead <strong>of</strong> the<br />

others, that was a mortal sin. That was the whole purpose. To be able to rid4 down to the end<br />

and everybody shoot your gun <strong>of</strong>f at the same time. (Chuckle) Oh boy.<br />

Q. Anything happen to the fellow that didn't. . .?<br />

A. No, no, There was one guy and they were riding and something happened to his saddle, it<br />

came loose and he went over, he was at the front <strong>of</strong> the group. . .by the way qey're dl in their<br />

flowing white robes, Oh gosh. This is very very colorful. Once a year. We ere there. And this<br />

guy, would have if he. . . his partner next to him caught him and got him bac up on the run. IT<br />

he'd fallen in between, he'd been trampled by the horses behind, and he sav<br />

Maybe he didn't shoot his gun <strong>of</strong>f because he was holding him up, this guy,<br />

on to that horse, After he'd pulled him up from in between, O<strong>of</strong>!<br />

that guys life.<br />

ing his best to hand<br />

Q. They were like Dervishes? Whitling Dervishes?<br />

I


A. Yeah. These were businessmen and all kinds. These. . ,<br />

Q. These were the local people?<br />

A. Well from Morocco, from all over. They came in from Fez or Marakesh.<br />

Q. How about Africa?<br />

A. Only North Africa. I mean we got over from Morocco to the Mediterranqm Africa. Yeah,<br />

we were in Algeria once, briefly, overnight I guess and then we were in Tunisia for about a week.<br />

I had friends there. We went out around Carthage and so on. He was an arcNologist helping. .<br />

.they were French, They lived out in Sidi Busaide, I think it was called. S I Q I (He spells it out).<br />

I cannot go any further, but that was an Arab village and he was in charge <strong>of</strong>. . .he was a scuba<br />

diver and so on. . .now this is way back, this is probably in the '50's when we were there, and<br />

there had been a huge barge <strong>of</strong> Greek artifacts, bronzes and things that were @en across horn<br />

Greece over to Cartage and it, right outside <strong>of</strong> Cartage there was a big storm gnd it sunk in about<br />

fifty feet <strong>of</strong> water, just outside <strong>of</strong> Cartage there, and so they, after the weathey cleared up they<br />

sent some divers down there and they'd go down, dive for a minute or two a@ then put some<br />

ropes on and the pulled up a bunch <strong>of</strong> the stone and bronze statues and retrieved them but then it<br />

just stayed there and so they decided to go down and see what they didn't retfieve. The little<br />

stuff, and so this guy, this French guy was in charge <strong>of</strong> scuba diving at that pqint, excavating, and<br />

they found all kinds <strong>of</strong> small s M that the others had missed. And they had old palace nearby,<br />

you see, if you're one <strong>of</strong> the rulers, you never use your father's old palace, y q build a new one.<br />

Q. What happens to the old one?<br />

A. Well, they became museums. But this was a magnificent museum. She worked for the<br />

museum. Spoke about four or five languages. She was a friend <strong>of</strong> Clarise mkox'. They went to<br />

school together out at MiUs College (Oakland) So she wrote them a letter. Told her where we<br />

were going to be and if they were available and it was funny, we were sitting<br />

the lobby <strong>of</strong> this<br />

hotel thew, and she said, "It's not TUNIS it's TUNEES" and we were in the bbby expecting to. .<br />

. they were to hunt us up. And we were sitting there having a drink and so 04 and we noticed this<br />

couple wwalk through the lobby a couple <strong>of</strong> times and £inally they zeroed in onius. We decided<br />

later that they were looking us over to see if they wanted to how us or not. Fhuckle)<br />

I<br />

Q. Well now, <strong>of</strong> all the places that you've been, where would you most wan to return to?<br />

A. Jihnmmm. Hong Kong. That's one <strong>of</strong> them. And who knows what it's ing to be afwr '97.<br />

Q: Do you mean Hong Kong proper or do you mean. . .?<br />

f<br />

A, I mean Hong Kong. We always stayed out on the island. Victoria's Is1<br />

don't know how much <strong>of</strong> this stuff you've been to but we had good


this trip we took the girls on for six months in 1961. Kitty wound up. ..we had more friends that<br />

we had made on the way and so Kitty kept writing and writing so we had a Mend in Japan who<br />

spoke good English in Kyoto and so she arranged to have the girls meet Japqese girls and we'd<br />

go to their houses and stuff and <strong>of</strong> course they weren't speaking Japanese, bq the kids were<br />

sixteen and we went <strong>of</strong>f and left them alone and when we came back, all foq<strong>of</strong> them camc out.<br />

Oh, they were twins too. Japanese twins and our twins. It was really sometl$mg. Mrs. Ewya<br />

really did a job with that, and she was marvelous with that. The kids came oit waving the+ arms<br />

through the gardens. a lovely old home. They know the same games we do, ey'd been flaying<br />

cards and stuff. t" I<br />

Q. Well now, you have this mini-museum. Have you always been a collect<strong>of</strong>?<br />

A. Always.<br />

IT<br />

Q. And what do you think started you <strong>of</strong>f?<br />

A. I think one <strong>of</strong> the most interesting antiquities I have. ..I always have stuf<br />

5<br />

and junk and little<br />

things but was the Director <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Springfield</strong> Art Association, a man by the me <strong>of</strong> George<br />

Raab, ( He was <strong>of</strong>1 German ancestry) he had a white moustache and a white tee, and he was<br />

one <strong>of</strong> the first Directors <strong>of</strong> the Art Association we ever had and we were godd friends. We got<br />

to be very good friends, I've got pictures <strong>of</strong> them here. Tall gentleman with p cane. Marvelous<br />

artist. And he gave me a Roman bronze coin that he had picked up when he was in Pompeii and<br />

then about a year later he gave me a second one. Believe me I still have theq I can show them<br />

to you. And that really got me excited about coins and things. They're not v+ry legible but their.<br />

.,since then I've got a lot <strong>of</strong> Roman and Greek coins and things. I've got coibs from all over.<br />

t<br />

From the markets <strong>of</strong> Afghanistan, from Istanbul.<br />

Q. They're easy to carry.<br />

A. They're easy to carry, yeah.<br />

Q. What else do you prize.? You have some Netsches? The Brundage Colleqtion would like to<br />

see them, I'm sure.<br />

A. I've got a collection <strong>of</strong> seals.<br />

Q, Seals. Stamp seals?<br />

i<br />

Middle<br />

A. Stamp seals that are made out <strong>of</strong> stone. Some <strong>of</strong> them are rollen and sone are Greek qnd<br />

Eastern, some from h, places like that<br />

Q. You seem to have an eye for quality.


A. These go back to the days when you rolled them in clay. Cuneiform stufft 1'11 show &rn to<br />

you after awhile. I've got prints and stuff af them and crazy stuff like that.<br />

Q. No particularly large collection <strong>of</strong> any one thing?<br />

A. Just a typical collector <strong>of</strong> everything (chuckle) and master <strong>of</strong> none.<br />

Q. Well tell me something about Kitty? She seemed to be a good companioq.<br />

A. She was a marvelous companion. All five feet <strong>of</strong> her. She fought weightbll her life. In high<br />

school she was a little butterball. She was smart and in those days. You cod$ skip grades in<br />

grade schools or at least skip a half a year so she skipped four different times, the second semester<br />

and so that she was about four months oldex than I was. She was born Febngtry the twenty<br />

eighth and I was born on July 2,1913 and so she was two years ahead <strong>of</strong> me high schod. My<br />

father had me in a parochial school then we went to <strong>Springfield</strong> High School$ but she was two<br />

years ahead.<br />

Q. She was local then? What was her maiden name?<br />

A. Wilms. German. She lived at 1045 South Grand here but I mean she lived in several places.<br />

She lived down on Walnut near the Presbymian Church.<br />

Q. So did you how her in high school?<br />

A. Yeah, but I was a freshman and she was a junior and you know the senioq girls didn't go with<br />

freshman boys.<br />

Q. So you knew her back then?<br />

A. I knew who she was, sure. And <strong>of</strong> course I was living over on Williams I$oulevard here and<br />

her aunt, , .<br />

Q. Her aunt?<br />

A. Her aunt. Her name was Reardon. Clara Reardon. She married very late in life to a guy by<br />

the name <strong>of</strong> Horace Reardon and anyway they built this house in 1923, I guess, and dad and<br />

mother built their house over on Williams and we moved in about 1925 and +e used to walk<br />

around thc neighborhood and mother hew her and she'd stop in and see mother every once in a<br />

while and then I heard latcr that she'd say to Kitty, ( they were very close,) "tVhy don't you ask<br />

that nice <strong>Trutter</strong> boy to some <strong>of</strong> your parties?" And she said, "What, invite t4at little infant?"<br />

(Chuckle) So that was always ldad <strong>of</strong> a joke between us, and she graduated f(om high school<br />

when she was fifteen and a half and wanted to go to the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

always interested in the theater as a child. She did toe dancing and all


in theaters and. ..do you want to hear all this? Anyway, I think; this is an in~esting story fibout<br />

Kitty. Her father would have none <strong>of</strong> it that she wanted to go to the Universh <strong>of</strong> Iowa because<br />

they had such a wonderful speech and theater department there. "No fifteen apd a half daughter <strong>of</strong><br />

mine is going to a state university." His only child, tough old German guy ,a)d so on and not<br />

terribly German, oh God, he hated the Germans. He had a record, I have it hqre someplacq, <strong>of</strong><br />

Madame Schurnann Hetl. Ever hear <strong>of</strong> her? She was a great, great German $nger and it was a<br />

twelve inch platter and he wrapped it and wrote on it. . .this was World War 4. . ,When the war<br />

is over, break it and destroy it." (Chuckle) He was a Captain in World War<br />

He was older and<br />

he was here and it's a long story about how he saved a lot <strong>of</strong> lives. He was i charge <strong>of</strong>. . .not<br />

getting away from going to the university . .but he was in the National Guarf a Captain in the<br />

National Guard and it was very close to the end <strong>of</strong> World War I and they weIp still gathering in<br />

the draftees and stuff you know and they were shipping them up to Rockfordi Camp Grant or<br />

something, up at RocHord, and about that h e the flue epidemic was beginag to break out and<br />

I don't know, I don't think they ever knew what it was, and the guys would wme down with<br />

these lung things and they'd die in two or three or four days and it got so bad, I even got this<br />

fiom one <strong>of</strong> the doctors in the Army up there, he said, "They didn't know wlqat to do with it.<br />

They were dying like flies there in the camp. The only thing they could do was get garaged and<br />

lay them out in there like cord wood and so on. And here came orders to sed up a new batch <strong>of</strong><br />

draftees to Rockford to Kitty's father and he countermanded the order for thqm to be shipped,<br />

three or four hundred anyway, ship them right into that mess, and he said, "I'm going to<br />

countermand that order, They're not going, they're not going up into that mqss, and they can<br />

court marshal1 me if they want to but they are not going." And he sent the oqders out that he was<br />

not going and I guess he got into a Little bit <strong>of</strong> trouble and then they woke ua to how, and so<br />

those guys were not exposed to all this mess up there. Well anyway that's a 'ttle story on the<br />

!<br />

side. Most people don't know about Kitty's dad. Well anyway, he said Kitt will go down to<br />

Montecello down in Godfrey there. And I used to tease her, she went to Mo+tecello Penitentiary<br />

for Women, and she went two years there and after two years there, he let h$. go over there for<br />

her junior and senior year in Iowa and she piled into the theater over there, dhe took astranomy,<br />

she took advanced mathematics, everything and theater, and she was in a play in her senior year<br />

written by her pr<strong>of</strong>essor, a guy by the name <strong>of</strong>. . .the play was called "Green Grow the Lilacs" and<br />

by, his name has slipped me and I know it just as well as. . .anyway she was in that play with dress<br />

rehersals every day and every night after classes, and he would change the lines. "Well now Kitty,<br />

maybe if you'd say it this way maybe it would sound better." Well that would change the queue<br />

for the rest <strong>of</strong> them or maybe he would say to somebody else. . .they did thatright up to the last .<br />

.His name, I think his name was Glenn Riggs. "Green Grow the Lilacs" and right up till the night<br />

<strong>of</strong> dress rehearsal, they were still changing their lines and Kitty had one <strong>of</strong> th~<br />

two female leads,<br />

so they got through the play and not too many years later a couple <strong>of</strong> guys pqt it together a<br />

musical and it became. . .<br />

Q. Same name?<br />

A. No. Oklahoma. Kitty would never go see Oklahoma in a movie on the stage or anything.<br />

She wanted no part <strong>of</strong> it. (Chuckle) As much as she loved the theater.<br />

I


Q. Was she angry? 8<br />

A. 1t just had bad memories for her. To try to learn the part this way and the), change it, 4d<br />

I<br />

change it? It was like "My Fair Lady." You know that was "Pygmalion" as q play.<br />

I<br />

Q. They took the story f om Pygmalion?<br />

I<br />

I<br />

A. Right. They just took the story and put it to music and a little bit more 9 that.<br />

Q. Did you go up to see it?<br />

A. No, no I didn't see her then. I graduated from the U <strong>of</strong> I in Architecture, panuary, 1938, rnidsemester<br />

and got a job with Carl Meyer on Washington's birthday and I had qn old friend,<br />

Florence Wilcox, and we'd gone to Kindergarten, no nursery school together+<br />

1<br />

they didn't have<br />

kindergarten in those days, at Helen Stericker's Nursery School, and we bu ed into each other<br />

every once and in a while and she said, "Phil, we've got a play out here and need very pcy<br />

door designed. It's a murder mystery, and you're the guy who could do it fo us out at thd Little<br />

theater" that they had out on South Fifteenth Street right across fiom that ket that's out there.<br />

You know, it's about a half a block south <strong>of</strong> Laurel, there's a big vegetable/ eat market opt there<br />

and across the street from that was an old Nickelodeon theater. Today it ma3 be the Gemym-<br />

American singing society or something like that, but they rented it for fifteen pollars a mar@ and<br />

the members, this was lmown as the Repertory Guild, and this was a group<br />

1<br />

at loved the theater,<br />

they worked their heads <strong>of</strong>f with plays.<br />

Q. Like the little theater on, . .<br />

A. Yeah, but it was minor to that but that type <strong>of</strong> thing. And they put on<br />

cracker-jack stuff and X think they'd run eight <strong>of</strong> nine nights with it, and,<br />

that. Really fine plays. "Shadow and Substance" was one they put on.<br />

in to do a door for them. What happened was this door suddenly had<br />

made it very fancy with silver on it and stuff and it had a bunch <strong>of</strong><br />

at the time that somebody was. ..but that was my fist episode<br />

there on, I was tapped and I built more damn stuff out there<br />

to the theater in those days. It cost the five cents and on Saturday nights itbost fifty ce&s and<br />

here were girls out there working to clean up that theater. It only had one lide john in it apd<br />

I<br />

it<br />

was just an old concrete floor and the girls out there scrubbing the floor, wasma up and, ell<br />

they wouldn't do that at home for anything cause they had maids in those days. This is la '30's<br />

and I had a budget <strong>of</strong> twenty five dollars to buy materials for those sets for ewh play and e used<br />

everything we had and I tied to build it for ten or meen, not have to buy anwg new if<br />

possible. The theater would hold maybe one hm&d and eighty, hundred and seventy, hu dred<br />

and sixty. Right in there somewhere and there were no dressing rooms really and they'd h ve a<br />

rack <strong>of</strong> clothes <strong>of</strong> costumes hanging with the boys on one side and girls on other. (Chu kle) It<br />

didn't make any difference. We had more Eun then and we always had plays.<br />

i<br />

i


Q. Now this is where you began to see her?<br />

A. I knew her. This is when we started going together. When they had these plays, they'd have<br />

lots <strong>of</strong> parties. That was the most important thing, putting on a play, they had a party afterwards.<br />

No one had any money, really, but we'd get together and have these plays, and then these parties<br />

and I remember, oh I don't know, I remember I got paired <strong>of</strong>f with Kitty a little bit or she'd be<br />

directing a play and wanted me to do the set and we worked together and ma$e she was the<br />

director <strong>of</strong> the play and had the most menial part <strong>of</strong> a cleaning woman in the play, she didn't care,<br />

it just was a play, whatever it was, it didn't make any difference to her. She lqved it and she was<br />

smart enough to know that the theater is not a good place to eat regularly. I rqean unless you<br />

make it to the top, and very few ever do that, but after she graduated, she wed to Chicago and<br />

did some radio up there.<br />

Q. What did she do in radio?<br />

A, She was anything that they needed. Helen Trent. Did you ever hear <strong>of</strong> that? If they needed a<br />

little girl or an old aunt or a grandmother, and she'd be in once or twice a we&. They'd go in<br />

maybe at nine o'clock, maybe at noon. She said they went through three Helea Trents but. . .<br />

she'd be in for a week or two and they'd get twenty five bucks or something l&e that, and she<br />

lived with a friend. . .<br />

Q. You were in Chicago then too?<br />

A. No I was in <strong>Springfield</strong>. Oh, that was before she came home. She graduqed from Iowa<br />

about 1934 or '35 in there. See I didn't get out until '37, '38. So she got her Chicago<br />

experiences. . . this is all wild, am I making this up? She had a friend up there by the name <strong>of</strong><br />

Margarqtta Brown. Did I mention her before? Maggie Brown. She was matron <strong>of</strong> honor at our<br />

wedding. Maggie was a cute little girl. I think her mother fell in love with a shrdent, a seminarian<br />

who got married at a very young age. . .<br />

Q. In her early twenties?<br />

A. Teens. By the way, he was the guy, I understand, that later invented the stop and go lights.<br />

Red, green, orange.<br />

Q. Mr. Brown?<br />

A. NO, No. His name was Curry and they had this one daughter, and that wqs Margaretta, and<br />

so they were in California doing something out there in the lobby and a gal case over and said,<br />

'Zook Mrs.Curry, you have a beautiful daughter there. Maggie was maybe tyvo or three or four.<br />

Maybe four, in there. No three. Maybe four or five. And she said, "Tell<br />

interested in having her in a movie?" Maggie said, well her mother said,<br />

could be interested," I think mamma was short on money as Maggie has


many a the in the Salvation Army overnight, and her mother was a very, very beautiful woman,<br />

and so she went into this movie with this gal and the gal was doing a movie <strong>of</strong> her own life and it<br />

was Mary Pickford and she played Mary PicHord as a little girl and that got hcr started in movies,<br />

and then she was the first little girl in the "Our Gang Comedies." You remember those?<br />

Remember, they had little Farina and the fat boy? She was the little girl who was always dressed<br />

up in the real nice pretty starched ribbons and stuff and got pushed into the md. That was<br />

Margaretta, and then she got a little older and a little older and then she went with the Dunqan<br />

Sisters on the stage, Incidentally, she probably never got much schooling (ch~kle). And then<br />

when she got to be eleven or twelve, she got to be a little bit in-between for t.f$ stage. In the<br />

mean time, her mother ran into a guy by the name <strong>of</strong> Case in Chicago who raq the Case Mmdy<br />

Bakeries and they baked pies, millions <strong>of</strong> pies. Scattered all over the Chicago pea, and Poppa<br />

Case had a lot <strong>of</strong> money and I guess was a lot older than Maggie. Then Magdes mother, (I've<br />

forgottea what her first name is, I do know her but it's kind <strong>of</strong> buried), so Kitqy's aunt used to<br />

like to go up to Chicago, not having any children, and her father, I think he w~rked for the<br />

Canadian Railway or something like that, arrd he'd be gone for awhile and he was a great hunter<br />

and all that, so Kitty's Aunt Clara would say, "Kitty, come on, let's go on up go the Edgewater<br />

Beach. We need to go up and hear Paul Whiteman and Bing Crosby was his sbger," and so<br />

they'd go up to the Edgewater Beach, at that time there was a beach there an4 they'd stay fbr a<br />

week or two and her aunt didn't have a very good heart and Kitty would be bqard stiff and she'd<br />

just go out in the afternoon, take a little book with her and sit in the garden an0 that's where she<br />

bumped into this other little girl her age. Maggie Brown. Margaretta. So wh$e their mother's<br />

were having naps in the afternoon or something, getting ready for music or soqething, the kids<br />

got to be.the very, very best <strong>of</strong> friends, so every time Kitty would go<br />

Margaretta Case was around, and yes, she's registered in. Anyway, Mar<br />

cancer <strong>of</strong> the bones and died at thirty six and Maggie was left with this<br />

Edgewater Beach Apartments. It's still there, the North building. The<br />

been torp down, and her mother had just taken out a twelve month le<br />

when she died, seven or eight room apartment in there, and here was<br />

Case had died also and he'd have a lot <strong>of</strong> millions.<br />

i<br />

Q. So when did you two get together?<br />

A. We got together after these episodes. She and Maggie used to have fun there with bein<br />

radio and television and then Kitty came home. She wanted to work for Franldin Life.<br />

cracker-jack with her English and she'd learned it the hard way from a Swedish teacher do<br />

Montecello where there was nothing else to do if you wok a theme, you tripfle spaced it<br />

at<br />

if<br />

you made a mistake, she'd put an X there, find out what's wrong,<br />

I<br />

1<br />

END SIDE TWO; TAPE-THREE<br />

l<br />

and you had to find out what was wmng with whatever spelling punctuation,<br />

i<br />

ammar, get the<br />

rule and write the rule in the space you left trippled spaced and turn your the back in to be<br />

corrected and it came back to you. As long as you had anything wrong, you g t the wrong rule,


do it over, hunt for another rule that would match, one that was right until you were absolutzly<br />

correct on that theme in every respect, so she really hew her English, so oncq she got back to<br />

<strong>Springfield</strong>, she went to work for Franklin Life and she used to do the pro<strong>of</strong>-repding and<br />

punctuation and everything in the fine print <strong>of</strong> their insurance policies (chuckle$ which was pretty<br />

important. In the meantime she got interested in the theater and so on. They always had th e<br />

t<br />

parties after. I did a lot <strong>of</strong> sets for her, and there was one particular party whqe we went u ..<br />

.they used to have a dance band on the sixth floor <strong>of</strong> the Old Elks Club and yop could go uq there<br />

at night and dance and they had a bar and so on, so it was a beautiful night,<br />

long about twelve thirty, the dances lasted until about one, about twelve<br />

we walked out on the ro<strong>of</strong>, cause Kitty loved moons and astrology, she<br />

university. If she wasn't in a play at nights, she was over there on their<br />

went out to look at the moon and it was a bemtiful full moon and I got<br />

on and she kinda got together and I kinda got an arm around her and so<br />

up at me and I looked at her and decided it was time to put the lips together a& we did and we<br />

kind <strong>of</strong> hugged a little and stuff and (chuckle) so we decided we'd better get b~ck in for the<br />

dance. The rest <strong>of</strong> them might miss us from the gang from the theater so we qent to the dc@r out<br />

on the ro<strong>of</strong> was a fire escape door and you couldn't open it from the outside SO we stood thkre<br />

and banged and yelled and knocked on the door. It did have big glass in it so e waved at<br />

i<br />

anybody, nobody really saw us very much, they were too busy dancing. Any y, we were there<br />

until just about the time the dance was over and everybody said, "Well, where ave you been?"<br />

"None <strong>of</strong> your business, out in the yard." So that kind <strong>of</strong> started things.<br />

Q, So tell me about your girls, your twins. Identical?<br />

I<br />

A. They're not only identical, they are rnirrar twins and they looked exactly al&e until they were<br />

sixteen at which point we decided ... that's when we took them around the wory. . .they decided<br />

they we:e tired <strong>of</strong> looking exactly alike and wearing the same thing and that stpff, so that wqs the<br />

end <strong>of</strong> that.<br />

Q. How did you feel about that?<br />

A. It was up to them, I didn't care.<br />

Q. Did it change their personalities at all? Did you see a difference inpason as they chose<br />

their clothes and brcame more independent af each other?<br />

A. Not particularly.<br />

Q. Did they become independent? Are either <strong>of</strong> them interested in the theated?<br />

A. Oh, they were in the theater. Their mother got them in a couple <strong>of</strong> plays. The one interesting<br />

play. Helen Hays played it for years. What was it? Yes, "Mrs. Mac Thing." I even have the<br />

book over here that Kitty had, some place around here,<br />

I<br />

72


Q. Wasn't that was Bobbie Herndon's Godmother?<br />

A. And named for the daughter that Helen Hays lost. That play. . .Kitty had #e lead, and phe<br />

twins played in it. I think they were eight at the time. They had their birthday. It was in October.<br />

Oh, they put on a pasty for them, but what they did was, one would play one night, the other<br />

would play the next night so they weren't up too late and the play was on for tight or ten days.<br />

Oh gosh, what's the name <strong>of</strong> that play? It's a famous play, and oh, it was kind <strong>of</strong> an ether@<br />

thing with a fairy Godmother and stuff, but it was funny. The last night <strong>of</strong> thelplay, the kid4 had<br />

identical costumes and they came and, the fairy Godmother or something in<br />

Kitty, she came oh, no, it was the director <strong>of</strong> the play who came on with one<br />

for the director to come out and she came out and took care <strong>of</strong> which ever<br />

she went like this ( demonstrates with his finger) and the other one came<br />

said, "We'll let you all in on it. It's their birthday tonight. You saw this<br />

the play, and this one in the last half <strong>of</strong> the play. Come join us for a<br />

! I<br />

Q. Phil, I have neglected to ask you where and when you were married?<br />

I<br />

I<br />

A. Well, we were married in Evanston, <strong>Illinois</strong>, on May the 8, 1943 and we re married i~ St.<br />

Mary's Cathedral Church in Evanston at Maggie Browns house there in Ev $ ton and, anyay<br />

we were married, <strong>of</strong> course the war was on deep and we were married without benefit <strong>of</strong><br />

relatives, There was a bit <strong>of</strong>, .<br />

"r<br />

.I was Catholic and Kitty's father was past Potantate <strong>of</strong> the hrine,<br />

and in those days they didn't mix very well, but anyway we went ahead and g t married at<br />

Maggie's and we had a wonderful little wedding <strong>of</strong> twelve or fdteen people. ent over to e<br />

Edgewater Beach Hotel. I'd driven all night. I was at Dayton, Ohio at the e, at Pattersgn<br />

Field, and I'd driven all night from Dayton. . . $<br />

I<br />

/<br />

Q. Wha$ service were you in? j<br />

A. I was a civilian as an engineerlarchitect and I was chief draftsman for the<br />

the Fairfield Air Depot it was called. They could control me by keeping me<br />

the military because they'd have draftsmen come in and then they ship out.<br />

Q. What were you drafting?<br />

A. Oh, all ldnds <strong>of</strong> stuff for the Air Forces there. "Fly Devils" and stuff. ' gs like that.<br />

Q. And then you stayed at the Edgewater Hotel and then she went back. . . .<br />

:i<br />

A. Saturday night I drove all night and Friday night to get to Chicago. We<br />

afternoon. We had tKe reception at Maggies, we went to the Edgewater<br />

night. . .we all got together the next day anyway. . .as a matter <strong>of</strong> fact I<br />

got to the hotel about eight thirty and about eleven thirty or twelve, the<br />

friend Maggie said, "Hey you two aught to be hungry now. It's time<br />

I<br />

I


"Come on down to the breMast shop. Come and have breakfast with us. So we did and 04 the<br />

way back up to our room at about one thirty,.they had funny papers in the<br />

up two or three newspapers and took them along with us and I don't<br />

about six o'clock or so and so we said, "Let's get even with Maggie<br />

we said, "Maggie, we've read all the newspapers and all<br />

She said, "You eat breakfast, I'll be. right down." And if she<br />

come down. (Chuckle) We had breakfast at about seven or<br />

and drove all that night. Pulled in at the Gibbons Hotel, Monday morning, Dqton, where<br />

could stay for five days, but since we almost bought the bar at the hotel befor7 that with o<br />

company, we stayed there for five months.<br />

I<br />

I<br />

I<br />

I<br />

Q. What did Kitty do? 1<br />

A. She darned all my sox cause I could put em on from either end. She did<br />

weaving. She said, "When I got it all done, it was silly, why not throw them<br />

some new ones." She'd always darned her fathers so she sat around for<br />

for an apartment and then. . .<br />

Q. They didn't provide one for you?<br />

A. Oh no. Four hundred war indusiries and Oh, my God, I think there were<br />

Q. In Dayton, Ohio?<br />

A. I think there were f ~ty five thousand civilians. See, you had Wright field, atterson Fiey and<br />

the, Oh, the Air Technical Service Command. How could I<br />

a prize for the Air Forces, and that was in another place that you had,<br />

Patterson, and so she went out. ..she had volunteered for the Red<br />

here or the women rolling bandages, and she was in the<br />

international truck around apd so she went out to the Red Cross at<br />

talked to the Director there, "Did he need any volunteer work<br />

give you a job. You're the new assistant field director. So she started just lik that and for<br />

she got a hundred and fifty dollars a month, just like<br />

wasn't making too much, We paid five dollars and a<br />

sheets and pillow cases and towels every day. We cooked a<br />

pot that we had. There was a big market across the<br />

the menus at the hotel which was not <strong>of</strong>ten, but<br />

come in and so. ..and they knew us very well<br />

beef sandwich instead <strong>of</strong> just the roast beef<br />

cents. It was 'about three dollars otherwise. Oh boy.<br />

Q. So when were the twins born? 1


A, Let's see. October 19, 1945.<br />

Q. Near the end <strong>of</strong> the war?<br />

A. Maybe it was October, '44. Yeah it wa .s '44 becaus<br />

birthdays and the war was over in '45.<br />

Q. So you came back here directly by way a€ Dayton.<br />

1<br />

our way horn le, thdy had their y ar<br />

A. We came back here fiom California. Our fiend Maggie was in California Ld she decidkd we<br />

should come out and visit on the way home.<br />

Q. Where in California?<br />

A. North Hollywood.<br />

Q. What was she doing out there?<br />

A. I don't know. She was divorced from Dm Brown at that point and then +y got back<br />

together but she just thought it would be a good place for me to start practicinb architectur~<br />

Q. How'd you feel about that?<br />

1<br />

A. Well let's look and look it over and she had a guy who was even willing to give me a job. But<br />

<strong>of</strong> course, the trouble was California does not recognize anybody else's licenc .<br />

Q. At that time?<br />

A. At that time, yeah. Still don't, I guess. You have to go for national.<br />

registration now but in those days, why. . .any more than Florida would<br />

because <strong>of</strong> hurricanes. I was alright for New York, I guess. If I was<br />

Chicago, I could build in New York, but anyway I didn't want to do<br />

Angels fear to tread. People with twins getting on an airplane in<br />

Mmmm. That's a whole story on it's own. Anyway, we got to<br />

then we came back here to <strong>Springfield</strong> and moved into Kitty's<br />

who had rented this had gone home. The war was over. It<br />

so we left the kids with Kitty's mother and Kitty and I<br />

place. There was a bunch <strong>of</strong> furniture that was her<br />

moved that down and did that for about a month<br />

Christmas: and that would have been '45.<br />

Q. And you were working with Meyer?<br />

I<br />

i


A. Not until a couple <strong>of</strong> months later. See that was '45. No, no. I was through, I didn't go to<br />

work for Meyer anymore then. .<br />

Q. You were working for who then?<br />

A. For myself. Wait, I was working for Hadley and Worthington for two or<br />

couldn't find anyplace for an <strong>of</strong>fice. There was no <strong>of</strong>fice space ANYPLACE<br />

a partnership with Karl Bretcher who worked for Carl Meyer for years and w<br />

up there and thought we'd work as a partnership and he managed to get a col<br />

old Reisch Building and so we worked together for a couple <strong>of</strong> years and the]<br />

own.<br />

Q. What year was that?<br />

A. That was about 1949. 1949,1950.<br />

Q. What was your first job? After you went out on your own?<br />

A. Oh Gosh. That's when I'd say I was with Karl Bretcher and he had the jc<br />

over because he had something else and that was the Holland Jewelry Store d<br />

<strong>Springfield</strong>. It's still there next t6 Mauldners with the glass you can see insid1<br />

windows you can see on the sides.<br />

xee months qause I<br />

le <strong>of</strong> rooms<br />

i<br />

n the<br />

[went out o my<br />

so I kind <strong>of</strong> / took<br />

mtown herq in<br />

md the show<br />

Q. What's been your most rewarding job over the years? What was the job 1<br />

A. Oh, I was very pleased with Griffin High School. That was built about 15<br />

Franlxlin:<br />

u liked the npost?<br />

9. Or the Bin<br />

Q. You did the Ben Franklin?<br />

A, I did the Ben Franklin. Washington and Jefferson Middle Schools. Then<br />

did the Municipal Building. Bill Turley. He did the structural and engineerin<br />

design and the other on that, I'll tell you something nobody ever thinks abom<br />

reasonably rewarding and that is the Hope School for the Multiple Hmdicapp<br />

vere two <strong>of</strong> us who<br />

and I did the<br />

hat has been<br />

i.<br />

Q. Which one?<br />

A. The one that's out here on Lakeview. You go East Lake Drive.<br />

Q. Tsn't there's another one on Wabash? A Hope School on Wabash?<br />

A. There is? Is that for blind handicapped kids? I don't how anything aboa it but I know this<br />

was started by old DOC Jordan and his wife who had a premature child that w$s haxdly six<br />

!<br />

76 ! I


months old, but was a preemie and they were very proud <strong>of</strong> the hospital keepiqg this child<br />

except the eyeballs and stuff hadn't developed and mentally handicapped. Sha's still alive.<br />

they started. ..there really wasn't any place that they could send her for blind pnd other<br />

handicaps, mentally and. . .<br />

Q. How did you learn to build a school or building for such handicapped?<br />

A. That was. ..there was nothing to research. One had never been built befort. There was/ one in<br />

England that had been an addition on some kind <strong>of</strong> an old building there, a do+rutory type Qf<br />

building, and I think there was another one up in Sweden someplace, a very s<br />

i<br />

all thing, and none<br />

<strong>of</strong> them had ever built anything like this. They wanted a "cottage system" th 's out there. I<br />

don't really know anything about it. It's built on a "cottage" theme so that th y were more like<br />

home than being in an institution, and there'd be a. ..<br />

Q. Did they dictate what they wanted rather than you, . .?<br />

A. They dictated what they wanted to do and this gal from England came ov<br />

<strong>of</strong> good points, For instance to be sure that the glass above child height is<br />

have any sharp edges and make it easy for the attendants, I mean when it<br />

a bath, raise the bathtubs up <strong>of</strong>f the floor so that they don't have to lean<br />

(demonstrates) to lay the kids down in the bathtub, and since so many<br />

and stuff, why we put sits baths in for them and if they got all messed<br />

and turn the sits bath and just sit them in there.<br />

Q. Had they designed the sits-bath by then?<br />

A. Oh yeah. Sits-bath. In all the years I was an architect, I never once installid a bidet. i<br />

(Chuckle) Some place to wash your feet or put your flowers or something lik4 that ( chucde.) I<br />

don't know. But that's. . .<br />

Q. Big wide halls for wheel chairs?<br />

A. They didn't have any wheel chairs there. There were wide hallways, but the main thing was<br />

we had twelve kids to a cottage, this was the cottage system, and with classro~ms. And I hadn't<br />

thought <strong>of</strong> it but some <strong>of</strong> these kids could see light and so on. Most <strong>of</strong> them wre mentally<br />

handicapped too and in the corridors they could ride bicycles and roller skate and stuff and they<br />

do, from cottages to cottages, and we put the cottages like this and so on and hen you have a<br />

corridor that ties them together and here's a fence that ties them <strong>of</strong>f and then they could have a<br />

play yard out here and drinking fountains in the yards. Forty feet apart or somctbing like that.<br />

They've added to it a lot since I did it, but I made the master plan. PCople come from all over the<br />

world to see the damn thing.<br />

Q. I ought to go over to see it myself?<br />

i<br />

I


A. You haw where it is? Take East Lake Drive. . ,<br />

Q. Want to tell me later?<br />

A, Oh, I forgot, we're still going on.<br />

Q. So what else have you done that you've been happy about?<br />

A. Oh, eighty or ninety or a hundred schools all over the state <strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong> in thq baby boom days.<br />

Q, So you were known for your schools?<br />

A. That was the principle work in the 1950's which was fine.<br />

Q. Did you have a certain design or a rather a formula for your plans?<br />

A. Actually in the early '50's we really got into problems because the war was pn and there were<br />

restrictions on the steel we could use on buildings if you could imagine that. y e don't think <strong>of</strong><br />

that, so we developed a method, these one story buildings, and we could use bb timbers. I mean<br />

we could get these great ten by eighteen or twelve by sixteen timbers that werq twenty four or<br />

twenty five feet long, and then they were tre~ted, salt treated, and then we put<br />

I<br />

them on four foot<br />

centers instead <strong>of</strong> steel beams for ro<strong>of</strong>. We could have a little bit <strong>of</strong> steel. TwQnty five percent<br />

maybe, so we had to save that for the gymnasium and these were classrooms here we used all<br />

wood and then they made big sheets <strong>of</strong>, not flexicote. If you were to take exc sior, very course<br />

excelsior and mix it up with cement and you put it in forms about four inches 'ck. Four feet<br />

wide, and eight feet long, and when that poured cement set up it was stiff soli and yet the<br />

excelsior left swirls and designs on the ceilings, see, so that was your acoustic for the classrooms,<br />

so we could take these eight foot pieces and the beams were on four foot cen s so you could<br />

take one sheet and go across a beam to the next one, so you had covered eight eet with a beam in<br />

the middle supportive. Then with the next one, you'd stagger them back and rth, and so you<br />

I<br />

had an acoustical ceiling and you had to. . .<br />

Q. Well, you were very innovative?<br />

A. Oh , I had some good partners too. I teamed up with a guy from Lincoln whose father was<br />

one <strong>of</strong> the first, he was number six in the state <strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong>. The sixth registered architect. He was<br />

Joe Deal and he and a partner <strong>of</strong> his designed the courthouse, the county courthouse in Lincoln.<br />

It's still thereand going strong.<br />

Q. Are most <strong>of</strong> the pieces you've done still +sting?<br />

A. Oh, yeah, yeah.<br />

ff


Q. What was the last thing that you did?<br />

A. It takes a lot <strong>of</strong> thought. I'm not sure. There were some nice houses but. . ,the houses were<br />

fun but about all they did was to pay the rent and the telephone bill.<br />

Q. Were they easier?<br />

A. No.<br />

Q, Did you have a formula for them?. What style were you? Bungalow?<br />

A. Whatever they wanted. I tried to please the clients in that I didn't force<br />

except on some lady who'd come into me and say, "Phil, I've seen some <strong>of</strong><br />

them very much and I want you to do one for us and I've got some ideas<br />

very big folder and it's full <strong>of</strong> all the stuff they had pulled £rom House<br />

Garden, Better Homes and Gardens, books that they got on House<br />

this one and that one and the other one and that's when you get<br />

think, ' Now this living room I love, this is wonderful, and this<br />

room is just about what we need and so on,' and you take all<br />

put that into a house that will meet the budget, <strong>of</strong> course.<br />

: Q. And their approval.<br />

A, And their approval. And so, my first conversation then would be after I fo<br />

6<br />

nd that out, "Have<br />

you looked around at the existing houses that were already built that could be emodeled to suit<br />

your requirements, otherwise you're going to spend a year or a year and a half f decisions and<br />

decisioqs and decisions <strong>of</strong> what color here, what kind <strong>of</strong> light fixtures there, w at kind <strong>of</strong> tile do<br />

you want and so on and so on and so on."<br />

Q. So what became <strong>of</strong> that?<br />

A. They said, "No, we'll go ahead on our own." I never talked any <strong>of</strong> them out <strong>of</strong> it, and so it<br />

was always compromise, compromise, compromise. I did my bast to put their houses. . .and then<br />

I'd interject some <strong>of</strong> my own ideas to make their's work better and they usually would buy those.<br />

Q. Then how did you charge them when they kept changing and compromising, changing a d<br />

compromising?<br />

A. That's one <strong>of</strong> the headaches because you'd make sketches, they'd sketch you to death and<br />

you'd charge them six or eight percent.<br />

Q. So what would you say were your fondest memories <strong>of</strong> architecture for yo*? And would you<br />

do it again?<br />

t


A. Not the way it's done today. It's all computers. I don't know if the kids wrning out <strong>of</strong><br />

college can draw or not. I don't know. When I put my pencil down in 1965. ,.Kitty and I. ..<br />

you want this silly little story? Kitty and I =re in Germany on the Rhine Riv~<br />

in an old c~tle<br />

right near the hrilei there, the bend in the river and down below us was the. . .<br />

Q. The Frederick Castle?<br />

A. I'm not sure, I can't remember, but right below us was the little "False Ca$le"<br />

7<br />

in the rniddle<br />

<strong>of</strong> the river, That's wliere the boats paid their tolls. Across the way were the ''Cat and Mouse"<br />

castles. The big one and the little.one, and it was October and it was a beau 1, beautiful day,<br />

and we sat out there on the terrace and watched the boat go up and down the ' e, and the<br />

people were picking the last <strong>of</strong> the grapes, you know the spatlase grapes gro the very ripe sweet<br />

ones, and we had a beautiful bottle <strong>of</strong> red wine and they only had about six ro ms in the old<br />

castle.Beautifu1 thing. As a matter <strong>of</strong> fact it had a moat around it and we cod only drive up to<br />

it It's only about four hundred feet above the river and we could drive up onl<br />

4<br />

so far. And they<br />

came out to meet us and they had a little pony cart with two wheels on it and pony to pullit and<br />

that's what we put our luggage on, and then we walked, following our luggag the rest <strong>of</strong> the way<br />

to the castle, So anyway, we got to the bottom <strong>of</strong> the second bottle <strong>of</strong> wine, d somehow she<br />

said, "Isn't that beautiful" and she said, " Phil, have you ever thought maybe b siness was<br />

interfering with out traveling?" And (chuckle) I said, "Well Kitty, many timesiI've thought so<br />

lately." She said, "Well now, you think about it. If when we get home, you Tnt over to your<br />

<strong>of</strong>ice and told your partners to go to hell January one." I said, "Kitty,<br />

I'll,do it. Now what are we going to do with our time?" So we got a<br />

made a list <strong>of</strong> things, course we were going to travel anyway, and we went <strong>of</strong> places after<br />

that like Afghanistan and Sumatra, so we made a list <strong>of</strong> about twenty three<br />

still got the list in the basement someplace. We didn't get them all done but w$ got a lot <strong>of</strong> them<br />

done besides traveling.<br />

Q. When did she die?<br />

A. July 30, 1977.<br />

Q. You have three granddaughters. What mure they doing?<br />

I<br />

A,. They were the three that we mentioned earlier, I think. In college, all <strong>of</strong> thtm. Two <strong>of</strong> them<br />

are sisters, twenty two and twenty one, they're fifteen months apart. One <strong>of</strong> th~m just graduated<br />

from Princeton, the other one is a senior at Northwestern.<br />

Q. She's an assistant isn't she?<br />

A. Yes. The one at Rinceton will be an assistant to one <strong>of</strong> her pr<strong>of</strong>essors the*. Of the three<br />

gixls, Jill and Jan. . .and we didn't give them any rniddle names. Their mother aaid it was bad<br />

enough when you get, later when you have a middle name, you get Married and you have four


names to wite out. If you want a middle name you add it yourself. So thqy were Jan afld<br />

Jill. . .or Jan's the oldest. They were fifteen months apart,and Jill has finished graduating<br />

at Princeton <strong>University</strong> and she's going back this fall to be an assistant to lone <strong>of</strong> her<br />

pr<strong>of</strong>essors. Her sister will be back at Northwestern as a senior. Last year, her Junior<br />

year. . .Northwestern changes with the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Suffolk in Enghd, hich is about<br />

iTS<br />

five minutes out <strong>of</strong> Brighton. She was there last year and when she finis d with her<br />

year, Jan graduated and they kicked around over there for over a month d they didn't<br />

get back till the middle <strong>of</strong> July and had a lot <strong>of</strong> fun together. Their cow'<br />

Carolines. ..Marilyn was their mother. Carolyn had one daughter. ..that' Holly. Her<br />

actual name ...her baptized name, is Natalia which means Christmas Chi<br />

She came a<br />

little ahead <strong>of</strong> Christmas but that's allright she uses Natalia <strong>of</strong>ficially but qhe uses Holly<br />

as a nickname. She's a freshman. She fmished her freshman year at Lehigh. She went<br />

down for a summer course at Tulane in ancient geography and Anthropolqgy. She may<br />

persue that some more now cause she enjoyed that so much this summer.<br />

Q. You're still going strong and only have your 'knees' to tend to.<br />

A. That's right. Just the knees!<br />

Q. With the exercises you're getting you're feeling better.<br />

A. People say, "Well, Phil, how are you doing"? and I say , "Well, fiom the knees down,<br />

lousy, and fiom the knees up, fine and fat"!<br />

Q. But then you're still going back to the <strong>Springfield</strong> Art Association to cb your art, yes?<br />

A. Oh yeah, I'll go back there this fall. Go back into sculpting to keep my fingers active.<br />

Take care <strong>of</strong> what arthritis I have in my hand.<br />

Q. Well, I want to thank you very muck It's been delightful.<br />

I

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!