- Series
- The American town: A self-portrait
- Air Date
- 1967-01-26
- Duration
- 00:29:44
- Episode Description
- This program, the first of two parts, focuses on the town of Napoleon, Ohio. Topics covered inlcude the Miami and Erie Canal; farming methods; hatchery businesses; windmill manufacturing; and the women's suffrage movement. Includes an interview with a 102-year-old woman.
- Series Description
- Historical documentary series drawn from the recollections of senior citizens in a variety of American towns.
- Subject(s)
- Creator(s)
- University of Michigan (Producer)Johnson, Ralph (Producer)
- Contributors
- Genre(s)
- Geographic Region(s)
- regions
- Time Period
- 1961-1970
[00:05 - 00:10]
The following program was produced by the University of Michigan broadcasting service for
[00:10 - 00:27]
national educational radio under a grant from the National Home Library Foundation.
[00:27 - 00:30]
That was the old values to call it printed
[00:30 - 00:37]
years ago old blue or in the field with the arsis.
[00:37 - 00:40]
You know we could use a bell when I was a tractor you can hear it.
[00:40 - 01:01]
The history of the place is the sum of many memories the
[01:01 - 01:05]
recollections differ. Sometimes conflict. But as people give voice to their
[01:05 - 01:11]
memories history take shape the past comes alive.
[01:11 - 01:15]
Napoleon Ohio population 60 700 lives some 40
[01:15 - 01:22]
miles south and west of Toledo in an area once known as the great black swamp.
[01:22 - 01:26]
It is part of the land which was wrested from the Indians by General Anthony Wayne. It is not far
[01:26 - 01:31]
from where the famed and bloody battle of fallen timbers was fought in 1790 for
[01:31 - 01:37]
Napoleon. As a county seat is the center of a rich farming district which was largely
[01:37 - 01:42]
settled by German immigrants as the horses have gone in the sounds of
[01:42 - 01:46]
tractors are heard on the farms. So a new sound is heard in the downtown area.
[01:46 - 01:56]
Hundreds upon hundreds of trucks rumble through Napoleon each day carry much
[01:56 - 02:01]
of the produce that was once transported by rail. The tracks of the Detroit Toledo
[02:01 - 02:05]
and I wanted cross those of the north western in Napoleon.
[02:05 - 02:10]
But for earlier then trucks or trains the Polian was one of many towns on
[02:10 - 02:15]
the Great Miami and Erie Canal course the early settlers
[02:15 - 02:20]
here there were no roads and mostly woods and they had no way of getting their farm products to
[02:20 - 02:22]
market.
[02:22 - 02:26]
The river was navigable. So
[02:26 - 02:32]
that's what brought it to the canal as well as many other canals.
[02:32 - 02:34]
And.
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It. Was open for use in the 1840s.
[02:39 - 02:44]
Oh Mr. Wolf and the county that early 20s that
[02:44 - 02:50]
used to tell me about when he worked on it but told me that.
[02:50 - 02:55]
He thought there was almost one dead man for every length of the wheelbarrow that build it and
[02:55 - 02:58]
they both will be.
[02:58 - 03:02]
There if there are fights or disease or something.
[03:02 - 03:03]
The first time I seen that I was bought.
[03:03 - 03:10]
Seven or eight years old father Drew we haven't forgot it on a farm and you
[03:10 - 03:15]
know a lot of wheat which in that time is stacked up
[03:15 - 03:20]
and you put it in and put it surely it will run the canal boat for a wreck
[03:20 - 03:25]
like this to certain there were going downstream and one going upstream that's first time I ever
[03:25 - 03:30]
seen the can now. That's ironic 80 years ago.
[03:30 - 03:36]
See I mediate that Canelo run from Toledo to Cincinnati.
[03:36 - 03:41]
It went up beyond defiance to Antwerp and her man at work I paddled a
[03:41 - 03:46]
canoe from Portland to Cincinnati on a cousin and I'm from Toledo and then
[03:46 - 03:51]
there was a branch run from bad work then clear up
[03:51 - 03:55]
to Delphi Indiana. It's almost the Illinois
[03:55 - 03:58]
border.
[03:58 - 04:03]
They carried any line of freight any line of a grain lots or they carried lots of
[04:03 - 04:08]
grain they had with the dock right up there but there will be mill Matt Becker's
[04:08 - 04:13]
blacksmith shop is in the hole in the canal and then it was ill little mail above there
[04:13 - 04:17]
shipped a lot of stuff out of there and they put a whole lot of grain. Then your
[04:17 - 04:22]
packets. That was a smaller boat that carried the mail and they
[04:22 - 04:27]
they went a lot faster a lot of passengers used most of the big boats didn't
[04:27 - 04:32]
carry many passengers with do but the packets the mailboat
[04:32 - 04:37]
carried the mayo on the expressway. They were smaller and they carried and
[04:37 - 04:42]
they traveled a lot faster in the old canal boat. They generally had a horse in a
[04:42 - 04:46]
tow rope two horses new and the old canal boats generally used three
[04:46 - 04:51]
meals and then they'd have an extra three that they carried along on the boat after
[04:51 - 04:54]
so many miles why then they'd take them off and
[04:54 - 05:00]
put the tired ones back on the boat and put the fresh ones on the people on the go
[05:00 - 05:06]
for the bridges non-work 20th or the intersection of 24 years where that was the canal
[05:06 - 05:11]
that 24 goes down through there was they all come out of it and there was a big ole iron
[05:11 - 05:16]
bridge up over that. Yes I can remember some of the
[05:16 - 05:21]
old photos there was old cap Sampson kept Morehead kept
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broad Nicks.
[05:22 - 05:28]
Dave Hancock Dave Hancock was toll collector
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for the kind where you are going to have your talents
[05:34 - 05:39]
sections ever here next Yellowcard is kind of addiction you know but
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it was too bad I was sad to see the canal go it was kind of a
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reminiscence of what was once you know. Oh yes it was the very best that we
[05:49 - 05:53]
used to be stores that have that at the courthouse there
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KAV stores.
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Well only come here Bury St be with cobblestone across the river
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still in our field you know eventually course we got that better and.
[06:09 - 06:14]
But done top out there off someone signed for a mill on the opposite side
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street. They all run a water wheel it's like a water works
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so mill womyn book is male and then there's this old mill set
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non-rigid right now around the water.
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Water wheels for the canal when leave Goodall house in
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1888.
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I hoarded lumber Gondor defines to have it dressed you know put
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different things and we did to free him from the
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gutter had a big load of like little D on a rack
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and I'd always leave there when they'd close so I could take the loan back home
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and I was going to succeed in that.
[06:57 - 07:00]
Mind you were just a kid.
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I heard my grandfather tell I wouldn't go back to the peers and the
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pokies they run a distillery just east of town on
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24. There are barns down there is a junk yard
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down there now that old barn was a distillery.
[07:19 - 07:24]
They made whiskey there and they also had a stone wheel in
[07:24 - 07:28]
there where they were at they could grind grain and I heard grandfather to
[07:28 - 07:33]
tell he could carry a bushel of wheat from way out there pared down to fill your meal.
[07:33 - 07:38]
Rock because you couldn't there was no roads come down
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one day and have that ground. And they owe that only ground they ground the
[07:43 - 07:48]
hall and everything in it and when they want to use it they had to sift it down one day and
[07:48 - 07:51]
stay overnight and walk back home the next day.
[07:51 - 07:55]
There were very few roads at that time. There were a few
[07:55 - 08:00]
paths but people quite frequently walked as the crow flies
[08:00 - 08:05]
and that took them across the fields and it was not at
[08:05 - 08:10]
all unusual by simply looking down to pick up an
[08:10 - 08:14]
arrowhead and sometimes if a person was lucky to
[08:14 - 08:20]
pick up a nice piece like a tommy hawk all of this was of course
[08:20 - 08:24]
evidence that the Indians had been there before us.
[08:24 - 08:29]
There are going to find out more and back over the history we had several Indian
[08:29 - 08:34]
camps that they come here. I don't know in the spring or far when it
[08:34 - 08:37]
was in camp. A lot of those rows
[08:37 - 08:43]
o up West the town here a couple a mile on a high knoll because I know
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I found 40 40 some arrowheads in one spot up there after the
[08:48 - 08:50]
1913 flood.
[08:50 - 08:56]
Then at least in the port in here down by the Damascus bridge they said at one that there was
[08:56 - 09:01]
and I remember there were no orchard and it was no it was no cemetery there
[09:01 - 09:06]
was a few will tombstones it was just weather. Well the lettering was
[09:06 - 09:11]
packed all wore off and they claimed the Indians camp there and I we found love
[09:11 - 09:14]
broken pottery but no friend Inside I found some of these big bear
[09:14 - 09:21]
tomahawks in that stuff on their own they say that was a Met there once
[09:21 - 09:26]
years a playground and then down there used on this side just beyond
[09:26 - 09:30]
Campbell Soup. Here the Tamils who owns a property there was a girl it went back up
[09:30 - 09:33]
there and they said that was an old Indian burying ground.
[09:33 - 09:38]
We found a lot of back up in that old gully up there or shall we say in
[09:38 - 09:43]
the little I've seen it's been a terrific contrast specially and in the change
[09:43 - 09:48]
in farming. You might say it's gone for a month.
[09:48 - 09:53]
From Horses and plows to push buttons since just in the short time that
[09:53 - 09:54]
I've been here.
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And the farmers used to work for mine.
[09:56 - 10:03]
Sun up to sundown almost the mountain now in three
[10:03 - 10:07]
months. They've got their work done. They spend their winters in Florida Holy Week
[10:07 - 10:13]
we see a lot of bad habits stretching out that really there's
[10:13 - 10:18]
been a greater change in the past 50 years than there has since.
[10:18 - 10:23]
Our forefathers landed on Plymouth Rock because for years and years we went along and
[10:23 - 10:28]
we had they all played on the hara and we played it many times by hand. I don't remember
[10:28 - 10:32]
this of course but now it's all mechanized and
[10:32 - 10:37]
as far as the farmer himself was concerned.
[10:37 - 10:42]
It's a. Lot less hard work now. I think the tensions and
[10:42 - 10:47]
the strains of Agriculture today are just like any other business. It's
[10:47 - 10:52]
tougher it's harder. You know you who you don't make many mistakes and
[10:52 - 10:55]
stay in the agricultural business nowadays because you can just.
[10:55 - 11:02]
Fool yourself right out of business. And we've got a lot of farmers that are doing that.
[11:02 - 11:07]
Small farmers a small acreages who have over equip themselves with expensive
[11:07 - 11:10]
equipment to pass out of the picture.
[11:10 - 11:15]
Yeah but why just why would a fella buy just that big
[11:15 - 11:20]
equipment you can get by with smaller stuff. But it's that trend you know and now
[11:20 - 11:24]
are the manufacture to the enormous that it's the trend to get bigger and they claim
[11:24 - 11:31]
they manufactured bigger where if it wouldn't be the trend they would have to keep it smaller.
[11:31 - 11:36]
That's who I look at and for me I think it be better. Around here
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there are just too big. Yet they're mostly like my
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size or maybe hundred sixty and things like that but
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then there are some that have maybe 160 acres and they ran another 80 and
[11:50 - 11:53]
try to get a little bigger.
[11:53 - 11:58]
So actually rings are the that was a social event almost as well as getting the work done.
[11:58 - 12:03]
You got to meet your neighbors. And you worked with them when you got the job done
[12:03 - 12:08]
and it was. A lot of hard hard work there is no question about that. And everybody worked hard that
[12:08 - 12:14]
it was a it was. A real neighborhood affair because farmers
[12:14 - 12:19]
got you aid in the other person's home. And women that.
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Work back and forth cooking the threshing the you and. We had
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a real sociable time out of it as well as getting the work done and of course there was many a
[12:29 - 12:33]
dispute settled at the Thracian ringgits during Thracian and especially if
[12:33 - 12:38]
somebody stole somebody else's girl they got this settled who I can remember one
[12:38 - 12:43]
quite quite rough affair that got settled. And.
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After it was all settled the two guys decided that they'd be friends again and
[12:48 - 12:51]
it worked out all right. But then this is this is the way it was.
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Oh yes we used to have fun with a trash can. Have all the men come
[12:56 - 13:01]
over and get together and each one helped. And.
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Then we used to make. A big meal. Trashing. Dinner.
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That was fun. All the men came in. I'll be
[13:11 - 13:16]
dirty in on them they'd have to wash up on the outside the big tubs and all sit
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around have some beer. Talk can have a lot
[13:21 - 13:22]
of fun.
[13:22 - 13:27]
And I always had in my room Bush. Everything that goes above the
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ground to plant in a new moon. And everything that goes
[13:32 - 13:37]
below to ground you plant in a full moon like potatoes or
[13:37 - 13:41]
special and and anything above the ground that we're
[13:41 - 13:47]
going to plant in the New Moon I still tell my Our mantra God.
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I said then you'll get a planet that's one idea. If you make up
[13:53 - 13:57]
your mind you're going to get a planet in that moon youll get a planet
[13:57 - 14:02]
it don't take but even that you just get careless. That's one of the objects.
[14:02 - 14:09]
And that's true. And I no doubt the moon has got some to do
[14:09 - 14:13]
with this with this stuff. For instance you Few see
[14:13 - 14:18]
some roof shingles or come. Come up. Others
[14:18 - 14:21]
really real flat.
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And you and I know fences by gosh it was on
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top of the ground even a blocks one set in the ground not one inch.
[14:32 - 14:37]
He'd stay right above the ground. Others again did sink right into the ground by
[14:37 - 14:42]
gosh one area after the other and it was put in a wrong time.
[14:42 - 14:46]
That's part of my idea and I believe that school had a
[14:46 - 14:51]
lot to do with the with the Guta and
[14:51 - 14:54]
weather and whatnot.
[14:54 - 14:58]
I think I believe in not just your regular meets the earth.
[14:58 - 15:05]
The song the group's like I never believe in
[15:05 - 15:09]
signs. I can remember when I lived out south
[15:09 - 15:14]
here there was an old man he believed in all these signs and one day he
[15:14 - 15:19]
came along and I was planning potatoes and he said you you just do the
[15:19 - 15:24]
wrong thing he said. Everything is against you today and I said well there's one thing
[15:24 - 15:29]
that I never believed in I said I just plant when I get ready. And
[15:29 - 15:34]
he had his patches crossed it all from me in Nashville he had his
[15:34 - 15:39]
and the signs because he lived and believed in him and then in form we dug potatoes he had a
[15:39 - 15:43]
hickory nuts and I had real big potatoes nice ones. So I think it
[15:43 - 15:48]
proves that signs don't mean it might might mean something believe in there but I didn't
[15:48 - 15:52]
and I don't want to show up here after. This.
[15:52 - 15:59]
Tell her though that nothing in the water started off oh you mean part of that that was your jealousy to get
[15:59 - 16:05]
25 like I'll. Like it I'll have to quote it.
[16:05 - 16:10]
Going up to back up this quarter crop failures
[16:10 - 16:15]
occurred not only with a cable is that sometimes we were almost like hickory nuts
[16:15 - 16:21]
but that could happen almost with any kind of a craft. I color in the end
[16:21 - 16:26]
we down and it all looks so real during times of draw for deuce.
[16:26 - 16:31]
Absolutely nothing. On occasion. And so many a farmer was literally
[16:31 - 16:35]
back to the wall and my life was like farming
[16:35 - 16:40]
simply had to be forgotten as a way of life and you had to
[16:40 - 16:45]
find other employment and just quite frequently it happened that
[16:45 - 16:49]
many fine farms went like it was the auctioneer's
[16:49 - 16:50]
hammer.
[16:50 - 16:55]
Oh like here when we raise talks we always did I remember trying on the farm.
[16:55 - 17:00]
And fry down the sausage and cured the hams. But now that we don't
[17:00 - 17:05]
even Raynes Park it we don't use much what we do about the grocery store.
[17:05 - 17:10]
This this is something that. Has changed tremendously farming has
[17:10 - 17:15]
become specialized or as there used to be when I was a young
[17:15 - 17:20]
man on the phone the farmer everybody had some Horrigan some chickens.
[17:20 - 17:24]
This was almost a must in a dairy cow and dairy cows. An hour
[17:24 - 17:29]
and as far as Potter is concerned I think there are just as many other more eggs produced
[17:29 - 17:34]
in the county than there were at that time but you can count or
[17:34 - 17:38]
perhaps in 10 or 12 areas.
[17:38 - 17:43]
All of these are produced and they're produced in large part of houses where they will be up to
[17:43 - 17:49]
five to eight thousand hands in a house or in a laying house.
[17:49 - 17:50]
This is specialization
[17:50 - 17:55]
stricture the
[17:55 - 17:59]
old they were hatched yesterday
[17:59 - 18:06]
and they would normally go out to the farm on feed today
[18:06 - 18:11]
we get the eggs from the what we call
[18:11 - 18:16]
flock owners raise the breeding stock for us. Ready
[18:16 - 18:23]
for fresh hatching baby chicks. We
[18:23 - 18:27]
have control of the flock. By we do the selection for the
[18:27 - 18:31]
breeding males and females. Which
[18:31 - 18:37]
egg we take and put in our incubator and
[18:37 - 18:42]
let After a three week period comes out.
[18:42 - 18:47]
Yet since we only have one thing the fellow naturally
[18:47 - 18:52]
an egg. Which is the food food product.
[18:52 - 18:58]
We have to throw all our energies toward producing that egg and producing it
[18:58 - 19:03]
cheaply as possible. We take this baby kick
[19:03 - 19:08]
and in some instances there are still some sales
[19:08 - 19:13]
as bagels but the majority of the sales are at 20 weeks
[19:13 - 19:14]
of age.
[19:14 - 19:19]
So we take this veil put it out with one of our
[19:19 - 19:24]
growers who grows to kick to a 20 week period for
[19:24 - 19:30]
us and then we call it.
[19:30 - 19:35]
And that's what it's called One week rather. Maybe X dollars. We
[19:35 - 19:39]
sell that into one of our producing units
[19:39 - 19:46]
and the producing unit does nothing but produce the egg.
[19:46 - 19:50]
After this all at once comes into production at about twenty six point four weeks
[19:50 - 19:55]
and then that egg is taken from there. Reducing
[19:55 - 19:59]
to our plant and
[19:59 - 20:07]
cart and shipped on to the various supermarket
[20:07 - 20:12]
years ago you said Stella baby and that and it
[20:12 - 20:19]
don't sell a baby. We sell it really to ourselves because we put it out. Somebody
[20:19 - 20:24]
girl we feed it our own feed from our own feed. Now
[20:24 - 20:29]
we run the egg after it's laid through our own processing and
[20:29 - 20:36]
we do our own marketing in the supermarkets and cities in the east.
[20:36 - 20:40]
So in reality all we've really got is an egg years ago and
[20:40 - 20:45]
we held only once the business the hatching and
[20:45 - 20:47]
I surely still baby.
[20:47 - 20:50]
And that with our end product that really hit
[20:50 - 20:57]
these when they come into production and
[20:57 - 21:03]
after they have laid for a year. Termed as old
[21:03 - 21:08]
hands who else by the time that a year is egg Productions has
[21:08 - 21:13]
taken place. The bird is about ready for market. However we keep
[21:13 - 21:17]
the Dharma late for a bus or scenes months is a good auctions and then
[21:17 - 21:22]
marketing hands to a processing plants.
[21:22 - 21:26]
It's where exactly scientifically it's sold out in the
[21:26 - 21:27]
sewers.
[21:27 - 21:27]
Chicken
[21:27 - 21:48]
rice.
[21:48 - 21:53]
Chicken noodle operation. That's. A crock right.
[21:53 - 21:59]
100 average trying to. Recruit and.
[21:59 - 22:04]
Train. Many of our great. Mockery. A
[22:04 - 22:08]
contractor. Out of about. 7000 acres in an area. Riding on. An
[22:08 - 22:13]
MRI. And a half. Hours
[22:13 - 22:16]
to hear. Her hand on her.
[22:16 - 22:20]
Speeding up only to 1948 when we purchased from East cedar France. For free.
[22:20 - 22:25]
Ever see a cocktail vegetable juice tests about this new plant
[22:25 - 22:29]
1957 XFL. Sandra Levy about 70
[22:29 - 22:34]
million dollars a year in this area. Consequently we have provided an economic growth
[22:34 - 22:39]
city and say have six come back from. Fighting other
[22:39 - 22:40]
Labor Liberal leaders.
[22:40 - 22:45]
Six. Thousand nine
[22:45 - 22:48]
hundred twenty one my father body and.
[22:48 - 22:53]
Together with several other than what in the hell around our company. Their
[22:53 - 22:56]
primary Mary.
[22:56 - 23:02]
Item of manufacture in those days was the windmill the baker windmill.
[23:02 - 23:07]
Which was known widely throughout this section of the country. Every farm
[23:07 - 23:09]
had a windmill on it to pump.
[23:09 - 23:13]
Water. I first came down and I started to
[23:13 - 23:18]
work in the summers as I say and I. Saw my first workers
[23:18 - 23:23]
going out and erecting. The e-mails on the
[23:23 - 23:29]
farm or splitting up the towers burning up the windmill. Adams after towers.
[23:29 - 23:34]
And then when I wasn't doing that have come back in the plant and I moved from one.
[23:34 - 23:38]
Department of the plant to another to learn the business. And.
[23:38 - 23:42]
My purpose was to learn the business from the ground up.
[23:42 - 23:47]
Today we still sell a roughly 10 percent of. We used to
[23:47 - 23:52]
sell this country but is still still an active business.
[23:52 - 23:57]
And many. People still employ them for use on the water
[23:57 - 24:00]
primarily for farm pond.
[24:00 - 24:05]
For so many farm ponds to see and sell windmills areas where.
[24:05 - 24:09]
The electricity. The farm pawn the horses away from the House and
[24:09 - 24:15]
the lace and the like. Current and is the reason they employ it with.
[24:15 - 24:20]
Less of fact at the Windmill the first cost as your last there will actually be
[24:20 - 24:22]
at windmills in the wreckage.
[24:22 - 24:27]
Forty five or fifty years when they're still in active service and will
[24:27 - 24:31]
wear out too. Would you like them once a year later.
[24:31 - 24:37]
Service when I came here in 1921 there were 26 when the
[24:37 - 24:42]
manufacturers of that state. Today there are three of us last
[24:42 - 24:47]
now and say that I am one of the largest left Selham most when
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I used to be you know here which
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made hooks for barrels and barrels or he was right Les and
[24:58 - 25:01]
I know Neymar.
[25:01 - 25:06]
And. We used to have a brewery there Mr
[25:06 - 25:10]
teach ins. Pat's work connected with that the Jinns brewery.
[25:10 - 25:16]
The business of the owners of business of course and nearly all are trained. Eventually I'll
[25:16 - 25:21]
be gone of course. There's. Very few of the old owners
[25:21 - 25:25]
the. There's one blacksmith's shop left in town and that's one of the few an awesome
[25:25 - 25:27]
restaurant.
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This man came over from Germany and. I believe he's in these 80s you know
[25:32 - 25:36]
and he passes along there won't be any.
[25:36 - 25:41]
There new. I landed three quite a yak. Examiner doctors doing
[25:41 - 25:46]
all kinds of repair work shopping plow sure. Megan Hart who really made
[25:46 - 25:51]
a mob a hand you know in the November time want to join you even when I got died
[25:51 - 25:56]
about two twenty five hundred or three thousand. But I had a
[25:56 - 26:01]
lot of heart you know what I hope my words here on the road I make them hope.
[26:01 - 26:06]
If you already marshes years ago. You know who race shorter Are
[26:06 - 26:11]
you sure who I'm going through right now but I'm going to announce what I give
[26:11 - 26:13]
unto or to read in order to get out of writing.
[26:13 - 26:19]
Paul in Ohio. Is located right along the mommy
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river. In fact. The river actually
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runs right through the town and there is a bridge that
[26:29 - 26:36]
crosses and it always intrigue us I remember as children. It's.
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A county seat county seat of Henry County Ohio.
[26:40 - 26:45]
And not only Napoleon but the surrounding
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little towns like Okolona and Hamer Dessler
[26:50 - 26:55]
Ridgeville. They were all part of the larger
[26:55 - 27:00]
area. And the section was called Hanover
[27:00 - 27:05]
settlement because all the people that that had moved in
[27:05 - 27:09]
there from abroad were from
[27:09 - 27:14]
Germany and they had all immigrated from the problems of
[27:14 - 27:19]
Hanover. And since they were all from the same
[27:19 - 27:24]
section this whole area was known as an over settlement.
[27:24 - 27:29]
Well this was just a crossroads and the county had been named Henry
[27:29 - 27:33]
County for Patrick Henry. And when they got to
[27:33 - 27:38]
quite a cluster of houses some people thought. It ought to have a name like a
[27:38 - 27:43]
town. So part of them wanted to name it Henry. Just
[27:43 - 27:48]
like the county but some of the first families here were
[27:48 - 27:53]
French and they wanted to name it Napoleon.
[27:53 - 27:57]
So they had an election and
[27:57 - 28:03]
Andrew would have run only they some on
[28:03 - 28:07]
one way I guess and wouldn't vote. Didn't have enough and they've
[28:07 - 28:12]
scrapped over that name for 10 years but after 10 years
[28:12 - 28:16]
enough had I guess
[28:16 - 28:21]
they voted on it. It was named Napoleon.
[28:21 - 28:24]
Listen there was a good many old timers back at that time
[28:24 - 28:30]
was very prominent citizens here there was.
[28:30 - 28:38]
The Tylers the Hellers
[28:38 - 28:43]
and the Harrisons the gross nurse
[28:43 - 28:50]
Martin ups shoemakers
[28:50 - 28:53]
some of their ancestors here yet
[28:53 - 29:00]
but they were all another Vokey the old time Baucis
[29:00 - 29:06]
and the pit and the peerage they were all prominent citizens
[29:06 - 29:11]
here and years gone and I was just shy of color in the van they all been
[29:11 - 29:16]
Sting's they were all people of ill will and the poet in which the
[29:16 - 29:21]
color was back of the first light and power plant are rarer ever put in the Poet and
[29:21 - 29:26]
the waterworks yet kind of a whiny little voice saying
[29:26 - 29:30]
you're all just color yet when they put in the waterline here and of course
[29:30 - 29:35]
electricity. I only said in the last just a moment as long as I
[29:35 - 29:39]
willand and I got was about right time you checked out our wildlife planet did too so we had to
[29:39 - 29:42]
go and rebuild good.
[29:42 - 29:44]
And we've been building the expend ever since.
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