May 102019
 

Lake Expo recently published an interesting article on three invasive species that could have a drastic effect on Lake of the Ozarks. “Lake Invaders! 3 Species That Lurk Nearby and How We can Protect Lake of the Ozarks” specifically points out a plant, a mussell and a fish and describes clearly what threat they pose to the native species and the new evnironment they find themselves in.

  • Hydrilla is an invasive plant from areas around India.
  • Zebra Mussels are native to Europe and Asia, but arrived in North American waterways in the 1980s.
  • Silver Carp are one of several Asian carp species in the state, are notorious for their unusual behavior when they get startled. They jump out of the water.

Read the whole story of how Lake of the Ozarks was created in Damming the Osage.  All Lens & Pen books are available on this site, at Barnes & Noble, and on amazon.com

 

 

May 082019
 

Promotional postcard with handwritten message. Postmarked “Galena Mar 1 10 AM 1910”

We recently acquired this gem of an image of summer play a century ago at Camp Clark in Galena (not the Missouri National Guard base near Nevada!). It is addressed to Miss Nettie M. McComb, Lamar, Mo who apparently had vacationed the previous year at Camp Clark. Rather than pay for a real photo postcard from local photographer George Hall, the owners pasted a snapshot on a blank Postal Card and handwrote their ‘pitch’ to customers from the preceding summer:

“Feb 28, 1910. Dear Friend: We remember how well you enjoyed your outing with us last year so we send you this card to remind you of Camp Clark, trusting that it will stimulate you to get up a party of your friends and come down and camp with us again this year. Your friends, Mr. or Mrs. A.L. McQuary”

A June 1913 newspaper ad for the “well known Camp Clark” assured readers: “Only people of good morals are accepted. It is a beautiful mountain camp on the James river, with pure air, grand scenery and fine spring water. A fine place for ladies to boat, bathe, fish and recreate.” All the Galena resorts pitched the idea that women were welcome—camping, fishing and floating were not male-only, stag affairs.

Dr. A. L. McQuary, former traveling evangelist who also prescribed eyeglasses, owned the resort, consisting of a set of bungalows and tents on a hill overlooking the James. He had been a farmer, run a saddlery business, and within a few years of moving to Galena in 1908, became the county collector.

 

Lens & Pen books are available on this website, on amazon.com and at Barnes & Noble.

Apr 212019
 

As Cole County, home of our state capitol, and the state of Missouri approach their 200th year, the Jefferson City News Tribune (April 21) has posted an interesting article about the origins of our state capitol and Cole County.

Steel engraving of Missouri’s second capitol from an 1852 Meyers’ Universum, published in Germany. (and page 292, Damming the Osage)

As part of the congressional legislation to establish Missouri as a state, a commission was created to find a suitable site for the State Capital. Jesse Boone of Montgomery County, John White of Pike County, Robert Watson of New Madrid, and John Thornton of Howard County were appointed commissioners to locate this site. With the Missouri River running across the center of the state, this was the most logical choice, and the commission was directed to choose a site within 40 miles of the mouth of the Osage River. Since rivers were the maritime highways to get across Missouri, this made the most sense.

In Damming the Osage, we delved briefly into the role that river played in the establishment of the newly carved out state of Missouri and the creation of its capitol. See our earlier blog post on the subject as well.

Apr 092019
 

Real photo postcard. Postmarked Jul 2, 1929

This is a relatively late real photo postcard. By the late 1920s much less detailed printed postcards had begun to usurp the market of the more detailed real photo cards, to the disbenefit of local photographers who produced the real photo cards in their darkrooms.

Meramec Springs, six miles from St. James, Missouri, in Phelps County, has the seventh largest flow of Missouri springs. The average from 1922-1929 listed in The Large Springs of Missouri (1944) was 96,300,000. Both its beauty and historical utilization make it a popular park today. Like many of Missouri’s major springs it was preserved as a state park after earlier industrial utilization. Today’s peaceful setting is a stark contrast to the industrial beehive that once operated here. The spring was dammed to provide waterpower for the extraction of iron ore from hematite. Relics of the iron works active from 1826-1877 are park features. That nature can be restored in this way is hopeful. Missouri State Parks, a Division of the Department of Natural Resources, has been a national leader in acquiring and protecting exquisite natural resources like these great springs.

“The clear water bubbling from the basic and rushing over the falls, under an arch bridge, and down the spring branch, adds to the picturesque charm of the valley and its surrounding wooded hills … At times during the period 1826 to 1877, water power was developed at the spring to serve the Meramec iron works which exploited a deposit of hematite iron ore that had been found at the surface about a half mile west of the spring. … The ruins of the old blast furnace and the remains of the chimneys of the forest still stand in a broad, shaded park beside the spring branch. Picknickers and visitors to the spring enjoy the beautiful natural setting which surrounds these vestiges of one of Missouri’s early mining communicates.”

The Large Springs of Missouri by H. C. Beckman and N. S. Hinchey, 1944

Lens & Pen books are available on this website, on amazon.com and at Barnes & Noble.

Mar 282019
 

My Irish Wilderness Google alerts delivered to my inbox an article about the recent meeting of the Oregon County Historical Society in Thayer.  Members discussed “Ozarks Outlaws and Gangsters.”

“Vice President Mike Crawford discussed property in the Irish Wilderness that was rumored to have been visited and traveled through by Jesse and Frank James.”

Yes, “The Irish” remains to this day a place of mystery, curiosity, and respite from the modern world!

Lens & Pen books are available on this website, on amazon.com and at Barnes & Noble.

Mar 242019
 

In recognition of everyone’s favorite saint–Patrick, the March issue of Rural Missouri carries a full page article (note – a full page in Rural Missouri is a big page at 10 x 14″) on “The Mysterious Irish Wilderness.” Jim McCarty weaves together the known history of its origin, its inclusion in the National Wilderness system in 1984, with a useful guide to trails for today’s hikers and campers. Jim also includes a list of all of Missouri’s designated wilderness areas (8 in all including “The Irish”) – from the smallest, Rock Pile Mountain in the St. Francois Mountains to the largest, Hercules-Glades in southwest Misosuri.

Mar 192019
 

A couple of years ago our constant search for Ozarks-related antique ephemera turned up a rare graphic poster for the Missouri Lumber and Mining Company. Condition was a little rough with chipped edges and creases, but the graphics are strong and the subject is hard to find. This was exciting! Much of the chapter, “Paradise: Lost, Repossessed and Regained,” in Mystery of the Irish Wilderness about the lumbering industry in the Ozarks after the Civil War, was based on a 47-page article in American Lumberman (1903) recounting the history of this very company.

The company was incorporated by Elijah Bishop Grandin and a few Pennsylvania oilman friends in 1880 with the specific goal of monetizing (to put it in contemporary terms) the yellow pine forest of southeast Missouri. They came to cut, saw and ship out the boards to build the burgeoning cities and towns in the expanding post-Civil War economy. To manage the ambitious enterprise, Grandin hired 24-year-old John Barber White, “to work out his plans and to found a commercial commonwealth.”

Most employees came from out of state. Many had experience in the northern white pine mills. Some locals worked in the woods, but usually on a contract basis. Had Hogan’s Irish immigrants somehow endured the war, it’s likely many would have been hired.

The first mill proved too small for the volume of logs they were cutting, so a larger one was built.

“The new mill was built at Grandin, Mo., ten miles southwest of the small mill … This mill was built in 1887 and 1888 at a small, deep spring lake, a valuable natural mill site in the heart of the great pinery.” By 1894, the new sawmill ran night and day, producing a daily average of 180,000 board feet, and was said to be the largest in the United States.

American Lumberman (1903)

The town of Grandin, named of course for E.B. Grandin, was built to provide goods and services to the company and its workers. “Every business in Grandin, except a barbershop and an undertaker, was owned by the corporation. All but the hotel turned a profit. When important customers came to tour the facilities they stayed free of charge. … The company built Catholic, Baptist, Methodist and Congregational churches for the workers. Unattended, the Catholic church became the library.” (MIW, page 92-93)

Looking at the remains of Grandin today, now virtually abandoned, it’s hard to imagine the bustling little burg at the height of its population and economic activity.

Mar 062019
 

Printed postcard, 1930s

The copy on the card reads, “The Pinebrook Inn, 50 Rooms Private Baths. Siloam Springs, Missouri.“ We may have come down too hard on John Woodruff, Springfield’s fabled developer. He relentlessly promoted Springfield, was instrumental in the creation of Route 66, and was honorable and honest in his business dealings. But he was wrong in his negative literary judgment of Vance Randolph and other Ozarks local-color-school writers. He clashed with Randolph, who he thought promoted a backward or hillbilly image of the Ozarks. In our book James Fork of the White, we’ve got a panoramic photo of the Pinebrook Inn from the 1930s and a contemporary photograph of the site in ruins. It burnt to the ground a few years ago. Our write up (page 144) encapsulates his resort aspirations:

“For all his antipathy for Ozarks rusticity, John T. Woodruff had a taste for country life. In 1922, he bought an unfinished health resort at Siloam Springs, Missouri, near the North Fork River, seventeen miles from West Plains. Woodruff finished the impressive four-story Pinebrook Inn, built a nine-hole golf course, constructed a dance pavilion and dug a swimming pool. Excavations to attempt to increase the flow of the place’s ten medicinal springs apparently had the reverse effect. Few believed by this date that drinking mineralized spring water cured diseases anyhow. Nevertheless, the progressive businessman advertised that “Siloam Springs water is recommended by physicians and praised by thousands of people who have been benefited or cured by using it.” He would spend the rest of his life waiting for guests to find the money pit in the middle of an isolated patch of cut-over mixed pine and oak forest. “

                                                                 Ruins of Pinebrook Inn in 2016

Lens & Pen books are available on this website, on amazon.com and at Barnes & Noble.

Feb 092019
 

Among the true delights of research for our upcoming book, Lover’s Leap Legends: From Sappho of Lesbox to Wah-Wah-Tee of Waco, was traveling to scenic, even spectacular, locations to take photos.  One of our first photo safaris was to Georgia, Alabama, and Tennessee – where we too visited Rock City’s fabled Lover’s Leap. My trusty Google Alerts just brought us this

Mystery couple in Rock City marriage proposal photo sought
Feb 042019
 

Real photo postcard. Postmarked “Cassville, September 17 8 AM 1910.“ Hinchey Photo

We acquired this outstanding real photo postcard after the publication of James Fork of the White or it would have been a half-page illustration in our book. The front identifies the spring as being two-and-a-half miles south of Cassville, Mo. Like many real photo postcards of this era, it is exquisitely exposed and sharp-focus.

Flat Creek is the longest tributary of the James River. Access to it is limited and it isn’t much fished or floated compared to the James between Springfield and Galena. Quoting from our book on the James (page 94): “Cherokees rested here on their Trail of Tears journey, and it was a well-known camping spot for settlers coming to Cassville to trade. Missouri highway 37, which runs next to the spring, was once the Old Wire (telegraph) Road. Both sides in the Civil War traveled this road and watered their horses here.”

The little stone springhouse is still there, but the spring today is enclosed by a circular rock and concrete wall.

Lens & Pen books are available on this website, on amazon.com and at Barnes & Noble.