Now that we are old retired folks who spend a lot of time
together, just the two of us, we often reminisce. Yesterday the subject of
Bob’s Grandma Russell came up in conversation and his mind went back to that
February in 1962 when he and his buddy Bill West stayed a few days with Addie
Jane Mahaffey Russell in her rustic home near Cass, Arkansas, one of only three
times Bob ever saw his grandma. His memory is so accurate that he can recall
her exact words, and his descriptions of the scenes and events paint colorful moving
murals in my mind. Although I was not there, not even a part of the Russell family
in 1962, I want to tell this story so that it doesn’t get away, so our kids
have a glimpse of “Bob's and Bill’s Big Adventure”.
The adventure was more than a stay with Grandma in Arkansas,
so much more. Imagine two nineteen-yr-old boys driving an oil burning 1949
Pontiac Coupe from northern Colorado to Winter Park, Florida, with less than two
hundred dollars between them, lured to the sunshine state by the promise of
good jobs and easy living, “fruit hanging from trees, ripe for the picking”, as
described by their friend Bill Hartwig, recently married and an Air Force
airman. “You can stay with me and Linda while you look for jobs.” Who could
resist an offer like that?
Bob Russell and Bill West graduated from Wellington
High School in May of 1961 having
supplemented their formal education by enrolling in a drafting course through
ICS, International Correspondence School. They started their first class the
night John F. Kennedy was elected. That summer they both found local jobs, Bob
as a carpenter and Bill an employee of the State driving a mowing machine along
the highways. Bill’s income was substantial, enough for him to buy the shiny
black Pontiac Coupe from Mr. Reed, so much down with monthly payments.
Bob planned to enter CSU
in the winter semester after Christmas so he quit his job as carpenter for a
local Mormon church and arranged for his friend Duane Johnson to take his
place. But something went awry with his college admissions and he found himself
at loose ends. Bill Hartwig’s invitation suddenly seemed the answer. Bill’s
mowing job had petered out with bad weather so he, too, thought a trip to Florida
was a good idea. Bob's parents were not in favor of his going to Florida and Bill's mother had her misgivings but standing behind her Bill's dad, Jack West, indicated with a jerk of his thumb that he thought otherwise, that it was time for Bill to go.
In January of 1962 Bill West pulled out of Wellington,
Colorado, in his twenty-year-old Pontiac
coupe, his best friend beside him, headed south. That first night they stayed
in a motel and the following morning ate a hearty breakfast before one of them
had the good sense to put pencil to paper and realize at the rate they were
spending money they would run out long before they reached Florida.
Somehow they had spent half their savings and were still in Colorado!
That was the last night in a motel. After that one drove while the other slept and they lived on
baloney sandwiches.
The cross country trip was not straight forward, no I-70 or
I-40. They meandered along two-lane highways in a southeasterly direction
adding oil to the car at about the same rate they added gasoline. They found gas for 19 cents a gallon somewhere in Texas but it seemed watery. In Dallas,
Texas, the distributor cap broke, and then
in Grand Saline, Texas, near the Louisiana
border, a valve lifter broke. Fortunately, both of these young men were good
mechanics. Had they not been they would never have made it to Florida in the Pontiac.The weather was wet and cold all across the south.
Bob tried selling encyclopedias, door to door, but didn’t
make a dime. Then he got a job as an electronics technician after agreeing to
pay a fee to the company that found the job for him. That fee cut into his
weekly wage considerably. Money was short for everyone. Linda cooked supper
with whatever the guys brought home, mostly living on spaghetti. Bob became
adept at sleight of hand in the grocery store, coming home with the all makings
for spaghetti while only paying for the pasta. There was no meat in this
spaghetti, just dried spaghetti noodles, dried mix, and tomato paste. They
jokingly called it 2 for 1 spaghetti. For every two ingredients picked up at
the store they paid for one. Cigarettes were a luxury they could barely afford and
when Bill still hadn’t landed a job the other two smokers told Bill he’d have
to improvise. He noticed the local high school kids parked their cars near the
Hartwig’s back yard and they left their cigarettes in the cars with the doors
unlocked. Bill took just a couple of cigarettes out of each pack he came
across, not too choosy about brands.
Bill recalls a memorable incident at a park. While looking
for a space to park the car they noticed one corner where no one had parked.
They checked it out, didn’t find any signs prohibiting parking, so they drove
in and got out of the car. But it wasn’t too long until they discovered there
was a flock of nearby gulls who were scooping up snails then dropping them onto
the car, hoping to break open the shells and make a meal of the snails inside.
If you didn’t want your car dented you didn’t park in that corner of the park.
I particularly like this memory of Bill’s because he is a birder, and now I
know he was a birder way back then.
After a few weeks of living on the edge, realizing good jobs
were nowhere to be found, and learning that the Hartwig’s landlord was
complaining that he had rented his property to two people and now there were
four living there, the fellas made the decision to leave Florida and drive
north to Anderson, South Carolina, where Bob’s older sister Mary was living
with her husband, Barron Simms, and their dog Hector. They left Florida
with a few dollars in their pockets owing the last month’s payment to the job
agency.
Within a day of arriving at the Simms’s Mary found jobs
for the both of them, soda jerk for Bill and gas station attendant for Bob. The
only thing she has ever told me about the two weeks the guys lived with her is
that when she went to wash their clothes she threw away their underwear – the
washing machine couldn’t save them. Hector was a purebred beagle show dog, prone to running away from home. His short legs would hold out for the first 50 yards or so before he slowed. On one of his escapades Bill chased him down, grabbed him by the nape of the neck and his tail and carried him that way back to the house with Hector trying his best to reach back and bite Bill.
One night after supper Barron was seated at the head of the table and Bob directly across from him, his back against the glass-fronted china hutch. Bill was on Bob's right. Bob had a deck of cards and they were trying to prove or disprove telepathy. Bob would hold up a card so only he could see it and sharp-eyed Barron would give a subtle nod or movement to his head indicating Bob should tilt the card slightly so that the reflection in the glass behind him allowed better viewing. Then Barron would hem and haw, saying "I see a diamond...yes, yes, I see a three of diamonds!" Then Bob would slap down the card showing it was indeed a three of diamonds. Bill was flabbergasted. They all had a good laugh at Bill's expense that evening.
One night after supper Barron was seated at the head of the table and Bob directly across from him, his back against the glass-fronted china hutch. Bill was on Bob's right. Bob had a deck of cards and they were trying to prove or disprove telepathy. Bob would hold up a card so only he could see it and sharp-eyed Barron would give a subtle nod or movement to his head indicating Bob should tilt the card slightly so that the reflection in the glass behind him allowed better viewing. Then Barron would hem and haw, saying "I see a diamond...yes, yes, I see a three of diamonds!" Then Bob would slap down the card showing it was indeed a three of diamonds. Bill was flabbergasted. They all had a good laugh at Bill's expense that evening.
While working at the gas station Bob discovered it was a
cover operation for a gambling ring.
Nobody cared much about what he was doing with his time so he took the opportunity to rebuild the car and outfit it with four new tires. After two weeks of seven twelve hour days Bob saved the entire $80 wages. Bill saved all his money too and sometime in February the two of them took off for Arkansas where they planned to visit Bob’s widowed grandmother before continuing on to Colorado.
Nobody cared much about what he was doing with his time so he took the opportunity to rebuild the car and outfit it with four new tires. After two weeks of seven twelve hour days Bob saved the entire $80 wages. Bill saved all his money too and sometime in February the two of them took off for Arkansas where they planned to visit Bob’s widowed grandmother before continuing on to Colorado.
Meanwhile, they discovered that the license plates on Bill’s
car were about to expire so Bill asked his mother to order the plates and send
them to Cass, Arkansas.
The trip from Anderson, South
Carolina, to Cass, Arkansas,
was uneventful and smooth riding on those new tires. When they arrived in Ozark,
Arkansas, they asked directions to Cass. As
they pulled into Cass they saw a group of men butchering a hog and asked them
how to get to the Russell place. “Nobody smiled,” remembers Bob. He explained
he was the youngest son of Doyle Russell so they reluctantly gave him
directions to Addie Jane’s place. Bob admits he and Bill looked a little like
hippies with their long hair and goatees. Mary Simms cut their hair in South Carolina but apparently they "went to seed" rather quickly.
That night they slept in the unheated leanto room, under
feather beds, where they gazed at the stars through the cracks in the roof. It
was cold - so cold in that unheated room that Bill went back out to his car and brought in their sleeping bags. They stuffed them under the quilts and feather ticks with just their noses exposed. Early the next morning Grandma Russell called to them, “Get up, boys,
the good Lord has provided us meat for breakfast.” The neighbors who butchered
hogs the night before had come by to check on Addie and brought along some meat to
feed the visitors.
Grandma Russell cooked on a small rectangular stove which
she fed hickory sticks to maintain an even heat. She was 79-1/2 years old and had been living alone since January of 1960 when her husband Elias passed away. When Bob and Bill arrived unexpectedly Addie was living in her front room having walled off the other rooms with Army blankets hung across doorways. She cooked the boys a breakfast
of fresh pork steaks and fried potatoes, balancing the skillets on that narrow stove, at the same time warming that small room comfortably. They stayed with her for several days while they waited for the
license plates to arrive in the mail. Bill asked what they could do for her and
she told him he could chop firewood. He asked how much firewood she needed and
she answered, “Well, Bill, I will always need firewood.” So he started
chopping. That is the memory Bob told me about today.
He said someone had brought his grandma a stack of hickory staves, slats from an old fence. They were about half an inch thick, three inches wide, and four feet long. Hickory is very hard, not at all like pine, more like metal. Bill’s experience in the Colorado Boy Scouts had not prepared him for chopping hickory with a hand axe. He would hit a piece of hickory only to have it bounce out unscathed and he would have to chase it down before he could chop at it again. Slow going.
He said someone had brought his grandma a stack of hickory staves, slats from an old fence. They were about half an inch thick, three inches wide, and four feet long. Hickory is very hard, not at all like pine, more like metal. Bill’s experience in the Colorado Boy Scouts had not prepared him for chopping hickory with a hand axe. He would hit a piece of hickory only to have it bounce out unscathed and he would have to chase it down before he could chop at it again. Slow going.
On one of the days they were in Cass they went over to Seldon’s
home, just over the hill from Addie Jane’s. Seldon was the eleventh of Elias and Addy's twelve children ,
Bob’s uncle. He had a bunch of kids and Bill has always liked kids. They had a
fun time that day and Bill was always referred to later as “that nice Mr.
West”. Another day of that visit Bill and Bob drove into Ozark to eat in a
diner. The waitress who came to their table took a long look at them and asked,
“What do you Yankee boys want?” Bill told Bob he thought those days were
behind us and Bob told him, “Not here, they’re not.” It may have been that day
in Ozark that the license plates arrived. Bill put them on his car, they said
their goodbyes to Grandma Russell, and once more headed west. That was the last
time Bob would see his Grandma Russell.
A couple of long days on the road brought them back home safely
to Wellington, tired and broke. By
April Bob had joined the Navy and would soon leave for boot camp. Bill could
not pass the military physical due to heart problems from rheumatic fever. He
enrolled in a school in Denver to
study Industrial Arts, rooming in a boarding house with strangers. So “Bob's and
Bill’s Big Adventure” came to an end….or did it? I think I need to amend that
title to “Bob's and Bill’s Big Adventure – the Florida Caper” for just as Tom
Swift had “…And His Flying Lab”, “…And His Atomic Earth Blaster”, “…And His
Ultrasonic Cycloplane”, Bob Russell and Bill West have their “Cozumel and the
Mayan Ruins Trek”, “Bonneville Salt Flats Adventure”, and “Ham Radio and Antennas
Experiment”, and more.The cartoon below, borrowed from the Internet, aptly depicts the relationship of these two guys, Bill and Bob, and why they've shared such interesting adventures throughout their lives. Carol West and I are happy to be a part of it all. Oh, one last thing, Bob says they didn't meet any girls on their trip, not one!