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Copyright 2021 by Stein Enterprises, L.L.C.
All Rights Reserved.
No use of the material is allowed without prior written permission of the copyright holder.
Copyright 2021 by Stein Enterprises, L.L.C.
Iowa Almanac for Tuesday, November 30, 2021
"The Video Game Capital of the World"
During the summer of 1981, a man named Walter Day visited more than 100 video game arcades over four months, recording the high scores he found on each game.
After that tour, on November 10, he opened his own arcade in Ottumwa, naming it Twin Galaxies. On February 9 of the next year, his database of records from that summer 1981 tour was released publicly as the Twin Galaxies National Scoreboard.
Twin Galaxies became known as the official scoreboard, arranging contests between top players. Twin Galaxies' first event in 1982 attracted international media attention for gathering the first teams of video-game stars.
Similar competitions were also conducted during the next two summers when Walter Day organized players in many states, including Iowa, to form teams and compete in high score contests for the Guinness Book of World Records.
On November 30, 1982, Ottumwa mayor Jerry Parker declared Ottumwa to be the "Video Game Capital of the World".
That claim was backed up by Iowa Governor Terry Branstad, the Atari video game company, and the Amusement Game Manufacturers Association in a ceremony at Twin Galaxies in Ottumwa in early 1983.
In January 1983, Twin Galaxies organized the first significant video-game championship, to crown a world champion. This event was filmed in Ottumwa by ABC-TV's That's Incredible! and was aired on the night of February 21, 1983 nationwide.
Twin Galaxies founder Walter Day left the company in 2010 to pursue a career in music. But his work led to Ottumwa being dubbed the Video Game Capital of the World, on this date in 1982.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 30th...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
"The Video Game Capital of the World"
During the summer of 1981, a man named Walter Day visited more than 100 video game arcades over four months, recording the high scores he found on each game.
After that tour, on November 10, he opened his own arcade in Ottumwa, naming it Twin Galaxies. On February 9 of the next year, his database of records from that summer 1981 tour was released publicly as the Twin Galaxies National Scoreboard.
Twin Galaxies became known as the official scoreboard, arranging contests between top players. Twin Galaxies' first event in 1982 attracted international media attention for gathering the first teams of video-game stars.
Similar competitions were also conducted during the next two summers when Walter Day organized players in many states, including Iowa, to form teams and compete in high score contests for the Guinness Book of World Records.
On November 30, 1982, Ottumwa mayor Jerry Parker declared Ottumwa to be the "Video Game Capital of the World".
That claim was backed up by Iowa Governor Terry Branstad, the Atari video game company, and the Amusement Game Manufacturers Association in a ceremony at Twin Galaxies in Ottumwa in early 1983.
In January 1983, Twin Galaxies organized the first significant video-game championship, to crown a world champion. This event was filmed in Ottumwa by ABC-TV's That's Incredible! and was aired on the night of February 21, 1983 nationwide.
Twin Galaxies founder Walter Day left the company in 2010 to pursue a career in music. But his work led to Ottumwa being dubbed the Video Game Capital of the World, on this date in 1982.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 30th...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
Iowa Almanac for Monday, November 29, 2021
"A Legend Dies in Iowa"
Cary Grant was the perfect image of a 20th Century movie legend.
By November 29th, 1986, the 82-year-old was enjoying intimate appearances before audiences across the country, playing clips from his films, telling stories from the stage, and answering questions from audience members. That was the plan for an appearance at the Adler Theater in Davenport that Saturday night.
The appearance was part of the annual Festival of Trees at the River Center in Davenport. A black tie reception was scheduled before the performance.
He went through an afternoon rehearsal at the theater, then started to feel ill. He went back to his suite at what was then the Blackhawk Hotel, thinking it was a stomach virus. During the pre-performance gala, it was announced that he had taken ill and would not perform as scheduled.
Before long, however, his condition worsened. Doctors arrived to find him coherent, but in some distress. He was rushed to a hospital around 9 p.m. but slipped into a coma on the way. He then suffered a final massive stroke, and was pronounced dead at 11:22 p.m.
The Quad-City Times reported the death with a very simple front page headline--"A Legend Dies in Our Arms".
The debonair actor, whose credits included some of the greatest films of the era, Cary Grant...died just before giving a performance in Davenport, on this date in 1986.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 29th...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
"A Legend Dies in Iowa"
Cary Grant was the perfect image of a 20th Century movie legend.
By November 29th, 1986, the 82-year-old was enjoying intimate appearances before audiences across the country, playing clips from his films, telling stories from the stage, and answering questions from audience members. That was the plan for an appearance at the Adler Theater in Davenport that Saturday night.
The appearance was part of the annual Festival of Trees at the River Center in Davenport. A black tie reception was scheduled before the performance.
He went through an afternoon rehearsal at the theater, then started to feel ill. He went back to his suite at what was then the Blackhawk Hotel, thinking it was a stomach virus. During the pre-performance gala, it was announced that he had taken ill and would not perform as scheduled.
Before long, however, his condition worsened. Doctors arrived to find him coherent, but in some distress. He was rushed to a hospital around 9 p.m. but slipped into a coma on the way. He then suffered a final massive stroke, and was pronounced dead at 11:22 p.m.
The Quad-City Times reported the death with a very simple front page headline--"A Legend Dies in Our Arms".
The debonair actor, whose credits included some of the greatest films of the era, Cary Grant...died just before giving a performance in Davenport, on this date in 1986.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 29th...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
Iowa Almanac for Friday, November 26, 2021
"They Love To Sing"
In March 1868, four homesick Norwegian immigrants in northeastern Iowa began to sing together regularly. They took the name Luren from an area in Norway, and so began what we known today as the Luren Singing Society.
The Luren Singing Society is the world's oldest Norwegian-American male chorus, now with more than a century and a half of continuous existence, with the slogan, "We Love To Sing!"
For many years, the group gathered and shared fellowship. But on November 26th, 1874, it was time for a public concert. The group of 22 had been practicing twice a week for most of that year. The concert at Radliff's Hall in Cresco cost attendees 50 cents a ticket, but that included a dance afterwards.
The printed program showed 11 choral pieces in Norse and three solos by chorus director Emil Berg.
A month later, the group had its first Decorah concert, in the Steyer Opera House.
The next year, a group of Decorah women made a large banner for the Luren Singers. That original banner hangs today in the Vesterheim Norwegian-American Museum in Decorah.
The Luren Singing Society, the world's oldest Norwegian-American male chorus, performed at World's Fairs in two different centuries. But their first public concert was in Cresco, on this date, in 1874.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 26th...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
"They Love To Sing"
In March 1868, four homesick Norwegian immigrants in northeastern Iowa began to sing together regularly. They took the name Luren from an area in Norway, and so began what we known today as the Luren Singing Society.
The Luren Singing Society is the world's oldest Norwegian-American male chorus, now with more than a century and a half of continuous existence, with the slogan, "We Love To Sing!"
For many years, the group gathered and shared fellowship. But on November 26th, 1874, it was time for a public concert. The group of 22 had been practicing twice a week for most of that year. The concert at Radliff's Hall in Cresco cost attendees 50 cents a ticket, but that included a dance afterwards.
The printed program showed 11 choral pieces in Norse and three solos by chorus director Emil Berg.
A month later, the group had its first Decorah concert, in the Steyer Opera House.
The next year, a group of Decorah women made a large banner for the Luren Singers. That original banner hangs today in the Vesterheim Norwegian-American Museum in Decorah.
The Luren Singing Society, the world's oldest Norwegian-American male chorus, performed at World's Fairs in two different centuries. But their first public concert was in Cresco, on this date, in 1874.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 26th...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
Iowa Almanac for Thursday, November 25, 2021
"Saving The Cupola"
As was the case in many Iowa counties, a fierce fight developed over time over where the county seat of Butler County would be located. There was Clarksville and Butler Center, but ultimately Allison became the choice, in great part because of how the railroad lines ran.
Even after a courthouse was built there, over nearly a century, the citizens were torn about the building. Voters approved adding on to it a few times, and a few other times proposals to build new buildings were rejected.
Finally, in May 1973, voters approved a new courthouse in a vote that had to be delayed a month because of the historic April blizzard that year.
The new courthouse would cost just under a million dollars. It took a year and a half to build, and was opened on December 14, 1975 on a piece of ground just to the south of the old one.
But a few weeks before that, on November 25, 1975, the 94-year-old courthouse made news when an Iowa National Guard helicopter lifted the distinctive round cupola off the building, carefully placing it on the courthouse grounds. It was to be a county American Revolution Bicentennial project, and include a hall of fame of county residents.
In April 1976, the old courthouse was torn down, leaving its replacement standing on the courthouse grounds. But there was one reminder of the old building left. The cupola from the old courthouse, left to honor the old structure, was moved by helicopter to the ground on this date in 1975.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 25th...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
"Saving The Cupola"
As was the case in many Iowa counties, a fierce fight developed over time over where the county seat of Butler County would be located. There was Clarksville and Butler Center, but ultimately Allison became the choice, in great part because of how the railroad lines ran.
Even after a courthouse was built there, over nearly a century, the citizens were torn about the building. Voters approved adding on to it a few times, and a few other times proposals to build new buildings were rejected.
Finally, in May 1973, voters approved a new courthouse in a vote that had to be delayed a month because of the historic April blizzard that year.
The new courthouse would cost just under a million dollars. It took a year and a half to build, and was opened on December 14, 1975 on a piece of ground just to the south of the old one.
But a few weeks before that, on November 25, 1975, the 94-year-old courthouse made news when an Iowa National Guard helicopter lifted the distinctive round cupola off the building, carefully placing it on the courthouse grounds. It was to be a county American Revolution Bicentennial project, and include a hall of fame of county residents.
In April 1976, the old courthouse was torn down, leaving its replacement standing on the courthouse grounds. But there was one reminder of the old building left. The cupola from the old courthouse, left to honor the old structure, was moved by helicopter to the ground on this date in 1975.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 25th...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
Iowa Almanac for Wednesday, November 24, 2021
"The Dance That Turned Tragic"
It was Thanksgiving eve 1965 in Keokuk, and about 75 persons were in the National Guard armory there for a gala square dance.
About four dozen were dancing in six squares, with another dozen sitting along the sidelines. More than a dozen children played in the basement of the building.
It was the weekly meeting of the Swing Ezy club, and with the holiday coming up, spirits were high.
Then came an explosion and flash fire that demolished the building in an instant.
The building was heated by natural gas, and when it ignited, the explosion blew out the walls and sent the roof high into the air.
A total of 21 people died as a result of the explosion or burns they received. More than a month later, another 12 were still hospitalized.
It was the top news story of the year in Iowa, and the greatest tragedy in Keokuk's history...when 21 people were killed in an explosion that destroyed the Keokuk National Guard armory...on this date in 1965.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 24th...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
"The Dance That Turned Tragic"
It was Thanksgiving eve 1965 in Keokuk, and about 75 persons were in the National Guard armory there for a gala square dance.
About four dozen were dancing in six squares, with another dozen sitting along the sidelines. More than a dozen children played in the basement of the building.
It was the weekly meeting of the Swing Ezy club, and with the holiday coming up, spirits were high.
Then came an explosion and flash fire that demolished the building in an instant.
The building was heated by natural gas, and when it ignited, the explosion blew out the walls and sent the roof high into the air.
A total of 21 people died as a result of the explosion or burns they received. More than a month later, another 12 were still hospitalized.
It was the top news story of the year in Iowa, and the greatest tragedy in Keokuk's history...when 21 people were killed in an explosion that destroyed the Keokuk National Guard armory...on this date in 1965.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 24th...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
Iowa Almanac for Tuesday, November 23, 2021
"The Day Without Football"
It was to be the game of the year. On Saturday, November 23rd, 1963, the Notre Dame Fighting Irish were to play the Iowa Hawkeyes at Iowa Stadium. It would be the last game of the Hawkeyes' season, and fourteen Iowa seniors were looking forward to ending their careers on a high note against a perennial power.
And then, everything changed.
From Dallas, Texas, the flash, apparently official...President Kennedy died at 1 p.m. Central Standard Time, 2 o'clock Eastern Standard Time, some 38 minutes ago.
The assassination of President John F. Kennedy changed the world in many ways. In Iowa, there was uncertainty whether the football game the next day should be played or not.
The Notre Dame team had already flown into Iowa and was checking into a Coralville motel when the shooting occurred.
The Hawkeyes went through their final practice and were taken by bus to a Mount Vernon motel, where they typically stayed at that time the night before a home game.
A crowd of 55,000 was expected, each paying $5 for a ticket.
Iowa athletic director Forest Evashevski met with his Notre Dame counterpart and decided that the game should be played. That was the word Friday night.
Then just after midnight, after further consideration, the decision was made to not play the game. Players did not find out until the next morning.
No Big Ten games were played that day. NFL games were played that weekend, a decision commissioner Pete Rozelle said years later he regretted.
Notre Dame offered to play the game two weeks later, but Iowa declined since extending the season by those two weeks would interfere too much with class work.
Until the 2020 COVID outbreak, it was the only game in Iowa football history to not be played in the season it was scheduled, when the Hawkeyes game against Notre Dame was cancelled due to the assassination of President Kennedy, on this date in 1963.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 23rd...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
"The Day Without Football"
It was to be the game of the year. On Saturday, November 23rd, 1963, the Notre Dame Fighting Irish were to play the Iowa Hawkeyes at Iowa Stadium. It would be the last game of the Hawkeyes' season, and fourteen Iowa seniors were looking forward to ending their careers on a high note against a perennial power.
And then, everything changed.
From Dallas, Texas, the flash, apparently official...President Kennedy died at 1 p.m. Central Standard Time, 2 o'clock Eastern Standard Time, some 38 minutes ago.
The assassination of President John F. Kennedy changed the world in many ways. In Iowa, there was uncertainty whether the football game the next day should be played or not.
The Notre Dame team had already flown into Iowa and was checking into a Coralville motel when the shooting occurred.
The Hawkeyes went through their final practice and were taken by bus to a Mount Vernon motel, where they typically stayed at that time the night before a home game.
A crowd of 55,000 was expected, each paying $5 for a ticket.
Iowa athletic director Forest Evashevski met with his Notre Dame counterpart and decided that the game should be played. That was the word Friday night.
Then just after midnight, after further consideration, the decision was made to not play the game. Players did not find out until the next morning.
No Big Ten games were played that day. NFL games were played that weekend, a decision commissioner Pete Rozelle said years later he regretted.
Notre Dame offered to play the game two weeks later, but Iowa declined since extending the season by those two weeks would interfere too much with class work.
Until the 2020 COVID outbreak, it was the only game in Iowa football history to not be played in the season it was scheduled, when the Hawkeyes game against Notre Dame was cancelled due to the assassination of President Kennedy, on this date in 1963.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 23rd...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
Iowa Almanac for Monday, November 22, 2021
"The Last of the Wringers"
Frederick Maytag's company in Newton was a world leader in development of washing machines. In fact, it was one of the few businesses to actually make a consistent profit during the Great Depression.
The first mass-produced washer was made in 1907. Called the Pastime, it was hand driven with a crank on top. There was a flywheel underneath to help with the load of cranking.
The first washer with a wringer added came in 1909. Called the Hired Girl, it could be either hand powered or driven by an outside power source. Electricity as a power source was added in 1911.
Over the next three-quarters of a century, Maytag washers advanced in technology with each new model. For example, an easy release wringer was added in 1921 for safety. Some models in the 1920s had gas engines, or could be outfitted with either electric or gas motors.
The last of the new models was introduced in 1955, but Maytag wringer washers were produced until November 22nd, 1983.
First introduced during World War II in 1945, Model E2L or the Master, featured a square aluminum tub, with either a gas or electric motor. And it became the model with the longest running production of any of Maytag's wringer washers.
For 76 years, Maytag wringer washers rolled off the production lines in Newton...but the very last one was made on this date in 1983.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 22nd...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
"The Last of the Wringers"
Frederick Maytag's company in Newton was a world leader in development of washing machines. In fact, it was one of the few businesses to actually make a consistent profit during the Great Depression.
The first mass-produced washer was made in 1907. Called the Pastime, it was hand driven with a crank on top. There was a flywheel underneath to help with the load of cranking.
The first washer with a wringer added came in 1909. Called the Hired Girl, it could be either hand powered or driven by an outside power source. Electricity as a power source was added in 1911.
Over the next three-quarters of a century, Maytag washers advanced in technology with each new model. For example, an easy release wringer was added in 1921 for safety. Some models in the 1920s had gas engines, or could be outfitted with either electric or gas motors.
The last of the new models was introduced in 1955, but Maytag wringer washers were produced until November 22nd, 1983.
First introduced during World War II in 1945, Model E2L or the Master, featured a square aluminum tub, with either a gas or electric motor. And it became the model with the longest running production of any of Maytag's wringer washers.
For 76 years, Maytag wringer washers rolled off the production lines in Newton...but the very last one was made on this date in 1983.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 22nd...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
Iowa Almanac for Friday, November 19, 2021
"They Ran for the Cornfields"
In the mid-1960s, Amish living near Hazleton in Buchanan County found themselves in the middle of a conflict between two school districts that were merging. Many in the smaller school district were opposed to the merger.
The Amish themselves wanted to be included in an area of the new district where one-room schools, which the Amish preferred, would still be operated. The Amish had also come under pressure from the state for failing to meet new teacher certification standards.
Some say the Amish were convinced by the larger school's superintendent to vote for the merger, with the promise that there would be one-room schools. The merger passed, thanks to the Amish vote.
But state inspectors visited the Amish schools, and imposed fines against the Amish for using uncertified teachers. And that led to a pivotal moment on November 19th, 1965.
On that Friday morning, a yellow Oelwein school bus pulled up to the Amish school to take the children to a consolidated town school. Sobbing parents were arrested for noncompliance with Iowa school law. Frightened children fled their school, running for cover in nearby cornfields. The iconic photos of the scene were on the front pages of major newspapers across the country the next morning.
The governor intervened to calm the situation, and eventually, the state legislature changed the law, allowing religious exemptions from state school standards. And the conflict was a factor in the 1972 U.S. Supreme Court decision, Wisconsin v. Yoder, granting Amish and other groups religious exemptions from state-mandated schooling standards.
But the conflict between the Amish and their beliefs, and state officials who wanted to force children to attend school in town, came to a head near Hazelton, on this date in 1965.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 19th...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
"They Ran for the Cornfields"
In the mid-1960s, Amish living near Hazleton in Buchanan County found themselves in the middle of a conflict between two school districts that were merging. Many in the smaller school district were opposed to the merger.
The Amish themselves wanted to be included in an area of the new district where one-room schools, which the Amish preferred, would still be operated. The Amish had also come under pressure from the state for failing to meet new teacher certification standards.
Some say the Amish were convinced by the larger school's superintendent to vote for the merger, with the promise that there would be one-room schools. The merger passed, thanks to the Amish vote.
But state inspectors visited the Amish schools, and imposed fines against the Amish for using uncertified teachers. And that led to a pivotal moment on November 19th, 1965.
On that Friday morning, a yellow Oelwein school bus pulled up to the Amish school to take the children to a consolidated town school. Sobbing parents were arrested for noncompliance with Iowa school law. Frightened children fled their school, running for cover in nearby cornfields. The iconic photos of the scene were on the front pages of major newspapers across the country the next morning.
The governor intervened to calm the situation, and eventually, the state legislature changed the law, allowing religious exemptions from state school standards. And the conflict was a factor in the 1972 U.S. Supreme Court decision, Wisconsin v. Yoder, granting Amish and other groups religious exemptions from state-mandated schooling standards.
But the conflict between the Amish and their beliefs, and state officials who wanted to force children to attend school in town, came to a head near Hazelton, on this date in 1965.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 19th...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
Iowa Almanac for Thursday, November 18, 2021
"Strike Up The Band"
Charlie Barnhouse was a talented musician. He taught himself to play the cornet, and became a conductor and composer. By the late 1880s, he decided to leave his home in West Virginia and see where his musical talents would take him.
He wound up leading town bands in both Mt. Pleasant and Burlington. Along the way, he started a music publishing company in 1886, with the first selection being The Battle of Shiloh March. In December 1890, he made his final move, settling in Oskaloosa. His C.L. Barnhouse Company soon became prominent in the band world, thanks to his works as well as those by Karl L. King, Fred Jewell and Russell Alexander.
When Charlie died on November 18, 1929, his son, C.L. Barnhouse, Jr., better known as Lloyd, led the company into a new era, at the start of the school band movement. During World War II, the Barnhouse Company became a major supplier of music for military bands, as well.
The third generation of the family assumed management of the company in 1957, and the fourth generation took over in 1979.
The C.L. Barnhouse company is unique, for preserving a nearly complete archive of all publications, dating back to 1886. As a result, virtually no Barnhouse publication is out of print.
The founder of a new type of company more than a century ago that continues to thrive today, C.L. Barnhouse, died on this date in 1929.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 18th...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
"Strike Up The Band"
Charlie Barnhouse was a talented musician. He taught himself to play the cornet, and became a conductor and composer. By the late 1880s, he decided to leave his home in West Virginia and see where his musical talents would take him.
He wound up leading town bands in both Mt. Pleasant and Burlington. Along the way, he started a music publishing company in 1886, with the first selection being The Battle of Shiloh March. In December 1890, he made his final move, settling in Oskaloosa. His C.L. Barnhouse Company soon became prominent in the band world, thanks to his works as well as those by Karl L. King, Fred Jewell and Russell Alexander.
When Charlie died on November 18, 1929, his son, C.L. Barnhouse, Jr., better known as Lloyd, led the company into a new era, at the start of the school band movement. During World War II, the Barnhouse Company became a major supplier of music for military bands, as well.
The third generation of the family assumed management of the company in 1957, and the fourth generation took over in 1979.
The C.L. Barnhouse company is unique, for preserving a nearly complete archive of all publications, dating back to 1886. As a result, virtually no Barnhouse publication is out of print.
The founder of a new type of company more than a century ago that continues to thrive today, C.L. Barnhouse, died on this date in 1929.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 18th...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
Iowa Almanac for Wednesday, November 17, 2021
"Death Before Dishonor"
Iowa soldiers distinguished themselves in many battles during the Civil War. Some suffered mightily at the Camp Sumter military prison at Andersonville, Georgia. The Confederate prisoner of war camp was overcrowded to four times its capacity, with inadequate water supply, low food rations, and generally unsanitary conditions.
Of the approximately 45,000 Union prisoners held there during the war, nearly 13,000 died. 202 of those were Iowans. No other state, north or south, had a higher percentage of its male population between the ages of 15 and 40 serve in the military during the course of the war than Iowa did.
In 1904, the Iowa General Assembly appropriated $10,000 to build a monument at Andersonville "in commemoration of the patriotism, suffering and martyrdom of the Iowa soldiers who were imprisoned and died" at the Camp Sumter prison.
Two years later, on November 17, 1906, the Iowa Monument at Andersonville was dedicated. Gov. Albert B. Cummins spoke of the sacrifices all the prisoners there made. "These boys suffered the unparalleled inhumanity of prison and the infinite cruelties of the stockade rather than surrender for a single moment their privilege to fight and die for the Union, and for the sovereignty of the old flag." Remember, many Civil War veterans were still alive at this time, barely 40 years after the war's end.
A commission of veterans selected the design of a weeping woman kneeling, mourning the loss of so many lives. Under the inscription Death Before Dishonor is a list of names of Iowans known to have died there.
It still stands in the national cemetery there, surrounded by the Civil War burials. The Iowa Monument, to honor Iowa Civil War veterans who endured the Andersonville prisoner of war camp, was dedicated on this date in 1906.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 17th...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
"Death Before Dishonor"
Iowa soldiers distinguished themselves in many battles during the Civil War. Some suffered mightily at the Camp Sumter military prison at Andersonville, Georgia. The Confederate prisoner of war camp was overcrowded to four times its capacity, with inadequate water supply, low food rations, and generally unsanitary conditions.
Of the approximately 45,000 Union prisoners held there during the war, nearly 13,000 died. 202 of those were Iowans. No other state, north or south, had a higher percentage of its male population between the ages of 15 and 40 serve in the military during the course of the war than Iowa did.
In 1904, the Iowa General Assembly appropriated $10,000 to build a monument at Andersonville "in commemoration of the patriotism, suffering and martyrdom of the Iowa soldiers who were imprisoned and died" at the Camp Sumter prison.
Two years later, on November 17, 1906, the Iowa Monument at Andersonville was dedicated. Gov. Albert B. Cummins spoke of the sacrifices all the prisoners there made. "These boys suffered the unparalleled inhumanity of prison and the infinite cruelties of the stockade rather than surrender for a single moment their privilege to fight and die for the Union, and for the sovereignty of the old flag." Remember, many Civil War veterans were still alive at this time, barely 40 years after the war's end.
A commission of veterans selected the design of a weeping woman kneeling, mourning the loss of so many lives. Under the inscription Death Before Dishonor is a list of names of Iowans known to have died there.
It still stands in the national cemetery there, surrounded by the Civil War burials. The Iowa Monument, to honor Iowa Civil War veterans who endured the Andersonville prisoner of war camp, was dedicated on this date in 1906.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 17th...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
Iowa Almanac for Tuesday, November 16, 2021
"The Grinnell 14"
It was the fall of 1961, and the protests that marked the decade were years away. But one group of Iowa college students set the example.
The 10 men and 4 women left Grinnell College by car on November 13th of that year, arriving in Washington, D.C. three days later. Their goal was to protest against atmospheric nuclear testing, seeking to influence the young president who was still in his first year in office.
Grinnell's student senate passed a resolution in support of the protestors. Around 160 students on campus fasted in solidarity while the group was in the nation's capitol.
They caused quite a stir, getting national news coverage on NBC's "Huntley Brinkley Report", and making headlines in international newspapers. They were welcomed into the White House to meet with officials; President Kennedy was away at the time.
They even went to the Soviet embassy to ask why nuclear testing was continuing.
And they set an example. Tom Hayden, later part of the Chicago 7, credited the Grinnell group with helping launch the broader 1960s student peace movement. The Grinnell 14 were followed by students from dozens of other schools, one after another, in a series of protests that lasted at least a year.
Less than two years after the protest, the U.S., Soviet Union, and United Kingdom signed a partial test ban treaty that ended the atmospheric tests.
Attention was given to the issue by a group of 14 Grinnell College students, who arrived for a week of protesting in Washington, D.C., on this date in 1961...60 years ago today.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 16th...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
"The Grinnell 14"
It was the fall of 1961, and the protests that marked the decade were years away. But one group of Iowa college students set the example.
The 10 men and 4 women left Grinnell College by car on November 13th of that year, arriving in Washington, D.C. three days later. Their goal was to protest against atmospheric nuclear testing, seeking to influence the young president who was still in his first year in office.
Grinnell's student senate passed a resolution in support of the protestors. Around 160 students on campus fasted in solidarity while the group was in the nation's capitol.
They caused quite a stir, getting national news coverage on NBC's "Huntley Brinkley Report", and making headlines in international newspapers. They were welcomed into the White House to meet with officials; President Kennedy was away at the time.
They even went to the Soviet embassy to ask why nuclear testing was continuing.
And they set an example. Tom Hayden, later part of the Chicago 7, credited the Grinnell group with helping launch the broader 1960s student peace movement. The Grinnell 14 were followed by students from dozens of other schools, one after another, in a series of protests that lasted at least a year.
Less than two years after the protest, the U.S., Soviet Union, and United Kingdom signed a partial test ban treaty that ended the atmospheric tests.
Attention was given to the issue by a group of 14 Grinnell College students, who arrived for a week of protesting in Washington, D.C., on this date in 1961...60 years ago today.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 16th...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
Iowa Almanac for Monday, November 15, 2021
"An Insurgent Senator"
Smith Brookhart Senior was well liked by Iowa voters, but not necessarily by his own party.
A graduate of Bloomfield High School, he taught school for a time before studying law and becoming an attorney in 1892, practicing in Washington, Iowa.
He served in the U.S. Army during the Spanish-American War and World War I, reaching the rank of lieutenant colonel. He was well known for his marksmanship with a rifle, and wound up serving as president of the National Rifle Association from 1921 to 1925.
Brookhart started a political career, strongly supporting Prohibition. After a failed attempt for the U.S. Senate in 1920, Brookhart was elected to fill a vacant seat in the chamber in 1922. Two years later, when running for a full term, he appeared to have defeated his Democratic challenger, Daniel Steck. But when Steck challenged the results, the state Republican Party sided with the Democrat, accusing Brookhart of disloyalty to the Republican presidential ticket because he supported Progressive candidate Robert LaFollette of Wisconsin.
Brookhart was removed from his seat by the Iowa legislature, but he immediately ran for Iowa's other U.S. Senate seat, and upended incumbent Albert Cummins in the primary, avenging his loss to Cummins in 1920. He was returned to the Senate by voters, and continued his independent reputation, criticizing Republican presidents and big business.
Brookhart lost his bid for re-election in 1932, losing in the primary to nurseryman and broadcaster Henry Field.
He became a special advisor to the federal government on Soviet trade, becoming an early advocate for U.S. recognition of the Soviet Union. He then practiced law in Washington, D.C., before moving to Arizona for health reasons.
Voters elected him to the U.S. Senate twice, but he was never a favorite of party regulars. Senator Smith W. Brookhart, Sr. -- who died on this date in 1944.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 15th...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
"An Insurgent Senator"
Smith Brookhart Senior was well liked by Iowa voters, but not necessarily by his own party.
A graduate of Bloomfield High School, he taught school for a time before studying law and becoming an attorney in 1892, practicing in Washington, Iowa.
He served in the U.S. Army during the Spanish-American War and World War I, reaching the rank of lieutenant colonel. He was well known for his marksmanship with a rifle, and wound up serving as president of the National Rifle Association from 1921 to 1925.
Brookhart started a political career, strongly supporting Prohibition. After a failed attempt for the U.S. Senate in 1920, Brookhart was elected to fill a vacant seat in the chamber in 1922. Two years later, when running for a full term, he appeared to have defeated his Democratic challenger, Daniel Steck. But when Steck challenged the results, the state Republican Party sided with the Democrat, accusing Brookhart of disloyalty to the Republican presidential ticket because he supported Progressive candidate Robert LaFollette of Wisconsin.
Brookhart was removed from his seat by the Iowa legislature, but he immediately ran for Iowa's other U.S. Senate seat, and upended incumbent Albert Cummins in the primary, avenging his loss to Cummins in 1920. He was returned to the Senate by voters, and continued his independent reputation, criticizing Republican presidents and big business.
Brookhart lost his bid for re-election in 1932, losing in the primary to nurseryman and broadcaster Henry Field.
He became a special advisor to the federal government on Soviet trade, becoming an early advocate for U.S. recognition of the Soviet Union. He then practiced law in Washington, D.C., before moving to Arizona for health reasons.
Voters elected him to the U.S. Senate twice, but he was never a favorite of party regulars. Senator Smith W. Brookhart, Sr. -- who died on this date in 1944.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 15th...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
Iowa Almanac for Friday, November 12, 2021
"The First Legislature"
The land west of the Mississippi River, including what is now Iowa, was part of the Louisiana Purchase in 1803. Iowa was originally part of the Wisconsin Territory, but ultimately, the parcel was divided. Some wanted to call the new territory Washington, after our first president. Others wanted to name it Jefferson, after the president who bought the land.
Imagine…instead of our state being Iowa, we were actually fairly close to living in the state of Washington, or the state of Jefferson. But instead, the name given the area by Albert M. Lea was used. Iowa.
On June 12th, 1838, President Martin Van Buren signed the bill which created the Iowa Territory. It went into effect on July 4th, Independence Day. The president appointed Robert Lucas as governor. He had previous experience as governor of Ohio. The president also appointed three justices for a territorial supreme court.
The people of the new territory were to elect their own legislatures, and on November 12th, 1838, the first Iowa territorial legislature began meeting, two months after the first election. Governor Lucas decided Burlington would be the capital of the new territory, until the legislature selected another location.
That first legislature settled various orders of business, but one of the first was to establish a new city in Johnson County, named Iowa City, to be the capitol. The cornerstone for the capitol building was set in 1840, but it took a long time for the stone capitol to be built. The legislature did meet there in 1841, but in a temporary frame building; they moved into the stone capitol the next year.
Today, our legislature meets annually, from January until typically April or May. But the first legislative session, for the Iowa Territory, was on this date in 1838.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 12th...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
"The First Legislature"
The land west of the Mississippi River, including what is now Iowa, was part of the Louisiana Purchase in 1803. Iowa was originally part of the Wisconsin Territory, but ultimately, the parcel was divided. Some wanted to call the new territory Washington, after our first president. Others wanted to name it Jefferson, after the president who bought the land.
Imagine…instead of our state being Iowa, we were actually fairly close to living in the state of Washington, or the state of Jefferson. But instead, the name given the area by Albert M. Lea was used. Iowa.
On June 12th, 1838, President Martin Van Buren signed the bill which created the Iowa Territory. It went into effect on July 4th, Independence Day. The president appointed Robert Lucas as governor. He had previous experience as governor of Ohio. The president also appointed three justices for a territorial supreme court.
The people of the new territory were to elect their own legislatures, and on November 12th, 1838, the first Iowa territorial legislature began meeting, two months after the first election. Governor Lucas decided Burlington would be the capital of the new territory, until the legislature selected another location.
That first legislature settled various orders of business, but one of the first was to establish a new city in Johnson County, named Iowa City, to be the capitol. The cornerstone for the capitol building was set in 1840, but it took a long time for the stone capitol to be built. The legislature did meet there in 1841, but in a temporary frame building; they moved into the stone capitol the next year.
Today, our legislature meets annually, from January until typically April or May. But the first legislative session, for the Iowa Territory, was on this date in 1838.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 12th...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
Iowa Almanac for Thursday, November 11, 2021
"The Armistice Day Blizzard"
The fall of 1940 was warm and uneventful. Hunters were waiting for the normal cold fronts to move in, so the birds they were targeting would move south.
But they didn’t want, nor expect, what hit on November 11th.
Weather forecasting was nothing like today, so the weather systems that converged on Iowa and the Midwest were a surprise. One system was moving east from the Rocky Mountains. A Canadian cold air mass was sliding down from the north, while warm moist air came up from the south.
The combination was deadly, resulting in a thousand mile wide path of destruction, becoming the most famous and disastrous blizzard in American history.
The barometric pressure dropped to an all-time record low in Charles City. The temperature dropped from the 60s to single digits in a matter of a few hours.
The storm dropped more than two feet of snow, killed thousands of cattle, and destroyed a million Thanksgiving turkeys. All tolled in the Midwest, 160 people died.
Hunters in Iowa were especially at risk, because without warning, they were trapped out in the wild. Thousands of ducks flew overhead, but the hunt was difficult in the hurricane force winds. And many hunters were so focused on their shooting, they did not pay enough attention to their own safety, and were lucky to escape with their lives.
Even decades later, the lucky ones, now in their late 80s and older, still think about being out hunting during the greatest blizzard in American history, the Armistice Day Blizzard, on this date in 1940.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 11th...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
"The Armistice Day Blizzard"
The fall of 1940 was warm and uneventful. Hunters were waiting for the normal cold fronts to move in, so the birds they were targeting would move south.
But they didn’t want, nor expect, what hit on November 11th.
Weather forecasting was nothing like today, so the weather systems that converged on Iowa and the Midwest were a surprise. One system was moving east from the Rocky Mountains. A Canadian cold air mass was sliding down from the north, while warm moist air came up from the south.
The combination was deadly, resulting in a thousand mile wide path of destruction, becoming the most famous and disastrous blizzard in American history.
The barometric pressure dropped to an all-time record low in Charles City. The temperature dropped from the 60s to single digits in a matter of a few hours.
The storm dropped more than two feet of snow, killed thousands of cattle, and destroyed a million Thanksgiving turkeys. All tolled in the Midwest, 160 people died.
Hunters in Iowa were especially at risk, because without warning, they were trapped out in the wild. Thousands of ducks flew overhead, but the hunt was difficult in the hurricane force winds. And many hunters were so focused on their shooting, they did not pay enough attention to their own safety, and were lucky to escape with their lives.
Even decades later, the lucky ones, now in their late 80s and older, still think about being out hunting during the greatest blizzard in American history, the Armistice Day Blizzard, on this date in 1940.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 11th...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
Iowa Almanac for Wednesday, November 10, 2021
"Little House on the Iowa Prairie"
Generations have enjoyed the books and television program inspired by the writing of Laura Ingalls Wilder. There have been various Iowa angles in the stories, including when Laura's older sister Mary went blind and attended school in Vinton for a time.
Not talked about in the Little House books was the time the Ingalls family spent in Burr Oak, Iowa. Charles Ingalls—Pa—helped run a hotel there for a year. It was during that year, on May 23rd, 1877, that Charles and Caroline Ingalls welcomed their fifth and final child into the world, a girl they name Grace Pearl Ingalls.
Grace moved from Iowa when she was an infant, and ultimately the family settled in Minnesota and the Dakotas. Like her mother and sister Laura, Grace also became a school teacher, near DeSmet, South Dakota. In later years, Grace became her sister Mary's caretaker.
There's another Iowa angle to note. Laura's daughter, Rose, also became a writer. In fact, she wrote the first biography of Herbert Hoover, before he became president. Rose donated her papers and those of her mother to the Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum in West Branch, where today, scholars travel to study her works.
Laura Ingalls Wilder's youngest sister, Grace Pearl Ingalls Dow, born in Iowa, died on this date in 1941.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 10th...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
"Little House on the Iowa Prairie"
Generations have enjoyed the books and television program inspired by the writing of Laura Ingalls Wilder. There have been various Iowa angles in the stories, including when Laura's older sister Mary went blind and attended school in Vinton for a time.
Not talked about in the Little House books was the time the Ingalls family spent in Burr Oak, Iowa. Charles Ingalls—Pa—helped run a hotel there for a year. It was during that year, on May 23rd, 1877, that Charles and Caroline Ingalls welcomed their fifth and final child into the world, a girl they name Grace Pearl Ingalls.
Grace moved from Iowa when she was an infant, and ultimately the family settled in Minnesota and the Dakotas. Like her mother and sister Laura, Grace also became a school teacher, near DeSmet, South Dakota. In later years, Grace became her sister Mary's caretaker.
There's another Iowa angle to note. Laura's daughter, Rose, also became a writer. In fact, she wrote the first biography of Herbert Hoover, before he became president. Rose donated her papers and those of her mother to the Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum in West Branch, where today, scholars travel to study her works.
Laura Ingalls Wilder's youngest sister, Grace Pearl Ingalls Dow, born in Iowa, died on this date in 1941.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 10th...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
Iowa Almanac for Tuesday, November 09, 2021
"Floyd of Rosedale"
Iowa and Minnesota have always been friendly rivals. Sometimes, not so friendly.
The football rivalry between the University of Iowa and the University of Minnesota got a little heated in the middle 1930s, in large part because of what Iowa thought was unduly rough treatment suffered by Iowa's star halfback Ozzie Simmons, one of the few black players of the time.
In 1935, both teams entered the game undefeated, and the rhetoric got a little heated. To try to ease tensions, Minnesota Gov. Floyd Olson sent a telegram to Iowa Gov. Clyde Herring, betting a prize Minnesota hog against a prize Iowa hog that Minnesota would win the game...and requiring that the loser deliver the hog in person to the winner.
Gov. Herring accepted, and on November 9th, the Golden Gophers won the game 13-6; later that year, they won their second straight national championship.
Allen Loomis, the owner of Rosedale Farms near Fort Dodge, donated a pig so Gov. Herring could pay off the bet. The pig was the brother of Blue Boy, from the Will Rogers movie "State Fair", and in honor of Gov. Olson, was named Floyd. Soon Gov. Herring personally walked Floyd into Gov. Olson's carpeted office in St. Paul.
Amazingly, some complained that the wager violated state gambling laws, and because it was across state lines, that the pig was subject to interstate commerce regulations. Lawsuits were even filed.
The Minnesota governor offered Floyd as first prize in a statewide essay-writing contest, won by 14-year-old Robert Jones.
To replace the real Floyd, Gov. Olson commissioned a sculptor to capture Floyd's image. The result is a 98 pound bronze pig trophy, and every year, the Hawkeyes and Gophers play for the right to win Floyd of Rosedale.
In 2008, Rivals.com named Floyd of Rosedale the top rivalry trophy in all of college football. But the real Floyd was the subject of a wager, on this date in 1935.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 9th...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
"Floyd of Rosedale"
Iowa and Minnesota have always been friendly rivals. Sometimes, not so friendly.
The football rivalry between the University of Iowa and the University of Minnesota got a little heated in the middle 1930s, in large part because of what Iowa thought was unduly rough treatment suffered by Iowa's star halfback Ozzie Simmons, one of the few black players of the time.
In 1935, both teams entered the game undefeated, and the rhetoric got a little heated. To try to ease tensions, Minnesota Gov. Floyd Olson sent a telegram to Iowa Gov. Clyde Herring, betting a prize Minnesota hog against a prize Iowa hog that Minnesota would win the game...and requiring that the loser deliver the hog in person to the winner.
Gov. Herring accepted, and on November 9th, the Golden Gophers won the game 13-6; later that year, they won their second straight national championship.
Allen Loomis, the owner of Rosedale Farms near Fort Dodge, donated a pig so Gov. Herring could pay off the bet. The pig was the brother of Blue Boy, from the Will Rogers movie "State Fair", and in honor of Gov. Olson, was named Floyd. Soon Gov. Herring personally walked Floyd into Gov. Olson's carpeted office in St. Paul.
Amazingly, some complained that the wager violated state gambling laws, and because it was across state lines, that the pig was subject to interstate commerce regulations. Lawsuits were even filed.
The Minnesota governor offered Floyd as first prize in a statewide essay-writing contest, won by 14-year-old Robert Jones.
To replace the real Floyd, Gov. Olson commissioned a sculptor to capture Floyd's image. The result is a 98 pound bronze pig trophy, and every year, the Hawkeyes and Gophers play for the right to win Floyd of Rosedale.
In 2008, Rivals.com named Floyd of Rosedale the top rivalry trophy in all of college football. But the real Floyd was the subject of a wager, on this date in 1935.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 9th...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
Iowa Almanac for Monday, November 08, 2021
"An Iowan for President"
By the time of the Iowa Caucuses early in a presidential election year, we Iowans have already seen candidates for close to two years.
Elections didn't used to last this long. And in the early 1900s, it wasn't surprising to see new political parties pop up. After all, the Republicans themselves had only been around for 50 years.
George Edwin Taylor was an African-American who was born in 1857 in Arkansas. His father was a slave, and he and his mother, who was a free black, fled the state to Illinois when George was only 2 years of age. He made his way to Wisconsin, where he became a journalist and labor activist. By 1891, George Taylor was in Oskaloosa, Iowa, where he published a weekly newspaper, called the Negro Solicitor and served as a local justice of the peace.
At first he was a Republican, but then became a Democrat; in fact, he was president of what was called the Negro Bureau within the national Democratic party.
But he became disenchanted with both major parties in that post-Civil War era, and in 1904, George Taylor joined the National Negro Liberty Party and became its candidate for president.
It was not a very successful run. Jim Crow laws kept blacks from voting across the country, much less being on the ballot. It's believed that Taylor received 65,000 votes nationwide, but records are sketchy.
After the election, he returned to Iowa, but moved to Florida for health reasons by 1910. He also returned to the Democratic party, calling himself an independent first, Democrat second, and always black.
George Taylor knew he would lose that presidential election, but called it a duty to his race regardless of the outcome. The election was held while he was living in Oskaloosa, as George Taylor become the first African American to run for the presidency, when citizens voted on this date in 1904.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 8th...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
"An Iowan for President"
By the time of the Iowa Caucuses early in a presidential election year, we Iowans have already seen candidates for close to two years.
Elections didn't used to last this long. And in the early 1900s, it wasn't surprising to see new political parties pop up. After all, the Republicans themselves had only been around for 50 years.
George Edwin Taylor was an African-American who was born in 1857 in Arkansas. His father was a slave, and he and his mother, who was a free black, fled the state to Illinois when George was only 2 years of age. He made his way to Wisconsin, where he became a journalist and labor activist. By 1891, George Taylor was in Oskaloosa, Iowa, where he published a weekly newspaper, called the Negro Solicitor and served as a local justice of the peace.
At first he was a Republican, but then became a Democrat; in fact, he was president of what was called the Negro Bureau within the national Democratic party.
But he became disenchanted with both major parties in that post-Civil War era, and in 1904, George Taylor joined the National Negro Liberty Party and became its candidate for president.
It was not a very successful run. Jim Crow laws kept blacks from voting across the country, much less being on the ballot. It's believed that Taylor received 65,000 votes nationwide, but records are sketchy.
After the election, he returned to Iowa, but moved to Florida for health reasons by 1910. He also returned to the Democratic party, calling himself an independent first, Democrat second, and always black.
George Taylor knew he would lose that presidential election, but called it a duty to his race regardless of the outcome. The election was held while he was living in Oskaloosa, as George Taylor become the first African American to run for the presidency, when citizens voted on this date in 1904.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 8th...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
Iowa Almanac for Friday, November 05, 2021
"Changing Its Name"
There are a number of items on an election day ballot. There are obviously votes for candidates for public office, and often voters are asked to render judgment on a taxation or bond issue.
Rarely, though, are they asked to change the name of their city.
But that was the case in the Greene county town of New Rippey on November 5, 1957.
There had been a village by the name of Rippey. Then, a new settlement was organized nearby, and took the name New Rippey.
But by 1957, the original Rippey was just a memory, having ceased to be long before. Besides, people who did refer to it called it Old Rippey, even though that was not its official name.
New Rippey was actually called Rippey by most people, since it was the only one left. The only time it was ever called New Rippey was in legal descriptions or judicial use.
The only way to change the city's name was through the will of the voters. Why bother? Because there was some fear that if someone called it Rippey in one place, and New Rippey in another, there would be confusion in legal documents.
So on November 5th, 1957, the citizens of New Rippey went to the polls to vote on a variety of municipal issues, including whether to officially call themselves Rippey.
The measure passed. And the name was changed.
Many of us know Rippey as the place where a mid-winter bicycle ride is held, the Bike Ride to Rippey, better known by its acronym, BRR. Imagine if the town was still called New Rippey...the acronym would not be nearly as clever.
Thanks to the will of a majority of voters, New Rippey became Rippey, on this date in 1957.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 5th...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
"Changing Its Name"
There are a number of items on an election day ballot. There are obviously votes for candidates for public office, and often voters are asked to render judgment on a taxation or bond issue.
Rarely, though, are they asked to change the name of their city.
But that was the case in the Greene county town of New Rippey on November 5, 1957.
There had been a village by the name of Rippey. Then, a new settlement was organized nearby, and took the name New Rippey.
But by 1957, the original Rippey was just a memory, having ceased to be long before. Besides, people who did refer to it called it Old Rippey, even though that was not its official name.
New Rippey was actually called Rippey by most people, since it was the only one left. The only time it was ever called New Rippey was in legal descriptions or judicial use.
The only way to change the city's name was through the will of the voters. Why bother? Because there was some fear that if someone called it Rippey in one place, and New Rippey in another, there would be confusion in legal documents.
So on November 5th, 1957, the citizens of New Rippey went to the polls to vote on a variety of municipal issues, including whether to officially call themselves Rippey.
The measure passed. And the name was changed.
Many of us know Rippey as the place where a mid-winter bicycle ride is held, the Bike Ride to Rippey, better known by its acronym, BRR. Imagine if the town was still called New Rippey...the acronym would not be nearly as clever.
Thanks to the will of a majority of voters, New Rippey became Rippey, on this date in 1957.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 5th...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
Iowa Almanac for Thursday, November 04, 2021
"Taken Hostage"
Jesup native Katy Koob became a teacher. But she had always been fascinated by the work of Edward R. Murrow and his reporting from Britain during World War II. That ultimately led to a second career as a foreign service officer. And that led to becoming a piece of history.
In the summer of 1979, the 42-year-old became director of the Iran-American Society, a non-profit group established by the U.S. government to build educational and community relationships between the U.S. and Iran. She had only been on the job for four months, when on November 4, 1979, a group of Iranian students supporting the revolution took over the U.S. Embassy in Tehran, taking embassy workers hostage. While her office was two miles from the Embassy, she too was soon taken hostage.
For 444 days, 52 Americans were held by the student group. A rescue effort in the spring of 1980 was unsuccessful and led to the deaths of eight American servicemen.
The hostage crisis dominated the presidency of Jimmy Carter and was clearly a factor in his landslide loss to Ronald Reagan in November of 1980. It was only when Reagan took the oath of office, literally, that the hostages were released by Iran into U.S. custody shortly after 12 noon on January 20, 1981.
Amazingly, all were safe, and all were able to walk onto the plane to freedom.
Kathryn Koob returned to the foreign service, serving in Austria, Germany and Australia, ultimately retiring in 1996 and moving back to Iowa.
Iowa native Kathryn Koob was one of only two females taken hostage, along with 50 others, in Iran on this date in 1979.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 4th...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
"Taken Hostage"
Jesup native Katy Koob became a teacher. But she had always been fascinated by the work of Edward R. Murrow and his reporting from Britain during World War II. That ultimately led to a second career as a foreign service officer. And that led to becoming a piece of history.
In the summer of 1979, the 42-year-old became director of the Iran-American Society, a non-profit group established by the U.S. government to build educational and community relationships between the U.S. and Iran. She had only been on the job for four months, when on November 4, 1979, a group of Iranian students supporting the revolution took over the U.S. Embassy in Tehran, taking embassy workers hostage. While her office was two miles from the Embassy, she too was soon taken hostage.
For 444 days, 52 Americans were held by the student group. A rescue effort in the spring of 1980 was unsuccessful and led to the deaths of eight American servicemen.
The hostage crisis dominated the presidency of Jimmy Carter and was clearly a factor in his landslide loss to Ronald Reagan in November of 1980. It was only when Reagan took the oath of office, literally, that the hostages were released by Iran into U.S. custody shortly after 12 noon on January 20, 1981.
Amazingly, all were safe, and all were able to walk onto the plane to freedom.
Kathryn Koob returned to the foreign service, serving in Austria, Germany and Australia, ultimately retiring in 1996 and moving back to Iowa.
Iowa native Kathryn Koob was one of only two females taken hostage, along with 50 others, in Iran on this date in 1979.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 4th...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
Iowa Almanac for Wednesday, November 03, 2021
"Iowa's First Newspaper"
The land that is now Iowa was originally part of the Wisconsin Territory. In 1838, the parcel of land was divided, and the Iowa Territory was formed, with a capital located at Burlington. Burlington was actually the last capital of the larger Wisconsin Territory, and in 1837, James Clarke and Cyrus Jacobs founded the Wisconsin Territorial Gazette there. After the land became Iowa, they changed the name of their publication on November 3rd, 1838 to the Iowa Territorial Gazette, becoming the Iowa territory’s first newspaper.
Clarke went on to become the third and last governor of the Iowa Territory. A county in southern Iowa is named in his honor. His partner, Jacobs, was killed in a duel just three days before the Iowa Territorial Gazette published its first issue.
Not long after, a rival paper was started, called the Iowa Patriot, encouraged by David Rorer, the man who won the duel with Cyrus Jacobs. The paper’s name was changed to the Hawk Eye in honor of Chief Black Hawk. That paper became the driving force to have “Hawkeye” adopted as our state’s nickname.
Ultimately, the Gazette and Hawk Eye both thrived in Burlington, long after Iowa became a state and its capital moved from the city. But the Depression took its toll, and a Galesburg man, O.N. Custer, purchased the papers and merged them into The Hawk Eye Gazette, the name it held until 1960, when the name was shortened to The Hawk Eye.
The first newspaper in the Iowa Territory, the Iowa Territorial Gazette, now the Hawk Eye, was published in Burlington on this date in 1838.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 3rd...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
"Iowa's First Newspaper"
The land that is now Iowa was originally part of the Wisconsin Territory. In 1838, the parcel of land was divided, and the Iowa Territory was formed, with a capital located at Burlington. Burlington was actually the last capital of the larger Wisconsin Territory, and in 1837, James Clarke and Cyrus Jacobs founded the Wisconsin Territorial Gazette there. After the land became Iowa, they changed the name of their publication on November 3rd, 1838 to the Iowa Territorial Gazette, becoming the Iowa territory’s first newspaper.
Clarke went on to become the third and last governor of the Iowa Territory. A county in southern Iowa is named in his honor. His partner, Jacobs, was killed in a duel just three days before the Iowa Territorial Gazette published its first issue.
Not long after, a rival paper was started, called the Iowa Patriot, encouraged by David Rorer, the man who won the duel with Cyrus Jacobs. The paper’s name was changed to the Hawk Eye in honor of Chief Black Hawk. That paper became the driving force to have “Hawkeye” adopted as our state’s nickname.
Ultimately, the Gazette and Hawk Eye both thrived in Burlington, long after Iowa became a state and its capital moved from the city. But the Depression took its toll, and a Galesburg man, O.N. Custer, purchased the papers and merged them into The Hawk Eye Gazette, the name it held until 1960, when the name was shortened to The Hawk Eye.
The first newspaper in the Iowa Territory, the Iowa Territorial Gazette, now the Hawk Eye, was published in Burlington on this date in 1838.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 3rd...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
Iowa Almanac for Tuesday, November 02, 2021
"Back In Office"
Terry Branstad never lost an election. And the one on November 2nd, 2010, was no different.
From 1973 to 1979, he was a member of the Iowa House, followed by four years as Lieutenant Governor under Governor Robert D. Ray.
Branstad was first elected Governor at age 36, the youngest ever in Iowa history. Before leaving office, he was elected governor four times—over Roxanne Conlin in 1982, Lowell Junkins in 1986, Don Avenson in 1990, and Bonnie Campbell in 1994. Branstad stepped down when his term ended in January 1999, after becoming the longest serving governor in Iowa history.
He spent a dozen years away from elected office, during which time Democrats held the governor’s seat. Then Branstad ran for his old job again in 2010. He held off two challengers in the Republican primary, and then unseated incumbent Governor Chet Culver in the general election, winning by 10 percentage points.
He was not the first Iowa governor to leave office and be elected again later…but Samuel Kirkwood did it in 1875, 135 years before Branstad.
And he was elected once after that…but Terry Branstad was first returned to office in the general election held on this date in 2010.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 2nd...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
"Back In Office"
Terry Branstad never lost an election. And the one on November 2nd, 2010, was no different.
From 1973 to 1979, he was a member of the Iowa House, followed by four years as Lieutenant Governor under Governor Robert D. Ray.
Branstad was first elected Governor at age 36, the youngest ever in Iowa history. Before leaving office, he was elected governor four times—over Roxanne Conlin in 1982, Lowell Junkins in 1986, Don Avenson in 1990, and Bonnie Campbell in 1994. Branstad stepped down when his term ended in January 1999, after becoming the longest serving governor in Iowa history.
He spent a dozen years away from elected office, during which time Democrats held the governor’s seat. Then Branstad ran for his old job again in 2010. He held off two challengers in the Republican primary, and then unseated incumbent Governor Chet Culver in the general election, winning by 10 percentage points.
He was not the first Iowa governor to leave office and be elected again later…but Samuel Kirkwood did it in 1875, 135 years before Branstad.
And he was elected once after that…but Terry Branstad was first returned to office in the general election held on this date in 2010.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 2nd...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
Iowa Almanac for Monday, November 01, 2021
"Murder On Campus"
You may find it hard to believe that it was three decades ago...on November 1st, 1991...that a disgrunted graduate student at the University of Iowa took revenge, killing four faculty members and one student, seriously wounding another student, and taking his own life. That's because for many, it seems like only yesterday.
That Friday afternoon was a bit chilly, and there was snow in the air in Iowa City. Then as now, Friday afternoons were often a time on campus for meetings and getting ready for the weekend.
Gang Lu was a 28-year-old who came to Iowa City from China and received his doctoral degree from the University the previous spring. However, he was angry because his dissertation did not win a prestigious campus award, and blamed his lack of employment after graduation in part on that.
He apparently planned his actions for a period of months. Finally, on that November afternoon, he attended a physics research group meeting in a conference room of Van Allen Hall. Shortly after the meeting began, Lu shot and killed three people—Prof. Christoph Goertz, Prof. Robert Smith, and graduate student Linhua Shan. He then went to the office of the department chair, Prof. Dwight Nicholson, and killed him.
Not satisfied, he then walked three blocks to Jessup Hall, killing associate vice president for Academic Affairs T. Anne Cleary and seriously wounding student employee Miya Rodolfo-Sioson.
Gang Lu then shot himself in the head, dying shortly after police arrived.
The president of the university at the time, Hunter Rawlings, was also on Lu's hit list...but he was in Ohio for the Hawkeye football game the next day.
The tragic killing that shook the campus and the state happened on this date in 1991—30 years ago today.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 1st...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.
"Murder On Campus"
You may find it hard to believe that it was three decades ago...on November 1st, 1991...that a disgrunted graduate student at the University of Iowa took revenge, killing four faculty members and one student, seriously wounding another student, and taking his own life. That's because for many, it seems like only yesterday.
That Friday afternoon was a bit chilly, and there was snow in the air in Iowa City. Then as now, Friday afternoons were often a time on campus for meetings and getting ready for the weekend.
Gang Lu was a 28-year-old who came to Iowa City from China and received his doctoral degree from the University the previous spring. However, he was angry because his dissertation did not win a prestigious campus award, and blamed his lack of employment after graduation in part on that.
He apparently planned his actions for a period of months. Finally, on that November afternoon, he attended a physics research group meeting in a conference room of Van Allen Hall. Shortly after the meeting began, Lu shot and killed three people—Prof. Christoph Goertz, Prof. Robert Smith, and graduate student Linhua Shan. He then went to the office of the department chair, Prof. Dwight Nicholson, and killed him.
Not satisfied, he then walked three blocks to Jessup Hall, killing associate vice president for Academic Affairs T. Anne Cleary and seriously wounding student employee Miya Rodolfo-Sioson.
Gang Lu then shot himself in the head, dying shortly after police arrived.
The president of the university at the time, Hunter Rawlings, was also on Lu's hit list...but he was in Ohio for the Hawkeye football game the next day.
The tragic killing that shook the campus and the state happened on this date in 1991—30 years ago today.
And that's Iowa Almanac for November 1st...Listen to the extended audio version of today's story by clicking on the audio player above.