PART I Growing Up
Chapter 1 CLARKSTON
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The home Gordon was born in |
Gordon enters his own story
at 2:10 a. m. on July 1, 1918, an early Monday morning. He was
blessed by Thomas Godfrey on August 4th 1918.
At this time, Woodrow Wilson
was the President of the United States which was involved in the
“Great War” which later became known as World War I. The war
ended on November 11, 1918 but before long the nation was faced with
another crisis which affected Gordon and his family. As the soldiers
came home from Europe, they brought with them a deadly influenza
virus. That fall, the terrible Asian Flu epidemic swept the country.
Mary, Gover, Ervin, and Gordon were all flat in bed with terribly
high fevers. Mary’s mother took care of the stricken little family.
Everyone wore gauze masks. Despite this precaution, Liza was soon as
sick as the rest of them.
Gordon and Ervin - 1919 | |
Church and school was
canceled from October 1918 until January 5, 1919 due to the flu.
Mary’s cousin, LaRee Barson, was asked to help take care of the
very sick family. An uncle called on them each morning to see what
supplies were needed. LaRee did her best tending the baby and taking
temperatures but soon became sick herself. Very few people in town
escaped the epidemic, some even died. The funerals were held out in
the open and everyone wore gauze masks. A few young men in town went
from door to door doing the milking and other chores. Eventually
Clarkston lived through the epidemic.
| Mary Eliza Godfrey |
This family was off to a
happy start with their two little boys. Gover and Mary each had a
rocking chair in which they would take a little boy and rock him to
sleep every night. This lovely young mother stated that she wanted to
have ten children. She was pleased to make the announcement that a
third child would be added to their family in September.
On September 25, 1920 Milton
Rudger was born. What should have been a blessed and happy event,
became a dark and tragic day. Mary died in childbirth at the young
and blossoming age of twenty-two. Gordon never really knew his
mother.
Gover was now alone with
three small children without a mother to care for. Ervin was four,
Gordon two, and Milton was just a baby. Not being able to care for
his little boys and run the farm, he turned to his family for help
and moved his motherless family in with his widowed mother.
Grandmother Buttars house built in 1906 | |
She had a large house with
plenty of room. Gover could still run the farm and have his sons
cared for by his mother and sister, Archulious, who still lived at
home. His brother, Wallace, still lived at home at that time too.
Gordon was a little boy
with white curly hair and brown eyes and was into probably more than
his share of mischief. Once when he was about three or four he got
into some black, sticky axle grease used to grease wagon wheels and
farm machinery all over in his hair. Aunt Archulious had quite a time
getting his hair clean again. His hair was hard enough to comb as it
was because it was so thick and curly anyway. When she would comb out
that snarled, matted, curly white hair he would bawl and carry on
something fierce.
Gordon and Ervin picked up
foul mouths at a real early age. When Aunt Archulious' husband to be,
David Archibald, came courting, those two little tykes would hide
under a bed or behind the couch and try out their newly learned
vocabulary of cuss words and giggle. Aunt Archlious didn't like
swearing so Dave would chase them down, which was great sport for the
little boys, until they got caught. When Dave caught them he held
them over his knees face up and pulled their tongues out with his
fingers as Aunt Achulious poured cayenne pepper on their tongues.
When they turned the darling little brats loose, they ran off
drooling, and spitting, and swearing.
After living with Grandmother
Buttars for about two years, Gover remarried. His new bride was Mary
Harriet Bowles from Lewiston, Utah. They were married June 28, 1922
in the Logan Temple. After they were married, Gover moved his new
wife and two of his sons back into his own house. Milton lived with
his grandmother until he was about eight. As the kids grew up they
called their stepmother Aunt Mary.
In 1923 or 1924 Gover bought
his first car, a brand new Model T Ford. Aunt Mary had Gordon with
her when she took the car to learn to drive. She nearly scared little
Gordon to death. With a car, now it only took about an hour to drive
the twenty miles to Logan. Gordon can remember making the trip in a
white top buggy drawn by a team of horses. Then, the trip took over
four hours.
To go to Logan was a treat
for a little boy. Gordon loved to go to Logan with his father. One
day Gover needed to go to Logan for something and naturally Gordon
wanted to go. At dinner, Gover took a meat fork full of cooked
cabbage and put it on little Gordon's plate. Gordon turned up his
nose because he didn't like cabbage. Gover put salt and pepper and
butter on it and fixed it up so it would taste good. "Now,"
he said, "If you eat this, you can go to Logan with me."
Gordon ate his cabbage and got go to Logan. At the same time he
learned to like cabbage.
On one trip to Logan, Gordon
and Ervin were attracted by a pall parrot perched on a sign in front
of a shoe store. As people walked by, the parrot would squawk out
"Hallow". They wanted to talk to the bird but didn't get
much response so they commenced shaking the sign to see if they could
get him to talk. The poor old parrot clung to the sign squawking,
"Downt! Downt! Downt!” The storekeeper ran outside to see what
all the commotion was about and down the sidewalk they dashed.
| The house down by the creek |
In about 1924 the family
moved to a new place out of town, down down by the creek. That same
year Gordon started school. The next few years had many adventures in
store.
Gordon had a little dog named
Sweed who became his faithful friend. Uncle Ervil (his mother's
brother) made a little two-wheeled cart with a pair of shaves so
Sweed could pull Gordon around in it. He had to sit just right to
balance the cart. If he sat to far back, the cart would rare pulling
up on Sweed and he would turn around and "chew all hell"
out of him. If he sat too far ahead it would put all the weight on
Sweed and he'd turn around again. As long as he kept balanced, Sweed
could pull him all over the place. Sweed could pull him in a little
sleigh too.
Sweed was a good dog to
have around. You could stand in the yard and throw your arms showing
him where the cows or horses where and he would bring them in on a
dead run, almost knocking down the fences. One day he and Gordon went
down the creek to catch magpies. He heard that magpies could talk
when their tongue were slit. They were not able to catch any to find
out if it was true.
Gordon also had a pony named
Old Cassey. Her tongue hung out the side of her mouth. When she got a
drink of water she had to bury her nose in the water past her
nostrils so she could drink.
At times Gordon would sneak
away from Aunt Mary and ride Old Cassey up by the cemetery where the
farm was to watch his dad work. The big thing to do was to ride side
saddle. One day he was bringing in the cows perched on the saddle
sideways thinking he was neat, until he fell off backwards
practically landing on the back of his head. Old Cassey stopped for
him as Gordon got up shaking his head. When he got to the yard,
Gordon was sitting in the saddle like he should.
A neighbor by the name of
Bois Jardine made Gordon a pair of wire spurs. He got on Cassey and
jabbed her in the ribs expecting her to go. Instead, Old Cassey
turned around and bit him on the leg. The spurs weren't such a good
idea after all so he didn't use them anymore.
When Gordon was a little boy,
his Great-grandfather Peter S. Barson was still alive. Grandpa Barson
would gather all of his great-grandchildren and seat them on the
floor and play an old fiddle and a wind up phonograph that had a
little man that danced around the record as it played. He gave each
of them a nickel to sit on the floor and listen to him play his
fiddle and tell stories of fighting Indians or riding fort the Pony
Express. If one of the kids got up to leave, he took the nickel away
from them. As a young man, Grandpa Barson got in on fighting Indians
when Clarkston was first settled and had plenty of stories to tell.
When Gordon was born it had been less than thirty years since the
last of the great Indian Wars so there were plenty of stories to be
told.
These stories had Gordon
scared of Indians. At times the Indians came off the reservations to
go about begging for flour and food. When he saw them coming up to
his grandmother's house, he would immediately leave his playing and
run in the house and hide under the table.
Being located on the slopes
of the Wasatch Mountains, Clarkston got a lot of snow in the winter.
Snow and kids could mean only one thing, sleigh riding. There was
always a huge snowdrift out from his grandmother's barn. All the kids
in town brought their sleighs to the top of the drift and would ride
them down. The more kids on a sleigh, the faster and farther they
could go. One of Gordon’s cousins was bigger than the rest of the
kids. He would lie down on his sleigh and pile four or five smaller
children on top of himself and down the run they'd go. They got going
so fast that sparks flew from the runners as they skimmed over the
snow. They could go clear down to the creek, almost a mile and a half
away.
Gordon and Topps at Grandmother Godfrey’s. Topps was one of Gover’s many horses. |
When it wasn't sleigh riding
in the winter, it was the swimming hole in the summer. This swimming
hole was just down the creek from their house. According to legend,
the swimming hole had no bottom because a runaway team of horses
drown there. Even though the water was ice cold, there were always
ten or twenty kids in there swimming. They'd dive in one side and
come up the other into some wild rose bushes, but that didn't stop
anyone.
Gordon had his chores too, so
there wasn't always time to play. He was milking cows before he was
big enough to go to school. He wasn't big enough to lift the buckets
after he had filled them so his dad dumped them in the milk can. By
the time he was eleven he could milk as fast as his dad.
At haying time, his job was
to ride the team that worked the derrick. When the men went out after
another wagon load he would ride the wagon. On one Fourth of July
they were stacking hay and a bunch of kids were going down to the
swimming hole and stopped to ask, "How come you're stacking hay
on the 4th of July?” The hired man answered, "So we don't have
to do it on the 5th."
After the chores were done
they made their own fun too. Gover used to raise purebred ewes. Once
during lambing season it was stormy so he put them in the barn.
Gordon and Ervin got the idea they would trip the ewes as they went
through the door. Ervin had the handle end of a fork and Gordon had
the tines. The sheep tripped over the fork handle alright, and
somehow one of the tines got into Gordon's wrist but he didn't feel
anything. His next move was up the ladder to the loft. As he reached
up to the next rung with that arm to pull himself up, all of his
weight caused the puncture to finish breaking open. The blood
squirted, he squealed and fell off the ladder, and ran in the house
to get bandaged. The wound healed without needing stitches but it
left a definite scar on his wrist.
After getting bandaged,
Gordon and Ervin went back to the barn to ride sheep. When their dad
caught them, well, talk about a sheepherder kicking his dog. When
Gover got a hold of them, the buttons were flying off their clothes
to where it sounded like a hail storm in that old barn. Boy, did they
get a walloping.
Another day they caught a
Rambulet buck in the barn so they could ride him. Now, when a sheep
jumps, it jumps stiff legged, so a little kid seven or eight years
old would naturally fall off. When it was Ervin's turn to ride him,
Gordon went to the other side of the barn and opened a door that was
never used because there was a three foot drop. When a sheep sees an
opening they most always go through it. When this old buck saw the
light through the door, out he jumped with Ervin right on his back.
The buck landed just short of the creek and Ervin flew off his back
and landed in the dirt. The ram got in with the ewes where he wasn't
supposed to be. Gordon jumped out of the barn door and Ervin got up
brushing the dirt off his clothes. Now they had to get the buck out
of the ewes before anything happened.
In the days of work horses,
there used to be a contest called a pulling match. The object was to
see who had the strongest horse or team of horses. Ervin and Gordon
would have their own pulling matches using their father's work
horses. Those little boys would get the teams harnessed up themselves
and hitched them back to back to get them to pull. A lot of the time
this would balk a good team, or get them so they wouldn't pull
anymore. They managed to ruin a team for their dad. This team was
Vick and June. Soon after, Gover had Vick and June hitched to a load
of gravel but they just wouldn't pull it.
It wasn’t hard to figure
out what was wrong and naturally he got mad. He made the culprits
(Gordon and Ervin) walk up to City Creek where Blanche and Bolley
were pastured. Blanche and Bolley were Gover's best team. They caught
them and put their collars and harnesses on and brought them back to
Gover so he could hitch them to the wagon. When they started pulling,
Blanche chocked down because they put too small of a collar on her
and it cut off her wind. Gover got mad and worked their pants over
once more. He was going to make the boys walk home and get the right
collar, but instead of wasting anymore time, Gover tied Blanche back
and had Bolley pull most of the load.
The little boys in Clarkston
would put their dogs up against each other in dog fights. The boy
whose dog lost would inevitably tear into the boy whose dog won. A
lot of times there were gang fights too. Several smaller boys would
tear into an older kid. Gordon and Ervin got in on their share of the
action.
It was in Clarkston when
Gordon started smoking. The thing to do was to peel the bark off of a
cedar post and shred it up real fine in their hands. Then they'd
“roll there own” and light up. Puffing on that burning cedar bark
sure tasted nasty so they switched to tobacco .
The Clarkston Ward Meetinghouse that was dedicated in 1913 | |
In Clarkston, their family
usually went to church. Gordon remembers going to Primary. Some of
his teachers remember him too. One of them told a story about him.
She asked him too say the prayer one day. Gordon stood up and bowed
his head and folded his arms. Then there was a long pause. After a
minute he said, "Oh, hell. I don't know how!” and sat down.
Gordon was baptized on 4 July 1926 by George D. Loosle and confirmed
by Joseph G. Christensen.
He had a cousin, Susie
Buttars, who was in his class. When the teacher called the roll, he
was clowning around. When she called Susie's name he hollered,
"Present" That got all the rest of the kids teasing Gordon
and calling him "Susie."
The old School stood in the
lot next to the Ward Building. It was a two story building of yellow
brick. There were four big rooms, two downstairs and two upper rooms.
Each room had about fifty desks. In each room were two grades. For
example, in one room were the first and second grades, in another
were the third and fourth, and so on. The school had a big bell that
could be heard allover town. It rang at eight o'clock in the morning,
giving the children one hour to get ready for school, which started
at nine when the bell would ring again.
Gordon started school in 1924
when he was six years old. His first grade teacher was Gretta
Tippets. He thought she was very pretty. Gordon knew how to tell time
before he went to school. He had a pocket watch that he carried with
him and the other kids were always asking him for the time. He about
wore it out by taking it out of his pocket all of the time. It was a
West Clock pocket watch that cost ninety-eight cents.
| The Clarkston School built in 1910. |
One morning in about the
first or second grade, one of the bigger kids lifted Gordon up and
made him grab a hold of the bell rope and left him hanging. His
weight was just enough to keep the bell going around and around and
he was going up and down. It was too far to the floor so he was
afraid to let go for fear of hurting himself. The bell kept going
around and around and up he went again and then down he'd come. The
bell rang at the top and on the bottom and a few times in between. As
the bell came down it picked up enough speed to go on over again and
up he would go again. Everyone in town heard the bell ringing and
wondered what in the world was going on. Finally someone came and
rescued him.
On April Fool's Day in the
fourth grade a bunch of kids (Gordon included) got in the school
house before any one else was there and took the door knob off the
door in one of the upstairs rooms. In its place they put a bolt with
a big washer on it. To the bolt they tied one end of a rope. With the
other end of the rope they tied several desks together. With the use
of another rope they climbed out the window to the ground. When the
teacher went to her class room, she couldn't get in because there was
no door knob. Nor could she pull it open because it was tied to all
the desks. Finally, they had to get someone with a ladder to climb
through the window to untie the rope.
Gordon and Gordon’s second grade Class picture in 1925. The teacher is Miss Greta Tibbits. Front row: Ulala Godfrey, Gordon, Ira Jardine (1st cousin), Fain Thompson, Eldon Rassmusen, Sadie Godfrey, Reba Godfrey, ??? Thompson, and Sybil Thompson. Second Row: ???, Hazel Raxter, LaVerl Bert, Dale Griffith, Vincent Buttars (2nd cousin), Laura Dahle, Flossie Buttars (2nd Cousin), and Jenny Ravsten. Notice the pocket watch in his overalls pocket. The reason for the scowl on his face is because he didn’t like the girl he was standing next to even tough she was his cousin. The other kids teased him about “liking” her. Everyone knows that little boys in the 2nd grade don’t “like” girls. |
Gordon liked school and got
pretty good grades. He got into enough trouble for two kids too. They
had an teacher by the name of Miss Sarah Heggie. One day in class
Gordon was acting up so Miss Heggie bent a geography book over his
head. If the class didn't study, or got caught goofing around, she
would keep them after school and make them run around the room until
they couldn't run anymore. Then when they got home from school they
would get in trouble with their dads for being late and not having
their chores done.
One day she had about
twenty-five kids running around the room after school. Golden Buttars
(who was Gover's cousin) burst into the room and let out a blat at
her and told all those kids to get home to their chores. Then he
proceeded to set Miss Heggie strait. Never again did she make anyone
run around the class room after school.
Gordon's fourth grade teacher
was Miss Smith. In the same class was his cousin, Ira Jardine. (With
all these cousins, you have probably figured out that he was related
to about half of Clarkston.) One day in class, Miss Smith did
something to one of them, the other one got mad too, so they both
jumped up to try to fight her.
His fifth grade teacher was
quite a change from Miss Heggie or Hiss Smith. She was a middle-aged
woman from Virginia. She was about his favorite teacher, but he can't
remember her name. She couldn't sing but she had to teach music and
singing. She taught them songs like, "Way Down Yonder in the
Cotton Field", and her favorite, “Carry Me Back To Old
Virginny." Since she couldn't sing at all, the kids would laugh
at her. She had quite a chore teaching the kids how to sing.
In the late 1920's, Gover
bought the family's first radio. Being so close to the mountains the
reception was very poor. They had to huddle close around the radio to
hear Amos and Andy, and the other programs being aired.
After being married for
almost six years, Gover and Aunt Mary had their first child. On February 18, 1928,
Gordon's half brother Nolan was born. Something went wrong in the
delivery that caused him to be stillborn. Nolan never took a breath
of this life. Then on January 30, 1929 William Ralph was born. Soon
after Ralph was born, Gover moved his family to Burley, Idaho where
he had bought a sixty acre farm with good sized house. Moving away
from Clarkston was hard for Gordon. This move changed the course of
the rest of his life.
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