Saturday, June 27, 2020

Some facts about Roy Rogers & Dale Evans you may not know

Take a Look at Roy Rogers Sweet Life

Having starred in more than 100 films, radio shows, and television shows, Roy Rodgers was something of akin a national treasure. This western icon’s name and looks were transferred to toys, books, and even comic books. To Roy Rogers and his wife Dale Evans family was everything. They had nine children, and five out of those nine children were adopted. However, this family’s “Happy trails” did not pass without a hiccup. Not only were there family tragedies, but, even though their family museum had more than 200,000 visits per year, it had to be shut down. If you want to find out why Roy Rogers fame withered, keep reading!


Roy Rogers wasn’t his birth name; rather he was destined to change it.



On November 5, 1911 in Cincinnati, Ohio, Leonard Slye, that will become to be known as Roy Rogers was born. When Roy Rogers was a little boy his father gave him a horse as a gift. This together with the fact that he was raised on a farm near Lucasville, provided him with all the knowledge about horsemanship.

Another thing that came from this farm and that made him into an asset in the field of his future career was the fact that he learned how to dance, sing, and play the mandolin there. This he learned because his family didn’t have a radio. So, the Slye family provided for their own entertainment and even organized square dances.

The Rocky Mountaineers  -  When Roy Rogers was 19, he and his family moved to California. The then Leonard and his father were truck drivers and fruit pickers. Then, in 1931 Leonard tried out for a Los Angles radio show the Midnight Frolics. Because they found him great he received an offer to join the Rocky Mountaineers – a western group.
 
Although Roger was timid, he still overcame his shyness and performed in front of other people. The Rocky Mountaineers tour took place in the middle of summer and included countries in the areas from New Mexico and Arizona. What they found the hardest was the lack of food, because they had to live off a really tight budget.

The Sons of Pioneers  -  During the time that he was on the Rocky Mountaineers, Roy Rogers started working with Bob Nolan and Tim Spencer. Both were former members of the Rocky Mountaineers. Together they formed a group – The Pioneers Trio, in 1933. Within the group, Spencer was the lead singer, Nolan played the bass, and Slye the guitar.

In 1934, they added another member to their trio – Hugh Farr. He played the fiddle. Because they were so young, the announcer on the radio changed the name of the band before their radio performance. The name he gave them was The Sons of the Pioneers. They were popular across the U.S. Some of their most famous songs were "Tumbling Tumbleweeds" and "Cool Water."

The Birth of Roy Rogers  -  Leonard Slye was given the chance to begin his career in the production of Western films. He first appeared on a film in 1935, in a supporting role. The main role in that film was taken up by Gene Autry. But, when Autry wanted the production to pay him more money, the studio began its search for a new cowboy that could sing.

Out of all the people who auditioned, Slye was the one who was chosen. Republic Pictures studio altered his name into Roy Rogers, and he was ready to assume his first leading role. It was in the film Under Western Stars.

When thinking of Roy Rogers, Dale Evans comes to mind immediately. However, death occurred before those two fell in love.

Meet Trigger  -  When the studio was prepping Roy Rogers for his first leading role, the gave him the chance to pick out his horse that would be his sidekick. They lined up five rented horses, and Rogers ended up picking a yellow-haired palomino stallion. The horse's name was Golden Cloud. But, because Rogers liked the horse so much, he bought it in 1943.

Rogers thought Golden Cloud didn’t fit the horse’s swiftness on foot and intelligence, so he gave him a new name – Trigger. Prior to his adoption, the horse had a Hollywood career of his own. He starred in The Adventures of Robin Hood. He was the mount of Olivia de Havilland’s character.

Trigger Was A Gifted Horse  -  Trigger knew how to sit in a chair, use a pencil to sign his name "X," lie down for a nap, and cover himself with a blanket. In addition to this, he learned 150 cues and he could reportedly walk on his hind legs for a stunning 50 feet! All that is what made him one famous horse, and he adored the fame.

No matter the number of tricks he had at his disposal, Trigger couldn’t help but ruin some of them because he bowed each time that he heard applause. If you ask us the most impressive fact is that Trigger was housebroken.

Rogers’ Love Life - Of course, apart from his career, Rogers had a love life. He married his first wife
in 1933. She was his admirer and their marriage only lasted a few years. Her name was Lucile Ascolese. But, during his radio tour, he met his second wife Grace Arline Wilkins. This also happened in 1933, but in Roswell, New Mexico.

The two married immediately after the finalization of Rogers’ divorce in 1936. They adopted a daughter, but Wilkins also gave birth to a daughter in 1943. Their names are Cheryl Darlene and Linda Lou. Wilkins also gave birth to a baby boy – Ray Jr (Dusty) – before she died of childbirth complications in 1946.

Then Came Dale Evans  -  Ray Rogers and Dale Evans met on set in 1944 when they collaborated on a movie together. Few years after the death of his previous wife Wilkins, the two inevitably fell in love. At the time, Evans was preparing for a role of a cowgirl and of a future co-star of Rogers’ at Republic studios.
 
Before she met Rogers, Evans eloped at the age of 14 and gave birth to a son at the age of 15. After her first marriage fell through, she pursued a radio career and had two more husbands. If her first three marriages didn’t fall through, she wouldn’t have met Rogers.

The couple built a huge family, but as you will see, the tragedy didn’t evade them.

Married With Children  -  At a rodeo at the Chicago Stadium, Rogers proposed to Evans. Soon after in 1947, the two got married. They married at the same place where they filmed Home in Oklahoma. It wasn’t long before Evans gave birth to a baby girl, whose name was Robin Elizabeth. Sadly the baby had Down syndrome and died after mumps complications.
 
This all happened before her second birthday! In order to show that they didn’t forget her, Evans wrote a book named Angel Unaware. This won’t be the only thing done in honor of their baby girl.

Angel Unaware  -  Evans’ book Angel Unaware turned out to be very inspirational. Her 1953 display of her daughter’s life prompted discussion amongst Americans and the disabled. People were amazed at the fact how much Rogers and Evans were engaged when taking care of their daughter was in question.


There’s even a training center for children with developmental disabilities that acquired her name – The Dale Rogers Training Center in Oklahoma. As time passed, Evans and Rogers adopted children Mimi, Dodie, Sandy, and Debbie. This showcases how much love the two had within them, and were ready to give.

Additional Tragedies  -  Robin’s death was not the only tragedy that happened to this famous couple. Their daughter Debbie was born in Korea. She was only 12 when she died. Namely, she was one of eight people who died during a tragic bus accident – the school bus crashed into seven cars on the highway. Sadly, that’s not all.

Their son, John David, better known as Sandy, was only 18 when he died. Sandy signed up for the army and was deployed to Germany. He died in a military hospital in Germany in 1965.

Career Continued To Flourish  -  While he was building his family and giving its members much-needed love, Rogers still focused on his career. Besides films, he did a lot of public appearances. The money from these appearances, however, ended up in the Republic Pictures’ pockets. It was only in 1940 that Rogers initiated a clause that permitted him the right to use his likeness, his voice, and his name for merchandise.


You can see just how big of a star he was by all the action figures, cowboy adventure novels, playsets, and even a Dell comic strip all of which featured Ray Rogers.

Evans and Rogers secured everything for their children, but you would never guess what stood between Dusty and Rogers.


The Roy Rogers Show
  -  On December 30, 1951, Rogers got his own show - The Roy Rogers Show. Rogers played an owner of a ranch in Mineral City, and Dale Evans was the owner of the town café and hotel. Roy even had a sidekick – Pat Brady. When it comes to animals, of course, there was Trigger, as well as Roger’s German Shepherd dog – Bullet the Wonder Dog.

The show was hot. It had 100 episodes and was a part of NBC’s program. It ended on June 9, 1957.

Just Work  -  When his show ended, Rogers still worked in Hollywood. His wife and he tried to make a hit out of another show – The Roy Rogers and Dale Evans Show. It was a variety comedy program that stood no chance against the then-popular Jackie Gleason Show. So, the show went off the air after only three months.

Be that as it may, Rogers continued with his career and had appearances as a cowboy on Wonder Woman and The Muppet Show.. His last motion picture was Macintosh and T.J., debuted in 1975 and filmed in Texas.

Rogers And Evans As Parents  -  Usually having famous parents has its upsides, but also its downsides. But, Evans and Rogers actually went that extra mile in order to raise their children away from Hollywood. Dusty, their son said for the People magazine “We always moved away from the encroaching population because Dad liked his privacy.
 
He wanted his kids raised on a ranch, where they could have horses and pigs and chickens and cows.” Of course, what parents want, and what the kids want re two completely different things. That’s how Dusty turned out to be in two films by the time he was finishing high school. Dusty wanted to be an actor, and Rogers was not too thrilled.




Dusty And Rogers - Rogers was not in favor of his son being an actor. “The job lasted for about two weeks. My main task was to test the seams in napalm bombs. Finally, I quit. That really angered Dad. I got mad and left town with friends,” said Dusty for the People Magazine. Dusty left his family in order to set up his career in Ohio, but that’s when he realized just how important of a figure his father is to the outside world.

Dusty eventually returned to Apple Valley and smoothed things out with Rogers by saying “What really worries me, Dad, is I’m afraid you’re gonna die and I won’t have a chance to tell you that I really love you.”

It won’t be long before Dusty would have to be the one making hard decisions.

In The Loving Memory Of Trigger  -  Trigger led a long and wonderful life. This successful horse even had his career in Hollywood. But, sadly, he de died 1965 in Apple Valley in California at Roy Rogers’ ranch. In order to honor Trigger Rogers preserved him and mounted him by Bischoff’s Taxidermy.

In 1967 in Apple Valley, Rogers started the Roy Rogers and Dale Evans Museum. The Trigger was a part of the display so that the fans can mourn his death. But as you will read, some years will pass until the horse is robbed of his permanent home.

An Additional Exhibit  -  The Trigger was not the only pet of the family who earned his place at the museum. Having passed away in 1957, Bullet the Wonder Dog was also preserved and added to the display. Another animal that was out on display at the museum was Evans’ buckskin Quarter Horse named Buttermilk that died in 1972.

If you thought that it was complicated taking care of these animals when they were alive it was just as complicated when they were preserved. They needed to be constantly brushed and their glass eyes cleaned. But, this all stopped soon after the museum was forced shut.

Relocation  -  The family museum was moved from Apple Valley to Victorville, California. From 1976 when the museum was moved, it attracted many people who rushed there in order to see something that would remind them of Roy Rogers and Dale Evans Westerns they watched on the small screens when they were growing up.

Then, in 2003, the museum was moved to Branson, Missouri. After Rogers and Evans’ death, the IRS levied a high tax on Rogers’ estate. The children could only relocate the museum to another area in the hopes of reaching more tourists that would visit and generate enough profit to keep it working.

The Museum Was Closed  -  The relocation to Missouri was not something that helped preserve the museum. The Roy Rogers and Dale Evans Museum simply couldn’t keep up with a variety of honky tonks and other tourist attractions in Branson. Because of that, the museum needed to be closed. “This situation is one I have not wanted to happen.
 
The decision to close the museum has come after two years of steady decline in visitors. We cannot continue to accumulate debt to keep the doors open,” said Dusty in one statement.

Roy Rogers Restaurant  -  If you didn’t know you could get your fried chicken, burgers, and roast beef sandwiches in a Roy Rogers restaurant. It was opened in 1968. Rogers of course had no connections to the restaurant chain, but he issued a license to his moniker for the franchise.

There is also a drink that has his name, and no it does not have a drop of alcohol in it. It is a non-alcoholic cocktail that has Coca-Cola, grenadine syrup and maraschino cherry.

Rogers Loved Trigger Too Much  -  Roy Rogers nurtured a deep connection to his palomino horse. When Trigger died


Rogers said “I just couldn’t think of burying old Trigger. Too many people loved him. We too took Trigger, Dale’s horse Buttermilk, and Trigger Junior and had them beautifully mounted.
 
The Trigger is up on hind legs and he looks just like he did the day before he died.” Rogers mourned his best friend’s death for a very long time.

Cameo Roles  -  You can see Roy Rogers in just about any Western film from the 50s, 60s or 70s. But there were some rather amazing cameos that Rogers has, such as the ones in Wonder Woman, The Muppet Show, and The Fall Guy. He also took part in Randy Travis’ video for the song “Heroes and Friends” in 1990.
 
This made him a modern country music video star. The video displays the best days of Rogers and Evans’ TV days, and in the end, Rogers suddenly appears.

Adoption  -  It was already mentioned that Roy and Evans had a lot of children. What many people don’t know is that the couple was a huge supporter of adoption. They adopted four children into their family. Because of this, their family had nine children in total.

Evans and Rogers even founded a few children charities. One of the most important charities is the Happy Trails Children’s Foundation which has the aim of combating child abuse, which Evans and Rogers called an epidemic.

Happy Trails Foundation  -  The Happy Trails Foundation collaborates with the Trinity Youth Services. It has two cottages which house 44 beds. The cottages are supposed to house children between the age of 10 and 16. All of them have either been a victim of abuse or were removed from their families by child protective services.

What the foundation offers them is a one-year treatment and therapy along with outdoor activities and athletics.

Did Evans do as well as Rogers?

After The Treatment At The Happy Trails Foundation they finish this program, children talk to professionals about their progress. Some children go back to their homes, and some go to foster homes or live with their grandparents, aunts, uncles.

What the foundation prides itself on is that the youth that gets out of its program doesn’t come back into the system. And that is precisely what Rogers and Evans had in mind.

Overcoming Shyness  -  Usually, people who star in movies or are popular are not expected to be very timid. But, this was exactly how Roy Rogers was. When he was still operating under his birth name Leonard Slye he was very shy. He even stopped out of night school because he couldn’t establish a relationship with his classmates.

He missed his first radio performance because he couldn’t speak. But, after a while, he overcame his insecurities and shyness and became a huge star.

No One Can Match His Career  -  Roy Rogers was a very popular actor. He was one of the most famous stars for as long as five decades. He acted in at least two movies per year. Sometimes that number was as high as eight movies in a year. That was all in the period from 1935-1951.

When he married Evans, he lowered the number of roles he accepted, and he still made appearances on TV all the way through 1984. You will have a hard time trying to find a better-employed actor and an actor with such a filming rate as he had.

Rogers Has His Place In The Country Music Hall Of Fame  -  Rogers was chosen to be inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame twice. The first time was in 1980 when he was still a part of the Pioneers and after that as a solo artist. This is very important because people tend to label him as an actor solely.
 
He is also the first person to be chosen for the Country Music Hall of Fame twice as of July 2013. He got a Golden Palm Star on the Palm Springs Walk of Stars as well!

Up next, take a look at Rogers’ box office rankings

Three Is The Lucky Number  -  While Rogers is to be remembered for his marriage with Dale Evans he had three marriages in total. His first wife was his admirer Lucile Ascolese and this marriage happened in 1933. The marriage was broken off because the couple disagreed on some basic things.

After that, Rogers married Arline Wilkins with whom he had two children and who died due to childbirth complications in 1946. This all made the way for the third and final marriage to Dale Evans.

Trigger's Career  -  Trigger career didn’t begin and end with Roy Rogers. It was only after the horse starred in the 1938 Adventures of Robin Hood that this Holden Cloud was even considered to be offered to Roy as his sidekick.

In the movie, he was ridden by Olivia de Havilland, who was in the role of Maid Marian. He starred with Roy in nearly ninety films.

Box Office Rankings  -  According to box office rankings, in 1942 Roy was the second most popular Western star. The one preceding him was Gene Autry. The year after he climbed up to the first place in the box office ranking. He continued his rise in 1944 and even came to be the 24th most popular star in the U.S.

Two years after he was the 10th most popular star in the U.S. That was his highest ranking. And in 1952 he was the most popular Western star for the 10th consecutive year.

Roy’s Music  -  Roy Rogers had a good go at the music scene as well. His first hit song was “A Little White Cross on the Hill” and it was number 7 in the U.S. His second hit “My Chickashay Gal” ended up being number four on the U.S. Country charts.

The first song to have success outside the U.S. was “Leavenworth” made in 1971. It was 12th on U.S. charts and 33rd on Canadian charts.

More About Dale Evans  -  Dale Evans ‘real name was Lucille Wood Smith, but she changes her name after one of her divorces when she wanted to pursue a music career. She married Roy Rogers in 1947 at the Flying L Ranch in Davis, Oklahoma, on New Year’s Eve.
 
Roy Rogers was her fourth husband, but this was her best marriage. The two were amazing both on TV and in real life.

Robin Elizabeth Was Her Muse  -  Roy Rogers and Dale Evans had only one biological child. Robin Elizabeth died before her second birthday because of her mumps complications. The child also suffered from Down syndrome. Evans was deeply saddened and inspired by the death of her daughter.

That is why she issued a book called Angel Unaware. She made it her goal to serve as a role model and she wanted to change the public opinion on children with disabilities. This too is the reason why she wrote many religious and inspirational pieces.

Evans’ Career  -  Besides her time on successful TV series The Roy Rogers Show from 1951-1957, she was a successful movie actress as well. In the Roy Rogers Show she and Roy Rogers were playing the cowboy and cowgirl pair. Off the small screen, she played in around 30 movies and she was featured in over 200 songs.
 
She wrote the song “Happy Trails,” and she was a true Christian. She never missed out an opportunity to speak religious words. And those were exactly what she would preach when somebody would ask her for advice.

The Beginning Of Her Career  -  Evans began her career on the radio. At first, she worked there as a secretary, but later she did gigs and screenings for important companies. She became very popular on the radio when she signed a contract with the 20th-century fox studios. Under that contract, she was featured on the Edgar/Charlie McCarthy show.

The studio ran her campaign as an unmarried woman who supported her brother Tommy. That was actually not her brother, but her son Tom Fox Jr. She kept this lie up all until she finalized her divorce and secured her role as a cowgirl with the Republic Studios.

Religious Public Speaker  -  The most important highlight of Dale Evans’ life was when she was chosen to speak at the Project Prayer. The rally was attended by 2500 people and the venue was the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles. Project Prayer was hosted by Anthony Eisley.
 
The whole project was aimed at the introduction of mandatory prayer in schools. Evans even had albums entirely dedicated to religious music. 1980s were the time when Rogers and Evans’ films were played weekly on the then Nashville Network.

Evan’s Awards  -  What Evans will be remembered for is for what she had done for the radio. This was exactly why she got her Hollywood Walk of fame star. After that she got another star for her contribution to the TV industry. She was inducted in the Western Performers Hall of Fame at the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma in 1976.
 
And, in 1995 she was inducted the National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame in Fort Worth, Texas as well.

Two Deaths  -  Strange as it may be, Dale Evans and Roy Rogers had similar deaths. What set them apart were a few years. Rogers passed away in 1998 due to congestive heart failure. Evans died in 2001 in the same way. Both of them are interred at the Sunset Hills Memorial Park in Apple Valley.
    
They are said to resemble “Johnny and June” in this sense. Evans is said to have been completely heartbroken and devastated for three years after Rogers died.

Legacy For Sale  -  Roy Rogers Jr. was forced to auction off the contents of his late father’s museum after it went into liquidation. The New York branch of Christie’s handled the sale in 2010, which included the stuffed remains of Rogers’ beloved horse Trigger, and dog Bullet, in addition to Dale’s embalmed horse Buttermilk.

Some of the other 1,000 plus items that went under the hammer included the Rogers' family dinner table, toy six-shooters, Rogers-themed tin lunch boxes and the Jeep "Nellybelle" from Rogers' TV show. According to Jamie Nudie, the niece of Rogers’ close friend, Rex Allen, Roy Jr.’s siblings weren’t supportive of his decision to sell their father’s belongings. However, Roy Jr. who was in tears as the auction kicked off, insisted that prior to passing away his father had told him, “If the museum starts costing you money, then liquidate everything and move on.”

The auction ended up fetching in excess of $2.9 million.


 


Finally, some rain in Clarinda

76º with mostly overcast skies here in Clarinda, IA at 10:30 am Saturday.  Rode 5.35 miles on the recumbent trike this morning (hadn't ridden since the 6 miles last Sunday).   Had thunderstorm overnight and dumped just short of .9" of rain from the gauge this morning.  Recently there have been quite a few showers come through, but they have mostly missed us.   --  Click on photos to enlarge.

Have not used the commercial garbage service this summer (at $25 a month).  All sink garbage stored in air-tight plastic containers to be buried at the farm, doing all the recycling possible with newspapers, cardboard, plastics, glass and tin, and putting burnable stuff in plastic garbage bags.  Since we returned to this home the 2nd day of May have gone to the recycle bins several times, but have not burned anything yet.  Got a used oil barrel from someone in Bedford through friend Leland Brown  and have taken end off and drilled some holes, for intake of air, in sides of the barrel.  Will give it a test out on our farm one of these days.



Last week got 2"X4" boards and some plywood from construction dumpster




and this last Sunday found some more, as well as a dozen concrete pavers.







Took some more of the lower branches from under several of the smaller trees in the front yard, drug them behind the shop where I am chipping them with the loppers.  Takes some time, but they will deteriorate more quickly then throwing them over the hedge as complete branches.



We had leveled the condenser for the Air Conditioner early in May and the tile in front of them was just a little too high to be cleared by the lawn mower, so dug them down.

Had the A/C checked - added 1/2 pound of "stuff" and cleaned the fins.  Will have to clean the fins myself sometimes during the summer.  The bottom was full and the drain holes plugged.



The new front on the Fareway grocery store.  Been up a week and still no new lettering on it.  This is where I got the wood and concrete blocks from their construction dumpster.


These lilies, behind the shop,
are now blooming.


$1.949 - Gas price in Clarinda.  Jumped 20 cents a week or two ago.  We had bought at Sam's Club in Des Moines last weekend for $1.679.





Last weekend when we were at our Granddaughter Ashley's place for her daughter Jessica's birthday party, looked through a very nice book that Grandma Patty had made up of some of the home-schooling account the Covid-19,pictures through the couple months Jessica spent at her Grandpa & Grandma's house.  Really nice book and memories of that time.

I ordered a book of Facebook photos from 2010 through 2019 which we received a few days ago.  It has many of the photos I had posted.  During some of our travels had posted lot of photos over the years.  Am not posting photos on Facebook very often now, just here on my blog.



A week or so ago I caught the movie "Adrift'.  It
is a true story about a sailboat wreck in a Hurricane in 1983 when this couple were in process of delivering a 44' sailing yacht from Tahiti to San Diego.  Found it very interesting and, knowing more information is in the book than the movie, I ordered softbound copy of the book.  A very good read for anyone.

With the Kenwood RV Summer Rally in State Center, Iowa having been cancelled for this August, I have been working on putting together photos from each year we have attended the Rally, and sending e-mails to all those I can reach who have attended from 2010 until 2019 with links to my Google Photo Albums.  Has taken a lot of time, inasmuch as each photo, after getting from my old files, has to be cropped, straightened, brightened for color, and noted with year for each one.   Here are the ones I have gotten done so far. Click on the year -  2010  - 2011 - 2012 - 2014 - 2015 - 2018 - 2019
Quite nice to look back, especially the earlier years where several of the people no longer come to Kenwood, or to State Center.

Well, must get to work on the years 2016 and 2017.  We were on our 5.5 month tour throughout the southwest, west coast, northwest, back across the Dakotas and to Michigan and Ohio in 2013 for our 50th Wedding Anniversary year so did not attend that year.

Later, Lynn


General John Bell Hood

In response to the current hysteria over the names of landmarks and public installations recognizing or honoring former Confederates, it is informative and instructive to look at the individuals who are honored, not the causes for which they served for a brief period of their lives or careers. Former Ku Klux Klan Grand Dragon and West Virginia senator Robert C. Byrd, whose name adorns numerous public buildings, institutions, and landmarks, was judged by his later years, and his changed values and public service after his transformation. Why aren’t former Confederates offered the same acknowledgment of their values and citizenship after the war?

  

An example is former Confederate General John Bell Hood—namesake of the U.S. Army’s Fort Hood (Texas)—a man who was much more than a soldier. Most 21st century Americans have no clue who John Bell Hood was, and those who do perhaps only know that he was a Confederate general in the American Civil War. Even when his name is Googled, it is likely that only basic biographical information will appear. Little public information is available that reveals John Bell Hood’s personal integrity and moral character that inspired an earlier generation of Americans to honor him.

  Until recently it was assumed that the character and moral integrity of historical characters was sufficiently established, but political correctness has drastically changed the standards by which our predecessors are judged.

  Hood was an 1853 West Point graduate who was wounded three times in combat, the first as a member of the famous U.S. Army 2nd Cavalry Regiment at Devil’s River, Texas in 1857. Hood, a native Kentuckian, adopted Texas as his home and after the Lone Star State’s secession in 1861 he resigned from the U.S. Army and volunteered for service in the Confederate army. Quickly rising to the rank of brigadier and then major general, Hood was wounded at the Battle of Gettysburg, losing much of the use of his left arm. Returning to duty in the fall of 1863, Hood was then wounded at the Battle of Chickamauga, resulting in the amputation of his right leg. After losing half his limbs, Hood recovered and continued to serve, eventually attaining the rank of full (4-star) general—at age 33 the youngest full general in American military history.

  If Hood’s peerless resolve and dedication to his adopted home state and nation were not enough, his postwar conduct as an American citizen became a model among ex-Confederates.

After the war, Hood took the oath of allegiance to the United States and with his citizenship restored became a vocal advocate of reconciliation, urging Southerners to be patriotic Americans. In a speech to Confederate veterans in 1874, Hood said, “We must, my comrades, turn from the past, and meet with courage the mighty issues of the present and the future.” Urging reconciliation and patriotism, Hood added, “With a majority of Americans favoring peace and good-will to all, there will be a strong minority constantly probing the wound and arousing old enmities. Let us, nevertheless, welcome reconciliation upon a fair basis, for the sake of humanity and all that is dear to us, but remain steadfast to principle. Obey the law, and make as good citizens as we proved soldiers.”

  An often unspoken modern reality is that any historical character who was in any way associated with slavery—whether a slave owner or not—or even affiliated with any past Federal or State government that recognized the institution of slavery, is now a target of derision and scorn. After the war Hood spoke of the subject of race and was a vocal advocate of the newly won rights of African-Americans. Hood advocated integration of African-Americans, and urged the rejection of racism, imploring Southerners, “To frown upon all such organizations – if they indeed exist – as that of Ku-Klux; encourage the education of the black man, wean him from those who would instill into his mind distrust and resentment, and make him our friend – for he has become an element of power, and we can ill afford to foster such an enemy in our midst.”

  After the war, Hood was imminently respected by his former adversaries, most prominently General William T. Sherman, who defeated Hood’s army at Atlanta and in Tennessee in 1864. Hood and Sherman—who served as U.S. Army General-in-Chief from 1869-1883—became close friends after the war. Sherman visited Hood’s home in New Orleans in 1878, and Hood visited Sherman in Washington D.C. in February 1879. While there Sherman introduced Hood to President Rutherford B. Hayes (himself a former Union soldier), Vice President William A. Wheeler, Secretary of War George W. McCray, and Supreme Court Chief Justice Morrison Waite. Sherman’s respect for his former enemy John Bell Hood should be sufficient testimony to Hood’s character

Hood was also a man of deep faith, stating “The foot-prints of God upon earth are not the work purely of man. The almighty King of Kings controls and shapes the destinies of nations; and if, as a people, we seek to follow His word and truth, remembering that the end of man is an action and not a thought and that will is the measure of power, He will bless our efforts with prosperity, and bring unto us once more, hope, joy, and peace.”

  The U.S. Army named Fort Hood in his honor. Other institutions and landmarks are named in Hood’s honor in several states. Before his name is removed and replaced from public places, those in authority and positions of influence should educate themselves about John Bell Hood, the man, soldier, and citizen, and do likewise for other former Confederates. Modern critics should also pray that their own beliefs and deeds are not judged by standards of society 150 years from today.

  Stephen M. “Sam” Hood

 Author of John Bell Hood: The Rise, Fall, and Resurrection of a Confederate General (Savas Beatie LLC, 2013); The Lost Papers of Confederate General John Bell Hood (Savas Beatie LLC, 2015); and Patriots Twice: Former Confederates and the Building of America after the Civil War(Savas Beatie LLC, 2020) https://tinyurl.com/r4tumyt

 


Monday, June 22, 2020

Birthday party weekend

69º with heavy overcast - almost misting now at 9:30 am on Monday Forecast is for 30% chance of showers -- have had lots of forecasts for rain, but they have mostly gone around us for the last week or so. Click on photos to enlarge.

At left - Jessica was a little somber when she ran out to greet us.
















On Saturday we drove east to Marengo, IA to be at a Birthday Party for great granddaughter Jessica. Her actual fourth birthday is on Tuesday, the 23rd, but the weekend was best for the get together. All of her dad's siblings and partners were there as well as Heath's dad and mom, and her mothers's mother.
Jessica's mom' sister, parents and us were there for that side of the family.

Heath BBQ'd hot dogs and hamburgers and, with a lot of other dishes, we ate outside and had opening of gifts until a shower was heading our way and then finished up in the house.

Lot of gifts, and lot of
tearing of the gift wrapping.
Jessica was excited about each
and every gift.

Her sun glasses from GmGrt Miles


Quite a cake! And,
Jessica was very happy with it.












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As we were getting ready to leave Sunday morning, Jessica modeled
here new cap and dress.

This little imp is cute, but damages a lot of
flowers on our back deck.

Hard to see in this photo, but
I planted 2 Norway Spruce in
milk jugs (with bottoms cut out)
"over the hump" behind the
hedge in our back yard.
These 2 plants are getting taller,
and setting on tomatoes!


This tomato plant, actually planted in the dirt,
doesn't seem to want to grow as fast.


Phyllis sewing on quilt stuff






























When got home Sunday found that neighbor Jan, to the east, had had tree trimming done.

Some pretty good sized limbs. Since she hasn't spoken to us since we arrived first of May, though, doubt she will say anything about it. The tree is huge and appears split in the main trunk. Have worried that it will end up on top of my metal building sometime.





Sometimes you have thoughts of events in the past--but 70 years past? I was deciding whether to have my glasses looked at for some problems with one lens when it reminded me of the first day I every wore glasses. I was 7 years old at the time. Picked up from eye-doctor on the west side of the square in Broken Bow, Nebraska. They were the pink plastic rimmed glasses. When we were on the street Mom asked me "What in the world are you doing?". I had my right foot about 2 feet in the air (even higher seeming, considering I wasn't too tall at the time) and was trying to get up on the street curb. I had, and still have, astigmatism and with the correction of the glasses, things were all askew and the curb seemed really, really high.

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* If any of you have ever been to a military funeral in which taps was played; this brings out a new meaning of it.
Here is something Every American should know. Until I read this, I didn't know, but I checked it out and it's true:
We in the United States have all heard the haunting song, 'Taps...' It's the song that gives us the lump in our throats and usually tears in our eyes.
But, do you know the story behind the song? If not, I think you will be interested to find out about its humble beginnings.
Reportedly, it all began in 1862 during the Civil War, when Union Army Captain Robert Elli was with his men near Harrison's Landing in Virginia. The Confederate Army was on the other side of the narrow strip of land.
During the night, Captain Elli heard the moans of a soldier who lay severely wounded on the field. Not knowing if it was a Union or Confederate soldier, the Captain decided to risk his life and bring the stricken man back for medical attention. Crawling on his stomach through the gunfire, the Captain reached the stricken soldier and began pulling him toward his encampment..
When the Captain finally reached his own lines, he discovered it was actually a Confederate soldier, but the soldier was dead.
The Captain lit a lantern and suddenly caught his breath and went numb with shock. In the dim light, he saw the face of the soldier. It was his own son. The boy had been studying music in the South when the war broke out.. Without telling his father, the boy enlisted in the Confederate Army.
The following morning, heartbroken, the father asked permission of his superiors to give his son a full military burial, despite his enemy status. His request was only partially granted.
The Captain had asked if he could have a group of Army band members play a funeral dirge for his son at the funeral.
The request was turned down since the soldier was a Confederate.
But, out of respect for the father, they did say they could give him only one musician.
The Captain chose a bugler. He asked the bugler to play a series of musical notes he had found on a piece of paper in the pocket of the dead youth's uniform.
This wish was granted.
The haunting melody, we now know as 'Taps' used at military funerals was born.
The words are:
Day is done.
Gone the sun.
From the lakes
From the hills.
From the sky.
All is well.
Safely rest.
God is nigh.
Fading light.
Dims the sight.
And a star.
Gems the sky.
Gleaming bright.
From afar.
Drawing nigh.
Falls the night.
Thanks and praise.
For our days.
Neath the sun
Neath the stars.
Neath the sky
As we go.
This we know.
God is nigh
I too have felt the chills while listening to 'Taps' but I have never seen all the words to the song until now. I didn't even know there was more than one verse . I also never knew the story behind the song and I didn't know if you had either so I thought I'd pass it along.
I now have an even deeper respect for the song than I did before.
Remember Those Lost and Harmed While Serving Their Country.
Also Remember Those Who Have Served And Returned; and for those presently serving in the Armed Forces.

Later, Lynn

"Paint" by numbers - on the smartphone

 Recent weeks I got into several apps of paint by numbers and Phyllis also picked up on it.  Our phones are tied together, so saved pictures...