SPORTS
'N OTHER STUFF
Dear Family,
When the snow began to melt and the birds started chirping it was time to
get out the old baseball glove, wipe it off, and give it a good coat of neats-foot oil,
and to check over the fishing tackle. My best fishing buddy was DeVane Smith, called "Smitty" of
course, who was in my school class and lived just across the street in the second house
east of Dr. Curtis. Smitty and I usually kicked off the fishing season on Good Friday.
School was closed, the stores shut down for a decent interval in the afternoon in favor of
church services, but we went fishing. And never on all those Good Fridays did we catch a
fish. I remember one year when we hied ourselves up to the paper mill pond only to find
that it was still frozen over. We walked on the ice all the way to the upper end where the
river entered before we found open water. Smitty backed up and, in turning around, knocked
the worm can off into about three feet of ice melt. I had a choice of watching him fish or
going in after it. I think that was the earliest that I ever went swimming. Sometimes we
fished in the south branch of the Chagrin River just outside of town (the south branch was
clean, the north branch that went through town was odorous and turgid). But mostly we
fished in the paper mill pond. In time we figured that not only were we expert anglers
with our cane poles but also that we knew every fish in the pond, his first name and home
address. So, of course, we got our comeuppance. One day two city slickers came along
wheedling fly rods, and proceeded to take a half dozen fish out from under our noses, fish
that we didn't even know were there. We
waited
until they moved on, then rolled up our lines, went home, and didn't come back until we had each managed to get a fly
rod.
Baseball and softball, interchangeably, started early also and continued
all through the spring and summer. This was all pick-up ball, needing only three or more
kids, and some could be girls, and a flat piece of land. We played in the school yard at
noon, and in our side yard, thereby sacrificing a few window panes, on Uncle Charlie
Burnett's land back of May Court, and just
about
anywhere. Between the ends of May Court and Elm Court was a two-to-three acre parcel of
land, flat and almost devoid of vegetation called "The
Flats" and on it were two softball diamonds
built by and for the village men's softball
league. We used those, too, but we never got to play on their teams. That was for young, and
some not so young, adults, and teenage boys were not welcome. There was a baseball diamond
in a natural amphitheater just south of town, and usually a town baseball team that played
on Sunday afternoons, provided they could raise enough money by passing the hat. Later
there were more diamonds built by the WPA up on the old Fairgrounds.
One year when I was, I think, seventeen, I caught on with the town
baseball team as second string catcher. We won our league and were invited to a postseason
tournament at Wakeman, Ohio, near Sandusky. That was the first time any of us had seen
baseball played under lights. Our pitcher was "Tommy" Thompson, a compactly-built, tough-as-hickory
twenty-two-year-old who worked on the railroad section gang and threw nothing but fast
balls. It was the only pitch he had. Under those somewhat primitive lights the batters
couldn't even see his pitches, and the more
strikeouts he racked up the harder he threw. Steve Cseh was catching. After one inning he
put a sponge in his mitt, after two innings he sent out for a slab of the toughest beef
the butcher had, and at the end of the game he had a mitt full of hamburger. We won the
tournament and were invited to another, a semi-pro tournament at Mansfield, but not enough
of our players had time to go.
Our high school baseball was a sometimes thing. If a male teacher could be
found who was willing and able to volunteer as coach, and the school board could afford
equipment, there was a team, but most years there was not. We had one designated coach on
the high school faculty, Mr. Ted Gurney who coached football, basketball, and track,
taught math, and served as assistant principal. He said that was enough. The only
organized sport for girls was high school basketball, and that was also a sometimes thing,
and for the same reason. First, they had to find a woman teacher to coach. Girls
basketball in those days was really three-on-three. Each team put the standard five
players on the floor, but only the center was allowed to play both ends. The two guards
had to stay in the back court, the two forwards in the front court.
We lived in a small town and we had a small school. There were thirty-one
kids in my graduating class, thirty-three in my brother's.
Everybody that wanted to play football was automatically on the team. Those lacking the
requisite ability at least were given a jersey and allowed to sit on the bench during
games. The coach handed out equipment as far as it went; helmets, shoulder pads, jerseys,
and pants. The helmets and shoulder pads were soft leather, although later on we got some
of molded leather, the jerseys were of several colors, and the pants were canvas with
insertable thigh pads. Players furnished their own shoes, or, if they couldn't afford cleats, either played in their street shoes
or borrowed from someone who probably wouldn't
get in the game anyway. Protective gear was not required and there were always a few macho
types that scorned helmets. The substitution rule at that time limited the number that got
into the game: any player removed for a substitute could not reenter until the following
quarter. Upon entering the game, the player reported to the referee (there was only one
official) who wrote his name, number, and position in a little notebook, and noted the
name of the player he replaced. Another rule long gone prohibited the coach from
communicating with the players on the field by voice or sign or gesture, including during
timeouts and between quarters. Even walking up and down in front of the bench was regarded
with suspicion and might draw a ten or fifteen yard penalty.
Football games were played on Friday afternoon after school, a full day of
school. Spectating were such students and teachers as were willing to trudge the mile
uphill to the Fairgrounds, and a few dedicated parents. We didn't have a band (although we did have a small
orchestra) but we did have cheer leaders. Playing games away from home involved another
element, transportation. Our school owned one or two buses but they were not to be used
for extracurricular activities. Transport was by private cars driven by willing mothers,
and since some games were played as far away as Dover (now Westlake) and Bay Village, this
was no small commitment. Mother was usually agreeable to helping out and I well remember
being squeezed into our family sedan with four or five muddy, sweaty, football players. In
the fall of 1934 when I was in the tenth grade we had, in talent, experience, and depth,
the best football team our school had had for years, but that team didn't win a game, in fact did not score a single point
for the whole season. Our coach went right out of his mind, even painted some footballs
white so we could practice by moonlight. We played the two co-championship teams to
scoreless ties and everyone else beat us. Our high school yearbook that year listed only
the schedule and nary a word about the outcome.
High school basketball had the same rules on substitutes and sideline
coaching as did football, and the same transportation problems only, of course, there were
fewer players. I was for four years a student manager, as was my brother before me. In the
ninth and tenth grade years that meant being essentially a "gofer." In
the eleventh grade year the manager was also the official scorer, wore a shirt, tie, and
sweater to games, sat at the scorers table and kept the official score book, together with
his opposite number from the other team. In the twelfth year, I was the official timer and
kept the official stop watch. As senior manager I was also regularly drafted to referee
scrimmages and practice games. I didn't like
that much, though, some kid bigger than I as always threatening to knock my head off when
a call went against him.
We played pickup football, of course, whenever enough like-minded boys
got
together on a vacant lot, but with the game being physical those contests usually ended up
in fights. And we played pickup basketball. The Federated Church had a full-sized gym set
up for basketball and we were free to play there anytime. Al and Don Jones' family had a barn with a suitable loft and so did
Julian Cary's. At times we just nailed a hoop
to
the side of the barn and shot baskets from the driveway. My athleticism was, to be honest,
somewhat wishful thinking, but I tried anyway. Following my bout with diphtheria when I
was six, and whether from that or preceding childhood diseases or whatever, I was pretty
weak and puny. Recovering from the diphtheria I needed supports on both ankles just to
stand up and walk. These resembled canvas shoes with the toes and heels cut out that laced
up the front and had vertical pockets on the sides for whale boned stays. When I went back
to school and for the next few years I was not allowed to participate in gym classes or
the rough and tumble activities of growing boys. Of course that simply whetted my desire
to be like the other kids, and I tried hard to build up strength. I remember Mother taking
me up to the pond on the Little Farm and patiently holding me up as I wobbled around on a
pair of iceskates tightly clamped to my shoes. I think it was during this period that I
learned to enjoy reading books, to be content with my own company if that was all I had. I
walked and practiced running and as I grew gradually stronger began following the other
kids around as long as I could keep up, but I never had the strength and stamina to really
compete and besides I kept spraining my ankles.
There was a world of things to do. We had the whole village to explore. We
had rivers and lakes and ponds and creeks. We had meadows and fields and pastures and
woods, and a rail road track to walk along. All that property clearly belonged to someone
but we never gave that a thought, and we never asked permission. Nor do I remember ever
being ordered off. Well, it was a small town and well settled. Most folks had lived there
for years, some families for generations, and everybody knew everybody else or at least
knew who they were. Complaints about kids, whether by citizens, police, or school
authorities, were filed directly with parents, and there was no escaping that jurisdiction
nor was there any appeal. We roamed the whole scene subject to the two cardinal rules -
stay out of trouble and come home when the paper mill whistle blows.
March's pasture was a
favorite
area. Actually there was a pasture and meadow that lay between May Court and the railroad
tracks, and between the Flats and the houses on the south side of Washington Street. The
March family lived there on the south side of Washington just opposite the end of
Philomathian Street. They had two sons, George, who was a year older than I and John, who
was a year younger, but they went to private schools and didn't mingle much with the village lads. Here there
were
hills to climb up and slide down, a creek, willow trees whose branches we whittled for
bows and arrows, and a pile of abandonded fence rails from which we built a cabin with a
secret door. Willow didn't make the best
bows,
it lost its springiness pretty quickly, about the same time that our interest ran out. In
the creek we built dams and sailed stick boats, caught minnows and crawdads (and let them
go), and had water fights. Late in the fall we would dam the creek and divert the flow
through a shallow ditch across the meadow and down onto The Flats to flood the whole two
or three acres to a depth of about two feet for ice skating. We had to be careful to stop
the flow before the water began running down the pavement on May Court though, because
that made the homeowners there kind of nervous. In the pasture were kept two brown-spotted
white ponies. The March boys didn't pay
much
attention to them, but the Lumme kids did. The Lummes were a wild bunch of tow-headed
Finns who lived just south of town. They would come down the railroad tracks at night,
catch the ponies, rig rope bridles, and ride them bareback. First thing they did was teach
the ponies to jump the fence and then they rode all over parts of two counties to turn
them back into the pasture, muddy, sweaty, and exhausted. I don't know if the Marches ever caught on, but after
awhile the ponies were gone.
As we roamed the village we often stopped to watch men at work. Heading
for the paper mill pond to swim or fish we would look in at old Mr. Kermode's blacksmith shop and watch him ply his trade
despite
having only one arm. (Our town also boasted a one-eyed barber and a one-legged automobile
dealer.) If we went up the north side of the pond we probably walked through the paper
mill yard and gaped at the piles of old cordage and paper waiting to be recycled.
Diagonally behind our house on the corner of May Court and South Main Street was the
Sheffield Monument Works where we played among the blocks of granite and marble and
sandstone displayed for sale, and looked in the shop where the two stonecutters cut,
polished, and engraved tombstones and cemetery markers. One was Mr. Alley Gordon who was
related to Mrs. Sheffield and lived next door. The other was a Mr. Venchiarutti, an
Italian immigrant who lived up on American Street with his wife and seven or eight
children. Their four oldest daughters were slender, dark-haired and dark-eyed, the
prettiest girls in town. Their only son, Henry called "Hank" was chunky, blond and blue-eyed. He was the
fullback
on our football team, and we clerked together at Fisher Brothers Grocery. I liked Hank,
most everyone did, and we never understood why, one cold winter's night, he walked alone all the way up to
Whitesburg
Pond and out on the boat dock and off the end and drowned, and never left a clue.
Up next to the railroad tracks, the Rowe & Giles Lumber Company
had a
plant where concrete blocks were made and stocked for sale. The sole employee, a Mr.
Werner Stahlder, didn't mind at all if boys
stopped to watch him at work. We would climb up into the towers where sand and cement were
fed to the mixers below, then come down to watch the blocks being cast, stacked on little
trams, and moved into steam-heated tunnels for curing. Just across the street was one of
our two feed mills, and we would wander in there to watch grain being ground and bagged.
Sometime during the summer we would decide to go into pigeon raising. The Green twins,
Bill and Bob, who lived at the end of Elm Court just above The Flats, had a barn with a
suitable loft so all we needed were pigeons and that was easily arranged. We trapped them
up on the feed mill roof. We would set an orange crate upside down, prop up one end with a
stick, tie a string to the stick, and thread the other end with kernels of corn. It never
failed. The Greens' loft had nest sites among
the rafters, and as long as food and water were provided the pigeons stayed on. When we
tired of the project and stopped feeing them, they all flew back to the mill.
We also looked in regularly at both the Chevrolet garage and the Buick
garage, watched the mechanics at work, gazed with awe at disassembled engines and asked
all kinds of questions. And we never failed to inspect the discarded junk out back for
possible treasures. Boys then, as boys now, were fascinated with automobiles and dreamed
of having one of their own. A boy's first car
was almost always a Model T Ford, recently fallen from popularity and usually available at
a junk yard for about ten dollars. The purchase price took all the available cash, so next
was to go back to the junk man and swap for pieces and parts to get it running, When the
car was running, the next small problem was the lack of license plates and insurance, so
most of the driving was done in the fields and back lots. The Green twins got a Model T
which they drove around the Flats and up through March's
pasture. My fishing buddy, DeVane Smith, came up with one but, having no direct access to
the back lots, mounted out-of-date plates, smeared them with mud, and skulked through the
back streets. The police knew about it, but they didn't
hassle him. Bob Cathan, brother of my hunting buddy Tommy Cathan, was given a Model T by
his father in payment for painting their house, but Bob spent so much time working on the
car that the house didn't get finished and his
dad took the car back and sold it. My first car was a 1934 Ford Cabriolet (a roadster with
a rumble seat) that I bought during my senior year in college. I paid one hundred and
twenty five dollars and financed it.
As you may have inferred from previous installments (if you have been
paying attention), guns played a large part in our growing up. Dad was the finest marksman
in our part of the country, both at hunting and at target shooting. In the 1920's, his
forte was trap shooting (formalized shooting at thrown clay pigeons but not to be confused
with skeet). In 1927, he tied for third place in the national trap shooting championship
The Grand American Handicap, held then as now at Vandalia, Ohio, and lost in a double
shoot-off. He might have done better had he not broken a firing pin and finished the match
with a borrowed shotgun. He was invited to turn professional and go around the country
giving shooting exhibitions but he turned the offers down and came home to his job and
family. Sometime around 1930 the cost of shotgun shells rose substantially, the Great
Depression bit deep, and trap shooting was no longer affordable. Dad and many of the
others in our local gun club turned to small-bore rifle shooting, punching holes in paper
targets with .22 caliber match rifles. They organized The Chagrin Falls Rifle & Pistol
Club, built an outdoor range with a club house that was usable all year, and a smaller
indoor range in the basement of an old factory. We built an outdoor range for our family
up at the Little Farm, and Dad set up an indoor range in the basement of The Brewster
& Church Co., where he worked. We all shot, including Mother, and between practicing,
intra-club matches both formal and informal, and inter-club matches all around
northeastern Ohio, we were firing somewhere at least once a week.
Once dad was convinced that my brother and I could and would handle
guns
responsibly, treat them with due respect, and keep them clean and oiled, we were free to
use them anytime. Rifles and shotguns were stacked against the wall in my parents' bedroom off the living room, ammunition was
kept in
a drawer in the sideboard in the dining room. Many afternoons I would come home from
school, grab a sandwich, change my clothes, pick up a gun and head "up back." During hunting season I would probably choose a .410 gauge shotgun, outside of hunting
season it would most likely be a single-shot .22 caliber rifle with open sights. Just
about every boy in town owned a .22 rifle, and had access to a shotgun, and boys walking
through town carrying guns (unloaded of course) were a common sight and no cause for
concern. We might walk along the railroad track and plink at tin cans, we might not shoot
at all, but we never shot indiscriminately and never, ever, at each other. In fact, I
cannot recall a single case of a person being shot, accidentally or otherwise.
Dad, and my brother, and I hunted together when we could, usually on
holidays. On Saturdays I might go hunting with Tommy Cathan, or "Archie"
Shanower, or John Harvey. My most faithful hunting companion, though, was Branigan, a dog of uncertain ancestry belonging to my Richardson cousins. He had the size and build
of a bulldog with the coat and color of a Labrador and the ears and tail of a spaniel,
sort of. I would whistle as I crossed the Flats near the Richardson's house on Elm Court (they lived next to the the
Green twins) and old Branny would come running. My cousins said that if he was in the
house he would still hear me whistle and demand to be let out. We would tramp to the
fields and woods, and heading home he would shear off as we crossed the Flats with never a
backward look. One year, I think it was 1932 or '33,
we spent to the entire fall and winter hunting cats, with to the blessing of the
conservationists. The woods were full, literally, of cats dumped by people that couldn't or wouldn't
keep them any longer, and wild game totally disappeared. The cats quickly turned feral and
became dirty, ragged, and fierce. There were so many that our Chagrin Valley Fish &
Game Association staged contests with a prize for the hunter that brought in the most cat
tails; a contest won by Mr. Earl Silsby who was part-time constable in Geauga County and
drove the back roads at night.
After the cat problem was more or less settled, attention turned to what
was considered to be an overabundance of foxes and we spent a couple of winters
participating in fox drives. Folks, all kind of folks, would gather early Saturday morning
at a designated country school or crossroad, and from there we would be distributed by
trucks along the roads on all four sides of a two-or three mile square block of farm land.
Guns were not allowed but nearly everyone carried a stick of some kind. At the starting
signal, a siren or dynamite blast, we could all begin walking inward, whooping and
hollering and whacking the bushes with our sticks. When we reached the center there would
be a ring of people maybe three-deep, and the foxes would be inside the ring. There they
would be run down and bagged in burlap sacks. People always said that the foxes would be
taken to a zoo, but I strongly suspect that their pelts ended up hanging in someone's shed. One Saturday we, that is my brother I and
Mr.
Willard Stoneman, took part in one drive in the morning that bagged six foxes, paused for
some lunch at a truck stop, and participated in another driven in the afternoon on an
adjacent block of land that netted two or three more. Mr. Willard Stoneman was a coal
dealer and local trucker whose brother, Mr. Roy Stoneman, was half -owner of the Buick
agency. My brother sometimes worked with him delivering coal and gravel and such. Now Mr.
Willard Stoneman was smaller than my brother but was probably the strongest man I've ever seen. A favorite Saturday evening trick was
to bet some city slicker that little old Willard here could pick up the back end of a
half-ton pickup truck, clear off the ground. He could and he could also pick up a front
quarter of the same truck. Our Chagrin Valley Fish & Game Association one time staged
a little different kind of fox drive. The plan was to drive three sides of the block, and
man the fourth side with selected marksman armed with shotguns who would shoot the foxes
as they ran past. It almost worked. Mr. Walter Lenhart who was Association president
appointed himself one of the guns and selected a position in the middle of the line where
a shock of corn stalks standing in the field would give him cover. We knew we were driving
foxes ahead of us, we saw their tracks in the snow, but we heard no shots. When we came up
to the gun line, all became clear. Mr. Lenhart, comfy in his corn shock blind, had dozed
off and the foxes had trotted by unscathed. He never did live that down.
Winter also brought trapping season. A lot of the boys trapped but it was
never one of my favorite pursuits. We had a good assortment of Victor steel traps out in
the barn, and a large collection of skinning boards for stretching pelts ranging in size
from small ones for weasels to large ones for fox. Incidentally, those old skinning boards
are now collectable folk art (see Smithsonian magazine for February, 1996, pages
42-44.) I just didn't like getting up at 5:00
AM
to tramp two or three miles through the cold and dark checking traps, and you had to check
them every day. About the coldest thing I remember was breaking the ice on a swamp and
reaching into the water bare-handed to check muskrat traps. Besides, trapping didn't pay all that well; possum skins sold for, I think,
a quarter, weasels for maybe twice that, and muskrats for maybe seventy-five cents. Skunks
were worth more depending on the color, but there was always the risk of being sprayed
with scent. We all knew ways of avoiding that, but I don't
think any of them really worked, and our school all winter long smelled faintly of skunk,
mixed with the aroma of wet wool and drying leather.
More fun by far was sledding, skiing, and ice skating. We had all sizes of
hills, and close at hand. In Mrs. Emma Button's
yard next door was a hill maybe six feet high from her back porch down to her driveway,
just right for toddlers. The next house east had one about twice as high. Across the
street in Dr. Curtis' side yard was one that
dropped some eighteen or twenty feet, and behind May Court was the Big Hill. With a good
icy, surface you could come down that one a mile a minute, bounce all the way across to
the flat and end up in the creek behind May Court. There was a good-sized hill in the Ober's back yard on South Main Street and another in
cousin Warren Smith's yard on Bellvue
Street. We
had Flexible Flyers, just like yours, and used them wherever the kids gathered and the
snow was good. We had skis, too. Yes, Janine, real store-bought wood skis that were just
like the skis today with one significant difference. Our skis had foot-to-ski attachments
consisting of a simple toe strap, no bindings or ski boots. You aimed the skis where you
wanted to the go, stuck your toes in the straps, and pushed off. They worked fairly well
skiing cross-county, but going downhill could present a problem. It was almost impossible
to change direction. If you found yourself heading for someplace you would rather not go,
like into a thorn bush or a rusty wire fence, you could either fall down, which carried
certain risks, or jump off, and hope you didn't
fall down anyway, and then pursue the skis on foot to wherever they finally stopped. A few
of the kids had toboggans. My brother and I built one from a long plank and a cheese box
but it didn't work very well. With good snow
on
a Sunday afternoon, we would be out of the house right after dinner, grab skis or sled,
and head "up back" whistling for the other kids as we went. The
Green
twins would come out and Dick Ricker and maybe some others. My Richardson cousins would
show up and maybe their neighbor Esther Schultz. Someone would bring a toboggan, and we
would all head for the really big hills behind the old Fairgrounds. We would use one hill,
then move to another, and another, usually ending up at some shallow caves in a ravine on
the east end of Mr. Clayton Ober's sugar
bush.
There we would build a big fire and sit around trying to thaw out and dry out before
finally heading home. When the snow was deep we went sledding or skiing, when it was thick
on the ground we skated. The Flats that we had flooded made a marvelous skating rink that
had an advantage over the other sites. Being only a couple of feet deep there was no
danger of drowning and we could skate there before the ice was thick enough to be safe.
When you broke through, which we did, you simply grabbed your boots and high-tailed for
home as fast as you could with skates on your feet. Kids came from all over town to skate
there, and sometimes adults, too. We didn't
skate very much on the paper mill pond, it was a little too big and too deep. Just east of
the railroad yard, the state fish hatchery kept one of their ponds filled all winter. It
was just the right size and shape for hockey, and play hockey we did. If it became
cluttered with girls and little kids, we would hike about a mile south along the railroad
to Gardner's Pond tucked away in the wood,
and
they never followed us there.
When the ice melted on The Flats, we had raft fights. The softball league
placed old telephone poles alongside the diamonds to provide seats for spectators and
players alike. Those poles floated, of course, so we would tie two or three together, cut
push poles, and ram away until we all got so wet we had to go home. There were as I said,
lots of things for boys to do. Even a rainy day was not necessarily a bummer. We had
raincoats and rainhats and rubber boots; puddles were made for wading and flowing gutters
for research into hydraulics and flood control. Simple pleasures? Yes, they were.
Love,
Dad
RETURN TO MAIN PAGE