I sought out a backroad short cut once on a way to my
cousins’ house in Van Buren many years ago. Highway 19 was my link between
Rochester and Wabash, but when it said go right, I went left, following across
county roads. With another turn, my path took me through Stockdale and Roann.
This is a path I’ve continued to take these many 30 years later, and it always
puts a smile on my face. Memories abound on this little shortcut.
My initial journey of discovery, that left turn instead of
right, took me straight past an orange-colored brick 19th century
church, abandoned, at the edge of a hillside graveyard. The building looked
sad, but inviting. Those arched windows of wavy glass pointed at their tops to
the heavens, as if to be continuing some lost sermon when the doors closed for
the last time. I wasn’t looking for anything particular on that drive, but here
was something of note that presented itself to me. So, I pulled over and turned
onto the dirt drive of two ribbons worn by tires, crowned by a long ribbon of
grass down the center. I drove slowly, to be certain not to bump any stones of
the departed, and in so-doing, read the names of pioneers. And then I read
those of my own ancestors. And it stopped me, literally, in my tracks. I knew
ancestors were in this region, and there they were.
This made me made me a believer in genetic memory, a term I
coined, which is a memory, or sense of place, that is passed down through
genes. As if my ancestors were directing my path from the left turn, to this
place. Even recently, on taking the right turn, then right again, did I find my
great, times four, grandfather’s house at a point where three counties come
together…and it appears just as it does in an early engraver’s print in a Miami
County history book.
This part of the state is the hearth of the Brethren
denomination. Jonathan Swihart, the ancestor I stumbled across by going left,
and his two brothers were the first ministers to bring the Brethren church
across the border from Ohio to Indiana, and it was here they settled, though
one, Mathias, continued northward and founded the first Brethren church in
Marshall County, now Walnut Church of the Brethren. Jonathan’s son, Aaron,
married Mary Myers, who grew up in the house found in the engraving. Aaron also
continued on to Marshall County and ascended in the Brethren church, becoming a
leader of the church in the Great Lakes Region. And it was Aaron, who was
accidentally shot by his son while on an expedition to establish a Brethren
colony in Michigan. Elder Aaron exclaimed “I am worse hurt than you” as he
dropped to the ground with a head convulsion. His body was brought back to
Marshall County aboard a train.
Leaving the little orange brick church and further down the
shortcut, I came upon an old mill, the Stockdale Mill, as I rounded a corner to
turn back east. It was built between 1855 and 1857, and remained in operation
until 1964. It was restored in 2002. Then a mile from there, I went through Roann,
graced on its northern edge by a covered bridge spanning the Eel River. So with
great regularity, as my work took me to Wabash and points south, I would take
this picturesque shortcut over and over again. While still my fiancé, I took my
wife, who packed a small basket, to picnic at the little public parking area
looking back at the mill on the north side of the river. It was just as
charming as I recalled 10 years prior.
Once while passing through, I noted a sign announcing Roann’s
fall festival was scheduled for a weekend in 2007. My wife was to be gone that
weekend, and I thought it would be a good distraction for our two little kids,
so I asked if they wanted to go to a small fair. They did, so we did. Now, I don't
want to seem to be picking on this little town, but, talk about a small town
festival! There were four or five food booths set up on main street and about
the same number of craft booths. I will admit, I was impressed with the
enormous turn-out for the mud volley ball tournament and tractor pull. Tractor
pulls are done right, here in the Hoosier state. But, it was the carnival
rides that the kids wanted to experience. Their eyes both immediately landed on
this streamlined mini train.......which, I could imagine my dad riding in the
1940's. I paid the outrageous sum for the two kids to climb into the engine and
second car. The carny sounded the whistle, which appeared to be a siren
scavenged from another ride, and off they went. They had the train all to
themselves.
While I was waiting for the kids to finish their
adventure, the carny struck up a conversation with me about where the rides
were going next in Indiana, then their circuit through the Michigan festivals
and how they should be done by the end of October. Then he gave me the low-down
on what had happened at the festival the night before and how he and two of his
buddies "went lookin' for a troublesome young buck" who threatened a
girl with a knife. Having nothing more to say to him, than "hmmm,
wow." he continued to tell his great tale of finding the kid in the alley
and threatened to drag his sorry butt (I cleaned this up) to the sheriff and
they'd give him "a good beatin'". Hmmm....wow. I said again.
Meanwhile, I had noticed the kids' adventure
seemed to be declining, the magic had now gone from their eyes-I mean, it had
been about 10 minutes at this point going in circles. The carny noticed this
too, so he thought to reignite the joy by sounding the siren again. He turned
to me and continued his fantastic tale from the dark alleys of this town of
about 600 Hoosiers. Soon I began to feel
a little sorry for the troublesome buck. I'm not so sure that I'd want to have
a run-in with three carnys in a dark alley-although I saw no sign of the
bearded woman or yak girl in and among the carnival grounds. I did notice that
my little girl had her arms stretched out wanting out of the little train. My
son sat with his chin in his hands-at this point the carny rung the little bell
on the front of the engine and said "whoo who!" Finally, the carny's story ended. And so did the magic
train ride........about 12 minutes, I'd guess. The next little girl got on, her
ride lasted about 2 minutes.
A few years later, in 2011, I was asked to complete a project
for the little village of Roann. Roann was originally platted in 1853 by Joseph
Beckner. The small village was a rival to a nearby Stockdale, which had
been settled in 1839 and had the advantage of a functioning mill on the
river. Beckner, himself an early settler, owned 600 acres of land
between the south edge of the Eel River to about one mile south of present day Roann. He
established a tavern along an American Indian trail near the south edge of his
property. A town in the vicinity of Roann had been proposed for some
time prior to the plat due to the location of a bridge over the Eel River in
the same area. When the Detroit, Eel River, and Illinois Railroad
was projected to come through the area, Beckner seized the opportunity to
establish the town on his land between the river and the proposed railroad. The
most valid story on the origins of the name for the community is from the name
of a young woman who worked at Beckner’s tavern and Beckner’s
daughter. Both girls’ names were Ann; the worker’s last name was
Roe.
The covered bridge, a Howe Truss design, was built in 1877 to
span the Eel River and provide better access to the new village of Roann. It
was listed on the National Register in 1981 and less than 10 years later,
suffered an arsonist’s fire. It was quickly rehabbed and is one of few covered
bridges remaining in northern Indiana. It played host to a dinner of assembled
preservationists a few years back, and despite the cold spring evening, was
still quite stunning.
Having gained some appreciation for the village, and
fulfilling a desire to experience another Indiana river in a kayak, I talked
some guys into floating a stretch of the Eel from near Laketon to Stockdale,
gliding under the covered bridge which sounded as though it was hosting a
wedding party that afternoon. We finished our float at that public parking site
opposite the Stockdale Mill, but one guy, soaking wet from disembarking from
his kayak, needed to change before he drove his truck back to the put-in site.
Taking a long look around, he dropped the rest of his clothes to put on dry
shorts, and I leaned over in the truck, which he was using as a partial blind,
and blew the horn just to announce to the folks visiting the mill, that my
buddy was baring it all in the parking lot. It’s not that he wasn’t agile, but
blowing the horn caused him to be more hurried and his toe caught the waistband
of his underwear and down he went.
This shortcut also took me past my grandpa’s sister’s home
east of Rochester. As grandad got older and drove less and less, he would ask
if I could take him on a drive to visit his sister, so I knew this path well.
After grandma died, gramps remarried a woman who had been single most of her
life. She was as set in her ways as grandpa was. And grandpa wasn’t about to
let her drive her compact car to his funeral, so he went out and bought her the
largest Ford manufactured at that time. She hated driving it, and went and
bought herself a new compact car. Therefore, the Ford sat in the garage….a
garage he built to house it….and it became known as the funeral car. The two of
them decided each was too set in their ways, so they parted theirs, but the
funeral car remained in the garage. Except for times when gramps wanted me to
take him to his sister’s house. Once in their conversation, his sister
mentioned that someone, recently, had written her name on a bathroom stall door
“for a good time call.” Given that gramps was given to story-telling, a trait I
got from him, I assumed this was an embellished story. At least I hope it was.
Once I put grandpa and his sister in the car and drove to the nearby one-room
brick Prill School, named for their great grandad. They enjoyed that, and I
have a great picture of them standing outside of it with my dad, his brother
and my cousin.
Both the Prills and Garners are buried along this stretch of
road, just outside the little burg of Athens. My great grandad, times three,
rests beneath an old cedar tree in the center of Hoover Cemetery. Often, not
always, but often I’ll pull the truck into the cemetery to pay respect to this
old veteran of the civil war who late in life got around by walking with two
canes. He’s yet to talk back to me, but I leave informed all the same. Life is
short. We forget that, I think, in our daily toils of life. It wasn’t that long
ago I was making the trips to Rochester with gramps. He probably thought the
same when visiting his grandad in the same town. And probably his grandad
thought the same when visiting his grandad outside Athens.
Athens was known as Hoover Station until 1896 when it was
renamed for the ancient Greek city. The cemetery still carries the Hoover name,
and named for the first white settlers in the region. The Hoovers were Quakers
who came up from Tippecanoe County and established a mill on the east end of
Lake Manitou, and founded Hoover Station when the railroad came through in the
1870s. The cemetery dates much earlier, into the 1840s. The Hoovers and Prills
married, then the Prills and Garners married, then the Garners and Swiharts
married, then the Garners and Bryants, also at Hoover Cemetery, married, and
then almost a hundred years later, I drove into the cemetery.
Over the last few years of making this my normal route, it seems that I hit this stretch of road closer to sunset each time, whether late in the summer evening when the sky turns the most glorious colors, or late afternoons in fall when the long shadows being stretched across the landscape connect you more so to the Creator, and it feels as though the heavens are washing you in the same gold colors washing across the canvas. I often slow down to a melodic roll, with windows down, allowing my tires to play the road in harmony with whichever song is on the radio. And occasionally, the landscape invites me to sing along.
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