On the 5th
of July in 1937, my father, Joe Rhode, started to work for Standard Elevator
Company as a clerk. In our conversation on the 28th of November in 1998, my
father had a twinkle in his eye when he said—with a smile—“Once, when I was
working at the elevator, Lee Rhode and Arby Brutus began to argue some point.
They kept at it for over an hour. By about noon, they decided to go to their
homes. They jumped in their trucks and took off. I had had difficulty working
while the argument proceeded. It was so intriguing! I noticed that each
combatant had taken the other’s truck. The trucks were nearly alike: a ’36
Chevy half-ton green pickup belonging to Arby and a ’34 Chevy half-ton green
pickup belonging to Lee. Within a few minutes, both trucks returned, arriving
at the same moment. Not saying a word to one another, the men switched trucks
and drove off again.” While I did not know Lee, I did know Arby, and I am sure
that, within a very short time, Lee and Arby were back on friendly terms. In my
view, Arby could not have held a grudge.
One
of Carter Dalton’s Homemade Model Steam Engines
Photograph
on Page 12 of The Iron-Men Album Magazine
For
July and August of 1956
|
Life in
Pine Village, my hometown in Indiana, was usually serene. Occasionally,
circumstances arose that called upon a person’s highest qualities. During a
conversation on the 26th of November in 1998, my father said, “Carter Dalton
and Jim Hooker were brothers-in-law; their wives were sisters with the last
name of High. The wives were from Locust Grove. Carter’s wife died. He took it
bad. Jim Hooker listened to Carter’s despondent remarks. Finally, Jim
recommended that Carter [take up] a hobby. ‘You’ve always talked about how much
you liked steam engines,’ Jim said, ‘so why don’t you build a model engine?’
Carter considered the idea. On another occasion, Jim repeated his idea. This
time, Carter took the bait because he had no hobbies and felt he would enjoy
trying to build a working model of a steam engine. He then built the Case
model. [He] misfigured the boiler size by modeling the diameter when he should
have used the circumference of the cylindrical part of the boiler; thus his
boiler looked too thin. He [also] made a double Nichols & Shepard
rear-mounted model.”
Wood Carving Attributed to Jim Hooker of Pine Village, Indiana |
I well
remember both models. While the Case provided plenty of fun because it was large
and easy to drive around, the Nichols & Shepard was a thing of beauty! As I
am not mechanically minded, I stand in awe of the work of machinists who can
engineer a working scale model of a farm steam engine! I considered Carter
Dalton an artist in metal, just as Jim was an artist in wood.
Jim’s barn
was filled with carvings, many of which were lost when the barn burned to the
ground. Cinders from the barn blew east across town. Volunteers came to our home
several blocks away to ensure that the roofs of our house and barn were not
harboring live sparks. Not too many years ago, I found in an antique mall a
carving of oxen pulling a wagon. While there is no identification on the piece,
I am confident that it is one of Jim’s earliest carvings that I used to see in
his barn. Perhaps he gave it to someone. I immediately purchased the antique,
as I had always wanted an example of Jim’s work. Incidentally, many years
earlier, Jim “ran a Model T sales business from the first floor of the Pine
Village Hotel,” as my father told me on the 18th of October in 1997. “He got
one of the Model Ts out of the showroom as the fire was beginning, but the
other Model T burned in the blaze, which destroyed the hotel.”
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