Gramma and Grampa Stringam |
Beginning with Remembrance Day, going through Thanksgiving
and into Christmas, the season of ‘family’ and ‘togetherness’ is upon us.
The best part of the year.
However, in 1912, ‘going to visit the family’ took on a
whole new meaning.
Let me tell you about it . . .
My Gramma and Grampa Stringam, with their (then) three
children, moved to southern Alberta in 1910, leaving their extended family
behind them in Utah.
They settled in Glenwood and started to farm.
Outwardly, all was well.
Inwardly, one of them missed her mother.
Finally, after two years of pining and tears, the decision
was made for an extended visit.
Gramma and her (by then) four children packed up and,
kissing Grampa goodbye, boarded the train for Salt Lake.
The trip there was fairly uneventful, the highlight - seeing
the sprinkler system in the Salt Lake depot.
But what came afterward . . . wasn’t.
Uneventful, that is.
Gramma and the kids climbed aboard another train for Salina
and then the mail stagecoach from there over the mountain to Thurber and
Teasdale.
A short hop by today’s automobile.
A considerably healthy prospect for the white-top mail buggy
of the early 1900’s.
In the rain.
On one particularly steep pass, soaked through and tired, the
team of horses gave out. Despite considerable encouragement, they refused to
move one more step up the mountain, choosing, in typical balky-horse fashion,
to back up instead.
They succeeded in backing the coach until they, quite
literally, ran out of mountain. When the driver finally got them stopped, the
vehicle’s wheels were hanging right out over the edge of the canyon.
Gramma and the kids were frantically extricated and gratefully
took shelter under a large spruce, where they turned, as they had been taught,
to prayer.
While they were thus engaged, the driver tried – unsuccessfully
- to remedy the situation. The wagon remained hanging over the edge of the
cliff.
A rather precarious position.
Meanwhile the little family under the tree had finished praying.
And it was as that exact moment that a second white-topped buggy came up over
the hill.
A buggy that was empty, save for the driver, a local real
estate agent. Who, to the little family huddled under the tree, suddenly took
on the aspect of a saviour.
The man stopped and surveyed the situation, then climbed
down and, using a knife, cut the traces holding the horses to the buggy and led
the animals to safety.
The mail man thanked him, threw his mail bags over one horse
and mounted the other, and rode on over the mountain, abandoning his little group
of paying passengers without a backward look.
On the side of a mountain. In the rain.
Don’t you hate days like that?
Fortunately, the real estate man was very kind and loaded
Gramma and her kids into his buggy and delivered them safely to the nearest
village.
The rest of the trip was fairly uneventful.
Let’s face it. After this experience, most events would pale
by comparison.
Gramma and her brood got their visit.
And, for generations to come, a story to tell.
Wow, what a great story! I can see it as though it were a movie, Diane. Amazing.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Karen! Yeah. Gramma pretty much had my attention at 'train'! :)
DeleteIsn't it amazing how our ancestors managed in difficult circumstances? And also how our own existence is a bit of a miracle considering the close calls they had!
ReplyDeleteExactly! Disasters. Plagues. Accidents. Mishaps. And yet someone survived because - here I am! :)
DeleteI'm guessing that this is a much better story for her family to tell later than it was for your ancestors to live through.
ReplyDeleteI SO agree!
DeleteWow....we don't realize what a grand adventure it was to leave home for anything over a 20 mile distance. It took a lot of guts for a woman to travel like that with her children.
ReplyDeleteTotally! I forgot to mention the ages of her children. The oldest was 4 or 5. The youngest an infant!
DeleteIt's interesting to know that when Grandma went back to visit, she was enthusiastically welcomed back. However when Grandma hinted that she'd like to stay, her mother told her: 'You married him; you belong with him!' Grandma went back to Glenwood and the next time they went back to Utah, they were together, family in tow.
ReplyDeleteSome motherly advice that would be helpful today.
Agreed!
DeleteThat is an awesome family story. It was a scary one but prayers were obviously answered.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing this one and blessings for you!
Thank you, LeAnn!
DeleteMy favourite kind of story!
What a powerful message about family and prayer. Thank you Diane!
ReplyDeleteSo glad you enjoyed it, Mary! Thank you!
DeleteYour life history is riveting and this story is just one of the many examples. "Rather precarious," indeed!
ReplyDeleteAh, the joy of the understatement! Or, in this case, the under(carriage) statement . . .
DeleteSurely this is a site well worth seeing.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Jerry!
DeleteWOW! Now THAT is a legend worthy Thanksgiving story!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Kim! Thankful for sure! :)
DeleteThat was a crazy story! Can you just imgine the fear! That's definitely holding on by the seat of your pants!
ReplyDeleteI think I would have just fainted dead away! They would have had to haul me out like the luggage . . .
DeleteFor a moment I had an awful visual of the wagon going down and taking the horses with it. now I'm wondering why the mailman didn't think to cut the traces, or ask the real estate agent to help try and pull the wagon back up. I'm glad that real estate agent came along though, because..here you are!
ReplyDeleteI sort of gather from the story that the mailman wasn't the brightest bulb in the chandelier. So many things they could have tried. And saved the wagon. I guess because it wasn't his personally . . .
DeleteI'm eternally grateful for that real estate agent!
I am not sure how appropriate this is as I am brand new to reaching out to people I have never met through social media other than my FB page. Any advice you have for me would be greatly appreciated.. I am trying to contact all of the people who commented on Cathy Chester’s wonderful post about Full Circle Equine Rehabilitation Center to do three things: 1) say how happy I am that you love horses too, 2) thank you for your kind words and 3) ask for any advice you may have to get the word out about FCERC so we can reach out to more horses and people.
ReplyDeleteI thank you for the gift of your time to help our circle grow and I encourage you to be sure and spend some time with a horse just for the joy of it.
Both you and the horse will be the better for it.
Best wishes to you and yours,
Cris Pemberton
Giving Tuesday Partner
Fullcirclerescue.org
Actually, Cris, this is totally appropriate. There is nothing more effective than visiting other sites and commenting. Then the people come back to you. They follow your links. Yours is a worthwhile program. A needed one. Good luck!
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