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                <text>The Sunbury News, 2005-05-12</text>
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                <text>Ebright, Jonard co-Student Citizens of Month</text>
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                <text>The Sunbury News</text>
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                <text>Academics, athletics play roles in teens' development during high school years</text>
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                <text>The Sunbury News</text>
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                <text>The Sunbury News, 2005-05-26</text>
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                <text>Sunbury celebrates Memorial Day Monday</text>
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                <text>The Sunbury News</text>
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                  <text>This collection contains a variety of materials from churches and church-related programming in Delaware County, Ohio. The collection currently includes material from Baptist, Methodist, Episcopal, and Presbyterian congregations. </text>
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                <text>Chauncey  G. Montgomery; Community Library</text>
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                <text>The First Baptist Church of Sunbury, located on Cherry Street,  was dedicated in May of 1952. This video shows the demolition of the church .  A parking lot was put in its place.</text>
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                <text>Aug 2004</text>
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                    <text>Barbara Johnson</text>
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                    <text>MA: Hear about one of those being your family history, and how the Dentons came here &#13;
&#13;
BJ: oh ok&#13;
&#13;
MA: and how the Johnsons came here and when that was.&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Uhuh &#13;
&#13;
MA: when they came to Berkshire Corners. &#13;
&#13;
BJ: OK&#13;
&#13;
MA: I wondered if you knew, you know anything that you wanted to tell us about what you remembered  &#13;
the area being like when you came here. And some of the buildings that were around then.  &#13;
&#13;
BJ: Uhuh&#13;
&#13;
MA: And then I um, have some specific things that we have in our collection at the library that I &#13;
wanted to ask you about&#13;
&#13;
BJ: OK&#13;
&#13;
MA: to see if you could add to the information that we know.&#13;
&#13;
BJ:  well prompt me whenever you need it&#13;
&#13;
MA: I will, &#13;
&#13;
BJ: because&#13;
&#13;
MA:  I have a list of questions here &#13;
&#13;
BJ: oh ok &#13;
&#13;
MA: but you know the conversation can just go where it goes, &#13;
&#13;
BJ: ha ha&#13;
&#13;
MA: anything you have to say &#13;
&#13;
BJ: OK&#13;
&#13;
MA: we're going to find valuable for the collection&#13;
&#13;
CM: You're good to go&#13;
&#13;
MA: OK we're good to go&#13;
&#13;
MA: So I read in the article that I showed you that your husband's family was from Medina &#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yes&#13;
&#13;
MA: But you're a Denton right?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yes&#13;
&#13;
MA: Are you related to the Dentons that live on North ___&#13;
&#13;
BJ: He's my cousin, Bruce is a first cousin, &#13;
&#13;
MA: Oh OK&#13;
&#13;
BJ: our dads, our fathers were brothers.  His dad and my dad were brothers &#13;
&#13;
MA: OK&#13;
&#13;
BJ: and uh, I don't, I know when my grandparents came down this way they a, they built a &#13;
home in 1925 my mother always told me this 'cause this was the year I was born. &#13;
&#13;
MA: Oh OK&#13;
&#13;
BJ: And um they built that in Delaware and that house is still standing. In fact a few years &#13;
ago I,I took my son, one of my sons, both of them live in Texas, and one of them was up here, &#13;
and I said let's go over and see if that lady will let us go in and I can maybe tell her some &#13;
things about the house that I remembered when we lived there and when grandpa and grandma &#13;
lived there. But we went over and of course I said I don't know I've never met this lady but &#13;
let's go and knock on the door. We knocked she came finally to the door and I think she's a &#13;
widow lady and um she looked us over and I said I told her who I was and what I'd like to do &#13;
to if she would let us come in and I said I can remember which rooms were what and I said I &#13;
can draw you the floor plan and everything. She said No you don't need to do that she said &#13;
she just lived up on Curtis Street and she said she had watched the house being built.&#13;
&#13;
MA: oh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Well that's one up on me but she was not about to let us come in. I realized afterwards &#13;
that you know  a man and a woman coming up that you've never seen before and saying I used &#13;
to live here when I was a girl and my grandparents lived here. Well anyone can make up a &#13;
story like that. And so I didn't blame her one bit but I sure would have loved to have seen &#13;
the house again. We moved away from there. We moved in in 1943 in the fall. It was&#13;
&#13;
MA: Here?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: No, this was when I was a girl&#13;
&#13;
MA: Ok&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Maybe I'm getting a little ahead of my story&#13;
&#13;
MA: That's OK, it was your grandparents who built the house in Delaware and they stayed in &#13;
that house?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yes they had lived there. And the reason we moved over there was because grandpa had &#13;
died and, a few years before, and it hadn't presented any problem about my grandmother having &#13;
somebody in the house with her until a couple of years, 3 or 4 years afterwards because then  &#13;
her daughter was going to be leaving the house she was on a sabatagal to do some studying down &#13;
at Ohio State and so that would have left my grandmother all alone. Well my brother went over, &#13;
and stayed. He went to school his last year at Willis in Delaware. And then he went into the &#13;
Army when he got out, and so that left grandma alone again.   Well she tried staying with some &#13;
of her children none of 'em could handle her.She was kind of Alzheimers and very very, um, &#13;
engrained Methodist Republican anti-this anti-that (laughter). And and she she was pretty far &#13;
gone mentally. So we moved in in the fall and she died in December of that same year.&#13;
&#13;
MA: Uhum&#13;
&#13;
BJ: And Um, so that's, my uncle, Uncle John, who is Bruce Denton's dad, lived right across the road &#13;
from her so he could kind of look in on her too occasionally. But um, like I said that was getting &#13;
kind of ahead of my story. Do you want me to start back when I first came here?&#13;
&#13;
MA: Well you lived in that house then?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: We lived there for about 2 maybe 3 years, and this was during the war. And um, my dad was working &#13;
at Curtis Wright when the war was over why they all lost their jobs. And um so he sold that house and &#13;
bought a farm over near on the Centerburg and Croton County line, Licking County line. And um, if they'd&#13;
moved to the house, to a house on the other side of the road my sister would have gone to Centerburg &#13;
schools. As it was she they didn't, and she went to Croton and graduated from High School over at Croton. &#13;
And um, it was just from there uh my folks moved back to Delaware. They they lived on the farm possibly &#13;
4 or 5 years I'm not sure what, it was 17 acres and my dad farmed it. He had kind of a rough time to go. &#13;
And um he decided he wasn't the farmer that he was when he was a young man (chuckle). And so they moved &#13;
back to Delaware. And they were the first people who eventually moved into the seniors place down on &#13;
London Road. And uh they had their  choice of any place, any apartment they wanted and they chose one &#13;
that looked right out on London Road and they hadn't built that gas station yet that's in front of it. &#13;
And so they watched all that being built up you know and everything and um they, they enjoyed themselves &#13;
there. But um, it it just seems like, I look back now and it just seems like that was a fast fast trip &#13;
growing growing up and all these things happening and I just couldn't uh could't vision what what all &#13;
had happened and and its just been a speedy thing. Uh my husband and I were married in 1950 and uh&#13;
&#13;
MA: Where did you meet him?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: I had known him forever it seemed like. We moved down here from Apple Creek, in Wooster area. This &#13;
is my family, my dad and mother. Dad had this store down here at the corner. And um, the Johnsons lived &#13;
here and Beryl had just graduated that year we we were, it was 1938 I believe.  And uh that was the year &#13;
that he graduated I think. And he and my oldest brother were kind of two of a kind, they didn't date, &#13;
they were very quiet. Beryl had a car, my brother didn't so Beryl took him lots of places and and um, in &#13;
the evenings they'd, they'd maybe go to a movie or something like that. And then um, then they both went &#13;
in the Army just a month apart I think. Beryl went in um February and Bob went in March or vice versa. &#13;
But it was just a month apart. And that was at the beginning of 1942.&#13;
&#13;
MA: So your dad had the store on the corner- that's the building that's for sale right now?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yes, yes&#13;
&#13;
MA: But you were living in Delaware and he would come to work here?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: No at that time uh I, I was getting ahead of my story. Uh when we first came down we moved to a &#13;
place down here all I can think of is Mabel Finch's house. &#13;
&#13;
MA: Oh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: But uh its just about um, well the corner is gone now. Its got that big building down here.&#13;
&#13;
MA: Is, is Mabel's house gone?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: No, &#13;
&#13;
MA: Its still there&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Its the first house down there&#13;
&#13;
MA: After Gosslin's Construction&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Second house, second house. &#13;
&#13;
MA: The little yellow one?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: There's a little one and then theres one right beside it where all the busses are.&#13;
&#13;
MA: Oh ok.&#13;
&#13;
BJ: ok&#13;
&#13;
MA: That house is the house with the busses?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yeah&#13;
&#13;
MA: Ok oh and you lived in there.&#13;
&#13;
BJ: yeah, and uh&#13;
&#13;
MA: Is this, this is that house? &#13;
&#13;
BJ: No that's the store&#13;
&#13;
MA: This is the store. &#13;
&#13;
BJ: That's the store. &#13;
&#13;
MA: Look at the intersection. That's, that's the intersection&#13;
&#13;
BJ: I made um, this is courtesy of the library (giggle)&#13;
&#13;
MA: Oh. This came from the library?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: No I made the copy over there. (giggle)&#13;
&#13;
MA: And so this is the front of that store&#13;
&#13;
BJ: uh uh&#13;
&#13;
MA: So it's been sided I knew it had been&#13;
&#13;
BJ: uh um&#13;
&#13;
MA: Because it wasn't, its its framed&#13;
&#13;
BJ: This doesn't show the gas pumps either. I think she, these were from Berl's mother. It says 1924 and &#13;
that was the year before I was born.&#13;
&#13;
MA: And what year, so did your dad buy the store from someone?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yeah he bought it from Mr. Billicum. Uh Dick Billicum was in my class at school and they lived down &#13;
the road and um&#13;
&#13;
MA: Do you remember what year that was that he bought the store?&#13;
&#13;
BJ:'38&#13;
&#13;
MA: 1938? OK and you were all living on South Galena &#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yeah yeah&#13;
&#13;
MA: In the house that now has the busses&#13;
&#13;
BJ: uh huh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: And we lived there and mother would come down to the store and help my dad do whatever he needed to do. &#13;
And there wasn't the delivery that there used to, that there is now so he would take this little panel truck &#13;
that he had and he'd go to Columbus to some of the wholesalers down there and to the hardware and everything &#13;
'cause it was a general store. &#13;
&#13;
MA: Uh uh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: And he'd go to Smith Hardware down in Columbus, and um, Smith Brothers  &#13;
&#13;
MA: That was a long trip&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yeah (giggle). And he'd would come back with nails and screws and everything. He, he did have um a &#13;
produce man that would bring fresh produce and also um meats and things he did his, um, he cut the meat &#13;
there but, you know, it would come in big sides or quarters or something like that.&#13;
&#13;
MA: uh um&#13;
&#13;
BJ: and&#13;
&#13;
MA: Did the farmers in the area provide produce and beef? &#13;
&#13;
BJ: Uh, no &#13;
&#13;
MA: Or did he always go into Columbus?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Generally, generally went into Columbus.  And um, he would, lets see, what was, I'm trying to think &#13;
there was something else that flipped through my mind like that and went out the same way. Well anyhow, &#13;
Mother would come down and help him. And then uh, she'd would walk back and forth 'cause she never learned &#13;
how to drive. And then he, he bought a house out here on the highway.&#13;
&#13;
MA: 37?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yeah and its, uh, lets see, do you know where that little house, that first little house is on this side &#13;
of the road, right just beyond the golf course? Its a small house kind of setting up on a hill, just, not &#13;
much of a hill but just a bank, just beyond this golf course.&#13;
&#13;
MA: Well we will notice it on our way back.&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yeah, well we lived almost&#13;
&#13;
MA: Is it white?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Um, I think so. Its only a story.&#13;
&#13;
MA: Uh um &#13;
&#13;
BJ: And its had some building on to it, but its the first one after the golf course&#13;
&#13;
MA: uh um&#13;
&#13;
BJ: and we lived right across the road from it.  Well those, the, the people that bought the property later &#13;
on after we moved here, uh tore down the house, it was an old farm house. And um, my dad had built a new &#13;
garage when he was out there. And the garage now is just barely hanging (makes a motion of blowing air) it &#13;
looks like the wind could blow it down.&#13;
&#13;
MA: uh huh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: and uh so you can still see that behind this brick home.&#13;
&#13;
MA: Why did they want to leave the house on South Galena?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: I don't know. It, we were renting there. &#13;
&#13;
MA: oh I see&#13;
&#13;
BJ: And he bought this one.&#13;
&#13;
MA: He bought it, ok&#13;
&#13;
BJ: So maybe that was, I think that was the reason, I think Mabel wanted to move back into her home.&#13;
&#13;
MA: Do you know if uh Mr. Billicum had owned the store for a long time?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: I don't think it was very long um, his, like I said um he had been a farmer I believe, I'm  not &#13;
real sure about that but I think he had been a farmer and um, it was quite a coincidence when I found &#13;
out that his son was in my class when I went over here to start school. I thought, Oh my (giggle). But &#13;
uh I,  I was very very quiet in school. I was just, you know, one of these kids that doesn't speak &#13;
unless you're spoken to and and um I, that was my class graduating picture and I was just counting them &#13;
up before, before you came in. I think 16 of 'em are gone and there were only 32 in our class so half of &#13;
'em are gone now.&#13;
&#13;
MA: uh um&#13;
&#13;
BJ: but um, this is me&#13;
 &#13;
MA: oh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Uh, Dick is still living, Bellicum&#13;
&#13;
MA: uh huh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: He's, he's over in Delaware&#13;
&#13;
MA: and he's the son of&#13;
&#13;
BJ: of the former owner&#13;
&#13;
MA: Is this your father in the picture?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: No, no I have no idea who that is unless it says on the back&#13;
&#13;
MA: I think, oh it sure does&#13;
&#13;
BJ: I saw some pencil writing&#13;
&#13;
MA: It says Birkshire Store and Harry Finch&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Oh well so that's another Finch then &#13;
&#13;
MA: Is that Mabel's husband?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: No, she never married. &#13;
&#13;
MA: Oh, ok&#13;
&#13;
BJ: And there was also another, Ilo Finch up here. &#13;
&#13;
MA: uh uh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: That might of been their parents Ilo and Mabel were brother and sister and this might have been his &#13;
dad, their dad. I don't know.&#13;
&#13;
MA: Do you remember, um, any stories that might have been passed on to your father when he bought the &#13;
store about the building or, or other businesses important at the corners there?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Well, there was Bests had a little gas station and they had ice cream. We didn't have ice cream.&#13;
&#13;
MA: And where was that?&#13;
 &#13;
BJ: That was in that vacant lot that's right across from the store. Right down here at the corner.&#13;
&#13;
MA: Oh, is that this building?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yeah&#13;
&#13;
MA: Oh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yeah&#13;
&#13;
MA: So that was a, that was a&#13;
&#13;
BJ: It was a little store. And they sold ice cream, milk. And they were open on Sundays whereas my dad &#13;
wasn't. But when we would go to church, we'd come up here to church, and he'd always stop at the store and &#13;
people knew that. So, if  they needed milk or a loaf of bread or a pound of baloney or something like that &#13;
they'd say "I'm coming down, I'm gonna stop, don't, don't go until I get there". &#13;
&#13;
MA: Uh huh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: And uh he would wait for 'em. Oh but store managing then was so different than it is now, so so &#13;
different.&#13;
&#13;
MA: Were there other um, businesses that were right there at the intersection? I know this is, this was a &#13;
house, I think the Frost house maybe.&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yeah, up here, &#13;
&#13;
MA: It was across the street&#13;
&#13;
BJ: it was on a bank that was gone, well no it wasn't that, that was still there. It was a two story, they &#13;
said that was a stage coach stop.&#13;
&#13;
MA: oh&#13;
 &#13;
BJ: But I don't know anything more than that. But Billy Frost, uh, lived in there. He never married, and um,  &#13;
my younger brother used to just love to go down to Billy's, because he'd, like I said he'd never married and &#13;
he just kind of adopted Jimmy, my brother. And he loved to have him tag around after him, you know how older &#13;
men are. And he'd, he'd tell him all kinds of stories and Jimmy would come back to the house and say "did you &#13;
know this, did you know that? Well Billy told me it was so." (giggles) Who knows, I don't remember any of 'em &#13;
now, I don't remember any of them now.&#13;
&#13;
MA: Uh, the, there were a couple of buildings that were taken down when, um, the Gosslin Construction &#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yea,&#13;
&#13;
MA: Building went in&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yeah, Uh huh&#13;
&#13;
MA: and one was a house&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yeah, uh, well there were two houses, uh. Right on the corner was where Wright Ormell and his family &#13;
lived. And his wife's mother was there. Her name was Strawser.&#13;
&#13;
MA: uh huh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: But I don't know if she had lived in that house before or if a, if she just moved in with 'em after &#13;
they got there. They were there when we came in.&#13;
&#13;
AM: Which was?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: In 1938&#13;
&#13;
MA: 1938. What was Mell's last name?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Whose?&#13;
&#13;
MA: Mell's last name, did you say Mell lived in the house?&#13;
 &#13;
BJ: No, I said I didn't know whether she had lived there. Her name was Strawser, she Wright Ormell's &#13;
mother-in-law, &#13;
&#13;
MA: OK&#13;
&#13;
BJ: but um&#13;
&#13;
MA: And then there was a, well in the Burrer Room we have pictures of that brick building and sometimes &#13;
it's labeled as a school and sometimes it's labeled as &#13;
&#13;
BJ: Oh&#13;
&#13;
MA: an Episcopal Church.&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Oh&#13;
&#13;
MA: What was it when you came?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: When we came it was part of his farm.&#13;
&#13;
MA: He was using it as a barn.&#13;
&#13;
BJ: yeah, kind of a dairy, dairy- uh uh -like store&#13;
&#13;
MA: uh um, yeah we have, this is a, this is hard to read, but its a map that's from the library and it, &#13;
and it has it has that building listed as the Episcopal Church.&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Oh really?   &#13;
&#13;
MA: Yeah, near the cemetery, but I didn't know if it was being used as a church &#13;
&#13;
BJ: ah huh (no)&#13;
&#13;
MA: when you were little&#13;
&#13;
BJ: ah huh (no)&#13;
&#13;
MA: When you were growing up here or if it was&#13;
&#13;
BJ: ah huh (no)&#13;
&#13;
MA: So you've always just known that to be the barn&#13;
&#13;
BJ: yeah, uh huh&#13;
&#13;
MA: That's interesting&#13;
&#13;
BJ: I don't know whether it started out that way or whether it had been a school house, excuse me I got &#13;
the hiccups,and um whether they just, you know, they stopped using it as a school because right across the &#13;
road here there was another little school house and it seemed odd that there'd be two school houses&#13;
&#13;
MA: Yeah, and uh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: so close together &#13;
&#13;
MA: yeah, um, they, the building that's right across the street that's painted red&#13;
&#13;
BJ: uh huh&#13;
&#13;
MA: was, because the Berkshire Methodist Church was here when you came here wasn't it?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: uh huh&#13;
&#13;
MA: Is it that building?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yep&#13;
&#13;
MA: I kinda thought it might be just because of the way the windows look.&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yeah, um, Mrs Crawford had the nursing home down here, the big brick house.&#13;
&#13;
MA: That's this house?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yeah&#13;
&#13;
MA: OK, so when you came here that was a nursing home.&#13;
&#13;
BJ: I don't, yeah when we moved here, that is when Berl and I moved here that was a nursing home. But &#13;
when we moved here before, when, when my dad and mother moved down here in 1938 it was not, it was a, it &#13;
was a house. And&#13;
&#13;
MA: The Speary's lived there but I don't know if that was before or after.&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Spa...&#13;
&#13;
MA: Speary. S P E A R Y, &#13;
&#13;
BJ: Oh,  &#13;
&#13;
MA: is what we have in the Burrer Room. It was Carlton Burrer's mother.&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Oh&#13;
&#13;
MA: So he, he grew up in that house. Did you know the Burrer's? &#13;
&#13;
BJ: I knew of them, but I didn't...&#13;
&#13;
MA: But I didn't know, we had in the Burrer Room that this had been a nursing home  for a time but there &#13;
aren't any dates attached to it so we really, we really aren't sure, when, when it was being used as a &#13;
nursing home, but you remember &#13;
&#13;
BJ: Oh yeah&#13;
&#13;
MA: When you came here it was&#13;
&#13;
BJ: In 1959 when Berl and I moved up here it was a nursing home at that time and it had been for some &#13;
time before that but I don't know exactly when. I think she was just getting it started and um she would, &#13;
I, both of our older boys helped down there, they'd help do dishes and they'd work in the kitchen and just &#13;
do various things. But Mrs. Crawford was always doing something there and they built that house just this &#13;
side of it, she and her husband. Mr. Crawford was a teacher over at Sunbury. &#13;
&#13;
MA: Oh, OK. And then the church, the church merged with another church is that correct? Its up on Cheshire &#13;
Road.&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Cheshire. yeah&#13;
&#13;
MA: So you all stopped going to that church&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Well we, we our selves. Um, I went there when I was growing up before I was married. But after Beryl and I &#13;
were married and moved here, uh we were members of the Church of Christ and we went to Delaware&#13;
&#13;
MA:uh huh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: and then from Delaware we went to Westerville where we're going now. but uh..&#13;
&#13;
MA: Was there a building that was torn down when the township hall was  built?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yes, that was the old school house and it was a red brick one room thing &#13;
&#13;
MA: Oh ok&#13;
&#13;
BJ: and we lived right across from it and I have pictures uh, on a um, a little 8mm camera (giggles), made &#13;
a long time ago of them when the firemen went over there and burned it. And they'd, they'd burn it a little &#13;
bit and then they'd stop, and go in and do other things and then they'd burn it some more and then another &#13;
township with their fire crew would go in but there was the Sunbury and I think there was, I, did Galena have &#13;
a separate one when they started out?&#13;
&#13;
MA: a school house?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: No I mean fire, fire&#13;
&#13;
MA: You know I'm not sure when Galena and Berkshire and Trenton joined to become&#13;
&#13;
BJ: uh huh&#13;
&#13;
MA: the BGST that they are now.&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yeah, well its been since I've been here I'm sure but I think that there were three or four different &#13;
ones, I think Berlin had one but there were several different companies over there and they were... It was &#13;
instruction just like it is now you know when you burn a place. And its done on fire, on purpose, where &#13;
they'd check it and see what, what needs to be done and so forth&#13;
&#13;
MA: I have a picture of that building, but it's unidentified, I had a hunch it is this&#13;
&#13;
BJ: oh really?&#13;
&#13;
MA: yeah&#13;
&#13;
CM: You say you have the 8mm?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: I did. &#13;
&#13;
CM: ah&#13;
&#13;
BJ: yeah, I I have, I have the camera, I I don't have the camera I have the film, I had it put on video tape &#13;
&#13;
CM: You did?&#13;
&#13;
MA: Oh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yeah, yeah, would you like to see it? &#13;
&#13;
CM: Well maybe&#13;
&#13;
BJ: I don't have it out right now&#13;
&#13;
CM: Maybe, maybe we could borrow it, uh, &#13;
&#13;
BJ: yeah&#13;
&#13;
CM: just,  just to get it on this tape&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Ok, Ok. I'm not real sure whereabouts it is&#13;
&#13;
CM: well you know there's no rush&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Then this, then this place down here which was right next to me&#13;
&#13;
MA: This one?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yeah, yeah&#13;
&#13;
MA: I wanted to ask you about that because everyone calls this the Major Brown House. And I was curious to &#13;
know if that's what people called it when you came here.&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Well I never saw the whole house. &#13;
&#13;
MA: oh,&#13;
&#13;
BJ : It was all&#13;
&#13;
MA: That's, that's a picture from the Delaware Gazette.&#13;
&#13;
BJ: It was all crumbed and just the foundation was there.&#13;
&#13;
MA: uh huh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: when we moved in here &#13;
&#13;
MA: oh and &#13;
&#13;
BJ: it was just a foundation&#13;
&#13;
MA: and that was in 19...&#13;
&#13;
BJ: when we moved to Berkshire with my parents uh, 1938, it was just the foundation &#13;
&#13;
MA: oh, so ___&#13;
&#13;
BJ: and maybe a brick wall standing or something like that&#13;
&#13;
MA: so that picture would have to pre-date 1938&#13;
&#13;
BJ: oh yes, yeah&#13;
&#13;
MA: We have the original and we have the negative, and thats all in the Burrer Room. Its a, its a large _____&#13;
&#13;
BJ: and then...&#13;
&#13;
MA: so you've always just known that little pile of rubble&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yeah, Yeah&#13;
&#13;
MA: And nothing else. Do you, did, did anybody ever call it the Major Brown House then or how was, how &#13;
was it referred to?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: (giggle) Denny's barn. Denny Neilson being the one who lived up on the hill down here. Mr and um... &#13;
It was just in his pasture,  I mean he owned this whole corner clear over to Carter's Corners and everything.&#13;
&#13;
MA: Well that's interesting. These, this was also in our library's collection, and I didn't know, uh this is &#13;
the Meadows, did your dad sell the store to them? I didn't know if this, if that's uh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Clyde Meadows, yeah, that's who he's yeah... its one of two businesses, yeah.&#13;
&#13;
MA: So you you knew, they did buy from your father.&#13;
 &#13;
BJ: The Meadows bought it from my dad, uh uh.I never knew her very well nor him but his, his brother lived &#13;
just down the road, John Meadows. &#13;
&#13;
MA: oh ok&#13;
&#13;
BJ: And uh they were from Berkshire. I, I don't really know where these folks lived but it wasn't right here &#13;
at Berkshire as I recall.&#13;
&#13;
MA: OK, Were they the last people to run it as a store? Do you know?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: No, um umm Ruby Basham who lived up around Olive Green. She bought it and she was still running it as a &#13;
store when we moved back here in 1959. And she was just a year ahead of me in school. And I went down when &#13;
I found out she was the new o, the owner, new as far as I was concerned I went down and told her a few things &#13;
about it and what I remembered and everything and she said well she says its changed alot since you were a &#13;
girl. (giggle) Oh that is great.&#13;
&#13;
MA: uh huh, and then, this uh this house is just really falling into disrepair all of a sudden. um, do you &#13;
know what they are doing?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: I think they are getting ready to buy and burn. I think that's what it is because there was another house &#13;
out there and they've just with within the last month or so that's been burned and a couple of others are empty &#13;
that are back there and I I think that figuring on the whole corner there going up in smoke.&#13;
&#13;
MA: was it this Marjon ____  &#13;
&#13;
BJ: Marjon Farm&#13;
&#13;
MA: when you were&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Well no that was Spanglers, his name was John and hers was Mary and that's how they got Marjon out of it. &#13;
She gave piano lessons and a he was I think more or less a gentleman farmer. And um our second son went out &#13;
and used to help him with his pigs and things like that. One day Rick came back and he says I got a present &#13;
out here for yea.  I said what do you mean? He said well Mr Spangler said with all the work I've been doing &#13;
out there he was going to give me a pig. (giggles) That was all we needed, I had four children and they were &#13;
going to bring a pig out. And um so he he fixed up a little pen back here and he just very, very readily fed &#13;
it, took care of it, cleaned it and everything.&#13;
&#13;
MA: What happened to the pig?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: He made good pork chops. (giggle)&#13;
&#13;
MA: That's what I figured. Um  I know that the Hoover Dam project went on in the 1950's but I don't know when &#13;
Alum Creek was built but I wondered what the road was like between here and Delaware. It sounds like it must have ___&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Just a two lane, just one lane each way&#13;
&#13;
MA: One lane each way and was there any water there at all?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Just a creek&#13;
&#13;
MA: Just a creek. oK, So there must have been just a little bridge that went&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yeah, uh uh metal, uh iron bridge, uh I can't think of exactly what it was like but when you go down, &#13;
there was a, go down the hill out there, there was kind of a curve and over on this side there, there still &#13;
is a shallow place and the lake now comes up into it. There used to be a little cottage right down there on &#13;
that little piece of land it wasn't any bigger than this, if it was this big, as this room, and uh somebody &#13;
owned it apparently but when they when they built the dam well that had to go. And uh, Its just amazing to &#13;
me to see, see all that water under there and I'm very scared of water but for some reason I can cross that &#13;
and it, it doesn't frighten me but get me any closer... I just have this fear I don't know why, I do.&#13;
&#13;
MA: My mom's the same way too, I'm not much crazy about swimming myself but... Um I see you have some pictures &#13;
in the file there.&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yeah um these were some, that uh I don't know whether you'd be interested in them or not, but these were &#13;
of Beryl he was over&#13;
&#13;
MA: Oh my gosh he's on a camel, &#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yeah&#13;
&#13;
MA: and there's a pyramid behind him so.&#13;
&#13;
BJ: In the back in the back there's some writing on it&#13;
&#13;
MA: So this is when he was overseas&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yes he went over to uh, Africa, and he was over there with the Rommel campaign and everything North Africa, &#13;
those don't have anything to do with this. And uh, then from there he went in to Italy and  that was what I &#13;
wanted to show you was these, that's how they censored some of the letters, you know you weren't supposed to &#13;
say where you were calling from or writing from or,  course they didn't do any overseas calls then, but they'd &#13;
cut it out. But sometimes on the back of the page there would be something (giggle) and um that's how I found &#13;
out he was in Italy.&#13;
&#13;
MA: Oh I see&#13;
&#13;
BJ: (giggle) And this, this might help you, I found that as I was doing some rummaging around.&#13;
&#13;
MA: We h.., we have this in the Burrer Room&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Oh do you &#13;
&#13;
MA: At the library but that's what made me start to think I wanted to ask if that building was this church&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Uh uhm&#13;
&#13;
MA: And it is. We have the um the uh registration book &#13;
&#13;
BJ: Oh&#13;
&#13;
MA: in the library and I saw you listed there as a little girl with all the other Dentons.&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yeah, uh huh&#13;
&#13;
MA: But uh I'm not sure how the library wound up with that but we have it&#13;
&#13;
BJ: well good, good&#13;
&#13;
MA: Yeah, and it will be it'll be scanned and be part of this collection. And be on the computer also&#13;
&#13;
BJ: oh great that's great.&#13;
&#13;
MA: And you will see your family's record there&#13;
&#13;
BJ: that's great. And while I'm at it did you ever see a V-Mail?&#13;
&#13;
MA: V-Mail? &#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yeah&#13;
&#13;
MA: I don't know what that is&#13;
&#13;
BJ: UH, I came across a few of these in some of my mother's stuff. This is what we used to write to &#13;
them on. It was a page about 8 by 10 and it was, we would send it in a special envelope, the thing folded &#13;
up to an envelope. It was censored here and of course it was censored over there across when they would  &#13;
write back to us and um that, that was put on film and then when it got over there they would re-develop &#13;
it so uh it would take sometimes two weeks or more to get a letter &#13;
&#13;
MA: So he's writing to your mom?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yeah, and I, I happened to run across several of them, I think this one was the one that my brother &#13;
wrote when, yeah, when I&#13;
&#13;
MA: That's what you copied and left in the Burrer Room. He's describing his eye injury.&#13;
&#13;
BJ: oh no this is another one, &#13;
&#13;
MA: OK&#13;
&#13;
BJ: I do have that here&#13;
&#13;
MA: you left me with a copy of that&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yeah, this was his letter&#13;
&#13;
MA: so how did he do? I mean he's, he's&#13;
&#13;
BJ: He's passed on now. But uh he, he was blind in one eye and had the metal plate in his head, &#13;
&#13;
MA: uh huh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: and he, uh, he had a, he got on to alcohol and drugs, I mean drugs for his pain, and um, he, he &#13;
lead a good life I mean when he came home he went to college, he graduated, he was an engineer. He &#13;
went to Western Reserve University and he had a good job.&#13;
&#13;
MA: Did he marry, have kids? &#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yes. He had two children. And um, it was just one of those things that the war did. I, I don't &#13;
think he ever would have touched anything if, if he hadn't been hurt.&#13;
&#13;
MA: That was a bad injury&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yeah yeah, very bad. And then they sent him back to the front again after he got out of the hospital&#13;
&#13;
MA: Gosh I'm surprised&#13;
&#13;
BJ: I know. There were a lot of people that were surprised but he went back&#13;
&#13;
MA: Those are all letters that your brother sent to you?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Between, well, between writing to my mother &#13;
&#13;
MA: uh huh &#13;
&#13;
BJ: But that one was after graduation, after I graduated&#13;
&#13;
MA: May I open them?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Sure, sure&#13;
&#13;
MA: Some pictures here&#13;
&#13;
BJ: But some Beryl wrote to, uh, that was my um&#13;
&#13;
MA: Oh, is this at the Sunbury School, then? This building?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: No, this was um, this was at Apple Creek &#13;
&#13;
MA:  Oh where you grew up.&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yeah, Apple Creek School and uh I don't have, oh, 1937 that was the year before I came down. Can &#13;
you find me on there, I'm in the front row I'll tell you that much.&#13;
&#13;
MA: Well you're none of those little boys so we can ignore that then.&#13;
&#13;
BJ: There were Amish kids that went up there too&#13;
&#13;
MA: Um, I'm going to guess, I've got you narrowed down to two guesses what do you think Chauncie? I was &#13;
thinking this little, are you this little girl?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: yeah&#13;
&#13;
MA: (laugh) Fifth and sixth grade.&#13;
&#13;
BJ: But I wrote all the names on the back (giggle)&#13;
&#13;
MA: My um, my uh mother's uncle settled in Wooster and lived there. His, he was a dentist there for years. &#13;
And he was also in the war and his last name was Steigerwald. &#13;
&#13;
BJ: Oh&#13;
&#13;
MA: I don't know if you ever &#13;
&#13;
BJ: No, never knew...&#13;
&#13;
MA: knew him at all. But He used to use, um, he was a radio um, operator in Germany and he was also a &#13;
dentist in Germany so he used to use his drill to scramble the signals &#13;
&#13;
BJ: Oh&#13;
&#13;
MA: so that the Americans could get messages where they needed them to go, but the Germans would only &#13;
hear a dentist's drill.&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Oh, well how great is that. That sounds like it might have been a German uh name so he could &#13;
probably speak German too&#13;
&#13;
MA: I'm not sure if he did or not, but, but my, my family was from the Steigerwald Forest area of Germany.&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Well when Bob was hurt it was in the Aukum Forest** &#13;
&#13;
MA: Oh. OK, That's right he wrote about that in the letter I think he identified that spot.&#13;
&#13;
BJ: I don't know what all is in there.&#13;
&#13;
MA: Cards and things like that&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Theres no special order, no&#13;
&#13;
MA: Boy this letter is old, its from your brother Bob&#13;
&#13;
BJ: uh huh, He wrote me a real nice letter when I graduated, and he said I'm so sorry I can't be there for &#13;
ya, but um, uh he, he wrote back to mother alot. And uh Beryl wrote to my mother. That was another thing I &#13;
wanted to show you is... In these pictures mother was very active over here in the church&#13;
&#13;
MA: uh huh &#13;
&#13;
BJ: and she made, everybody had a service flag that had anyone in the war and she got all the neighborhood found &#13;
out, I forget who the gold star was for but it was someone here within Berkshire township, and then all the other &#13;
blue stars there were the other active members in the Army and Navy. She wrote every one of 'em. &#13;
&#13;
MA: Uh huh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: She would write to every one of 'em.&#13;
&#13;
MA: uh huh, So each star represents a soldier?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: yeh, yeh&#13;
&#13;
MA: from Berkshire?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: yeah. &#13;
&#13;
MA: oh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: And these were just some family pictures, uh, taken. Um, this is part of my family&#13;
&#13;
MA: I see you there, so that's your mom and your brother and sister&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yeah, yeah, and then I had a younger sister, that was when my oldest brother was in the Army so he wasn't &#13;
in any of those&#13;
&#13;
MA: Is this house in Wooster that you're standing in front of?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: No that's, that's the one in Delaware, &#13;
&#13;
MA: oh, in Delaware&#13;
&#13;
BJ: my grandparents' home, &#13;
&#13;
MA: uh huh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: it's 558 West William that's where it was. And at that time it was the last house in, in Delaware, &#13;
but since then they extended it about a mile beyond there.&#13;
&#13;
MA: and um, do you know, the Johnsons were from Medina, but do you know when the Dentons and when the &#13;
Johnsons first came into Ohio from, I know they must have come from the east?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Yeah, they came from the east. My, I don't know anything about Beryl's family, when they came. Uh, &#13;
he has a cousin, a distant cousin who lives over near Johnstown and his wife uh, has a lot of genealogy &#13;
for that's begun, and how intertwined everything and all the greats and, and two brothers married two &#13;
sisters and that made their children double cousins or something like that (chuckle) I don't know&#13;
&#13;
MA: Uh huh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: But anyhow I, I don't know all of that history and I'm sorry I don't 'cause every once and a while my &#13;
kids will come up and say well how are, how are we related to these people you know, and all I can tell is &#13;
just about our generation. &#13;
&#13;
MA: Uh huh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Um, I don't know whether Beryl's mother was an only child or if she had brothers or sisters. I know his &#13;
bro, his dad was one of three brothers.&#13;
&#13;
MA: Uh uh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: and my, as far as my family is concerned my grandfather was a minister and when they built that house &#13;
over in Delaware uh, he was retired at that time so he, he didn't minister here in central Ohio. &#13;
&#13;
MA: uh huh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Uh, he came from West Virginia and uh that's where he did the biggest part of his, and in northeast &#13;
Ohio. He um, he might have retired from up there, there's a little place called Chatham &#13;
&#13;
MA: uh huh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: "C-h-a-t-h-a-m" and um, oh there's another place up there uh, I have a niece who lives in that, on the &#13;
lake, what is it, Mentor on the Lake. &#13;
&#13;
MA: Uh huh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: And its up in that vicinity where grandpa preached at little country churches. At one time he was a, a &#13;
circuit rider &#13;
&#13;
MA: oh ok,&#13;
&#13;
BJ: preaching&#13;
&#13;
MA: uh huh, We have a book about circuit riders in the Burrer Room.&#13;
&#13;
BJ: uh huh&#13;
&#13;
MA: Um, Does it seem, it must seem like Berkshire Corners has changed a lot?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Oh yes, neither of these houses, I've got two on each side of me, when we moved in here there was nothing. &#13;
&#13;
MA: uh huh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: And, I,  you know, I was used to running out in my bathrobe out to...&#13;
&#13;
MA: (laugh)&#13;
&#13;
BJ: to the outside anywhere, I said I can't do that anymore and then when I found out that their houses were &#13;
in back of mine, I thought oh this is going to ruin everything, &#13;
&#13;
MA: Uh huh (chuckle)&#13;
&#13;
BJ: but, but I'm friends with all of them now. And they, they've, they've all been real nice people. &#13;
&#13;
MA: uh huh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: I, I have a tendency to stick to myself, I'm not, I don't, you know people call, talk about "neighboring", &#13;
&#13;
MA: uh huh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: well I, I "neighbor" but I do it in my own way. &#13;
&#13;
MA: uh huh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: If I see you outside "Hi" &#13;
&#13;
MA: (chuckle)&#13;
&#13;
BJ: and we'll talk, uh, I'll talk out in the yard or something, but I'm not one to actually go visit and &#13;
have a cup of coffee or something like that I, I don't think I've ever done that.&#13;
&#13;
MA: uh huh. It sounds like when you, when you and your husband had the, the store, or you and your father, &#13;
your father's family had the store, that things were pretty bucolic and quiet there&#13;
&#13;
BJ: It was, it was very quiet&#13;
&#13;
MA: a place for gas and a place for ice cream and that's about it,&#13;
&#13;
BJ: chuckle &#13;
&#13;
MA:  that's really all you need (chuckle)&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Do you, Did you know um, Stevens over in Sunbury, Jay Stevens?&#13;
&#13;
MA: I don't know that name do you (to Chauncey)?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: He has a, what do you call it, a backhoe and he does a lot of work sometimes. Um, as you turn left on &#13;
Route 3 out here at 36, you turn left, there was a, a house before you reach the next light and the backyard &#13;
had some of these big equipment machines in it. &#13;
&#13;
MA: uh huh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: That's where Jay and Ellen lived, and Ellen Grove lived up here, &#13;
&#13;
MA: uh huh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: She grew up in this house down here where they have, you pass it every day when you go to your place. &#13;
&#13;
MA: uh huh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Its the uh first one on the right hand side after you cross the road&#13;
&#13;
MA: Oh, the one story that has the garage *(unintelligible remark)&#13;
&#13;
BJ: where they have the wood and stuff. yeah&#13;
&#13;
MA: uh huh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: And uh, her name was Grove and the Groves were here for a long time&#13;
&#13;
MA: We always have been told that the red house that's a few down from that on the same side of the road was &#13;
a was a, &#13;
&#13;
BJ: Crones&#13;
&#13;
MA: Oh they own that, right, that's right the Crones do own that, um that that was some sort of a stop for a &#13;
train or a stage coach &#13;
&#13;
BJ: I don't know&#13;
&#13;
MA: or some other transportation&#13;
&#13;
BJ: I don't know anything about that. &#13;
&#13;
MA: uh huh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: But his, um, Joe lives there now with his family and I don't know how many children they had or anything &#13;
else. I know his eyesight is real bad &#13;
&#13;
MA: uh huh&#13;
&#13;
BJ: but, uh, his mother lived in that red house and then Joe built the house just this side of it&#13;
&#13;
MA: uh huh, and then um, that pond that's a, across the street from us probably wasn't, I don't know when that &#13;
was built&#13;
&#13;
BJ: well that's been since we moved here in 1959. &#13;
&#13;
MA: uh huh&#13;
&#13;
Bj: But uh, uh there was another house down there too, &#13;
&#13;
MA: Uh huh&#13;
&#13;
BJ:Uh did you live here at that time?&#13;
&#13;
MA: No, well uh, well my husband's parents bought the, bought the house in 1969&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Oh in '69. yeah yeah&#13;
&#13;
MA: And I think they bought it from a family named the Freemans&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Curt Freeman and his wife, yeah&#13;
&#13;
MA: uh huh, And before that the Searles, some Searles lived in it. I think about the time that you, in the &#13;
1930's they owned it but I don't know if you&#13;
&#13;
BJ: I knew the Freemans&#13;
&#13;
MA: They had lived there for a long time, I think they owned the house for maybe 20 years, 25 years&#13;
&#13;
(unintelligible dialog here)&#13;
&#13;
BJ: and then Tippetts lived down there across the road&#13;
&#13;
Ma: Where the Smiths used to live&#13;
&#13;
BJ: yeah yeah&#13;
&#13;
MA: Yeah he, he came and knocked on our door because he wanted to see the inside of the house because he, &#13;
he had lived in that house for awhile too because he had a, his grandfather had lived in this house. And &#13;
so we, we showed him around.&#13;
&#13;
BJ: uh huh&#13;
&#13;
MA: because he had spent some time in it as a child.&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Mr. Tippett was one of the big teachers over here at Sunbury between he and Pop Neilson&#13;
&#13;
MA: Was he a music teacher, Pop Neilson or?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Well he, he sang, and he could play uh an accordian and uh, I don't know whether he ever taught music or &#13;
not but he, he loved to sing and he always directed our choir over here at the church. And it was kind of nice &#13;
to have a couple of teachers that close to ya, you know, in one way. In another way they were always at the store, &#13;
and they, if my dad had asked 'em how I did in school that wasn't so good.&#13;
&#13;
MA: So did you ever have to go in to Sunbury much for anything? Or people in Berkshire Corners could just come to &#13;
your store and they could get their gasoline and maybe to go to school and&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Well we went to school in Sunbury and the bus came around but um, other than that, it, for daily things no, &#13;
and most everybody had a garden. Big gardens 'cause they had big families at that time. I know we had a big garden &#13;
too. We had to work at it, I mean there was no laying around or anything else. I can remember, we didn't even have &#13;
a radio at home.  My dad bought a little, little one about that long about, oh about that wide  and maybe about that &#13;
high and he'd tuck it under his arm on Monday morning and walk from Mabel's house down to the store and it stayed &#13;
there until Saturday night when he'd come home and then we would have a radio we could listen to on Saturday night &#13;
and Sunday. That's the way we grew up, we didn't have a radio. And of course there was nothing like TV, nothing &#13;
like that. And let me tell you about the telephones. Everybody was on the same line and they had their own ring, &#13;
and I'm not sure now I'm so used to this 965 prefix that I can't recall what our prefix was but it was like, just &#13;
for instance if it was 965 R2 then the R meant how many rings and you had to ring it. And R2 meant two even, and &#13;
if it was 1 2 1 it'd be a short, one short two longs and one short. Or if it was 2 1 1, it was two, don't ask me &#13;
how they figured it out, but when we finally got a phone of our own out on the highway it was R5. So  One, Two, &#13;
Three, Four, Five. And you could hear everybody's ring.  You could hear everybody's. So if you wanted to pick it &#13;
up&#13;
&#13;
MA: You could listen in&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Oh yes. There was only one line out here&#13;
&#13;
MA: You know you explained something that I didn't know. We have in the collection at the library these old &#13;
Delaware County directories and they have this code of R 1 2 1 and it doesn't explain anywhere in the directory &#13;
what that means.&#13;
&#13;
BJ: What that means&#13;
&#13;
MA: And you just did, yeah, so that's good to know&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Well that's just a for instance. The store was R 2&#13;
&#13;
MA: uh huh, &#13;
&#13;
BJ: But everybody else's&#13;
 &#13;
MA: Well I'm sure the store is listed in that, in that directory that we have. &#13;
&#13;
BJ: I wouldn't be surprised.&#13;
&#13;
MA: What, what did your dad call the store?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Just Berkshire Store&#13;
&#13;
MA: Just the Berkshire Store&#13;
&#13;
BJ: It went by that name all the time that I can remember.&#13;
&#13;
MA: What have, what do you have in your, uh blue folder there?&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Oh this was the uh, the stuff that I've been working on to save for... This was uh, where was it? This &#13;
is what I gave you &#13;
&#13;
MA: Yes that's what we have in the Burrer Room.&#13;
&#13;
BJ: and I've kept all these copies about things being done over there with the&#13;
&#13;
MA: Oh, at the Memorial&#13;
&#13;
BJ: Uh huh, and I bought 4 brick, and had 'em for my husband, my two brothers, and our two sons. Both &#13;
of our sons were,  Oh I've got to show you something, this isn't way back like this is. But I've made a &#13;
quilt and its in the other room, and its for my oldest son. He's going to retire next year, he'll have &#13;
30 years&#13;
&#13;
End of video&#13;
&#13;
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