Looking west from the top of the big hill on 250th Avenue. Below is Wolf Creek and the Sterling Sand Barrens and in the distance MN. |
Fire department water site -- can refill the water trucks. Out here in the country these are the fire hydrants. |
All that is left of the Mac Fors (and Nancy Nelson) farm is the lilac bushes. A two story house, barn and outbuildings on the sandy lowland right on Wolf Creek was a better farm than just the sandy land further west. The lowlands along the creek were more fertile and the land across the creek better. Mac raised string beans for Stokely's out of Milltown in the days when they were all hand picked by migrants (the migrants being the local farm wives and children). I was about 4 or 5 when I first earned money on the field in that was in the next photo. Mac gave us each a row, a sack and we picked our way to the end filling the sack. When we were done for the day, he weighed our sacks and paid us for the beans (maybe 35 cents) and then hauled them to Milltown to resell to Stokelys. The biggest memory I have of this is his dog, that I was playing with, bit me in the lip and required a couple of stitches. My fault and my bean money was lost as J. A. Riegal took all the money I made for the summer to put in 2 stitches -- an X in my lip. |
Imagine a field of string beans of 5 acres along the road, with a dozen kids and mothers hunched over picking string beans to make some money to buy school clothes |
A small creek comes from the big swamps to the west and goes under Evergreen Av just past the string bean field above as it joins Wolf Creek. In the olden days, it was a huge tamarack swamp, cut and sawed for railroad ties in the 1890s. The plantation on the west of planted trees were small when I rode past here with Floyd Harris and his station wagon school bus in the 1950s headed down the road to the Wolf Creek School I think it was planted under one of the CCC or WPA programs to put people to work. |
Skipped right to Evergreen Av looking east up the hill where the sand turns back to clay and over Wolf Creek. |
Nothing left of the Rutsch Farm on the north (newer Swenson built house) and nothing left of the Peterson farm on the right (but also a replacement house) |
The wooded lot on the right is all that is left of John Nelson's 1905 built farm. A house, windmill and old barn were there when I was young. |