Saturday, April 11, 2015
Friday, April 10, 2015
Loose Wheels by Gary Helmer
Loose Wheels
By Gary Helmer
In the fall of 1964 we were
harvesting sugar beets on the Wilson farm about
six miles east of Belle Fourche on highway
212. It was the first place on the south
side of the highway just east of the Belle Fourche
river bridge. My oldest brother Ray and
I were operating the beet harvesters and Ray’s Wilma and another brother Glenn
were driving the trucks to haul the sugar beets to the beet dump on the North
side of the U and I Sugar Company’s sugar beet processing plant located east of
Belle Fourche.
We would work until dark this was before daylight savings time came into
existence and I would take the last load of the day to the beet dump in Belle
Fourche on my way home for the night as we lived south of Belle Fourche along
the Redwater river. On this particular
night I was in a hurry to get to the beet dump before 6:00 pm. I was traveling west at about 70 mph when I
passed a pickup by the Ingersoll school.
About two miles down the road I started to slow down to make a right hand
turn down the county road that lead to the beet dump. All of a sudden the left rear of the truck
dropped down and the truck started to slide like it was on ice. I
could see sparks in the rearview mirror as it slid down the highway. I didn’t know what had happened until I saw a
wheel and tire pass me on the left side.
As I was controlling the truck, I watched the wheel speed down the
highway towards a car approximately a quarter of a mile away traveling east
towards me. Just as the speeding wheel approached
the car, it swerved into the right hand lane and I never saw it again.
I flagged down the pickup
that I had passed earlier to ask them to call Ray to tell him that I needed
some help. Doug Brost stopped by, and I
had him go notify John Moline, the operator of the beet dump, that I wouldn’t
make it in by 6:00. I had the truck
parked on the shoulder of the highway with the lights on. As I waited for Ray, I stood at the left rear
of the truck watching traffic go by.
Several vehicles passed until I noticed a car coming towards me, I could
hear the engine back rap as the driver had taken his foot off of the
accelerator but was not moving over. I
ran into the road ditch to get out of the way of the car. As I got into the ditch, I turned to see if the
car may swerve into the ditch. At that
moment, I watched the car crash into the back of the stopped truck. The car lights went out as the car impacted
the truck. The wrecked car sat on the
highway with no lights on, and there was oncoming traffic. The truck started to
roll into the ditch. I ran to stop the
truck and set the brake, I ran back to the car to see if the occupant was okay. As I opened the car door a dog jumped out and
took off and the driver got out with blood running down his face from a wound
on the forehead. The occupant seemed to
be okay as he was calling for his dog. As soon as he exited the wrecked car, he
took off after his dog. I asked the next
car that arrived on the scene to park behind the wrecked car to keep someone
from crashing into it. Shortly after the
accident happened Ray arrived followed by Glenn, another brother Larry, Marvin
Kindsfater the owner of the adjoining land and Sheriff George Hafner.
The tow truck driven by Bob
Conner arrived to move the wrecked car off the highway. With his flashlight in hand, the sheriff
walked around talking to people. He told
me and Ray to come to the jail the next night to file a report. We all went home for the night.
Early the next day, we went
to put the wheels back on the truck and get it unloaded. We found that one wheel and tire had crossed
the highway fence and landed a few feet from where the truck stopped, but we
never found the other one. Ray got
another wheel and tire from Patrons Oil Cooperative where he had purchased the
truck. After we had the wheels and tires
back on the truck, we discovered that the truck box loaded with beets had slid
into the left side of the truck cab and that the beets could not be unloaded
until the box had been slid back. Glenn
had the box slid back into the proper position at the Lindstad Alignment
shop. While the truck was parked in the
road ditch that night, someone siphoned the gas out of the tank and stole Ray’s
log chain that was in the cab. I
remember asking Ray if we should lock the doors, and he had replied that nobody
could take it without a set of duals.
By noon we were back to
harvesting sugar beets. Ray and I
stopped at the Jail to file an accident report with the Sheriff who resided in
the Butte County Jail
The Spaulding Cabin
By Gary Helmer
On our farm about three miles southeast of Belle Fourche along the Redwater River was a log cabin. There were remnants of a yard fence as an old gate hung between two posts. Approximately 100 feet south of the gate was a hand-dug water well that was shored up with planks that were starting to bow in because of the deterioration of the wood. Approximately 200 feet to the southwest in a hillside were the remnants of the cellar. The cabin’s main entrance was at the south end. It had a walk-in door that was tied shut with wire. The second floor window was immediately above this door.
The old cabin was about 20 feet long and 14 feet wide. Built by Johnny Spaulding, it had a lean-to on the west side that was 12 feet wide by 26 feet long. The main house had two rooms on the main floor and a narrow, winding, steep stairway that led upstairs to 2 bedrooms. Some of the windows were broken out and the door was always tied shut to keep the livestock out of the items that were stored inside. The main cabin had a wooden floor, the first of its kind in the area. The lean-to had a dirt floor. Its door and windows were gone. The livestock could go in and out of the lean-to area.
In the 1950s, my brother Larry and I, sometimes joined by our nephews Keith and Daryl, would play in this old cabin. I was about six years old at that time. In 1956 or 1957, a couple of members of the Belle Fourche Lions Club approached Dad about selling the cabin to the local Lions Club. Dad indicated that he would not sell the cabin to them, but he would be willing to donate it to the Lions Club. Later that year, the lean-to was removed and the cabin was moved to Belle Fourche.
Jim Snoozy and Bud Ginsbach were contacted to move the cabin. After they had lifted the cabin up using old railroad jacks, they realized that the equipment they had was not suitable for moving the log structure. They had Tom Mitchell move the cabin with his heavy equipment-moving low-boy trailer. That afternoon when I got home from school, Mom said that the cabin was on its way to town. I looked out the north living room window and could see the cabin going past the place where Snoozys lived (the present Curt Elson residence) on Helmer Road.
The Lions Club placed the cabin across State Street from the Post Office, and refurbished the cabin. It was decorated with items from the Tri-State Museum. This made it look like an actual settler’s cabin. For several years the Lions Club hired a couple of ladies to serve as attendants during the summer months. These attendants would answer questions for the visitors that stopped by.
In 1976, the local Senior Citizens organization took on the attending of the cabin as their bicentennial project. They continued serving as attendants until 1993 when they discontinued the project due to declining membership in their organization. To begin with, there were enough Senior Citizen volunteer attendants that each only had to be there for a half a day once a week. As their membership declined, the schedule for tending the cabin became more demanding. During the time that the Senior Citizens tended the cabin, my mother spent a lot of time helping out. After her death in 1985, our family had a plaque mounted in the cabin honoring our parents, Bill and Alma Helmer. for the gift of the cabin. In 1993, the cabin and the operation of the cabin was turned over the the City of Belle Fourche.
On June 26, 2006, the cabin was once again moved to the present site of the new museum and Chamber of Commerce Office along US Highway 85 on the south side of the Belle Fourche River Bridge. In May of 2007, I was asked by the Questers Organization to serve as master of ceremonies for the rededication of the cabin at the new site. The dedication was held on June 15, 2007. All of my brothers and sisters were in attendance. It was an honor to do this.
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