Thursday, September 22, 2011

The Kidder Newsletter, part 2

Another profile as printed in the December 1965 Vol. 1, No. 3 issue of the Family Tie.   (This is also the very first issue I have.)

    "Clarance M. Kidder was born June the twenty-fifth, eighteen hundred seventy-five, Town of Day, Mt. Calm County.  This record from the family Bible.
    When Clarence was eight years old his father moved the family to the Dakota Territory.  These were exciting days and Dakota Prairies presented many problems not experience in the pine woods of Michigan.
    The alkali water was not fit for man or beast.  It was necessary to haul drinking water by wagon for a distance of twenty miles.  When tornadoes were sighted the family sough refuge in a storm cellar.  This was homesteading land which had never been plowed or sown with crops.  The Dakota Territory was frontier country with no conveniences except those provided by the homesteaders.
    Intermingled with the hard work of cultivating new ground was the excitement of hunting game on the open prairie.  Bill Long, the hired hand, would hitch up a buckboard, grab a couple of muzzle loaders and with Clarence on the seat beside him go hunting for prairie chickens.  Driving the horses into a flock of prairie chickens and shooting from the buckboard put meat on the table in time for supper.
    When Clarence was eleven years old his mother died from prairie fever.  The family moved back to Michigan where his father could get help to raise the children.
    Clarence attended school and after school worked in the mill packing shingles.  His half-brother, Will Kidder taught him to box and he became very adept with his hands.  On Saturday night the young men from nearby towns came to Stanton to box the local talent.  Clarence frequently was on the card and usually won his match.
    In spring of 1900 Clarence boarded a train to seek his fortune in Chicago.  He worked for two years on "The Line" where horses were sold at auction in the Drexel Park Pavillion, Union Stock Yards.  He was the barn boss for Eli Pfaelzer Meat Packers for two years.  After three more years working for horse drawn liveries Clarence decided there was a future in automobiles.
    In 1907 he married Emma Kallberg.  There were five children born of this marriage.  Stanley, Mildred, Lillian and Dorothy were born in Chicago and Ruth was born in Whitehall, Michigan.
    Clarence learned quickly about automobiles.  He drove for the Emery Motor Livery in the Hyde Park District.  he was a yellow cab driver for several years.  He was a night foreman for Keeley's garage.  While working for the Yellow Cab Company he was also a private chauffeur for Mr. Van Winkle who lived at 44th and Forestville Avenue.  Clarence moved his family into Mr. Van Winkle's tenant house.  He was able to raise a few chickens which Emma had bought as a Easter gift for the children in 1916.  Two of the chickens, Dick and Biddy, became members of the family.  Dick would perch on Clarence's shoulder and carry on a conversation.  Biddy on one occasion was brought into the house and promptly laid an egg on the scarf covering the piano.
    Clarence longed for a place in the country where he could raise a garden and some chickens.  In 1917 he moved the family to Whitehall, Mich.  Emma who was born in Sweden found several Swedish women who were friendly and liked to drink coffee and talk.  In the summer the children picked berries on shares.  If they picked three crates of strawberries they received one for their labor.  It was always great fun getting ready for winter.  Clarence would buy 10 to 12 bushels of potatoes, several bags of flour, a 200 lb. sack of navy beans which were stored in the cellar along with 300 or more jars of home canned fruit and vegetables.  With the shed full of cord wood Clarence woudl say "Let it snow, they can't freeze us out now."
    In the evenings after supper the family would father around the hot blast stove.  Mildred, his oldest daughter, would play the organ and the family would sing hymns and folk songs.  Occasionally Clarence would play a violin accompaniment.
    Five acres of ground in the Fruitvale area was purchased as the future site of a chicken farm before he moved from Chicago to Whitehall.  The weekend trips to Fruitvale to improve the five acres were also occasions for hunting and fishing excursions.  The small game, rabbits, partridge and squirrels were plentiful in the area.  Lake Michigan, inland lakes and five trout streams known throughout Michigan provided excellent fishing.  Clarence and his son, Stanley, enjoyed the outdoors hunting and fishing together.
    Clarence worked in the local garage as a mechanic.  He had several books on auto repair and was a good mechanic.  The local mechanics were able to repair the Model "T" Fords but were a bit lost on the other models. When a Chandler sheared off an idling shaft in the transmission on the sandy road to Fruitvale local mechanics were unable to help.  With no parts available Clarence fashioned a shaft from a piece of hard wood and drove the car into town.
    Clarence joined the Odd Fellows Lodge and was active in community affairs.  He rented a building and opened a garage and auto repair shop.  Business was real good in the summer months.  In the winter the deep snow and cold weather stopped most auto traffic.  During the first World War he operated a gear machine in the Continental Motor Works in Muskegon, Michigan.
    On August 30, 1923 members of the Kidder family who were living in Michigan, came to Whitehall for a family reunion.  Twenty-six members including the families of Clarence, Dan, Fred and Grace Shea spent two happy days together in the beautiful wooded area around White Lake.
    In 1925 he moved the family back to Chicago.  He rented a large two story building with an English Basement.  After some remodeling the upstairs rooms were rented as light housekeeping rooms.  He was employed by Armour & Co. as a pipefitter.  The children finished school and were married.
    Clarence was gainfully employed all of his life.  In his later years he worked as an overseer for a wealthy property owner on the West side of Chicago.  Mr. Knox, the property owner, was in his eighties and unable to look after his property.  Mr. Know had implicit faith in Clarence's judgement and integrity.  In addition to being employer and employee they were very good friends.
    His family hold cherished memories of him as one who brought encouragement in the time  of trouble, help in the time of need and a loyalty to family and friends that was at times fierce in its dedication.  He believed that people and animals had to be loved as well as doctored to restore their mental and physical health.
    Clarence M. Kidder died on June 2, 1951 from injuries received in an automobile accident near Madison, Wis."

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