Rare, Collectible, & Otherwise

Tag: Catoosa (Page 72 of 101)

Carving a name on the wall. Or in a book.

Ray J. was just a teenager when the bombs fell at Pearl Harbor. He was tall and thin – in fact, he couldn’t meet the weight requirement at the recruiting office. They sent him home to eat some bananas. When he showed back up, they accepted him into the US Navy and sent him to the Pacific.

He never spoke to me much about his experiences beyond mentioning being a little nervous sitting up in the conning tower when Japanese Zeros passed low overhead. Late in the war, some of the pilots were slamming their planes into the US ships.

On July 5, 1945 his name was on the list of sailors aboard the Robert F. Keller, a destroyer escort, when it sailed out of the Philippines for what turned out to be its last mission. Ten days later, his ship assisted in the sinking of the I-13, a submarine off the coast of Japan.

The Keller was part of the escort convoy when the aircraft carrier USS Bismark Sea was lost in a Kamikaze attack – the two US destroyers and three escort ships nearby managed to pick up 605 survivors over the next twelve hours. Those were facts Ray J. never mentioned. I had to do a little research. Sort of like Don’s story.

Don Spaulding was just a teenager when he enlisted, but he picked the US Army. His family lived within an afternoon’s car drive of Ray J.’s family, and the Robert Keller actually sailed into the Philippine Islands and the very strip of land where Spaulding was stationed. But Don wasn’t there anymore.

Japanese forces had taken the Philippines early on – and the US troops were ordered to surrender. What ensued has been called the Bataan Death March, but that was just the start of it. From his place of assignment at Clark Field, Don and his unit joined others as they were herded to a location where they could be transported to Japan.

There were labor shortages among manufacturers, and the US prisoners of war were to be carried to Japan to work as slave laborers. There were 345 men taken from Clark Field. After the long march to Manila, they were loaded into the hold of a freighter called the Noto Maru.

In August of 1944, there were one-thousand-thirty-five prisoners jammed into the forward hold of the Noto Maru. The hatch covers were closed initially, and the heat was beyond belief. Bathrooms were simply buckets stuck against the wall. The POWs were given a cup of water and two rice portions a day. The young men lived in the cramped hold of the freighter Noto Maru for twelve days.

Years later, Don learned that a great many prisoner transports were unknowingly attacked by US ships – because they had every appearance of an enemy transport. At Moji, Japan, the prisoners were at last removed from the ship and loaded onto railway cars, having survived an attack and two torpedoes that ran deep.

Don Spaulding stayed on the train until it reached a point between Tokyo and Yokohama where he was to begin working at the Osaka Zōsen steel mill, producing equipment that would be used in the Japanese war effort. He spent the rest of the war as a prisoner, but many of his comrades were not so fortunate. Conditions were dire, the work was hard, and food was scarce.

Ray J. returned to Parsons and Don eventually found his way back to Tulsa.

Don Spaulding didn’t stay home for long. Almost unbelievably, he traveled to Texas and re-enlisted at Fort Sam Houston in 1946 and specifically requested to be assigned to the Pacific – the Hawaiian Department.

Years later, and back in Tulsa, Don was reminded of his comrades who shared the dark hold of that Japanese freighter bound for Japan, fellows from Company Three like Charles Ashcraft, Fred Bolinger, and Otha Johnson. His good buddy Alfred Sorensen. Pete Armijo, John Chesebrough and Juan De Luna. Don’s name was in there too – ironically – listed right beneath his friend Alfred.

The book was Brothers from Bataan. It tells the story of those brave men who lived an ordeal that the rest of us cannot even imagine. When it came into the shop, I noticed the signature and some cryptic notations. It wasn’t an author’s autograph, and it took a little investigating.

I learned what Noto Maru signified – a ship in the group of some two-dozen vessels referred to in later years as “Hell Ships,” the unmarked freighters that carried prisoners off to Japan.

Don Spaulding owned the book and already knew the information he wrote on the title page. I believe he wanted to make his mark on the wall, like many prisoners of war did. A simple, personal legacy intended for those who might come later. Many who carved their names into the walls of their prison cells did not have much time left. Don lived another eight years. He died in Tulsa in 2009.

His story is not so different from that of Louis Zamparini’s, the subject of the book Unbroken. Zamparini survived a plane crash in the ocean only to drift on a raft into Japanese-held islands. He also wound up working as a slave laborer.

The story of Ray J. – my father – is one that will never be known. Like Don, he was a young man who left home to serve the United States against aggressors, with no guarantee of returning. I can’t share Ray J.’s story, because I don’t know the full of it.

But I can share the tale of another young man from the Midwest as a measure of respect for their service, and as a token of my regret that it did not occur to me to express my pride and appreciation to my father – until I had missed my opportunity.

Better late than ever, I hear.

Proud of you, Pa.

Where’s the Welcome Wagon?

Used to be a group (probably only in small towns) that knocked on the front door after the moving van or U-Haul pulled away. They were the Welcome Wagon. Smiling folks who delivered a howdy-do and a basket of muffins or some-such, along with some store coupons and special offers. Welcome to our town! (In small communities everyone knows when someone has moved in from places afar – and not from just across town.)

We need a Welcome Wagon for the Rose District.

The new neighbor has hung out his shingle (that’s what they said back in the day when a business painted their name on a board and displayed it outdoors…). I have to admit, I’m a tad envious. There’s nothing like exterior signage to bring attention to an area. Heck, I’ll be excited to see what it looks like when they throw the switch to light it up.

I rolled up Main this morning right after the cloud cover moved in overhead and spotted the outstretched crane from a half-mile away. They’ve been setting the new street lamps in the Rose District and I figured that was the crane-project.

Turns out, it was the Bruhouse Grill.

So far, I’m not aware of a projected opening date for them, but I know they’ve been busy across the street doing interior renovation. The curtains were pulled back the other evening when I was strolling down the sidewalk and I was able to glance in (would have poked my face up to the glass but there were folks working inside). Big changes to the floor plan from how it appeared as Dooley’s.

Impressive.

Things are truly shaping up here in the Rose District. While the construction is tough on business right now, at the rate the crews are moving it won’t be too long before the store-front parking is restored. They are close to completing the block from Commercial to Dallas; the east side in particular is very close and the installation of lighting may be enough to finish up the construction part. Landscaping is next – but that shouldn’t deter shoppers and diners.

I have an appreciation for tradespeople and who know their stuff. Sometimes it’s a little scary to watch. Saw a fellow using a very large commercial circular saw to cut a series of boards. He was using his thigh as a saw horse. I watched for a couple of minutes, thinking all the while, “Accidents happen.”

Then it occurred to me that accidents happen to people like me when we try to do something like that. My brother-in-law was an expert carpenter and as he was cutting wood for my backyard deck, he wielded his saw like a butter knife, completely comfortable with the power tools. Experience is easy to recognize.

This afternoon, bricklayers are working on the landscaping planter that is located directly in front of the book store. They allowed me a photo while they worked – I want to be able to remember what it looked like (as it is today) when the renovation is completed.

Cloud cover made the picture a little dark, but the Bruhouse sign images also show the new street lamps. There are two types and I imagine the reason for that will become apparent once it grows dark and they turn them on. (After such a length of time operating in the dark down here it will be exciting to have street lights again.)

The talk lately ‘round here is the pushing back of the completion date. I’m not sure the vote by the civic body will have any bearing on how long the construction actually takes. It might make it official, or give the contractor a target to shoot for. Personally, I’m shooting for As Soon As Possible. (Which is probably what everyone is after…)

They’re saying mid-November for the street part. December for the whole sha-bang. That doesn’t mean it will be that long for the primary shopping and parking areas. The work in front of the shop here should be wrapping up in a couple of weeks. That doesn’t mean we’re closed along this part of Main. We unlock our doors every morning, sweep the dust from the sidewalk (it returns quickly, but hey! There’s less of it when we start fresh each day!), we turn on the OPEN signs and keep an eye out for shoppers and guests.

Come visit!

McHuston

Booksellers & Irish Bistro
Rose District
122 South Main Street, Broken Arrow OK!

One man’s treasure…

Children see things a lot more clearly than adults. They have several advantages. The child in you is agreeing with me – your grown-up side is already thinking up exceptions to the claim.

When I saw a fellow trudging around in the construction pit with his metal detector looking for buried treasure, it made me think of my childhood find – Unburied Treasure. Adults need that mechanical search aid. The dyno-tuned multi-frequency radar-pinging metal detector. Because we grown-ups know nothing is out there in plain sight.

A kid would just jump down in the dirt and look.

Not all treasure is made from metal, as every child understands. That’s part of their advantage over adults. They have an energetic curiosity that is seemingly eroded away later in life, reduced in varying degrees by experience and expectations. Adults know what to look for, but our focused searching causes us to overlook everything else – and we come away empty handed.

Kids have no preconceived notions. No built-in bias. No suspicions. Children are innocent, but adults are gullible. The grown-up in us won’t allow childlike-behavior in someone taller than a yardstick.

Children see things a lot more clearly than adults.


They have younger eyes. They are seeing things for the first time – looking with New Eyes.

They are lower to the ground.

I believe that’s what helped me find my treasure coin. Frontenac, Kansas – a little town near Pittsburg in the southeastern corner of the state. Frontenac was to Pittsburg in the way that Krebs is to McAlester in southeastern Oklahoma. A little community that began with Italian immigrants. We had a house there while my dad pursued his degree.

What a find it was! Resting on its edge in the summer grass, tilted just enough that the afternoon sun caused a glint of light. I picked it up and brushed it off. I had never seen anything like it. Where could it have come from?

Even as a first-grader, I could apply some detective logic. The yard had been mowed recently, and I figured my newly-found treasure coin would not have survived a bout with a power mower. It had to have been recently dropped.

I immediately looked around, swiveling my head in every direction. Nah. That was foolish-thinking. There hadn’t been any adults traipsing through the front yard. The piece was too sturdy and mysterious to be a kid’s thing. Anyone could see that.

Finally, I came up with the only reasonable conclusion. Somebody was flying over in a plane and dropped it. (Remember, I was in first grade…)

The token has been among my junk ever since. Used to keep it handy so I could pop it out and ask, “Ever seen anything like this?” Wasn’t showing it off. I just wanted to know what it was, and what all the symbols meant.

As it turns out, I wasn’t the only one wondering.

It took until the Age of the Internet, but the background of my Egyptian coin finally came up on a Google search.

There still is no definitive answer, apparently. But in 1905, Sears & Roebuck (as it was called back then) offered a “gentleman’s fob” in their catalog. A “fob” was a medallion or ring that was attached to a pocket-watch, or a set of keys, to help keep track of them. Men’s vests had a “fob pocket.”

No. 4C16186 The latest craze.
Gentlemen’s fob, imitation Ancient Egyptian design,
silver plated, oxidized finish, on German silver.
Length 5 1/4 inches
No. 4C16187 Same as No. 4C16186 but gilt finish.
Price, each … $0.12
6 for ……….. .66
12 for ……… 1.25

You can see in the image that the medallion part of the fob is identical to my childhood treasure find.

According to the website BrianRXM,

“They have appeared for years on Internet coin and metal detecting boards, on Ebay, at coin shows, and even in the movies.

There have been sightings in Great Britain, Canada, Australia, Germany, Poland, the Czech Republic, Uruguay, Pennsylvania, and, yes, Egypt.”

There was a big Egyptian craze in the late 1800s, in the days of the oversized steamer trunks and camel expeditions out into the pyramid-infested desert sands. Maybe the token was an off-shoot of that – in fact, the catalog described it as “the latest craze.” The Sears version was “German silver,” but most appearing since then are brass or bronze. No artist or manufacturer has ever been identified for certain.

They pop up on eBay from time to time, but it just isn’t the same – the idea of buying one.

When I reach that age of enlightenment, that time of life when material things have no more allure, I believe I’ll have someone drive me through a neighborhood filled with with playing children. In my hand, I’ll be carrying my lucky Egyptian treasure coin. When I spy the perfect location, I’ll reach my arm out the window.

And I’ll pitch that mysterious thing into a grassy front yard.

Come visit, with or without your treasure hunting machines.

McHuston

Booksellers & Irish Bistro
Rose District
122 South Main Street, Broken Arrow OK!

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