Thursday, March 24, 2016

Throwback Thursday: Lydia Kerr

Lydia Kerr graduated from the Iowa State Teachers College on June 6, 1916. She was the middle child of five – four girls and a boy – and while each had attended classes at Upper Iowa University, Oelwein Business University, or the Teachers College, Lydia was the only one to complete a degree.

One month after graduation, her parents retired from farming near Elgin and moved to 116 Home Park Boulevard in Waterloo. Lydia lived there for a while, but decided to set out on her own. In the fall of 1917 she took a teaching job in Sioux City, where she would spend the next eight years.

When her father died in 1925, Lydia moved back to Waterloo and took up residence with her mother. In April of that year she was hired as a second grade teacher at Kingsley Elementary. She became active in the First Methodist Church, singing in the choir. She joined the West Waterloo Teachers Association and was an honorary member of the Phi Beta Kappa National Honor Society.

After her mother’s death in 1939, Lydia remained in the house on Home Park Boulevard. She never married, but was devoted to her nieces and nephews, as well as her Kingsley Students. During World War II, she helped coordinate ration book registration from school, and was proud of her four nephews serving in the armed forces.

On January 27, 1944, she entered St. Francis Hospital for surgery. She remained there for nine weeks, dealing with complications that would cut her life short on March 23, 1944, at age 51. She was buried with her parents in the cemetery outside Illyria Community Church.

Thursday, March 10, 2016

Throwback Thursday: Shaffer Drum Corps

The Shaffer Drum Corps had many members during its six decade run, but two remained constant: John D. Shaffer and Robert Peters. The men were just boys when they organized the drum and fife corps in 1871, learning much of the music from local Civil War veterans.

Martin Klingman and Marion Baldwin joined the corps in 1874, and the foursome built a reputation playing patriotic marches and traditional Civil War music. Also known as the Shaffer Martial Band, the group played GAR reunions, led Memorial Day and Independence Day parades, and headlined town festivals from Decorah to Oelwein.

“The great aim of the corps is to perpetuate the tunes and the drum beats of the Civil War period, and in all probability this is the only corps that furnishes some of the tunes with the most intricate of drum beats, known as the double drag,” said one newspaper account.

In 1930, they were invited to play at Waterloo Cattle Congress. It was the group’s 59th anniversary and Mr. Shaffer and Mr. Peters were still at the lead – Mr. Shaffer using the same teak wood drumsticks from 1871.

Later that year, Dr. Roy DeSart joined the band as a second snare drummer. They played in Lansing June 19-20, 1931, at a two-day celebration for a new bridge across the Mississippi. One week later its leader, John Shaffer, died at age 73.

The surviving members played at Mr. Shaffer’s graveside in Illyria Cemetery on June 29, 1931. Mr. Peters promised to keep the band alive, and a month later they reorganized with a new drummer, though still under the Shaffer name. Mr. Peters died March 1, 1933, and with him, the Shaffer Martial Band.

On March 9, 1933, Dr. DeSart published the following tribute in the Elgin newspaper:

THE OLD DRUM CORPS

Dedicated to John D. Shaffer and Robert Peters

Our rendezvous,
No longer here, It cannot be.
‘Tis with them in eternity.
The old double drag, the rat-a-tat-tum,
The boom boom-boom of the big bass drum,
The screaming fifes that led us on,
Are silent now. Our pals have gone.
Adieu.
With music hushed, we stand and
through
Our tears, we gaze into the blue,
And pray to Him for strength to wait,
With aching heart and burdened soul
The final call - the last long roll.
But hark! It calls! Oh precious
sound!
We of the old drum corps have found
Our rendezvous.