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Tag: Now That’s Rural

Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Karen Sturm – Talking Tombstones

“If only those tombstones could talk….”  Have you ever had that thought while visiting a cemetery? Today we’ll meet a rural community which is giving a voice to fascinating histories of the past.

Karen Sturm
Karen Sturm

Karen Sturm is tourism coordinator for the Chamber of Commerce in Caldwell. This is a volunteer position, as was her time spent as president of the local historical society.

“I’ve always loved history,” Karen said. As a child, she enjoyed reading historical books.  Karen grew up at Caldwell and married a farmer. They have two sons and four granddaughters.

Caldwell is located near the Oklahoma border. It played a significant role in the 1893 Cherokee Strip Land Rush into Indian Territory, now Oklahoma. In 1990, the community of Caldwell began a three-year process to prepare for the centennial of the land rush.  Karen stepped in to help with this celebration and learned much more about the fascinating history of Caldwell.

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Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Brett Pfizenmaier

“The perfect pumpkin.” That’s the objective of a young farm entrepreneur whose interest in a pumpkin seedling 4-H project has grown into a business of its own.

Eric (left) and Brett Pfizenmaier
Eric (left) and Brett Pfizenmaier

Brett Pfizenmaier and his brother Eric are owner/operators of the Pfizenmaier Pumpkin Patch. Their parents, Pat and Maureen Pfizenmaier, farm west of Clay Center.

Bobby Bulk, a family friend, helped the Pfizenmaiers with their field crops. He also loved to garden, and that knowledge would prove helpful in the future.

Brett and his brother were active in 4-H. One year Brett tried a 4-H project to learn about germination of seedlings using a nice, big pumpkin seed as an example. He planted and watered the seed and watched it grow.

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Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Tracy Teeter – The Main ARTery

The main artery is vitally important in the circulatory system of every person. It carries nutrients and life-giving oxygen that is vital to the human body. Today we’ll learn about a different type of artery. This one is literally about Art. The Main ARTery is a catchy name for a remarkable art gallery in a rural region of Kansas and it’s the topic of this week’s Kansas Profile.

Tracy and Lynn Teeter
Tracy and Lynn Teeter

Tracy Teeter is owner of The Main ARTery in Ulysses, Kansas. She grew up at Ulysses and studied commercial art at Garden City Community College and Emporia State University before working in the restaurant business at various locations around the country. In 1995, she returned to Ulysses and went to work for an attorney. She also met and married her husband, Lynn Teeter.

Tracy practiced painting pastels on the side. In 2005, she befriended a local frame shop owner and fellow artist named Jeani Gustafson. After seeing her friend’s artwork, Tracy said, “Let’s do a show together.” The two joined with other artists to plan and produce an art show in Ulysses.

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Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Todd Trzcinski – SCR Professional Services

The people stood on their front lawn, looked at their house, and they began to cry. Does that sound like a story about the devastation resulting from a flood or tornado? In this case, the story has a whole different focus, because these are tears of joy. Today we’ll learn about a rural Kansas entrepreneur who is using his painting skills to create happiness through improvement.

Todd Trzcinski owns and operates SCR Professional Services in Goodland, Kansas.
Todd Trzcinski owns and operates SCR Professional Services in Goodland, Kansas.

Todd Trzcinski is owner of SCR Professional Services which includes SCR Painting and SCR Tree Services. Todd grew up in Denver but he spent summers working with his grandfather back east. “He had a handyman service which included painting, and I gravitated to the painting part,” Todd said.

After a couple of years in corporate life, he went into painting professionally in Denver. “I painted all the way along the front range, mostly commercial painting,” Todd said.

Eventually, living in an urban area wore Todd down. “I got tired of the rat race,” Todd said. “I didn’t want to sit in traffic for 1-1/2 hours each day. Then one day two kids were shot on their way to school in my neighbourhood, and that was the last straw.”

Todd decided he would take a drive. He drove to a small town in eastern Colorado, picked up a local newspaper, and saw that there was a house for rent in Kanorado.  Todd not only rented the house, he went to work for the farmer who was offering it.

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Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Mike Kilkenny – Taylor Forge

Slug catchers and pig traps. Those sound like things you might find in a garden or hog farm, but they are actually devices that are used in the natural gas industry. Today we’ll meet a remarkable Kansas company which is the world’s leading supplier of such devices and which also builds metal products used in ways as diverse as nuclear submarines and rockets for outer space.

Taylor Forge in Paola, Kansas manufactures a variety of products for the natural gas and other industries.
Taylor Forge in Paola, Kansas manufactures a variety of products for the natural gas and other industries.

Mike Kilkenny is CEO and owner of Taylor Forge Engineered Systems in Paola, Kansas.  This amazing company produces heavy duty products for these diverse uses and more.

In 1900, an inventor named J. Hall Taylor launched a pipe works company – now known as Taylor Forge – in Chicago. Three decades later, another engineering company started a facility in Paola, Kansas to serve the natural gas industry. Paola is centrally located between the Hugoton gas field to the west and industrial centers in big cities to the east.

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Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Joe Edmunds – Kaw Valley Greenhouses

Growing a greenhouse business is not an easy proposition. Today we’ll learn about an innovative family which has developed their greenhouse business so that it can sell millions of plants across the Midwest.

Chris Edmunds and her brother Joe Edmunds are two of the family members who own and operate Kaw Valley Greenhouses near Manhattan, Kansas

Last week we met Terry Olson, owner of Eastside and Westside Markets in Manhattan.  Today we’ll learn about the greenhouse business started by her father, Dr. Leon Edmunds, a K-State plant pathologist who began Kaw Valley Greenhouses near Manhattan in 1967.

For his greenhouse, Dr. Edmunds and his wife Pat had a built-in labor force: Their nine children. Terry, the oldest, eventually opened her own separate retail market. Four of her siblings now own and operate Kaw Valley Greenhouses: Joe, Chris, Pete, and Knute.

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Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Terry Olson – Eastside and Westside Markets

Eastside Market in Manhattan, Kansas
Eastside Market in Manhattan, Kansas

“Connecting with customers.” That’s what owner Terry Olson likes best from working with the Eastside and Westside Markets in Manhattan. In 2016, this business is celebrating 40 years of providing “fine fruits, fresh veggies, and fast friendly service.”

 

Terry Olson is the owner of Eastside and Westside Market. Her parents came from Wisconsin. Terry grew up in the family produce business. “My parents’ families got through the tough times of the depression by growing big gardens,” Terry said.

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Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Amanda Kaufman – Collingwood Barn

“Feel the Barn.” That sounds like a political slogan of 2016, but it may also describe the deep feeling of a young woman who is helping a historic barn find new purpose in rural Kansas.

Collingwood Barn, one of the largest in Kansas, has been restored and opened as an event space.

Amanda Kaufman is events coordinator for the Collingwood Barn in Pretty Prairie, Kansas. A man named Mart Collingwood started building this barn in 1913. The current owners, Dan and Brenda Pace, are descendants of the Collingwood family who also started a grain company.

Amanda first saw this barn in 2011. She is a Colorado native who went to Oklahoma State University. While working at a rodeo Bible camp in Texas, she met a young Kansan named Blaine Kaufman from Pretty Prairie. Their relationship grew.

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Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Verne Claussen – Mill Creek Lodge

Go west of Alma a few miles and one will find a gem – not a literal jewel, but a beautiful place. It is a historic farmstead with fabulous buildings which have been painstakingly restored and repurposed, and now are open to the public for lodging and events.

verneclaussenVerne and Marilyn Claussen are owners of a newly opened facility called Mill Creek Lodge at Volland Point. This is on a ranch which belonged to Verne’s parents. Verne went to K-State and then Houston College of Optometry, becoming an eye doctor. After a fellowship at Yale, he came back to Kansas and bought another place near Alma. He served as an optometrist in the region for 43 years before retiring.

Meanwhile, he was puzzling over what to do with his parents’ farm. This place has a rich history. J.R. Fix and his wife Rebecca homesteaded the place in 1865 after Fix had served in the Civil War. The couple had one son who died in infancy. Then they had a daughter – and then another daughter – and then another and another. All told, there were eight daughters born to the Fix family.

This meant they needed a spacious place to live. They also needed a large barn to house the workhorses needed for the farming, plus a place for the farmhands to live.  The Fix family expanded the buildings through the years.

The place remains a working ranch, now known as the Claussen Ranch. But what about the buildings on the farmstead? By 2013, the barn was no longer suitable for everyday farm use, for example.

“I wanted to make it into something where people could come out and enjoy the rural lifestyle,” Verne said. He took on a wonderful restoration of the house and buildings so as to create a place for lodging, meetings, and special events. That was the beginning of Mill Creek Lodge at Volland Point. The grouping of buildings has been designated a historic district by the National Register of Historic Places.

Since J.R. Fix and his wife had all those daughters, each daughter needed a bedroom so the Fix family built a majestic three-story Italianate home. “The house was in real good shape,” Verne said.

In 2015, Verne restored the house with heating, air conditioning, and modern plumbing and electricity. He also brought in period chandeliers and antique furniture. Verne named each one of the guest rooms for the daughter who lived there. So, guests can stay in the Pearl bedroom or the Mabel bedroom, for example. There is no doubt about which room is which – those two daughters actually carved their names into the wood floor.

The nearby tenant house for the farmhands was restored and expanded also. Then came the barn, which received a total makeover. The exterior look was largely preserved, but windows, heat and air conditioning, water and bathrooms were installed.

“The barn had been built in two phases,” Verne said. “The first part was to hold the horses, hay and wagons, and the second part was a corn crib to the west.” Verne remembers putting hay in this barn as a kid. Now the barn has been converted into a thoroughly modern but rustic-looking meeting area with multiple restrooms. The hayloft area can hold up to 250 people and the horse stall area can hold another 100. The north side of the old corn crib is now a receiving kitchen for caterers, and the south side is a bunkhouse. A spring-fed, hand-dug well is inside a cave nearby.

Mill Creek Lodge at Volland Point is now host to weddings, meetings, family reunions, and hunting in season. Up to 29 people can stay there overnight. The lodge is located 7 ½ miles west of the rural community of Alma, population 785 people. Now, that’s rural. More information can be found at www.millcreeklodgevollandpoint.com.

Go west of Alma a few miles and one will find a gem – not a literal jewel, but a beautiful place. We salute Verne and Marilyn Claussen for making a difference by restoring and repurposing these historic buildings in rural Kansas. I think it is a treasure.

Audio and text files of Kansas Profiles are available at http://www.kansasprofile.com. For more information about the Huck Boyd Institute, interested persons can visit http://www.huckboydinstitute.org.

 

 

Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Jerry Blackstone

Jerry Blackstone is a two-time GRAMMY award winner and internationally known conductor. His roots are in rural Kansas.

Jerry grew up on the family farm in the northern part of Jewell County. His family consisted of farmers, not musicians, although his grandfather played

Jerry Blackstone
Jerry Blackstone

the harmonica and his dad would sing for fun while riding the tractor. Jerry’s mother liked to play piano and sing also. His parents always encouraged and supported his interests.

Jerry grew up going to a one-room country school. His first teacher was a young woman named Miss Lippe. After he completed first grade, Miss Lippe told his parents, “He is a bright little boy and I’m afraid he’s going to get bored. Why don’t you get him piano lessons?” They did so and Jerry loved it. He grew up playing and singing in church.

Jerry’s sisters enjoyed music as well. Sister Marilyn now lives in Iowa and sister Ruth lives at Manhattan.

After four years in the one-room school, Jerry went to the school in town, but it was still quite rural in nature. The town was the nearby rural community of Burr Oak, population 249 people. Now, that’s rural.

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