Monday, October 20, 2025

Livestock Field Day Set At Quarry

 This interesting article appeared in The Crittenden Press, June 8, 1972

Livestock Field Day Set At Quarry, By John Lucas

Acting area extension agent Rankin E. Powell urges all county farmer’s and interested persons to attend the Crittenden County Livestock Field Day which is slated for Wednesday June 14.

 

The field day is sponsored by the area extension office, Production Credit Association and the West Kentucky Land and Cattle Company.

 

A full day of activities are planned which will include viewing the underground feed lots located at the Alexander Stone Company, touring farms owned by Gaines P. Wilson of Louisville, seeing modern hay handling equipment, a free bar-b-que lunch, and afternoon speeches by the field day sponsors.

 


Activities are scheduled to begin at the Alexander Stone Company located approximately seven and one-half miles north of Marion on Highway 60. Powell said that those coming should arrive around 9 a.m. and that the tour of the underground pens would begin at 9:30 a.m. 

 

Using the approximately 40 acres of tunnels that the Alexander Stone Company has quarried for limestone was first envisioned by Edward O’Nan, Wesley Nick and Gaines P. Wilson as a way of treating calves which had pink-eye.

 

It was later expanded to a full scale operation. Presently there are only about 200 cattle and 450 hogs being housed in the quarried tunnels, but plan are being made so that they hope to eventually house up to 4,000 or 5,000 cattle and an undetermined number of hogs. In charge of the operation presently is Froman "Hoppy" Lovell.

 

Water is being piped into the caverns from reservoirs about ground. Not only does the operation use ground which can’t be used for anything else, the underground system maintains a constant temperature of near 60 degrees and produces no weather or fly problems. Lovell said that the animals seem to stay calm and quiet in the subdued atmosphere.

 


 

After touring these facilities, plans are made to tour the farm of R. R. "Shorty" Holland and the Gaines P. Wilson farm which joins it. 

 These are located approximately four miles north of Marion on highway 60.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

One of the main drawing cards on these farms will be the exhibitions of modern hay handling equipment.

 

This equipment will be shown with an emphasis on field stored hay. This will include equipment capable of making t he regular and large round bales and equipment which will make the stack. All of this equipment is designed to produce a bale which will shed water to protect the hay from the weather.

 

If the weather permits, actual demonstrations are planned. Otherwise, examples of the stacks and round bales will be on display.

 

Powell said that many area farmers are turning to this type of hay storage because of the difficulty of getting labor to put the hay in a barn and because the cost of doing so was prohibitive. He added that when the hay is left in the field there is also no added cost of taking it from the barn to the field.

 

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FYI: Another interesting fact about the quarry tunnels - From February 24, 1972.

Shelter Approved.  The tunnels at Alexander Stone Company, which has recently been surveyed and approved by the Army Corps of Engineer's as a fallout shelter for Crittenden County.  The tunnel complex would serve 15,6954 according to Murray Fox, Chief of the Civil Defence branch.  The survey was conducted at the request of Charlie Hodge, Crittenden County Civil Defense director. 

(In 1972, the general danger of a nuclear bomb was high as the world was in the midst of the Cold War between the United States and the Soviet Union) 

 

Friday, October 10, 2025

The Old Folks Meet - 1897

 

Crittenden Press, July 22, 1897



The Old Folks Meet

The old folks meeting at Sugar Grove Saturday was one of the most unique and joyous events ever had in the county.


The young folks frequently have their gatherings, but it is not often that the line is drawn at sixty years, and all beyond that mark "especially invited." Such was the gathering in the beautiful grove at Sugar Grove church Saturday.


While others were there, and welcome, too, it was the old folks’ occasion, and never did the light heart of youth beat with as sincere pleasure as thrilled the souls of these our honored friends whose silvery locks tell us that they, have been with us "lo, these many years," as they shook hands with each other Saturday.


It was a favorable day for the occasion and everything possible was done to make it a day pleasant and profitable to the venerable sires and matrons who should gather to enjoy the day. A very large congregation assembled, many more than could be seated in the beautiful and commodious church house of Sugar Grove.


At 10:30 a prayer service was conducted by W. T. Oakley, and the prayers had the old time ring of the days past and gone – prayers full of fervency and of pleading for the presence and power of the Holy Spirit.


At 11:00 the congregation enjoyed a very able and comforting sermon preached to the old people by Rev. J. T. Barbee, pastor of the church.


At noon an excellent dinner was spread of sufficient variety and excellence to satisfy the appetite of all the most fastidious. The old people all ate together and were amply supplied with that greatest of luxuries, excellent hot coffee. The noontide hours were delightfully spent in social chat in which the old folks recounted many striking reminiscences of the past.


The afternoon hours were spent in an old fashioned prayer meeting, conducted by Uncle William Hill.


It was a very interesting meeting. Several of the gray haired veterans of the cross led in prayer, the old songs were sung, several earnest talks were made, and the services closed with an old fashioned hand shake and general rejoicing.


Doubtless there were more old people present than been together for a long time. Quite a number testified that they had been Christians forty eight or fifty years, and they were not tired of the way. The day will be crowned with sweet memories by those who were present.


The following is a list of the names, and the ages of the old people who attended the Sugar Grove Old Folks Day" Saturday, July 17, 1897.

E. H. Porter, 66 

Rev. W. B. Crowell, 77 

H. H. King, 70

W. D. Givens, 70 

W. M. Brown, 67 

W. H. Asher, 70

J. D. Boaz, 67 

J. A. Jacobs, 63 

A. D. Crider, 62

W. J. Brantley, 74 

Field Brantley, 72 

R. C. Lucas, 73

W. P. Lamb, 76 

W. B. Crider, 64 

Joe Newcom, 73

F. M. Stevenson, 65

 L. B. Hunt, 64 

H. C. Gilbert, 76

J. C. Brown, 70 

Elijan Hughes, 65 

R. L. Wilson, 61

I. N. Cain, 62 

Jas. Btler, 72 

W. J. Bruce, 73

H. B. Stembridge, 62 

P. H. Woodsides, 64

 B. A. Enoch, -

M. A. Lamb, - 

Sue Pickens, 68

 Huldah Lamb, 81

M. A. Newcom, 73 

M. A. Steward, 70 

Mrs. E. Hughes, 61

L. E. Redd, 71 

S. C. Nunn, 64

 M. V. Beard, 61

P. E. Williams, 67 

M. M. Campbell, 78 

N. E. Wheeler, 65

Mary Long, 71 

M. L. Jacobs, 61 

J. Bugg, 68


(P.S. I wish they had used their full names instead of just initials)

Wednesday, October 1, 2025

The Gold Rush - Reunion of "Fortyniners"

 On January 24, 1848, at Sutter's Mill in Coloma California, Jim Marshall saw a yellow object glistening in the mill race.  Picking it up he found it to be a small nugget of gold.  Thus began the California gold rush.  

Every color, nationality and class was represented in the Forty-Niners - young men of rich families shopkeepers, farmers, workman, including a large number of criminals of the worst type.

 Many who started for California in the gold rush died on the way, and all suffered extreme hardships.   

Word of this great find also reached Crittenden County and several from this area went to find their fortune.  There is very little to be found about who traveled from Crittenden County to California, we have a few names. Some of the men that traveled to the west were: Tom Robinson, George Boaz, George Adams, William Barnes, Jim Barnes and William H. Franklin.  We do not know if all the men that returned to Crittenden and Livingston counties struck it rich in the gold fields or not, but they were considered to be men of influence in the business world at their deaths.  I wish they had shared their adventures when they returned to Crittenden. 

To add some more history and information on this subject, from the Crittenden-Record Press – May 26, 1905 was the following article.

A Gathering of Veterans of the Plains

Wednesday was a bright pleasant day and with the beginning of the day there was clustered around the entrance to the New Marion Hotel a small bunch of men with snow white hair and frosty beard. There were ten in all and it represented almost all of those who survived of the many who crossed the western plains from 1849 to 1852 to seek a fortune in the California gold fields, and who at this time reside within fifty miles of Marion. They have a little organization, which they call "The Forty-Niners", and they had gathered here to hold their annual reunion. 

 

After spending the forenoon in making inquiries, one of the other, of some friend of the plains, and calling up incidents that happened on the plains, they then followed their chairman and historian John Montgomery of Providence in the dining room of the New Marion Hotel where with a few invited guests they partook of a bountiful repast.

 

After the noon hour they met in session to reorganize and Montgomery was re-elected chairman. Time was then devoted to the calling up of events of the plains, and Rev. James F. Price of this city, one of the guests, was called upon to read Montgomery's history of the trip across the plains. The various parties that crossed the great plains and the great mountains from the Mississippi Valley to California from 1849 to 1852, made the trip in about six months. The parties making this journey consisted of from ten to twenty-five in each party. 

 

The names of pioneers attending this meeting, together with their age and place of residence, is as follows:

John Montgomery, 72, Providence 

Judge J. F. Ingram, 70, Princeton

Robert B. Nunn, 73, Owensboro

 D. L. Bryan, 72, Marion

James R. Stalion, 79, Carrsville

 James A. Trimble, 70, Carrsville

George M. Cash, 78, Kuttawa 

 Thomas Robinson, 75, Lola

B. J. Spratt, 81, Princeton 

Marcus Dunkerson, Lisman

After the meeting, the "Forty-Niners" thanked the citizens of Marion for their interest and the many courtesies shown them, and hoped to meet them in Marion again soon.