two of Lovell`s - The Lovell Chronicle
Transcription
two of Lovell`s - The Lovell Chronicle
1 2 We are proud to share the Lovell Chronicle’s 2010 Historical Section with our web readers … Take a step inside for stories about the National Guard’s deployment to Korea; two of Lovell’s finest town fathers, Dr. Scott M. Welch and Bill Powell; Lovell Senior VIPs and a very daring Mel Kuper! 3 4 5 6 1 June 17, 2010 | The Lovell Chronicle Historical Section 60 years later: Remembering the Korean War deployment By Brad Devereaux Last year’s Wyoming National Guard deployment has been called the largest deployment in the state’s history, with some 941 soldiers from Wyoming heading to Kuwait as part of the deployment of the 115th Fires Brigade. Looking back, the next largest Wyoming National Guard deployment was also its first deployment, about 60 years ago, to the Korean War in 1951. National Guard units from Lovell, Sheridan, Thermopolis, Worland and Cody made up the 300th Armored Field Artillery Battalion. The orders to ship overseas were received in January of 1951, and the 300th left shortly after, after four months of training at Fort Lewis. About 65 men from Lovell were deployed as part of the 300th Service Battery. The service battery was responsible for maintenance of equipment, and also supplying ammo, arms, food and other supplies to the rest of the battalion. They went on line May 16, attached to the Second Infantry Division. Don Dover of Lovell was working at the National Guard Armory at the time of deployment, and was given the job of contacting the men in the unit to tell them they had been activated. Some of them were surprised, but most soldiers knew it was coming, he said. Dover said there were advantages and disadvantages that many of the men in the battalion were from Lovell. “We were all friends, so we didn’t get homesick as much. We all worked together and helped each other,” he said. “The bad part was, you could have the whole unit wiped out in one deal.” Fortunately, the 300th Service Battery did not suffer a single causality during the war, although other soldiers from northwest Wyoming in the battalion were killed. But that’s not to say there weren’t some close calls for the Lovell soldiers. Courtesy photo Bob Baird (right) stands next to his Korean friend, Gus, who Baird hired to help with construction and other tasks around the Army camp. Dover remembers a tense trip when he and another soldier left the service area and took a drive up to the artillery line. Dover was in charge of distributing rations to the service battery and spent much of his time organizing, preparing and delivering food, but he also traveled to the front lines on occasion. “A Jeep sped by in the opposite direction and the guys were yelling at us to turn around and go back,” he said. They watched as artillery blasts landed in the center of the road, one every 10 feet or so, coming toward the jeep. They quickly jumped out and took quick cover on the side of the road. Seconds later, a shell dropped just feet from where they dug in. It was a dud. They jumped back over to the jeep, which was covered in dirt from the blasts, and took off down the road, passing an artillery outpost that had been blown up and a few marines who were killed in the blast. Dover remembers taking baths in a Korean river during downtime and a bunch of soldiers floating down the river on air mattresses. Dover snagged his mattress on a barbed wire hanging over the water and had to walk a few miles on the riverbank to catch up with the group. “They were laughing so hard at me,” he said. Even during downtime, there were constant reminders of the war, he said, recalling the bodies of Korean soldiers and civilians floating down the river alongside them. Trucking ammo Ammo Supply Sergeant Wes Meeker’s main responsibility was to make sure the three firing batteries in the battalion had the ammo they needed during combat. He said most of his time was spent running ammo trucks back and forth to the 18 artillery guns of the battalion. The service battery was equipped with 12 trucks to haul equipment, and also a radio truck and a jeep, which served as a quick back and forth between the artillery and the service battery. They typically hauled boxes with two shells in each, at 48 pounds per shell. Vehicles of the 300th were stamped with a Wyoming bucking horse logo on a bumper plate, Meeker said. The pride of the logo also extended to troops not native to Wyoming, he said. The ammo supply soldiers stayed in tents with the rest of the service battery during the winter, Meeker said, but often they operated more like infantry, staying between the front lines and service battery, digging holes in the ground and making small shelters out of ammo boxes filled with dirt. With a tarp pulled over top, Meeker said some nights he slept pretty good and the structure helped keep the soldiers out of the way of shrapnel flung by exploding artillery rounds. Meeker said the battalion was put on a task force to break through enemy lines to try to cut off Chinese troops in May of 1951. The opposing soldiers caught the 300th, along with the Second Infantry Division they were supporting, in a narrow passage and they were forced to back up with M7 howitzers to vacate the area. The force was made up of 12 Chinese divisions, an estimated 120,000 troops. Meeker said the Second Infantry was overrun terribly, with many killed and wounded. The Second Infantry Division and the 300th Armored Field Artillery Battalion received a distinguished Unit Citation for “deserved honor and distinction,” for their actions during the operation on May 16- Soldiers of the 300th Armored Field Artillery pictured in 1951 in Korea are (front row, l-r) Mel Baird, Lyle Townsend, Cecil Carlton, Uel Moore, Bob Lindsay, Jerry Horsley, John Mckay, Kay Parks, Don Dover, Jim Larson, Robert Earhaart, Bob Tillett, Harley Higuraski, Darrell Stevens, Don Pickett, Aaron Owens, Perry Alsager; (second row, l-r) Bob Baird, Alvin Doerr, Ira Summer, Harry Ryan, Max Chandler, Kim (Korean boy), Dean McArthur, Jerry Fink, Agpowa, Dastis, John Pilaroski, Roman Silkowski, Fred Davis, George Torre, – Edwards, George Manhart, Dale Quinn; (third row, l-r) Austin Prestice, Wayne Porter, Ian Ross, John Vankershaver, Mark Robertson, Arnold Korell, Mr. Brown, Lt. Smith, 2 3 4 5 6 Courtesy photo Members of the 300th pictured are (unknown), Bob Baird with his pheasant shotgun, Lyle Townsend and Dale Quinn. The Wyoming bucking horse is stamped on the upper left corner of the truck. 22, 1951. The following is a passage from the citation: “The Third Chinese Army Group drove the full force of its savage assault against the Second Division with the specific mission of annihilation of the units. The right flank of the unit was completely exposed when enemy pressure broke through adjacent United Nations elements. Pressure increased and each night enemy forces bypassed the staunch defenders and occupied positions to their rear. Tactical units of the Second Division launched fierce counterattacks which destroyed enemy penetrations, successfully extricated themselves, and through readjustment of positions, stopped the onslaught of the Chinese forces.” The 300th received another citation for their efforts on July 10, 1953, to provide artillery support until infantry units could establish new positions further ahead. “The magnificent fighting spirit exhibited by members of the 300th Armored Field Artillery Battalion reflects great credit on themselves and the military service,” the citation reads. “We had a good outfit. I was really proud of our outfit,” Meeker said. “We hauled a lot of ammo.” By the time Meeker left Korea in February of 1952, the 300th had fired more than 285,000 rounds of artillery fire. Ice cream was the thing Meeker said he missed the most while overseas. He said ice cream was made at camp and distributed twice to the 300th during their time there. Meeker made a point to mention that First Sergeant Mel Baird was “the finest first sergeant you would ever run into.” Baird, a WWII veteran, was also instrumental in getting the new national guard unit started in Lovell after the old 115th Calvary was disbanded after mobilizing just prior to WWII in 1940. Meeker was the first non-veteran to join up, he said, and he spent some time recruiting. He said he talked to many local soldiers about joining up including Dover, Dick Doerr and Pete Moncur, to name a few. “I told them it was a good deal,” Meeker said. “You got to wear a uniform, got to go to camp and you got paid.” The last day troops were in Lovell, See ‘korea,’ page 4 Douglas Reutzel, Thorald Rollins, George Husby, Wilbur Clark, Wes Meeker, Bill England; (fourth row, l-r) John Richadson, Norald Emmett, Jack Johnson, Elmer Ezzell, Farrell Walker, Fred Fitchner, McElkinny, Bob Halliwell, – Price, –Burger, Andy Anderson, Gordon Olsen, Walter Jones, Bill Shumway, Dr. Freeman, Ralph Wilkerson; (fifth row, l-r) Don Blackburn, Rex Reasch, Bill Whalen, Sgt. Wooley, Ken Blackburn, Jack Frost, Wayne Kinser, Lew Nicholls, Dick Doerr, Don Moncur, Eugene Lewis. Not pictured: Graham Simms, Richard Sessions, Mondell Workman. Courtesy photo 2 | The Lovell Chronicle Historical Section | June 17, 2010 www.LovellChronicle.com 2010 Mustang Days Parade marshal: Town father Dr. Scott M. Welch believes in serving Scott Meeks Welch was born Jan. 25, 1925, in Cowley. He attended school in Cowley, graduating from Cowley High School. Scott served as an ensign in the Navy during World War II from Nov. 1943 until Oct. 1946. He married Kathleen Peterson, also from Cowley, Sept. 4, 1945. After the war both Scott and Kathleen continued their education at the University of Wyoming. Scott played football for the Wyoming Cowboys, starting as quarterback in 1946 and 1947. In the spring of 1948, Scott and Kathleen both received their bachelor’s degrees. After graduation, while waiting for placement in dental school, Scott was the assistant football coach for the Wyoming Cowboy freshman football team. Scott attended dental school at St. Louis University in St. Louis, Mo., graduating in the spring of 1953. Scott and Kathleen moved to Lovell where he practiced dentistry until 2004. Scott was always active in the community. He served on the North Big Horn Hospital Board for 24 years. He served on the board for Big Horn County School District No. 2 for 29 years. He served on the Foster Gulch Golf Board for 25 years. Dr. Welch was also very active in state, national, and international dental boards and organizations, He was a member of the American Association of Dental Examiners (AADE). Dr. Welch served as Third Vice President, Second Vice President, Vice President, President-elect, President and Past President for the United States AADE. He was honored with the great distinction of being named The American Association of Dental Examiners Scott Welch and grandson Scotty Dillon smile for the camera while Dillon was on leave from active duty in November of 2005 at a Veterans Day ceremony in Cody. “Citizen of the Year” in 1988 by the AADE. A member of the American Dental Association (ADA) and the Wyoming Dental Association (WDA), Dr. Welch attended the National ADA meetings as the delegate for Wyoming for 15 years, always delighting everyone with honey candy from Queen Bee Gardens. Dr. Welch served as president of the WDA in 1978/1979. The ADA also honored Dr. Welch with a distinguished service award in 1984 for serving on the Joint Commissions on National Dental Examinations 1978-1984. Internationally, Dr. Welch was a member of the Pierre Fauchard Academy. Dr. Welch served as Vice President, Presidentelect, President of the PFA in 2002 and Past President in 2003. He served as Pierre Fauchard Chairman of Wyoming from 1973-1995. He then served as a regional PFA Trustee for Section 5, which represents the western United States – Alaska, Hawaii, California, Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Utah, Nevada, New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado and Wyoming – from 1996-1999. He was honored to receive the Outstanding Contribution to the Arts and Science of Dentists Award by the PFA in 1995. Dr. Welch received a Fellowship from the American College of Dentists in 1976 and was also a fellow in the International College of Dentists. Dr. Welch has also been very active in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He served as bishop from 1959-1966. He served on the stake high council and in the Big Horn Stake presidency as the first counselor to President M. Dale Ensign. Dr. Welch, with his brothers John, Art and Ford, (the Welch Brothers) sang at countless funerals throughout the Big Horn Basin, “Beyond the Sunset” being requested most often. Dr. Welch was in many honor guards and color guards in the Memorial Day services in Byron, Cowley and Lovell, singing at many of them. Dr. Scott and Kathleen Welch are the parents of seven children. All seven children graduated from Lovell High School and hold bachelor’s degrees or higher. Chauna Welch Bischoff lives in Lovell and teaches music at Lovell Elementary School. Robert P. Welch (Dori) is a financial advisor in Salt Lake City, Utah. Dr. Scott P. Welch practices dentistry in Lovell. Dr. Brad P. Welch (Cindy) and Dr. Greg P. Welch (Wendy) practice dentistry together in Las Vegas. Dr. Barry P. Welch (Lori) is an ophthalmologist practicing in Cody. Krystal Welch Brown (Carl) is an artist living in Houston. They have 33 grandchildren and seven greatgrandchildren. Dr. Welch loves his family and church, believes in serving and helping everyone and takes pride in putting in a good day’s work. Dr. Scott and Kathleen still call Lovell home. 2 Scott Welch, pictured in his younger years, is wearing a letterman’s sweater during his time in high school or college. Scott Welch was honored as AADE Citizen of the Year in 1988. He is pictured posing with a plaque and his wife, Kathleen. Cracklin’ Rosie hits the Rose City Monday of Mustang Week By Brad Devereaux While many performers’ careers are ruined or badly bruised by accusations of lip-syncing, Conner Lorre actually takes such a charge as a compliment. Then again, he isn’t actually lip-syncing, but singing the songs live. Lorre will be in Lovell Monday to start Mustang Days with a diamond-studded free performance at the Lovell Community Center. His show begins at 7 p.m. and goes until about 10. Once you hear his voice, you’ll be a believer, or maybe a skeptic wondering if Lorre is lip-syncing on stage, as he belts out extremely accurate vocals designed to sound exactly like the recordings made by the bands he is imitating. “I make my best effort to sound most like the original recording as humanly possible,” Lorre said in a phone interview this week. “I’ve spent hours scrutinizing every swoop and swirl of every note. It’s very time consuming, but my audi- Conner Lorre ences are really loving it.” His specialty is Neil Diamond, but he also does the Beatles, Oasis, the Eagles, Elvis, Dean Martin, Frank Sinatra and Tom Petty, to name a few. His show Monday will be filled with a variety of imitations of songs. “You’d be hard pressed to find anyone else who would sound more like them,” Lorre said about the performers he emulates. A one-man show, Lorre sings along with a live band shire, Cincinnati, Denver, Kansas City, Minnesota and Wisconsin. When he’s not traveling, he stays busy playing local gigs near his home in Georgia. This will be his first time in Wyo- 0 5 9 1 e Hom New 500 $14, Hyart Film Festival Aug. 20-21, 2010 Friday films at 7 & 9:30 pm Saturday at 3 & 7 pm Questions? Call 548-6707 or visit www.LovellInc.org yone the r e v e h s i w We is year’s h t g n i r u d t bes Manufactured by BarVista and Genesis Homes We are here to help you! You can pick a floor plan, customize it for your needs and put it on a lot, all in 8 weeks! Come visit us and see how it’s done. Jaguar Home Sales 179 E. 3rd St., Lovell, WY 82431 • 548-2213 www.BankofLovell.com Wyoming Bentonite Part of the Lovell Area since 1971 Innovative Solutions for Industry through a Commitment to Quality Gas 20¢ gallon uick V8 B from ial Spec 263 $2, Evelyn Carter hired Lorre after hearing some of his material online. Lorre’s Website at www.myspace. com/connerlorre contains several sound clips. Call us at 307-548-6707 or drop us a line – Lovellinc@tctwest.net – to see how we can help you. Milk gal. 82¢/ Postage Stamp 3¢ ming, he said. “I just love it,” he said about traveling and performing. “I love these great songs and I’m very fortunate to be able to do what I love.” Whether you’ve been away for decades or just a few years, maybe now is the right time for you to be considering Lovell for your business, your family, your life. Be in a brand new home in 8 weeks or less! IN The Bank of Lovell was helping you with your financial needs back then, just as we are today. backtrack and interacts with the audience throughout the show. While he sings plenty of oldies, Lorre said his performances are something that people of all ages can tap their foot to. Lorre tells a story of when he was fired in the middle of performing a twoweek contract in Florida years ago because event organizers accused him of lipsyncing. “I scheduled a meeting with the manager and thanked him for the compliment,” Lorre said, adding that he offered the manager $1,000 if he could prove Lorre was faking the performance. “Obviously he failed to prove I was lip syncing.” “From that experience I was very, very inspired,” he said. “It was literally the birth of my voice impersonation show.” Lorre hails from Marietta, Ga., and spends a lot of time flying on commercial airliners to places around the U.S. to perform. His recent stops include shows in Massachusetts, New Hamp- 187 E. Main • Lovell • 548-9200 www.JaguarHomeSales.com 1 s y a D g n a t s Mu celebration s 0 5 e h t o t n Swing’ 3 4 5 6 June 17, 2010 | The Lovell Chronicle Historical Section | 3 www.LovellChronicle.com 2010 Mustang Days Parade marshal: Town father Bill Powell served his country and community By David Peck Editor’s note: The following story is an edited version of a story that was printed in June of 2000. There are many facets to Bill Powell, who will be honored this Saturday as one of two grand marshals of the Lovell Mustang Days Rose Parade. There’s Bill Powell, the World War II war hero; Bill Powell, the successful businessman; Bill Powell, the band leader and trumpeter; Bill Powell, the community leader; Bill Powell, the patriot; and Bill Powell, the husband, father and grandfather. A good-natured man who’s as quick with a joke as he is with a friendly smile and a handshake, Powell is deeply proud of his country, his community and the many organizations he has served over the years, and his enthusiasm is infectious. Born March 19, 1923, to Alva A. and Lila Rogers Powell in Billings, where his father was the assistant master mechanic for the Great Western Sugar Co., Powell moved with his family to Lovell as a baby when his father was made the master mechanic for the Lovell factory. In 1932, Alva Powell was transferred to Billings again, and the family lived in Billings for a year and a half before Alva died of a heart attack. The family moved back to Lovell, where Lila Powell raised the family. After Bill’s father died, his mother owned and operated a hotel where the Haskell Apartments now stand. Trumpeter Powell’s school days brought him one of his greatest loves – the trumpet. When young Bill started the first grade, the school music program was reorganizing the band, and anyone in school who could come up with an instrument, no matter how young, was invited to play. Ted Stevens, the Great Western landman, gave Bill his silver trumpet, and Bill joined the band. He played for 12 years and was first chair his final four years. “I loved the instrument, and I always have,” he said. “I played in dance bands off and on for 20 years with four or five different orchestras” – Ralph Ericksen, Carroll Whalen, Jake Adolph and others. Later, Powell ran the Mustang Band for 16 years, leading the popular Dollies of the Follies in song. “Nobody had more fun in that band or dancing than I did,” he said. “We played in the Basin, Greybull, Lovell, Cowley, Powell, Cody and Red Lodge parades and won many trophies. Other bands would play, and the crowd would clap, but we’d come along and the crowd would go hog wild. “We thrilled the crowd more than any other band in the parade. We didn’t sound better, but the cancan girls were so beautiful.” Military career When Bill was a junior in high school, he joined the 115th Cavalry, Troop A, based in Lovell, and he was, naturally, the bugler. When the 115th Cavalry was activated for federal duty in 1940, Powell wanted to serve, but Capt. Wendell Poulson, the LHS football and basketball coach, told Powell stay in school because he had another year to go. “He said ‘we’re leaving and you’re staying’,” Powell said. “He was a man I wanted to pattern my life after. He was a wonderful man.” Lovell High School had to make do without four top educators that year when the Cavalry was called to patrol the Pacific Young aviator Bill Powell poses at the cockpit of his P-38/F-5 photo reconnaissance fighter plane. Powell flew 70 missions in his F-5. in the Army Air Corps, and I had been biding my time,” he said. Powell applied for the Aviation Cadet Program and survived a rigorous testing procedure. Of the class of 27, only nine passed the academic test and four passed the physical test. In the end, Powell was the only cadet to complete the course and earn his wings. The young airman worked his way through a number of posts during his training, including stints in Texas, Spokane, Wash., Santa Ana, Calif., Tucson and Phoenix, Ariz. and Muroc Army Air Base in California. He then served as part of the West Coast fighter patrol, flying the Lockheed P-38 Lightning fighter out of Glendale and Van Nuys, Calif. One day a notice appeared on the bulletin board seeking pilots for F-5 photo reconnaissance planes, a fast, high-flying version of the P-38 used for taking pictures of enemy formations, installations, etc. No one signed up because all of the pilots wanted to fly fighters, but two or three days later Powell saw his name on the list. He had been “selected.” Buzzing Lovell After training in Colorado Springs and Oklahoma, Powell shipped off to England to enter the war, but not before he made a memorable flight to his home town. On Saturday, Aug. 28, 1943, he took off on a training flight ostensibly to fly over Shreveport, La. Instead, he flew to Lovell to say hello to his mother and buzzed downtown Lovell numerous times after buzzing Thermopolis, Worland, Basin and Greybull along the way. He flew his P-38 so low that he could recognize people walking on Main Street. For instance, he recognized Oscar Kilian walking near the Big Horn Market with his apron on. “I flew between the water tower and the smoke stacks,” he said. ‘It was absolutely against regulations. I was almost between the buildings coming down Main Street. Reg Croft Twenty-year-old Bill Powell (center) poses with his (dentist) said he could see crew chief J.P. Culler (left) and his assistant crew into my cockpit (from his chief in France after 46 missions. second story office). I made six passes or so.” Powell said his superiCoast and guard against enemy infiltraors never knew. He, of course, took no photion, Powell said – Coach Poulson, Supt. tos and said his camera must have malof School Archibald Black, assistant coach functioned. and teacher Reed Colvin, and ag teacher The brash young pilot was assigned to Norman Lewis. All were excellent examthe 30th Photo Reconnaissance Squadron, ples to follow, Powell said. first stationed at Chalgrove, England and Powell graduated from LHS as presithen Middlewallop, England. Eventually, dent of the senior class in 1941, and he he flew out of Field A-9 in France, Verwas working for the sugar factory on saille, France, and Gossilies, Belgium. December 7 when the Japanese bombed Powell and the other members of his Pearl Harbor. He quickly enlisted in the squadron flew direct support of the First U.S. Army Air Corps. “My lifelong ambition was to be a pilot Army, taking critical photographs of the front line and of enemy formations and installations behind enemy lines to provide target information to the artillery and bombers. The F-5s also took post-raid photos for bomb damage assessment. The information gathered by the photo recon pilots was vital to the Allied war effort, so much so that Powell said of the Axis forces, “They couldn’t make a move without us knowing it.” On June 6, 1944, Powell flew and photographed the coast of Normandy in France, the day of the Allied invasion, flying both morning and afternoon missions. The day was to be known as D-Day. The F-5 was able to be equipped with a variety of different cameras, depending on the mission. Often, Powell flew with a 40-inch focal length camera that could clearly photograph railroad ties from 35,000 feet. “It was the finest camera in the world,” Powell said. F-5s were unarmed and had only light armor, but they could out-run anything in the sky. “The only thing we had was altitude and speed,” Powell said. “We were never to engage the enemy, and we had to keep our head on a swivel, checking our tail. We had to get the film back.” Some branches of the Air Corps had a set number of missions for its crews. B17 crews, for instance, got to go home if they survived to fly 25 missions, Powell said. But there was no set number of missions for photo recon pilots, and by the end of the war, Powell had flown 70 missions, which he said put him probably in the top 20 of photo recon pilots who flew in the war. He said the average photo reconnaissance pilot’s life span was eight missions. Powell earned the Distinguished Flying Cross, among other medals. After VE Day, Powell was granted leave in February of 1945 and returned to Lovell, where he quickly fell in love with Lucy Robertson, who had been Lovell’s first Rose Queen and was “the prettiest girl in high school” when he was in school, Bill said. Lucy was two years ahead of Bill in school, but he said she wouldn’t even look at him when they were in high school. But when he came home with his uniform on, it must have made an impression. Bill and Lucy were married on March 22, 1945, and Bill was then assigned stateside until his discharge in January of 1947. He flew in the reserves as a captain until 1958. Businessman Returning to Lovell after his discharge, Powell worked at the sugar factory, at the Ford garage as a parts man and for the Ohio Oil Co. When Ohio Oil left town, Powell bought Kilian’s Men’s Store from Oscar and Harold Kilian, taking over the operation on January 1, 1957. He said the store was in the storefront where Big Horn Dispatch is now. He ran Kilian’s until disaster struck the block on January 23, 1967. A huge fire destroyed several buildings, including the historic Snyder Building, which Powell had purchased as a rental property from Jesse Robertson in 1965. Seizing the moment, Powell went in with Phil Reasch to build a new building that housed Lovell Drug and the new Bill Powell’s. The new building had much more room than his former location, so Bill was able to add women’s clothing to his product line, and the name changed from Kilian’s to Bill Powell’s. The new store’s grand opening was Sept. 5, 1967, and Lucy assisted Bill with operating the store for many years. Bill and Lucy Powell stayed in business for more than 30 years until his health forced him to retire. Bill Powell’s closed for about 14 months from August of 1989 to November of 1990, re-opened for nearly two years, then closed for good on Sept. 19, 1992. He had re-opened during the optimism surrounding the prison project and had hoped to sell the store as a going concern. Bill had the perfect personality to run a store, gregarious and out-going. He has a way of making each person he meets feel appreciated, and that’s how he ran his store. “I like people, and you can own a store and treat people other than friendly and never get them back,” he said. “People who had moved away always stopped by my store when they were back visiting. That pleased me so much. “I always felt the customer was the most important person. Without them, you’re sunk.” Civic leader Powell has been very active in the community over the years, serving on the North Big Horn Hospital Board for 20 years, including a time as chairman; helping develop Rose City West as president of the Lower Shoshone Valley Projects, Inc., then serving as president of the board for 16 years; helping to promote the development of the gypsum wallboard plant now operated by Georgia-Pacific; and serving as president of the Lovell Rod and Gun Club. He was a long-time member of the Lovell Area Chamber of Commerce, serving as president of the board, and he now holds an honorary lifetime membership. He served as bishop of the Lovell First Ward of the LDS Church, as well as other positions. He also coached Little League basketball and baseball, helping to revive the baseball program when it was struggling by raising money and purchasing new uniforms and equipment and by serving as the head umpire. Bill and Lucy Powell Family is also important to Bill Powell. He and Lucy raised seven children: Linda (Grant) Dayley of Mesa, Ariz.; Monte Jo (Gary) Laing of Loa, Utah; the late John William Powell; Florence (Jim) Thomas of Kaysville, Utah; Lila (Robin) May of Rock Springs; Debra (Mike) Archibald of Kemmerer; and Roger (Vicki) Powell of Golden, Colo. They have 30 grandchildren and 20 great-grandchildren. Patriot Perhaps Bill Powell’s most indelible mark on the Lovell community is his many years of service to area veterans and their families. He is a 62-year member of the VFW and a 61-year member of the American Legion, and he organized Memorial Day services at the Lovell, Byron and Cowley cemeteries for decades, serving as commander of the color guard. He also conducted military graveside services for many, many years, often playing Taps on his trumpet, as well. Bill Powell can speak eloquently about what it means to be an American and live in Lovell, but he summed his feelings up with a few words: “I’ve lived in a wonderful country and had a wonderful time. I’ve raised a family and am proud of each and every one of them. I’m proud to be an American with the blessings and freedoms we enjoy. We’re free to travel, free to work in a place we want to work. We have freedom of speech, clean air, clean water, a wonderful food supply supplied by wonderful farmers. We are a blessed people.” That feeling of pride, which fills Bill Powell’s heart, is what he is all about. 1 2 3 4 5 6 4 | The Lovell Chronicle Historical Section | June 17, 2010 korea Continued from page 1 they were asked to lead the Mustang Days Parade down Main Street. Meeker said the soldiers chanted a sound off and remembers the parade was “a lot of fun” before leaving for Ft. Lewis, Wash. He said “the whole town” showed up at the train depot to see the soldiers off as they left to pick up more troops before flying to camp from Billings. Meeker said he was one of the last soldiers to return home from the 300th Service Battery deployment. He had dated Iva Lee Lewis in high school, but she moved to Gillette and the two lost track of each other. Meeker’s mother told him Lewis had stopped by to talk with them while he was at war, and encouraged him to write her a letter. Reluctant at first, Meeker wrote a letter and the next day, he received a letter from Lewis. The two letters had passed in the mail, he said. They dated for a while and eventually married, celebrating their 57th anniversary this year, Meeker said. Meeker recalls a time when the troops dug out a swimming hole and started playing submarine tag in the water. A fellow soldier named Jerry dove in and hit his head on a large boulder just under the surface of the water. Meeker said the medic didn’t have all the right supplies to fix the soldier up at the time, so he used dental floss and a needle to stitch his wound while the soldier finished the better part of a bottle of whiskey. “He was singing when the medic got through with him, and he wanted us to harmonize!” Meeker laughed. Meeker said his mother sent a lot of letters along with the Lovell Chronicle. He said it was always great to read about the happenings back home and to hear from family. His father, who worked at the post office, would write short messages on the envelopes of the mail going to soldiers. They also received the GI newspaper sometimes, he said. Honeymoon at Fort Lewis Lovell veteran Bob Baird married his wife, Ann, just after he graduated high school. He was given deployment orders soon after, taking his new bride with him to Ft. Lewis to be together before shipping off to war. Baird said he remembers working on WWII equipment before heading into combat and said it took a while to get the tanks, artillery and other gear ready. He said many of the Lovell soldiers hadn’t seen any combat action, though he and a few others were previously deployed in WWII. Their five months of training La De Da www.LovellChronicle.com gave them an idea of what to do, but once deployed they had to be ready to do their job right away. “A lot of people weren’t too sharp on the jobs they had,” Meeker said. “We had a few things to learn.” Pushing up toward the 38th parallel for several days without much sleep, Baird remembers burning trucks, equipment and piles of rubble blown up in their path. When they reached the first spot to dig a foxhole and set up for the night, the soldiers closed their eyes for some muchneeded rest. Baird woke up to the sound of artillery falling all around him from his spot under the shade of a truck. He watched as artillery shells fell, exploding next to soldiers bathing in the river. An allied artillery gun took out a plane flying overhead about 100 yards away and Baird knew he had arrived and was at war. Later, he said when the bodies of Koreans were lined up, with dog tags hanging off their big toes, it made him sick to his stomach to think of all the telegrams that would be sent to the families of the deceased men. However, the sights, sounds and smells were something a soldier had to get used to, he said, and soon they were used to the horrible things happening all around them. Baird said many of the men in the 300th were Mormon, and they held church service sometimes when time allowed. But the war wouldn’t be quiet for religion or any other reason, and the church tent was once hit with a wall of dirt sent into the air from a mortar blast on a nearby hill. Baird agreed it was bittersweet to have many friends there. He also had his brother, Mel, with him, as did other soldiers in the group. He recalled one time when he found Mel hit by a piece of shrapnel after an artillery attack on the camp. “He was sitting there and said he had been hit, but he didn’t know how bad it was,” Baird said. “He was setting a trip flair at the time, sitting behind a stump with his leg hanging out from behind the stump. He thought his foot was gone and he was afraid to feel it. I felt it and found it wasn’t too bad.” Danger was everywhere, sometimes lurking where the soldiers in the new environment did not expect it at first. “We had to be careful. We didn’t go anywhere we didn’t have to go,” he said. “There were a lot of land mines, even on the roads. Anytime we went anywhere, we would follow the guy’s tracks in front 2 Brad Devereaux Korean War veteran Bob Baird looks at an illustration that is framed along with a description of one of the 300th Armored Field Artillery’s citations. of us.” The military was a good experience, Baird said, but it’s not something he wanted to make his life’s work. “It has a lot to do with who I am today,” he said. “It was good to be doing something and doing a good job at it.” His grandkids enjoy hearing the many stories he has to tell about wartime, he said. A positive memory of the war was of a Korean man who Baird hired to make him a desk and help with other tasks around camp. Baird skipped his native name and instead called his friend Gus, because it was easier to pronounce and remember. Gus built a nice desk for Baird, which kept a photograph of his wife, Ann, and other family, before he eventually had to leave the desk behind. Gus was working to send money to his family in Pusan, and he was impressive at building things, Baird said. He carried with him a small pouch containing small homemade tools for his craft. When Baird was looking for a shotgun to shoot pheasants with for sport, Gus helped him find one – buried underneath his home – because shotguns were illegal in Korea at the time. Meeker also hired a Korean boy, about 12 years old, while deployed to help out at the ammo station. The boy couldn’t Dollar store A Treasure Chest Gifts for all occasions! Have a safe and happy Mustang Days! Open 9am - 8pm Tues. - Sat. during Mustang Days! Swing by during Mustang Days! Have a good! celebration speak English, but he was a great help to the battalion, Meeker said. After losing track of each other, Meeker and the boy were reunited when the boy pulled up riding in a jeep one day and ran up to Meeker and slapped him on the knee, grinning ear to ear. He still didn’t speak English, but it was apparent they were happy to see each other. The two were together through the rest of the deployment and Meeker taught him how to speak English. Meeker said his parents sent the boy a red wool sweater and a pair of shoes for Christmas, and the boy loved his new sweater. He remembers a humorous time when the Korean boy was hanging around a group of American soldiers while waiting for a movie to begin, beaming with pride while wearing his bright red sweater, surrounded by soldiers who were decked out in drab brown uniforms. “They were having more fun with him that night than they did with the movie,” Meeker said. The boy, now a man, got back in touch with Meeker in recent years, finding his address and sending a letter from his new home in Texas. The two old friends met up at a battalion reunion in Cheyenne and Juan’s wife sang a traditional Korean song at the event. Meeker said they still keep in contact with phone calls today. Murphey’s t! Stop in and check us ou 186 E. Main 548-2030 1 Stop by, say hi, and check out our bargains! G-P Gypsum reminds you to have a safe and wonderful Mustang Days Celebration. Georgia-Pacific Gypsum LLC 80 e. Main st., lovell Welcome to Lovell 548-6546 Welcome toys! Mustang Da and Mustang Days! Have a safe and enjoyable weekend! Deb Good, Agent Haskell Funeral Home 605 E. Main • 548-7678 307.548.7891 8 E. Main St., Lovell Mon.-Fri., 9am-5pm Welcome to ! Mustang Days Minchow’s Service & Food Court Have a fun & safe Mustang Days! Be sure to enjoy the Cowley Boys in our parking lot Friday night at 8:30 pm Fun for the whole family! JIM MINCHOW, OWNER Burgers & Fries! Open late during Mustang Days! 317 E. Main • Lovell Station: 548-7211 Food Court: 548-7979 Convenience Store • Cooper Tires • Propane Interstate Batteries • Complete Service Work Gas • 24-hr. credit card fueling • Diesel Bulk Deliveries • Computer Spin Balancing 3 4 5 6 June 17, 2010 | The Lovell Chronicle Historical Section | 5 www.LovellChronicle.com Enthusiasm for life keeps Mel Kuper flying high By David Peck Mel Kuper has a zest for life. The 79-year-old Lovell resident has nary a dull moment in his active life. Following his retirement 1992, he dove headfirst into his hobby of restoring furniture, quickly developing into a master craftsman. He loves to travel, often taking to the road to visit his children or friends. He loves to ride motorcycles. His latest passion? Skydiving. Kuper took up skydiving at the age of 76 and has three jumps under his belt. With two more he can jump solo. He had hoped to solo before the age of 80, but poor weather on several attempts has delayed his progress. Kuper almost got into the sport on a dare. He and his late wife, Carol, were good friends with neighbors Marv and Jan Hubbs when they lived in Cody. After the Hubbs moved to Lander, the couples kind of lost track, but after Marv died, Jan sent a Christmas card to Mel and Carol, not realizing that Mel had lost Carol earlier that year – July of 2005. Jan was living in Ft. Collins by then. Mel let Jan know that Carol had passed, and the two old friends caught up on each other’s lives. One day a few months later, Mel received a call from Jan that intrigued him. “Your birthday (Aug. 3) is past, but mine is still coming up,” Jan said. “I have something to do that’s special, but I want you to do it with me.” “I said, ‘Sure, I’ll be there.’ I never asked what it was,” Kuper said. “When I got there she said, ‘Are you curious?’ I said, ‘Yeah, I’m a little curious.’ “’I want to go skydiving, and I want you to go with me,’ she said. I said, ‘Let’s hop to it.’ I was all for it.” And so at age 76 on a fall day in 2006, Mel Kuper made his first jump. Mel Kuper and Carol Jean Solberg, both age 15, pose at Big Stone Lake near the Minnesota-South Dakota border on their first date. “I was lucky,” Kuper said. “I got a young guy who was 30 years old and the day he took me up was his 1,000th jump. He lived it. Unfortunately, a month or less later they had an exhibition (of skydiving). There were a whole bunch of them and he was killed.” Kuper donned a jump suit and in the air was strapped to his instructor. He was one of 17 jumpers that day, he said. He said the instructor had both a chute and a backup chute, and there was a ring he could reach in case something happened to the instructor. Amazing experience “I couldn’t wait to get out of that plane,” he said. “That was the best part – that freefall. Oh, god, we went out of that plane and as we jumped out we did a big, ol’ somersault and then there was the photographer just lying on his back – just floating there (and taking photos). He had jumped out first. He came right up to me and gave me a ‘high five.’” After about 43 seconds the instructor told Kuper, “We have to open the chute now.” “I said, ‘OK,’ and the photographer took a dive and down he went. And ‘Zingo!’ up we went. “The view was mind-boggling. It was the most fantastic thing,” Kuper said. “He let me steer the parachute. We went down and then back up in a loop. We were the first of the 17 out of the plane and the last to land. “We made one more loop and when we got close he said, “When I tap you once, put your feet out, and when I tap you again, put your feet down and start running.’ “When he tapped me the second time, we hit and I took one step. We were standing right smack dab in the middle of that X (painted at the airport). That’s how good he was. I just stood there dumbfounded.” Meanwhile, Jan and her instructor had sailed out over some office buildings and landed out in a field on the airport grounds. “Poor Jan was about a half a mile away,” Mel said. “They didn’t have to come look for us.” Mel was thrilled, but when told, his children weren’t as thrilled. “I didn’t tell either one of my kids,” he said. “I was going to do this thing. Joel (in Greybull) said, ‘Boy, you’re lucky you didn’t tell us.’ Then he added, ‘You would have gone anyway,’ and I said, ‘You’re right.’ “My daughter (Robyn Stacey of Woodruff, Utah) cried and said, ‘You’re going to get killed.’ But hey, on any day you can get in your car and you could get killed. I thought I was old enough.” Was Kuper scared? “No, not a bit,” he said. “When you get my age you don’t worry about that stuff. I’ve lived a good life. I’ve done a lot of good things.” Kuper said his goal is to jump solo. He has three jumps in now – “It’s always a thrill,” he said – and he needs two more to solo. He wanted to solo by his 80th birthday, but he said when he has tried to get more jumps in over the years he has sometimes run into “squalls, lightning and wind, wind, wind.” “I want to beat George Bush (senior),” Kuper said. “I want to solo before he does.” An interesting life Kuper was born in 1930 in northeastern South Dakota near the town of Marvin about 40 miles from the Minnesota border. His father and mother, Harm and Myrtle Kuper, farmed some 320 acres plus some leased land, raising cattle and crops. The Kuper farm was about 25 miles from the closest high school, and there were no buses. When Mel’s brother Marlyn joined the Air Force, his dad told him he needed him on the farm. There were few hired hands around because of the war. Mel attended one week of high school. Later, his folks moved to town and bought a grocery store. Mel worked at the store and got whatever odd jobs he could find. He soon went to work for the Milwaukee Railroad, which was building a double track in the area. His job was to replace the broken handles of sledgehammers. He also worked for the railroad on the signal crew, checking and repairing signals. Meanwhile, Kuper attended high school basketball games, dances and other activities. He met a girl from Summit, S.D., named Carol Jean Solberg. “It was love at first sight, I’ll tell ya,” he said. “That was it. I never had another girlfriend. We went to basketball games, tobogganing, movies and dances.” Mel and Carol Kuper were married in 1950 and moved to Sioux Falls. After about a year they moved to Racine, Wis., where Mel worked at a J.I. Case tractor factory and Carol worked for Whitman Publishing and Western Printing. But the climate in Wisconsin didn’t suit Mel, who had suffered from rheumatic fever as a child. Mel and Carol gave it a go back on the family farm in South Dakota, but when his brother, who had moved west to work as a linotype operator, said he had a chance at a job in Cody, he told Mel, “If I like it, why don’t you join me out here?” He took the job and in March of 1958 Mel and Carol moved to Cody. “When Carol saw her first mountain, she loved it,” Mel recalled. Kuper had taken a correspondence course in appliance and electronics repair and went to work for Samuelson Economy Furniture and later became the chief electrician for Big Horn Gypsum, later Celotex, working at the wallboard plant in Cody for 25½ years. He moved into quality control at the plant later in his career and retired in February of 1992. Carol’s health had begun to deteriorate, and she experienced an irregular heartbeat. The couple looked for a smaller home at a lower elevation and moved to Lovell around Christmas of 1999, settling in at 283 E. Main. “She enjoyed it here. She loved it here,” Mel said. Mel plunged into his woodcraft passion, building a shop behind the garage, building a deck in front of the house and filling in the space between the house and the garage. He loves to craft, rebuild, repair and refinish furniture, and his work can be seen at his storefront at 214 E. Main in Lovell. Mel is self-taught in the furniture business. “If you work hard enough, you can do anything,” he said. Carol died in July of 2005, and Mel sold his home in 2006. He bought and refurbished Vera Poe’s home on Carmon Ave., then sold it. He has lived a somewhat nomadic lifestyle since then, living out of a motor coach at times, spending time in Arizona and driving to see friends and family around the country. In Arizona, he heard about the needs of a Baptist church in Florence that did a lot to help the local populace but needed to quickly raise $25,000 to pay for a new steel building. Kuper donated his motor home to the cause, and a man bought the coach and added $5,000 more, giving the church enough to cover its costs. “I was tickled,” Kuper said. Back in Lovell now, he is diving back into his furniture business and living out of a rented apartment. He’ll probably travel again by the time the snow flies. Whatever he does, he’ll do it with his usual enthusiasm for life. “That’s what keeps you young,” he said. “I refuse to get old.” And that is what keeps Mel Kuper living large. Mel Kuper poses with some of his refinished furniture in his shop at 283 E. Main. Welcome to Lovell and Mustang Days! Lovell Drug has been in business for more than 100 Years! 307-548-6909 JohnsonHomeAndLand.com Your Full Time, Full Service Real Estate Professionals 235 E. Main, Lovell Lisa Marchant, Sales Associate, Jyl Duffy, Sales Associate, Sarah Johnson, Broker/Owner Stop in for the best malts & shakes in town! Wyoming Souvenirs Postcards Gifts • Cards • Cologne Leather Handbags • Fine Jewelry Scrapbooking Supplies Willow Tree LOVELL DRUG Lyle and Carolyn Aichele 2010 Senior Center V.I.P. North Big Horn Senior Center and Service District 757 Great Western • Lovell, WY • 548-6556 Proud to be serving North Big Horn County! Lovell • Cowley • Byron • Deaver • Frannie Last year we served 14,118 meals in homes, and 16,198 meals in our dining room. Caring for those who cared so much for us! Thank you for your continued support! 1 2 3 4 5 6 6 | The Lovell Chronicle Historical Section | June 17, 2010 www.LovellChronicle.com VIPs give back with volunteer service By Brad Devereaux The 2010 North Big Horn Senior Center VIPs are certainly important to the people they volunteer countless hours to help. VIPs Lyle and Carole Aichele enjoy eating lunch and socializing at the center, but they also volunteer much of their free time helping others there. Lyle is a dedicated meals-onwheels delivery driver and Carole is a member of the quilting team at the center, which is made up of women who chip in to work on quilts for raffles to raise money. Lyle, 81, said many of the people on his food delivery route are younger than he is, but he enjoys taking the ride and checking on all of his friends on the route. He delivers meals on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, as long as he is at home. Lyle works as a car courier, driving behind wide loads with flashers, and said he never knows where he will be called to work any given day. Many times, he’s rushing back to Lovell from the Canadian border just in time to pick up his meals and pass them out on his route. Lyle started the volunteer job a few years ago when Senior Center Director Denise Andersen asked him if he would, and he said he’s been enjoying the role ever since. “It keeps me busy and keeps me young and running all the time,” he said. Lyle says a quick hello to some on his route and gives a sarcastic jab to others, but it is obvious that ev- eryone is happy to see him. Carole said she is looking forward to the Mustang Days celebration this year and said it is an honor to be named a VIP. Carole and Lyle are both from Oregon originally, and Carole said she moved to Lovell to be with Lyle. She is a member of the Pindroppers Quilting Club in Lovell and, along with other members, donates her quilting skills and materials to the senior center. The center is always raf- fling quilts to support a variety of causes, and the volunteered time is invaluable, Andersen said. “The Pindroppers club is the most supportive group of women I’ve ever met,” she said. “They are all very talented and nice to each other.” She said she appreciates the center and all the other volunteers who work there. She said the center consistently has good food and the cooks are “the best in Lovell.” Lyle’s passion is classic cars, he said, and the couple will probably be riding in the parade while waving from his 1957 Chevy. Andersen said the Aicheles were chosen as the 2010 VIPs because of how helpful they are to the center. Andersen drives Lyle’s route on Tuesdays and Thursdays, and she said everyone he serves appreciates his friendliness while on the route. The quilting work Carole donates is always high quality, Andersen said. Look for coverage of Mustang Days Round-Up 2010 starting in our June 24 edition! The Lovell Chronicle Your trusted source for local news Happy Mustang Days! Sign-up TODAY for Absolutely FREE Checking And Get A ere T! IRS F re Ua YO Cody Office 1507 8th Street www.codybank.com (307) 587-3800 Cody Downtown Office 1426 Sheridan Avenue www.codybank.com (307) 587-7117 Where YOU are FIRST! Senior VIPs Lyle and Carole Aichele A hot and cold deli, featuring WonderRoast chicken, Chester Fried chicken, salads, donuts, cakes, cookies and so much more! A wonderful selection of fresh fruits and vegetables in our produce section, great for picnics and B-B-Q’s! A tradition of progress, service, and hometown pride, we’ve been part of the Lovell community for 63 years, giving our customers personal, quality service. That’s been the trademark of the Red Apple Supermarket (and Big Horn IGA and Big Horn Market before that) throughout our 63 years in the grocery business in Lovell. 3 4 6 Wh Powell Office 245 E. 1st Street www.powellbank.com (307) 754-2201 2 5 FREE Gift! Lovell Office 284 E. Main Street www.lovellbank.com (307) 548-2751 1 The drive-through or walk-in C&R Liquor Store stocked with a pleasing selection! 9 E. Main • Lovell Take care of all of your photo needs with our Fujifilm photo maker.