The George and Lucy (Herlan) Schaub Farm
East Sparta, Ohio
1920's
These pictures
are from the collection of their great-granddaughter, Sandra Jane (Paulus)
Franklin.
The remembrances
of this farm are those of my (Betty Latta Kitchen's) father, Vernon John Latta:
The
following stories were shared by Vern as we reminisced in the days following
his wife (my mother's) death on October l8, 1998.
When Vern was little he spent much of
each summer on the farm of his Grandma and Grandpa Schaub in East Sparta. He remembers that Grandma Schaub used to put
long stockings on her hands and arms when she went berry (raspberry,
blackberry, dewberry) picking. She'd
fill up a big syrup bucket. Vern
remembers putting a mess of frog eggs in a jar, then taking them in the house
to hatch and grow. Vern often got the
job of filling up the trough for the animals, lots of pumping to fill that old
trough a couple times a day. On real
hot days, after pumping in the morning that ice cold water would warm up, and
all the boys would jump in the trough, sans clothes of course.
Frequently Vern got the job of taking
water out to Grandpa in the field. They
had lots of maple syrup buckets, and Vern would have to lug it out to
Grandpa. Grandpa drank his fill then gave
the rest to the horse. The kids had to
be about 7 to go into the barn. Vern
remembers how big Old Jimbo the horse looked and was sure he would get
squished.
The most fun at Grandpa Schaub's might
have been when they brought in the hay.
They'd pile it on the wagon and jump on it, then put more on and ride it
up to the barn (feeling like they'd all slide overboard all the way.) To get it on the wagon the horse would pull
a huge hay rake that would stand up the hay in a wind row. Then the kids would use a 3-pronged hay
pitch fork to sling it on the wagon. In
the barn there was a track or tube all around that hay hooks were attached
to. A carriage ran through the track,
was attached to a horse, and about one third of the wagon load was pulled up
into the hay lofts. The kids up there
had to scatter it and stomp it down so more could go up.
Vern did a lot of rabbit hunting. In the fall he used to fill up a peck basket with apples then go along and
throw them in the briar patches. Then
during rabbit season the rabbits would be at the apples and the dogs could find
them. He had a 20 gauge shot gun. They always cleaned them good and hung them
over the clothes line to freeze to get some of that wildness out of them, then
Grandma Schaub would cook them.
(Grandpa Schaub could see the rabbit breath coming out of the ground on
cold days, but Vern never could.)
Last modified
February 9, 2014.
Provided by Betty Latta Kitchen
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