Ann Frances Hall (née Stimler)

reminisces on

Anthony Valentine Stimler


"One thing, he was a good father and he was so proud of all his kids. One time he took me to the Teff's farm on some business when I was 7 or 8. I had high-top button shoes, and he told them I could 'jig.' So I stood there and I tried to jig -- with no music or anything -- my dad clapping his hands. (Laughs hard) I was so embarrassed!
"At Easter, he would hide the eggs in the yeard, and we had a big yard -- corner lot. Only Joe, Dee Dee and I were of the age to hunt for the eggs. It made a big impression on me -- in those days men didn't do those kind of things!


View from the cabin at Lake Julia.
View from the cabin on Lake Julia.

"He liked to go fishing. Once, when I was about 14, the (boat) motor was on the fritz so he talked me into rowing for him at Lake Julia. 'We won't stay out there very long' -- those were his words. We went after breakfast. I rowed and I rowed and I rowed. The fish were biting, so we stayed out until about 4 PM, and I told my mom, 'I'm never going fishing with that man again!' -- and I didn't!
" Joe learned to swim by Dad throwing him out of the boat. The kids all swam.
"Joe used to dress like he just stepped out of a band box; his slacks fit so well. When Joe was in high school and Dad would get rid of his old pants, Joe would wear them when he got home from church. They were all worn out, held up by a scrap of rope or something, and he looked just like a refugee! My sisters, especially Leona and Marie, would say, 'Mom! Make him take off those pants!'
"Dad never spanked us -- that was left up to Mom. But one look from him and you knew you'd better quit what you were doing. One look was enough!
"Once, out at Lake Julia, Dad got me in the car and said, 'Now you're going to drive to the store.' Not only was the store a couple of miles away, but the worst of it was that from the cottage to the main road was all hills and sand! I did quite good until we got to the first hill -- which looked like a mountain to me -- and the motor stopped. Dad restarted the car and told me to give it more gas. I begged, 'Oh, Dad, you do it! You drive us there!' He said, 'No. You're going to do it.' So I made it up that hill and I didn't kill the motor again!
"Dad, Rube, and Al made a tin cupboard car for Joe. It had a front and a back seat, but no roof or anything -- all open, except for doors. There was a brother and sister, Pat and Maggie, who lived on a farm out of town -- our family just loved them. So for some reason, when Mom would see Joe and I going anywhere in that car, she's say, 'There goes Pat and Maggie!'
"There a lot of good stories of growing up that are fun, pleasant memories. My dad lost everything when the banks closed in 1930 -- he lost everything but the house. I never knew that we were poor, because most everybody was. At this time it affected my dad's health, I'm sure, and working with the fumes from the blacksmith and the garage didn't help him any. It took everything out of him -- he lost more weight -- and he was skinny to start. Supposedly he had T.B., but my sister Marie, a nurse, thought he had cancer. He was up to a sanitarium for T.B. patients in Walker, MN, for treatment. It was bitter cold when he left. Everyone cried; Mom cried. Tony and Mary Stimler. He was up there maybe a year, I'm not sure. He was so lonesome and didn't like the place so he told Mom to come get him -- he couldn't stand it. I remember going once to visit him. The sanitarium was all screened in, the food was horrible and it was cold. So Mom and Uncle Paul (Dad's brother) went to get him. He'd cough and he'd bring up this horrible stuff. They brought him back in the winter and he lived until his birthday in April. Dad was in the one room and Mom would sleep with him. She was a great believer in Lysol and fumigating with sulfer. There was a stigma with T.B. We weren't shunned, but people were afraid they'd get it. Dad was practially housebound, but when he'd go out to the yard the neighbors would come over and talk to him.
"Mom was the one who loved to play tricks. But here's a good one Dad got on the family. We were at Lake Julia; Dad was already sick and weakened. It was night. There were kids camping out there and Dad caught word that Joe was going with them to steal potatoes from a nearby patch. Dad took a short cut to the patch, beat them there and hid himself. He caught them in the act and in a loud, booming voice he roared, 'What's going on here?!' The kids took off running scared. This one kid -- six-foot-something -- cleared the barbed wire in one leap. But Nubbs (Norbert), Deed and Joe Stimler and their pony. not as tall, didn't quite clear it and tore his best jeans. How Dad got home first, I'll never know. Joe had figured out that it had been his dad and not the potato farmer. Poor Nubbs kept begging, 'Mrs. Stimler, you've got to fix these jeans -- they're the newest ones Auntie May bought me!'
"Dad got Joe a Shetland pony named Topsy and Topsy had a foal, Oakie.
"My dad wan't a very big man; in fact, he was skinny and 5'8" or 5'9" -- not much more than that. He was a very good man, very honest. I don't know if he went to school -- maybe to the third grade. I don't remember.
"My dad met my mom when he came to Duelm to blacksmith. Dad stayed on the Brennan's farm, a mile or so from my mom at her parent's farm. Dad always called Mom 'The Mrs.' They spoke German to each other a lot, probably because they didn't want the kids to know what they were saying! Their first home in Duelm was moved on sleds to Foley. Dad worked as a blacksmith until he got the Ford Agency. When Joe was about 11 Dad would take him and a couple other guys, drive them down to Minneapolis, and each would drive one of the new cars back to Foley. Joe had to look through the steering wheel -- he was too short to see over it!
"I don't remember any of my grandparents, but Grandma Kampa came to live with us when Grandpa died and I was little. My dad was a very giving person; he helped out a lot of family members."

Stimler Family Crest      Kampa Family Crest
Last modified: October 18, 2000
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