UNION PRECINCT |
had been touched in some way or another by the tornado.
Telegraph messages were sent to Lincoln, Wahoo, and Ashland, and help arrived from these towns before midnight. Doctors arrived to treat the injured. A morgue was set up in a furniture store. The four most severely injured persons were put on a train and sent to Lincoln. When the sun rose on Monday, the 24th, people looked around at the devastation and wondered if the town could ever recover from the tragedy. But help was sent in by the Red Cross, neighboring towns sent in food and clothing, and assistance was given to the most needy for rebuilding their homes. All four churches were badly damaged or totally destroyed. Only 2 were rebuilt, -- St. Peter's Reformed Church and St. John's Lutheran Church. Both had been rebuilt in 1913 and both are still standing today. Now, after 70 years, the tornado of 1913 is ancient history but it was a very important event in the lives of the people who lived through it. For many years it was a measurement of time, -- "before the tornado", -- "after the tornado". And there are people still living who can recall how a day that started out so bright and cheery turned into desolation and heartbreak for many. THE EASTER TORNADO AT |
Actual Tornado March 23, 1913 |
Papa came about 5 o'clock to have coffee and walk home with us. But the sky was getting ugly; there were heavy clouds in the southwest with occasional rolls of thunder and flashes of lightning. Papa decided against coffee and insisted on us starting home at once. We arrived home safely and had supper on the table when the storm hit. The kitchen door flew open and both of my parents ran to close it.
I grabbed my 3-year-old sister's hand and remember nothing more until I found myself, still holding her hand, climbing over mountains of rubbish. I had a gash in my forehead and my arm was bleeding. It was dark and raining. The only light came from fires breaking out in homes where stoves and baseburners had overturned. We finally reached a house that had not been struck by the tornado. Many people were there, my father was laid out on the floor with several other dead; my mother was seriously injured. My 6-year-old sister was found and brought to the same house.
Suddenly someone announced that another storm was coming and that we should find other shelter. With my small sisters, Laverta and Eleanor, holding each of my hands, I and several other children started out in the pitch black night. We wound up in a corn field where our local grocer found us and took us to his home. Much later a doctor came and bandaged my head and arm.
My 8-year-old sister Viola, whose hip had been broken, had been taken to an uncle's home. The hip had been set there, and while she was still under sedation, Viola was put on a train and taken to a Lincoln hospital. She learned of our parent's deaths when a nurse told the story to some visitors at the hospital.
My mother died of lockjaw 2 weeks after the tornado. A day that began so cheery left us bereft of both parents, -- a very tragic event in our lives. For awhile each of four girls lived with a different relative. Then our Aunt Reka Hirsch came from California and said that she would make a home so that we could all live together again. Our home was rebuilt and we were all reunited under one roof. We felt a deep sense of gratitude to Aunt Reka for making this possible. Gladys Starmann Kuhr, Ceresco, Nebraska
I looked across the prairies wide,
and thought of ancestors with pride;
how with the faith and work-worn hand
was carved, our country, from this land.
Now, what have we done with this place;
how have we used this boundless space?
It's sad to see how man laid waste
and ripped up roots in thoughtless haste.
May such slashed soil, then once laid bare,
come back to life with love and care.
God grant us that this may be so,
that grass and trees return, will grow.
Copyright, 1982 -- Used with permission of Eden May Hoevet Klumpp
Yutan Hoot-N-Nanny 1979 |
The Yutan Community Club sponsored the first Hoot-N-Nanny in 1979 as a club fund raiser for community projects. The talents of Verona Trost and Joann Shivley who put the show together, using local talent and friends from other areas, has made the show a great success. The show was performed again on March 18 and 19, 1983. The show is well attended and enjoyed by people from miles away. The show includes skits by local club groups and plenty of music. Submitted by Lester Zwiebel
1936 Blizzard on Hwy. 92 |
"All Star Wedding" Presented by the Yutan Volunteer Fire Dept. in 1952 |
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