“Blessed is the man. . .in whose spirit there is no deceit.”
Van De Stroet rented that land from a gruff, bearded man
named Keen, who determined that most of what he’d made during his life would be
given, upon his death, to a Methodist hospital not far away.
Along came the Depression, the complication of the story
on this yellowed sheet of newsprint. Keen mortgaged his land to keep from
losing it; but when he died mid-Depression, that Methodist hospital became the
Van De Stroet’s landlord.
To say times were tough seems an embarrassing
understatement. In Van De Stroet’s obscure corner of
Those hills nobody else wanted? They ended up at the
heart of the Van De Stroet family’s survival. When drought left no feed to be
grown or purchased, John let his sheep graze the bluffs, where they ate the
buck brush. When things got even bleaker, he shooed his hogs up there too,
where they could munch acorns from the burr oak that run like an unruly
moustache over those hills. When other farmers were dumping livestock, those
bluffs saved the Van De Stroet operation, and by the time the Second World War
came around, the family farm got on its feet.
This old newspaper clipping is from 1976, 44 years after
the Methodist Hospital Board shook their collective heads and let that $1,000
land payment ride.
In the picture with the newspaper story is an old guy
with his shirt buttoned up tight beneath his chin. To his left is his wife, in
a hair net and a print jacket, what’s likely her finest mother-of-pearl brooch
right there perfectly centered on her chest. The old guy—you might have
guessed, he’s John Van De Stroet—is handing a small piece of paper to a big guy
with an open collar. It’s a check for a thousand dollars. All three of them are
smiling. Forty-four years later.
Like I said, I got the paper to prove it. If you don’t
believe me, I’ll send you a copy. But I’m saving this one, because it’s an
obscure story that needs to be remembered, a little story on a shard of old
newsprint, an otherwise long-forgotten story for our time and all time, a story
about a human being in whom there was no guile.

3 comments:
It's stories like this that make you memorable James; ordinary people, quiet observations, "truth to be told" type messages wrapped in the soft but strong fabric of the Word.
Your destiny was to push a pencil in a classroom, but our reward is "honest vignettes" of your vision through a camera, and through a story... well written I would add, for us to apply to our lives.
I suppose you should do what I must keep telling myself daily as I am aging and face challenges unwanted... "don't dwell on what you can't do, but dwell on what grace allows you to do"; and keep doing it again, and again... and again.
Bless you in this new week, with new opportunities to dream.
Great comment, and graciously and articulately put! Totally agree.
Many thanks to both of you.
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