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 1950 - 1970
The twenty years between 1950 and 1970 are characterized by slow, steady
change in and around Hubbard. Hop yards continued to be a familiar sight.
Hop poles, straight and unyielding, stood like soldiers at - attention.
Methods of harvesting changed over the years as horse drawn wagons were
replaced by tractors. Hazel Claypool Friend has worked during all stages
of hop productions. Hazel reminisces:
I had a friend, Hap Pulley. His wife always worked in the
hop yard and she wanted me to start working in the hop
yards, too.
There was a tractor pulling something that got us up high
enough to tie. That was a real challenge to do that.
After we got them going up the wire, every so often we'd have to
strip or trim some of the branches off. And of course in
the fall, we'd pick them. I started to pick by hand.
In later years they had a machine that picked the hops.
Hap's wife and I got to ride the machine,- and, as the
men would cut the hops off the wire, they'd fall down on the
chute and onto the machine and come sliding down. She
and I would have to stand there and pull a hook to hook the vine.
On the other side, it went up and picked the hops
off.
It has been over 100 years since the first hops were produced in the
area. Their importance to regional identity remains undiminished. Frank
Fobert, life-long farmer and now exclusive hop grower, reflects on his
experience:
Well, I started with 10 acres and I kept growing. My
brother used to farm, truck farming, on the same place.
In 1965 I proceeded to buy a used picking machine that the
October storm had blown over, moved it from St. Paul
over to here, and at that time I went on my own. Been on my
own ever since. We now have 200 acres.
The wires used to be right straight over the hop row. When
the picking machine came about, we put the wires over
the middle of the row so we can pick them the opposite direction.
We had kids up there with knives who would cut the vines
and they cut toward each other. They were liable to cut
each others hands, but with the picking machine we turned
around and went down the wire.
Hops is mostly used for beer. Hops flavor the beer and
contribute to the foaming. We sell to a broker. The
broker sells it to the brewery. A few hops are used in yeast,
or in medicine.
All our early hops, called the aroma hops, go to Anhauser
Busch. The later varieties, called a higher alpha
variety, and are sold to any brewery around the world. With a
high alpha hop, it doesn't take so much hops in the brew
to make do what a hop will do. We harvest the middle of
August. Late ones come on about the first of
September.
In the hop business, we make a lot of our own machinery.
We are mechanized. You see the portable in the parade?
That would take the place of a hundred pickers. A hundred
people! The one we use today pickes as much as four hundred
people!
Frank's experience of growth and expansion in the hop business was
paralleled by other specialty growers.
IVAN DEARMOND: We bought the big farm at Hubbard, 1300
acres. There was only 800 acres cleared and we cleared
the balance, my brother and me. With a bulldozer, and there
was a lot of handwork. We'd pick up sticks and pile them up,
then burn them.
My brother and I were grass seed growers. We had about
1000 acres in grass seed I think we were the first in
the Hubbard area.
While small family farms were becoming a way of the past in rural
community, the downtown face of Hubbard was also experiencing change.
ROY KENAGY: I think the biggest change is Hubbard used to
be all along 3rd Street.
BEVERLY JORY KOUTNEY: I think the closing of the businesses in
town has been a major change. The move to the malls has been
very dramatic. I still remember when the restaurant in
town, the Homestead, was a half hardware store and half
grocery store. Across E Street, where there is a vacant lot,
was the Red and White grocery store. It had one side dry
goods and on the other side, groceries. So there were two
grocery stores, side by side. We really had a downtown.
You could go down to the main street and really shop. I
bought baby shoes there, took my prescriptions in to
have them filled.
LEONARD BIZON: The Post Office is the center of any
community. It used to be located on 3rd, just north of
where the Homestead Restaurant is now. You can still see the
concrete foundation. The old building was falling apart
and a program was started to replace the old buildings.
When it was moved to the new location at lst and G that was
it,-the end of town. It's true. It happened. And then
when anything new was built, it went closer to the highway.
Happened in other towns the same way.
Droopy in their old age, numerous wood buildings which had been
constructed early in the century, were removed during the mid-1960's. The
Odd Fellows hall and Dr. Schoor's hospital building were two which were
dismantled. The Hubbard School was replaced at a new location.
HOWARD JONES: I was on the school board when we closed
the Hubbard School and built North Marion. The high
school was up on the top floor, the grade school down
below. When the high school let out, they just hit about
every other step and bang, bang, bang, bang! The
teachers couldn't leach at all. And the big boys were a bad
influencefor the small kids and wejust decided something
had to be done.
Woodburn wanted to take us in up there, which we didn't
want to do. On the way home from my folks one evening,
Mary and I got to talking. I said, White school has
already come in to Hubbard, but there is Broadacres,
Donald, Butieville and Aurora. Why can't we take all these
and make a school out in the middle somewhere, out
in the country. Then the kids couldn't run to the store all
the time, like they were doing."
I went to the school board meeting the next time
andpresented it to them. The year I was chairman, probably.
Manion Carl and Marvin Barrett were on the board
with me and they liked the idea. So we went around and
checked with all the school board members in the other
districts and talked to them.
MARY JONES: It also was getting big enough.
HOWARD: Yeah. There wasn't room. There were only four
rooms on each floor. Each teacher had two classes.
ALICE SHRADER: While North Marion was being built, first
grade class was held at the Hubbard Community
Church. We were there for two years. There were two classes
and nothing but a big heavy curtain divided the
rooms.
While the new North Marion school was a benefit to the district, not
everyone felt the move to the country was a benefit to the town of
Hubbard.
VELMA SCHOLL: I believe when the school, all grades, was
relocated out of town about two miles in the country,
Hubbard lost much of its identity as a thriving community.
No longer did students come to and graduate from
Hubbard, they became North Marion students; address:
Aurora. So a sense of local pride in all school problems
and activities by students and their parents suffered by
comparison. This is not to say the move to consolidate was
not a good idea, for several smaller districts
benefitted, but for the town of Hubbard, it seems to me,
it has proven otherwise. Without the students and
their activities in our midst, supported by satellite
business, housing, and social life, we are not a
complete entity.
Service organizations also suffered.
MANTON CARL: The old gatherings and so forth, there was
an attempt to revive them, like having an auction or
twofor the volunteer Fire Department. And I led the Boy
Scoutsfor awhile. We tried to get a little community service
club. There was just not much interest. The Pythians and
the Odd Fellows began to deplete. The old timers stayed with
it until they were gone, but there were not many new
joiners.
The Hubbard Fire Department remained a strong organization. Plays put
on by the firemen and their families, as well as dances, continued to be
held at City Hall. Firemen continued to put out fires. In 1964, firemen
answered a total of fourteen calls which included two auto fires, six
house fires and eight grass or field fires.
BEVERLY JORY KOUTNY: I can remember dances when Edward and
I were first married Fireman's dances. Nobody came to
the dances early. Theystartedat9p.m. Nobody came before
10 or 11 p.m. They were partying other places, and then
they'd drift into the dances. Every fall they'd have a
Hunter's Dance and then a Sweetheart Dance on Valentine's
Day. I think this was on Valentine's Dav, when there was
afire on A Street.
All the firemen, in their best outfits, rushed off to the
fire. The fire was in an upstairs apartment and it was quite
ajob climbing all over the roof. They got the fire out and
came back to the dance. Several of them went home and
changed because they had gotten dirty, wet and muddy. In that day and
age they did not have uniforms. Edward had his next best
outfit on when the fire whistle went off again. The
mattress had caught fire again at the same location.
Back at the hall, the women were sitting around talking to
one another, the band was playing, and the men were off
at the fire. Finally, the men were called back a third time in
their third outfits. The dance was over! The band went
home. The next day was Sunday and Edward had nothing to
wear to church. |