Sunday, May 28. 2006Captain and Mrs. EdgingtonSunday, May 21. 2006W. J. QUINLAN in better daysFriday, May 19. 2006May 19th- The Beginning of Summer FunCollection of River Memories: May 19, 1955 My brothers Dick and Bob and I lived on Sterrett Avenue, in Covington, Kentucky, one large block west of where the Reverend Coers, a local minister, and his family lived in the small, white, clapboard rectory on Eastern Avenue. Mike Coers was around our age, and my brothers, our cousin Ray Cooper, and I played in the area adjacent to Holmes practice field locally known as "The Swamp", but in reality was the lower back yards of the rectory and their adjoining neighbors' property.
Our favorite game was playing "Army", and our usual willing rival was Mike and an equal number of his buddies. Mike had dug a deep foxhole on the hillside behind his house, and our "gang" had to make frontal assaults on this heavily-fortified position. Our weapons were mud balls, and as rocks were strongly forbidden, no one was seriously hurt. Mike’s father, the Reverend Dr. Coers, thoroughly disapproved of our war games and would sometimes come down the steep hill, round us all together, and try to get us to pursue a more genteel pastime. After his lectures, he would dig deep into his pant pocket and pull out a handful of assorted coins and scatter them over the ground. My brothers and cousin would scramble for the coins, but as the "leader of the gang", I wouldn't, but I was always in on the pop and candy later bought with the reverend's bribe-money for peace in the swamp. By the time our trip to "Charlie’s" at Wallace and Madison, and all the candy was eaten and the soda drunk, we’d ease back down to the swamp to see if Mike’s dad was gone and if his son was ready for another battle.
On one fine day in May, 1955, our gang assembled on the plains of the swamp for a challenge given for combat by the younger Coers. Mike was wearing an official U. S. Army helmet liner to protect him from the barrage of clay missiles that would surely rain down upon his entrenchment, and he had a couple of his regular friends in the trench with him. It was a great day for war and both sides were eager for battle. We were delighted that Mike and his boys were especially ready for combat in spite of the fact that our assaults, of late, had driven the Coer’s gang out of their fortification and into the basement of the Rectory where they had safe-haven and where we never pursued, but stayed outside to beg them to come back out and fight another round.
At a given signal, we began plummeting Mike's deep entrenchment so that more that one "thud" was heard as a round clod of clay find the army helmet of the rival leader. Then with a fury we charged up the hill toward the enemy position as mud balls filled the air. We expected an immediate surrender of the Coer’s Gang, but as we were half-way up the hill, Mike and his boys broke and ran toward the open basement door as a few final clay rounds found their marks before the fleeing enemy disappeared within the safety of the forbidden territory.
The sweetness of victory suddenly turned sour as out of the cellar door poured, not Mike and his defeated boys, but a real gang of tough kids from a rough part of town that Coers had secreted within the basement awaiting our charge up the hill. His retreat had suckered us into a perfectly executed killing zone. As the mean boys poured out of the basement like angry hornets, my gang and I beat a fast rout, not in the direction from which we came, but toward the rectory front yard and across Eastern Avenue toward the flood wall that protected the town from the occasional anger of the Licking River- a place we were especially forbidden to venture.
There was no let-up from our pursuers, they were not restrained from any gentlemanly rules of war. They were after blood—our blood ! On we ran over the flood wall as our hunters continued the chase. The illicit
Our pursuers were tiring too, and had lagged an increasing distance behind us. This worked to our advantage as we dropped below the path and pressed ourselves close to the face of the three-foot cliffs as our assassins thundered by and disappeared down the blind trail. That was the last that we heard of them. We waited anxiously for at least twenty minutes, or maybe half an hour, before we arose from the safety of our refuge. And as we came up from where we had been sheltered, we found that we were in a forbidden paradise! We had found our own
A week later we returned with another neighborhood friend and explored this new and exotic land, and we claimed it as "Our Camp". For the remainder of our youth, we secretly swam and played upon the banks of the
The Swamp lost its appeal and seldom did we play there again, and we kept the secret of our adventures along the
Posted by Captain Donald J. Sanders
in Battens, Keys and Cockhats
at
07:51
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Monday, May 15. 2006Natchez we love you no matter whatHowdy y'all. I just wanted to state that if the Natchez was going to Tall Stacks and wanted to make some side charter money that we could all pitch in, I'm sure, and find some cities along the way to help out. If it can't be done.....I'm aware that folks want to be home with families and daily the situations there change even on infrastructure, I'm sure. We can't imagine what is going on down there. I almost spent three or four months down there to help, and I should have. It has been a mixed winter up here. My life would have changed dramatically, I'm sure. There are some folks from here that have an apartment in the French Quarter and spent some time down there around Christmas and wanted to be there with the other folks for kinsmanship. There were excited to go there and be with friends down there. It is a small world. If the Natchez wants some neat event.....we can do it. If the time isn't there and folks want to be home with family, that is quite understandable. Please know that someone is there to help you in whatever way possible. Pick city routes, don't add, and volunteer captains chosen to get their city volunteers, each city does their own event, pay rent to use the vessel, and go onward. I'd say each city should ask really low hotel rates, maybe subsidized by their CVB's or city. Just a suggestion. Nothing esle. The Natchez is great and a winner. That is my story and I'm sticking to it. Natchez you rock!! Mary Sunday, May 14. 2006Helping the Natchez as we save ourselvesHowdy. I read with great interest Judy Patsch's entry for the Message Board concerning the Natchez. I'm writing on this column as the message board is under construction and I'm an idiot in figuring out computer work. I'm on the internet all the time but less on the making it work skill department. (I'll relearn the message board in time, don't drink Vodka...) So, my question is......during the Tall Stacks time.....by helping the Natchez wouldn't be also helping our great steamboats in the country. Why couldn't certain cities be mapped out and then those cities are incharge of finding whatever volunteers are needed to 'staff the boat'. Have someone from Natchez be there to coordnate the troops. Staffing could be various things, like welcoming, seeing who paid table, greeting guests to the boat open areas, why couldn't caterers be used locally for the food--they make money on the drinks, if it was needed for music--I bet any city's Philharmonic or special music group could make it into a fundraiser with adding more to the ticket price for a "special evening on the Natchez with....thing". (Side note, our city, needs help....it wanted to charge the Natchez a dollar per ticket to dock here the next time. I have almost fainted each time and felt sick. They don't understand the concept of GREAT MARKETING/ADVERTISING WE'RE GETTING FOR THEM BEING HERE AT ANY TIME. It just infuriates me. There are those of us in the city trying to show the little boy politics that you don't do that in our country...they dock for free. UGH. They'll get past it in due time.) ANYWAY, if there couldn't be another national sponsor to sponsor their tour and do tramp up and down the river, then how about different cities key into that.....find out cost to charter the boat, put it into ticket price, as what we all do anyway, and there could be a special fundraising event or even what each city wants to do.....rent out upstairs for private parties, if downstairs isn't used for storage....which it probably would be...then rent that out at each city. Hey, it isn't a lot of money, but it is some money. Count me in as a charter for our city. I've been keeping our Philharmonic open for a boat to come for months. It gets the word out about the steamboat, too. Maybe the Governor or Louisiana would give some start up bucks to get the boat from point A to B. I'd say the city of New Orleans, LA, may be strapped for cash right now. I'm just suggesting. I want the boat to come to Evansville, IN, as anyone would want it to come to their city. If it is shortage of help---then, lets help our own. Get volunteer staffing to help, make it a fun event for each city involved--whip it up whatever event is done and SELL tickets. Sell tickets in each city on Ticketweb or someone in their city be responsible for the money. Or sell on ticketmaster like what was done before and settle each closing night in each city before the Natchez goes onward to the next city like they do at concert shows. Each city responsible for what event is on the boat--like a venue for rent that day. Kids, it is America. And all things are possible if the boat allows it, I'm sure if the insurance company allows it, and who ever is on board. Gordon Stevens, Adrienne Thomas, you know I'm from Evansville, Indiana, and I'd love to have you here. Count me and our city--I'll have to club a few in the head---but, count us in. We love you, talk about you all still in our city, and would love to have you back. Coooooommmmmmeee oonnn, to Indiana. It is just a thought. Glad to air this out in the open. I'll call you Adrienne Thomas on Monday, May 15, 2006, and see if we can get something shaking on this. I don't know what the Tall Stacks folks would have to say about contract arrangements---but, get a life. If we can help these folks, save a national treasure in our country....then, please allow us to do that. If they can do a river tramp--come tramp with us. If they need to tramp some cities up and some cities down to New Oreans, LA, or deadhead up to Cincinnati, OH, then come back down on tramp..... Thanks, that is all today, I'm sticking to my story, and now I must say to all who it applies to "Have a Happy Mother's Day". Mary K. Hukill
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