Iowa Gets Missouri in Nashville

OK, to keep these stories going. My dad dropped out of the Iowa medical school after three years when he finally got up the nerve to tell his dad, my grandpa, who was a small-town doctor back in the hometown, that he didn't want to be a doctor.

He became a pharmaceutical rep with the state of Arkansas his territory. He walked into a doctor's office and asked the receptionist for a date that night. He proposed after two weeks and they eloped to Kennett, MO (got to keep this Missouri thread alive) after three weeks. The only thing my grandma was mad about was that she was marrying a 'damn Yankee'. My dad moved back to the hometown, became a banker and they had six kids, I'm #5.

One last interesting side note. My dad's fiancé was still living back in Iowa City. He got married without giving her notice! She wasn't very happy, I read some of the letters she sent.
 
OK, to keep these stories going. My dad dropped out of the Iowa medical school after three years when he finally got up the nerve to tell his dad, my grandpa, who was a small-town doctor back in the hometown, that he didn't want to be a doctor.

He became a pharmaceutical rep with the state of Arkansas his territory. He walked into a doctor's office and asked the receptionist for a date that night. He proposed after two weeks and they eloped to Kennett, MO (got to keep this Missouri thread alive) after three weeks. The only thing my grandma was mad about was that she was marrying a 'damn Yankee'. My dad moved back to the hometown, became a banker and they had six kids, I'm #5.

One last interesting side note. My dad's fiancé was still living back in Iowa City. He got married without giving her notice! She wasn't very happy, I read some of the letters she sent.
Love hearing these stories.

My own parents' way of meeting was pretty crazy...sorry if it's too long, no need to read it.

My dad was born and raised in the same town I live in now. His dad (my grandpa) owned a fairly successful business and told all his kids when they graduated from high school he'd either pay for college or buy them a new car. My dad took the car.

He and his best friend graduated, and decided they wanted to sow their oats. They looked at help wanted ads in the Sioux City Journal and there was a company called Regal China in Kenosha, WI looking for factory workers. They made stuff like those cheesy decanters and perfume bottles that were so popular in the 60s. So they both hopped in their cars, drove to Kenosha, and rented a house.

Around the same time my mom's dad had gone to work for American Motors in Corinth, Mississippi after the farming thing started to transition to bigger operations. In 1968 that car plant went to the chopping block. The workers were given two choices...3 months severance pay, or you could go to work in their plant in Kenosha but obviously you had to move. There were still 5 out of 12 kids at home and they decided to go north. My mom had quit school by then and was 17 (she later got her GED and nursing degree), so she got a job at Regal right around the same time my dad did and that's how they met.

So from two TOTALLY different worlds my folks ended up together, got married, and moved into a little rental house by themselves in Waukegan, Illinois. Then things got real weird.

Six weeks after they got married my dad got a draft notice and a bus ticket to Ft Lewis, Washington for basic training. Nine weeks after that he got on a plane to Vietnam and spent the next two and a half years over there carrying an M60. The pictures I have are unreal. He looks like a baby.

My mom, newly married with no husband and no place to go, moved in with my dad's parents here in Iowa while he was overseas. My grandma hated her, she was a real snooty German lady who thought her shit didn't stink and to her my mom was just a hillbilly my dad had a crush on. No pictures of the two of them exist. My grandpa and her were thick as thieves though and got along great. He treated her like one of the kids and they laughed their asses off in the short time he ended up living from what I've been told. My dad's siblings used to even tell me what a stuck up old ***** my grandma was, I never met her. That was coming from her own kids. My mother was the most loving, big-hearted human being I've met in 44 years on this earth, so maybe it's best I didn't meet my dad's mom. I probably wouldn't have liked her or been good enough for her.

Dad came home after Vietnam and started working at the family business (it doesn't exist anymore, things went to shit in the 80s farm crisis and that was the end of it), and they built their own house. I came along a whole 10 years later. My parents were the last ones in either of their families to have kids, my dad was 30 and mom was 28. In 1980 that was ancient to be having kids. I'm glad they waited that long because the had their shit together byb that point. Neither of them were wild and they always put my brother and I first in their lives.

Unfortunately, neither of them took awesome care of their health like a lot of folks didnt in the 70s and 80s. Dad died at 57 years old and so did mom. They're still the first thing I think about when I wake up and the last thing I think about before I fall asleep. Crazy how when you're going through life it feels like it takes forever, but now it feels like it was all instantaneous.

C'est la vie.
 
C’mon, man. You stole that story from the first Vacation movie. So you went 100% Clark Griswold? I’m just kidding, I’m f*cking with you.:)
One of my alltime favorite movies. It captured the essence of a baby boom family taking their kids cross country, a concept that was rapidly disappearing by the early eighties. So was Route 66 (the highway their trip was loosely based off) roadside hamburger stands, KOA type campgrounds, and low budget motels. Those were all American icons and slices of Americana that people had grown up with for decades. All were celebrated in the movie.
 
My mom's family was all from Mississippi, back in the day when road atlases were a thing we always drove from Iowa through ESL on the interstate, had a similar story I'll always remember as a kid. My folks got kinda turned around and it was way late, line 1, 2 in the morning ish...

Had an '86 Astro Van (still love that thing), they stopped at a gas station in ESL not knowing any better to ask directions, the attendant told my dad to get out of there and not stop for stop signs or red lights. I remember he was a super nice guy and told us how to get back on the interstate but you could tell he wasn't messing around telling us to get outta there.

Nowadays with Google maps you can plan around that stuff and either way that route probably wasn't optimal, but back then you planned out trips at the kitchen table with a road atlas and a highlighter.
I could look at road atlases for hours. I still had one up until less then ten years ago.

You can still find those old Phillips 66 road maps in antique stores and flea markets. They can fetch a little coin if in decent shape.
 
I could look at road atlases for hours. I still had one up until less then ten years ago.

You can still find those old Phillips 66 road maps in antique stores and flea markets. They can fetch a little coin if in decent shape.
I just bought a new road atlas. Love maps. And, yes, I have a garmin gps and rely heavily on apple car play. 30,000 miles a year on average on my Honda Pilots. Read it and weep, working people…
 
I could look at road atlases for hours. I still had one up until less then ten years ago.

You can still find those old Phillips 66 road maps in antique stores and flea markets. They can fetch a little coin if in decent shape.
I still stop at rest areas in surrounding states and grab paper copy of their state map.
 
Gotta say ... These recollections and anecdotes are 100X more interesting and entertaining than watching Iowa in ANY bowl game vs a P5 team without KJ.
That bullet riddled pickup fared better in Nashville than Hawks will.
 
In the summer of '41 grandpa was pushing my dad to register for college. He would have none of it. The arguments happened frequently. Finally dad said, "If you can get me into Notre Dame, I'll go". He figured, that will be the end of that.

Two weeks later grampa said, "you're to be in South Bend on the 15th". He pulled some strings and made it happen.

The war broke out, the navy took over campus. Grampa said, "you'd better enlist before you get drafted". Dad walked across campus and registered for OCS (forget the name of the exact program) and he served in the pacific theatre on a Destroyer Escort. The returned after the war and graduated. He said he almost stayed in San Diego after the war ...almost. When Hayden Fry came to Iowa, Dad became a Hawkeye fan.

this has nothing to do with Missouri
 
In the summer of '41 grandpa was pushing my dad to register for college. He would have none of it. The arguments happened frequently. Finally dad said, "If you can get me into Notre Dame, I'll go". He figured, that will be the end of that.

Two weeks later grampa said, "you're to be in South Bend on the 15th". He pulled some strings and made it happen.

The war broke out, the navy took over campus. Grampa said, "you'd better enlist before you get drafted". Dad walked across campus and registered for OCS (forget the name of the exact program) and he served in the pacific theatre on a Destroyer Escort. The returned after the war and graduated. He said he almost stayed in San Diego after the war ...almost. When Hayden Fry came to Iowa, Dad became a Hawkeye fan.

this has nothing to do with Missouri

OCS - officer candidate school
 
In the summer of '41 grandpa was pushing my dad to register for college. He would have none of it. The arguments happened frequently. Finally dad said, "If you can get me into Notre Dame, I'll go". He figured, that will be the end of that.

Two weeks later grampa said, "you're to be in South Bend on the 15th". He pulled some strings and made it happen.

The war broke out, the navy took over campus. Grampa said, "you'd better enlist before you get drafted". Dad walked across campus and registered for OCS (forget the name of the exact program) and he served in the pacific theatre on a Destroyer Escort. The returned after the war and graduated. He said he almost stayed in San Diego after the war ...almost. When Hayden Fry came to Iowa, Dad became a Hawkeye fan.

this has nothing to do with Missouri
Again, this is the Shit!
Let me tell ya ... Iowa wants nothing to do with Mizzou, either.
WWll was a blood bath and so will this game be.
 

Latest posts

Top