You’ll rejoice to
know the rainwater cistern is a-borning – it is now down to 7 feet in depth and
is 8 feet across. The digging is very hard, for it is now frozen hard pan, but
it won’t have to go a great deal deeper. It’s going to be a real boon, for it
will more than cut this awful chore of hauling water in half. Ernest is planning to put a timber cribbing around the top on
the outside of the bricks to bring the well top to the same level as the porch.
Then we can just walk right to the pump from the porch with no steps to climb
up and down. “I can hardly wait until Saturday night to try it.” -- Ethel to Vance, 1-3-37
[The quote above confirms that Ernest Robinson was really digging the cistern at the farm by hand and during the cold months. However, the actual year was 1936-7.]
A postcard from Vance's collection |
Ethel was relieved not to have to go
to the school today. She had her own
family’s laundry to do. Ernest’s clothes were filthy what with his work to make
a cistern. It was wet, cold, dirty work, but she was proud of him for doing it,
and she just knew having access to water at the back door would revolutionize
life for her parents, who were carrying water from a spring some distance away.
Laundry on the sun porch; west dormer above |
Another of Vance's postcards |
“Let’s see,” said Ina, as Jack
cleared the kitchen of washtubs, buckets, and pails. “Christmas Eve is just one
week away. All right! That means I must begin mailing the boxes tomorrow. I’ll have
Pearl’s ready first, then the one to Earle and Bernice (Idaho Falls), and then
the boxes to the sisters in Drain and Vance’s to Raymond.” Just thinking of all
those trips to the mailbox made Jack’s head spin, but he really didn’t mind.
After all, Ina did all the work. His only part was to carry the mail to and
from the mailbox.
An early photo of the dining room |
In order that the hustle and bustle
of daily chores and Christmas preparations might continue uninterrupted, Jack
rode off to fetch Sadie from school. On the way home, they stopped at the
mailbox, where the mailman had delivered a dozen cards today.
After a supper of
beef stew and cornbread, the family again gathered round the dining room table
to open and read the Christmas cards and letters. KW
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