My Aunt Lynn (Myrtle Dobson) took this picture of farm wives at “the Cunningham sale” near the farming community of Gilbert, Idaho, in the summer of 1919. I suspect that the Cunninghams were selling out and leaving the area. It’s the only photo of this type that I find in my grandmother’s collection. I think it was a poignant occasion. The small farmers, many of whom were original homesteaders in the area, were selling out. Perhaps Ina foresaw that this group would not be together again. The Gilbert post office closed in 1920, meaning that their hopes for a real town had not materialized.
It doesn’t matter about the event. In fact, 100 years later, even the identities don’t matter very much. These were hardworking farm wives of the pre-electrification era. The picture speaks to me without words, as I hope it does to you.
The women are Identified as follows:
Standing, l. to r.: Mrs. Wells, Mrs. Cordell, Bertha Dobson, Ida Chandler Dickson, Ida McCain, Ina Dobson (my grandmother), Mrs. Dieterle, Mrs. Trutton, Kate Lugar (standing behind Mrs. Laura Moss), Effie Hill, Mrs. Reese, Mrs. Phar.
Seated, l. to r.: Mrs. Cunningham, Grandma Chandler, Emma Pratt, Mildred Boehm.
Bertha Dobson was my grandmother’s sister, affectionately called “Aunt” by Ina’s children. Ida Chandler Dickson, called “Ida-Ben” to distinguish her from another “Aunt Ida,” was married to Bertha and Ina’s brother, Ben Dickson.
Mrs. Cordell and her son Jay were guests at Ina’s Christmas Eve parties, as were John and Mildred Boehm. Someone told me that Jay Cordell was interested in courting Aunt Shirley, but when Henry Shockley came along, he backed off. KW