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BY MARIDETH
SISCO
Quill Staff Writer
“The county sent a lot of people
down there.
Everybody that nobody
wanted, they ended up down there," said Joe Aid, describing the
Howell County Poor Farm.
Aid, West Plains, who is known for his collection of pictures
and memorabilia, said he has no pictures of the Poor Farm. "I can't
even remember seeing any," he said.
Doing research for the story brought back scenes from
childhood with any grandmother admonishing her children about their
spending habits, "Be careful, or you'll end up in the poor farm."
or, commenting on people who used to live near us, I don't know what
happened to them. They may have had to go to the poor farm."
To a child, it had the
feeling of fairy tale monsters or being threatened by boogey man.
Nobody would really do that to someone, would they?
But of course they would, and did. People with no place to go
had to go somewhere.
In Howell County, they often went to a place officially
called the county welfare farm.
For some, it was a place to work off a court fine in
Depression days when cash was harder to come by than 30 days’ time.
For others, it was better than anything they had had out on
their own.
For many, it was the end of the line, as they lived out their
lives and died, with nowhere to go, and no one -to notify when they
were gone.
Just over the lip of a grassy rise from the buildings that
still stand on the old welfare home property, the county cemetery
sits inside a curve on Howell Co. Rd. 868, about six miles southeast
of West Plains.
It is a quiet, peaceful place these days, shaded by a large
oak tree and several pines. The wind whispers quietly in the leaves
and needles, sounding strangely respectful.
For years after the farm
was sold in 1955, the cemetery was forgotten and allowed to grow up
in brush and briars. Recently, the county commissioners ordered it
cleared and cleaned up so it could be mowed.
The clearing revealed a pathetic little scattered grouping of
tombstones, all alike, except for the names. Even some of those are
identical, with five stones sharing the name "unknown." Only 26 of
the graves are marked. The rest were apparently marked at an earlier
time with wooden markers, now long gone. The only marks now are the
slight mounds and depressions of identical dimensions, in columns
and rows.
Seen in the late afternoon, when shadows are long and help
define the contours of the land, the cemetery is apparently full, or
almost.
"At one time there was about 60 or 70 people there at the
farm, in the late '30s and early '40s," said John Gid Morrision, who
served as Howell County Clerk while the farm was still open and who
now lives on a farm just down the road, within sight of the
cemetery. "The cemetery was for people who lived there at the farm
and people who didn't have anywhere else to be buried."
Among those was a man who is listed in county records as a
"white male, about 30, supposed to be killed by a train." The record
is dated June, 1936, when countless men fitting that description
were traveling the country by rail, incognito, looking for work and
survival.
Another, recalled by long time West Plains resident Dail
Allen, was a reputed "bootlegger" during prohibition days.
"I remember they caught a bootlegger, he put up a fight and
they killed him. They buried him down there," Allen said. "I always
think of that when I drive by there. I remember they took him to
that undertaker's parlor down next to where the library is now. Me
and another kid went down there and looked at him. It was kind of a
big event in those days. The town was a lot smaller then."
A volume of county records listing activities at the farm
between 1927 and 1946 show at least 31 persons as having been buried
at the cemetery. None of the names listed correspond with the names
on the stones.
A long afternoon spent in the vault where county records are
kept revealed at once too little and too much about the farm's
former residents.
A woman named America lived at the farm for five years before
dying on July 4, 1936.
The body of a man who was buried at the cemetery in 1936 was
exhumed and moved to Illinois to be near relatives in 1950.
John T. Matthews, who lived at the farm from 1922 to 1936,
signed an affidavit overriding his relatives wishes to claim his
body when he died, electing to buried at the farm, near his friends.
Many records after 1939 ended with "Released. Got old age
pension." According to documents filed with the patient records,
the old age pension at that time amounted to about $25 a month - not
much, but enough to get off the farm.
Other records are more pathetic.
"E.S., April
through June, had a baby here."
"W.F. Stevens, 68, here a few hours and died. Relatives
not none of."
And repeated too often, "No relatives. No one to notify."
They were the county's paupers, explained Buford Skaggs, West
Plains, who was presiding judge of Howell County during many years
of the farm's operation.
"Before there was Social Security or the old age pension,
people had nowhere to go, no home, no food," Skaggs said. "At the
farm, they had their own dairy, butchered their own meat, and raised
most of their own food. Those that were able to work got out and cut
wood, hauled hay and brought in a little cash for the county. They
was took good care of. We had people there to cook their meals and
wash their clothes for them," he said. "It wasn't a self-supporting
deal, but it didn't cost too much to run the place."
And when the people died with nothing, Skaggs explained, the
county would bury them.
"We would buy the caskets a dozen or half dozen at a time. We
had an arrangement with an undertaker. We kept them down there in a
building," he said.
Allen said he remembers the caskets. "I was down there when I
was a kid and I remember going In one of those sheds and saw two or
three wooden coffins. That'd kind of open your eyes," said Allen,
who was acquainted with some of the people who worked at the farm.
Not many had their eyes open to conditions at the farm,
according to one county employee who asked not to be identified.
"It was something no one wanted to talk about or think
about," he said, adding that for the people who lived at the farm,
the best thing that ever happened was when it was closed and sold in
1955.
"They were able to get all those people into nursing homes,
where they could get the proper care."
Patient care at the farm, while the best the county could
offer, wasn't much, the employee said. Prisoners, the mentally ill,
the mentally retarded and the old and abandoned were all lumped
together In one place.
"It wasn't
a good place," he said. "Cold, wet, those old concrete floors, the
cells. It wasn't a place you'd want any of your people to be."
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