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  • HAVE YOU EVER HEARD OF BUTLER’S RANGERS?




     HAVE  YOU EVER HEARD  OF  BUTLER’S RANGERS? 

    (MEMORIES  OF  THE WYOMING VALLEY MASSACRE AND THE VENGENCE OF SULLIVAN)
    (noted at the Farm Sale for Charles  Colin Trout, on  March  31, 21018)

    alan  skeoch
    April  2, 2018



    THIS is  Marjorie Skeoch sitting and guarding  her possessions like a  mother hen at the Troup auction sale, March  31, 2018, on the farm near Vineland, Ontario.
    Notice her right hand, resting on that wood  box.  THAT IS  NOT HERS!  That box  is the platform used by auctioneer Rick Rittenhouse to elevate himself above 
    the crowd.   She thought I bought it.  Back  in the deep past, in the  1780’s, Loyalist veterans  of the American  Revolution must have guarded their few possession like 
    this.  Marjorie’s family were Loyalists…United Empire Loyalists…so  she comes  by this feeling of  dispossession naturally.  She was  not connected to Butler and  
    his Rangers however.


    THIS FARM HAS A LONG HISTORY…DEEP ROOTED IN THE CREATION OF CANADA

    AND IT WILL REMAIN AS  IT IS TODAY…NOT SUBJECT TO DEMOLITION



    THE STORY

    Below is  an  imaginary dialogue between Marjorie and Alan  Skeoch:


    “ALAN, did you hear about that house?”
    “Hear what?”
    “Owner  says  it goes back to the Butler’s Rangers…”
    “Way back that far…are you sure?”
    “Mr. Troup says so.”
    “And  who  is he?”
    “Owner of this  farm since the death of  Charles Group in 2015,”
    “Butler’s Rangers  were a bloody tough bunch in the American  Revolution according to what I’ve read”
    “Whose side?”
    “Our side…the British side, they fought some nasty battles  with Jospeh Brant’s Iroquois…a  lot of people died, some  scalped.”
    “Losers…”
    “Right…after the Wyoming Valley  Massacre they had  to get the hell out as  fast as they could.’
    “Massacre?  Wyoming?  Never heard  of  the place or the massacre>”
    If you are American you would  remember.  Bunch of American militia, around  450 of them  under guy by  name of Denison got caught.  Sucked into a horseshoe
    ambush…slaughtered mostly, then their farms  were  burned…Iroquois scalped  a lot of them, ‘blood and gore all over  the floor”
    “How  can you make light of a massacre.”
    “Sorry.  It was bad.  Women and children fled  into the  forest and some escaped to tell their story.  No doubt time has magnified the event. But it was
    a bad scene.  Hard  to imagine how deep  the hatred was  back in the 1770’s and  1780’s…even up to 1815.”
    “If Colonel Butler and  his force  won Wyoming Valley  battle,  how come  they fled later?”
    “Because the American decided to get even.  Sent Sullivan north with several thousand troops…they ripped  Western New York state to bits.  Smashed, killed,  burned the 
    homeland of the Iroquois.  They had a  war cry…good one…

    TORIES WITH YOUR BRATS AND WIVES
    SHOULD FLEE  TO SAVE YOUR WRETCHED  LIVES

    “Sullivan and his troops drove Butler and  his Rangers, only a couple of hundred strong, north…across the Niagara River  eventually.   Iroquois refugees  by the 
    hundreds clustered around  Fort Niagara…that big stone fort on the US side of the river now but in the 1780’s it was  British.”
    “What happened to them?”
    “For a  few years Butler and  the Iroquois launched  lightning and violent raids into American Territory…raid, wreck, burn, retreat, killing was part of it….war
    is never pretty.”
    “And then?”
    “After the American victory in  1776, the Loyalists  and  Iroquois  were settled  along the new border, principally the Niagara River.  Butler’s guys were
    each given a 100 acre farm in the then wilderness of Upper Canada.
    “Do  you think this farm is one of those land grants?”
    “I do.  But first must do some checking.”

    “While you are  at it, tell me about this guy Butler…I  see his  name often.  Such as  the sign “Butler’s Buring Ground” near Niagara  on the Lake..

    AFTER A  LITTLE  RESEARCHING


    THE FARM OF CHRISTIAN PRICE…AND  CHARLES  COLIN TROUP

    “OK, this farm seems to have been granted to Christian  Price, a private in  Butler’s Rangers…daughter must have married Troup family, hence name change over the years.
    Colin Group died In 2015…not long ago…leaving the farm to others in the Troup Family who  own  Lakelee Orchards…easy to spot from the QEW at Vineland exit.  Lots  of  peaches.”
    “Is that where we buy our peaches by the bushel?”
    “Same  place…part of the Christian  Piece land  grant.”
    “Where are the Pries buried?”
    “Why would  you care?”
    “Just trying to check your story…”
    “You don’t believe me?”
    “Not all  the time, no…sometimes  your enthusiasm  gets  ahead of the facts.  Where are the Price graves?  Gravestones  give facts.”
    “Gone.”
    “How  can  that be?”
    “Big storms  on Lake Ontario washed  the Price Burying ground out into the lake…coffins and  all.  Maybe gravestones can be found by good  divers,  but I doubt it.”
    “Facts gone?”
    “No, lots remain…more than enough to back up this story.”



    “SAY, ALAN, tell me a  bit about Colonel Butler…seems to have been loved and  hated.”
    “You might be interested in how he became a  Colonel”
    “Not really…assume appointed  by King George.”
    “Nope  just named  himself  Colonel and went around gathering men who were pro British.”
    “But who was  he?”
    “A rich man…had 27,000 acres of land before the American Revolution…very Pro-British…was an officer but just not as high as a Colonel.”
    “Lost it all?”
    “Yep, lost every square inch of it.”
    “Assume  he got lots  of land here  in Upper Canada…given by a grateful King.”
    “Nope, he only got 500 acres…lost 27,000 acres (*which may have  really been Indian  land)…became a kind of sleazy businessman in getting  access to Indian land for personal profit.”
    “Surely  King George III was aware of shady  happenings?”
    “King George  III was not that great…loony a  good  part of his  live. Americans
    made fun of the king…and rightly so.

    KING GEORGE THE THIRD
    SHOULD NOT HAVE OCCURRED
    ONE CAN ONLY WONDER
    AT SUCH A BLUNDER

    “Was Butler a bad guy?”
    “If you believe American historians, Butler was a despicable murderer…but take that with a grain of salt.”
    “Why?”
    “The history of war is often  written by the winners.  Washington won the American Revolution so the Loyalists  (nice  name) became Tories  (bad  name) and
    Butler’s Rangers  became evil.”
    “Truth, is there such a thing as truth?”
    “Look for the middle path.  Butler’s Rangers were no better and  no worse  than other troops fighting on the American frontier.”
    “Did Butler achieve anything?”
    “Sure did.  He won  the loyalty of the Iroquois warriors and  fear of them stopped American forces  at the Niagara  River. They trusted  Buttler
    more than that trusted  any American leaders.  Their land was taken and Buttler was part of the final settlement of the Iroquois on the Grand River
    of  Upper Canada where most remain today.”

    “What about Christian  Price?”
    “He married  and  settled  down on his  new farm…then, in the 1780’s, covered with giant trees and  bisected  by streams and swamps.Today covered  with
    peach, cherry and grape  orchards and  bisected  by a wide swath of the multi-lanes  QEW along with service  roads..”



    Above are Mr. and  Mrs.  Troup, direct descendent of  Christian  Piece and the exploits of  Butler’s Rangers.  To Canadian Buttler and  his  Iroquois irregulars were heroic  defenders of
    British colonial life.  To Americans,…?  not so!



    And after the auction sale was  over, Andrew helped Marjorie and I load  our purchases…so the story has some hard  goods as  well  as  soft print.



    Treasure?  Well, this hand operated corn sheller (below) is to my mind  a  grand treasure.  Comes  complete with a  hopper feed system and  a  hand crank.  Mr. Troup and who knows how many Troup’s before him, gathered  
    corn cobs  each year and stored them in this  corn crib set up on stone pillars to keep the rats and mice away.   Then shelled the cobs into piles  kernels  to feed the livestock…pigs,  chickens especially.
    The corn  sheller has survived as has the farm granted to Christian Piece in the  1780’s. Now called Lakelee Orchards. As mentioned, Today the QEW cuts right through the original lakefront part of the farm.  And  somewhere out in the
    lake rests  the tombstone of Christian Price, washed away.




    FOOTNOTES

    Charles Colin Troup

    TROUP, Charles Colin –  Peacefully on Friday March 13, 2015 at his residence at the Orchards in Vineland Ontario in his 89th year. Predeceased by his wife Muriel May Hodge (2002). Survived by his daughters Marilyn and Sandra and son David (Sev). Grandfather of Jason, Nicholas and Aundrea Troup, Victoria and Jessica Gibson, Fred Leppard and Sarah Thiede. Great-grandfather of Noah, Ava and Aleah. Also survived by many nieces and nephews. Colin lived a very full life and was probably best known as a fruit grower, income tax consultant, and a stamp collector who exhibited his award winning collections internationally. He was a member of both the Jordan Lions Club and the Beamsville Ivy Lodge for over 50 years. Special thanks to Dr. Overholt and his staff for looking after dad in his final years. Cremation has taken place. The family will receive friends at the VINELAND CHAPEL of TALLMAN FUNERAL HOMES  on Friday March 27, 2015 from 7-9 pm with a service in the chapel on Saturday March 28,2015 at 11am. There will be a private family interment at a later date. If desired, donations can be made to the Canadian Cancer Society or the Heart and Stroke Foundation in his honour. Online condolences at www.tallmanfuneralhomes.ca12909130

    www.yourlifemoments.ca/images/candle-top.png); width: 568px; color: rgb(68, 68, 68); font-weight: 700; height: 23px; border-bottom-width: 1px; border-bottom-style: solid; border-bottom-color: rgb(68, 68, 68);”>

    Re: Butler’s Rangers

    ANON-Y-MOUSE (View posts)
    Posted: 07 Dec 2001 02:17PM
    Classification: Query
    Just type in Butler’s Rangers. The Lincoln & Welland Regt.
    has all of them on their site.
    Christian Price was a Butler’s Rangers. He lived on the
    shore of Lake Ontario, (now the North Service Road)in the
    former Township of Louth (Now Town Of Lincoln)on Conc.I, II & III, Lot 15. Sons & Daus. of American Loyalists by
    Wm. D. Reid. PRICE, Christian of Louth Children: 
    Elizabeth Md. Jacob Culp of Clinton O.C.19 May 1819
    David Of Louth, O.C. 19 May, 1819
    Christian of Louth. O.C.19 May 1819
    Peter of Louth O.C. 19 May, 1819
    Abraham of Louth O.C. 17 Mar. 1825
    Catherine O.C. 19 Dec. 1833
    Jacob of Louth O.C. 19 Feb. 1831
    John of Louth, O.C. 19 Feb. 1831
    Mary md.John McCarthy of Louth O.C. 19 Feb.1831
    Nancy Md. John Haines of Grantham O.C. 19 Feb.1831

       

       

    Re: Butler’s Rangers

    Posted: 08 Dec 2001 01:47PM
    Classification: Query
    Edited: 12 Feb 2002 01:40PM
    Christian Price died 1832 buried Price Family Burying Ground, Louth which was washed away by Lake Ontario. He married Barbara Overholt born Bucks Co., PA; died 1822 buried Price Family Burying Ground; daughter of Isaac Overholt who died 1824 buried Mennonite Cem., Louth. You can find Barbara’s siblings and my notes on these folks in CD 24 of the Pedigree Resource File.

  • “SOMEDAY I WILL DRIVE A TRACTOR, DADDY”

    “SOMEDAY  I WILL DRIVE A TRACTOR LIKE THIS , DADDY””

    “NOT AS LONG AS YOU HAVE THAT THING IN YOUR MOUTH, ANDREW.”
    “SHOULD I TAKE IT OUT?”
    “NOPE, KEEP IT IN AS LONG AS  YOU CAN, GROWING UP SHOULD BE DELAYED  AS  LONG AS POSSIBLE.”

    PICTURE OF ANDREW SKEOCH
  • DADDY, CAN I EAT ThIS?

    “daddy, can  I eat this?”


  • in AN IDEAL WORLD!!!

    I REMEMBER vaguely and no doubt inaccurately a great painting and attendant comment about an ideal utopian world where “the lamb will lay down with the lion”.

    We are certainly not anywhere near that perfect world.  Nor is it even achievable.  Murder sanctioned by religion points that out to us every day.

    Obviously Marjorie has not given up hope…(picture taken some time ago and made digital today)

    alan skeoch
    March 2018

  • TWISTED: SOMEHOW THE TRIP GOT OUT OF CONTROL (ENG.AND EUROPE 1965)

    1960’s:  These were different times.  Less up tight years  for Eric, Marjorie snd me…we  were young and  life was pretty good.
    If the bottom story seems abominable to you then there is nothing I can say to change your mind.  We live in different times today.
    Far more fearful times.  Less tolerant of  idiot behaviour.  More judgmental…up tight.   Our story below was  just part of  our
    life journey.  The serious, academic, compassionate, well behaved facet of our personalities may not be as evident as some
    readers may like.    Give us a little space to be silly.  Takes  some space yourselves.

    alan

    TWISTED:  OUT OF  CONTROL IN EUROPE  1965

    alan skeoch
    march  2018

    I blame my brother Eric for our shameful performance as Canadian visitors to western Europe  back  in 1965.  His  fault.  He set the tone
    for the trip when he organized a stag celebrating my marriage to Marjorie Hughes.  She was the ultimate ‘nice person’ everyone said.  Some
    friends even cautioned her that she could  have made a better choice as a marriage partner.  Looking back, I  have to agree.  Marriage to
    the North Bay judge’s  son might have been  wiser.   But women  have a  twisted streak and  often look for the man whose behaviour they
    can twist into shape.   If that was  her plan, it did not work out too well as this photo essay  proves. 


    So Eric  invited  a bunch of our friends to the SKEOCH MONASTERY just before our wedding , August 24,1963…somewhere around that date.
    We had  a good time, ‘ Windows’ Bill Doyle set a fine example.  Eric nicknamed  him Windows because he was  the first friend to get glasses.
     Windows promised  his mother he would  never touch alcohol until he turned 21.
    As fate would have it the stag date was his 21st birthday.  We missed him for much of the stag and found  him semi  impaled in a  large 
    forsythia hedge at the farm.  He was making up for lost time.  The stag was  great fun…all our friends together.  Nothing sordid.

    A year or so later, when  Eric  and  I were employed as history teachers at Parkdale Collegiate , I got a great idea for the summer of 1965.

    “Eric, how would you like to join Marjorie snd me on a trip to Europe?”
    “Three of us?  Are you joking?”
    “We could save money…three travel cheaper than two.”  I got that ides from that goddamn book “Europe on Five Dollar a  Day”…turned  out
    to bre wrong.
    “Suppose I could.  Are you sure I won’t be in the way, if you know what i men?”
    “Nah!  Marjorie likes you…enjoys your company.”
    “Have you asked her?”
    “Not yet, but I will.”
    “Let’s do  it”

    So we flew to Europe with a skimpy budget.  And did we ever have a time.


    We  started off in some cheap B and B places.  Charming as you can see above.  Eric had  a separate room.
    Marjorie did  not sleep with her suitcase…she made room for me.  I  love this picture.
    We looked for inexpensive places…like this one…note the wall paper.  

    I was  a little nonplussed when hosts  assumed Marjorie and Eric were husband  and wife and I  was just a hanger on.
    Perhaps that was because  he carried her bag often.  That gave me  an idea.

    “It would  be a hell of a lot cheaper if we all stayed in the same room.”
    “What does Marjorie think of that.”
    “No problem.”
    “Have you asked her?”
    “Well…..”
     
    So we did.  Eric was unwilling to split the costs 50 50 though.

    Beds on night trains were not the best

    “If we use the European trains,  we can sleep in rooms on the night trains…they hold six people…really cheap.”
    “How do they get six beds into a room?”
    “Stack them up…three bunks high…a little tight…but cheap.”


    Read the sign.  I know some of you cannot read…as I expect som you are only looking at my pictures.  The sign
    says “Danger…Keep Children Under Control”.     We had entered  the slippery slide back  to childhood….



    Marjorie became less amused as our money began to run out.  She only complained once…the day we had no meals for the whole day.  She even called  her guardian, Phyllis Morgan,
    saying:  “We are down to one meal  a day…and that meal is usually Bread, cheese and a couple of bottles of Bulmer’s Hard Cider.
    I am losing weight but having s good time.”  She may have said  other things.


    We rented a  small car…really small…and visited Lower Wooton Farm … relatives or bonded friends from our grandparents past.   Nancy  Griffiths  killed a
    couple of chickens which  Marjorie plucked and we all ate.  Predators.   In previous stories  I mentioned events here.  A cow was having a breached birth
    Cyril called us to action stations.


    “Boys,  need  you in the barn now…trouble.”
    “I will reach in the cow and  tie this  rope to the calf’s feet,”
    “What is wrong?”
    “Breached birth…twisted…just pull when  she contracts…firm but gently…work with her…don’t try to be heroic.”
    “Now! Pull.”
    And the calf flew out with all the afterbirth and landed on Eric who was  wearing view one and  only suit.  Yuck!

    “It could  have been worse Eric.”
    “How?”
    “It could have landed on me.!!”


    In 1965 we seemed  to have relatives everywhere…and we stayed with them. This is
    Una Dunne who later became a Roman Catholic Nun.  I am not sure but I think we
    helped her decision making.

    Things started to get really twisted.  Our diet started to cause gastric problems.  One incident comes to mind.
    We were standing in line to buy s post card  to send back to Mom.  Eric handed me the card and left
    the store with Marjorie.  He left something of himself behind.  An  odour.  A ‘futz’ as they say in German.
    The ladies behind me said “Oh, someone has passed  by” and held their noses.  And looked at me. Eric and Marjorie were hooting
    with laughter outside while I was assumed to be the carrier of  Night Soil in the lineup.  Not funny?  Right.



    Eric took off to Spain for a few days.  He was chased by some young girls on the train who called  him ‘Blondie…Blondie’  in an effort 
    to corral him.   Female toreadors looking for a Ferdinand.   (Children’s story…read it)  I  think they failed.   But we were on the downhill slide now for sure.

    Above is a picture of  Marjorie in the vast Hofbrau Beer hall in Munich.   That is a quart she is  drinking…not a puny British pint…bigger…a German quart. (litre)
    Take a look at her drinking buddies.  The cream of German beer hall society  Marjorie became a star here.  Really did.

    “Alan, look at that poor msn.”
    “Don’t look over there Marjorie…those guys want…”
    “Alan, look at him.  The front guy.  He has passed out.”
    “So what?”
    “His cigarette is burning down to his fingers…he will burn himself.  I am going to help him.”

    And she did.  Took the cigarette and stubbed it in the ashtray.  Was Marjorie ever a hit.  Other Germans came over and sat with us.  Bought us
    another round  of beer.   The barmaids by the way could  carry six or eight steins of beer at once.  They washed the used ones with a quick dunk 
    in laundry tup   We did not care.  Then a really weird thing hopped.   Something grabbed my pant leg from under the huge table.. Another  msn emerged  …he was pretty drunk as well.
    It became quite a party in which Marjorie was no longer just another tourist.  She was compassionate…warm hearted…a cigarette stubbed.
    Those of you who only  drink in sophisticated society right be horrified.  Us?  Not a bit.

    Eric was  still in Spain.  When Marjorie and I left the Hofbrau  house we left with our steins…someone paid for them.  Germans from another table…sober
    Germans…saw Marjorie prevent the flesh burn of the fellow in the picture.  They loved her.  We all sang loud  and  long.  Then we left.  

    “Where will we sleep, Alan?”
    “Right here in this park…nice green grass…good for s nap.”

    We flopped down and  slept.  Some time later s police officer poked me.  He pointed to dome sign…something saying ‘Verboten”.   Marjorie was
    still sleeping holding her stein firmly.   The cop said  something about vagrancy but he wasn’t really mad.  We got up and headed back
    to our B snd B.

    Eventually we met up with Eric. To this day he does not remember the “Blondie Blondie” sirens on that Spanish train.

    Back in London things got really interesting.


    The next stage in our decline into insanity was due to Eric noticing a loose board in a
    fence at  the Portobello Road  antique (and junk) market.

    “Some one behind the fence, Alan…odd?”
    The board flipped up.
    “You lads need  new hats.  How about these?”
    “Derbies!”
    “Very British…you can sashay across  London Bridge with all the toffs with these …”
    And he held out two beautiful derbies
    “How much?”
    “Five quid.”
    :”Sold.”

    So we were now part of the British establishment
    Marjorie left us for a  while and  visited her aunt and friends from North Bay who happened to be in London.  They stuffed her with food.  Eric and
    I tested  our hats in a local pub … Plowman’s plates of mish mash food and  a pint  of bitter.  Good  stuff.  And we searched for a cheap  B and  B.  
    Marjorie joined  us  refreshed. 

    “Where did you get those derbies?”
    “Never mind.  Look at mine…got Harold MacMillan’s initials inside…think he’s the Prime Minister of something…must
    have lost his hat.”
    “You didn’t steal them I hope”
    “Nope, bought them from an antique dealer…” (the less  said the better about that)
    Things  kept sliding from bad to worse as our trip wound down.  I can only find one
    picture to prove our decline but it is a good one.  We flew home from Dublin, Ireland with a 
    short stay in Iceland to refuel.

    Refuel?   We did  not need  any refuelling ourselves.  While  waiting for the flight we joined a Roman Catholic priest and
    his father…real father.  The priest was  a pioneer.  Means he did  not drink.  His father on the other hand enjoyed a pint
    of Guiness now snd then.  Well we had  too much Guiness by the time our plane was ready.  We put on quite a show.
    Good natured but twisted.

    Proof?  No better proof than this picture.



    Guess who took the picture?  Not me this time.  For some TWISTED  reason while we were airborne on the way to Iceland, the
    stewardess got the caption to come back  and se the three of us.  Nice guy.  I took a picture of him and have it somewhere but 
    he took my camera and snapped this priceless shot.   He even put on my derby.  Little wonder we got so much station on that flight.  Today they might
    even turn around and put us in he slammer.  We were in fine shape.  Notice the derby is back on my head.  And notice Marjorie.  She was  a huge hit.

    I may look drunk but I sobered up fast. The real reason the pilot came back to our seat was not just a jolly bit of  friendship.   There must have been a
    reason…a concern.   He took one look at us  and relaxed.   Just young  Canadians with a little too much Guiness in them.   Marjorie decided  that the whipped cream
    on her cabin dessert could  be good  finger paint and she proceeded  to write her name on my face.  Something she thought was hilarious.   

    “Here, Alan, let me paint your face.”
    Alarm bell rang in my head
    ”Sober up, Alan.”
    “How is Eric doing…seems qjuiet.”
     Eric was vomitting into the little bag provided by all airplanes.  

    “Alan,  call the stewardess.”, Eric said
    She arrived  with a grin.”
    “Here take this  away…”

    And Eric  handed her his pillow and put the vomit filled bag behind his head.  

    The trip was  coming to an end but there was one more moment I will never forget.

    We landed  in Iceland for a couple of hours.  Eric was still sick.  Still vomiting or getting ready to vomit as 
    we all sat in the holding room.   A nice young girl came across the room,

    “Are you Mr. Skeoch?”  she asked.
    “Yes…” he slurred.
    “You were my practice teacher at Humberside last April.”
    “Really?”
    Eric tried  to hide  the vomit bag.  

    Eric and  I returned as history and  English teachers at Parkdale Collegiate.  Marjorie  had a teaching job
    st Emery Junior High School.  ” Hurrumph!  Fine  examples of teachers!.” you say sarcastically.   We were, I believe,
    closer to the  wave lengths of our students.   They never heard our stories  but had we told this story back
    then I believe we not have been reviled as  outcasts.   I have often  wondered what that little girl reported about meeting Eric in
    Iceland.  


    When I began to write this story that song intruded again and again.  What song, you say?

    Those were the days my friend
    We thought they’d never end
    We’d sing and dance forever and a day
    We’d live the life we choose
    We’d fight and never lose
    For we were young and sure to have our way.
    La la la la…

    Those days re gone.   Well, not really gone.  I think about them now and  again.  I see Marjorie seductively
    wrapped  in that bed sheet and  Eric with his derby…not  those days are not gone.

    We’d smile at one another and we’d say
    Those were the days my friend
    We thought they’d never end
    We’d sing and dance forever and a day
    We’d live the life we choose


    Alan Skeoch

    March  2018

  • kevin skeoch sitting on a mcCormick Resper


    Kevin skeoch  is sitting on  a McCormick  Reaper…a descendent model of the reaping machinethat
    could  harvest immensely more grain  in a very short time.
  • 38th Rover Crew… 1956 : CATAWBA IS CHEAP WINE: TED IS DEAD

    CATAWBA IS CHEAP WINE: TED IS DEAD
    (38TH ROVER CREW, WINTER 1956)
    ALAN  SKEOCH
    MARCH 2018

    Those were grand  years, the 1950’s.  I thought they would never end, as the song goes.  But they did and as  near as  I can  see they have not been repeated.  The innocence, sense of  adventure, opportunities, simplicity, thrift, tight friendships  of those years are difficult to replicate today.  This  picture for instance, was taken on one of  our winter camping trips with the 38th Rover Scout troop led by Ed Hisson (right) where we tramped into a huge log cabin built by a group of older WW2 veterans deep  in the Canadian  Boreal wilderness north of Parry Sound.  They shared it with us for some reason I cannot fathom…perhaps just the Rover Scout bonds.  That’s  Big Red Stevenson in the foreground, one of my lifetimes friends and me in the background.  Our coats come from the War Surplus stores of which there were many in the 1950s.

  • High up on a Swiss Mountain at the SUMMER PASTURE

    KEVIN took these pictures a few years ago when he and Gabriela had the super energy required to reach the SWISS SUMMER PASTURE.

  • Who says Dogs cannot smile

    This is our old coonhound Tara…GRINNING…SO  GLAD  TO SEE US

  • DAYS OF WINE AND ROSES

    WE did not belong to a fraternity at U. of T. but we went to this fondly remembered fraternity party one night.  Eric, Marjorie and I.  No pocket money for beer.  just enough for one cigar as you can  see.  Then we hit a bonanza in the dark.

    “A half bottle of red wine, here…”
    “Take a  swig.”
    “finish it off before the owner comes back”
    “What are these lumps?”
    “CIGARETTE BUTTS?  CIGAR BUTTS!!
    The bottle had been used as an ashtray.  We did  not notice until we got some distance down in the bottle.