Showing posts with label Meetings - Sumner County Historical and Genealogical Society. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Meetings - Sumner County Historical and Genealogical Society. Show all posts

21 November 2013

November 25th Meeting - Horse Racing - A Family Affair

November 25th Meeting

 “Horse Racing: A Family Affair”



On Monday, November 25th, Joyce Church, retired teacher and former girl jockey will present the program, “Horse Racing: A Family Affair,” to Sumner County Historical and Genealogical Society members and guests at 6:30 p.m., at the Wellington Senior Center, 308 S. Washington, Wellington. Visitors are welcome; no charge for the program. For possible weather cancellations, contact SCHGS President Jane Moore at 620-447-3266.

In 1946, wearing maroon and pink racing silks, a skullcap, and wielding a bat, fourteen-year-old Joyce Riggs Church began her short career as a ‘bush’ jockey, racing her father’s thoroughbreds on small ‘bush’ tracks. Church and her sister raced in several Kansas towns, including their home town of Conway Springs, Anthony, Burden, Garden City, Emporia, and many other towns in Kansas, Oklahoma, Nebraska, New Mexico, Missouri and Illinois. 

Church, a genealogist, was surprised to find that breeding horses and racing them was ‘in their genes.’ Her research turned up that not only had her grandfather bred and sold mules by the train car load, ancestors before him had also bred mules and pacing and trotting horses.

“Dad grew up in that atmosphere,” Church said, adding that it was her father’s dream to breed and race thoroughbreds and after her folks bought four colts and a stallion from a man in Fairfax, Oklahoma, her father needed jockeys, so he enlisted the help of his two daughters.

“Mother never wanted us to ride,” Church said, adding that although her father allowed them to race, her parents were very protective and she and her sister were not allowed to hang out with other jockeys in the barns where there was drinking and gambling.

“Racing was a family affair,” Church said, adding that the entire family traveled to the races with the horses. The horses traveled in the back of a wheat truck, and her mother drove the car. 

Church said that her mother packed picnic baskets with fried chicken and cherry pie, and the family picnicked on the race track grounds, and often spent the night in the back of the wheat truck with a tarp strung over the stock racks to keep off the rain.

Although Church went off to college when she was 16 years old, she came home on weekends to race, and at times lived at home and drove back and forth to school at Friends so that she could continue to ride. Church stopped racing when she was twenty-nine years old, and married in 1963.

“Before that, I ran around so much I didn't have time to get married,” Church said.

 Church said she “had had some accidents,” and been knocked out and taken to the hospital by ambulance, but had never broken a bone. But Church added that 1976 was a bad year for the Riggs family when her sister was killed in June at Churchill Downs at the age of 37, and her father died later that year.

Church will bring photographs and other racing memorabilia to share with the group, as well as the book “The Boys From the Bushes” by Lou Dean, a book about ‘bush racing’ that shares stories from Church and other ‘Bush’ jockeys.

21 October 2013

Colonel George M. Boyd - Tuskegee Airman - to Speak on October 21st

On Monday, October 28th, 87-year-old former Tuskegee Airman, George M. Boyd, Colonel in the Civil Air Patrol and former Wing Commander of the CAP and Retired Major in the United States Air Force, Wichita, will present the program “Keeping Our Dreams Alive”, a program about patriotism and being American, to the Sumner County Historical and Genealogical Society at the Wellington Senior Center, 308 South Washington, Wellington at 6:30 p.m. Contact Jane Moore at 620-447-3266 in case of inclement weather.

See Programs for more information!

19 October 2013

Amanuensis Monday - Newspaper Flashbacks - Carry Nation smashes first saloon...

Conway Springs Star & Argonia Argosy
21 February 2013

From the Star Files
February 1933

Local thermometers registered 10 to 14 degrees below zero during the winter's worst cold wave which hit here.  High wind made that night and Tuesday morning most disagreeable.  The wind subsided Tuesday night but the thermometer went on down to 18 below, with 20 below Wednesday morning.  Failure of the local gas supply to meet the demand caused a lot of inconvenience in homes and places of business and caused school to be dismissed all day Tuesday.

I. R. Attebury, who is the new state superintendent for the Western Telephone Corp., was in Conway Springs last week making plans for State Office to be in operation here by March 1.

The Rev. J. W. Winrod of Wichita will speak here Thursday night at 7:30 in the Christian church.  Mr. Winrod was the bartender of the  first saloon which Carry Nation smashed.  Immediately after smashing his saloon, Mrs. Nation became world famous.  Mr. Winrod will tell his experience in the old saloon and how Carry Nation was instrumental in putting him into the ministry.  He has recently returned fro a speaking tour through Pennsylvania and New York state.  He has seen both sides ad says that Prohibition at its worst is better than the old saloon at its best. 

21 April 2010

SCHGS Meeting, Monday April 26th, "Kansas and the Louisiana Purchase"

“Kansas and the Louisiana Purchase”

On Monday, April 26th, at the Wellington Steakhouse, at 6:30 p.m., Jim Crisler will present “Kansas and the Louisiana Purchase” to the Sumner County Historical and Genealogical Society and visitors.

How did the French plan to use the Louisiana Territory? How close did Kansas come to being part of the Spanish Empire? What one person, considered a traitor by some, played a pivotal role in the Louisiana Purchase?

“This talk will focus around the maps,” Crisler said, “and the politicians and the people who decided how those maps came out.”

Through Crisler’s eyes, we will see a glimpse of what our nation was like at this early time in its history, how international conflicts pulled the colonists in different directions, and how the colonists and the attitude of the countries to their colonies and the colonists to their countries played a crucial part in the growth of America.

Crisler will touch on how the Native Americans interacted with the first official expedition that came from the United States into the territory that is now Kansas, the Pike Expedition, and will follow the career of one very interesting character who “turns up at a surprising number of important times in our nation’s early history and was considered by some to be one of the biggest traitors in United States history.”

Crisler said there were many national and international events that brought about the Louisiana Purchase and many interesting and surprising characters that played a part in influencing those events, including the treatment of famous founding fathers George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, and Thomas Jefferson as English colonists, and he will share how ordinary settlers, as well as traders and traitors, Native Americans and generals, explorers and heroes all interacted and led to the Purchase.

“Whether Kansas would belong to the United States or become part of the Spanish empire, the year 1806 decided the fate of the United States west of the Mississippi, and Kansas’ fate ends up being decided by a notorious traitor,” Crisler said.

There is no charge for the meetings and visitors are always welcome!

Sumner County Historical & Genealogical Society
Meeting, Monday, April 26th at 6:30 p.m., Wellington Steakhouse, Wellington, Kansas
For more Information, contact Sherry Stocking Kline at: sherry@familytreewriter.com