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Halloween Party at Kemah c 1933

2021.46.12

Photocopy

Laviollette, JeanNewnham, RuthValleau, Rhea JeanChambers, Vivian "Viv" (Powers) 1920-2015Fox, June (Force)Van Dis, Jane Ellen (Bird) 1921-2017Lamb, Celia (Force)Bird, ElaineVan Syckel, BillFonger, FelicityDu Vall, Katherine "Kay" (Van Syckel) 1922-2003Force, JoyceForce, JuneSpringer, William J. 1883-1941Hedglin, VirginiaDorr, Betty Jane (Powers) Strample 1921-1980Maines, Shirely (Springer) 1924-2003Springer, William James Jr. "Billy" 1927-1946Springer, Alys 1904-1941

Winthers, Sally

image area

5-1/2 in

7 in

Kemah Cottage b.1906-

HALLOWEEN AT KEMAH - 1933 Names identified by Jane Bird Van Dis and June Force Fox, July 2010: 1) Unknown, 2) Unknown, 3) Virginia Hedglin, 4) Shirley Springer, 5) Unknown, 6) Unknown, 7) Jean Laviollette, 8) Billy Springer, 9) Betty Powers, 10) Elaine Bird, 11) Maybe a Floto, 12)Joyce Force, 13) Vivian Powers, 14) Celia Force, 15) June Force, 16) Jane Bird, 17) Rhea Jean Valleau, 18) Ruth Newnham, 19)? A Kortkamp boy, 20) Unknown, 21) Felicity Fonger, 22) Katherine Jane Van Syckel, 23) Bill Van Syckel, 24) Unknown Number 1 and 19 - both Kortkamp boys, one was Caedmon and the other David) Click on the image for a higher resolution copy. Costumes, games and special treats were the fare 78 years ago this month, when twenty-five area children celebrated Halloween at Kemah in 1933. The Commercial Record reported: "The moon lent its image and a suitable squint in its wicked eye with a dark feathered owl pecking at the other one. There were dangling skeletons minus rattle, grinning pumpkins with broken teeth in need of the dentist but otherwise uncommunicative, black cats without a miau and nobody seemed afraid to cross their feline paths." Mrs. William J. Springer (Alys/Alice) and children Shirlee/Shirley and Bill were the hosts for yet another special event for children and their wonderful Pleasant Street home. The Springers had purchased Kemah (an Indian word meaning "In The Teeth Of The Winds") in June 1926 as a summer home from F. S. Thompson and had major renovations done on it by their neighbor, architect and artist Carl Hoerman. The Hoermans were to become fast friends, traveling with the family on a trip through the Southwest and through Europe. Jane Bird Van Dis lived down the hill under Kemah and says she remembers Shirley standing on the hill and calling out "Jane, Jane Bird, come up and play". June Force Fox's mother worked for the Springers at the house. She recalls that Shirley and Bill were in school at Saugatuck at one time and that Mrs. Dodie Wilson was Alys Springer's best friend in the area. When the father, William J. Springer (b. 1883), died on Feb. 10, 1941 at their Chicago home, Shirley was attending Columbia College in Missouri, and Bill was a cadet at the Culver Military Academy in Indiana. Wife Alys, who had been ill for some time, died tragically from a heart attack in June of the same year, age 37. Both rest in Saugatuck's Riverside Cemetery. Johnson Fox reported when he came home on leave from the war that he had heard that Bill (William J. Springer Jr.) had been killed in an explosion while loading ammunition. His name is included on the "WWII West Coast Memorial" in San Francisco, CA with a date of May 7, 1944. Other sources place the tragedy at Hunter's Point, CA. During their years in Saugatuck, the Springers made a decided impact on the village, even though they were only part-time residents. Mel Hershaw remembers Shirley driving around town in her car (a Lincoln Zephyr, he thinks) with her pet sheep riding in the seat. Locals did hear she had married, but no one seems to know anything further, or recalls her coming back for a visit. With a birth of Sep. 12, 1924, if Shirley were living, she would have just recently celebrated her 87th birthday. We cannot help but wonder what a wonder trove of photos she might have from the family times in Saugatuck. With a little internet effort, I managed to track down one of Shirley's closest girl friends from Chicago, Joanne Boynton. She reports that Shirley (or Shirlee, as she began to spell her name) did marry and then divorced. Her second husband was Johnny Maines, a rodeo circuit star, and there were no children. Shirlee herself, always a dare-devil, joined in the rodeo activities and even rode bulls. She had a farm around Palatine, Illinois and Joanne (who had become Mrs. Edward Chrisman) would bring her kids so the family could ride horses. Shirlee passed on some time ago. So it seems the Springer Saugatuck memorabilia, if it even existed, is out of reach to us. contributed by Chris Yoder https://sdhistoricalsociety.org/Newsletter/2011/oct11/oct11_newsletter.htm

08/19/2021

10/04/2023