The Chili Cone Chronicles: How I Survived the Sixties in Small-Town America

In The Chili Cone Chronicles, Michael Winslow shares his remarkable story of growing up and coming-of-age in a small midwestern town during the tempestuous, whirlwind time of the 1960s. Funny and poignant by turns, Winslow offers a memorable journey through the mayhem as he relies on the comfort of his family, oddball friends, and small-town charm to make everything right in his own little corner of the world. Against a backdrop of calamitous world and national events, Winslow recalls the cocoon of his youth on a sane island at the twilight of corner grocery stores, passenger trains, drive-in movies, and greasy spoons. While it may be true that you can never truly go home again, Winslow’s stories awaken the child within, providing glimpses into a fading way of life filled with such delights as eating an ice cream cone filled with hot chili, surfing Suicide Hill in flattened cardboard boxes, and feeling the exhilaration and pulse-quickening excitement that accompanied boxcar running in the dark of night. Thoughtful, warm, and full of hometown vignettes, The Chili Cone Chronicles will compel the willing to recall their own budding youth—and the events, places and people that were a part of it.

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The Chili Cone Chronicles: How I Survived the Sixties in Small-Town America

In The Chili Cone Chronicles, Michael Winslow shares his remarkable story of growing up and coming-of-age in a small midwestern town during the tempestuous, whirlwind time of the 1960s. Funny and poignant by turns, Winslow offers a memorable journey through the mayhem as he relies on the comfort of his family, oddball friends, and small-town charm to make everything right in his own little corner of the world. Against a backdrop of calamitous world and national events, Winslow recalls the cocoon of his youth on a sane island at the twilight of corner grocery stores, passenger trains, drive-in movies, and greasy spoons. While it may be true that you can never truly go home again, Winslow’s stories awaken the child within, providing glimpses into a fading way of life filled with such delights as eating an ice cream cone filled with hot chili, surfing Suicide Hill in flattened cardboard boxes, and feeling the exhilaration and pulse-quickening excitement that accompanied boxcar running in the dark of night. Thoughtful, warm, and full of hometown vignettes, The Chili Cone Chronicles will compel the willing to recall their own budding youth—and the events, places and people that were a part of it.

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The Chili Cone Chronicles: How I Survived the Sixties in Small-Town America

The Chili Cone Chronicles: How I Survived the Sixties in Small-Town America

by Michael Winslow
The Chili Cone Chronicles: How I Survived the Sixties in Small-Town America

The Chili Cone Chronicles: How I Survived the Sixties in Small-Town America

by Michael Winslow

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Overview

In The Chili Cone Chronicles, Michael Winslow shares his remarkable story of growing up and coming-of-age in a small midwestern town during the tempestuous, whirlwind time of the 1960s. Funny and poignant by turns, Winslow offers a memorable journey through the mayhem as he relies on the comfort of his family, oddball friends, and small-town charm to make everything right in his own little corner of the world. Against a backdrop of calamitous world and national events, Winslow recalls the cocoon of his youth on a sane island at the twilight of corner grocery stores, passenger trains, drive-in movies, and greasy spoons. While it may be true that you can never truly go home again, Winslow’s stories awaken the child within, providing glimpses into a fading way of life filled with such delights as eating an ice cream cone filled with hot chili, surfing Suicide Hill in flattened cardboard boxes, and feeling the exhilaration and pulse-quickening excitement that accompanied boxcar running in the dark of night. Thoughtful, warm, and full of hometown vignettes, The Chili Cone Chronicles will compel the willing to recall their own budding youth—and the events, places and people that were a part of it.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781450277082
Publisher: iUniverse, Incorporated
Publication date: 12/03/2010
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 336 KB

Read an Excerpt

The Chili Cone Chronicles

How I Survived the Sixties in Small-Town America
By Michael Winslow

iUniverse, Inc.

Copyright © 2010 Michael Winslow
All right reserved.

ISBN: 978-1-4502-7706-8


Chapter One

WAKING UP WITH SUGARFOOT

It was as if he were kidnapped by the mob or abducted by Martians. Or more likely, forgot to come home from The Knotty Pine, the seedy, rundown tavern by the railroad tracks where he liked to swill Pabst Blue Ribbon with the boys after work. The only thing I knew for sure was that one minute my father was there, and the next minute he was gone—beat up Chevy Apache truck and all. I don't recall, even though I was only four years old at the time, a formal announcement from mom about what had happened.

In any case, in the summer of 1959, after eight years of marital bedlam and domestic turbulence, mom filed for divorce from dad. And from the moment we moved out of the little house with the cupola window at 4th and Lincoln Streets in Erie, Kansas, none of our lives would ever be the same. The first stop for mom and my older and younger sisters and I was an upstairs apartment at 5th and Butler in Erie—just a few blocks from our former home.

Looking out from the kitchen window of our new living quarters, I could still see the old house. I felt if I stared at it long enough, dad would magically come home and move us all back there and everything would return to normal. No matter that, according to my mom, 'normal' was anything but.

I am not sure what the 1,232 other townspeople of Erie thought of mom—a 26 year old divorcee with three kids was not generally thought of in a positive way in that era—but Lloyd Lane, the gaunt, middle aged man who owned the rambling house where our apartment was located—clearly was infatuated with her. We weren't at that address for long, but I remember him acting very peculiar around mom any time he was near her.

Together with acquaintance Chin Moses, they became good friends and spent time visiting, fishing and concocting home brew in Lloyd's claw foot bathtub—the pungent, cider-tinged aroma of which I can still smell to this very day. Little did I know that all the while mom had been carrying on a clandestine romance with an older man in Chanute, Kansas, 16 miles northwest of Erie. Before you could say 'kindergarten' mom was re-married to a stern, humorless man named Bob Wright and we were packing our bags once again—this time for another town.

It was 1960.

Compared to the tiny village of Erie, Chanute was a virtual metropolis of 10,849 residents. I had been regaled with stories of the town teeming with commerce and truck, train and bus traffic—and I couldn't wait to get there to check it all out. Imagine, then, my acute disappointment when learning that the house we would be living at with Bob and his two sons from a previous marriage was actually on the outskirts of town on West Main Street—beyond the city limits.

Problems surfaced, as one might expect in this complex situation, almost immediately. First there was the new family assimilation plan. Or lack of one. Bob's two boys couldn't have been more different from each other. It was as if they were sired by a completely different set of parents.

Butch, the older one, appeared to me at the time to be about 25 years old, though I later learned that he was about 12. He had curly, fiery red hair and a disposition to match. He fought with everyone who came within arm's distance and he had one volume of speech—loud. I had never heard of the idea of demon possession, but in retrospect I believe that something at least very similar was occurring to Butch.

If he was the malevolent Mr. Hyde, then younger brother Jackie was the benevolent Dr. Jekyll. Jackie was everything Butch was not—kind, considerate, polite and caring. He quickly took me under his wing at the little yellow farmhouse on the lonely blacktop. It was to be virtually the only positive thing to come out of the short-lived relationship between our two families. He introduced me to comic books, taught me how to ride a bike, bait a fishing line and most important of all—how to avoid being maimed or killed by Sugarfoot.

Sugarfoot was an ugly, mangy, smelly nanny goat that the Wright's kept on their property for some heretofore unknown reason. There was precious little grass to eat, nor was there an abundance of noxious weeds or woody shrubs and trees. She didn't appear to be providing milk, and because she was still very much alive, there was no meat to be gleaned from her, either. I soon learned that she was the 'guard' goat and her only responsibility in life was to clear the property of intruders or wayfarers.

Unfortunately, because she was a goat with a brain the size of a pebble of sand, Sugarfoot wasn't able to properly differentiate between interlopers and inhabitants. Thus, we were all fair game for her attacks, which were swift, precise and final. I don't remember the exact circumstance, but I can recall the first time she laid me out. Seeing her, I froze out in the middle of the yard, paralyzed by fear, and watched as she rumbled toward me with her head down, her horizontal, slit-shaped pupils fixated on my skinny five-year-old body. It was as if I were hit by a diesel locomotive at 60 miles per hour.

The force of the impact knocked me clear out of my shoes, and I laid there doing my best to play dead, hoping she would go away. Strange thing was—she did go away. Apparently, and this was to be useful information for future run-ins with her, once she had taken you down, the thrill was gone. She was content to move on—probably in search of other, new victims in her insatiable wanderlust for blood.

That first encounter was merely that—a first encounter. No matter how stealthily I moved about the property or how carefully I planned my route to my bicycle, mailbox or the street out front, Sugarfoot always seemed to materialize out of nowhere, barreling at me like Green Bay Packer tackle Forrest Gregg, intent on separating me from my senses. Sometimes I played the role of the crooked prizefighter taking a dive and making good on a fix, voluntarily hitting the ground just to deprive her of the moment. It was great fun to watch her as she tried to figure out what just happened—and more importantly—what to do next. Usually she just sauntered off with a look of bewilderment on her bearded face, occasionally looking back as if she had left something important behind.

It was a shame, really. The rest of the world was concerning itself with grave events of the day. Francis Gary Powers had been captured by the Russians when they shot down his Lockheed U-2 Dragon Lady spy plane. Sputnik 4 was launched into the earth's orbit. A terrible earthquake, still one of the greatest to ever occur, tore Chile apart from Talcahuano to the Taitao Peninsula. I, on the other hand, on my little island and totally oblivious to critical world events, was waging a battle of wits with a four-legged machine of destruction.

As time went by, though, I gradually figured her out and began to outthink the old goat. On the increasingly rare occasions where she successfully ran me down or cornered me on the porch (one of her favorite moves) mom would come to the rescue, firing hedge apples at her, boinking her on the head and distracting her long enough so that I could escape. I could never understand why Sugarfoot didn't just eat all of the hedge apples, thereby depriving my mother of the ammunition cache that would eventually be used against her. Goats, I knew, had amazing digestive systems.

In any case, the encounters between the old goat and myself ebbed over time. I began to cautiously, delicately enjoy the daily bike rides to Lincoln Elementary School, a half-mile into town, and occasional forays with Jackie downtown to Zip Drug, where we would chug Root Beer floats and read comics from the racks in air-conditioned comfort until management prodded us to "buy or be gone."

The atmosphere in the little house on West Main Street gradually grew more tense, though, and always seemed on the verge of implosion. I could never figure out why—it was just starting to get fun for me. In retrospect, I suppose it was difficult for everybody involved—seven people suddenly cloistered together in very tight quarters, strangers to one another.

Mom had, at best, a rocky relationship with Bob. Margaret, my older sister, appeared sad and perpetually unhappy. Deirdre, my younger sister, laid low and did her best not to be seen or heard. Butch fought with everybody. Sugarfoot continued to stalk—even with varied results. I found sanctuary only with Jackie. He was the big brother I never had, the person that I needed the most—even if he was just a step-brother. And all that was about to change.

One windblown and overcast February morning in 1961, teachers at Lincoln collectively noticed with some dismay that none of us five kids were in attendance at school that day. Rightfully assuming that something might be very wrong, the authorities were dispatched to our house. Noting that the family vehicle was in the driveway but no one was answering the door, and I suppose, fearing foul play, a decision was made to break into the house.

It was a good call to say the least. All of us were found unconscious in our beds. Some of us had vomited in our sleep. It took quite a bit of time before they were able to rouse Bob and mom from their sepulchral slumber.

One by one, the rest of us were all woken up and transported to Neosho Memorial Hospital for examination. The initial test results indicated carbon monoxide poisoning. A faulty furnace heat exchanger had emitted dangerous levels of the odorless, tasteless and toxic gas throughout the house via the ductwork system. It would be several days before any of us children felt normal enough to return to classes nor the adults to work. Hadn't it been for the keen response of vigilant school and law enforcement officials, you might not be reading this book. For me, however, it was but one of two near-death experiences while living with the Wrights. And Sugarfoot, I am happy to report, had nothing to do with either.

The following June we made a rare trip to Santa Fe Lake, south of town, to picnic, fish and swim. These outings were cherished and helped, at least for me, to take the sting out of not seeing dad anymore. Soon after setting up camp, Butch, Jackie and I headed over to the boat dock and ramp to drop our lines and try our luck there. We were having a great time fishing, talking and joking—even Butch seemed unusually happy that day. The gentle lapping of the water up against the pier was a lyrical soundtrack.

There were some support beams jutting off the side of the dock that had once been covered by lake water—but were now visible due to a paucity of spring rains. Craving a better casting vantage point, I decided to take a walk out on one of the beams. The water in that cove was not very deep—perhaps 8-10', but it may as well have been 80' deep to a six year old who didn't know how to swim.

When I lost my footing and slipped from the beam into the water, the first thing I did was let go of my fishing pole and open my eyes—and then try to breathe. I remember how green the water looked—and how different it appeared from below the surface. Then, as I began sucking water into my lungs instead of air, I panicked. I flailed away in the emerald foam assured that I was going to die. After what seemed like an eternity, but was in fact just a few seconds, someone crashed into the water beside me, cradled me in their arms and towed me safely to the shore.

Butch—not Jackie—had saved my life. I would never again think of him as the recalcitrant, mean-tempered step-brother always spoiling for a fight. He was, at least on that sunny, early summer day at the lake, my guardian angel. And for the second time in six months, I had cheated death—unless, of course, you happen to count all of the near-misses with Sugarfoot.

The final dissolution and break-up of mom's marriage to Bob was eerily familiar to that of hers with my dad. We got no warning, no speech and no preparation. One day we were there in the little yellow house on West Main Street and the next we were moving into an upstairs apartment on South Evergreen Street. It was no wonder that I eventually began to equate apartments with separation.

Déjà vu, divorce-style.

Just when I had gotten somewhat contented with my new family and the only school that I had ever known, we were on our own again—mom, sisters and I. It would be a very long time before I got over not seeing Jackie everyday. He did ride his bicycle over to our apartment a few times, which amazed me, as it was at least five miles from the old house.

I even missed old cranky, argumentative Butch, always reminding myself of the day he saved my life. But there would be a new school to attend, Roosevelt Elementary, money would get increasingly tight for mom and we would all have to make new friends. We had no car and no telephone. We were literally strangers in a strange land.

At least there were no goats in the yard.

Chapter Two

SIGHTS, SOUNDS, SMELLS & STRANGE CHARACTERS

At about the same time we moved into the city of Chanute proper—and perhaps it was an inexplicable coincidence with my attending first grade at Roosevelt—I began to be acutely aware of all of the sensory wonders of our new environs. From the shrieking shift change whistle at Mid-America Refinery on the north end of town to the idyllic church bells of the stately First Presbyterian Church on Main Street, the town seemed to be governed, and indeed moved along by sounds.

Unlike sleepy little Erie, downtown Chanute was bristling with hurried pedestrians, honking cars and hungry parking meters. Semi tractor trailer trucks growled through town on U.S. 169, grinding gears and spewing plumes of acrid smoke as they snaked north and south, crossing Main Street at the dead center. Up and down the narrow concrete corridor, from such filling stations as Deep Rock, DX and Sinclair, the pleasant noise of impact wrenches spinning off lug nuts in the garages and the "ding-ding" of their driveway air hoses were an antithesis to the traffic drone.

Diesel horns blasted from the Santa Fe Railroad switching yards just a couple of blocks west of the heart of town. Nothing could compare, though, to the ear-splitting sounds of box cars slamming into one another in the hump yard. It was not, I imagined, unlike those of a hydrogen bomb. The yard, I soon learned, was a virtual city within a city of unusual sounds—hissing air brakes, squealing wheel bearings, rails that moaned, humming refrigerator cars and the constant and ever-present grinding of the engines as they plied their service. It was all a wonderful discordance—a tapestry of blue collar music, if you will—that would have an immediate and lasting impact upon me.

In and around June of each year, the soft whishing sound of wheat and grains being loaded into rail cars from the elevators at Chanute Grain & Seed were an auditory reminder that summer had commenced. It was a real treat to see, like clockwork, the procession of trucks laden with grain being weighed, unloading their bounty and then seeing the product finally being hauled off in oxidized rail cars to parts unknown by trademark yellow and blue ATSF engines.

Everywhere I looked—and I looked everywhere those first few years in Chanute—the sounds of a city very much alive greeted me. Forklifts churned in the lumber yards, school bells kept the youthful masses in line, airplanes took off and landed at the small airport west of town, and every once in a while wailing sirens from Police or Fire Department vehicles would pierce the air.

Until that time, I had never known a city could smell, too. I didn't recall any particular odors from the time I had lived in Erie—but this was something very different. For starters, the refinery spewed a variety of foul-smelling vapors, and if the wind happened to be blowing from the north, its fumes would permeate the entire north end of town. Not surprisingly, some of Chanute's poorest families lived nearest the refining complex where the odors became part of everyday life—olfactory white noise.

If the aromas from Mid-America Refinery were the most significant in town, those that emanated from the concrete-walled drainage ditch that ran along Second Street from the west side of the city to the east were surely second. It was referred to as "the Sewer," though it was in reality a canal full of rocks, water, trash and broken glass. It had a dank, musty and distinctly 'sewer-like' smell about it which no young boy in town could resist. It beckoned to us with its siren call of stench like some primeval Svengali.

(Continues...)



Excerpted from The Chili Cone Chronicles by Michael Winslow Copyright © 2010 by Michael Winslow. Excerpted by permission of iUniverse, Inc.. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

WAKING UP WITH SUGARFOOT....................1
SIGHTS, SOUNDS, SMELLS & STRANGE CHARACTERS....................7
THE LEGEND OF THE CHILI CONE....................15
IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD....................19
THE WOODS, HOLIDAYS & LIFE AT THE GULAG....................25
AT LONG LAST SUMMER....................35
RUNNING WITH THE PACK....................42
THE ERIE CONNECTION....................52
ROCKET MAN....................62
RITES OF PASSAGE....................71
WINDS OF CHANGE....................86
GOING LIGHTLY FROM THE LEDGE....................100
AFTERWORD....................121
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