Cut a rug. Roll up a rug. That didn’t happen only in a
flooring store. It happened in parlors and dining rooms all over Kewaunee
County, at least for those who had rugs.
If there was anything the county’s hard-working Germans,
Bohemians and Belgians looked forward to, it was their music. And their beer.
When Harriet Hall was interviewed about the early settlement called Wolf River,
she said any time there was a fiddler around, there was a dance and plenty of
homemade beer to quench the thirst.
It wasn’t only in Wolf River. It was all over Kewaunee
County, outside on the grass, inside homes and, eventually, in the halls that
sprung up though out the county. Halls
such as Fellows’ in Foscoro, Barta’s at Kodan,
Feldman’s at Forest Hill, Woracheck’s at
Krok or Schauer’s at Norman were only a few of the popular spots. There were
far more bands than are remembered today. Ramesh, Froelich, Gosz, Mahlik,
Stahl, Schlies, Slovan and Petrosky’s Polish band were a few. Better known
among the present generation are Reckleberg, Kulhanek, Nejedlo, Karman,
Kohlbeck and Zimmermann. Family members played in the Two Creeks Farm Hand
band, the Rhythm Boys, Hunsaders and the Penguins.
Hunsaders’ band, which included Grandpa on violin, cornet or
tuba, played in many private homes including his own where the dining room was
the scene of dances into the 1920s. Those who could afford real rugs in the
parlor or dining room rolled them up. Who would chance having a rug damaged by
shoes and dancing? Besides that, rugs slowed down dancing feet much as grass
did generations earlier. Shoes slid more easily across the floors of halls where
corn meal was sprinkled. Sometimes those shoes slid so fast that the person wearing
them went down, spraining an ankle or even breaking a leg.
Those who had pianos in the parlor didn’t need a dance band.
There was always someone to tickle the ivories and provide entertainment,
whether for singing, dancing or just plain listening. A typical old German
family planned for the oldest child to be musical. In Grandpa’s family it meant
he would play a violin and both he and Gus would master the brass instruments.
Sena played piano and organ, and played for church as well. Then came the
player pianos and their rolls. As long as one could pump his feet fast enough
to keep the music going, it did. Pumping one’s feet meant being able to read
music or play by ear was unnecessary. Piano rolls provided the music that
sound-mixing and programmed electric pianos do today, 100 years later.
In this day of earbuds, playlists and CDs, one hardly thinks
of Ahnapee/Algoma being a place to buy a piano, a Victrola or phonograph. In
this day of earbuds, playlists and CDs, the younger set doesn’t recognize the
words Victrola and phonograph. Those who could afford Victrolas probably felt
as if they’d “arrived.” As radios, phonographs and record players came into
existence, who was going to crank up the Victrola? Fifty years ago, old Victrola trumpets were
found in barns being used as funnels for filling tractors and other machinery
with oil. By then technology had moved to 8-track tape recorders and transistor
radios, ensuring a party anywhere.
Buying a piano today means a Kewaunee County resident must
travel to Green Bay, however August H. Klatt was selling Kimball pianos in
Algoma by the turn of 1900. Victrolas and Ambrolas followed. C.A. Guth was
another popular Algoma music merchant. A few years later Jirtle’s Music Store
sold player pianos and their rolls. One might find them in county antique stores
today.
Oldsters who complain about young people and what the loud
music is doing to their ears could have harped on the same thing during their
grandparents’ youth. Just under 100
years ago, in 1921, C.A. Guth installed a Magnavox Victrola in his music store. It was said that in still weather the thing could play music loud enough to be heard as many as
three miles away! Guth planned to play new records on the instrument and felt
it could eliminate the need for orchestras at public dances.
To stop at Guth's to purchase a recording of a group such as the Rankin Band and have it for home use was a marvel in itself. Early records were about a
half inch thick and were stored in the cabinet area below the turn table on
which the recording was played. The arm was set so the needle would be in the
first groove in the record and the magic followed. Needles had to be kept free
of dust to minimize sound distortion. If
needles stayed in the same groove of a scratched record, it produced the same
sound over and over until it was moved. Record players were “the bee’s knees”
in technology 100 years ago and for more than 50 years after. Now all one needs
is a Smart phone. Nobody cranks it. There is no investment in a Victrola or
record player itself, nor needles and records. Besides that, it fits in one’s
pocket and is always there.
Sources: The Commercial History of Algoma, Wisconsin Vols. 1 & 2. Photos are the blogger's.