In the late 1960s and 1970s, I drove through the small town
of Greenland, on the southern edge of Fayetteville, just past the airport,
dozens of times, barely noticing it.
Before the opening of Highway 540 connecting Fayetteville with I-40, the
route to Little Rock was either on Highway 71 or the pig trail, and if you took
Hwy 71, you were through Greenland before you even got serious about the trip.
The only time I remember stopping in Greenland was in the 8th
grade when the Hillcrest Junior High School B team played there in a basketball tournament. I think the final score was something like 12
to 8. I can recall nothing remarkable
about the place.
Greenland comes to mind because I just read a small gem of a
book by Fred Starr, titled Of these
Hills and Us, published in 1958. In it, he tells the story of how he and
his wife moved in 1935 from western Oklahoma to the village of Greenland, population 140, to
“wrestle with the other fellow’s youngsters” (p. 56). He and his wife, Florence, whom he had
married in 1928, had been teachers in Oklahoma, living for several years in a
“teacherage ” there, which I take to be group housing provided for teachers
(p.35).
Starr begins the book with the story of a washday in
Oklahoma when, because they had an infant son, Joe Fred (who later became mayor
of Fayetteville), he -- helping out his wife -- had washed about three dozen
diapers, and they were hanging them out to dry when a dark cloud suddenly blew
in a dust storm. It came so quickly they were unable to get the diapers off the
line before the wind gave the diapers a “sandy red bath” that would make washing them
next time twice as hard.
His wife was so distraught she told him, "If you’ll
take me out of this country….I’ll live in a tent! I’ll live just anywhere and
do anything to get out of his mess.”
Fred Starr in early 1940s |
Starr took her up on her offer, and found a job teaching in
Greenland, taking a pay cut from $140 a month to $50 a month, though the
Greenland school board suggested he might get up to $60 a month. He didn't know it at the time, but both he
and the Ozarks have rarely been so lucky as the day he arrived. He spent much of the next 40 years telling
the stories of the hills and the neighboring hill folks in a clear, sympathetic
voice. In doing so, he left us a
colorful picture of life in the Arkansas Ozarks in the late '30s and early 40's
before modern life changed things. Also,
he gave us a vivid picture of life in Greenland at the time.
Starr's first encounter with his neighbors came on the day
they moved there. As he tells the story, the house they rented in Greenland was
on a hill so steep the moving truck could not drive up it. So the mover left all of their furniture and
belongings at the bottom of hill.
Fred was hesitant to move everything up the hill that day,
but his wife was afraid that it would rain, so she insisted they carry
everything to the house before it got dark. One of the first things he grabbed was
their most priceless possession, an antique grandfather clock that had been a
gift from his grandmother. So, he wrapped
his arms around the heavy clock, which was just about as big as him, and was
struggling to carry it up the hill when he ran across one of “natives,” who
stopped and seemed astounded to see him carrying the big clock. After following him and watching him for
awhile, the man went over and tapped Fred on the shoulder. According to Starr:
…he inquired, gazing wonderingly at
the huge timepiece, “Say, mister, why in tarnation don’t you carry a watch.
A few minutes later, this same man told Starr:
“…I hear tell you’re the new
teacher. Well, iffen I’ze out shootin’ school professors I’d never in the world
aim at the likes of you.”
Starr, his wife, and small boy quickly settled into the
rhythm of their new surroundings. He joined the locals in the daily trek to the
post office to check to see if the train arriving that morning had brought them
any letters from the relatives they missed. He set up an account at the dilapidated general store that was chock full of goods that only the owner – a
generous man to a fault – could find. He
joined in the conversations of the men who squatted in front of the store on
good days, and sat inside the store on bad days, about their favorite topic:
the weather. And he became acquainted with his neighbors, a superstitious lot,
who knew how to read the signs to determine such things as when crops should be
planted or hogs neutered.
Fred Starr in late 1950s |
After a while at the first house on steep hill, his wife
insisted that they move, fearing their son would fall out of the yard. Well, another
problem probably disturbed her more. The neighbor across the road had a big
bull and lots of heifers, and they made an impression on her son. Starr described it like this:
...Our two-year old was beginning to imitate the bull's bellow. If by chance we had a caller, the off-spring made it a point sometime during the stay to get down on all-fours, approach the visitor with a low grumbling in his throat and say menacingly, "This old bull is goin' to git you." The child's mother considered this very embarrassing.
They moved to another house in the town, but could not stand
the hard water there, and moved again, this time to a 20 acre farm, the Hively
place, two miles south of Greenland off Highway 71 on the West Fork River. It was during this move that they found local
lore warned against three moves. Also, they learned from their neighbors never
to move a broom or a cat to a new residence.
They didn't.
Much of the Of These
Hills and Us is about life at the Hively place and another farm they moved
to a couple of years later. They had had
a daughter there (another son, Jon Larry, arrived before they moved to the farm; many
of us remember him as the head of the Fayetteville Youth Center in the early
'60s and as a local sports editor), raised
a cow, kept some bees, neutered their pig, found water, killed hogs, listened
on the party telephone line, went to church, and celebrated Christmas, all with
the advice and help of the locals. In
telling the stories of these events, Starr introduced the reader to some
remarkable neighbors whose folkways enriched the Starr family in their work and
life.
Starr clearly loved his life in the Ozarks, though he had to
scratch out a living teaching; delivering the Northwest Arkansas Times [NWAT] newspaper; writing a column for the
NWAT, the Tulsa World, and other
newspapers; and farming. His wife, born in the flat lands of western Oklahoma,
was less enamored with the hills, but slowly came around.
As Fred and Florence Starr gradually changed from "furriners"
to Ozarkers, they learned to trust the wisdom of their Greenland neighbors, and
they gained their own insights. Talking
of a “city cousin” who came to visit and was dismayed by their isolated lives,
Starr write,
She knows only one way to be rich –
by having a heap. But we have learned by living here in the hills – shut off
from the world for a spell – that one can be contentedly rich by wanting
little.”
Later he wrote, “poor folks have a poor way, rich folks have
mean ones.”
From 1958 to 1971, five of Starr's books were
published. Of these Hills and Us was the first and, I think, the best. It certainly
was the most popular, published in three editions (1958, 1960, and 1971). The
book is a small masterpiece of autobiography, character study, and folklore. It is humorous, clearly heartfelt, and genuine
-- in the best sense of the word. As
with all of his books, Starr wrote Of
These Hills and Us in unostentatious prose, with common language and
colloquialisms, enhanced by droll humor.
Thanks to reading Starr's book, I will never think again of
Greenland as just an extension of the Fayetteville urban area, a place with a
red light that threatens to slow the trip to a destination to the south.
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