At the Registrar of Deeds, I found that the Father Dunne
Newsboys Home and Protectorate’s camp had been sold for one dollar to the current landlord on 21 January 1986; the digitized records went back no farther. The older,
oversized, weighty books of legal records, handwritten or typed, bound together by
year, were in the archive. That room is chilly, and after the clerk copied me
the 1986 deed, she pulled up on a monitor the digitized microfilm of all the
Jefferson County deeds back to the 1860s and showed me how for each year I
should search all the entries that began with the letter “F.”
She’d worked with
many historians and seekers. “People get cold in here, so if you need a sweater,” she
said, then pointed to the coat rack where a lone cardigan hung, “use that one. That’s the
‘house’ sweater.” Only in Missouri.
The "house sweater" in case historians get cold. |
Father Peter Dunne, an orphan who became a parish priest,
sheltered his first homeless newsboy in 1906 and the shelter was
running full tilt when Father Dunne died in 1939. “Old Newsboys Day,” Father
Dunne’s fundraiser, is still held annually in St. Louis. Pat O’Brien starred in
the RKO bio-pic Fighting Father Dunne
(1948). Can’t find the movie. But I did find facts today about this 100-acre property:
-The house I rent was built circa 1935. It is 1070 square
feet. The second house on the property was built circa 1960. There was a dorm-like building on this property in 1954, according to an Army Map Service topographic map.
-On March 31, 1941, Herman H. and Lillie M. Oberhaus sold
67.19 acres to Father Dunne’s Newsboys Home and Protectorate for $100. It would
have been 80 acres total, but in April 1937 the Oberhauses had sold 12.81 acres
of it to James R. and Gladys Murphy for $800. The price suggests that the
Murphys bought a house on that property. In November 1938 a 15-foot easement was
granted to Union Electric for electrification and tree-cutting.
-On June 26, 1942, William D. and Marie B. Walsh sold 40
acres to the Father Dunne Newsboys Home and Protectorate for $100.
As of June 1942 the Protectorate owned 107 contiguous acres
and maybe established the camp then, but that doesn't explain the 1935 log cabin, built for summer residency. Perhaps the camp rented.
The property records are kept here. |
The land was cheap because it’s good for nothing but a
camp. Terrain is rocky, with dropoffs and steep-sided ravines and beneath an
inch of soil is clay on sandstone. It’s so difficult that to this day AT&T
refuses to extend its cable here.
Before today I knew only “lore” passed down through two
previous tenants of my house (1986-91, 1991-2001), saying it was built around
1930 as the camp gatekeeper’s house. The keeper held the keys to the dorm, dining
hall, and the gate, to which I held the key until it was dynamited for road
widening in 2002. The camp closed in the 1970s, it is said because lots of little
black orphan campers caused nearby residents to complain. Or maybe it was
cost-prohibitive to remove the asbestos or bring the wiring up to code. Priests
still used the camp’s pool as a vacation getaway in the 1980s; the first lease
I signed required me to maintain the pool, covered and abandoned years before. The
newer house on the property, my neighbor’s, is nicknamed “the monsignor’s house”
and I need other records to learn who lived there.
Coincidentally, a friend had been a Father Dunne’s
(later Catholic Charities) charge, living in the shelter downtown, and camped
here in the summer of 1962; he was 12. Their baseball diamond was on LaBarque
Creek floodplain now grown over, its backstop having collapsed completely about
five years ago.
One day a man drove up saying he added the bedroom to the
house in 1969. (It looks very 1969.) Another day an older priest drove up and wanted
to revisit the property, if I said okay.
When the Jeff County assessor’s staff learned I was
unraveling the story of my adorable house, they came forward with old files and
photos that helped me more, plus the names of local historians, and which
library held the books most likely to be helpful.
Fascinating stuff. I love this kind of lore.
ReplyDeleteOh, you know how I love this. I was told by Dr. Coles, who was the 'director' of Tyson Research Center Annex (as the property was called when we moved there in April of 1986) that the residence closest to the pool was used for the 'sisters' - but I heard conflicting stories. Brother Matthew Gallagher the artist who lived at St. Joseph's Hill infirmary told me that there had also been a 'log' chapel up above the current dorm buildings - on the bluff but that in the 1950's an arsonist burnt it down in the fall, when the camp had closed, which became the reason for placing security gates in front. When I lived there, the large stone and concrete 'niche' in front of that house had a large statue of the Virgin inside. We also had to maintain the pool but it was worth it. I miss those days. Thanks so much for all the research.
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