Last week I was sitting on a beach with my family (sans Aubrey who is currently in Nepal on a mission trip) in Cannon Beach, Oregon watching children run around on the sand with huge smiles and squeals. There were families gathered around fires cooking hot dogs and waiting for the big boom and glare of a fireworks display which, by the way, was really incredible. As I watched this I was taken back in time to my childhood and how we celebrated the Forth of July in Ferndale. I'm sure it wasn't much different then most small towns, I mean we had your typical barbecues and fireworks, the high school marching band assembling for a rousing rendition of the “Stars and Stripes Forever” and so on... but we did something in our little town to this day I've never heard done elsewhere... We had firetruck rides.
Mind you, this was before the establishment of OSHA, car seats, childproof bottles and skid resistant bathtubs. So, it may surprise you that if you were a kid in Ferndale and your parents would let you; you were given ability to jump on any of the four fire trucks housed at the volunteer fire department just off of Main St.and ride them… But no, not just ride in them but ride on them. There were kids on top, hanging out the sides and if you were lucky to grab a spot… off the back. No seat belts, no straps, nothing! It is amazing to think now that parents would line up on the sidewalk pushing their little darlings up onto massive hunks of sheet metal that would hurl down the street at 40 miles an hour with the whistle blowing and lights flashing! Trust me, for a kid not only in my small town but in ANY town; this was all too terribly exciting. Today it would just be terrible!
The best thing about the morning firetruck rides was the Bazooka bubble gum. Most of the time you would get on a truck for a ride and a volunteer fireman would hand you a couple of pieces, but some of the firemen would just set the open box out leaving the gum for a “first come first served” basis; meaning only a couple of kids would get gum on that ride. Other than the Fourth of July the only other time we knew you could get handfuls of gum was Halloween. That’s why I think we were so eager to empty the box of neatly rowed, individually wrapped pieces of gum. Back then you could buy 2 for a penny at the store. Now I don’t know of anything in my life that you could get two of anything for a penny. But then I was seven years old and had no concept of value so if it’s free and plentiful and you can have as much as you want you just grab as much as you can.
There was a reason why you did this too… well, two reasons; first because we could but the other reason is you needed backup. What I mean by backup was another piece of gum to replace the flavor of the gum that would quickly fade. I think this may have been where the term, “snowball effect” started. Many people think it has something to do with rolling a snowball down a hill and as it rolls and gains speed and it gets larger as it continues down its path. The problem is I’ve been on a hill with a snowball and I’ve never seen one roll down a hill collecting more snow let alone people and various large items in its path, like we’ve seen in the cartoons. But I have experienced a small piece of gum quickly lose its flavor, only to be refreshed by another piece again to lose that flavor… this time in about half the time as before, to again be added with another, but again the flavor fades even more quickly then before and as the practice to replenish the flavor continues soon you have a wad so large in your mouth you’re upper and lower jaws can no longer connect and you have pink gum juice flowing off your chin.
Jake Thomas was driving the truck with Jake Jacoby who were best friends growing up and they relished the fact that they both had the same first name. They both worked at the Challenge creamery and they both drove the same car a Mustang. So, it was no surprise when they both join the volunteer fire department the year before. We knew that if we got on their truck we would have a good chance of a box of gum just left open for our picking and that they would drive a little faster and farther than some of the older firemen; which is exactly what they did. And we were convinced we were getting the best ride of all the trucks that went out that morning.
When I looked over at Bill Wallens who had a massive wad of gum in his mouth but could still manage a stupid grin, I started to laugh but then gasped. We could see the look of surprise on the Jakes’ faces too because as we passed the old Nielson feed store at the city limits which had one of the two fire-whistles that were used to summon all the volunteer firemen in the case of a fire, we could hear it blaring over the already loud fire whistle on the truck.
Looking up into the cab of the fire truck we could see both Jakes having a very animated discussion. Which meant every third word was a curse word…
“What the bleep?”
“Hear that bleepin’ whistle?”
“Who would bleepin’ believe a bleepin’ fire would bleepin’ start this bleepin’ morning?”
“I can bleepin’ believe it! Bleep! It is bleepin’ right here!
“Bleeeeeeep.”
Sure enough as we slowed down to make the turn back toward town we could see smoke billowing out of the Silva home.
Jackie Silva’s husband, Don, was killed almost ten years prior on the opening day of duck season. It was a freak accident as they say. But if you have ever been within earshot during the predawn hours of opening day you would think it may have sounded something similar to the invasion of Normandy. Which is why no one was aware when Don’s duck blind tumbled over the deep embankment of the Eel River holding him under the current, entangled in the overgrowth.
Jackie was now left the burden of raising their two sons Tom and Jerry named after the cartoon characters. But when Tom graduated from high school he surprised everyone by enlisting in the Navy and soon found himself on a ship in the south Pacific leaving his mother and Jerry the younger brother to keep the farm. Which wasn’t a prudent decision because his mother was advancing in years and Jerry was known to be a little low on the IQ food chain; which wasn’t a surprise then when he landed himself in Jail for bank robbery. As the story goes; Jackie stopped stocking the pantry with some of Jerry’s favorite snacks. When he asked why she told him that ever since his brother left she was having a difficult time managing the dairy and they were running out of money. So, thinking of the only thing he could do he went into Eureka where there was a Bank of America. So, when he walked in he grabbed a deposit slip and wrote a demand note for the teller, which read, “This is a stickup” but as he stood in line writing the note he began to think maybe the person behind him could see what he wrote so he got nervous and left. To which he proceeded across the street to the Empire Bank where he could just walk up to the teller and present the note. Upon which the teller after reading it could tell by the spelling he wasn’t the sharpest tool in the shed and told him she could not accept this note because it was written on a Bank of America deposit slip and therefore he would have to go to Bank of America. To which he politely excused himself and walked back across the street to where he was quickly apprehended after the teller called the police.
It only took eighteen months for Jerry to be released on parole and confined to his mother’s care which was going to break her heart knowing that the demise of a small section of her house was due to her quick trip to the county fairgrounds to meet several of the ladies preparing for the VFW picnic. She wanted her son to come with her but when he objected she could understand his reason for not wanting to socialize with a bunch of old maids making Jell-O salads and ranch beans. But his real motivation for staying at the house was to look in the Deluxe 64, box of Red Devil, safe and sane fireworks which were purchased from a makeshift plywood shack outside the Blue Stamps redemption center over in Fortuna the day before.
Even though Jackie hid the box it took him less than five minutes to find the bright red and white container holding the evening fireworks show. He carefully removed the boxes of sparklers a snakes which were boring and given to the little kids and pulled out the long, mounted sticks of explosive which would later spay brilliant sparks of light in colors of red, blue, green, yellow… sometimes all at once sometimes in succession. Some were cone shaped, some had a square base. Some had two sections and some would promise to make noise when lit. They were called the screamers or whistlers and they were Jerry’s favorite.
Knowing that everyone was in town and could hear the fire whistles on the trucks carrying children he decided no one would hear a “whistler” if he were to just light one for his own personal pleasure. So, Jerry walked into the kitchen and grabbed the box of matches from the junk drawer and walked outside. It only took a moment to strike the fuse and hear the shrill sound, however being the daylight he didn’t see the extent of the sparks flying out of the stick on the ground and was surprised to see the bush next to the house suddenly engulfed in flames. The fire then quickly moved up the side of the house and caught the eves in a near flash.
Mirella Leman who was next door making potato salad saw the burning bush and new right away that it wasn’t a religious experience. So, she called the phone number for the fire department but no one was answering the phone because everyone was outside managing the children wait for a ride. Finally, Mirella called her brother Frank who lived over at the next block across from the gumdrop trees and had him run to the station and alert them of the fire.
Jake pulled the truck into the driveway of the Silva home thinking the rest of the crew would be in tow. But the other three trucks including the water truck were close to the station when the whistle blew. Now the water truck was an important part of fighting fires in Ferndale because there were no fire hydrants but all the trucks were still at the station waiting for the Jakes to return.
There were six of us on the truck. Me, Bill Wallens, my cousins Greg and Allen and my boyhood pal Rick and his brother Tim. By this time the fire had spread to a good portion of the roof and it was apparent to even us kids that action was needed fast. Jake noticed the water tower next to the barn which was filled by a windmill that was attached to a crude pump which was sourced by a subterranean well and started toward the water tower. But as the other Jake began to ready the pump and lay out the water hose we could see Jake on the water tower struggle with the hose. So, the rest of us created a human daisy along the ladder to lift the feeder hose up the water tower.
When Jackie arrived at the house it only took a matter of seconds for the rest of the volunteer fire department to show up and help extinguish the fire; Shortly, all the ladies from the VFW arrived. Soon the soda, popcorn and candy booths which were set up at Fireman’s Park for the afternoon softball game were reassembled in the field behind the Silva home. Barbecues, hauled in on the back of pickup trucks began emitting the aromas of hotdogs, steaks and fresh caught Pacific salmon. Mirella’s potato salad was the first to go and everyone got stuffed on fresh corn on the cob and deviled eggs; there was plenty of Portuguese sweet bread and homemade pies.
That night the parents seemed to pay particularly close attention to their little ones running around with sparklers in their hands and I think perhaps a few parents began to question just how safe it is for children to be hanging off the back of fire trucks.
It was an unusual day, but then again holidays like the Fourth of July are meant to stand out from all the others and this Fourth definitely stood out from all the other Fourth of July’s in my small town.
It was a day when unlikely heroes went to extraordinary measures to save a home. A day when unaware inhabitants… clueless of what they could loose… careless to protect their possessions were rescued by the goodness of neighborly welfare. Which is what makes this country so great and what makes me proud to be an American.
Let’s not lose sight of the value of our freedom. Just by the nature of the name freedom it doesn’t mean it’s cheap. And just because we enjoy plenty of freedom in America, that doesn’t mean it has no value. Therefore, let’s not allow our freedom to snowball. What I mean, is lets not allow it to drift far from where it was and attach a whole lot of things to it. We must keep our freedom pure.
We need to get back to the simple things: The things that matter and the things that made this great country great; like family, freedom and faith. So, hug your kids, call your parents, organize a family reunion, support our troops, encourage freedom for all people in all places and have faith, not only in each other but in God. For it is God, not man, who is the author of freedom. However, because we have the opportunity to promote freedom we must uphold the responsibility to defend it today. For it was the faith of good men and women who laid the foundation for our freedom by sacrificing home and security; who fought and died, not for the field but on the field, not for the life they were living but for the living and not just for today… but also for our tomorrow.
I hope when my grandchildren are teaching their grandchildren about Independence Day we will still be celebrating the Forth of July by watching children stare with gaping wonder at a sparkler in their tiny hands, having simple cookouts on the beach and having families gather together to the boom and glare of an incredible fireworks display.












