Brucemore, Inc.
Transcription
Brucemore, Inc.
'noie by Ellen Williamson Mr. and Mrs. George Bruce Douglas, Jr .. daughters Ellen (left) and Margaret, and " a cross little black Shetland pony called Neddie" - on the grounds of Brucemore about 1910. Photo courtesy Mrs. Howard Hall. In the year I was born - 1905 - Cedar Rapids haq a opulation of about twenty thousand people. The Douglas imily must have seemed an odd group to the other ~sidents, for they never discarded their Scotch ways and Listoms, but stuck firmly by them. Not only did we have ollie and sheltie dogs with names like Jeanie and .oderick Dhu, but we children drove around in a wickerasket-type cart behind a cross little black Shetland pony alled Neddie. Out by the barn and stables was a little Jund dog-kennel house with runways where West :ighland terriers were raised commercially. Why had the Douglases come to Cedar Rapids in the first lace? Because my grandfather George Douglas, a tonecutter and construction engineer who lived in 'hurso, Scotland, was asked to come to the United States :>help to build a railroad that would run from Chicago to lmaha, Nebraska... . Cedar Rapids, being just about alfway between the two cities, seemed to be the best lace for Grandfather to settle, especially as a cousin of is, Robert Stuart, was already living there and with his ivo sons had started a small cereal plant which was irning out a variety of rolled and steel-cut oats. Grand:ither put some money into the company, and as a result is railroad was given the business of shipping oats East nd West. The company did well, and around the turn of the cen1ry merged with another oat mill, known as the American I\ Brucemore Memory" i1 excerpted from the book, Wh•n W• Went First Cta.a, by Ellen l illiamoon. Copyright c 1977 by Ellen Williamoon. Published by Doubleday&. Company, , C, Cereal Company. What should they name the new company? They found that one brand of the Douglas-Stuart Mills outsold all the others (actually they were all exactly the same but were packaged differently), and it was known as the Quaker brand. The name evidently sounded solid and honest and safe for babykin's oatmeal, so they named the big new company the Quaker Oats Company, and that is what it has been called ever since. Our little bit of Scotland included a dour Scot named Ross who kept the horses glossy and well groomed. He was also excellent with the bagpipes and he piped my father and mother into dinner every night when there was company. And while we children ate our oatmeal porridge and applesauce upstairs in the nursery with our Scotch nurse Miss MacDannel (known to us as Danny) the men in the family appeared for dinner in full-dress kilt. My father and his two brothers all lived near each other at this time, and it was a grand sight to behold them (I've been told) , all tall and handsome, wearing the pleated kilts of the ancient Douglas plaid, the colors of soft blues and greens, and each with a short-waisted dress jacket of black or gray velvet or heavy silk twill (a material then called bombazine). After dinner there was often a game of whist (that would be the forerunner of bridge) and I learned that gentlewomen in those time referred to the spade suit as "lily." The word "spade" or "pique" was considered vulgar, especially as the design started out as the fleur-de-lys. Besides whist there was music. My mother played the harp and the piano, and there was also an Aeolian pipe organ that played (when pumped furiously) rolls of music. 11 • Brucemore, Inc. wine. There is a tunnel leading from the lower cellar over to the Garden House (a two-bedroom guest house) two hundred feet away. One can still crawl through it quite comfortably. It's purpose? It carried steam heat in a big pipe from Brucemore's two big coal furnaces. Up on the third floor there is a small secret room with its own cozy little bay window looking down on the garden. Whyfore? Back in the 1920s a new and larger pipe organ was installed. The smaller pipes were all put in a thirdfloor guest room, the larger pipes being down in the cellar, and the bay window was walled off with an extra ten square feet, making it the smallest and most private room in the house. (The next book I write is going to be a whodunit, all laid in Brucemore, and the body will be found in the secret room. It will turn out to be the corpse of - ,1-.f.-. a clever little old man who lived all his life in Brucemore The three bo~g~s~~a'~-ghte~ C!Jring their years of growing up at with no one knowing it. He came and went via the empty Brucemore (from left, as they are presently known) Ellen Williamson, Margaret ~all and Barbara Dixon. Photo courtesy of Mrs. Howard Hall. tunnel of course, used the elevator when we were running down the stairs, etc.) Outside, the workmen that were brought over fr_om ' .. - ... Ireland to build the house also left their individual touches. (Several years. later I remember pumping away at the The . . . big stone chimneys are each carved ~n a different design. Each side of the house bears different stone or thing myself while singing ''Oh, ·Where, Tell Me .Where, slate inlaid areas to relieve the monotony of the brick, and Has My Highland Laddie Gone" accompanied by the proper notes, thanks to the self~'1nwinding paper roll, with .· _the lintels over the windows and doors are each carVed all the stops pulled -out.. The '_ noise was like the dawn differently. coming up like thunder indeed.)/\.::-.'-;~.: '. ,·'=': -_ . ' , . One ... thing about Brucemore: the library is haunted Mother and her sisters-in-law never cire5sed in kilts,· (shades of the little old man). One night when I was studying algebra my father and I were sitting in the at least not in the evening. They: all three wore c.ustommade Parisian dresses from Paul Poiret, Worth, Patou, library with a fire going and the lights turned low. He was Callot Soeurs, Vionnet, -· always · gown8 .from .La Haute reading in his favorite armchair, his reading lamp turned Couture. '.' . } ~>.:>;,-:. ··· ' . · : · . :"'" on, and I was over at the desk. All of a sudden we both Brucerriore:. Wbat 'was it like? heard a soft swishing noise coming from above the At fi;fSt the property was just a big front lawn sweeping , fireplace. We looked up and to our amazement saw, in the uphill to the stark three-story red-brick house standing dim light, a tall ceramic vase moving from its post at the bleakly at the top, driveway to the left, and a sidewalk right-hand edge of the long mantelpiece. It was moving ascending to the right. That was all; behind the house it slowly but steadily toward the other matching blue vase at was strictly farm. There were stables arid cow barns and a .the left edge. There was nothing else on the mantel. pond for ducks. There were . fields of corn. and alfalfa, Dad rose to his feet. . . . · ·· -~ chicken houses and a -pigsty; :and beyond · was a dense ' · '-'This cannot be," he stated firmly, · peering · at the woods filled with hazelnut bushes ·and walnut _and but- ;. .mantel closely. "Aha, I know," he exclaimed. "There's a ternut trees.. :' · '-' .. -.. :·, · ·:·:·. -:·>-- • ., ; · • . mouse in it." He picked it up, turned it_over and shook it Gradually the farm .receded. First the big white barn - but nothing fell out. The two vases, being each two feet tall departed and an orchard with a playhouse and swings for . and smooth, would have presented difficultieS to any and us took its place; then a formal garden and tennis court. _all mice. ·.. ,- _._ · .. · \'· - ~: · · appeared adjaeent to the house, ·next a greenhouse and a · ~. _I stOod up too. "what did it?" I quavered, f~ling the squash court; then the pond became landscaped and a pair ·. palnis of my hands turning clammy. · . Dad looked bewildered. "It's not a practical joke," he of white swam·fioated on the surface. ·: ;-'.~\·- •3::;·/-_Today there is still vegetable garden,'\ivhicli'is hidden . announced. "There are no strings or invisible threads away behind the.garage~ and I noticed the last time that I around." He turned to me after running his hands over and saw it, it contained . a mere rows 'of sweet com. under the mantel. "It can only be that the thing is on a Brucemore has beeome completely' citified: · ·, · slant. Perhaps the house is settling. Tomorrow we'll get a The house too has lcist its stark Victorian look, thanks to carpenter's level and prove it." the addition of many porches and terraces and surrounWith this announcement he went back to his book. The ding trees. It still is a curious house both inside and outnext day the mantel turned out to be perfectly level. Even a golf ball remained in stable equilibrium when perched side. Each of its thirty-odd rooms contains fireplace, and each one is different. There are two stairways to each of next to the creeping vase. It made Dad so · cross and the three main stories and the attic, as "'ell as the cellar, puzzled that we refrained from talking about it. A week or so later a scientist of some sort of psychology and there is also an elevator shaft. There are two basements, one with recreation rooms and laundries and a or parapsychology appeared at Brucemore. My father had furnace room, and a lower one for storing vegetables and sent for him from the University of Chicago and he made a ~ (.'l.-f~ - 1 .~:\f;~" • 41.)!, . _:\q '• .. ):.J.' . ,._!'J .·: ..;.~ .. .'~'.: \ . •!''.; :_.3~ ·:;·;~ . "~-I -···"fl1 .. ~;~~) ·~~ \~~~~i~ ·<?i_~· j )~t' . ·,:'.~'( ''. .'f$.N, "';}' ~ -:~·11.~! .·~.-~;~~ ~ ::; t ;· <I •f.>:;. ~. ~ ' .I two . ' , ' I ~ a a ihree. a 12 .. Brucemore, Inc. . " '•,J j ·i·a ~- :) ' .. / ·""'' 1,;..,"l ~ \ .:·t·~, :::;?J. . ·I ... ~:i ,> '1: .'1~:j ,_ . ~ '' •\\,. .:~i:l~ . . ., ~\;11~( ~ '~ ·-"b :•f;~;;··~: ':.:~;J "ff.:- special trip to Brucemore. Dad met him in the front hall and told him in a few terse words to go over the whole house, and give his scientific opinion: was there any part of it that seemed different from the rest? To Dad's great surprise, the professor, after a careful private inspection of the whole place, announced at lunch that the only part of the house with a strange and unnatural atmosphere was the library. He couldn't explain, he said, but there was something wrong with it. He would like to stay on and conduct some experiments; perhaps it would take weeks or even months. After lunch Father marched him to the door and the car drove him to the station, and that was the end of the library's future as some kind of an official psychic phenomenon. Later on that winter a committee that I belonged to had a meeting in the hall just outside the library. The long velvet curtains at the room's entrance had been pulled, and there were fifteen of us who sat in a circle in the hall, which when the curtains were drawn turned into a room, also with its own large fireplace. The meeting had been called regarding a Christmas party that our club was giving. As we listened to reports about the cost of refreshments and the orchestra we suddenly heard a loud groan of agony, more bestial than human, coming clearly from the library, behind the heavy draperies. My first thought was that one of the members had crawled in as a joke and was trying to scare us (word of the moving vase had spread). Quickly we counted noses but everyone was there. Then we decided that sister Barbara and some of her crowd had hidden away in there, but the room was empty when we turned on the lights, and it had no hiding places or secret exits. Some of the committee girls were so unnerved that they left at once, and we finished up the meeting around the dining-room table. This strange groaning sound has been heard several more times since then, as well as the sound of low menacing laughter. My mother decided that it was a friendly poltergeist of some sort, pointing out that it never left the library, nor did it ever do harm to anyone, and the groans and laughter were too far away to ever wake anyone up, nor ever really disturb anyone, and the vase was never moved again. The last time that I heard the poltergeist was several years ago. I had gone up the front stairway and had just reached the landing when I heard a semi-moan ending in a hoarse sort of cackle. Believe me, being all alone in that part of the house, I broke into a wild dash, reached the second flight of stairs and arrived in my room as if shot from a pneumatic tube.... Once when I was very young a respectable and well-todo bachelor cousin wrote from somewhere in Perth, Scotland, inviting himself to come and stay a month with his Iowa relatives. He was Sir Sholto Archibald DouglasHamilton; he was thirty-four years old, had never visited "the States," and wondered if he should bring his golf clubs or ... were there no golf links available? My father wrote and suggested that he spend the month of October at Brucemore, the autumn being the best season in the Middle West, and he added that there were several golf links in the vicinity, but he noted apologetically that compared to St. Andrews and Dornoch and so on, our links were new and primitive. Sir Sholto arrived on an afternoon train in the early fall with all sorts of bags and valises and satchels, minus the golf clubs, and begged pardon for traveling with so little baggage. He was a large tweedy type with a bushy beard, a splendid Scotch brogue, and a warm smile. When my father conducted him to our new car, a large gray open Stoddard Dayton, he was amazed. "By Jove!" he exclaimed. "You have a motah." He turned to my father. "And you have roads?" he asked. My father nodded. The chauffeur got the luggage in somehow, cranked the motor, and off they went. Sir Sholto seemed dumbfounded. "My word" - he pointed his finger- "you seem to have sidewalks. I say er- it seems far more civilized than I had believed the Middle West to be." He turned to Daddy. "Cousin George, sir, are the Indians hereabouts friendly or otherwise?" He patted his bulging overcoat pocket. "I thought it best to come fully armed." Daddy answered solemnly that there were in fact several Indian tribes in the vicinity, that on a clear night one could see the smoke from their tepees across the cornfields, and that they were friendly unless they drank too much firewater, which only happened on Saturday nights. Sir Sholto was delighted. "They carry tommy-hawks, of course," he suggested. "Tomahawks," my father corrected him. "And of course bows and arrows. Steel arrowheads nowadays,'' he added. "Cost plenty wampum." "What sort of Indians?" Sir Sholto asked eagerly. "The local tribes are the Tama Indians," Daddy said after a moment of busy thinking. "I think they must be Sioux or Dakota or a mixture of both." After they had reached Brucemore and the auto had snorted up the long elm-shaded driveway to the house, he was welcomed by Mother and the brothers, his luggage was dispatched to his room, and he was told that dinner would be at eight, with a before-dinner drink served in the library (the word "cocktail" was not yet in use), and that Daddy's valet would have his dinner jacket laid out for him. Poor cousin Sholto turned beet-red with embarrassment. "I say." He faced them bravely. "I've nowt but apologies. 1-1 thought that you were all a bunch of wild and woollies. I didn't bring any proper clothes - just rough gear for stalking Indians - aye, that's about it." He turned to Daddy, "You and your savages!" And he laughed uproariously. "Aye, and I believed it all until I saw your bonnie Brucemore." Ellen Wllllamson ls the author of three books, Wall Street Made Easy, Spend Yourself Rich, and When We Went First Class, from whlch the above excerpts are taken. She ls a sister to Margaret Douglas Hall. 13 • Brucemore, Inc. ..