Life at West Portal, Colorado
Written by Stella Timmerhoff Todd in
1985
Background: Stella Timmerhoff was born October 31, 1899 in
Brainerd, County, Minnesota. Her parents were Fred Timmerhoff and Ina
Mott Timmerhoff. She had siblings: Lester, Chester, Velma, James Harold,
Richard and Dorothy. I believe the family came to Colorado around 1920
to work for the railroad. Stella married Phillip Todd in Douglas county
Wyoming in 1924. Phillip Todd was born in Greeley, Weld County, Colorado
in 1898. Stella passed away in Long Beach California in 1990.
The
following story has been submitted by her great niece, Judy Powell
Silva. For more information contact Judy Silva at jingo@snowcrest.net.
In June of 1926 Phil quit his job in the Chicago-Burlington and
Quebec Railroad in Wyoming and left for Fraser, Colorado to visit my
parents, the Fred Timmerhoff's, for a few days.
Phil went to
West Portal and got a job in the Moffat Tunnel, which was 11 miles from
Fraser. In a few days, he was a workingman again. That was July 1926. We
stayed with my folks until we could find something of our own to move
into. It wasn't long until someone told Phil about a one-room shack
furnished with a woodstove for cooking and heating, a bed, small table
with chairs, and a rocking chair. We bought it all for $100. Everything
about the cabin was crude, but we didn't seem to mind. Everyone else was
living the same way.
Before the summer was over, I was cooking
one meal a day for three or four men who worked on the main road. I have
forgotten where they sat while they ate. Phil worked in the tunnel for
fourteen months. Soon after he started to work, there was a cave in. All
the men who were in the tunnel at the time were killed.
Life
wasn't too easy living in West Portal in the winter, but we were used to
the cold. Phil working in the tunnel would get wet and walking home
after work his clothes would freeze on him. After he took them off they
would stand up on their own. He began coughing a lot and drank bottle
after bottle of Pinex. After we moved away from there, the cough left
him.
In May we planned to go to Fraser 11 miles away, for
Mother's Day, but when we got up that Sunday morning there was two feet
of snow on the ground. We stayed at home and went to town the following
week.
West Portal was like living in an old mining town, like we
used to see in the movies. All the cabins or shacks were very much
alike, so no one needed to feel bad about the other person having
something better. There were a lot of dogs running loose and no one
seemed to mind the barking. It was so cold in the winter, we kept our
dog inside, perhaps other people did the same.
"Trail of 98" a
movie was made at West Portal the winter of 1927. A lot of local people
were in it. I might have tried to get in it, but I was pregnant with
Russell and didn't feel too well. After we moved to Long Beach, we saw
the picture at one of the theaters. It had a lot of snowing in it. It
was supposed to have been an Alaskan picture.
On my 24th
birthday, October 31, 1925, my father gave me a pretty heart shaped moss
agate with a gold ring around the edge. When Phil and I got married I
gave it to him to wear on his watch chain (outdated now). He wore it to
work in the tunnel and lost it. He felt bad about it and never expected
to see it again. Two shifts (16 hours) went on before Phil went back to
work again. He still had the moss agate on his mind and soon after
starting to work, he reached down and picked up a handful of muck and
rubbed it back and forth between his fingers and thumb. Believe it or
not, Phil had picked up the agate. He was so pleased about finding it,
but I was an Indian giver and I took it back. Now at the age of 85 ½
years old I still have the agate.
Back of our shack and down the
hill a ways, was the toilet. Not warm and cozy like the indoor ones in
the cities. Believe me, it was very cold having to go outside in the
winter. It meant having to keep a pathway shoveled out, so we could get
to it. We were always glad when summer came for more reasons than one!
Only two months out of the year cars didn't have to be drained of water.
All other times the water would freeze.
At East Portal, working
towards the west, the men drilled a hole in the top of the tunnel and
drilled into the bottom of a lake on the top of the mountain. The men
were off work for several days until the water could be drained from the
lake and out through the east end of the tunnel.
Russell was
born June 6, 1927, while we were still living in West Portal. A couple
of weeks before he was born we rented a little 2 room house in
Tabernash, which is about 18 miles from West Portal and nearer to the
doctor. His name was Dr. Fleming, he was an army doctor.
About a
month before Russell was born, I heard him cry! One night Phil and I
drove into Fraser so Phil could drive my father to a Masonic Lodge
meeting which was several miles away. It would be late by the time Phil
and my father would get home, so I went to bed in my mother's room. Soon
after I got all comfortable in bed, I heard a baby cry! I lay there for
a few minutes listening and couldn't decide where the crying was coming
from. I sat up thinking perhaps there was a baby outside the window.
After I sat up I realized it was the baby inside me that was crying. I
didn't tell anyone about it. I was afraid people would think I was
crazy. Several years later, after we had moved to Long Beach, California
and our three boys were partly grown I read in a newspaper that babies
can cry before they are born, but that it was a rare thing.
The
night before Russell was born, my parents drove up to the house in brand
new Chevrolet touring car. They had just driven it from Denver where
they had bought it that day. I had a great ride in it that night.
The last of July, we had a chance to sell our shack for what we paid
for it only $100. We rented a house in Fraser for $10.00 a month. I was
nursing Russell, I had enough milk for two babies and I weighed less
that one hundred pounds. The food I ate all went to making milk.&bnsp;
He was thriving on my milk and I was getting weaker - spending more and
more time in bed. The doctor said to put the baby on a bottle; otherwise
I wouldn't live to take care of him. I was hard for me to put him on the
bottle, having so much milk. Later I didn't have any milk for the two
other boys.
Near the last week in September 1927 Phil quit his
job at the tunnel and we started getting the car ready for our trip to
Long Beach, California, where we planned to make our future home. It is
now April 1985 and we are still in Long Beach.
At noon on
October 6, 1927, we were ready to leave Fraser, Colorado, and head for
California. It was a sorrowful time -everyone was hugging each other and
crying. That day Russell was exactly four months old. Later when he was
old enough to talk, he said he remembered everyone hugging each other
and crying when we were saying goodbye. I said, "How could you, you were
only four months old?" He said, "but I do". He stuck to that story all
his life.
Over the years we have heard of strange things that
have happened to other people all over the world, hiccupping, sucking
thumbs, crying before being born. Phil and I have come to the conclusion
that Russell did know what was going on that day when he was only four
months old. Russell always said he wasn't going to be very old. I told
him he would probably out live his father and me. He knew what he was
talking about, he passed away when he was only 55 years 8 months ands
two days old.
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