The Des Moines Tribune-Capital printed this picture of the Pioneer Club Pushmobile Race which took place on Saturday, May 4, 1929. The winners were John Dowd and Earl Myers.
Wednesday, January 21, 2026
Pioneer Club Pushmobile Race 1929 - Des Moines
The Des Moines Tribune-Capital printed this picture of the Pioneer Club Pushmobile Race which took place on Saturday, May 4, 1929. The winners were John Dowd and Earl Myers.
Steamboat Muscatine
The Davenport Democrat and Leader published this image of the Steamer Muscatine on August 25, 1929. The paper said the boat began service on the Mississippi River in 1864.
Author David Morrell: Rambo Was Just The Beginning
| David Morrell |
Vietnam was still fresh. America was jumpy. The country felt like it was cracking at the seams. And here was a novel about a returning veteran who couldn’t fit back into normal life, colliding with a small-town system that didn’t know what to do with him.
Morrell
wasn’t guessing about any of this. He taught literature at the University of Iowa
and knew how stories work and what themes do when you tighten them like a vise.
He just aimed that knowledge at a new target: suspense.
Morrell
taught American literature at the University of Iowa from 1970 to 1986, became
a full professor in 1977, and wrote bestselling novels during that same
stretch.
So
picture it. He lectured on American writing and culture during the day… then
went home and wrote chase scenes, manhunts, and plots with real teeth.
Murder at the Kirkwood Hotel in Des Moines
Alcoholism, disregard for the rules, and
incompetence played into a double murder at the Kirkwood Hotel early in the
morning on March 25, 1911.Officer Clarence Woolman
Officer Clarence Woolman was assigned to take his best friend and prisoner, Dr. Harry Kelly, to the State Inebriate Hospital at Knoxville. They stopped for the night at the Kirkwood Hotel in Des Moines and had a few drinks. The next morning, one man lay dead with a bullet in his brain, and the other on the floor in a nearby saloon shot full of holes.
The men checked into the Kirkwood at 9:30
p.m. By rights, Woolman should have taken Kelly to the county jail—standard
operating procedure was to lock up prisoners when traveling overnight. Woolman
disregarded it because he didn’t want to hurt his friend’s feelings.
Kelly wasn’t the person you’d expect to be
an alcoholic or a murderer. He grew up in an excellent family. His father
managed the Standard Oil office in Council Bluffs. He was a “crack athlete” who
played halfback for the University of Nebraska football team. Before his
drinking got out of hand, he was considered the top doctor in Council Bluffs,
maybe in the entire state.
Tuesday, January 20, 2026
Author John Irving New Hampshire Born Iowa Bred
Iowa City looks harmless. Bookstores.
Brick streets. Workshop gossip. Then John Irving shows up and says, “Sure, but
what if we make it weird?”John Irving
He comes to the Iowa Writers’ Workshop in the mid-60s, and ends up studying under Kurt Vonnegut—who’s basically a human smoke alarm with a typewriter. Funny. Furious. Allergic to fake seriousness.
Irving’s
young. Full of big-story energy. A writer who loves accidents, coincidences,
and fate like they’re all cousins at the same chaotic family reunion.
At
Iowa, he drafts Setting Free the Bears. A thesis that turns into a
full-blown novel. Europe. Wild turns. That shaggy, runaway-cart feeling that
becomes his signature. Kirkus called it “a wonderfully fresh, wildly
imaginative notion of a book,” which is reviewer-speak for this kid might
be trouble in the best way.
Then
he cranks out The Water-Method Man and drags the chaos closer
to home. Iowa City shows up. Graduate school creeps in. Relationships get
messy. The jokes get sharper. The plot keeps slipping sideways like it’s trying
to escape the room.
Monday, January 19, 2026
The Pacific Junction Horror: Murder in Small Town Iowa
Someone crept into Edith and Helen Kuhl’s
bedroom overnight on March 20, 1935, and bludgeoned them nearly to death. Helen Kuhl
The girls were taken to Mercy Hospital at Council Bluffs. Helen had a fractured skull and cuts and bruises on the right side of her head. Edith’s injuries were so severe, doctors didn’t expect her to pull through.
Both
girls remained unconscious late into the afternoon, so the police had very few
clues to work on. Edith died the following day. Helen remained unconscious for
nearly five days, and when she came to, she could shed no light on the
attack.
The
girls roomed at the home of their aunt Ritta Graham in Pacific Junction. Their
uncle, Clarence Price, also boarded in the house. Ritta was away attending a
funeral in Omaha.
Price
told authorities he rapped on George Durkee’s door at about 11 p.m. Wednesday.
“Come quick!” he shouted. “Something terrible has happened.”
They
found the girls on the bed. The glass had been broken out of their bedroom
window, and the screen pulled off. Durkee told police there were signs of a
struggle.
Wicked Liz and the Bellyswirls Rocking Davenport for 30 Years
Davenport, Iowa. 1998. Back when bands still had to earn it. No algorithms. No “content.” You played until your fingers hurt and the bartender hated you and the sound guy stopped pretending he was going to help. You played until people finally went, “Alright. Fine. These maniacs are for real.”Liz Treiber sings like she already knows what you want. Behind her: Leo Kelly on lead guitar, Bob Kelly on bass, Greg Hipskind on drums.
That’s the BellySwirls. The name sounds like something you get from gas station nachos, but onstage it’s a tight machine built to wreck a room. These guys don’t float through songs—they kick the door in.
Genre? Call it blues-rock if you need a label—greasy, hooky, and mean enough to make you forget you were going to leave after one drink. Big riffs, fat groove, stomp-on-the-floor energy. Stuff that makes you spill your beer and not care.
Their songs have that “we’ve done this the hard way” feel. “Believe.” “Mary Kate.” “Nick of Time.” “Ruby.” “Wicked Waltz.” “Break Me” is exactly what it sounds like—not a poem, not a diary entry, more like somebody slamming a door and daring you to follow.
Sunday, January 18, 2026
A Midnight Murder in Davenport
| James Gallagher |
October 30, 1915. Second and Fillmore Streets.
Davenport, Iowa, after dark. A street corner that feels normal in daylight and
ugly at night. Quiet. Empty. A little too much shadow.
James Gallagher came in from Ottumwa and ended up
on that corner at the wrong time. Two men stepped out of the dark and closed
the space between them fast. They weren’t there to talk.
There’d been two holdups in the past two days.
Quick stickups. A hard voice, a gun in your ribs, a pocket turned inside out.
The same story stayed the same: two men. One taller. One shorter. The short one
with the nerve.
That night they picked Gallagher.
The smaller man pulled a .38. There was a flash, a
crack, and it turned from robbery to murder in a heartbeat. Gallagher took a
bullet through the right lung. He lurched forward.
He made it a few steps. Then he folded and hit the
pavement.
Saturday, January 17, 2026
He Killed His Wife To Marry His Girlfriend
| Walter "Dusty" Rhodes |
He had a wife, a steady job, and a home. People like that don’t get whispered about or watched. They move through life under a blanket of normal, and normal is the best hiding place.
The
morning his wife died, he leaned on normal like it could hold him up.
Down
in the basement, the shotgun went off with the force of a bomb.
Dusty
ran upstairs and told the maid to call a doctor and the sheriff. It was an
accident. His voice was fast, controlled, almost businesslike. Myrtle
remembered that calm later.
When
the officers arrived, Dusty said he was preparing to go hunting. His wife
handed him the shotgun, and it accidentally discharged. It was tragic, but
nobody’s fault.
Jack the Hugger--A Different Kind of Ripper
London had Jack the Ripper. Muscatine had Jack
the Hugger. He appeared out of nowhere the day after Valentine’s Day in 1904,
randomly grabbing and hugging women on the street.
Jack the Hugger would sneak out from the shadows,
hug a woman, and disappear
The Muscatine Journal was at a loss to
explain the strange phenomenon and dubbed the perpetrator “Jack the Hugger.”
The story quickly went viral, appearing in newspapers throughout the Midwest,
and eventually spawned a slew of imitators.
The Hugger assaulted three women on the evening
of February 15. The first attack occurred on East Seventh Street. The man
jumped out of the shadows and embraced the girl, almost suffocating her in a
giant bear hug. He grabbed his second victim as she walked through the cut on
East Second Street. The Hugger leaped out and grabbed her tight.
The third assault occurred on the high bridge
near Walnut Street. The Hugger was a little more daring this time. He threw his
arms around the girl and planted a wet, juicy kiss on her lips. Then, when she
screamed, he bit her under the eye and hurried off down the alley.
Buffalo Bill Cody Frontier Scout Wild West Performer
| Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show |
The family left for Kansas in 1853, searching for
freedom because Iowa was feeling a little too crowded. That wanderlust followed
Bill for the rest of his life.
The Pony Express was Bill’s first brush with fame.
It only ran for about eighteen months, but it changed everything. Riders hit
relay stations at full speed, swapped horses, and kept flying. Mail moved
across the country faster than anyone thought possible. It was dangerous,
brutal work. A boy could vanish on the prairie and no one would know.
Bill said he rode for it. People still argue about
whether he did, but it doesn’t matter. The Pony Express fit the image he sold
the rest of his life: an inexperienced rider in empty country, living on speed
and nerve.
After that, he trapped, scouted, and rode with
soldiers. Then he picked up the name that turned him into a brand.
27th Iowa Infantry in the Minnesota Sioux Uprising
In August 1862, violence swept across Minnesota in what became known as the “Minnesota Sioux Uprising.” It hit fast and close. Along the Minnesota River valley, families fled farms and small towns with little warning.
Attack on the Lower Agency in Minnesota Sioux Uprising
New Ulm was attacked on August 19, and panic spread across southern Minnesota. Fort Ridgely was assaulted on August 20 and again on August 22. Settlers crowded into towns or ran east, leaving wide stretches of countryside empty.
On September 6, the War Department created the Department of the Northwest and placed Major General John Pope in command, with headquarters at St. Paul. Pope’s orders were clear: restore order and end the violence. His first problem was also clear. He needed troops.
The Civil War made that difficult. Regular army units were tied down in the South and East. Pope had to pull help from nearby states, even if the men were brand new. Iowa responded with the 27th Iowa Volunteer Infantry.
Thursday, January 15, 2026
Rearguard Action At Jenkins' Ferry
| Iowa soldiers covering the retreat at Jenkins Ferry |
The trouble started weeks earlier with the
Camden Expedition. The plan looked good on paper. A Union force would move
south from Little Rock, link up with other columns tied to the Red River
Campaign, and tighten the squeeze on Confederate Arkansas. In reality, it was a
gamble. Supplies were thin. Roads barely deserved the name, as spring rain
turned everything into mud and muck.
Iowa regiments made up a big part of the force.
They knew what campaigning in the Trans-Mississippi looked like, and they knew
it was usually miserable. This one got bad faster than expected.
Sunday, January 11, 2026
Iowa Soldiers at Iuka and Corinth
The fights at Iuka and Corinth tested Union
troops in very different ways. Iuka was a confused collision in the woods. It
came late in the day and never settled into a clean line. Units bent, folded,
and drifted under pressure. Corinth followed two weeks later and felt nothing
like it. It was a direct assault on a fortified railroad town. Success depended
on whether men could hold ground while being hit again and again.General William Rosecrans
Iowa regiments ended up in the hardest places
because the campaign pushed experienced units toward weak points. When the line
thinned, they were sent there. When artillery needed cover, they were placed
beside it. When ground had to be held no matter the cost, they were already
close.
Iuka sits in northeastern Mississippi where
roads and rail lines cross. The town was nothing more than a dot on the map.
What mattered was control. Confederate General Sterling Price moved in during
September, hoping to regain ground and threaten Union supply routes. Union
commanders tried to trap him before he could slip away. A column under William
S. Rosecrans marched in from the southwest. Another under Edward Ord moved in
from the northwest.
On paper, the movement seemed simple enough. Two columns would close in and crush Price’s force. In the field, everything broke down. Roads narrowed into muddy paths. Wagons jammed. Units lost their bearings. Ravines cut across the landscape and split formations without warning. The woods were thick and uneven. Sound didn’t travel the way it should have. When fighting started, part of the Union force never heard it and stayed out of the battle, forcing Rosecrans’ column to take the full weight of the attack alone.
Wednesday, January 7, 2026
Second Iowa Infantry At Bull Run
Most Iowa soldiers fought the Civil War in
the West. Shiloh, Vicksburg, and Chattanooga shaped Iowa’s war. But one Iowa
regiment got its start closer to Washington than most Iowans would ever get.
Fighting at Bull Run
When the war broke out in April 1861, Iowa moved fast. Governor Samuel J. Kirkwood called for volunteers. The Second Iowa gathered at Keokuk in May, where drilling started before uniforms and equipment fully arrived. Some men trained in work clothes. Discipline came quickly. So did confidence. The Gate City reported that the camp at Keokuk was “crowded daily with citizens watching the men drill.” The regiment showed “an uncommon seriousness for troops so newly raised.”
By early summer, the Second Iowa was sent
east, attached to the Army of the Potomac. For many of the men, it was their
first time away from home. The camps around Washington were crowded and noisy.
Politicians, reporters, and spectators drifted in and out. Everything the army
did seemed to be watched. The New York Tribune described
western regiments arriving near Washington as “plain in dress but earnest in
bearing,” a contrast not lost on eastern observers.

