Saturday, January 24, 2026
Jarvis Doughnut Shop Advertisement Davenport 1921
Nice 1921 advertisement for the Jarvis Donut Shop in Davenport, Iowa. Note they had tables for the ladies, or you could take home a bag.
Shop The Kahl Building
This advertisement encouraging people to shop the Kahl Building in downtown Davenport was published in the Davenport Democrat and Leader on September 25, 1921.
The Burzette Gang of Sioux City
Some criminals aren’t born in the dark. They’re
trained there.
Everett Burzette
And Everett Burzette—sitting in a jail cell in
Mason City, Iowa, accused of first-degree murder—was raised in the shadow of a
name that carried fear like a headline.
Burzette.
A name tied to stolen automobiles, gun smoke, and
a man who didn’t plan on surrendering. A name made infamous by Everett’s older
brother—Red Burzette—who, as one account put it, “met his death with a belching
revolver in his hand,” fighting the police in Sioux City.
That was the family legacy Everett inherited. Now
it was his turn to face the rope.
His cousin, Melvin Burzette, was locked up on the
same charge in the cell next to him. They were accused of murdering Morris G.
Van Note, a well-to-do farmer, shot down in the yard of a rural school building
near Mason City. He’d tried to stop them from stealing school property,
and—bang . . . Van Note was dead.
Friday, January 23, 2026
An Unsual Golf Tournament at the Newton Country Club
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| (colorized image, from a black and white photo) |
The Des Moines Register printed this picture of an unusal golf tournament at the Newton Country Club on August 28, 1927. The players (left to right) are: Harlan Bailey - Newton postmaster, and Harry Cross - a local attorney. Bailey played the course with his clubs, while Cross attacked the balloons with his bow and arrow. The final score was 5 up, in favor of Cross.
Villisca Muder House
The Des Moines Register printed this picture of the Villisca muder house on July 10, 1927, fifteen years after the brutal axe murders of eight people.
There had been may confessions since then. All of them false. The most recent confession had come from Frank Carter, the "Omaha Sniper." He took credit for the murders before his execution in the electric chair, saying they were his "most notorious kill." Officials ignored the confession, figuring it was a last ditch effort to buy himself more time.
Previous supects were Sentor Frank Jones, William "Blackie" Mansfield, and Reverend Lyn George J. Kelly. None of the leads panned out--114 years later the case is still open.
Moonshine and Murder in Red Oak
| Albert Girardi and his family |
“For God’s sake, hit him again!” John Stewart
screamed. “He is raising up.”
Austin hit Girardi with the king bolt. “This blow
finished him,” he said. “I didn’t notice any more life to him.”
Austin rifled through Girardi’s billfold. He
counted $82 in cash, pocketed the money, and tucked the wallet back in
Girardi’s jacket. No sense taking evidence with him.
That was the second time they killed Girardi. But
let’s start at the beginning.
Albert Girardi was a produce salesman from the
Little Italy district of Omaha, Nebraska. He had a wife, two small children,
Arto, 4, and Lucrezia, 9 months—and a booming business.
Monkey Island at Fejervary Park in Davenport
| Visitors at Monkey Island |
From a distance, it looks cute. Up close, you realize it’s a setup.
There’s a concrete wall around the lagoon, and the water’s kept low on purpose so the monkeys can’t use it like a springboard and launch themselves out of there. No grand escape. No heroic leap. Just a shallow moat and a reminder that the island is more stage than wilderness.
Still, they’ve made a life in it. A whole little kingdom.
Thursday, January 22, 2026
Muscatine Business District Lit Up At Night
The Muscatine Journal published this image of the city's buisness district all lit up under the new illumination system. The lights were turned on at 8 p.m. on February 1, 1928, by the Queen of Light (unidentified). (colorized version of black and white newspaper image)
Samuel J. Kirkwood: He Mobilized Iowa For The Civil War
When Samuel J. Kirkwood became governor of Iowa in 1860, the country was already sliding toward civil war. He acted fast, calling for volunteers, forming new regiments, and getting those men ready to serve the Union.
On April 16, 1861, Washington ordered Iowa to send
a regiment for immediate service. Kirkwood didn’t have time to ease into the
war; he began organizing at once.
The United States didn’t have a large army. That
meant the states had to do much of the work. Iowa had willing men, but supplies
were scarce. Guns and ammunition were the biggest problem. Even when volunteers
poured in, the state couldn’t outfit them properly.
Kirkwood’s job became a constant scramble for
equipment. At first, he wasn’t sure he could raise a full regiment. When
volunteers flooded in by the thousands, the number of men ready to serve was
larger than the state could quickly arm and outfit.
That created a fresh crisis. Kirkwood and other
leading Iowans took unusual steps to get the state moving. They pledged
personal property to borrow money for supplies, because waiting meant wasting
time the Union didn’t have.
The Bat, The Bite, And The Midwestern Freak Show
January 1982. The Blizzard of Ozz plays Veterans Memorial Auditorium, and for a few chaotic seconds, Des Moines became the center of the American freak show.
Ozzy Osbourne is onstage. Lights slicing through smoke; guitars loud enough to rearrange your organs. The crowd is packed in tight. Denim and teenage adrenaline fill the auditorium.
Then something comes flying onto the stage. Small.
Dark. Flopping wings.
A bat.
Depending on who you ask, it was a rubber toy or
the real deal—a dead bat someone had brought like a twisted party favor. Either
way, it lands near Ozzy’s boots, and that’s when reality shifted.
Ozzy picks it up. And bites it. The crowd watches,
unsure how to react. They aren’t horrified. Just stunned. Like their brains
need a second to catch up and decide—is it part of the show or some new-fangled
Ozzy Voodoo ritual?
Then it hits. Screams. Cheers. Confused people,
unsure how to react.
Afterward, Ozzy said he thought it was rubber.
Maybe, but— There’s something unsettling about it. Grabbing something off the
ground and biting it.
The moment lives on, one of those stories
that’s too ridiculous to die. Forty years later, the legend persists. And the
question—reality or sideshow.
Wednesday, January 21, 2026
Skyjack Hill Motorcycle Climb - Carlisle, Iowa
Riders came from across the country for a motorcycle hill climb at Skyjack Hill, located five miles southeast of Carlisle, Iowa. The event was held on June 1, 1930.
The contest drew twelve professional riders from different parts
of the country, along with over 30 riders from Iowa and neighboring states.
Several well-known hill climb riders entered the contest.
Petrali of Chicago was listed as a national hill climb champion. Reiber of
Milwaukee entered as the runner-up from the previous year’s championship climb.
Art Erlenbaugh of Milwaukee also competed. He was reported to hold a hill climb
record of 6.25 seconds.
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.







