This advertisement for the Drake vs Cornell football game appeared in the Des Moines Register on September 30, 1923 Tickets were $1.00.
Saturday, December 13, 2025
Before Hollywood Had Rules: Iowa Actress Rita Bell's Wild Moment in Film
Rita Bell was born Marguerite Hughes Bell in 1893, back when the Midwest still believed it could raise children who would never leave. Iowa City was orderly and calm, a place that expected people to fit. Bell didn’t.
She sang her first part in an amateur performance in Iowa City while she was still a little girl, dressed in pinafores and wearing pigtails, standing on a small local stage and learning what it felt like to be seen.
She
changed her name to Rita Bell because the old name belonged to classrooms and
expectations. The new one fit on a program and was easy to remember.
This
wasn’t a movie story. Despite later guesswork, Rita Bell never worked in silent
films. Her career lived where voices mattered and mistakes were public—stages
and music halls, where you either held the room or you didn’t.
By
the early 1920s, she was working professionally. In 1922, she played the
ingenue role in The Spice of Life, produced by John Murray
Anderson. The role demanded charm without softness and confidence without
arrogance.
Friday, December 12, 2025
How Davenport Iowa Actress Patricia Barry Beat the Hollywood Trap
Patricia Barry was born Patricia White on November 16, 1922, in Davenport, Iowa. She learned early that talent wasn’t enough. You had to show up ready. Those lessons followed her east to Northwestern University, where she studied drama with the seriousness of someone planning a career, not a fantasy. By the time she headed west, she wasn’t chasing fame. She was chasing work.
Hollywood in the 1940s was crowded with hopefuls
and ruled by contracts. Barry signed with Warner Bros. She played intelligent
women, professionals, wives, secretaries with spine. An early reviewer
described her as “cool, composed, and believable in every frame,” a compliment
that followed her for decades.
Her early films came one after another, never
flashy, always solid. She appeared in thrillers, dramas, war pictures. In The
Window, she helped anchor a tense story without pulling focus. In O.S.S., she
brought calm authority to a wartime world built on suspicion. Then came The
Beast from 20,000 Fathoms, a film that leaned into spectacle while Barry did
what she always did—grounded the chaos. Critics noted she gave the film “a
human center amid the destruction,” a reminder that even genre pictures needed
actors who could sell reality.
Wednesday, December 10, 2025
Francis J. Herron Iowa's Hardest Charging General You've Never Heard Of
| General Francis J. Herron |
He was young. Thin. Sharp-eyed. The man people underestimated fast and then regretted it later.
He wasn’t born in Iowa, but Iowa made him. By the
time the war arrived, he was living in Dubuque, working as a banker. When the
first guns fired in 1861, Iowa answered with farms, factories, and young men
who barely knew how to hold a rifle. Herron joined the fight. A Dubuque paper
said he left “without hesitation, with the confidence of one who had already
chosen his duty.”
He helped raise the 1st Iowa Infantry and marched
off with them like someone who’d been waiting for the war to start. At Wilson’s
Creek in Missouri, his regiment was thrown straight into one of the war’s early
disasters. The Union lost the field. Men scattered. Smoke swallowed the hills.
A private later wrote, “The air was thick with lead and fear. The trees were
cut as with knives.”
Samuel Ryan Curtis and the Fight For the Frontier
| General Samuel Ryan Curtis |
But the war didn’t care what men looked like. Curtis had been a West Point engineer, a congressman from Iowa, and a man who believed in the Union the way farmers believe in fences. When the shooting started in 1861, he quit politics and picked up a sword at age fifty-six. Most men that age were done charging at anything. Curtis was just getting started.
Missouri was the problem. Torn in half. Bushwhackers in the trees. Guerrillas in the shadows. Everybody armed. Everybody angry. Confederate armies wanted it back. Union generals wanted to hold it. Civilians just wanted to survive. One Missouri paper called it “a land where every fence rail hides a rifle and every road leads to ambush.”
Curtis was sent in to clean it up.
In early 1862, the Confederates made their big gamble. General Earl Van Dorn gathered an army and marched north into Arkansas, aiming straight at Curtis. Win the fight. Take Missouri. Threaten the Mississippi. Shake the whole Western war loose. Southern papers bragged that Van Dorn intended “to march through Curtis as through dry leaves.”
Curtis saw it coming and didn’t blink. He planted his army along Little Sugar Creek near a place called Pea Ridge and waited. Ten thousand men. Cold ground. Wet boots. No retreat planned. If the Confederate army came, they would come straight into his teeth.
Tuesday, December 9, 2025
The Joye Sisters Betty Ballard and Bobby Jean Lewis
Betty Ballard and Bobby Jean Lewis, better known as the Joye Sisters, were a Des Moines singing duo in the 1920s and 1930s. They headed to Mexico in May 1928, but were forced to turn back after a series of unfortunate events.
While in El Paso, they saw two Negroes lynched for
attacking two white girls. That “horrible sight,” said Miss Ballard, “seemed to
forecast the nightmare” of events.
They were detained in Juarez, then sent home
because of the Revolution. They told reporters, “The queer taste of the Mexican
food and a rumor that the revolutionists were poisoning all the food made them
refrain from eating anything.”
No matter, the girls didn’t intend to let a bit of
bad luck discourage them. They planned to return to Mexico in a few months
after things cooled down.
Blood on the Beat: Remembering Des Moines Policeman Ollie Thomas
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| Policeman Ollie Thomas |
August 21, 1925, near Fourth and Grand.
Some poor bastard heard the first few go off and
thought it was just a car backfiring. Then two shots boomed louder than the
rest, the kind that don’t lie about what they are. Gunfire always has a
signature. Anyone who’s heard it knows when the lie ends.
Moments later, a bareheaded man came flying out of
an alley and tore east down Grand Avenue like hell had suddenly remembered his
address. The witness said the build looked right. The speed looked right. The
panic looked right. Bootlegger energy, all of it.
By the time the echoes finished bouncing off brick
and glass, Patrolman Ollie Thomas lay dead.
They found him crumpled at the bottom of a
stairway landing, soaked in his own blood. Two bullets did the job. One through
the abdomen. One through the head. Both traveling downward. That detail stuck
with the detectives like a splinter in the brain.



