Friday, December 19, 2025

A Speaker Without Swagger: The Iowa Politician Who Didn't Need It

David Bremmer Henderson
David Bremner Henderson was born in Scotland in 1840, brought to America as a boy, and raised in the Midwest, where reliability mattered more than ambition. That background stayed with him, even after he reached the highest levels of power.

When the Civil War broke out, Henderson joined the Union Army. He expected the war to be short. Most people did. It wasn’t. He was shot in the neck. Later he was shot again, this time in the leg. Part of that leg was taken off, and he walked with a limp for the rest of his life. Years later, he summed up the experience with characteristic restraint. “War is not a parade.” He didn’t elaborate. He didn’t need to.

After the war, he went back to Iowa. He became a lawyer, married, and stayed involved in his community. He didn’t trade on his injuries or his service. He believed that surviving carried responsibilities, not privileges.

Politics eventually found him anyway.

Henderson entered Congress in the early 1880s and stayed there for twenty years, representing Iowa’s 3rd District. Washington was loud and combative in those days, but Henderson wasn’t interested in volume. He listened more than he talked. A colleague said he had  “the manner of a man who had already seen the worst that could happen.”

Wednesday, December 17, 2025

Book Review: Whatever It Took by Henry Langrehr

Henry Langrehr came from Clinton, Iowa. A river town. Factories, cold winters, work that didn’t ask how you felt. That kind of place teaches you to endure before it teaches you to dream. 

On June 6, 1944, he jumped into France with the 82nd Airborne. The sky over Normandy was shredded with anti-aircraft fire. Men were hit in the air. Some never reached the ground. Langrehr crashed through the glass roof of a greenhouse in Sainte-Mère-Église and kept moving because stopping meant dying.

 

The drop was chaos. Units were scattered. Orders didn’t exist. The survivors fought German tanks with rifles and nerve. Most of the men he trained with were gone within days. On June 29, he was captured.

 

From there, the war showed its real face.

 

Langrehr was held near a death camp and saw what the Nazis called efficiency. People marched to their deaths. Bodies stacked like lumber. It wasn’t rumor or ideology. It was machinery. He watched because he had no choice.

Bringing Christmas Home: How Evergreen Trees Came to Iowa

Christmas trees weren’t a big deal on the Iowa frontier. Not at first, anyway.

For many early settlers, Christmas was quiet. Sometimes it meant church. Sometimes, nothing at all. Winter was hard. Money was tight. There was wood to cut, animals to feed, and snow to shovel. Decorating a tree wasn’t high on the list.

 

The truth was, a lot of early Iowans didn’t know what a Christmas tree was. One widely reprinted explanation in American newspapers during the 1850s tried to spell it out plainly, calling it “a German custom, recently introduced into this country, and designed chiefly for the delight of children.”

 

The idea came west with German immigrants in the 1830s and 1840s, in places like Dubuque, Davenport, and Burlington. Back home, they’d grown up with evergreen trees brought indoors and lit with candles. When they did the same thing in Iowa, their neighbors didn’t know what to think.

Monday, December 15, 2025

Henry Cantwell Wallace The Farmer Who Wouldn't Shut Up

Henry Cantwell Wallace was born in 1866, just after the Civil War finished. Rock Island, Illinois, on paper. Iowa in practice. Adair County dirt under his boots. Weather in his bones. A place where optimism depended on rainfall and a man learned early that effort didn’t guarantee reward.

His father preached the gospel and edited farm papers with the same intensity. Faith, soil, and justice were all part of the same equation in the Wallace household. Dinner wasn’t quiet. It was arguments about land, debt, and whether America would eventually remember who kept the lights on. Young Henry absorbed it all and went off to Iowa State believing, dangerously, that facts might matter.

He studied agriculture when it was still half science and half superstition. Graduated in 1892, convinced that farmers weren’t failing because they were lazy or dumb, but because the system was rigged to chew them up and move on. He would later write that the farmer’s greatest need was not harder work, but better knowledge. This wasn’t a popular opinion among men who profited from confusion.

Sunday, December 14, 2025

Radio Station WOC Davenport Iowa


Dr. Frank W. Elliott, vice president and business manager of Palmer School of Chiropractic (left), was in charge of the WOC radio station at Davenport. Peter McArthur (right), worked as an announcer on the station.

An accompanying article said the station’s slogan was: “Where the west begins and in the state where the tall corn grows.”

At the time the article was written in 1925, the station was “selling good will.” Its advertising was “wholly indirect.” It discouraged “any direct selling methods.”

How times have changed.

Picture: Des Moines Register. December 6, 1925.

Iowa's Misfit Band: Susie's Kitchen Kabinet Band

Susie's Kitchen Kabinet Band
It wasn’t like any band people were used to seeing.

The instruments didn’t come from a music store. They came from the kitchen. Dish pans. Tin spoons. Pie plates. Curtain rods. Flour sifters. Everything was bent, soldered, and turned into something that could make noise.

Every instrument started out as a household object.

One of them had a kazoo soldered right into the mouthpiece. The violin player skipped the soldering altogether and just held a kazoo in her mouth while she played.

It worked better than it had any right to.

Knecht Ruprecht Santa's Not So Nice Helper

Knecht Ruprecht didn’t come to Iowa breathing fire or dragging chains. He came the way most serious ideas do, riding along in a trunk with winter coats and hymnals, carried by people who expected children to behave and winters to mean business.

German immigrants brought St. Nicholas with them. They also brought the understanding that December wasn’t just about treats. It was about judgment. Somewhere in the old country, St. Nicholas had a helper whose job was to remember the bad stuff. His name was Knecht Ruprecht.

In Iowa, the name didn’t stick, but the job did.

Old Iowa newspapers talk about St. Nicholas visiting schools and churches. Kids lined up in their good clothes. Songs were sung. Candy was handed out. Then, tucked into those cheerful little reports, something uncomfortable crept in. A rod. A switch. A warning that not every child would be pleased with the visit.