Tuesday, November 29, 2022

Robert Dean Draper (BOB) ~~~ A Mt. Pleasant Stalwart Citizen

 


1928 – 2022

Robert Dean Draper (Bob) passed away on Nov. 4, 2022, leaving a void in the world, and in the hearts of his loved ones.

Bob was born to Edward Clifton & Wilhelmina Christensen Draper on January 11, 1928, in Mt. Pleasant, Utah. He graduated from North Sanpete High School in 1946. He believed in hard work and at a very young age, he started logging and working in the family sawmill. They logged with large workhorses, and his dad used 2-man hand saws to cut down trees. Generations have been blessed with the sights, smells, and memories of the sawdust piles, the barn, rows of stacked logs, and fresh-cut lumber. Bob’s children, grandchildren, & great-grandchildren cherish the memories of him running the sawmill, and chainsaw.

Bob married his wife, Doris in 1949. They were blessed with 4 wonderful children: Barry, Tanna, Tammy, and Coy, 14 grandchildren, 37 great-grandchildren & 5 great, great-grandchildren. Bob and Doris were married for over 73 years and have lived in their Mt. Pleasant home for 40 years. Thru the years they have welcomed countless friends & family into their home to enjoy one of Doris’ delicious, homemade meals.

Bob has a great love for nature, animals, and the mountains. One of the mountains that Clifton, Bob, and Barry logged in was Twin Creek. Bob is known for building the road there, and over the years people built homes and gated off the road. (However, they honored Bob’s building it and provided him passage.)

Bob was a natural-born artist and loved to draw, paint and carve. In his later years, he combined his artistic talent with his skill of wielding a chainsaw. He became a renowned chainsaw carver, using only a chainsaw to carve fine details including a skewer-width Indian spear or the tender fetlock of a horse. He dominated chainsaw carving competitions and produced carvings that captured far more than met the eye. Bob has been featured in many magazine and newspaper articles, as well as TV shows. Most notably, the show “That’s Incredible” documented him carving and finishing one of his most prized pieces of art.

Bob was a devout servant of Jehovah and freely shared his beliefs. He is authentic, honest, and full of knowledge. He loved to show the kids and grandkids herds of elk or the beauty of a sunset, and he always gave credit to The Creator.

He is from “the old school” where right and wrong matter. His handshake was better than any legal document ever drafted. He had integrity, and compassion, and believed a man’s word meant everything. They don’t make ’em like him anymore!

He liked to put a smile on other people’s lips with his catchy little jokes and his sense of humor, (which he used right to the finish). When Bob was asked how he was doing he would often reply, “I’m Super Colossal” or “I’m in good shape for the shape I’m in.” Bob’s special way of wording or doing things, will continue to live through his posterity. His one granddaughter expressed it well by saying, “We try to emulate the qualities that grandpa taught us.”

 

Bob's friends & family are invited to share treasured memories in a way he would want to be remembered. Online condolences at rasmussenmortuary.com.

Monday, November 28, 2022

Home of Andrew Alonzo Cahoon and his wife Mary Ann Erickson ~~~ Researched and Compiled by Tudy Barentsen Standlee



Tudy is currently updating many of the homes as they have been sold and remodeled.   I love this home and spent much time there as a child when Miles and Jewel Sorensen lived there. 

 

Sunday, November 27, 2022

Home of William Marsh Farnworth and his wife Mary Yates ~~~ Researched and Compiled by Tudy Barentsen Standlee

Tudy is currently updating many of the homes as they have been sold and remodeled.   I love this home and spent much time there as a child when Miles and Jewel Sorensen lived there. 


 

Saturday, November 26, 2022

Do You Need A New Washer













Company history  *comes from wikipedia*

The Maytag Washing Machine Company was founded in 1893 by businessman Frederick Maytag. In 1925, Maytag Washing Machine Company became Maytag, Inc. Frederick's son Elmer Henry Maytag took over as president of the company from 1926 until his own death in 1940. In the early 1930s, photographer Theodor Horydczak took pictures of the plant and some of its workers.[1] During the Great Depression of the 1930s the company was one of the few to make a profit. In 1938, Maytag provoked strikes by the company's workers because of a 10% pay cut.[2] The company was able to beat the strike because of the intervention of four military companies, including a machine gun company, of the 113th Cavalry Regiment, Iowa National Guard.[3] At his father's death in 1940, Fred Maytag II, grandson of the founder, took over the presidency. During World War II, the company participated in war production by making special components for military equipment. In 1946, production of washing machines was resumed; in 1949, the first automatic washers were produced in a new, dedicated factory. In 1946, Maytag began marketing a separate line of ranges and refrigerators made by other companies under the Maytag name. During the Korean War, the company again produced parts for military equipment, although washing-machine production continued.

During the 1950s, the 'white goods,' or laundry and kitchen appliance industry, grew rapidly. Maytag first entered the commercial laundry field at this time, manufacturing washers and dryers for commercial self-service laundries and commercial operators. In response, other full-line appliance producers began to compete with Maytag in the white-goods consumer market. These included 'full-line' manufacturers such as Whirlpool, General Electric, Westinghouse, and Frigidaire, who built not only washing machines and dryers, but also refrigerators, stoves, and other appliances. Since Maytag was much smaller than the full-line producers, the company decided to limit itself to the manufacture of washers and dryers, alongside marketing ovens and refrigerators built by other companies, as a small, premium-brand manufacturer. The company capitalized on its reputation by renaming its corporate address in Newton, Iowa, "One Dependability Square".

By 1960, Maytag had ceased marketing ovens and refrigerators, but later started again to expand into kitchen appliances with its own design of portable kitchen dishwasher and a line of food-waste disposers. Upon the death in 1962 of Fred Maytag II, the last family member involved in the company's management, E. G. Higdon was named president of the company, with George M. Umbreit becoming chairman and CEO. By the late 1970s, over 70 percent of U.S. households were equipped with washers and dryers, and with approximately 18,000 employees worldwide, the company was established as a dominant manufacturer of large laundry appliances. After the company's acquisition of Magic Chef, Inc., in 1986, a move which nearly doubled its size, the company acquired a new corporate name, Maytag Corporation.

In 1988, Maytag acquired Chicago Pacific Corporation, which was formed using the remnants of the bankrupt Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railroad. Chicago Pacific Corporation owned Hoover US and Hoover UK as well as Thomasville Brand Furniture. Maytag quickly sold off the Thomasville Furniture brand. Maytag Corporation, led by Chairman Daniel Krumm, next planned to make Maytag a worldwide organization.[4] The UK part of Hoover was to help Maytag expand into Europe. Hoover UK was not doing well financially and offered customers a round-trip ticket anywhere if they purchased a vacuum. This campaign cost the corporation $50 million to settle. Subsequently, Maytag sold off Hoover UK. This was a huge setback for the amount of cash Maytag had in hand and thus started the downward spiral financially.

In 1991 Maytag built a new plant in Jackson, Tennessee, for the manufacture of newly designed plastic tub dishwashers. The Plastic tub was developed in Newton, Iowa, but in 1996 Engineering was transferred to Jackson because Mr. Len Hadley, then president of Maytag Corporation, wanted the plant to be self-sufficient. This engineering team engineered a Stainless Steel dishwasher, Tall-Tub Plastic and Tall-Tub Stainless steel product. Engineering crescendoed with a Double Drawer dishwasher which today is manufactured in Findlay Ohio at the Whirlpool Plant, the only Maytag legacy product built in the Whirlpool Appliance line-up. The Jackson plant evolved into a streamlined manufacturing facility that could build thousands of dishwashers daily on multiple lines. This plant was the most efficient plant and was a hallmark for other facilities. Whirlpool closed this plant in 2009.

In 1997, Maytag Corporation purchased G.S. Blodgett Corporation, a maker of commercial ovens. At the time of this purchase Maytag was looking at the Turbo Chef line they had been working on up to this point.

Prior to 1997, the Maytag engineering team, at Maytag Laundry Appliances Research and Development, developed the Maytag Neptune line of front-load washers.[5] A matching dryer was introduced to accompany the new washer. The company claimed that the new Neptune model saved energy costs over traditional washer/dryer sets. Production of the Neptune line was later switched to Samsung Electronics. In 2001, the company acquired the Amana Corporation and its appliance assembly facilities. That same year, Ralph F. Hake became the last chairman and chief executive officer (CEO) of Maytag Corporation, serving in that post until March 2006. Once renowned as the standard for laundry appliances, by 2003 the company faced increasing competition from new appliance brands in the US market, as well as from existing appliance manufacturers who had outsourced production a decade earlier in order to reduce costs.[6][7] While Maytag had begun the process of shifting appliance production to lower-cost assembly plants outside the United States, in 2004 the company was still producing 88 percent of its products in older U.S.-based factories.[8] In an apparent move away from traditional company marketing strategy, company management decided on a plan to stimulate consumer purchases of new Maytag appliances before their old ones had worn out.[9]

Costs incurred in Maytag's acquisition and integration of Amana and an increased corporate debt load led to aggressive internal cost-cutting efforts in direct materials, manufacturing, and distribution costs.[8][10] Maytag introduced a value-priced appliance line under a separate label, Performa by Maytag. To increase sales, the company also marketed Maytag-branded 'Legacy Series' washing machines that were otherwise identical to low-end Amana models, and built at the formerly Amana assembly plant in Searcy, Arkansas. The rebranded Maytag models, later termed Amanatags by dissatisfied owners, received poor customer reviews after reports surfaced of major mechanical and/or durability problems.[11][12] The company also consolidated warehouse operations and cut the number of Maytag vendors. Between 2002 and 2004, Maytag corporate management cut new-product investment by 50%.[8]

An increasing chorus of consumer complaints concerning product reliability and customer service, assisted by the rapid growth of internet consumer forums, began to affect the company's reputation with customers.[13][14][15][16] The company was also slow to react to customer complaints regarding its flagship Neptune washer and dryer line (labeled the Stinkomatic by dissatisfied customers because they would become moldy in a way that could not be easily cleaned), resulting in further damage to the company's reputation and a $33.5 million payout to settle several class-action lawsuits arising from the Neptune problems.[17][18][19][20] By 2005, Maytag's market share had declined to all-time lows, sales were flat, and customer satisfaction surveys ranked Maytag near the bottom of the appliance field.[8] The problems with the Neptune line continued; in 2007, 250,000 Neptune washing machines became part of a nationwide safety recall by the Consumer Product Safety Commission due to fire danger.[21]

In 2005, Haier sought to expand its share of foreign markets by acquiring rival white-goods OEMs and by expanding overseas production capacity. With backing from two large U.S. private equity funds, Haier made a bid to acquire U.S. appliance maker Maytag for $1.28 billion. The bid failed and Maytag was bought by Whirlpool for $1.7 billion.[22]

On April 1, 2006, Whirlpool completed its acquisition of Maytag Corporation. In May 2006, Whirlpool announced plans to close the former Maytag headquarters office in Newton, as well as laundry product manufacturing plants in Newton, IowaHerrin, Illinois; and Searcy, Arkansas by 2007.[23] Following the Maytag headquarters closure, all brand administration was transferred to Whirlpool's headquarters in Benton Harbor, Michigan. The Maytag name would now be used on Whirlpool-designed appliances. Most Maytag employees were terminated, but some were offered jobs at Whirlpool. The board of directors of Maytag all received five years' severance pay.[citation needed] Former Maytag chairman and CEO, Ralph F. Hake, received two years' base salary and two years' target bonus under his severance agreement.[24]

Museum exhibit in Amberley Museum. Hotpoint Maytag 'Gyrofoam' washing machine, circa 1927

On January 1, 2009, Maytag (under the ownership of the Whirlpool Corp.) changed the vested lifetime benefits of the Maytag retirees. There is a lawsuit pending in the Southern District Court of Iowa where Whirlpool has asked for permission to change the UAW bargained benefits. The benefits in question were subsequently changed despite any resolution of the lawsuit.

Chronology[edit]

YearEvent
1893Frederick Louis Maytag, his two brothers-in-law, and George W. Parsons each contributed $600 for a total of $2,400 to start a new farm implement company named Parsons Band-Cutter & Self Feeder Company. They produced threshing machines, band-cutters, and self-feeder attachments invented by Parsons.
1893Threshing machine-related injuries were all too common, and a strong need for a safer threshing machine was present. The company successfully met this need by developing a threshing machine feeder, a device which fed straw more safely into the threshing cylinder.
1902The company was the largest feeder manufacturer in the world, and, by 1904, the Ruth was the most popular model.
1905Maytag introduced the Success Corn Husker and Shredder.
1907Maytag's first washing machine, the "Pastime", was produced. F.L. Maytag decided to produce these machines during the periods of seasonally related downturns in farm-implement sales. The "Pastime" washers used a wooden tub. A dolly was turned by a hand crank via wooden pegs. This turning action would pull clothes through the water and force the clothes along the corrugated tub sides producing cleaning action. A pulley allowed the machine to be operated from an outside power source such as a tractor or a windmill.
1911A model of the Pastime with an electric motor was unveiled.
1915Maytag developed its Multi-Motor gasoline-engine washer. This allowed customers in rural areas without electricity to utilize the automatic washers.
1919The first aluminum washer tub was produced by Maytag. Prior to this, it had been believed in the industry that aluminum tub washers could not be built. This aluminum tub proved to have numerous advantages over the wooden tub, which had issues with leaking and rotting.
1920L. B. Maytag, son of the company's founder, began serving as company president.
1922Howard Snyder invented the vaned agitator. The agitator is placed inside the tub and mounted in the bottom of the tub. The concept was that, instead of washboarding or dragging the clothes, they would be gently agitated. Maytag first introduced this new washer, the 'Gyrafoam', and became exclusively an appliance company.
1924By 1924, one of every five washing machines were made by Maytag in Newton, IA.
1924Maytag introduced its first iron.
1925Maytag was listed on the New York Stock Exchange.
1926The company was now headed by Elmer Henry Maytag, another son of F.L. Maytag.
1926On October 12, five trainloads packed full with Maytag Washers were shipped out to the country. At this time, it was the world's largest single shipment of merchandise. Maytag broke its own record in May 1927, and shipped out eight trainloads.
1927Maytag had produced over a million washers.
1929Maytag realized earnings of $6,838,883, a pre-war high. Maytag also survived the Great Depression without having a loss for any year.
1934Maytag begins production of Maytag Toy Racer automobiles on October 11.
1938Maytag hit by strikes because of 10% pay cut, survives labor unrest only through intervention and backing of four troops (companies) of the 113th Cavalry, Iowa National Guard.[3]
1940E. H. Maytag died and his son, Frederick Louis Maytag II (grandson of F.L. Maytag), became Maytag's head at the age of 29.
1941Maytag Toy Racer production ends on December 1. During World War II Maytag no longer produced washing machines and instead concentrated on the war effort. From 1941 to 1945, Maytag made design improvements on, and manufactured special components for, military airplanes. These parts were used in sixteen different types of combat aircraft, including the B-29 Super Fortress, the B-17 Flying FortressB-26 Marauder, and the P-51 Mustang.
1946The war ended and washing machine manufacturing was geared back up in Newton, IA. Maytag began selling ranges and refrigerators.
1948Maytag's second plant was opened in Newton, Iowa. This facility manufactured Maytag's first automatic washers, the "AMP", introduced that year. This was the start of a new age in washing machines for Maytag.
1951The Korean War was underway, and Maytag built parts for tanks and other military equipment alongside the washing machines.
1953Maytag introduced its first automatic dryer.
1954Maytag's first television advertisement was aired.
1958Maytag introduced the commercial coin-slide washers used in laundromats.
1961Maytag's corporate headquarters building was dedicated.
1962Upon the death of F. L. Maytag II, George M. Unibreit became chairman of the board and chief executive officer, and E.G. Higdon was named president. The company would never again be led by a Maytag family member.
1966Maytag produced its first line of portable dishwashers. Licensed its first Maytag home appliance center.
1967Character actor Jesse White appears in the first "Maytag Repairman" TV commercial.
1972Daniel L. Krumm succeeded E.G. Higdon as Maytag president and treasurer, and two years later he was named chief executive officer.
1975Maytag introduced Maytag-equipped home style laundries.
1981Maytag acquired Hardwick Stove Company.
1983Maytag discontinued production of wringer washers, after 76 years.
1985Maytag introduced the first-ever stacked washer/dryer.
1986The Maytag Company became the Maytag Corporation. It acquired Magic Chef and Norge Appliance Company, and started selling a full line of appliances.
1987Maytag Corporation added a line of front-loading commercial washers.
1989Maytag acquired the Chicago Pacific Corporation, parent of Hoover.
1989Gordon Jump of WKRP in Cincinnati fame first appears as The Maytag Repairman.
1991Maytag contracted with Montgomery Ward & Co, who had previously sold its own brand of appliances which were manufactured by Norge Appliance Company (Owned by Magic Chef and later acquired along with Magic Chef by Maytag in 1986.) for the exclusive use of the Admiral brand (acquired in the Magic Chef/Norge acquisition) on its consumer electronic goods. (Following Montgomery Ward & Co's bankruptcy and the closure of all its stores in 2002 Admiral would later become exclusive to Home Depot after Whirlpool acquired Maytag).
1992Maytag began manufacturing dishwashers in Jackson, Tennessee.
1994Hoover introduced the first SteamVac extractors.
1997Maytag introduced the first domestically produced high-efficiency washer, the Maytag Neptune. Manufacture of these products were later switched to Samsung Electronics in Korea.
2001Maytag acquired Amana. Maytag relabels some Amana-built models with the 'Maytag' brand, selling them as Maytag products.
2002A class-action lawsuit is filed against the company on behalf of Neptune washing machine consumers.
2004Maytag Corporation announces a loss of $9 million.
2005Maytag became the subject of a takeover battle between a private investment group in the United States. (Ripplewood); a three party group composed of Blackstone, Baird and Haier Corporation, a Chinese appliance manufacturer; and the Whirlpool Corporation. On December 22, Maytag stockholders agreed to sell Maytag to Whirlpool, ending Maytag's 112-year history as an independent company.
2006On March 31, Whirlpool completed its acquisition of Maytag and began integrating the two appliance companies.

Thursday, November 24, 2022

The Mother of Thanksgiving ~~~ Shared by Larry Staker ~~~ Also Steve Willardsen

 Sarah Beth Hale  ~~~ A Glenn Rawson Story

For the day we call Thanksgiving and the Holiday we celebrate together, we owe our thanks to Sarah Buell Hale.

Have a wonderful Thanksgiving,

  • The music and song featured on today's video: For the Beauty of the Earth by Jason Tonioli.
  • For a relaxing Sunday playlist with over 25 hours of hymns featuring several of the artists that have helped me and are featured on my weekly stories, you can click here.



    
 Steve Willardsen  of Ephraim  2013



A SIGHT TO BEHOLD ~~~ Elizabeth Jacobsen

 Elizabeth Jacobsen Story 

1513 Madison Avenue Cheyenne, Wyoming 82001

 Non-Professional Division Honorable Mention Anecdote

 In the early days before the turn of the century and up until 1903, the sheep owners and cattle owners of Sanpete could graze their flocks of sheep or their herds of cattle on the Wasatch Plateau east of Sanpete County absolutely free. Then in the winter, they would move the herds down from the mountain pastures to the East Desert -- or to the West Desert. 

The West Desert was Jericho where most of the Mt. Pleasant livestock were taken. The sheep were herded by young men from Mt. Pleasant, some of whose families owned the livestock.  

It was a pleasant job for a young man to spend his summer on the mountain and to have his own horse and sheep camp wagon, with a white canvas cover for his shelter and, inside, a stove and table and bed. Each herder had his sheep dogs to help him control the herd.

 In the morning there was much work to be done and also in the evening to get the herds bedded down for night time, but in the afternoon there was time for the herder to spend as he pleased while the sheep were resting in the shade of the trees. 

Some boys rode their horses, some rested and some spent hours foolishly carving names on the lovely white-barked Aspen trees with their pocket knives; but there was one boy from Mt. Pleasant who did not waste his time or talent. Each afternoon he got out his paints, brushes, and turpentine and painted lovely things -- birds, trees, horses, small animals, and his dogs and sheep and the lovely mountains and streams.  

Then at the end of the summer when it was time to bring the herds west to Mt. Pleasant and over to the West Desert, they all came with their sheep—camp wagons down to the valley. Some wagons and herders were not needed on the Desert. Many of the camps were left in Mt. Pleasant until needed again in the springtime of the next year. 

The young herder I most admire was the one who had painted lovely things on the entire space of his new white canvas wagon top. Both outside and, would you believe it, inside as well. It was truly a "Sight to Behold." 

This painted wagon was pulled into the Madsen ranch barnyard, and needless to say, the artist was very proud of his work., Every- one came from far and near to see it - it was very colorful and T, for one, wish I could have seen it. It should have been saved along with many other lovely things from the past that we have lost.

Wednesday, November 16, 2022

Random Photos From the Mt. Pleasant Pyramid

When the Mt. Pleasant Pyramid Office was moved to Springville these photos were given to us to share at the Relic Home.  Some do not have names or descriptions.  Let us know if you can add any details. 

No names given