|
|
“If they had just had the gall, they could have taken Cincinnati in a
minute.”
The man who said that was talking about war . . .not the war you are
thinking about, for the one he was referring to and the conflict of
today have distinct differences . . .in many ways.
Eighty-four-year-old August Hauer was talking about the Civil War, whose
proper name in these modern times is termed “The War Between the
States.” The date Mr. Haur recalled happens to have been 1863, and not
this streamlined era of 1943.
Nice Gentlemen
Yes, as a barefoot boy of four years, he walked through an encampment of
about 40,000 Confederate soldiers on the then farming area which is now
an exclusive residential section of Kentucky on the Dixie Highway across
from Retchulte’s Inn.
Mr. Hauer, whose memory is perfect even down to naming many specific
dates, tells of how the “rebel” soldiers had parked their covered wagons
on one side of a large pond, and themselves on the other. There was
“hardly enough room to walk between the wagons,” the veteran Kenton
county resident recalls.
He says the southerners were “nice gentlemen,” and the he and his
father, the late Jacob Hauer, would walk through their midst every day
and talk to them.
“No Fighting”
The Confederate warriors remained in encampment two or three weeks, then
“one morning we got up and they were gone,” Mr. Hauer relates. There
wasn’t any fighting in Kenton county during all of the Civil War, but
the “Rebels” could have “blown Cincinnati off the face of the earth,”
the subject of our interview contends. He explains there was a Fort
Mitchell, where Fort Mitchell heights is now, Fort Perry, and another
fort or encampment of Northern soldiers near Kyles lane, but the
“Yankees” were not at those locations in large numbers. They could have
been overpowered by the southerners with very little trouble, he
believes.
As he continues to tell of this historical period in America’s struggle
to build a sound democracy, Mr. Hauer, who celebrated his 84th birthday
lat Friday, relates how a group of Yankee soldiers came to the same
camping ground on the Dixie highway where the Southerners had been
“three or four days” after the later had departed.
“Yankees Mean”
The Yankee soldiers were “mean,” Mr. Hauer says, as
he tells of an incident when one of them deliberately sot one of his
father’s chickens and “didn’t even pick it up.” The elder Mr. Hauer had
plenty to say about this affair and threatened to report the soldiers to
their superiors. He tells of an encampment of Southern soldiers later
located on top of the hill back of Sandford on the LLL Highway.
Differences between fighting in Civil War times and the present days are
seen as Mr. Hauer describes the weapons used by the soldiers that he
viewed as a young boy. Also, they did not carry tents in those days, but
instead slept in their covered wagons or on the ground.
Mr. Hauer’s father operated a roadhouse across the Dixie Highway from
where the estate of the late George W. Hill, Covington grocer, is
located. And Mr. Hauer has a vivid recollection of an occurrence there
after the Civil War had ended in 1865.
A group of Negroes, elated over the outcome of the war, rode along the
Dixie Highway, then known as the Lexington Turnpike, and brought their
horses to a stop in front of the Hauer roadhouse.
Helped Himself
One of them went inside, and when Mr. Hauer was busy with a number of
customers in another part of the building, helped himself to a bottle of
ale. The customers were men whose occupation was burning charcoal, known
as “charcoal burners.” The rushed from the roadhouse and the Negro was
made very sorry for his conduct.
Talking of war conditions, Mr. Hauer says, “everything was awfully high”
during Civil War days. Flour sold for $16 a barrel. While many products
brought excessive prices, he remembers that ale sold for 15 cents a
quart and whiskey at 17 cents a gallon…” and, by golly, that was good
whiskey,” the subject of our interview aid with a smile and a tone of
voice which emphasized the recollections that were his.
The area from Kyles Lane to Erlanger was a farming section in those
days, and Mr. Hauer tells of there being only four farms to comprise
that area between the lane and what is now the Shinkle property near
Dudley Pike. He tells too of many noted characters of that day. Mr.
Hauer operated a dairy farm “on the shares” for the late John L Sandford,
and was working for him at the time he was shot down by William Goebel,
later Kentucky’s martyr governor, on a downtown Covington street.
Recalls Hudson
Among those he remembers was a man named Shelly Hudson, one time
operator of a tobacco factory on Madison avenue in Covington. There was
a saloon across the street from the factory. Mr. Hudson, known as a
“great shot,” saw one man strike another with a bottle of beer, and shot
the bottle from his hand before he could do much further damage with it.
And, upon another occasion, Mr. Hudson drove a buggy pulled by two
horses through the Cincinnati Arcade in answer to a $500 wager…and then
had to pay the entire sum as a fine levied by the Cincinnati
authorities.
Jack Leathers was a prominent Kenton countian of those days, owning 3000
acres on both sides of the Dixie Highway and which was later developed
into South Fort Mitchell.
Knows the Dates
Mr. Hauer calls off dates of various events just as you would name the
date of your own birthday. Did he remember the building of the Southern
Railroad? Yes, tht was in 1875. And, Mr. Hauer recalls seeing 50 mules
being used in moving dirt along the railroad rights-of-way, none of
which had drivers to direct them. The winter of 1882 saw the thermometer
drop to 20 degrees below zero, and Mr. Hauer assisted in the storage of
ice from the ponds that were frozen to the bottom…with sleds being
driven upon them to haul away the ice.
Mr. Hauer, who walked to the Guardian Angels Parochial School in
Sandfordtown during his early days, later bought his “old home place” on
Horsebranch, and lives there today. He is very active for his age, reads
very nicely and has never been aided in this by eyeglasses, and is a
constant radio fan…listening all day long sometimes.
Physically Fit
His physical condition is good, except for some annoyance with his legs.
. .but this is not unusual considering the fact that buckshot from two
shotguns struck those legs at the same time back in 1920. He was hunting
with two companions near Richwood, on the Dixie Highway. They both shot
at a rabbit, striking Mr. Hauer instead. He remarks, “I could have
gotten the rabbit very easily, because he was only fifty yards away.”
His lets work alright, but the effects of the injury bring about
occasional pains.
Mr. Hauer married Miss Elizabeth Levi. She died in 1904. They had ten
children, seven of whom are living. One of these is John Hauer who
operated a restaurant and garage at the end of the Ft. Mitchell
streetcar line for a number of years. Mr. Hauer, who is careful with his
health, says alcoholic beverages have never damaged him. “Whiskey
doesn’t hurt anybody if they don’t drink too much of it,” he says. .
.and proves it by starting each day with a hot toddy.
|