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The good old days in Homer

There, life was an Odyssey

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I haven’t been back to Homer for a long time. The last time I was there, I drove by the old house, but the ancient, red barn, where I used to jump out of the hayloft, was gone. It’s always a little sad to see such an icon of one’s youth disappear from the landscape.

Grandma and Grandpa’s house on South Ellen Street wasn’t real big, but there might have been 25 or so people sleeping there over a holiday. Some of us would bunk in the garage where the older cousins convinced us that bats would swoop down in the middle of the night. It didn’t help that the abandoned mansion across the street had to be haunted.

The space between the house and barn was large enough for a football game. If there weren’t enough interested players for football, the barn was a treasure trove waiting to be explored. Grandpa was a bargain hunter and frequented auctions, so the barn and garage were filled with beds, dressers and assorted junk.

Up in the hayloft, there was a hand-hewn beam that stretched across the width of the room, effectively partitioning off about a third of the space. The massive beam could be a pirate’s plank, a dining table or an airport runway depending on what game was being played. Those were the days when a kid’s imagination was the cornerstone of entertainment.

My paternal grandparents had 18 grandchildren and most of us have children of our own. We’re spread all over the country with a few overseas. We’re all products of our environment and heredity, so that means there’s at least a little bit of small-town Homer influence spread around the world.

Notable people from Homer include former P.O.W. Paul Lewis (Iranian hostage) and Indiana Gov. Frank Hanly, a presidential candidate during Prohibition. Indians forced to relocate in 1838 camped near Homer as part of the “Trail of Death.”

All of these little towns have their stories about famous residents and events, and it all weaves together as part of the history of the state, the nation and the world.

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