JERRY PERSON -- A Look Back
In the next two columns, we are going to look at the life of a
remarkable lady.
You may have driven Goldenwest Street, between Slater and Warner
avenues, and, nestled between much newer homes, is a much older home.
This was the Stricklin ranch house that belonged to Oscar and Sadie
Stricklin and their family.
This week, we will look at the early years of Sadie Stricklin and
learn of her many hardships. I contacted Sadie’s daughter, Phyllis
Bartimore, who graciously supplied me with a good deal of information on
her mother.
On Oct. 28, 1889, Sarah “Sadie†Jane Hatfield was the fourth child
born to Robert and Jane Hatfield. The Hatfield family also consisted of
eight other children -- Grace, William, Maude (who died in infancy),
Charlie, Pearl, Nell, Bob and Gertrude.
The family lived in Sand Ridge, Ill., in a one-room,
20-foot-by-30-foot house. It was heated by a wood stove. Sadie’s father
died at 48, and her mother cared for the family by working in the nearby
fields with her older children to supply food for the table. Once while
attending a one-room school, Sadie’s teacher wanted to come over to her
house, but Sadie made up an excuse because she was embarrassed by the
family’s poverty.
When Sadie was 11, she quit school and went to work keeping house at a
neighbor’s home. While working for Jimmy and Dessie McManus, 16-year-old
Sadie met a coal miner, Oscar Stricklin, who was related to the McManus
family and lived nearby. Oscar asked Sadie if she would go with him to
see a play.
Since neither had a horse and buggy, they walked. They saw each other
for a while, but the relationship cooled.
Two years later, she saw Oscar at the Murphysboro fair in southern
Illinois, and later, as they sat in the McManus’ swing, Oscar asked Sadie
to marry him.
Two weeks later, they were married in her sister Grace’s home by a
justice of the peace. While they only had $5 to their names, it cost
$2.50 to get married, cutting their finances in half.
That night, a group of young miners “shivareed†them -- shouting and
banging on the doors until they were given money to stop. Oscar gave them
their last $2.50. A short time later, a typhoid epidemic hit, and it was
Sadie who nursed six of Oscar’s family back to health. Sadie also was
stricken, but she recovered.
Oscar and Sadie were eventually able to buy a two-bedroom house on two
acres for $750 in Murphysboro, Ill. Their first child, Carl, was born
there in January 1910, and later a daughter, Wanda, and another son,
Pete, was born.
The family sold their house and moved to a larger one in Harrison,
Ill.
Sadie’s sister, Nell, and her aunt and uncle moved to California. Nell
wrote Sadie in 1919, telling her how wonderful it was out West, even
sending Sadie and the family oranges at Christmas.
Oscar was convinced that California was the place to see, but it took
some time to convince Sadie to make the six-day train trip. But before
Sadie would go, she had Oscar buy round-trip tickets.
My next column will focus on Sadie’s life in California and her life
and friends in Huntington Beach.
* JERRY PERSON is a local historian and longtime Huntington Beach
resident. If you have ideas for future columns, write him at P.O. Box
7182, Huntington Beach, CA 92615.
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