John
Terry, 92, is one of the few remaining original homesteaders in the Basin.
Here, Terry visits the workshop he used as a base of operation for
ranching his land before losing his right leg in 1997.
There wasn’t
so much as a fencepost on the 240 acres they won in the land drawing of
1949. But the couple slowly made their way on the windswept acreage,
growing potatoes and other crops and raising cattle.
John
Terry will be 93 on April 9. He sat down recently to recall the high
points in his life that reached from his father’s farm in Missouri to his
years as a military policeman in the Southwest Pacific theater of
operations during World War II.
One
of Terry’s early memories involved a commotion in his parents’ house in
1920. It was a celebration because women had just won the right to vote.
Terry, who was barely 5 years old at the time, had little idea the ruckus
had historic significance.
‘Something
special’
“I
was just looking 4 for something to eat, but I think I knew something
special was going on,” he said.
Terry’s
father died when he was 7, and Terry stayed on in Missouri until he was
19. That’s when he struck out on his own, settling in Tulelake in 1934. He
did a variety of jobs, including loading hay bales for Klamath Basin Feed
Co., and surveying refuge roads as part of the Civilian Conservation
Corps.
There
was never any doubt that Terry would work the land, given his upbringing
on a farm.
“I
liked to grow things,” he said. “That’s the way we made our living. We
were always just darn farmers. After the war, I came back to Tulelake and
the real work began.”
He
recalled one temporary
job that involved hauling potatoes out of a cellar and loading them onto a
truck. Terry earned $1 per load and was paid with 60 silver dollars.
“I
thought I was the richest man in Tulelake,” he said.
He
farmed with a Tulelake
family and lived on their property before receiving land of his own and
beginning to homestead.
With
the exception of his military service, Terry has not been away from
Tulelake since arriving in 1934.
“He
knows so much about the history of Tulelake,” said Aline. “He was here
when they had dirt streets and board sidewalks.”
The
couple has been married 66 years. They spent their first year on the
homestead living in a metal shed from the Tulelake internment camp that
had no electricity. A year later they moved into their current house —
which also was relocated from the internment camp.
Terry
was a successful farmer. One time he got a bid from Campbell Soup Co. in
Sacramento to supply potatoes. He sent off the product, which filled
several refrigerated railroad cars.
On
the rails
Terry
said all the hay and grain, along with cattle, went out via the railroad
in those days.
Despite
long hours on the farm, he found time to serve as a 4-H leader for several
years. A plaque of thanks from the Tule Basin 4-H chapter hangs on his
living room wall.
The
family sold their 300-plus head of cattle in 1993, but Terry continued to
work the fields. However, he came into the house one day in 1997 with a
crippling
pain in his right leg.
He
thought it was a charley horse, but it turned out to be blood clots. Terry
was rushed to the hospital, where doctors amputated the leg.
Leasing
the land
His
health problems grew in 1998 when he suffered two strokes. He moves slowly
these days, but he still gets around with a walker and a battery-powered
scooter he uses outdoors. The Terrys continue to live on their homestead
and lease the
agricultural land.
Terry
keeps a sense of humor. Asked how he feels these days, he replied, “Like a
new Corvette that’s been run over by a train or two.”
He
has some advice about what it takes to live a long life.
“My
secret is to take it one day at a time, and do your best,” he said.
Aline,
who will be 84 next month, says her husband has a special quality.
“He’s
a tough old guy,” she said.