A4 • Friday, July 12, 2019 | Seaside Signal | SeasideSignal.com SignalViewpoints A happy 100th to Morey Morehouse! SEEN FROM SEASIDE R.J. MARX A nsell “Morey” Morehouse turned 100 years old on July 10 and friends Eric Beal and Bob Cook of Amer- ican Legion Post 99 want to lead the celebration. The great Seaside chronicler Claire Lovell — Hedda Hopper and Louella Par- sons rolled up into one — wrote this of Morehouse: “Ansell Morehouse knows dozens of stories. As some of you may know, Morey once played ‘golf’ with Jack Kennedy in Manchester, Massachusetts, when they were about 17 and 19 years old, respec- tively. They buried Campbell’s soup cans in the grass for cups and used Jack’s clubs to play around the ‘course.’” Morehouse came to Oregon as part of the Civilian Conservation Corps, the nationwide public works program as part of Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal, insti- tuted in the 1930s. Corps projects included Ecola State Park, which opened in 1936; the Sunset Highway; even the fi re lookout on Saddle Mountain. Morehouse entered World War II with the U.S. Merchant Marine and later the Navy, where he met his wife, Sandy, stand- ing “4-foot-10 and about 90 pounds,” according to Cook. After the war, Morehouse moved to Seaside permanently, where he raised a son, Rick, and worked as a salesman for Roehm’s Furniture. Morehouse had been a bosun’s mate in the Navy and had a Navy expression for every problem on the job, family member Jeff Roehm said. “We hired Morey away from Cam Lars- en’s grocery mostly because my mother, who passed away in 1951, really liked him. He was our fi rst employee along with Har- vey Brooks who didn’t have the name ‘Roehm.’” Roehm remembers Morehouse as “always happy and upbeat and really fun to work with, my fi rst ‘boss’ when I worked for my dad back in the mid-50s.” Morehouse started calling bingo for the American Legion when the post was “out on the Prom,” Cook said, on the top fl oor of the natatorium building at the Turnaround. Bingo raised so much money that Legion members devoted resources to the property it stands on today, at 1315 Broadway. Cook credits Morehouse, along with John Raniero, Frank Roshay and Les Mor- ris, among many, for the purchase of 18 lots at the eastern end of Broadway, before a bridge spanned the Neawanna River. Volunteers came up with some cre- entifi ed. at left is unid an m e th r; Roehm, cente t right; Gene n o fr , 1950s. se u o h 940s or early 1 Morey More te la e th m s it is fro Roehm believe Morey Morehouse celebrated his 100th birthday on July 10. ative ideas during the Legion’s construc- tion. “Every time the tide would come in or out, the soil came out,” Cook said. “Refrig- erators, stoves, washers, dryers and any- thing possible was used as riprap to stop the erosion.” Morehouse took care of his wife, Sandy, at home for 13 years, doing everything for her, columnist Lovell wrote in 2008. “She had several physical problems, any one of which could have been fatal, but he was such a good nurse to her that she lived hap- pily and well for many extra years.” When Sandy Morehouse entered assisted living, Morey Morehouse became a “den father” to other residents, Cook added. “He took care of her, then talked to everybody else in the home. He knew everybody in the county because he called bingo for 50 years.” A former fi re department volunteer, Sea- side Fire Div. Chief Chris Dugan describes Morehouse “as a member of the department when the volunteerism was true.” , Jeff While undated Everybody, from the chief to the brand new fi refi ghters, were volunteers, Dugan said. “There was no money involved. Any money that went to the fi re department went to the equipment and the building. The city did their part, but it really relied on volun- teers to get that fi re department going. Like Roscoe Larkins, Clarence Owens — and even as late as Glenn Bard and George Lar- fi eld — he fi ts into the names of the history of the department.” Morehouse entered Suzanne Elise in 2014, where he lives today. Morehouse’s son Rick and his daugh- er-in-law, military veterans, both died as a result of exposure to Agent Orange, Cook said. After the death of Pearl Harbor survivor Bill Thomas, who died at age 95 in Decem- ber 2016, Morehouse unoffi cially became Seaside’s oldest living veteran. At Suzanne Elise, Morehouse is sur- rounded by friends and supporters. Judy Pesonen helps with his care, with com- panionship from community members like Beal, Cook, Roehm and Dugan, among many others. Happy 100th to Ansell “Morey” Morehouse, a salute to a remarkable achievement. The caboose is loose, and gets new life at Wheel Fun Rentals CABOOSE VIEW FROM THE PORCH The caboose is loose (and right behind Wheel Fun Rentals). EVE MARX I f you’re inclined toward observation, you may have noticed something out of the ordinary on South Holladay Drive, not far from Broadway. It’s a rail- road car, a caboose in fact. Its owner, Patrick Duhachek, owner of Wheel Fun Rentals, says it’s 116 years old. After being used as a piece of playground equipment in Clatskanie, in the early 1990s it belonged to the Astoria Railroad Preservation Association where it sat on the property of a lawn and garden shop. Now Duhachek, the caboose’s new owner, has set his mind to restore it. Once upon a time when the caboose was a working railroad car affi xed to a train, it ran between Spokane and Port- land, or between Portland and Eugene. As far as Duhachek can determine, Caboose No. 026 was built in the Northern Pacifi c Railroad shop in Tacoma, for use on the Willamette Valley Line. The working history of the caboose is, at least for now, a bit unclear; it may have been used at times on freight trains as a rolling offi ce or observation car, and it also may have been used to protect the rear end of the train when the train was in the terminal. The caboose was also a rolling home for train crew, including the conductor and the rear brakeman and the fl agman. Although the caboose is just a shell now, at one time it was fi tted with a desk PUBLISHER EDITOR Kari Borgen R.J. Marx The caboose is transported to Wheel Fun in Seaside. for railroad paperwork involving bills, wheel reports, and timekeeping. It’s easy to see where there was room for three bunks, a fold-down table, an icebox and food storage, as well as a stove, a water tank, a sink and a toilet. Built in 1903, this caboose was retired in 1948. Here’s a few fun facts about the caboose. Common nicknames for this car included “Little Red Shack,” “Par- lor Car,” “Shanty,” “King’s Castle,” and “Old Men’s Home.” Cabooses were also CIRCULATION MANAGER PRODUCTION MANAGER CONTRIBUTING WRITERS Jeremy Feldman John D. Bruijn ADVERTISING SALES MANAGER SYSTEMS MANAGER Sarah Silver- Tecza Carl Earl Skyler Archibald Darren Gooch Joshua Heineman Rain Jordan Katherine Lacaze Eve Marx Cara Mico Esther Moberg called “crummy,” which was a nicer way to imply they were repositories for body lice. Each set of wheels weighs 7,000 pounds. The caboose itself weighs 24,000 pounds. I asked Duhachek how he got it from Astoria to Seaside; he said the Ness Campbell Crane Company out of Portland moved it. Duhachek was kind enough to give me a private tour. There’s no way to get into the caboose except to climb a ladder. While it does need work, it’s easy to imag- ine where the train men sat, and were able to cook and eat a meal, and where who- ever was responsible for driving it would have to be to get the best view of the track. Duhachek said it’ll be awhile before he can complete the restoration, but he’s excited about the prospect. Meanwhile, next time you’re in that part of town, aim your eyes east and take a gander. It’s not every day you see a genuine caboose in someone’s yard. Seaside Signal Letter policy Subscriptions The Seaside Signal is published every other week by EO Media Group, 1555 N. Roosevelt, Seaside, OR 97138. 503-738-5561 seasidesignal.com Copyright © 2019 Seaside Signal. Nothing can be reprinted or copied without consent of the owners. The Seaside Signal welcomes letters to the editor. The deadline is noon Monday prior to publication. Letters must be 400 words or less and must be signed by the author and include a phone number for verifi cation. We also request that submissions be limited to one letter per month. Send to 1555 N. Roosevelt Drive, Seaside, OR 97138, drop them off at 1555 N. Roosevelt Drive or fax to 503-738-9285, or email rmarx@seasidesignal.com Annually: $40.50 in county • $58.00 in and out of county • e-Edition: only $30.00 POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Seaside Signal, P.O. Box 210, Astoria, OR 97103. Postage Paid at Seaside, OR, 97138 and at additional mailing offi ces. Copyright © 2019 by the Seaside Signal. No portion of this newspaper may be reproduced without written permission. All rights reserved.