DL: Is the dugout process related in any way to 1862?
SS: Not to 1862. I think in 1862 when the people came, they were putting dugouts in at that time, and this was right after. But that’s what usually they did: they would come to an area where they were going to settle and homestead, but they had no place to live. So the only thing they could do was make a dugout to live in for maybe one or two years until they could get enough trees cut down for a log cabin. Dugouts didn’t last that long. And then they would have their log cabin made, they would use them for cellars because that would keep things cool. Then they just left them to deteriorate, and probably after 5 years they probably were just abandoned. And that’s why you can’t find anything about dugouts much. Where my great-grandpa had his, the people who lived there said when they were just kids that there was a place there. They said this is where they thought that was.
But that’s 60 years ago now, so I go no idea really where- I know about the area, but to know right where it was, we don’t know that.
DL: What would these things have looked like? Could you stand in one; were they tall enough so you could stand up?
SS: Yes.
DL: That’s a lot of digging. And it had to be dangerous as well- what was to keep it from caving in?
SS: It depends on what the banks are like. The one I dug, when we got down about 4 foot, we got to real hardpan, where it’s real hard dirt. So there’s no way that’s going to cave in. In some of the places I had to put slabs along there so we could cover the sides, but it’s hard there and not going to cave in. And the higher part above it, I got some boards along the edge so it can’t cave in. But otherwise you can see it won’t cave in because the ground is that hard. But nobody’s ever seen any. The Ingalls, theirs was up by Walnut Grove. It was later on when they dug theirs. They had whitewashed the sides, the dirt, they whitewashed it. But I know when my grandpa made the dugout there was no way he could get any whitewash or anything, because the train wasn’t through there and there would have been no way they would have done that. But later on they maybe did.
DL: How would they heat them?
SS: They had little stoves. I got a little stove that’s about this high, something that they could haul around. It’s got a flat top. Now they call them laundry stoves, but they’re real hard to come by, because they’re quite old.
DL: How would they keep the smoke from not going into the dugout?
SS: Well, they had their stoves there, and they did have stovepipes at that time. And New Ulm had a few stores where they could buy them; otherwise they would have to go to Mankato to get supplies, and they would be gone for a couple days to go get supplies.
DL: Did they have doors; these dugouts?
SS: Yes, they had doors. They were pretty rugged; everything had to be cut with the cross-cut saws. They didn’t have anything like what we have now. And the windows, some of them didn’t have windows, so they would just take what you have when you get these little sacks, they would put a little oil on them so it would draw a little light through, just to get a little light in there until they got some glass, so they could put a regular window in. But some of them didn’t even have that. But even the one I made, it’s so dark in there; you’d need a light all the time. Even with the door open, if the sun starts going down it gets dark in there a lot, so they must have had to use their lanterns quite a bit.
DL: That’s very rustic living.
SS: Yes. I want to just see what it would be like to be in there. And in the wintertime I want to go down there and start the fire and really see how warm it would be and how it gets. It’s real damp in there now.
DL: How did they survive the winters- because winters can be very severe here.
SS: Yes.
DL: And here you are, stuck in the hole of a riverbank?
SS: Yes. I really don’t know how you could live in there for two years, because it’s so tight in there. They said some of them were 8x10. I made it 9X12, which makes it quite a bit bigger. But just a 9x12 room, that’s all you got to live in with two kids for two years, or for sure a year. That’s quite hard to understand, how they could make it, but it was tough times. I guess they just had to put up with the way the times were.
DL: If they had food to store, it had to be down there too, because how would they eat? What would they eat in the winter months?
SS: I really wonder. A lot of them would have pig and they made salt pork. Now how they made salt pork, I don’t know, but it was some deal where you would put a lot of salt with it and soak it, and that would preserve this meat. They did a lot of that. They used to can meat. My mother canned meat when we were younger; we didn’t have a refrigerator or anything, and then when we would butcher, they would can the meat, and put it in fruit jars and cook it for so long, and then you put it down the basement and it was good any time. And I don’t know if they did any of that, I don’t know if they had jars, or really how they survived. It’s really interesting when you think about how they would have survived.
DL: I wonder if they could have done any fishing on the winter, because certainly it froze over.
SS: I think they did. And in the winter time they used to cut a hole in the ice and then they would spear. You could spear carp. Now nobody wants to eat a carp or a sucker; we used to get bullheads, they were good, but nobody else would eat them now. But when I was younger, if you caught a fish, you brought it home and you had to eat it, so I’m sure that they did quite a bit of fishing too, through the summer months. Because I know like, this Schneider, the great-grandson told me that that’s what he was told, that every so often they had to go down and get fish, and they lived right next to the river. I think they liked to be close to the rivers because they needed water and fish. It seemed like a lot of them settled along the river in the early years.