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This
recollection is an excerpt from the book, Perdew: An Illinois
River Tradition, written by Ann Tandy Lacy. A copy of this
book can be purchased through the museum.
From
their first home, Charlie and Edna overlooked the river which was to
play such an important role in their lives. Just five years later they
began building across the street, at the 914 Front Street address
where they lived and worked for the rest of their days. Charlie
recalled those early days of youthful energy in a 1957 letter:
When
Ma and I started our house Oct. 11th 1907 (note the date)
close to cold weather, I mixed the cement work by hand on a board and
got the house up before it snowed (7 inches in one night), and I laid
up and worked sometimes until midnight and never got tired, that was
[a] delightful time of our life, get up early morning and go to the
dam and catch 3 or 4 nice bass, come home dress and cook the fish and
eat breakfast and get to my gun shop up town by eight o’clock, go over
during the week and shoot rail birds and were they good eating? It was
then wild rice and lotus. Take the history of it all and you will have
stories that present shooters can’t believe.

Charles and
Edna Perdew at their home in Henry, Illinois
Photos by Joseph B. French |