The Faro Caudill family eating dinner in their dugout, Pie Town, New Mexico 1940 (Russell Lee/Library of Congress) |
So, here’s to the
pioneers, the one’s who couldn’t sit still, the visionaries, the utopians,
the filibusters, the proto-hippies, the foolhardy, the oddballs, and the merely
hungry.
Here’s to the Studebaker company, that made the Conestoga
wagons and all the little wagon shops too.
Here’s to the Overland Trail, The Oregon trail, and the
Cumberland Gap, not to mention the Ozark Trail where the jalopies first rolled.
Here’s to the Susquehannock, the Sioux, and Comanche, who
tried to keep us out.
Here’s to the captive, the scalped, and the innocents
of both sides.
Here’s to the indentured servant and the slave and the
immigrant, to the Mexican citizen who suddenly became Hispanic American.
Here’s to the plainsman, the rancher, granger, ploughman, ranger, homesteader, sod buster, husbandman, stockman, pilgrim, and nester.
Here’s to the failures, the burnt out, dusted out, starved
out, flat broke and busted.
Here’s to the sickly, the consumptive, and
the pioneer mother burying another one too soon.
Here’s to the rebels, Quanah Parker, Delfido Gonzales, and
Billy the Kid, who claimed to ride for justice, and probably did.
Here’s to the merchants and the freighters, hauling it all
across the Santa Fe Trail and Belen Cutoff.
Here’s to the preachers, giving us hope and burying our
dead.
Here’s to the teachers in the sod schools, the dugout
schools, lean-to schools, and the dame schools.
Here’s to Bob Wills, Woody Guthrie, and all the fiddle &
guitar players who lifted the gloom, if only for awhile.
Here’s to anybody who finds
themselves “a stranger in a strange land.”
God bless you all, and finally, thanks.
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