In which the Gift of Stories continues with a true "needle" story
I love historical stories, and I was thrilled when a storyteller answered my call for "sock stories" with a link to this one. Enjoy!
--Aarene
The Last Darning Needle - an
Oregon folktale
retold from the story by S.E.
Schlosser
Folks traveling the Oregon Trail looking for a new
life left almost everything behind them when they made the 2000 mile journey in
their covered wagons. As the trail grew harder, the valleys steeper, the
mountains more treacherous, they started abandoning furniture and luxuries of
all sorts by the wayside to make it easier to move the wagons.
By the time the settlers reached Oregon, the
few goods they had were precious indeed. And so it was for the people who
made their new home in Pass Creek Canyon. The tiny settlement was so
isolated that the villagers had no access to manufactured goods of any sort and
had to make do with what they brought with them.
Soon they were soon down to their very last darning
needle.
Now, darning needles were used to sew clothing and
darn socks and mend buttons that were torn off. For a whole community to
have only one darning needle was a major concern. The settlers were very
careful to keep the needle safe. They passed it from family to family,
and for two or three days at a time, the women in each family would sew and
darn as quickly as they could before passing the needle on to the next
household.
One day, little Jimmy Chitwood was assigned the
task of carrying the needle to Grandmother Drain's cottage over the
hillside. To keep the darning needle safe, his mother threaded it with
bright red wool knotted firmly through the eye of the needle. Then she
stuck it into a potato and gave the precious needle to her small son.
As the little boy walked along the trail, he heard
a rustling in the bushes. Ahead of him, a big bear and her two cubs
ambled into view.
Alarmed, Jimmy ducked behind a serviceberry bush,
hoping the bear wouldn't notice him. He sat very still, trembling from
head to toe, until all sounds of the bears had ceased. Then he crept back
out onto the trail, checked carefully in both directions, and continued toward
Grandmother Drain's cabin. And that's when he realized his hand was
empty! He'd lost the potato with the precious darning needle stuck into
it.
Little Jimmy looked everywhere, but there were many
serviceberry bushes, and he couldn't find the exact place where he'd left the
trail. Soon the whole village turned out to look for the potato with the
darning needle stuck into it. They combed the hillside for hours, and it
was the despairing little Jimmy who finally caught a glimpse of red wool in the
bracken and swooped inside to rescue the darning needle.
But all good things come to an end. With so
much heavy use and so much time spent stuck into the juice of the potato, the
needle grew weak and it broke in Grandmother Drain's hand the day after it
was found in the woods. The whole village was upset by the loss, but no
one blamed Grandmother Drain for breaking it. It could have
happened to any of them. But all sewing and mending in the village ceased
from that day, and clothing grew tattered, socks and stockings had gaping holes
in them, and folks shook their heads, wondering what to do.
Little Jimmy Chitwood blamed himself bitterly for
the loss of the darning needle. If only he hadn't lost it. If it
hadn't been stuck so long in the potato, it might not have broken in
Grandmother Drain's hand. Nothing his parents said could comfort
him.
At that time, a young man in California decided he
wanted a life of adventure. He came north to Oregon, set himself up with
a mule and wagon full of goods, and started roaming the mountains and
vallleys, visiting villages and mining camps and farming communities.
It so happened that a month to the day after the
breaking of the last darning needle, he wandered into Pass Creek Canyon with
his peddler's wagon.
News of the peddler spread like wildfire through
the community, and soon the young man was surrounded by families fingering his
wares and talking excitedly.
The young man soon learned about the last darning
needle from Mrs. Chitwood, and he watched little Jimmy stroking the horse's
mane and pretending not to listen as he mother talked of losing the needle when
the bear appeared, and finding it again, and then losing it again when it
broke.
"Well, son," the young peddler said to
Jimmy. "Do you intend to give your family and friends Christmas
gifts this year?"
Jimmy looked up from patting the mule, startled by
the question. He hadn't thought about Christmas until that moment.
He nodded uncertainly.
"Well, son. How about you and I give
everyone their Christmas presents a little early."
He knelt down beside the lad and took a small
packet out of the pocket of his coat.
"Why don't you give one of these to each of
the ladies in your town as an early Christmas gift?"
He handed the child the packet full of darning
needles. "I think there are enough here for every family to have
one."
And so there were. Little Jimmy passed the
needles out to each family, his face beaming with pride. And the peddler
refused to accept a penny for the needles, insisting that they were a Christmas
gift from Jimmy to the town.
After that, Pass Creek Canyon became a regular stop
on the peddler's route, and the farmers and settlers in the community began to
prosper and do well in their new home. And never again did they run out
of darning needles, which was a blessing to all!
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