My Great Grandmother Survived “The Great Tri-State Tornado” of 1925 – the worst tornado in U.S. in history (to date)

The 100 Year Anniversary of The Great Tri-State Tornado


Seeing the footage, videos and photos of splintered trees, the rubble of homes, first responders and devastated people and hearing of the rising tolls of the injured, missing and dead and imagining the immense pain of all the fractured families — especially in Tuscaloosa, Alabama and in Joplin, Missouri — it is all the more remarkable to me that my great grandmother, Mable Agnes Brantley, then just one day shy of her 18th birthday, and her soon-to-be husband, Harry T. Ruble, survived the 1925 “Tri-State” tornado.

That tornado devastated the town of Murphysboro in Jackson County in Southern Illinois. It was the WORST tornado in U.S. history to date: an F5 on the Fujita Scale — nearly 700 people died — but it is also infamous for its duration, sustained speed, length and breadth!

Mable Brantley would go on to have a full life, to raise children during the Great Depression, to work outside the home before and during the War Effort and for decades after — and more importantly, to help to raise her grandchildren, great grandchildren, and great, great grandchildren.

My great grandma lived the rest of her life with “souvenirs” of the tornado – fine shards of car window glass embedded deep in her chest, back and upper arms. The car she was riding in had been tossed around at a railroad track crossing near The Murphysboro Ice Factory – as in ice, for iceboxes — for food preservation and storage.

She would remain forever nervous and frightened during thunder and lightning storms — down to the basement we went at the first sign of one and those were only times, aside from the loss of her own daughters, including my maternal grandmother, that I ever remember her revealing any fragility.

As a girl, I saw my great grandma nearly every day after school and also spent a good many Sunday nights sleeping over at her house, on the loveseat in her living room, watching 60-Minutes, Lawrence Welk, Bobby Vinton – the Polish Prince, and Hee-Haw (“Pfffft, you was gone!”) with her. I always wanted to watch the Wonderful World of Disney which was broadcast at the same time.

She’d make me breakfast and then drive me to my Lutheran grade school in Humboldt Park on Monday mornings. She’d pick me up after school too.

She hd learned how to drive on hand-crank automobile.

She was of the founding generation of daytime soap operas and hated missing her “story” which was “Days of Our Lives”; its music and intro to this day, remind of me of her, of summer afternoons and her trusty wall clock. Noon.

There wasn’t anything she didn’t know how to do or make. She made a divine pineapple upside-down cake; tasty plum and apple butters, jellies and piccalilli; Southern Illinois style peanut rolls; rum cake and fruitcake at Christmas; country chicken and dumplings (as a side dish of all things!) on special occasions; lovingly- and well-crafted, crocheted afghans and slippers; matching summer tops, as well as denim and crocheted purses for my mother and me; she kept a vegetable and flower garden and a dog for nearly her entire life.

One of her favorite rituals was buying impatiens or petunias for all her female family members on Mother’s Day. We would venture up Elston Avenue to the original “farmers market” for flats of those flowers — everyone got one flat for their garden or flower boxes.

She commissioned a quilt for me when I was married, because she could no longer make one herself.

My mother adored her unusual — for her time and culture — open-minded, non-bigoted, and forward-thinking Southern Illinois grandmother, and my Black second father befriended her. He never once called her by her name, instead, he nicknamed her “Miss Beautiful” from the get. Throughout their special friendship, they teasingly planned to run away to Hong Kong together (they were both afraid to fly and neither ever had a passport); they never failed to mention their travel plans at our regular Monday night dinners.

She kept her beautifully simple “up ‘do” dyed Clairol Black until her last year of life; I recall my mom gently “fixing” her hair for her a few times every week for years on end, setting pin curls the evening before, the next day combing them out, “teasing”, and pinning her silky hair in an up-do and finishing it with Aqua Net hairspray. She was self-proclaimed as “tender-headed” — and I still have her favorite rat-tail, dye-stained comb .

She said that she had indigenous lineage – from her father, Edgar Brantley [Strickland, Rosewaters], who had spent part of his childhood with his mother on a reservation in Oklahoma. These are stories many white Americans tell themselves and their descendants — especially about the “Five Civilized Tribes” — claiming Indigenous heritage that is unproven, or outright false; my great grandmother was not culturally connected to or affiliated with any of the tribes of Oklahoma. Children of the Flower Moon should end all that white nonsense, finally.

I bookended five living generations of our family for one short year.

A large, original black and white photographic image of her mother, Jenny Mac Dowell, with beautifully colorized accents, mounted in its original frame with a lock of braided hair, is one of my most treasured possessions and hangs on my bedroom wall.

My great grandmother and I made several trips to Murphysboro, Illinois together over consecutive summers to see my grandma, Jennie Rose (her daughter) and my grandpa, who had relocated there when they sold their Humboldt Park blond, airport bungalow — and their many ventures had played themselves out — the very last of them — an off-track betting operation.

Those trips down I-57 or I-55 were a two-fer: my great grandma would visit with her remaining siblings, her brother, Elza, and her sister, Hattie and all her extended family and also visit the family plots in order to lay flowers atop the graves for Memorial Day.

She was extraordinarily devoted and loyal to her two daughters; her eldest did not inherit her mother’s character whatsoever – and fell painfully, awfully short; while her youngest, my grandmother never quite got her life together and sadly, died at 59 years old from lifelong complications of Type 1 diabetes.

It was just the two of us, me and my Great Grammaw — on those mini road trips, traveling at first, by car and later, when the 6-hour drive was just too much for her varicosed legs, tired feet and old eyes, by Amtrak train. She’d leave and return to Chicago after a week or so, but I’d stay – spending my childhood summers in her very hometown.

She lived a long, simple and hard life. She tried to live her life with integrity and honesty, and for the most part, I think she did – family members served as her albatross, and she was often unwittingly and unwillingly aiding or rescuing them from their schemes.

She made my and my son’s existence possible – and she lived long enough to meet him and to know him as a toddler and little boy. She adored all babies and young children but especially hers – and her eyes sparkled at the sight of them.

She continued working into her early 80s, she had outlived her husband by nearly 25 years and also outlived both of her daughters.

On the day before she died, I went to see her in her peach stucco home in the Lake View neighborhood of Chicago. She asked me if I would attend to her face; I also soaked and cleaned her baby soft hands – her pale skin was paper thin – and blue with veins. I manicured her still-pretty finger nails.

I realized only later that I had in fact, anointed her body just before her death. She chose me for the job.

She moved on from this world the very next day, just before her 92nd birthday, in March of 1999.

 

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