SCOTCH GROVE—The Scotch Grove post office, one of the
oldest in the state, has a new temporary postmaster.
He
is Leslie M. Balster, appointed acting postmaster to succeed his father,
Arend Balster. Arend Balster has retired after serving as postmaster
since 1920.
Leslie Balster will serve as postmaster until
examinations for a permanent appointment are completed. The office now
has 26 boxholders and a rural route of 39 and one-half miles.
The
office was established 103 years ago, in 1851. John E. Lovejoy, a
colorful figure of Scotch Grove, was appointed the first postmaster in
August of that year.
Brother Slain Before his
appointment, he farmed for a time near Scotch Grove and assisted in the
early publication of the Anamosa Eureka. Later he was appointed United
States consul in Peru.
After returning from the foreign
assignment, Lovejoy served as the first North Western railroad station
agent at Center Junction. He was the brother of Elijah P. Lovejoy, noted
abolitionist who was murdered by a mob in Ashton, Ill, in 1857.
His grand-niece, Katherine Glenn Callahan, now lives in Monticello.
Other postmasters who have served the office and the year of their
appointment are: David Holmes, 1855; John E. Lovejoy, 1857 (second
term); Robert Espy, 1857; James S. Applegate, 1872; Milton T. Blazer,
1873; H. D. Hanna, 1871; Ira Webb, 1881; George Davis, 1885; Sandy
Shoemaker, 1887; Donald O. Sinclair, 1893; E. L. Himebaugh, 1903, and
Mr. Balster, 1920.
Third Class The office was
a fourth class office until 1935, when it was raised to third class. It
has been located always in a store building. Due to remodeling plans, it
is scheduled to be moved in the near future from its present location.
Mrs. Dale Ladehoff is the present clerk. She followed Mrs. May
Himebaugh, clerk for 17 years before her retirement in 1950. Mrs.
Balster has served as clerk and still does for emergencies.
From
The Cedar Rapids Gazette, Sunday, July 4, 1954, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and
submitted by Sharon Oltmanns
Post Office at Scotch Grove Is Back at Old Site
SCOTCH GROVE—The post office opened for business at a
new but old location Wednesday morning. The post office was originally
at this same site in 1900. Prior to 1900, post offices were located
in the postmasters' homes. The first of record was around 1850 when John
E. Lovejoy was named the first postmaster.
Before that records
are scarce but in Scotch Grove, which was settled in 1837, one resident
has saved a letter addressed only to "Jones or Johnson County, Dubuque
Territory."
Only twelve men have served as postmaster here. From
the first location in the corner of a grocery store, the office was
moved across the street to what is now the office of the Balster stores;
from there to a brick building on the east edge of Scotch Grove in
October 1855, and now to the present location again at the rear of a
grocery store, but in a much more modern setting.
There is no
inner connection between the store and office, and considerable
remodeling and painting has been done. Irvin Hussman is present acting
postmaster. The building formerly housing the post office has been sold
to Milton Rieken, operator of the tavern in Scotch Grove.
From The Cedar Rapids Gazette, Thursday, May 2, 1963, Cedar Rapids,
Iowa, and submitted by Sharon Oltmanns
Scotch Grove's Final Postmark Delivers Place in History
by Dave Rasdal; Gazette staff writer
SCOTCH GROVE—Nine years before Pony Express riders climbed into
the saddle, Scotch Grove was put on the map with its own post office.
That was 1851, five years after Iowa became a state. But now, like the
Pony Express, the Scotch Grove post office is fading into the sunset.
The small white-frame office with an elevated boardwalk out front and 32
postal boxes inside closes for good Friday.
"We've lost our ZIP
code," laments David Naylor. "We've lost our identity."
That a
community like Scotch Grove has held onto its post office this long can
be credited to David, 37, and Naylor Seed Co., the largest business in
this unincorporated village along Highway 38 in central Jones County.
For one thing, Scotch Grove has never had a mayor or a town council.
The railroad and one-room school houses are long gone. There isn't even
an official population, although about 60 people call Scotch Grove home.
But, it has had Naylor Seed Co. since 1920. And even this week,
David, now president, will mail 55-pound sacks of seed through the post
office to customers in Iowa and surrounding states. Naylor Seed could
have used other carriers, but preferred the U. S. Postal Service for its
good rates and excellent service. David also felt using the postal
service would keep the post office open.
It worked for a while.
But a year and a half ago, the postal service began a study for
discontinuance, says Cheryl Wernimont, manager of post office operations
for the area. Since then a postmaster has not been assigned to the post
office. It has been operated by an officer-in-charge, a term used for
employees training to become postmasters.
When the study
concluded the post office should be closed, David continued his fight.
Opening a file folder in his office, he points to letters he wrote last
summer in a last-ditch attempt to save the post office.
"At a
time when the United States is purportedly committed to encouraging
economic revitalization in rural areas, the closing of a post office in
a small community which has fought hard to buck the trend of rural
decline is inconsistent at best, if not downright discouraging," David
wrote.
In addition to Naylor Seed, he added, Scotch Grove has
Balster Implement Co. with more than a dozen warehouses. It has several
smaller businesses including a nursery, two bed-and-breakfasts, a tavern
and Bohlken Automotive.
George Bohlken, 86, who built his garage
in 1950 and turned it over to son, Ken, in 1994, remembers his part-time
work in the post office more than 60 years ago. It was located in the
back of Balster's Grocery while Arend Balster Jr. was postmaster, from
1920 to 1954.
"I shipped out as high as 100 packages a day out of
there," George says.
The post office later moved to Plueger's
Garage, the building now housing R & J Station tavern. In 1963, it moved
to the present location, a small building at the rear of the closed
grocery store.
The last postmaster, Steven Bahnsen, left in 1995
to become a carrier in Chicago. But David says he plans to return Friday
for the final hours, when the Iowa Postal History Society issues a
special envelope with a photograph of the post office and a Scotch Grove
cancellation on an Iowa Statehood stamp. The envelopes will sell for
$1.25 each or five for $5, beginning at 10 a.m.
When the normal 2
p.m. closing time arrives, officer-in-charge Janita Fisher of Lowden
will lock the door one last time. Scotch Grove will join Luzerne and
Toddville as the third Eastern Iowa town to lose its post office since
1994. ZIP code 52331 will no longer exist. The addresses will change to
rural Monticello. Yet, local customers will now receive rural
delivery at curbside boxes. A big blue mailbox will still accept drop
off mail. And David Naylor will mail his bags of seed by leaving them
for late afternoon collection by a rural carrier.
"I understand
the post office, they're losing money," David says.
So, even
though he's sad to see the post office close and the town's identity go
with it, he is not bitter.
"Maybe," he adds, "it'll work out for
the best."
David Naylor, president of Naylor Seed Co., strolls
across the street to the Scotch Grove post office. Naylor has fought the
closing of the post office because his company still uses it to mail
55-pound bags of seed. The post office will close Friday.
From
The Gazette (Cedar Rapids-Iowa City), Tuesday, November 18, 1997 and
submitted by Sharon Oltmanns