JACKET
https://collections.galtmuseum.com/link/artifact12878
- Material Type
- Artifact
- Other Name
- “RED HEAD” HUNTING JACKET
- Date Range From
- 1950
- Date Range To
- 1970
- Materials
- CANVAS, CORDUROY
- Catalogue Number
- P20130004002
- Material Type
- Artifact
- Other Name
- “RED HEAD” HUNTING JACKET
- Date Range From
- 1950
- Date Range To
- 1970
- Materials
- CANVAS, CORDUROY
- No. Pieces
- 1
- Height
- 3
- Length
- 76
- Width
- 53
- Description
- TAN-COLOURED, WAIST-LENGTH CANVAS JACKET WITH CORDUROY COLLAR AND WRIST LININGS. POCKETS AT LEFT BREAST, RIGHT AND LEFT WAIST, AND LENGTHWISE ACROSS BACK. WAIST POCKETS ARE DIVIDED INTO COMPARTMENTS. THREE BROWN PLASTIC BUTTONS ALONG FRONT ARE EMBOSSED WITH TEXT READING “RED HEAD BRAND”. SQUARE BLACK PATCH AT INNER RIGHT SIDE IS EMBROIDERED WITH RED AND WHITE THREAD, DEPICTING THE IMAGE OF A DUCK AND TEXT READING “TRADE MARK REGISTERED, RED HEAD BRAND, WATERPROOF, GUARANTEED”. GENERAL WEAR THROUGHOUT, WITH PROMINENT BLACK STAINING ACROSS FRONT OF BODY. UPPER RIGHT SHOULDER HAS DARK, CIRCULAR STAIN. *NOTE* A 1959 BIRD GAME LICENSE MADE OUT TO "R. L. MEISSER" AND SEVERAL BROKEN MATCHSTICKS WERE FOUND IN THE JACKET'S POCKETS AT THE TIME OF ACQUISITION. THESE ITEMS ARE BAGGED AND INCLUDED IN THE ARTIFACT'S PERMANENT FILE.
- Subjects
- CLOTHING-OUTERWEAR
- Historical Association
- PERSONAL CARE
- LEISURE
- History
- THE COLLECTION OF OBJECTS BELONGING TO THE MEISSER FAMILY WAS DONATED BY JUDY WRIGHT, NIECE OF LOWELL MEISSER, WHO OPERATED A FARM OUTSIDE WARNER WITH HIS BROTHER ROME AS THE ‘MEISSER BROS’ FROM 1929 TO 1946. JUDY’S MOTHER WAS THE SISTER OF LOWELL’S WIFE ELINOR, AND SHE SPENT MUCH OF HER CHILDHOOD LIVING WITH THEM AND ROME MEISSER, DUE TO HER MOTHER BEING UNWELL. IN HER LATER ADULT LIFE, JUDY TOOK CARE OF “UNC” ROME AT HIS WATERTON RESIDENCE, AND BECAUSE ROME AND HIS BROTHER LOWELL DID NOT HAVE ANY LIVING DIRECT DESCENDANTS, JUDY WAS LEFT THE FAMILY BELONGINGS WHEN ROME DIED IN 2004. THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION ABOUT THIS ARTIFACT WAS EXTRACTED FROM AN INTERVIEW CONDUCTED WITH THE DONOR BY COLLECTIONS TECHNICIAN KEVIN MACLEAN ON NOVEMBER 14, 2013, AS WELL AS FROM A DOCUMENT WRITTEN BY HER AT THE TIME OF THE DONATION. WRIGHT SAID: “MY UNCLE USED TO TAKE ME HUNTING WITH HIM. WE WENT UP INTO THE HILLS OUTSIDE OF WARNER AND WE HUNTED PHEASANT AND DUCK. WE TOOK OUR DOG WITH US AND I HAD TO STAY BACK WHILE HE WENT HUNTING. I COULD SEE HIM HUNTING AND IT WAS JUST MY TIME WITH MY UNCLE. AND IT WAS A VERY, VERY SPECIAL MEMORY TO ME… [ROME] WEARING HIS JACKET AND HIS HUNTING CAP AND HAVING HIS GUN AND HIS DOG AND ME, AND WE WOULD GO UP TO THE HILLS TO HUNT FOR BIRDS…IN THE ‘40S DEER WERE PROTECTED AND YOU COULDN’T HUNT THEM. THEN THEY OPENED HUNTING UP FOR JUST THE BUCKS, AND THEN FINALLY DOES, BUT JUST AT THE END OF THE SEASON AFTER THE FAWNS WERE OLD ENOUGH TO LOOK AFTER THEMSELVES… ROME QUIT HUNTING DEER AFTER SPENDING LOTS OF TIME IN WATERTON WHERE THEY WERE SO TAME AND EVERY SPRING THEY HAD MOTHERS AND FAWNS HANGING AROUND IN THEIR YARD AND THEY PRACTICALLY BECAME PETS. THEY HAVE SUCH BIG BEAUTIFUL INNOCENT EYES AND HE LOST HIS WILL TO SHOOT THEM.” THE FOLLOWING BRIEF FAMILY HISTORY WAS DEVELOPED WITH INFORMATION FROM ROME MEISSER’S MANUSCRIPT ‘THE MEISSER’S AND OTHER RAMBLINGS’ AND DONATIONS OF FAMILY PAPERS MADE BY WRIGHT TO THE GALT ARCHIVES. THE MEISSER FAMILY PATRIARCH, MICHAEL MEISSER, WAS BORN IN SWITZERLAND IN 1830 AND IMMIGRATED TO ALMA, WISCONSIN IN 1846. HIS SON, JOHN LUTZI MEISSER MARRIED MARIE KINDSCHI ON APRIL 30, 1898 AND THEY MOVED TO WARNER, ALBERTA TO FARM IN 1910, LOOKING FOR A DRIER CLIMATE FOR MARIE, WHO SUFFERED FROM TUBERCULOSIS. THE COUPLE HAD FIVE CHILDREN: ORMA, LOWELL, JOHN (WHO DIED AT AGE TWO OF PNEUMONIA), ROME, AND MARIE. IN 1912, MOTHER MARIE DIED IN A TUBERCULOSIS CLINIC IN SALT LAKE CITY, AND FIVE YEARS LATER FATHER JOHN DIED FROM HEAD TRAUMA SUSTAINED IN A GRAIN ELEVATOR ACCIDENT. ONE OF THE CHILDREN’S PATERNAL AUNTS, FRENA, CAME TO WARNER TO HELP THEM WITH SCHOOLING AND RUNNING THE FARM. IN 1920, ORMA MARRIED LEE TENNEY AND IN 1926 LOWELL MARRIED ELINOR TENNEY, AND THE TWO COUPLES LOOKED AFTER THE TWO YOUNGER SIBLINGS UNTIL ORMA AND LEE MOVED TO CALIFORNIA IN 1931. THE YOUNGEST SISTER, MARIE, LATER JOINED THEM WITH HER SON JIM. LOWELL AND ROME FARMED TOGETHER FROM THE SEASON FOLLOWING THEIR FATHER’S DEATH (WHEN THEY WERE 17 AND 13 YEARS OLD, RESPECTIVELY) UNTIL 1945 WHEN THEIR LAND WAS DIVIDED FOR TAX BENEFIT. ROME NEVER MARRIED, AND IN 1928 HAD A SHORT STINT IN PILOT’S TRAINING BEFORE RETURNING TO FARMING PERMANENTLY. LOWELL AND ELINOR’S SON JERALD WAS BORN IN 1929. BY 1957 THE MEISSERS RETIRED FROM FARMING AND LEASED OUT THEIR LAND, AND IN 1958 THE FAMILY BOUGHT A CABIN IN WATERTON PARK, WHERE THEY SPENT ALL FOLLOWING SUMMERS. LOWELL AND ELINOR’S SON JERALD SPLIT HIS TIME BETWEEN FARMING IN SOUTHERN ALBERTA AND VARIOUS PROJECTS IN THE UNITED STATES. HE ENROLLED IN THE CATHOLIC SEMINARY IN SPOKANE, WASHINGTON, BUT PASSED AWAY IN 1990 BEFORE HE COULD BE ORDAINED. LOWELL DIED IN 1988, ELINOR FOLLOWED IN 1992, AND ROME PASSED AWAY IN 2004. THE FOLLOWING REMEMBRANCES OF ROME ‘UNC’ MEISSER WERE EXCERPTED FROM THE NOVEMBER 14, 2013 INTERVIEW. WRIGHT SAID: “I LIVED WITH THEM AND WENT OUT TO THE FARM ALL SUMMER LONG EVERY YEAR FROM THE TIME I WAS FIVE OR SIX YEARS OLD… I JUST HONESTLY THINK THAT I AM WHO I AM TODAY BECAUSE OF MY UNCLE ROME. MY DAD WAS A STAUNCH OLD ENGLISHMAN AND HE COULDN’T RELATE TO ME. HE WAS 45 YEARS OLD WHEN I WAS BORN BUT HE COULDN’T RELATE TO ME. SO, MY UNCLE COULD… HE SHOULD HAVE BEEN MARRIED WITH AT LEAST A DOZEN CHILDREN. IN HIS EARLY NINETIES, WHEN I FIRST GOT THERE [TO WATERTON] WE’D GO GROCERY SHOPPING. I’D HAVE TO WAIT WHILE HE STOPPED AND CHATTED WITH ALL THE CHILDREN HE’D COME ACROSS. HE SHOULD HAVE HAD LOTS OF KIDS. HE JUST LOVED KIDS AND I WAS A LITTLE KID… I WAS THERE FROM PRACTICALLY BIRTH AND LIVED MONTHS AT A TIME WITH HIM… HE COULD AFFORD TO LOOK AFTER THE COMMUNITY AS WELL… HE GAVE GENEROUSLY TO [COMMUNITY ORGANIZATIONS]. HE GAVE TO THE MILK RIVER HOSPITAL. HE DONATED $200,000 FOR THE HOCKEY GIRLS’ RESIDENCE. THEY HAD NO MONEY AND THAT’S WHY WE NOW HAVE A HOCKEY GIRLS’ RESIDENCE THAT HAS A HUGE KITCHEN AND HOUSES UP TO 25 GIRLS, AND KEEPS OUR WARNER SCHOOL OPEN. SO THAT IS A VERY BIG GIFT, HIS DONATIONS. THEY ALSO STARTED A MEISSER SCHOLARSHIP IN 1967 AND TWO WEEKS AGO I WENT OUT AND GAVE THE TROPHY AND THE MONEY TO THE LAST GIRL THAT WON IT. AND IT WILL GO ON INDEFINITELY AS LONG AS THERE’S A SCHOOL…HE WAS VERY SUPPORTIVE OF CHILDREN AND EDUCATION. THE SCHOLARSHIP, THE HOCKEY GIRLS, KEEPING THE WARNER SCHOOL OPEN - BIG FOCUS FOR HIM – WAS EDUCATION AND CHILDREN… HE WAS ONE OF THOSE KIND OF PRACTICALLY ANONYMOUS DONORS IN THE PAST. HOWEVER, AS HE GOT A LITTLE OLDER, I THINK HE ENJOYED THE ATTENTION. THEY MADE A BIG DEAL ABOUT THE HOCKEY SCHOOL. THE RESIDENCE HAS GOT, HUGE, IT HAS HIS NAME ON IT BUT I DON’T THINK HE SAW THAT. AND THEY HAD HIM RIDE IN THE PARADE ONE YEAR, THE COMMUNITY RECOGNIZED HIM AS MUCH AS HE’D LET THEM RECOGNIZE HIM.” SEE PERMANENT FILE FOR A FULL TRANSCIPT OF THE INTERVIEW, WRITTEN DOCUMENTATION ON THE MEISSER FAMILY BY JUDY WRIGHT AND ROME MEISSER, OBITUARIES AND PHOTOGRAPHS OF FAMILY MEMBERS, AND FURTHER INFORMATION ABOUT EACH ARTIFACT COMPRISING THE DONATION.
- Catalogue Number
- P20130004002
- Acquisition Date
- 2013-03
- Collection
- Museum
Images
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