A 74-year-old Louisiana farmer used a 1909 steam traction engine to drain 60 acres of swamp land that had been declared permanently flooded by the Army Corps of Engineers, revealing that the flooding was caused by a deliberately blocked drainage outlet from 1913, not natural conditions.
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Every Engineer Said Nothing Could Drain It — Then a 74 Year Old Fired Up a Steam Engine That Hadn't追加:
On the 14th of October 1961, a four-man survey team from the Army Corps of Engineers drove a government truck down a dirt road called Fondino Road in Tensaw Parish, Louisiana, and parked at the edge of what had been 2 years before some of the finest cotton ground in the parish. Now, it was swamp. The lead surveyor, a civil engineer named Warren Whitfield, 29 years old, 2 years out of LSU, stepped out of the truck and looked at 60 acres of standing water. Cypress knees had already pushed up through the surface. Cattails had taken an earbank.
A great blue heron lifted off the far tree line and disappeared without a sound. Whitfield took out his clipboard and did what he had been trained to do.
He measured. He probed. He calculated the depth at seven sampling points and noted that the center of the swamp ran 14 ft deep. He tested the soil at the water line and found it had already begun the slow conversion from farmland to wetland that according to his training was irreversible without a federal drainage project costing more than the land was worth he wrote in his report that afternoon. The parcel in question approximately 60.4 acres of bottomland in section 12 of Tensaw Parish is no longer agriculturally viable. The 1959 backwater flooding event has created a stable wetland system. Recommend property owner consider sale or land use conversion.
Recovery is not recommended. He handed that report to an old man standing at the edge of the water watching him. The old man's name was Ambrose Fondo. He was 74 years old. He read the report slowly, folded it once, and handed it back. He said, "Your father ever farm a piece of ground, son?" Whitfield said he had not.
Ambrose Fontino nodded and looked back at the water. "This swamp," he said, "drained once before. I was 12 years old when it happened. I stood right here and watched the water go." He did not explain further. Whitfield drove back to Baton Rouge and filed his report and forgot about Ambrose Fondo. He would remember him again the following January. Let me go back to that October afternoon because that is where the argument actually started. Whitfield had been respectful. He was not a cruel man, but he was a trained engineer and train engineers speak in the language of data and the data on Fondino road was unambiguous that he told Ambrose 14 ft at center is not a pump problem. A pump can move water. A pump cannot move the problem which was that the land sat in a natural bowl with no functional outlet.
The 1959 flood had come in fast and the water had nowhere to go. It had been there 2 years. It would be there another 20 told Ambrose. The cost to drain 60 acres of established wet land by mechanical means with no natural outlet to work with would be somewhere between 40 and $60,000.
The land once drained would need several seasons to be productive again. At current cotton prices, the math did not work. It simply did not work that he told Ambrose. There was a buyer interested in the property, a man named Lucy and Bro, whose family had farmed the adjacent section for decades. Bro was offering $8,000 for the 60 swamp acres. A fair price, Whitfield thought, for land that was functionally gone.
Ambrose listened to all of it. Then he said, "The bros have wanted this land since before you were born." Whitfield said that was not his concern. No, Ambrose said it wouldn't be. He turned and walked back toward his barn. The barn was a long gray-sided structure built in 1901, and inside it, under a canvas tarp that had not been moved in 28 years, set a machine that weighed 11 tons, that had not run since the summer of 1933, and that most people in Tensaw Parish had entirely forgotten existed.
Let me tell you about Ambrose Fondo because you need to understand what this land meant before you can understand what he was willing to do. His father, Octave Fondino, came to Tinsaw Parish in 1895 with $40 and a federal land grant that nobody else wanted. The bottomland along Tinsaw Bayou flooded most years.
The soil was dark and rich when it was dry, but getting it dry was the work of a lifetime. Octave spent his first five years digging drainage ditches by hand alone, a shovel at a time. Doppy Wine 1902. He had 400 acres under cultivation. Cotton, corn, and a kitchen garden. He had a wife, three sons, and a debt to the Planters Bank of Tula that he paid off in 1909, the same year he bought the machine. The machine was a Port Hiron steam traction engine built in 1909 by the Port Hiron Engine and Thresher Company of Port Hiron, Michigan. It weighed 11 tons. It stood 9 ft tall at the stack. It burned wood or coal, produced 25 horsepower at the belt pulley, and could run a threshing rig, a cotton gin, a sawmill, or a dredge pump.
Anything that needed steady continuous belt power on flat ground where you couldn't get mule team in. Octave used it to run the gin and the thresher for 23 seasons. Ambrose grew up working that engine. He learned to fire it at 14. By 16, he could read the boiler pressure by sound. He knew that engine the way you know a thing you have grown up aside.
Not as a fact, but as a presence. The poor Huron went into the barn in 1933 when diesel became cheap and steam became obsolete. Ambrose covered it with a tarp and the years passed and the cotton market rose and fell and the farm stayed in the family. And in the spring of 1959, the Mississippi ran high and the tinsaw bayou backed up and 60 acres of the lowest fondo ground went under and did not come back. His grandson Claude, who was 31 years old in 1961 and had gone to college in Baton Rouge, told Ambrose the Army Corps was right. Sell the swamp acres to bro. Take the $8,000.
Stop fighting a flood. Ambrose said nothing for a long time. Then he said that swamp drained before. Claude said paper. That was 50 years ago. Nobody even remembers why. And that was the part that was not quite true. Because what Ambrose remembered, what he had never forgotten was that in the winter of 1913, when he was 26 years old, he had watched the low acres drain in four days. The water had gone somewhere underground. And then a week later, the outlet had been blocked. He did not see who did it. He was not there when it happened, but the water came back. And his father, Octave, spent 3 weeks trying to find where the drainage had gone and eventually stopped looking. What Ambrose did not know was that his father had not entirely stopped. He would find that out in November. inside the steam chest of the Port Hiron behind the boiler jacket in a leather document tube that had been hidden there for exactly 50 years. But that comes later. Let me tell you about the first week of November 1961 because that is when most men would have given up before they even started. Ambrose Fondino was 74 years old. He had a bad left knee from a mule kick in 1941 and his hearing in his right ear had been gone since 1952. His grandson Claude had driven back to Baton Rouge. His nearest neighbor was three mi down the road, but he pulled the canvas off the port here on alone. What he found under it was this 28 years of dust. The cast iron flywheel had surface rust, but the spokes were solid. The boiler jacket was intact. The stack, which had plugged with burlap in 1933, had held. The drive wheels, 48 in of cast iron, showed no cracking. She had spent 28 years in a dry barn. And a dry barn, it turned out, was exactly right. What she needed was this, a new set of boiler flu tubes because the originals had corroded through at the ends. New packing around the piston rod because the old graphite packing had hardened to stone. A thorough cleaning of the steam chest, the valve box that controls the timing of steam into the cylinder, and new gaskets throughout. Ambrose ordered the flu tubes from a machinist in Monroe who had worked on old boilers before and still had the tooling. He made the packing himself from hemp rope and graphite the same way he had done it in 1933. He cleaned the steam chest by hand with coal oil and a wire brush. It took 11 days on November 22nd, 1961. The same morning, a young president was shot in Dallas. Though Ambrose would not learn that until his neighbor came by that evening. He fired the poor Hiron for the first time in 28 years. He started with fire in the firebox at 5 in the morning.
Built pressure slowly over 4 hours watching the gauge. At 9:45 with the boiler at 90 lb per square in, he opened the throttle a quarter turn. The flywheel moved. I t was slow at first.
Then it caught the rhythm and the exhaust began to chuff. that particular sound, that rhythmic bark that a steam engine makes when it is working. And Ambrose Fondo stood in the barn door in the November light and listened to it and did not say anything at all. Let me pause here because most people do not understand what a steam traction engine can do in a drainage situation that a modern diesel pump cannot. And you need to understand that before you can understand what Ambrose was attempting that a modern drainage pump runs on a diesel engine or electric motor and it moves water by volume. It pulls water from one place and pushes it to another.
That works fine when you have a reliable outlet to push the water toward. It does not work when the outlet is unknown or blocked or buried 14 ft underwater. What Ambrose was planning to use the port Hon for was not a pump. It was a belt power dredge that a dredge does not move water. It moves earth. It digs a channel. It cuts through the swamp bottom and creates a path for the water to follow on its own. The Port Hiron's belt pulley at full operating pressure produced 25 continuous horsepower. In 1961, that was modest by modern standards. But the key word is continuous. A steam engine at operating pressure produces the same torque at one rotation per minute as it does at its rated speed. There is no stall point.
You cannot overwhelm it. You can load it to its limit and it will hold that load all day as long as you feed it fuel and water that a diesel engine of equivalent horsepower will lug down under heavy intermittent loads. The kind of load you get when a dredge bucket hits hard clay or submerged cypress log. The engine bucks and throttles back and you lose momentum and you lose the channel. The port Hiron would not buck. It would pull steadily at whatever the load demanded until the chain broke or the boiler ran dry. That was what Ambrose needed. He had a dredge bucket on a cable rigged to a wooden A-frame. He would lower the bucket, fill it with swamp bottom, raise it, swing it to the spoil pile over and over, finding the channel. What he believed, what he had believed for 50 years, though he had never been able to prove it was that the channel was there underground waiting. Something had drained that water in 1913 and something had blocked it afterward and the blocking was still down there somewhere in 14 ft of swamp bottom. He just had to find it. Let me tell you about what he found the day before the dredging started. Because this is the detail that changes the whole story that on the morning of November 29th, Ambrose was making a final check of the steam chest, tightening the last of the new gasket bolts when his wrench slipped and he struck his knuckle hard on the back of the boiler jacket. The jacket, the sheet metal casing that insulates the boiler, had a seam along the backside that was not in any of the original port. Hiron engineering drawings he had. There should not have been a seam there. He got a pry bar and worked the seam loose.
Behind the boiler jacket in a space about 3 in deep running the length of the boiler's rear face, someone had wedged a leather document tube. It was about 18 in long, wrapped in oil skin, and tied with a piece of cotton twine.
The leather was stiff but intact. The oil skin had done its work. Ambrose sat on the workbench, but he looked at it for a while. Then he picked up his wrench and went back to the steam chest.
The engine needed to run tomorrow.
Whatever was in that tube had been in there for a long time. It could wait one more day. Let me tell you about the six days of December 1961 because this is where 50 years of waiting became 6 days of work. Ambrose set up the A-frame dredge on the south bank of the swamp on December 4th. He positioned it at a spot he had chosen by memory. The place where, as a boy of 12, he had watched the water disappear in the winter of 1913. There was a slight depression in the bank there, almost invisible now under the cattails that told him something had once drained through this ground. He fired up the Port Hiron before dawn on December 5. The dredging was slow. The bucket weighed 200 lb empty, full of swamp mud. It weighed closer to 600. The cable was 1-in manila rope run through a series of wooden blocks to the belt powered winch on the port Hiron's left side. The engine took the load without complaint. The first day he moved 40 cubic yards of swamp bottom and found nothing but clay and submerged cypress roots. The second day was the same that on the third day at about 2 in the afternoon, the bucket came up with a load of blue clay, the dense gray blue tinsaw parish clay that sat about 8 ft below the surface. And in the blue clay was a piece of flat stone, fitted stone, cut stone. Ambrose reached down and pulled it out of the bucket. It was a piece of dressed limestone about 8 in square with mortar still attached on one face. He sat on the spoil pile and looked at it for a long time. Then he went inside and opened the leather document tube. Let me tell you what was in that tube because this is where the story takes its final turn. There were two documents. The first was a drainage survey drawn in a careful engineer's hand dated April 14th, 1911. It showed the low 60 acres of the Fontineau property in full, the elevation contours, the soil profile, the water table depth at 16 sample points. And at the south end of the survey, clearly marked with a dotted line and the notation natural subsurface outlet discharges to Tensaw Bayou lateral approximately 340 yd south. There was a drainage channel underground running south beneath the Fondino bottomland and beneath the corner of the adjacent bro property discharging into a lateral ditch that connected to Tensaw Bayou.
The survey had been commissioned by Octave Fontau in the spring of 1911. The engineer's name at the bottom was a JT Meanin of Ravville, Louisiana. The channel was real. It had always been real. The second document was a single sheet of paper handwritten dated February 3rd, 1914. Ambrose recognized his father's handwriting the moment he looked at it. It read. The outlet shown on Milan survey was blocked in the winter of 1913. I found the work myself in December of that year. Fitted limestone and hydraulic mortar placed on the bro side of the property line. I do not know who gave the order. I cannot prove it was done deliberately. I am hiding this survey with the engine because the engine is the only thing on this place that will never be sold. If the land ever floods beyond recovery, find this first. Ambrose read it twice.
Then he set it down on the workbench and stood in the barn in the December light for a long time. He was not a man who showed a great deal of emotion. He had buried two sons and a wife and had not wept at any of their funerals because he did not believe in weeping where other people could see it. He stood there for a long time. Then he walked back out to the poor hiron and opened the throttle.
Let me tell you about the winter of 1913 because you need to understand what was done and why before you can understand what came next at in 1911 when Octave Fondo commissioned Milankin's drainage survey. The Fondino farm was the most productive small operation in that section of Tensaw Parish. The low 60 acres were Octave's best bottomland.
Dark organic soil, 2 ft of top soil above the blue clay. When the drainage was right, it grew cotton at yields the neighbors could not match. The man farming the adjacent section was a man named Elier Bro. He was by 1911 60 years old and wealthy by parish standards. 800 acres, a cotton gin he rented to his neighbors, a son in law school in New Orleans. He had made three separate offers to buy the Fontinol low acres between 1906 and 1910. Octave had refused all three politely each time.
Elzier bro knew about the underground drainage outlet before Octave commissioned the survey. He had learned of it from Meankin himself two years earlier when Meankin had surveyed the Bro property and found the outlet's discharge point in the lateral ditch on the Bro side of the property line. The outlet ran entirely beneath Bro land from that discharge point back to the boundary. Elier Bro owned the critical 30 feet that I in October of 1913. Bro hired two men from out of the parish, not local men, not men who would talk.
And they worked for 3 days in the cold November mud. They dug down to the outlet on the bro side of the line, packed the opening with fitted limestone and hydraulic mortar, and tamped the soil back smooth over it. The fondolo acres flooded the following spring and the spring after that and most springs after that though never badly enough to ruin the farm until 1959 when the river ran high and the water came up and found the low acres waiting and this time did not leave. Elier bro died in 1931 but his grandson was Lucy bro had offered Ambrose $8,000 for 60 acres of swamp in October of 1961. Let me tell you about December 8th, 1961. Because that is the day 50 years of deliberate flooding came to an end. The limestone dam was 8 ft down in the blue clay, just inside the Fondo property line, not on Broland, as Octave had assumed, but on Fondo ground where bros men had apparently shifted the work to avoid any question of trespass. Ambrose found it with a dredge bucket on the morning of December 8th.
It was intact hydraulic mortar fitted stone six courses high built to last that he rigged the dredge cable differently that morning. Instead of a scoop bucket, he attached a steel hook he had fabricated the night before from a wagon axle. He lowered it to the dam.
The port hiron took the load. The first two attempts did nothing. The mortar held. On the third attempt with the engine at full working pressure, 100 lb per square in. The hook caught the top course of stone and held. Ambrose opened the throttle to the stop. The flywheel hesitated. The exhaust chuff slowed to a sound like a man straining under something he wasn't sure he could carry.
The boiler pressure dropped three lb for pounds five that the stone moved. Then the mortar gave, not all at once, but in sequence one course and then the next.
And there was a sound from underwater that was not quite a roar and not quite a rush, but something between the two, a low sustained movement of water, finding a direction it had been denied for 48 years, and the swamp began to move slowly at first. Then with intention by late afternoon, you could see a current on the surface running south. The 60 acres drained in 4 days. Not all at once, not with drama. It went the way water always goes when it finds its path. Steadily, persistently, indifferent to what anyone thought it should do. Be why December 10th, the cattails along the north bank were standing in 6 in of water instead of 3 ft. By December 12th, the Cypress knees were above the surface. By December 14th, you could walk the south end of the property without getting your boots wet. The soil that came up as the water fell was black and organic and dense.
50 years of sediment laid down in the slow way that only still water can lay it down. Ambrose walked the property line on December 15th. The first time he had walked it in 2 years and pushed a cedar fence post into the ground with his hands. It went in 4 ft before it stopped. No magit, just hands. He called his grandson Claude that evening from his neighbor's telephone that he said, "Come home." Claude arrived two days later and stood at the edge of what had been a swamp and was now 60 acres of the finest looking bottomland in Tensaw Parish, Louisiana. He did not say anything for a while. Then he said, "Papera, how?" Ambrose handed him survey and his father's letter. Claude read them both. He looked at the property line. He looked south toward the bro place. He said the name bro in a low voice. The way you say a name when you have just understood something you cannot unfeill. Ambrose said their grandfather did it. Not them. It doesn't help to be angry at the dead. Claude said, "What do we do?" Ambrose said, "We plant cotton." Let me end this story where it began because that is the only way a story like this can end. Dot. On January 19th, 1962, Warren Whitfield drove back down Fondino Road with two men from his survey team because someone Ambrose had telephoned the regional office himself. Had submitted a request to amend the October drainage assessment. Whitfield got out of the truck and stood at the edge of 60 acres of bare, dark bottomland soil. There was no water. There had not been water here since December. He walked the property for 40 minutes. He probed the soil. He found a drainage outlet on the south end, open, running clear, discharging into the tinsaw bayou lateral exactly where Milankin's 1911 survey said it would. He noted the sight of the removed dam. He noted the soil profile that he found Ambrose in the barn running the Port Hiron at idol, listening to it run.
Whitfield stood in the barn door. He said, "You knew the whole time." Ambrose said, "I knew 50 years ago. I just couldn't prove it." Whitfield looked at the engine. He said, "That machine is older than I am." Ambrose said, "Yes, it is, and it'll be running after both of us are gone." Whitfield's amended report filed January 23rd, 1962.
Read in part, "The October assessment was incorrect. The parcel has demonstrated full natural drainage capacity. Soil profile is exceptional.
Previous obstruction of a natural drainage outlet, apparently deliberate and of significant age, had created conditions misread as permanent. They were not permanent. Ambrose Fontino died in March of 1971 at the age of 83. He had farmed a reclaimed 60 acres every season from 1962 until 1969 when his niece finally told him that 60 years of farm work was enough. His grandson Claude farms the land today. The Fondo place is 320 acres now. They sold some of the north ground in 1978 to settle an estate debt, but the south 60, the acres the Army Corps declared permanently flooded, have been in continuous cultivation for 62 years. rich ground.
It has not flooded since. The 1909 Port Hiron steam traction engine is still in the original barn on Fondo Road. It has not run since December of 1961. Claude has kept it clean and dry, the way Ambrose kept it. He has had three offers to sell it to restoration collectors, the highest of which was $11,000, which he declined. He keeps Mealankin's 1911 survey and Octave's letter in a frame on the wall of the farmhouse kitchen. Next to them is a photograph blurred and slightly overexposed taken by a neighbor on a Kodak brownie of Ambrose Fontino standing beside the Port Hiron in the barn doorway November 1961.
He is looking at the camera, but not quite. He is looking at something past it. The barn is dark behind him. The engine is enormous beside him. He does not look small. There's a marker at the south end of the reclaimed acorage. A piece of cypress board with words burned into it in a careful hand put there by clawed in 1 1987 it reads. This land was declared permanently flooded in October of 1961. The declaration was wrong. So is every man who mistakes a temporary problem for a permanent.
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