Thursday, April 11, 2013

80 YEARS


“It was a dark and stormy night” when the second child was born to Edward and Erma Cotter, named Alvin James. It was February 27, 1933. I was born in a farmhouse with my father as midwife.
O’K’, the phrase  “It was a dark and stormy night” is plagiarized from Victorian novelist Edward Bulwer-Lytton, the opening line of his novel PAUL CLIFFORD.  What follows is not fiction; it will be about milestones in my life.  
My mother said I was a curious child, into everything. This curiosity led me to the second major milestone in my life. I just had to go see what Dad was doing in a field near the house. The result of my inspection was the amputation of my left leg.  Followed was a series of operations, new artificial legs and with the last operation the year before High school and the last artificial leg purchased with out insurance in 1969. My parents purchased a new leg every three years. Was this all bad? No!, I became an avid reader. My Dad and Mother who also enjoyed reading and subscribed to several magazines. And I went to the library in Prescott Wisconsin, my hometown.  I recall reading the “Country Gentleman” For hours and re reading them again and again. I was “allowed” library privileges, because I was the Cotter kid with a limp. I had a new leg every three years that was only the right length for one day. I recall visiting the Case implement dealer and reading the Nebraska Tractor test book. Did you know a1939 John Deere B produced 8-horse power per pound of fuel? I did. A Farmall H would produce 10 horsepower per pound of fuel. But Dad bought a John Deere B with a hand clutch so I could drive it. My mother was very concerned about my education. She said I needed to prepare for a job where I didn’t have to “work”.
The third major milestone came after a lackluster High School experience and one year of College at River Falls State College. I had no idea what I wanted to do with my life. I wanted to farm! So I decided to get a “high paying” union job at the packing plant in South Saint Paul and to make enough money so I could farm. I was not hired; because I was a cripple. I was so dam mad I drove to Saint Paul and started the next Monday at the American Hoist and Derrick as a Draftsman. I had one semester of drafting at River Falls State College. After six months at the American Hoist and Derrick, I moved to 3M.
After three years at 3M, I was told that I had potential to be an Engineer! This was a major milestone. Also 3M Engineering and personal department (HR) said they would help me enroll in college and pay tuition. I started at the University of Wisconsin majoring in mechanical engineering. While I was a twenty four year old freshman, I probably wasn’t any more mature than the eighteen year olds, so I fit into dorm life and was president of my Dorm in my sophomore year. The U of W was clearly my fourth milestone! I graduated in 1962.
My fifth milestone begun after graduation when I was offered an engineering job with Eastman Kodak and a counter offer from 3M.  I accepted the 3M offer, which took me to Saint Paul Minnesota instead of Rochester New York. There I met Joan Donohoo my future wife and life partner in future milestones of my life.
The next milestone in my life was our moving to Hutchinson Minnesota with our now three children, Kathleen, Constance and Andrew. The year was 1969. And the remarkable part of the move to Hutchinson was not the decision to move to Hutchinson verses California, but that Joan, a city girl, took to the small town as an adventure and approached frustrations with humor.
And then the move to a Farm! In the late summer of 1971 Joan was taking a bike ride in the country. She saw a for sale sign on the south tip of Otter Lake. We had a fantasy of someday building a home on “the lake”. The lake property was a part of a 140-acre farm. On October 1 of 1971 Joan and Al owned lake property with 110 acres of cropland attached, crops to be harvested and 150 chickens. The rest of this story is long, but to summarize, the home on the lake soon escalated into fantasy of part time hobby farming, to full time farming exploring new farming methods. The purchase of the farm was a major milestone in my life!
Twenty years after the farm purchase, I retired from 3M and started to fulfill the fantasy as a full time farmer. This did not go as planned. I was recruited to run for Parish Council and despite not attending on election Sunday and I still won.  Also as a chronic complainer about the price of corn (a farming addiction), I got involved with county corn growers, soon elected to state board as a director, Because of my science and engineering background, I became involved in research on the national level. It soon became apparent to me how big a gap in experience I had about the role of government. At this point I thought of government as an organization who confiscated my wages through taxes and issuing me speeding tickets. I soon become aware of governments role in infrastructure and basic research.  Two examples of infrastructure are the Erie Canal and the issuance of land for building railroads and our Land Grant College system.  Was my involvement in Corn growers a major milestone?  Maybe not, but it was a significant part of my educational life experience.
The final milestone is Activities for Learning (AfL). AfL is a result of Joan’s study and work developing the curriculum “Right Start Math”  < http://rightstartmath.com>. My role has been many. First and foremost have been the support, encouragement and council to Joan in the development of her method of teaching math to children. While this role will continue, I have been able to help develop a company to publish Joan’s work so children can “understand, apply and enjoy mathematics”.  And I am still enjoying working on this milestone!