Two past owners says this
old corner post and a three strand fence has stood since the 1930's accepted as
the boundary of the land we have acquired for a boys ranch... which a
neighbor now wants to change, in order to gain a fraction of an acre of land.
This is the ten year old house that a neighbor
wants to destroy after doing a secret land survey which he says gives him
possession of the end of it…possibly as little as 10 feet. If we can save
it, the ranch for fatherless boys will have a headquarters and a three-year
plan will be fulfilled
I
hadn’t done much of anything important in my life until the summer of my
twentieth year. That summer I needed
a job before returning to the University of Missouri for the final semester. A
man name Gilbert Rader, with the University’s Extension Service, asked me if I
would like to come back to Texas County, where I was born and raised, and work
with young troubled boys who were already getting into trouble at the age of 12
or 13. It was a great summer and I knew then I would like to do as much of that
as I could, because I saw the summer’s work change lives.
About
five years ago I met an elderly man and his wife because my daughter was his
doctor. He wanted me and my little
grandsons to come and see his place.
His name was Dan Besser, and in he was a war veteran with one of the
most remarkable life stories I have ever heard. In the summer 2014 issue of the Journal of the Ozarks
magazine, one of our writers interviewed him and told the story of much of his
life.
Dan
was a good person at heart, and I really liked him. His wife Phyllis passed away in the winter of 2013 and he
just fell apart. His health was
poor and I began to take him to the hospital in Springfield every couple of weeks.
After one of those trips he told me he had a dream of keeping his 50 acres
along Brush Creek as it was for others to enjoy. He had built two cabins on knolls in the woods overlooking
the creek and bought my grandsons a kayak because they and a half-dozen boys
were celebrating a birthday there one weekend.
I
think right then that God had a plan which Dan and I were to become partners
in. Neither of us could really see
what it was until he told me how his father had died before he turned six years
old and he recognized how it had affected his life to not have a father. He started hanging out in a Wheatland
tavern, and they gave him all the beer he could drink. Because they thought he
was funny when drunk, they turned him into an alcoholic for life!
But
something made Dan build one of those cabins with lofts, which he told me he
envisioned providing weekend retreats for youngsters. He wondered if I would help. An outdoor writer may not have
the money to pull such a thing off but with the help of my daughters we used
money left to us by their grandfather, who loved the outdoors as much as
anyone. Using that money we bought
the land with the agreement that Dan could live there until his death.
A
couple of months later, Dan came to me and said our neighbor to the west was an
evil man who lived for money. He
had recently been caught and charged with hunting over bait barrels and
according to Dan he and his cohorts killed turkeys out of season while they hunted
deer. Dan said the man, who I have never met, had become angry because Dan
didn’t sell him the land, and I suppose he figured having neighboring land
being used for dozens of under-privileged children in the fall might ruin his
hunting.
Dan
told me that for a half century, the boundary of his land had been marked by
two old 3-strand barbed wire fences but he had caught this neighbor to the west,
with his son, tearing down the boundary fence, trying to hide any evidence of
it. But he had left much of it,
including the old corner post. Dan said the neighbor had a new secret survey
done which took in small sections of the road and about 10 feet or so of the
cabin. He and his lawyer
demanded a hefty sum of money AND the closing of the road, and insisted on
demolishment of the ten or fifteen feet of the 30-foot home Dan had built ten
years before.
Dan
said not to worry, the road and barn it led to had been there for twenty years
and something called “adverse possession law” would not allow the man and his
lawyer to take that fraction of an acre or destroy the home which we were going
to use in the wilderness retreat for boys without fathers. He said he and his lawyer would take
care of it in court.
Before
he could, Dan became very ill. For months, dementia took him away. He died last
July. Suddenly the whole thing
fell on my shoulders. I called a
previous owner, Gary Rowland, who told me the fence that had been removed had
been the boundary that five landowners had always agreed on for thirty or forty
years and when he sold it to Dan, the boundary was indeed that fence. He said the road and barn had been
there for about twenty years, and the home had been there ten years. Rowland said he suspected that before
they had the secret survey done, the man and his lawyer may have manipulated
the land boundary description.
Like me, he couldn’t imagine why a man would be so adamant about
destroying a home when he could gain nothing but a few yards of brushland; especially
someone who already owns more than 100 acres.
I
am convicted to make this place Dan Besser loved so much into a place where
boys without fathers can come for a weekend or a week, guided by good
counselors. With the two cabins,
and Dan’s three bedroom home there could be room for as many as 20 children at
a time and four or five counselors.
I have already begun work on nature trails through the woods and believe
I can easily have 2 miles of trails finished by mid-winter. There is a big flat field there for
softball or soccer, a beautiful gravel bar and swimming hole and I think I can
soon have a dozen kayaks and canoes for the creek. A nearby flowing spring can give us a fishing
hole of cold flowing water stocked with trout for kids to catch and eat.
I
don’t have a lawyer and the case is to be decided by a judge who has the same
name as a judge in western Missouri I once wrote about. He took high officials from
Conservation Department hunting on his special private reserve and talked them
into giving him a quarter million dollars to improve it. Today, that family has their property
taxes paid by the MDC and they despise me for letting the world know about what
they’ve done. I doubt that judge will render any impartial decisions if he is
indeed part of that family. We
need a lawyer to make this dream that Dan and I had, a reality. Not one who is
interested in making lots of money, but one who has an interested in seeing
this project for under-priveleged children come to fruition.
No
one is going to make money out of this plan, I want this to be free for deserving
kids. But if this neighbor has his
way and can indeed claim the fraction of an acre his new boundary gives him and
bulldoze a few feet of the home, the whole thing is hopeless. I hope somewhere out the among this
column’s readers I can find some help.
I don’t know anything about courts and land dispute issues and adverse
possession laws but I know what evil is.
We are going to need help dealing with it.
Meanwhile
if you want to see what I am talking about, and see the great potential of
using this land and the structures for a type of free boys retreat, come and
let me show it to you.
Write
to me at Box 22,Bolivar, Mo 65613 or email me at lightninridge@
windstream.net. The phone number
is 417 777 5227.
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