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The Proudest Small Town

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proudest-small-town-cadiz-ohio-harrison-county2Now, I do not claim to be a reporter, or a journalist by any means. But I do tend to be somewhat observant at times. Recently, while coming into the office in town, I notice activity on the corner of the Court House lawn. Some further investigation revealed a bronze plaque in quite weathered condition,being set in place. The plaque reads:

Cadiz, Ohio
The Proudest Small Town in America
By producing many men of national prominence. More then any other community of similar size.
Cadiz stands as a monument to the value of small town life in America.

Bob Burns, deeply grateful for his small town youth in Van Buren, Arkansas, sought out towns that have fathered successful men. He found many, but leading them was Cadiz.

To honor Cadiz and the small towns that have contributed so much to American life, the Arkansas Traveler presents this plaque.

Born In and Near Or Living At Cadiz Were:

General George A. Custer – Soldier
Mary Jobe A. Keley – Educator
John A. Bingham – Statesman
Percy Hammond – Critic
W. H. Holmes – Archaeologist
Clark Gable – Actor
Bishop Matthew Simpson – Clergyman
Lynn Harold Hough – Clergyman
Edwin M. Stanton – Statesman
General Thomas M. Vincent – Soldier

October 1938proudest-small-town-cadiz-ohio-harrison-county

I personally, do not know where this plaque was originally located, or the decisions behind the reasoning to place it where it now sits. It is something I personally plan to find out. While attempting to find out more information about this plaque, and the name that dedicated it. I discovered this.

Bob Burns (1890–1956)
aka: Robin Burn
bazooka_f

Bob Burns was a well-known national radio and film personality during the 1930s and 1940s. He was known by a variety of titles that referenced his hillbilly origins, such as “The Arkansas Traveler” and “The Arkansas Philosopher.” Burns was a musician and an actor who wove tales of life in the Arkansas hills with his musical performances. He earned his nickname, “Bazooka,” from an instrument he invented and named as a young man in a plumbing shop in Van Buren (Crawford County). The instrument, which was a simple device made of spare gas fittings and a whiskey funnel, eventually lent its name to the World War II anti-tank weapon due to its similar looks and Burns’s popularity among the troops who employed it in combat.

Bob Burns was born Robin Burn on August 2, 1890, to William Robert Burn, a civil engineer, and Emma Needham; he had one brother. Sources are divided as to where he was born, with some having his birthplace as Van Buren, while others have him born in Greenwood (Sebastian County) and moving with his family to Van Buren when he was three. As a young man, he learned to play brass instruments and, before the age of twelve, was playing with the Queen City Silver Cornet Band in Van Buren. By the age of thirteen, young Burns had formed his own string band and, during a practice session, put together the handcrafted instrument that gave him his nickname. His “bazooka” was a novelty instrument that made the sound of a “wounded moose,” and he practiced until eventually becoming skilled enough to play it in the Queen City Silver Cornet Band. The instrument had a very narrow range and peculiar tone by design. Burns used his simple invention to entertain audiences between yarns.

Eventually, Burns’s ambition led him to audition for the most popular radio station in Los Angeles, California, and he won a non-paying spot on the afternoon radio show The Fun Factory as the character “Soda Pop.” His popularity immediately grew along the West Coast.

In 1935, in New York City, Burns was able to persuade Paul Whiteman, a coast-to-coast radio host, to give him an audition on his show, and the young entertainer subsequently became a national celebrity. Before long, he was a regular guest with Rudy Vallee’s very popular radio program. He often made long political speeches and was compared by many to Will Rogers.

He returned to Los Angeles before the year was out and played with Bing Crosby on NBC’s Kraft Music Hall radio program, with which he remained until 1941. Though Burns had previously appeared in such movies as Quick Millions (1931)and Young As You Feel (1931), it was in 1936 that Burns really launched a motion-picture career with the release of the full-length film Rhythm on the Range, in which he starred along with Bing Crosby, who also enjoyed his first major role in the film. Among his other films were Waikiki Wedding and Mountain Music (1937) and I’m From Missouri (1939).

Though Burns appeared in many films, he is most well known for his radio programs. He continued his rise to fame between 1941 and 1947 with his own popular radio drama, The Arkansas Traveler. The show was based upon the character he had developed over his career and had played in a feature film in 1938 titled The Arkansas Traveler. During the long run of the program, which eventually became The Bob Burns Show, the music of Spike Jones was often included.

Burns was married three times. His first marriage was to Elizabeth Fisher on September 22, 1921; she died in 1936. Later that year, he married Judy Canova, who became a well-known radio host after the couple’s divorce in 1939. He then wed Harriet M. Foster on May 31, 1939, whom he remained married to until his death in 1956. Burns had one child from his first marriage and three from his second.

Burns died in Encino, California, on February 2, 1956, of kidney cancer. He is entombed with his wife at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, California. His former house in Van Buren is now a museum.
( Source:located here )

If anyone has any information about this plaque, or the man behind it, please comment below and share with everyone else!

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Larry Bertolino is a 29 year old, U.S Navy Veteran, and the owner of myLocalPCpro which is located in Cadiz, Ohio. He is also member of the American Legion, The Cadiz Business Association and a member of the Tappan Lake Volunteer Fire Department. Find mylocalpcpro on Facebook
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Posted by on July 27, 2009, 1:01 pm. Filed under Community, Featured. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback to this entry

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