Ramona Hotel

click on pictures for larger images and descriptions

In the early days, commerce thrived in Ramona. With the arrival of the railroad, one of the first buildings on main street was a boarding house, operated by the Ausherman family. The Aushermans came to Kansas from Pennsylvania in the early 1880s, and settled north of Ramona where the Rosebank church is now located (200th Street). They farmed and operated a postal station on the route from Abilene to Marion, and when Ramona came onto the rural landscape, they built a two-story hotel on the west side of main street.

ramona_hotel.jpgThe hotel offered accommodations for railroad workers who were building the railroad lines through Kansas. While the Missouri Pacific railroad went through Hope and Herington, the Rock Island headed south to Lost Springs and Lincolnville. In 1887, the railroad line reached Ramona; Tampa and Durham followed.

The hotel also offered lodging to traveling salesmen, called “Drummers,” who traveled by train with their trunks of merchandise samples, calling on Ramona merchants to take orders. The hotel also served meals for the traveling public, and the local business people, as well. It was a valuable asset to the community at that time. Eventually, the hotel was torn down by Henry Beltz, and the lumber was used to build a farm house northeast of town.

For nearly 100 years, Ramona had no hotel or boarding house, until 2000, when the California Sisters—Pat Wick & Jessica Gilbert—moved from California to Ramona, and turned the old Lutheran church parsonage, at 4th and D, into a bed and breakfast, called Cousins’ Corner. They opened their doors for business in 2001. Once more, the railroad—this time the Union Pacific—brought steady business.

A railroad crew came to the area to fix ties and repair crossings, and the crew supervisor heard we had a bed and breakfast. We were living in the house, doing remodeling, but when they asked to stay at the house, we had it ready for them within 12 hours, and my sister was ready to serve them bacon and eggs for breakfast.
Pat Wick

cousins_corner_sm.jpgThe sisters have operated their guesthouses for over a decade; their customers include railroad crews, itinerate constructions workers, folks who have roots in Ramona, and return for reunions and funerals, and city folks, who have no ties whatsoever to Ramona, but want to experience a slice of rural America.

 

 

 

Barbershop

old_barbershop_inside_sm.jpgbarbershop3 The barbershop building has been the site of several businesses through the years. The little building still stands on the west side of main street. In 1887, Reinhart Fiel built the structure for his harness and shoe repair shop. He was a master of his trade and served Ramona until his death in the 1920s.

The building was then remodeled for a barbershop, operated by Carl Kramer, who came to Ramona in 1906, from the Junction City area, and conducted his barbering business in several different buildings, until settling in the small building, which today is located at 207 D Street. In 1929 Carl sold his business to his son, Raymond.

I grew up south of Ramona. One day I came into town with my grandpa (I was just a little girl at the time), and while my grandpa conducted his business in town, I headed straight for the barbershop, all by myself. ‘I want a windblown haircut,’ I announced to the barber, Carl Kramer. I climbed into the barber’s chair and he began to cut. By the time he was done, I looked like I’d been stripped of hair. When Mr. Kramer said ‘That’ll be 25 cents,’ I realized I didn’t have any money, so I told him that I’d pay him the next time I was in town. When I got home, my mother saw the new haircut, and exclaimed, ‘What on earth have you done!’ and when I told the story (including the part about not having 25 cents to pay the barber) my mom wasn’t amused. She gave me a good spanking!

Rachel (Koch) Epp - from an interview in the Ramona News, 2003

 

 

old_barbershop_inside.jpgOther barbers, who snipped their way into Ramona history, were Victor Bernhardt, David Spellman, and Glen “Curly” Bernhardt, the last barber in town. Curly cut his last head of hair in 1966.

barber_sm.jpgThrough the years the little barbershop building has had several owners—Clinton Hanschu, Reign Anduss and most recently Pat Wick, who turned it into a gallery and gift shop from 2005-2007. In honor of the many barbers that cut hair in the building, Pat called her shop “The Barbershop Gallery.”

The building no longer holds a business, but you can still see the barber, giving a little boy a haircut, if you look in the window—they’re “scarecrow figures,” but they’re reminders of the good ‘ole days when Ramona had a barbershop, and you could get a haircut for “two bits.”

 

 

Vehicle Dealers and Garages

  • J.H. Brubaker Building
  • Eskeldson Farm Implements S.C. Eskeldson Farm Implements and Vehicles
  • S.C. Eskeldon's first business S.C. Eskeldon's first business, an agent for Bradley's & Vehicles

Some of the first buildings on main street in the 1890s were ones that housed the various incarnations of S. C. Eskeldson’s businesses. Unfortunately, none of them remain.

My dad came to Ramona in 1890, when he was just 16 years old, from Denmark. Dad had to learn to read and write English upon his arrival in the United States. He did have family already living in Ramona—his sister, Kristina, was married to N.P.J “Pete” Sondergard—and so he had a place to stay. Eventually my dad and Pete became business partners. I was the last of the ‘tribe’ of seven kids, so by the time I was an adult, Dad didn’t have much to say, and so I don’t have many details about my father’s business life. But I do remember one thing he said, often: ‘You really don’t know people til you deal money with them.'

Steve Eskeldson (son of S.C. Eskeldson) - From a 2012 conversation with Jessica Gilbert; Eskeldson still lives on the family farm, northeast of Ramona.

 

Both S.C. Eskeldson and Pete Sondergard came from Denmark, and were brother-in-laws for a time. Sondergard was employed as a blacksmith for the railroad (in Herington) when he first came to this area, and decided to start his own business in Ramona. He asked Eskeldson—a wheelwright—to join him. Eskeldon’s skill was a very valuable one at the time—since replacement parts of farm machinery and wagons were not available, so one had to turn to a “smithy” to forge needed parts.

Soon Eskeldson and Sondergard added a dealership for McCormick-Deering Farm implements, which was very successful, because the population was increasing and the demands for implements was rising right along with it.

vehicles_hardware_sm.jpgEventually, Mr. Eskeldson built a hardware and implement building, where he continued his business. In 1915 he sold the business to Roy Bird, who later sold it to the Woodrow Wilson family, and finally John Biehler. Around 1922 Clarence Neis operated a restaurant on the first floor of the building, and there was a theater on the second floor. One year it was even used as the gymnasium for the Ramona High School basketball team.

When Pete Sondergard, Eskeldon’s business partner, retired in 1907 from the “smithy” business, he leased his blacksmith shop, and moved to Lost Springs to open a flourmill. Eventually, Otto Kuether purchased Sondergard’s blacksmith shop. The last “smithy” in Ramona was William Weber, who operated his shop from 1937 until his retirement in the 1960s.

ramona_garage_sm.jpgBeing progressive in his business ventures, S.C. Eskeldson decided to open a Ford dealership in Ramona, and call it the Ramona Garage. This time he partnered with Niels Sondergard—Pete Sondergard’s nephew—who was the mechanic for the garage.

This was a very prosperous business during the hey-day of the motel-T Ford. Many of us can recall when Fords were shipped in by railroad, four to a boxcar. They came unassembled. The chassis were stacked at one end of the railroad car, and the bodies at the other. The fenders and wheels were piled in the middle, at the doorway. Workers removed the fenders and wheels first, then the chassis and then a body, with the fenders piled onto the body. It was then pushed down the ramp and steered down the street to the garage, to be fully assembled and prepared for sale. My dad would buy a car and then sell it to one of the farmers, after teaching him to drive. No driver’s license was needed—just $300-$400 to buy the car.

Dale Sondergard (Pete Sondergard’s son) - Excerpt from A Century of Memories

 

ford_sm.jpgCompetition from the new Model-A Fords and the 1928-29 Chevrolets impacted the Ramona Garage business, so S.C. Eskeldson sold his interest in the business to his partner, Sondergard, who took on new partners—John Dorsch and Jake Schnell.

implements_sm.jpgIn 1945 Oren and Lauren “Babe” Daetwiler bought the garage, and ran the business until 1955, when Alfred “Kink” Sondergard (son of Niels Sondergard) took over and operated the garage until 1987. The last owner of the building was Maurice Stroda. By this time, the garage was primarily a gas station and Maurice also operated a repair business. In 2001 a heavy snowstorm caused the roof of the grand old building to collapse, leaving only the back part of the garage, which can still be seen on the east, when you drive down main street.

 

kleopfers_sm.jpgburbaker buildingThere were other garages and tractor dealerships through the years. In 1916, J.H. Brubaker built a large red brick building, on the east side of main street, to house a dealership for farm implements, automobiles and Avery tractors. Harvey “Barney” Kleopfer leased part of the building for an automotive repair business—Kleopfer’s Garage and Machine Shop—who was the first professionally-trained mechanic in the area.

 

 

I remember as a kid, what excitement there was in town, when the latest implements were showcased by the Tatge brothers. It was like a carnival was in town—there were hot dogs and other foods served, and the streets were filled with curious farmers. They also gave away little toy tractors to all the kids who came, and I was thrilled to get one.
Laurel Ehrhardt (From a conversation with his daughter, Pat Wick, 2002)

The Tatge brothers were very astute businessmen, providing employment for many in the community. They were an asset to Ramona for over 20 years.

New farm implements were difficult to obtain during and after WWII, so the Tatges searched several states for used machines, and hauled them to Ramona. They used the good parts from several machines to make one really good one. They deserve a lot of credit for such foresight and initiative.
Dale Sondergard - (Excerpt from A Century of Memories)

tatge_sm.jpgEd Tatge eventually sold his interest in the implement company, and became an extensive wheat and livestock farmer in Colorado and Kansas. His brother, Harlan, moved the implement business to Herington and sold it, becoming associated with the Welch Manufacturing Company at Herington. Prior to 1987, they purchased the old Ramona high school building and established a small manufacturing company called Tox-O-Wik Cattle Insecticide Applicator. This business continues to this day in Ramona, and is owned by Warren Gfellar, a businessman from Kansas City.

The last owner of the red brick building, called the Tatge building, was Norma Weber and her son, Jim Weber. The building was a Ramona landmark until 1995, when it was torn down because the structure became unsafe.

Restaurants

ohms_sm.jpgJust south of the Tatge building is a small building that, in Ramona’s early days, served as the post office in Ramona. When the post office relocated to a building on the west side of the street, Jess Oyster converted the building into a restaurant.

The Albrights had been operating the restaurant in the late 1940s and had closed the business, so the owner of the building was looking for a buyer. Harold and Betty Ohm purchased the property on March 21, 1952, just days before they got married on April 3. Betty opened the restaurant/bar herself when she arrived in Ramona—she was barely 19.

Betty and daughetersThe Ohms turned this structure into their home, eventually raising their three daughters there—and turned their front room into what became affectionately know as “Ramona’s living room.” The cafe was the social hub of Ramona.

 


In 1952 there were 14 businesses in town, besides our cafe: Strickler’s Mercantile, Curly’s Barbershop, Lizzie Mohn’s cream station, Oscar Applegate’s real estate office, Grover Anderson’s grocery store, Jack Anderson’s post office/hardware store (in the same building). There was the bank, the central telephone office, a gas station owned by Henry Albright, Marie Hicks’s liquor store, Alvin Sader’s television repair shop, the Sader Café, the elevator, and the train depot.

Betty Ohm: (From an interview in the Ramona News, 2006)


Betty and Harold retired from the restaurant business in 2000. They stayed in Ramona, moving to a house on Second Street. The restaurant was sold at auction to Jeannie Weber Goza, who operated her own restaurant, Cheers II, for several years. This little historical building still stands on the east side of main street; it’s used as a residence.

inside cafeimplements_sm.jpgRamona has been blessed with many restaurant owners through the years: Clarence Neis, Ira Miller, Ezra Riffel, Shorty Mortimer, Wilbur Liddell, Ray Kramer, Dale Sondergard, Harry & Georgia Berger, Pete & Hannah Sader, Greg & Lori Stenzel, Harold & Betty Ohm, Jeannie Goza, Reign and Marlene Anduss.

 

 

 

 

 

Badger Lumber

badger_lumber_sm.jpgbadger_lumber_sm.jpgOne of the oldest structures in Ramona is the former Badger Lumber Company, located on the east side of main street, at the south entrance to town. (The Badger Lumber Company also had lumberyards in Herington, Marion, Elmo, Hope, Abilene, Tampa, and Durham.) Mr. Al Peterson was the first manager at the Ramona store, followed by Robert Telfer, who managed the operation until the Depression, when the store temporarily closed. It re-opened under the management of Les Hungerford, and operated for another ten years.

When the enterprise closed, the lumber shed was removed. The store building was sold to Harry and Georgia Berger, who used the building for a restaurant, as did Pete and Hannah Sader, and Greg and Lori Stenzel. Don and Norma Bird bought the building in 1988, and Norma operated an antique business there until 2007.

Ramona Elevator

Joseph Strickler came to Marion County from Virginia, with his family of 11 children. He had successfully operated a grain elevator in Virginia for 15 years, so when he moved to Ramona, he built an elevator on the railroad property.

Ramona Elevators

The elevator, still a prominent landmark in Ramona, later became a farmers’ cooperative. It dominants the Ramona skyline to this day, and is owned and operated by Agri-Producers of Tampa, Kansas. These days, there’s little activity at the elevator, until summer harvest rolls around.

 

 

Markets and Mercantiles

Hanschu and O'KeefDaniel Merilatt, a farmer who lived east of Ramona, established the first general store in Ramona in 1887. He built a two-room building, located on the west side of main street, a short distance north of the first intersection in town. Later the building would be used as the first bank, and later as a restaurant.

 

 

I remember ‘Butter and Egg Night’ in Ramona, when everyone came to town on Saturday nights to trade goods, enjoy fellowship with neighbors, or dine in one of the cafes. You could hardly find a place to park. We girls would go over to Lizzie Mohn’s Creamery, where she would weigh us. Or we’d go over to Billy Oyster’s Café to purchase a Mr. Goodbar for five cents.

Anna Mae (Sader) Stika - (From an interview in the Ramona News, 2002)

Stricklers and Company

strickler_inside_sm.jpgStrickler & Co., founded by the J.S. Strickler family, became Ramona’s most prominent general store. He began the mercantile in partnership with J.B. Shirk.

As the mercantile prospered, Strickler built a large store, on the west side of main street, at the south entrance into town. When Shirk retired, Strickler was sole owner of this prosperous business. His five sons, helped run the mercantile. The store served the community for over 70 years until an unfortunate fire, in February 1955, destroyed the building.

 

hanschu_mkt_sm.jpgThe building that has housed many grocery stores in Ramona, still stands on the west side of main street. Robert Greer, who used it as a combination cream station and grocery store, constructed the building. This small grocerty continued in business, throughout the next 100 years and these families were some of the owners: Robert Greer, Jim Nelson, Grover and Eva Anderson, Jake & Bertha Schneider, Salu and Hannah Brunner, and Clinton and Frances Hanschu, who retired in 2000.

When I was in my youth, I worked for a short time at the grocery store when it was owned by Saul & Hannah Brunner. I remember Hannah coming around from the back of the meat counter and saying, 'Sell the Hamburger for three pounds for a dollar today!' Imagine that!

Anna Mae (Sader) Stika - from an interview in the Ramona News, 2002

 


A.G. “Archie” Greer and his sister, Marie, built a store on the northwest corner of what is now Third and D Streets in Ramona. The year was 1901. The Greers came from Ireland in 1890 and spent a decade working in New York City, before coming to Ramona. Archie was employed by a large mercantile firm in New York, and Marie was employed by several wealthy New York families—including the Vanderbilts who lived on the Hudson River.

sidewalkThe Greer siblings built a store that they called the “Coney Island Store.” Today, if you look carefully at the crumbling sidewalk just north of the old bank building, you can see Archie Greer’s signature in the cement, commemorating the opening of the Coney Island Store. They operated the store until 1911, and then leased it to the George Finuf family, who continued until 1920, when the land was sold to the Ramona State Bank, for their new brick building.

 

 

 

Ramona Banks

bank_farmers_sm.jpgIn 1903 the Ramona State Bank was organized; the bank building was just north of Strickler’s Mercantile, on the west side of main street. In the 1920s the bank purchased the lot on the northwest corner of the first intersection (now named Third and D Streets), and built a modern brick building.

In 1989 the bank changed ownership and became a branch of the Tampa State Bank. For over a decade, tellers from the Tampa Bank came to Ramona twice a week for a few hours, so folks could conduct their banking business. In 2002, the bank closed, and the building was given to The California Sisters (Pat Wick and Jessica Gilbert), who created a city historical museum.

Because the sisters had relatives in Ramona who had lived here all their lives--specifically their aunt and uncle, Henry and Gertrude Schubert, who were the town historians--Pat and Jess had many pictures and other memorabilia that needed a place to be displayed. The sisters created on-going displays, featuring various themes: harvest practices, kids' antique toys, high school and grade school pictures, and fashion through the years.

implements_sm.jpgHelping the sisters in their efforts to maintain the old bank building was their dear friend, and life-long Ramona resident, Tim Steinborn, dubbed "Tooltime Tim," because he was not only gifted in doing construction and repairs, he had a big collection of tools to get the job done. Routinely, throughout the years, the old bank building needed to either have the floors leveled and jacked up, or the roof tarred to keep it from leaking.

In 2009, when Tim unexpectedly died of a brain tumor at the age of 48, the sisters could no longer maintain the building. Many of the historic pictures were moved to other buildings for safekeeping. The museum closed in 2009, but the sisters keep displays in the windows, to add life to main street Ramona.

  • Tampa State Bank Tampa State Bank (1987). The bank closed in 2001 and was given to the California Sisters, who housed an historical museum in the building until 2007, when repairs on the building became so extensive that the sisters closed down the building. The fate of the building is uncertain. Centennial photograph by Alan Streubing, (1987)
  • Bank Museum In 2002, when the Tampa State Bank closed in Ramona, the California Sisters turned the building into an historical museum. The museum closed in 2009 when the building needed major repairs. (2005)
  • Bank Windows Jessica Gilbert keeps the windows of the old bank building filled with memorabilia from those community members who served in the military. (2012)


From Horse and Buggy to Automobiles

wagonRamona’s livery barn—located east of main street on a large lot—was operated by the Coulson family. The barn was a hip-roofed building with fenced corrals for horses and livestock. The Coulsons provided livery services to Dr. Saylor, Ramona’s only physician.

Dr. John Harvey Saylor completed his medical training at Kansas University in 1904 and promptly moved to Ramona to start his practice. He lived in the small yellow house on the west side of what is now “C” Street. The house still stands.

Doc Saylor began his practice in the days of horse and buggy, and almost lost his life on one occasion, while trying to reach a patient during a snowstorm. His rig was struck by an oncoming train at the crossing east of Ramona, near the St. Paul’s Lutheran Church. The horse was killed, and the buggy demolished. With a broken leg, Doc Saylor crawled to the church parsonage for help.

Saylor served the Ramona community until 1925, when he left to become Marion County’s first Health Officer.

The Coulsons eventually sold the livery business to Lewis Smith, who continued as long as there was a demand. The Smiths retained a herd of horses, which were used for maintenance work on the city streets and township road.


“I recall Elmer Smith with a four-horse team, pulling a drag over the streets. They raised an enormous cloud of dust.”

Dale Sondergard


The rig that was used to grade the streets is still in Ramona, resting in a special spot at the corner of 360th and Quail Creek.

  • Road Grader This grader was hooked to a team of horses and used to grade the roads in Ramona; it rests on the Alcorn's property, south side of the road as you enter Ramona.
  • Model T Ford Alex Brunner driving his Model T Ford Touring car. With him are Bill Sader, Marie and Lydia Brunner, and Gus Hamm with the girls.
  • Ramona Service Station Edwin "Ears" Berger in front of the Ramona Service Station, which was located where the Ramona City Hall now stands (3rd and D).
  • Stroda gas station Maurice Stroda was the last person to operate a gas station in Ramona; he bought the Ramona Garage from Alfred Sondergard in 1987. (circa 1995)


The Ramona Oil Company was started because automobiles were becoming more prominent. Howard Button built a bulk gas station, on the triangle of land just north of the railroad tracks (the intersection of 3rd and F, today). Two large storage tanks, along with pumps, were on this land, with a pipeline running to the railroad siding, since gasoline was shipped in by tank car.

Mr. Button was a farmer when he began this company, but as business flourished, he eventually gave up farming. The Durham Oil Company bought the business in 1929, followed by Newt Kleopfer, and finally Ben Brunner.

The Ramona Garage, owned by Maurice Stroda, was the last filling station in Ramona; Maurice quit pumping gas in 1994.