Written, narrated, and researched by At the Bend of the River author, Patty Norris Peavler, Reflections provides snapshots of critical and insightful moments of our community's history. Produced by the museum, Patty's podcast gives insight into artifacts and objects on display in the museum, events which occurred in our history, or stories of individuals whose legacy is often lost to time.
Each episode is released with an accompanying transcript (below).
Available here to listen and read the transcript
George Graham Vest, a Frankfort native was four times United State Senator from Missouri. His family home still sits at the corner of Wapping and Washington Streets. In 1853, Graham left Kentucky to practice law in Missouri. On September of 1870, Vest represented Charles Burden suing for damages after his dog, Old Drum, was shot and killed. At the Warrensburg trial, Attorney Vest declared he would “win the case or apologize to every dog in Missouri.” Vest’s closing argument offered a eulogy of sorts which is one of the most enduring passages of prose in American courtroom history. Part of the transcript reads…”the one who never deserts him and the one that never proves ungrateful or treacherous is his dog.” Vest, who was 40 years old, 5 feet 6 inches tall and weighing only 110 pounds it was said became a giant at painting pictures with words when he rose to speak. Those present reported few dry eyes, the jury included.
Vest won the case and $50 for the dog’s owner. He also won the appeal to the Missouri Supreme Court. In 1958, a statue of Old Drum was erected on the Johnson County Courthouse lawn. On the base is carved a summation of Vest’s closing speech, “A man’s best friend is his dog.” So impressed were the judges, a bust of the dog resides in the Missouri Supreme Court.
Written, Narrated, and Researched by Patty Norris Peavler.
Author of At the Bend of the River. Available online today.
Recorded and Produced by Eleanor Hasken-Wagner.
This is a production of the Capital City Museum--telling the stories of Frankfort and Franklin County.
Each episode is released with an accompanying transcript (below).
Available here to listen and read the transcript. (Below)
I admire Ruth Booe and Rebecca Gooch whose candy making prowess provided the genesis of Frankfort’s most famous confection but I’d like to also focus on a house keeper at the Frankfort Hotel, Fannie Rump. I know very little about Ms. Rump but I know she had courage. It must have taken a long time for Fannie to save $50 after all cleaning hotel rooms in the early nineteen hundreds was a menial job. Women were not paid equal wages with men. Employment opportunities did not abound. Ms. Rump must have seen something in the determination of Ruth Hanley Booe whose candy making business had been destroyed in a fire. Mrs. Booe had applied at a local bank for a loan to restart her business. Yes, she was turned down. You can’t possibly be surprised; women were not seen as capable of running a business. Yet, Rebecca Ruth Candies continues to this day and Fannie Rump soon saw the return of her $50 investment.
It began in 1919, two Frankfort women, Ruth Hanly and Rebecca Gooch began candy making after accolades from friends and family convinced them a living could be made from chocolates. Prohibition meant the bar of the Frankfort Hotel on Main Street was available so this location became the first home of the candy making enterprise.
The business prospered and the partnership seemed assured, Ruth married Douglas Booe and sold her interest to Rebecca and moved to Ft. Thomas, Kentucky where she continued making candy. After Mr. Booe’s death a few years later, Ruth and her son moved back to Frankfort to live with her parents. In 1929, Rebecca married and sold the shop to Ruth who moved the operation to nearby Jett. The fire and the advent of the depression almost spelled the end of the venture. Fannie Rump’s $50 loan provided the means for Ruth to continue. This time she began to experiment with new tastes, the first called Mint Kentucky Colonels.
The idea of putting bourbon in candy came after a friend’s chance remark that the two best tastes in the world were a sip of bourbon and Mrs. Booe’s candy. It took two years to perfect the still secret process of blending bourbon and candy into the now world famous bourbon balls. So popular was the confection that during World War II, patrons saved their personal sugar rations, bringing them to Ruth to make candy for them. A big boost came in 1947 when the New York Times’ food editor recommended Rebecca Ruth candies to her readers.
Mrs. Booe retired in 1964 but kept her hand in the company until her death in 1973. Her son took over operations and now her grandson heads up the company. Some of the equipment used today is original to the business including a marble slab which came from the bar of the Frankfort Hotel, the first home of Rebecca Ruth Candies.