Culture Mendon, Missouri - A feel good story for once

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Mendon, Missouri. Population 171. There’s really nothing here. The tiny town is located off Route 11, just south of Yellow Creek. You’re three hours west of Saint Louis, two hours east of Kansas City.

It’s quiet. No attractions. No major landmarks. Nobody famous ever lived here unless you count Vern Kennedy, right-hander for the White Sox, circa 1934.

If you’re looking for entertainment in Mendon, your main option is Busch Light. But you’ll have to drive all the way to Brunswick to find a liquor store.

“We are just country folk,” said Mendon native Carol Ann Wamsley, “and that’s what makes us a special place.”

At its heart, Mendon is a railroad town. The first iron tracks were laid in 1887. Within a decade, a town sprang up. You had a few dozen storefronts, a school, a newspaper, and a couple churches with steeply conflicting views on eternal damnation. Most of that is gone now.

Today, the Atchison Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad line still passes the northwest side of the community, only now it’s the Southern Transcon Railroad.

The Amtrak Southwest Chief runs through town regularly. On summer afternoons you can see the Amtrak locomotive in the distance, racing across the prairie like a polished chromium bullet. But the train never stops here. It just keeps moving.

Until last week.

It was a Monday that will live in infamy. The Southwest Chief made an unexpected stop near Mendon, of all places.

The Chief was traveling 87 mph, bound for Chicago. There were more people aboard than there are living within Mendon’s city limits.

Up ahead a dump truck was on the tracks. The truck was obstructing the crossing of County Road 113. This was not a small truck. This was a vehicle about the size of a Sonic Drive-In.

The train never slowed.

The sound of the collision could be heard from as far away as Westville. It was the noise of two General Electric diesel locomotives and seven Superliner cars plowing into a mass of Dearborn steel. The train was derailed.

Ron Goulet was riding coach.

“…I was airborne. Everything was tumbling. People on top of people. The train rolled on its right side—the entire train, except for the front locomotive.”

Carry-on bags went everywhere. Elbows collided with craniums. Shoes crashed into jaws. Children clashed against the ceiling.

“When I climbed up and out of the train…” said Ron, “I was stunned that the entire thing was lying on its side. Not in a jumbled mass, but all laid over on the side.”

The story made national headlines, of course. Reporters from national newspapers visited. They photographed, videoed and wrote. Cable news anchors wore frowny faces and mentioned the wreck, just before cutting to commercials urging elderly viewers to reverse mortgage their livers.

But somehow, the bigger story about what happened in Mendon was lost. Somehow, you didn’t hear about Mendon’s magnificent people.

Sure, you heard about the wreck itself; the 150 injured, and the four fatalities. But you didn’t hear about how the residents of Mendon—nearly every single resident—rushed to the scene of the accident.

Throngs of ordinary townspeople arrived before first responders even knew about the crash. There were volunteers crawling out of the wallpaper.

“It was a wonderful problem to have,” said school district superintendent, Eric Hoyt, “but we probably had too many volunteers show up.”

People came from all over Chariton County, riding beat-up Silverados, ATVs, or arriving on foot. They came from Sumner, Marceline, Cunningham, Brookfield and Indian Grove.

Two Boy Scout troops dutifully helped injured victims from the wreckage. Local high-schoolers were fashioning bandages out of bandannas. Old women recited the Lord’s Prayer alongside strangers in blood-stained clothes.

There were farmers, off-duty nurses, truck drivers, soccer moms, Little League coaches and grade-schoolers. They were doling out food, first aid, bottled water and, most importantly, phone chargers.

Victims were taken to local homes, fed, bathed and bandaged. Weeping passengers were embraced by rural preachers. Passengers using wheelchairs were lifted from the rubble by young men in ropers and camouflage caps.

Local schoolbus drivers transported the wounded to hospitals. Northwestern High School staff members triaged victims in the gymnasium and fed people in the cafeteria.

One resident said that Mendon didn’t feel like a 171-person town anymore. “It was like 671 people came together.”

And the most unusual thing about all this is: None of this is unusual. At least not within the national tapestry that is The Great American Small Town.

Although we rarely hear about such acts of compassion and lovingkindness within our society, believe me, they happen. Every day. Every hour. Ordinary Americans will astound you with their goodwill. Sadly, ordinary American journalists aren’t interested in being astounded by such things.

Either way. Now you know the rest of the story.

https://seandietrich.com/mendon-missouri/ (A)
 
Well, I hate small town America.

You're on your way to work and want to pick up an energy drink, so you stop at the one gas station in town. Fucking kids running around like it's Disneyland since it's like the only thing in town. A couple of old men are just hanging out reading the newspaper. You get your stuff and go to check out and there's a huge line because everyone knows everyone else and has to talk.

"Oh hi there Frank, how's Barb and the kids? Tony's in 5th grade now? Ha ha ha! Oh, how fast they grow. Some weather we've been having, huh? Yeah, yeah, I suppose it's good for the crops. Yeah we went up to Johnson's pond to do some fishing. Oh, the old Ford's still hanging in there. I think it needs a new water pump and I just replaced the break pads. Oh, Marlene is doing OK. Little bit of a gout flare up but Ol' Doc Miller gave her some pills that fixed her right up. Hold on, let me show you the pictures I took..."
You make it sound wonderful.

What is a "Sonic Drive-In" and is it now a unit of measurement? Americans will use literally anything to avoid metric.
It's a small restaurant the size of a large restaurant.
 
Its a drive-in fast food place like the 50's had where you park your car, order from there, and then they bring you your meal, and they're deliberately styled in a retro fashion. So you're looking at a small building, possibly roughly two of those if they include the parking spots. They're really not that big compared to a McDonald's where everyone needs parking and seating.
Ah, thank you kind snek.

Sorry for the joke about your mom! :)
 
Reminds me of the bus crash in Orland a few years back as well as (most famously) the people of Gander.

People willing to give total strangers a place to stay.

Small town wholesomeness.
 
Ah, thank you kind snek.

Sorry for the joke about your mom! :)
Na, its fine. She actually is a bit overweight (not as bad as you're thinking, but she is a bit above what would be best for her) thanks to some pretty nasty diabetes. She lost the genetic lottery badly in that regard and I've needed to be careful since a few blood tests when I was heavier had me technically pre-diabetic. Gotten better and I watch my intake, but it is a concern and potential risk.
 
Its not about metric but to Americans its a lovely way of telling them just how big this truck was. Don't you foreigners use size-related descriptions at any point?
Yes, the standard British comparative measures are the football field for length, the tennis court for area, the elephant for weight and the x number of stacked double decker buses for height.
 
Yes, the standard British comparative measures are the football field for length, the tennis court for area, the elephant for weight and the x number of stacked double decker buses for height.
I was being sarcastic, because sarcasm is the only proper response to "Lol Americans won't into metric".
 
A lot of rural coops are rolling out gigabit fiber these days. This place is a little small but it's also not too unlike the sort of place remote workers my age find pretty attractive. Some might be carpetbaggers but some more just want to help see certain things about small towns survive if they can.
EDIT: Yes these places are horrible don't come here from the bughives they are surrounded by pits of ravenous rapeweasels that vote Republican and get poor mileage.
 
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A lot of rural coops are rolling out gigabit fiber these days. This place is a little small but it's also not too unlike the sort of place remote workers my age find pretty attractive. Some might be carpetbaggers but some more just want to help see certain things about small towns survive if they can.
Shh... don't let these people know about that, or how staggeringly low the prices are compared to bughives. Guys, there totally isn't affordable all-fiber internet that terminates at the modem in rural America. There also isn't any 4g cellular because we and the cell companies mutually revile each other and we want their cancer waves far, far away from us.
 
Lots of places like that in the USA, all over. Not just small towns, either. We read too often about the shit that happens in certain cities, or parts of certain cities, and don't hear often enough about the places like Mendon.

It's a big America, folks. What happened in Mendon would happen in a lot of places.
 
I was being sarcastic, because sarcasm is the only proper response to "Lol Americans won't into metric".
It wasn't even a legitimate criticism. Why would they be avoiding metric there? They could just say it was 40 feet by 20 feet or whatever. But it's more illustrative for the reader to use a comparison like that then autistically rattle off its exact mass and volume because humans don't think like robots. Quick, exactly how big is a sofa? How much does the sofa weigh? Don't know? How about if I said something was "twice as big as a sofa"? You'd understand that instantly. Thus, my point.
 
Yes, the standard British comparative measures are the football field for length, the tennis court for area, the elephant for weight and the x number of stacked double decker buses for height.
Do you have RyanAir's quality of service as a metric to talk about how bad something is?
 
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