Nebraskaland

Aug-Sept 2022 Nebraskaland

NEBRASKAland Magazine is dedicated to outstanding photography and informative writing with an engaging mix of articles and photos highlighting Nebraska’s outdoor activities, parklands, wildlife, history and people.

Issue link: http://mag.outdoornebraska.gov/i/1472976

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 32 of 63

August-September 2022 • Nebraskaland 33 any material amends for the crippling injuries you received," and it went without saying that the railroad would take no further responsibility for its former employee, even though he was injured on the job and the boy he rescued was the son of a station agent. It was up to local people to provide for the disabled 25-year-old. Poell posed for photographs with the child he rescued; prints were sold to raise money to buy a small house for Poell and his wife. The young man needed a desk job, so Hall County voters elected him county clerk. According to railroad historian Jim Reisdorff , Poell resigned his clerkship in 1910 after being accused of misappropriating county funds. Poell left Grand Island and eventually moved to Kansas. But he maintained a lifelong friendship with Paul Ussary, the little boy he had rescued. Ussary, who grew up to be a train dispatcher, recalled that Poell "was like a second father to me." Reisdorff tells the story in his new book, Hero of the Rails (South Platte Press). For me, the oddest part of Poell's story is that I fi rst heard of him while researching a nearly identical 1907 railroad rescue between Seward and Milford. Marion Lux didn't lose any limbs, but like Poell, he rescued a toddler by climbing out on a locomotive's cow-catcher. How many small children were playing on railroad tracks in those days? N Learn more about History Nebraska's publications, including free history emails, at history.nebraska.gov/publications Prints of this reenactment of the rescue were sold to raise money for Poell and his wife. Stuhr Museum of the Prairie Pioneer.

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

view archives of Nebraskaland - Aug-Sept 2022 Nebraskaland