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Wilma Bicking Mildred Heiden Jeannie Heiden Ralph Heiden
Helen Heiden Wm Frank Heiden Dianne Houpt Pat Klass
Helma Nickel Mary Lou Opfermann

Marie Tommelein 

Brick Tommelein 

Listed below are excerpts from transcriptions of audio tapes of two meetings with different combinations of the people shown here. They occurred on May 28 and September 25, 1995. For the entire script, Click Here.

  • Wilma, Jeannie, Wm, Helma and Marie were children of Wm Carl Heiden

  • Mildred was married to Arthur Heiden and was mother of Ralph Heiden

  • Helen was wife of Wm Frank and they were parents of Dianne

  • Pat was daughter of Wilma Bicking

  • Mary Lou is daughter of Leo and Lucille Heiden

  • Ralph, Dianne, Pat and Mary Lou were first cousins

Norma "Jeanie" Heiden - Pa didn’t get a lot of schooling but he was very good with math.

Wilma (Heiden) Bicking - He only went through the sixth grade at Bridge School. But, if he were going to put barley in the bin, he could sit down and figure out how many bushels there were to go in. He could figure out most anything.

Norma "Jeanie" Heiden - When we had math problems from school, he could always help us out. People were intelligent without necessarily having to go to school for a long time.

Helma (Heiden) Nickel - I only went to the Bridge School for seven years. When I started there, Harrison Dentel was the teacher. All the classes were together in the same room. I was the only one in the first grade so he moved me up with the second graders. So, when it came to the end of the year, he passed me on to the third grade. So I kept going and graduated from the eighth grade when I was thirteen.

Ralph Heiden - The Heidens overall seem like a pretty sharp bunch of people. I haven’t found too many who are down and out.

Norma "Jeanie" Heiden - Wilma was third in her high school class.

Wilma (Heiden) Bicking - Jeanie was Salutatorian of hers.

Norma "Jeanie" Heiden - Yeah, I had to work real hard to beat Wilma. Then, when I had to give the speech at graduation, I was wishing I had been third.

Wilma (Heiden) Bicking - Professor Ayris said he thought I should have gotten Salutatorian because the girl who got it had transferred in from another school. He said that the records from that school said that she had gotten all A’s and there was nothing he could do about. He wanted to make me class Historian so I could give a speech too but I said, “No thank you!”

Norma "Jeanie" Heiden - When Wilma was in the fourth grade, she won the county spelling bee against everyone, even the eighth graders and won all those medals.

Wilma (Heiden) Bicking - I remember the day of an assembly in Monroe High School auditorium when they asked, “Is Wilma Heiden in the audience?” I stood up and they started clapping but the announcer said, “Where is she? I can’t see her.” Finally, I had to get up on my chair and everybody started cheering.

Norma "Jeanie" Heiden - Harrison Dentel wanted me to get into the spelling bee because Wilma had won it but I was too bashful for that stuff.

Ralph Heiden - A lot of the Heidens went to Bridge School. It went from kindergarten to eighth grade. How many students would there be at the school in the average year?

Helma (Heiden) Nickel - Oh, about fifty or sixty. Harrison Dental would be the only teacher.

Norma "Jeanie" Heiden - We were all in the same room together. Everybody would be sitting at their desks and he would call up one class at a time to work on their lessons. That used to help the younger ones, I think. We would sit back there and, when we were in the second grade, we would get done with our work and then listen to the third grade go through their lesson. By the time you got there the next year, you pretty well knew most of it already.

Mary Lou (Heiden) Opfermann - By the time we got to the seventh or eighth grade, we would be allowed to help with the first graders and teach them.

Norma "Jeanie" Heiden - I can still remember that old Regulator clock on the wall. It made a loud “Tick! Tick! Tick” sound!

Mary Lou (Heiden) Opfermann - The teacher had a length of rubber hose in his desk. And, boy, he would use it too!

Norma "Jeanie" Heiden - He would be teaching another class up front in the room but, if you turned around to talk to someone, he would spot you. All of a sudden, “Whop!”, he would snap you behind the head with the hose.

Wilma (Heiden) Bicking - He wore those big, black high top shoes and he would walk on the balls of his feet.

Helma (Heiden) Nickel - He always tiptoed around.

Norma "Jeanie" Heiden - We always called him, “Tippy toes!” 

Ralph Heiden - What kind of activities did they have at Bridge School. Did they have plays or recitals?

Norma "Jeanie" Heiden - I was in a play one time. I got up and said, “We will now sing Fiddely Dee for YOU!” During practices, the teacher would always tell me to emphasize the “you” at the end.

Wilma (Heiden) Bicking & Norma "Jeanie" Heiden (singing together) -

Fiddley Dee
Fiddley Dee
The fly has married the bumble bee.
The fly to the bee
Will you marry me?
And live with me,
Sweet bumble bee.
Fiddley Dee
Fiddley Dee

Helma (Heiden) Nickel - Boy, you’re memory is still good to remember all that stuff!

Norma "Jeanie" Heiden - And then we’d sing The Old Grandfather’s Clock.

(Everyone singing together) -

“And it stopped short,
Never to go again.
When the old man died.”

Helma (Heiden) Nickel - We had parent-teachers meetings way back then too. I remember I was in the second grade and we all had to get up and say a nursery rhyme. I played the part of Jack Sprat in the rhyme about Jack Sprat could eat no fat. That is when Leo gave me the nickname, Jack. He had a nickname for everyone.

Mary Lou (Heiden) Opfermann - So that’s where that came from, I remember him calling you Jack.

Norma "Jeanie" Heiden - We always had music at school. Harrison Dentel played the piano and we had the old Golden Song Books.

Wilma (Heiden) Bicking - I still have a copy that we bought at a yard sale. We used to sing out of that every morning at Bridge School.  

Helma (Heiden) Nickel - I have the 100th Anniversary Book for Bridge School if you would like to see it sometime, Ralph.

Ralph Heiden - When you reached the end of the eighth grade, then what?

Norma "Jeanie" Heiden - People back then always thought that 8th grade was enough schooling for anyone.

Wilma (Heiden) Bicking - You didn’t have to go on to high school in those days. I was the first one in our family to go. Harrison Dentel came to the house when I finished the 8th grade. He said, “She’s only twelve years old. What is she going to do here at home? She should go on to high school.” Pa didn’t like the idea at all.

Mildred (Roggerman) Heiden - Art wanted to go on to high school so bad too. But when he was in 8th grade, they wouldn’t even let him go to Ida to take the entrance exam.

Norma "Jeanie" Heiden - They thought going to high school was foolishness. But finally, Harrison Dental talked and talked to them about Wilma and they gave in. Then, when my time came several years later, I had to beg and beg. Pa said, “All Wilma learned up there was foolishness. Going to parties and such foolishness.” But, they finally gave in and I got to go.

Wilma (Heiden) Bicking - I was in the class play my junior and senior years. Elizabeth Johnson lived across the river and she would come to pick me up to take me to practice. When it was time for the play, they asked if my mother and dad were coming. I had to say, “No.” I wouldn’t have thought about asking them. Pa would have thought that it was really a lot of nonsense.

Helma (Heiden) Nickel - Back when I would have gone, you would have had to pay tuition to go to high school. The pastor’s kids were going to go and I could have gone with them but I would have had to walk to the parsonage to catch the ride every day.

Helma (Heiden) Nickel - Our road was mud at that time and we often had to walk to the corner to get a ride somewhere. You could usually get down to where Henry and Edna lived. When I started working at River Raisin Paper, I rode with John Beaudrie and I had to meet him down at the corner at 6:30 every morning.

Wilma (Heiden) Bicking - I remember one Christmas Eve, everybody who came over for the party got stuck on the road. They had to get the tractor out and pull everybody out of the mud.

Ralph Heiden - Did you get snowed in very often back then?

Mary Lou (Heiden) Opfermann - Oh, I can remember walking down the ditches that were full of snow.

Wilma (Heiden) Bicking - We would still walk to the Bridge School no matter how deep the snow was then. It used to get a crust on top and it would be up as high as the fence posts. We would walk across that and have a lot of fun.

There were always a bunch of us on the way to and from school each day. There would be Walter (left) and Lavern Berns, (right) Lloyd Rath, Junior Barnaby and Harry Karney. There would be a whole gang of us. I remember hitting Junior Barnaby over the head with my lunch bucket. He fell down and I thought I really hurt him but he was O.K. 

Ralph Heiden - I always wondered why Grape existed. By the time I was around, there was only a general store there any more.

Norma "Jeanie" Heiden - Oh, that’s were they used to have “Grape juice!” It was the first electric generating plant there on the river. It’s were we got our electricity from at first.

Helma (Heiden) Nickel - There was a quarry there too. The Seitz’s had something to do with that and then they had a big trucking company. They went to the Bridge School and were sort of “big shots” there in organizing the 100th Anniversary celebration

Mildred (Roggerman) Heiden - Walter Berns has a book all about Grape and the area around there.

Wilma (Heiden) Bicking - The family that lived in Grape were called the “Sourwines” but it’s spelled Saurweins. That’s the truth!
Dianne (Heiden) Houpt - Did they shut the Bridge School down at some point?

Ralph Heiden - I think kids went there through the late 1940's before they were bussed to Dundee.

Dianne (Heiden) Houpt - I went a half a year there before going up to Dundee.

Helen (Henning) Heiden - I remember when you were little, you missed the bus once and went running behind it, bawling like mad.

Dianne (Heiden) Houpt - Ralph, do you remember that we started out with the red, white and blue buses and then the yellow ones came along later. At school, they never seemed to line them up the same place every night. They would line up in the order that the drivers happened to pull up. Some nights, we would get lost.

Ralph Heiden - I remember having Wes Feinauer as a driver. One day, I was showing off acting like I wanted to thumb a ride as he pulled up. For some reason he didn’t like that and made me sit in the front seat for a week. I was probably only in the second grade and it scared me.

Dianne (Heiden) Houpt - He came to the back of the bus and escorted me to the front seat one time. I saw him years later and he said he wanted to laugh all the time while he was doing it but didn’t dare in front of the other children.
Ralph Heiden - Now, on this farm, Grandpa owned all the land on the north side of the road to the river too? Did he sell off the parcels where the other houses are now?

William Frank Heiden - Leo was the first one to buy a three acre lot from Dixon Road back to the river. His was the one right next to Jesse Barnes’ place. Then he sold three acres to Wally Grams. The last lot went to Paul Goetz.

(Note: Walter Grams was the teacher at Bridge School during the later 1930s and into the 1940s. He built the original house at 8864 Dixon Road)

Ralph Heiden - I remember Jerry and Anabel from Toledo who had a small place there where they came out on weekends.

William Frank Heiden - Those were the Feebacks. They bought the lot from Leo.

Mary Lou (Heiden) Opfermann - I think they sold the lot when they bought the house on South Custer where Mother lives now.

Brick Tommelein - When Leo bought it, were they going to live there? Wonder why they never did.

Mary Lou (Heiden) Opfermann - They had intentions of building. I can remember them looking at books and books of house plans but they never did build. Probably because they had a chance to buy the home on South Custer.

William Frank Heiden - I think Pa sold all those lots for $1500 each.

  1. Edna Berns
  2. Lavern Berns
  3. Walter Berns
  4. Wilma Bicking
  5. Myrna Bishop
  6. Donna Burge
  7. Janice Clark
  8. Bertha & Cecil Drake
  9. Mildred Eipperle
  10. Hilda Fuller
  11. Arthur Heiden
  12. August & Rika Heiden
  13. August Heiden Children
  14. Carl Heiden
  15. Emma Heiden
  16. Ernst Heiden
  17. Heinrich Heiden Children
  18. Helen E. Heiden
  19. Henry Wm Heiden
  20. Herman and Reka Heiden
  21. John Heiden
  22. Leo Heiden
  23. Lester Heiden
  1. Mary Heiden
  2. Norma "Jeanie" Heiden
  3. Wm Carl & Mary Heiden No 1
  4. Wm Carl & Mary Heiden No 2
  5. Wm Frank Heiden
  6. Dianne Houpt
  7. Lena Koster
  8. Laas/Burmeister
  9. Linda Miller
  10. Helma Nickel
  11. Mary Lou Opfermann
  12. Rambow Family
  13. The Rambows by Drake
  14. Grandma Rambow
  15. Minnie & Wm Rambow
  16. Carol Toburen
  17. Marie Tommelein
  1. Walter Berns Poem
  2. Bridge School
  3. Christmas Eve Party
  4. Dentist Visit
  5. Dixon Rd Lots
  6. The Depression
  7. John Eipperle Fun Times
  8. The Farm House
  9. Five Generations
  10. German Book
  11. Germany
  12. Grape Community
  13. August Heiden Documents
  14. Herman and Reka Heiden Article
  15. Higher Ed
  16. Home Farm
  17. Indian Burial Ground
  18. Leo Heiden Homes
  19. Letters from Germany
  1. Life on the Farm
  2. Lutheran Church
  3. Mary Heiden Cooking
  4. Mary Heiden Health
  5. Mecklenburg, Germany
  6. Middle Names
  7. Mildred Eipperle's Death
  8. Nephews
  9. Helma Nickel's Cooking
  10. Old Receipts
  11. Reunions
  12. School Days
  13. Sparrow Hunting
  14. Stormy Weather
  15. Wedding Shiveree
  16. Willows by the River
  17. The Woodlot
  18. Work on the Farm