The story of Rufus Reuben Tucker

Posted by hawk3ye on Mar 6, 2009 in History |

Rufus Reuben Tucker, originally uploaded by Hawk3ye.

One night enjoying some brandy and babbling with my friends Tom & Kathy a long-forgotten family story popped into my head. Although it had always been there and to my mind was just as well-worn as most of my tales, apparently it was new to Tom & Kathy, and when I repeated it later, to Jim as well. So sit right back and you’ll hear the tale:

Rufus Reuben Tucker was one of those “no-good” relations that family has little nice to say about later (many apologies to cousins Judy & Bill Tucker & families). He was married to my grandpa’s much-loved sister Petrona, who died too young of breast cancer in the late sixties or early seventies. [Update Per AP: She had breast cancer at one time, but died of heart disease in 1975.] They had a bitter divorce and she destroyed most photos of him, so the one shown here is a rare specimen from the family archives.

The story I remember has to do with the famous 1938 radio broadcast of “The War of the Worlds.” You may have heard that the broadcast was mistaken for breaking news by American listeners and created a panic, although Wikipedia says this is largely a myth:

The War of the Worlds was an episode of the American radio drama anthology series Mercury Theatre on the Air. It was performed as a Halloween episode of the series on October 30, 1938 and aired over the Columbia Broadcasting System radio network. Directed and narrated by Orson Welles, the episode was an adaptation of H. G. Wells’ novel The War of the Worlds.

The first two thirds of the 60-minute broadcast was presented as a series of simulated news bulletins, which suggested to many listeners that an actual Martian invasion was in progress. Compounding the issue was the fact that the Mercury Theatre on the Air was a ’sustaining show’ (i.e., it ran without commercial breaks), thus adding to the dramatic effect. Although there were sensationalist accounts in the press about a supposed panic, careful research has shown that while thousands were frightened, there is no evidence that people fled their homes or otherwise took action.[citation needed] The news-bulletin format was decried as cruelly deceptive by some newspapers and public figures, leading to an outcry against the perpetrators of the broadcast, but the episode launched Orson Welles to fame.

According to family lore, Rufus Reuben Tucker, then employed as much of my mom’s family was in the coal mines of Southern Illinois, was caught up in the (perhaps mythical) wave of panic. He grabbed up a coffee can containing his all of his young family’s savings, left wife and children behind, and hid down in the mine to escape the Martians.

The practicality of this move aside (do extra-terrestrials accept US currency?), you can imagine that forever after Reuben would have been known as 1) an ass, 2) a fool who believed the “War of the Worlds” broadcast was real, 3) a coward who immediately abandoned his wife & kids in the face of alien invasion, without seeing one flying saucer or little green man.

Flush with recent praise for this gem of a tale, I asked my Uknavage family if they remembered any more details. And none of them knew what I was talking about! What? Did I make it up? Did I overhear it sometime at a family gathering when neither of my aunts, my uncle, or my sister were present? It seems unlikely but possible.

We do have some video archives from the late 1980s of my grandpa & his aunt Susie — a couple of hours of old family stories in fact. So I have some research to do to find the source of this story, where Reuben & Petrona lived in 1938, what mine that might have been, how widespread the radio broadcast was in Southern Illinois, etc. Another fun mystery to be solved.

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7 Comments

Aimee
Mar 6, 2009 at 2:01 pm

Intriguing and well written! :)


 
Jimbo
Mar 6, 2009 at 2:03 pm

Fact or fiction, it’s a great story! I’m reading TC Boyle’s latest novel, and I can definitely picture master-storyteller Boyle exuberantly listening to this one. Hiding down in the mine . . . awesome! And yes, what an ass.


 
Pam Russell
Mar 6, 2009 at 2:16 pm

What a fun way to present that story. You did great! You got it all in there, even the apology to those who might still like Uncle Reuben, and the possibility that you imagined the story – good job! The only boo-boo I saw in the facts themselves was that Aunt Trona actually died from heart failure or heart disease not breast cancer, but then who’s to say that worrying herself silly about the breast cancer she had a a much younger age didn’t bring on the heart failure? I think her divorce from Reuben probably contributed more to the heart disease than the breast cancer, though. I wouldn’t change a thing. And you turned it into a mystery! Did you know that Reuben was one of the mine bosses and not one of the “real” miners like Dad and Uncle Bill.

Your intriguing story about Uncle Reuben makes me want to dig out the facts and try to determine if this sort of behavior surfaced in the man throughout his life. Hmmm……


 
Mike Uknavage
Mar 6, 2009 at 5:42 pm

Loved the story! Never heard it before either. Once I accompanied Dad and Uncle Reuben to a bar in Sullivan, IN. The year was probably about 1959, the bar had a minah bird in a cage, the men drank and smoked while they talked about coal mines, stopes, and women. Billy Tucker hated his dad, Reuben. Aunt Petrona got ripped off by Reuben. I fixed her tv and visited with her a time or two when she lived near Aunt Toots in Kankakee. She seldom ventured past the Marycrest area, except for that she drove herself to work at Manteno State Hospital, but had to be shown the route numerous times before she finally got it. I don’t think she even knew how to drive a car until after her divorce from Reuben.


 
hawk3ye
Mar 6, 2009 at 5:53 pm

Wow! Thanks for all the great replies & additional stories. I love the one about the old bar with a minah bird. Reminds me of one of the seedier locations in A Confederacy of Dunces which I read last year. You would have been 10 years old then, Uncle Mike? I had to look up “stopes” — rooms supported by pillars of rock in hard rock mining.


 
Hawk3ye
Apr 11, 2009 at 4:22 pm

Hey! I found another photo of Rufus Reuben Tucker in a forgotten photo album I put together some years ago. It is not archival so I think I better put the pictures in a new one sometime…


 
Steve anonymous
Jan 10, 2010 at 10:31 pm

you’re related to Conan O’Brian!


 

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