Chinook resident celebrates 105th birthday on Flag Day

By Ginger Maddox

Chinook

When your birthday happens

to fall on a national holiday it

can be either a good thing or a

not so good thing. Ruth

Buhmann’s birthday falls on

June 14, Flag Day, but she’s

always enjoyed having flags flying

on her birthday. This year

she will be celebrating her 105th

birthday.

Born in 1901 in Jonesville,

Mich., Ruth Burrene Sprague

was the youngest of five children

born to Benjamin and Elizabeth

Sprague. She grew up in

Litchfield, Mich., and remembers

the first time she saw an

automobile. She was about 6 or 7

at the time, and they heard the

car coming down the road. They

all ran out and stood along the

side of the road and watched in

awe as a little red car that was

driven by moving, what looked

like a long stick, passed by.

Ruth was 9 years old and in

the fourth grade when the family

moved to Oregon. They thought

they were moving to a place that

was 30 acres, had an orchard

and a house. When they arrived,

they found there was no house,

so her dad and her brother built

a house for the family to live in.

Ruth and her sister, Kit, drove a

horse and buggy four and a half

miles to attend school in

Hermiston. The year that Ruth

graduated from the eighth grade,

Kit graduated from high school,

and during her high school

years, Ruth rode the horse to

school. She still has the “split

skirt” that her mother made for

her to wear over her dress so she

could ride astride the horse. She

would pull the skirt on over the

top of her dress skirt, ride to

school, take the riding skirt off,

and then repeat the process

when she rode home after

school. Ruth graduated from

Hermiston High School in the

spring of 1920. She still has her

eighth-grade graduation dress

and her high school graduation

dress, both made for her by her

mother.

In September of 1920, Ruth

married Reinhart Buhmann, her

high school sweetheart. Their

first home

was in

Colfax,

Wash.,

where

Reinhart

worked in a

machine

shop. When

an opening

came up

with the

Hermiston

Power &

Light Co., Reinhart was hired to

run the town’s power plant and

they moved back to Hermiston.

They had two sons, Robert Ray

“Bob” born in 1922 and Ivan

Gene born in 1924. Reinhart

passed away in 1929 following

goiter surgery. As a single mother,

Ruth found work in a grocery

store, then in a variety store.

Her mother-in-law took care of

the boys while Ruth was at work.

It was a difficult time, but she

was determined to keep her sons

with her.

In 1930, Ruth married

Reinhart’s older brother,

Lawrence. Shortly after the marriage,

they moved to the eastern

part of Montana where Lawrence

expanded his bee business. They

located along the Missouri River

south of Glasgow and for the

first few years they lived in a log

cabin that belonged to someone

else. When he wasn’t working

with the bees, Lawrence worked

in a neighbor’s sawmill and cut

the timbers for a house that he

built himself. Ruth worked

beside Lawrence when he was

working the bees, and they traded

some of the honey they gathered

for supplies and sold the

rest for cash income. Through

their hard work, their business

grew and began to prosper.

Their daughter, Ilene, was

born in 1932 in Glasgow. From

then on, they had a hired man to

help Lawrence with the bees.

Ruth has many, many memories

of the years they lived along the

Missouri River, many are fond

memories, but there’s also a few

that aren’t (especially being

forced to leave their home

behind.)

When the Fort Peck Dam was

completed, everyone living along

the river was told they would

have to move as their property

would be covered with water. In

1937, everyone living in that area

was forced to move. That was

when Lawrence and Ruth moved

their bee business to the small

town of Zurich. The business

continued to grow and flourish

and became one of the best in

the state. The Buhmann Apiary

that was built in 1958 was one of

the biggest and finest, and their

reputation for top-quality honey

is known far and wide.

In 1939, Ruth and Lawrence’s

youngest child, a daughter they

named Nancy, was born. Ruth

was kept plenty busy as a mother

and wife. She also helped

when needed at the apiary,

cooked for the men they hired,

raised the large garden and

canned the produce. She was a

member of the U-Go-I-Go Club

that met once a month. You can

ask any of the women who were

members and you will learn

what a very active group of

ladies they were.

In 1983, Lawrence and Ruth

sold the business to Bob and

moved to a home a few miles

west of Chinook. Lawrence was

84 and Ruth was 82 when they

moved. They didn’t want to live

in town and they continued to

raise a sizeable garden and

maintain the yard and house

themselves. Ruth says they’re

tired because Lawrence was

“tired” and she was “retired.”

When Lawrence passed away

in February of 2002, he was just

one month short of turning 103.

Ruth continues to live in their

home and gets by with minimal

help. She misses being able to

tend a garden and do her housework,

but acknowledges she is

grateful to be able to still live at

home. Her quick wit and sense of

humor make her a delight to

visit with, and her wonderful

memory of things that have happened

throughout her lifetime

makes her a great source of historical

information. She has

observed an infinite number of

changes through the years, many

good and some bad. She has

some difficulty hearing in a large

crowd, but enjoys visits with

friends and family one on one or

in small groups.

When asked what their secret

to long life is, Ruth smiles and

says they never had a “secret.”

Neither of them ever smoked or

drank and that might be a factor,

but she’s pretty sure that the

hard work and well balanced diet

that included a bit of honey

had a lot to do with her being so

active long past the age when

many folks have slowed way

down.