Joyce Maxine Jordan was born on a frigid cold February night, February 19, 1933 at her parent’s home with a mid-wife present. She made her appearance into the world on a farm near Russell Springs, Kansas that her grandfather John Jacob Jordan homesteaded on in the late 1800s near the Smoky Hill River. Her parents, Harold and Helen (Wright) Jordan, were overjoyed as she was their first born. Grandpa John Jordan, who lived with them, was happy too, as she was his first grandchild. He insisted she be named Joy and her folks added the -ce.
Grandpa Jordan was a great influence in Joyce’s life; his love of the outdoors and gardening stayed with her all her life. Sadly, he died in 1950, the year she graduated from high school.
Growing up in the Dust Bowl days was challenging to everyone in the area. Dark clouds on the horizon had her mother rushing to get wet sheets or whatever was handy to hang over doors and windows to keep out the dust.
During this time, her siblings were arriving, Helen Mae, Marian, Frank, Marjory, and Francis. Helen Mae passed away when she was two from what was called the croup. Francis died in Vietnam in 1968.
“Growing up in the ’30s and ‘40s, without electricity and running water, were some of the happiest times of my life,” Joyce said. She spent time with her other grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins. They used their imagination for entertainment such as playing house, making mud pie cakes, which she fed to her sister Marian, and the love of reading which her mother instilled with her children and remained with Joyce all her life.
Living near the Smoky Hill River, the Jordan family had swimming pools and fishing holes. Mother Helen would yell, “You kids stay out of the river ‘till you learn to swim!” Fishing was Joyce’s favorite pastime so she would bribe her sister Marian to do her chores so she could go fishing. It was nothing for her dad to wake her at 3:00 a.m. to head to the dam and set up for fishing at sunrise.
Her grandpa had a play for Joyce as she grew older. He’d sharpen the hoe and say “let’s go to the garden Joycie,” the loving nickname he called her by. His garden covered about eight acres and those rows looked miles long, according to his granddaughter Joyce. He irrigated the garden from a spring, growing lots of vegetables and the best watermelons and cantaloupes in the county. He would hitch up the horses to the wagon and take a load of produce to the store in town. Helen would put up hundreds of jars of vegetables for winter use, as well as meat when butchering day arrived. Summer mornings were spent butchering chickens; it was a family affair.
Joyce’s dad worked for the county road and bridge so when the last school bell of the day rang, it was time to head home for evening chores. Joyce saddled Nag, her horse, and would get the cows in, milk, pick up corn cobs from the pig pen to get the morning fire going in the wood burning stove. The water supply came from a spring on the hillside. A cart on wheels carrying a barrel, pulled by a person, transported the water for drinking, cooking, dishes and laundry and a bath once a week. Sometimes several trips a day were made, including after school. (Joyce has a wheel from the cart hanging in her garden shed to remind herself how nice it is to turn a faucet on for water.)
The years rolled by with everyone in the family playing a part in the framework of existing. Joyce said she doesn’t ever remember being bored.
Joyce played sports in high school and loved it. There were some black girls on the team, and they were not treated any differently than the white girls. On one occasion, the team went to an event in Colby, Kansas and later to a restaurant to get a bite to eat. When the owner refused service to the black girls the entire team walked out. They were not going to stand for discrimination. All her life, Joyce refused to be a part of any kind of discrimination and was there often for the underdog.
During high school Joyce sort of noticed this good looking high school basketball player from Winona, Kansas, just up the road from Russell Springs. “He had ideas of his own, too,” she said. Soon they started dating and shortly after graduating from high school she married her soul mate, William John Escudero. She said, “Something must have worked as we have made it through 71 and a half years.”
It wasn’t too long in their marriage when the youngins’ started arriving. First on the scene was Nancy. A year later Cindy arrived, another year went by and here came Marilynn, followed by Paul a year later. During those years after many different jobs and moves, Bill started his railroad career.
Many more moves were on the horizon and during this time Bruce, Lisa and Gary arrived. After the nineteenth move when the family came to Cheyenne Wells, Joyce told Bill, “I’m staying put.” In 1969 when Gary started school Joyce went to work at the newspaper office and Bill was on the road with the railroad. In 1974, Bill and Joyce purchased The Range Ledger and Cheyenne Wells Record. In those days, she had a dark room and processed all her pictures. She was at every event taking photos.
During this time, Joyce was expecting Lori. When she went to see Dr. Jerome Keefe thinking she had a tumor and he told her the tumor would disappear in a few months. She said, “I already had a grandson, Chad, so I wasn’t a very happy camper being pregnant again. Lori was born and she has been such a blessing; as well as all our children. Before their move to Cheyenne Wells, while living in Sharon Springs, Kansas, their baby daughter Lisa died from injuries from a car accident. They lost their son Gary in 2003 from hemochromatosis, a genetic disease which causes the body to store up too much iron. All their children graduated from Cheyenne Wells High School. She said, “Guess what, we got through without the internet and cellphones.”
In the late 1980’s, the railroad had moved Bill’s office to The Range Ledger where it remained for approximately one and a half years before the agency closed. A group in the community including Joyce, Betty Talbert, and Kent Gumina, who was Cheyenne County’s Department of Local Affairs representative, enlisted the services of some engineering students from CSU who said the depot building was sound in the group’s attempt to save it. Unfortunately they were unsuccessful. Bill had the option to move to St. Louis and remain with the railroad, and Joyce said again she was staying put. He retired from the railroad in 1991 after 38 years. During his time in Cheyenne Wells he served all the elevators and made great efforts to get them cars for transporting their products and eventually grandfathered the grain trains. Bill was the last depot agent for Union Pacific Railroad in Cheyenne Wells, Colorado before the railroad closed the agency.
In the 1980s a friend called Joyce and told her about a merry-go-round he knew about which was for sale in New Mexico. She went to the bank and borrowed the money, $15,000, and started praying donations would come in to pay for it. Bill was unaware of this project (and still may be). The friend delivered the carousel driving quite a distance with a broken leg. Donations started coming in to pay for the merry-go-round and to this day, children, big and little, enjoy this carousel at the Cheyenne County Fair and Rodeo.
Joyce was involved in many community projects. She and her partner in crime, Betty Talbert, were always looking for ways to improve the community. For two consecutive years they put on the Tumbleweed Festival because at that time there wasn’t anyone to organize the event. After two years, being older they just couldn’t do it anymore and gave that up and others in the community stepped up.
Joyce worked out of the home prior to going to work for the newspaper. She worked for August and Gladys Stienike at the Dairy Queen (formerly the Tigers Den and MaBe’s), cleaned Shelton’s apartments (now duplexes) and babysat for several family’s children.
Joyce was a member of the Cheyenne Wells Improvement Committee, volunteered to help the Girl Scouts, a member and for a period of time the president of the United Methodist Women, served on the Cheyenne Wells City Council, for a few years worked with others on the Cheyenne Wells Chamber of Commerce, opened the fabric shop, BJs, taught quilting classes while the fabric shop was open, (and took home a lot of fabric making dozens of quilts for family members and some quilts for raffles) took painting classes from Laura Quint and offered her free space to give painting classes, was involved with school fundraisers when the school had a band and choir and was a former member of the Red Hat Ladies.
Joyce retired in 2004 after 30 years and turned the newspaper reins over to their daughters, Nancy and Marilynn.
Joyce and Bill have 38 grandchildren, great-grandchildren, and great-great-grandchildren
She said,” I would have to write all their names down to separate the two. We are just Grandma and Granddad to all. They’re in and out of our home so there’s not much time to be bored. I tell everyone I’ve hibernated; but reading, sewing, gardening are my go-to.”
She tries to keep Bill busy and it can get quite humorous. Bill and Joyce said, “Even with the ‘ups and downs,’ we feel blessed with our family and all the wonderful people in our little town and county. The ‘ups’ have far outweighed the ‘downs.’
Joyce passed away on July 29, 2022 at the Keefe Memorial Hospital in Cheyenne Wells, surrounded by her family. Funeral services were held on Sunday, August 21, 2022 at the Cheyenne County Community Building in Cheyenne Wells. Joyce was laid to rest in the Fairview Cemetery. Memorial contributions can be made to the Joyce Escudero Memorial Fund c/o any Eastern Colorado Bank location. Friends and family can register online condolences and sign the guestbook at www.brownfuneraldirectors.com. Visitation and funeral services were entrusted to the care of the Brown Funeral Home in Cheyenne Wells.
Evelyn Rose (Keefe) Sexson, age 94, of Weskan, KS passed away peacefully on January 7, 2025 at Hope Springs Care Center in Sharon Springs, KS. Born June 13, 1930 in Winsted, MN as the youngest of 7 children to Daniel and Mary Keefe. A longtime resident of Weskan,... [More]
William Verdell (Bill) Mai was called home to his Savior on December 29, 2024 at Greeley County Hospital in Tribune, Kansas. Bill was born on June 21, 1936, at the family farm in Wallace County to William and Martha (Deines) Mai--the fourth of six surviving children. He... [More]
Evan Fredrick Grund, 85, passed away December 28, 2024 at Leisure Homestead in Stafford, KS. He was born September 26, 1939 on the family farm in Wallace County, KS to Leslie and Juanita (Mather) Grund. Evan married Delores (Wise) Grund April 19, 1964. Evan graduated from... [More]
Evadene McMillen, age 97, of Goodland passed away Wednesday, November 27, 2024 at the Goodland Regional Medical Center. Evadene was born to Will and Vica (Newell) Cullens on September 16, 1927 in Wallace, Kansas. She grew up in Logan County with her parents and 3 brothers.... [More]
Troy Wayne Funk, Holyoke, CO formerly of Sharon Springs KS, passed away at his home surrounded by his wife and family. Troy was born to Wayne Funk and Lois (Lane) Funk in Tribune KS. Troy married the love of his life on April 15, 1967, Mary Jo (Whisler) Funk. To... [More]
John Roscoe Hurley, age 79, died in Wichita, Kansas on November 4, 2024. After living most of his adult life in Wallace County, KS, he moved to the Ranch House Nursing Home in Garden City, KS. He was born June 6, 1945 in Phoenix Arizona, the son of John W. and Alene E. (Whiteman)... [More]
On October 31, 2024, at the age of 88, Ronald Neil Howard peacefully passed into glory at Keefe Memorial Hospital in Cheyenne Wells, CO. Ronnie was born on May 8th, 1936, to Deloris and E.G. “Buster” Howard in Abernathy, Texas. There were 6 children born from this... [More]
Gregory Joseph Roth, 77, passed away in his sleep surrounded by family following a lengthy illness on October 22, 2024. He was born on August 2, 1947, in Great Bend, Kansas, the youngest of six children born to Robert (Bob) and Mary Roth. When Greg was two years old, the family... [More]
Third through fifth grade students from Greeley and Wallace County gathered in Tribune on Wednesday, April 30, to take part in an Agriculture Safety Day. The event, which was sponsored by Greeley and Wallace County Farm Bureaus in partnership with Greeley County FFA, featured... [More]
On Sunday, May 4th, Nicholas Hartman will walk across the stage to accept his diploma, making him the first to be the fifth generation of his family to graduate from Wallace County High School. In 1919, Hartman's Great-Great Grandmother Mabel (Kyner) Jennings was... [More]
On April 7th, Governor Kelly signed SB114 into law, authorizing nonpublic and virtual school students to participate in ancillary public-school activities and making it unlawful for the Kansas state high school activities association and school districts to discriminate against... [More]
On January 21 Weskan Coyotes took on the Bobcats of Bethune, Colo at home. The boys won with a final score of 64 to 28, with Trey Allen scoring his 1,500th point during the game. The girls also won by a final score of 60 to 51.
1s trow: Makenna Gibbs, Jersi Benisch, Jaelyn Daily, Mya Funk, Jaretsy Romero, 2nd row: Coach Braydon Summers, Makenzie Woolf, Zuri Spresser, Kallie Richardson, Lyla Pearce, Olivia Kuhlman, Assistant Coach Cassondra Summers. 1st row: Gage Cox, Trell... [More]
WCHS Winter Homecoming Royalty was crowned on Friday, January 17, 2025. Queen Jaelyn Daily is the daughter of David & Jori Daily. King Joe Edwards is the son of Cameron & Rebecca Edwards.
It is “Final Review” time in the County Appraiser’s Office. We will be driving through the entire county to review the conditions of buildings to ensure that we are valuing all properties accurately. We will be driving a county vehicle very slowly down... [More]
RAW Ministry is moving the clothes closet. The new location is 130 N Main Street in Sharon Springs. We will be open every Tuesday afternoon from 1 - 4:30 and Saturday mornings from 8 - 11 :30. Our trailer will be parked behind the building if you would like to drop off... [More]
Peak travel season may be over, but that doesn't mean that we are closing up shop at the Fort Wallace Museum! We have re-vamped winter hours that are already underway - you can visit Mon - Sat 10-4 MT this winter, weather permitting. If there is questionable weather, you can... [More]
It’s that time again in Wallace! It’s Rodeo Time! This year’s 70th Edition of the Fort Wallace Rodeo is shaping up to be a special one! There are again two performances; Saturday May 25 at 7 pm MDT and then on Sunday May 26 at 5 pm MDT. Admission... [More]
This past weekend, the Fort Wallace Museum had record-breaking attendance at the annual Symposium, and an equally successful Fundraiser Banquet. Around 90 people were in attendance at the day’s lectures and presentations, with attendees from all over Kansas, as well as... [More]
The Guardians of the Fort Wallace Museum will host their annual symposium and banquet on Saturday, March 16, at the museum, with symposium beginning at 8:30 am MDT and Capt. Keogh’s Emerald Banquet at 5 pm MDT. The theme of this year’s events is “The Moccasin... [More]
The Christmas Season approaches! Our annual Candlelight Christmas Service will be held on Sunday, December 3rd at 5:00 MT, starting at the 1888 Bethany Lutheran Church located on the west side of our Museum grounds. The traditional Swedish Lutheran service in the historic atmosphere... [More]
On Thursday evening, Nov. 2nd, come on over at 6 pm to hear a most talented musician, mandolinist and singer/songwriter John DePew! We will be hosting John inside the 1888 Bethany Lutheran Church. John Depew is a Kansas-based musician, songwriter, and traveler with a knack for... [More]
The fall travel season has featured strong attendance at the Fort Wallace Museum, with many retired couples and international travelers coming through. Our RV Park has also been busy, with many people staying to experience the local flavor of Wallace County. Our summer hours... [More]
This past Friday and Saturday, the Fort Wallace Museum grounds once again sprang to life -this time with the sights and sounds of a Native American village. 10 traditional tipis glowed in the sun, as well as military tents and a complete 1800s chuckwagon set-up. During Friday’s... [More]
©2025 The Western Times. Powered by Pluto Sites.