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Camp Crowder Creators

4/15/2014

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About 6 months ago, we came across a picture of a carpenter crew from Camp Crowder, in Neosho, Mo. Dated 3/27/1942. (V. R. Moore, Senior Foreman and Henry V. Rogues, Foreman.)  
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This picture is currently for sale at Grandma's Attic. $10.00
We started talking about Camp Crowder with Earnie and Loretta of “Finders Keepers”, (Some vendors at Grandma’s Attic). They were kind enough to lend us a book they have on Camp Crowder.  The book was published by Newton Country Historical Society in 2006, and is titled “From Camp Crowder to Crowder College.”  It was compiled by Larry A. James.
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While researching Camp Crowder, we came across some interesting information. 

One fact that stood out to us was that the creator of Beetle Bailey and the creator of the Dick Van Dyke Show have a common thread with a local institution here close by Anderson, Missouri, where Grandma’s Attic is located. 
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The cartoonist Mort Walker, of Beetle Bailey, and writer Carl Reiner, of the Dick Van Dyke Show both drew inspiration for their creative interests from their time at Camp Crowder. Most of the humor in Beetle Bailey revolves around the inept characters stationed at “Camp Swampy” (inspired by Camp Crowder). The Dick Van Dyke show was based on Carl Reiner’s professional and personal life.  Both Reiner and Walker were stationed at Camp Crowder in Neosho, Missouri while it was being used as a military training facility.  
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Another local personality became attached to Camp Crowder through one of these creators, Carl Reiner.  Actor Robert William “Dabbs” Greer, who was raised here in town and laid to rest in a local cemetery, was the minister on the Dick Van Dyke Show who married the characters of Rob Petrie and Laura Meehan.  (He was also the minister who married the characters Mike Brady and Carol Ann Taylor Martin on The Brady Bunch.) :)

{See our recent blog post on "Dabbs Greer & Anderson, MO" for more info.}
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In the Dick Van Dyke Show, Dabbs played the Army chaplain of Camp Crowder, where he married Rob and Laura.
From May 15, 1941 to July 1, 1962, 10,240 acres south of Neosho in Newton County were known as "Camp Crowder" and used by the United States Military as a training compound.  From April 2, 1963 to Present it has been known as "Crowder College."  Many of the same buildings were used by both the military compound and the college. 
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Image Credit: http://shepquest.files.wordpress.com/
 Crowder College is only approximately fifteen minutes’ drive Northeast of Grandma’s Attic, in Neosho, Missouri. Next time you stop in to visit us, you might want to leave some extra time to check out the local history surrounding Crowder....


The college and the camp.
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Dabbs Greer & Anderson, MO

4/8/2014

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Robert William “Dabbs” Greer
(April 2, 1917 – April 28, 2007)

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Image from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This very familiar face has been seen in films and especially on TV for fifty years. This American actor was a sort of "everyman" in his roles and played merchants, preachers, businessmen, and other "pillars of the community" types as well as assorted villains. With his plain looking face and wavy hair he was a solid supporting actor. His distinctive, mellow, southern-accented voice fit well in shows featuring rustic characters, such as westerns. He also was portrayed on other shows as a minister, and is probably best remembered as the Reverend Robert Alden in NBC's Little House on the Prairie.
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Greer in 1954//From Wikipedia
Dabbs was born in Fairview, Missouri (which is about 200 miles north and East of Anderson, Mo.), but he was reared in Anderson, Missouri. He was the only child of a pharmacist father, Randall Alexander Greer, and a speech therapist mother, 
Bernice Irene. It is said that he got his stage name, "Dabbs", from his grandmother, who's maiden name was Dabbs. 
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http://www.riflemanconnors.com/dabbs_greer.htm
His first acting experience was on stage in a children's theatre production when he was eight years old. He made his film debut as an extra in the 1938 film Jesse James, which was filmed mainly in Pineville, Missouri. "They were paying $5 a day – a day! – to local people for being extras. That was really good money in those days, more money than we had seen in a long time," Dabbs told the Neosho Daily News in 2002.
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He attended Drury College in Springfield, Missouri, where he earned a BA. He was a member of Theta Kappa Nu, and headed the drama department and Little Theatre in Mountain Grove, Missouri, from 1940-43. He then moved on to the famed Pasadena Playhouse in California as actor, instructor and administrator from 1943-50. He made his film debut in Reign of Terror (1949) (aka "The Black Book") in an uncredited bit part and went on to appear in many parts during the next 50 years. Greer's last feature film was a prominent role as the 108-year-old version of the character played by Tom Hanks in 1999's The Green Mile – 61 years after Greer was an extra in the 1938 film Jesse James. Greer's last television performance was in a 2003 episode of Lizzie McGuire.
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http://www.riflemanconnors.com/dabbs_greer.htm
Dabbs played in many supporting roles, but was not a lead actor. 
One quote attributed to him is 

"Every character actor, 
in their own little sphere,
is the lead." 
And although Mr. Greer may not have played in big roles, 
it's fair to say that he was pretty important. 
After all, who else could have married 


Rob & Laura Petrie on "The Dick Van Dyke Show" 
And 
Mr. & Mrs. Brady on "The Brady Bunch".  :) 


As a side note, in the pictures below, on the left, he is playing the role of the Army chaplain at Camp Crowder, in Neosho, Missouri, which is only approx. 15 minutes North of Anderson. 
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In 2007, at the age of 90, he died at Huntington Hospital after a losing battle with liver and heart disease.  Greer never married and had no survivors. His resting place is Peace Valley Cemetery in Anderson, MO.  Grandma’s Attic is located in Anderson, and we are proud to say that Dabbs Greer was raised here and is buried in a local cemetery.  
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Dabbs Greer, in the 1999 movie, The Green Mile//From Wikipedia
 The cemetery is approx. 2 miles from Grandma's Attic, if you happen to be in the area and would like to visit his resting place, we'd be more than happy to give you directions! You might also enjoy a visit to "Dabbs Greer Town Hole Park" just off Main Street in Anderson. 

We have enjoyed researching the life of Mr. Greer, and we hope you enjoy reading about it as well!
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