May 31, 2020 AsktheBuilder Newsletter

If you’ve just become a subscriber in the past few days, this spot is yours! Newcomers to my newsletter family deserve a friendly welcome, right? I’m so glad you’re here!

You, on the other hand, might be a very seasoned subscriber who I’m always happy to see. I may have dusted you with so much chili pepper that you remember when I shared the news about how my composite decking was growing mushrooms! CLICK or TAP HERE to see some unbelievable fungi photos.

I love to listen to music while writing this newsletter. I think you’ll really like this week’s song. It’s a wistful tune that was part of a touring show about 20+ years ago. This particular song and performance introduced the third person in a sultry love triangle within the show. Take a few minutes to enjoy this amazing song and video. Then we’ll get back to work.

CLICK or TAP HERE and turn up the volume on your dream machine.

Two Sets of Young DIYrs

I’ve had the good fortune to help two young couples in the past few days. One couple lives in Connecticut, and the other in Indiana. I admire their energy and desire to tackle home improvement projects. It reminds me of my own early building and remodeling adventures.

These two projects are as different as night and day. The CT couple plans to install all new plumbing in an older home. They were really stumped on how to install vent pipes.
How to Vent Plumbing

CLICK or TAP HERE to see how complex plumbing vent pipes can be. I recorded this video in a brand new home here in NH.

I did an hour-long live video call with them explaining how I’d do the piping if I was there. This is a big project that might call for a professional, but this feisty young woman is bound and determined to try it herself.

She did, however, remind me at least twice that it’s just a four-hour drive from my house to hers - hint, hint! I had mentioned that just last year I’d installed all the plumbing in my daughter’s new home. “You can adopt me! I’m your long-lost UK daughter,” she chortled with a thick London accent.

I have a strong connection with the other young couple. The wife was just a little girl when I remodeled her mom’s kitchen. During the remodel, the young lass got sick at school which was two blocks away and I ended up carrying her home in my arms. I sometimes wonder if it’s a tale oft-told at their holiday table. I’d not seen nor talked with her for over thirty-three years.

It turns out she and her husband live in a wonderful Craftsman house in an Indianapolis suburb. The covered concrete front porch is showing some wear. But this is no ordinary concrete porch.
Craftsman House - Indianapolis

They’ve gotten bids from some trusted concrete contractors who’ve indicated that they could replace the porch and do a great job.

There are two issues, in my opinion, worthy of serious consideration:

  • the one-of-a-kind stone piers and support walls adjacent to the porch could easily be damaged by removing the existing slab
  • there’s no real structural issue I can identify

It turns out this young couple can save thousands of dollars by just applying a cement stucco coating over the porch. This is a project they can do themselves. But it’s critical they use a time-tested bonding agent so the new stucco adheres permanently to the existing concrete.

What’s this magic material? I thought you’d never ask. CLICK or TAP HERE and behold a secret shared with me by an old concrete mason when I was but twenty-three years old!

Fun Quiz!

Are you interested in holistic Italian wrinkle-removing face cream? Do you know anything at all about plasma ejection? Do you have any insight into diseases that afflicted European Neanderthals?
what is miasma

If so, then you’ll LOVE, LOVE, LOVE this week’s FUN one-question quiz.

CLICK or TAP HERE to enhance your little gray cells!

Father’s Day Chainsaw
echo cs 3510

I had the good fortune to test a new Echo chainsaw a few days ago. This model is brand new. It’s a sweetheart saw for any homeowner.

CLICK or TAP HERE to discover why this particular saw would make a great Father’s Day present.

Heck, you don’t have to be a father to get one as a surprise prize gift! Ladies, you REALLY WANT TO see how little this dandy saw weighs!

Front Loader Washing Machine MOLD

Do you ever have mold on the gasket of your front loader washing machine? Does your top-loading machine SMELL MUSTY?

Do you want to know the BEST way to clean it?

Better yet, would you like to know how to ensure the mold and mildew NEVER COMES BACK once you clean the gasket?

I thought so! Do I have a prize for you!

CLICK or TAP HERE and listen to something I’ll bet you didn’t know.

DANGER! Electrical Panel Water

Did you know water can leak into your electrical panel where all the circuit breakers are?

It’s actually somewhat common.

CLICK or TAP HERE and listen to what might be happening and how you can stop it. This is a DIY fix that can save you BIG $$$.

Blistering HOT Garages

Is your garage HOT?

garage ventilation

Mine can get stifling hot. CLICK or TAP HERE to see how you can keep it as cool as possible.

That’s enough for a Sunday, don’t you think?

Tim Carter
Founder - www.AsktheBuilder.com
Clean ANYTHING - www.StainSolver.com
Morse Code LIVES! - www.W3ATB.com

Do It Right, Not Over!

P.S. Is the water pressure in your shower low? Do you know how to save well over $100 and fix it yourself?

CLICK or TAP HERE to see if you were right.

Restore Old Deck

saving deck framing

Restore Old Deck | Can you believe the size of the cracks in the top of these treated lumber deck joists? They were hidden by the deck boards that were removed. Get your FREE deck repair parts list before you start the job. Copyright 2020 Tim Carter

Restore Old Deck - Flip Over the Joists

DEAR TIM: I’ve got a nine-year-old treated lumber deck on my home that’s showing worrying signs of decay. I removed some of the deck boards to discover some of the 2x12s are rotting at the top and there are huge cracks running along the top edge of each joist. Should I replace the entire deck and start over? Is there a way to salvage what I have? If you were here helping me, how would we make it so the deck would last thirty or forty years? Jeff Y., Upton, MA

Nine years old!!! I know this really dates me, but I can clearly remember the first time I saw an in-store marketing piece for treated lumber. I was fresh out of college and had just started my own remodeling business.

I was at the sales counter of a local full-service lumber company. This was four years before the orange major big box store was even a glint in the eye of its founder. There on the counter was a color cardboard placard that introduced treated lumber with a LIFETIME GUARANTEE. I marveled at that and took it hook, line, and sinker because I had yet to have enough life experience to know better.

I’ve since come to realize that some marketing managers for manufacturers live in a world populated with unicorns, rainbows, and glitter. Some also distort the English language and make a play on semantics. Rhetorical question: “Who’s lifetime?

Here’s the truth. Treated lumber can and does decay. It can and does crack. Water is its enemy. Let’s do an autopsy on Jeff’s nine-year-old (gasp!) deck hoping that you can avoid his pain, his upcoming labor, and possible expense.

Treated lumber is a magnificent material when you think about it. It used to be treated differently decades ago when I first bought it, but the EPA decided that the heavy metal chromium was not such a good idea in your life. Today’s treated lumber that you see at the home center and lumber yards contains lots of copper, a very good natural biocide.

But the core issue with treated wood is it’s hygroscopic. This means it changes its shape and size in response to the presence of water. If you have a piece of older treated lumber you can do a fascinating experiment. Set the piece of lumber out in the sun and allow it to become dry as a bone. Once dry, drop a small amount of water on it. Look closely and you’ll see the water soak into the lumber. Therein lies the problem.

The water causes the lumber to swell. As the wood dries, the lumber now shrinks. This back and forth movement causes tension within the lumber and micro-cracks start to develop. After repeated wet/dry episodes, the cracks grow to where you can see them. These are called checking cracks. These cracks allow the next rainfall to penetrate deeper into the wood causing even greater tension forces. The cracks grow bigger and bigger.

Rot can happen for any number of reasons. When you purchase the treated lumber, you hope that the chemicals used were the right proportion. You hope the pressure vessel the lumber was in was working right. You hope the pressure gauges were accurate. You hope the operator didn’t have a fight with his wife or boss that day. Hope is something you should reserve for things you can’t control like the weather and if you might get rescued from a deserted island.

If I could help Jeff rebuild his deck, here’s where I’d start. First, I’d buy my lumber from a true lumberyard, not a home center. You can get different grades of treated lumber and I prefer #1 if I can get my hands on it. All I ever see at the home centers I visit is #2.

I’d be sure to use the absolute best metal framing connectors and fasteners that have been rated for use with modern treated lumber. Remember, today’s treated lumber has a very high concentration of copper in it. Once treated lumber gets wet, a chemical reaction begins and the iron loses this battle. Many a person has been injured or killed in a deck collapse caused by the corrosion of the fasteners.

Once the undercarriage of the deck was complete, I’d cover the top of all the joists as well as the tops of any beams with the newer joist tape meant for this purpose. This tape seals the top of the joists and beams and minimizes the chances of water entering the lumber. It’s important to realize that when you drive a nail into the top of a treated lumber joist you create stress points that eventually result in cracks around the nail shaft. The cracks allow the wretched water into the lumber with the above-mentioned ill effects. The tape is designed to seal around the shaft of a deck nail or screw.

Jeff might be able to salvage all his current lumber. He may be able to flip the joists over. The issue might be that he’ll have to trim the lumber ever so slightly in case the joists are crowned. A crowned joist has a hump in it much like bridges you drive over. Crowns should point skyward. If you flip a crowned joist over, now it has a dip in it that can cause water to collect on the deck. You need to snap a chalk line and cut out the dip.

I’d purchase some liquid copper naphthenate and brush it on any of the joists where the rot is less than 5 percent of its overall width. Joists with more rot than this should be replaced in my opinion.

Deck maintenance is very important and necessary. Read Tim's September 15, 2019 AsktheBuilder Emergency Announcement regarding a deck failure.

Column 1357

Garage Planning Ideas

Garage Planning Ideas

Garage Planning Ideas | This is an expensive lake-front house sporting a very common mistake - a cramped garage. There’s no room for the pedal boat in the winter! They should have come to my website for garage planning ideas before goofing up. Copyright 2020 Tim Carter

Garage Planning Ideas - Make it Bigger

DEAR TIM: I can’t tell you how many thousands of dollars I’ve spent on remote storage facility fees. I want to put all my stuff on my own land in a dream garage. I realize a garage can be detached as well as attached to my home. Have you built the dream garage for yourself or a client? Would you please share with me what your dream garage would be like if you could wave a magic wand? I want to get it right this time and am so very tired of banging my car and truck doors against things when I have to squeeze to get in and out of my car. Amanda G., Westport, CT

I’m not really a betting person, although I did bet my son years ago I could make a basket and lost, but I’m willing to wager you have the same frustration Amanda does with her garage that was probably built for gnomes or hobbits. My own garage, it’s important to realize I didn’t build the house I’m in now, is too narrow. I see narrow garages all the time and for the life of me can’t understand how this mistake is perpetuated.

Is it Hard To Build a Dream Garage?

It's easy to build a dream garage. I’ve built several garages for myself, my daughter, and clients that have gotten pretty close to the dream level. It’s not hard to do, but it does require a little more space than you might realize.

Is There a Simple Planning Tool?

To solve any planning problem, you must start from the inside and work out towards the outer walls. You can do this with simple 1/4-inch graph paper. A simple sheet that’s 8.5 inches by 11 inches will accommodate your perfect garage. Each block can represent one foot in your plan.

CLICK or TAP HERE to get FREE QUOTES from local dream garage builders.

How Wide Should a Garage Be?

I suggest we solve the garage width issue first. The biggest thing that goes in most garages is a car or truck. My neighbor once tried to get his powerboat and trailer in his garage at an angle and got frustrated in a hurry. He was fuming but that’s a story for another day.

Cars are bigger than you think. My 1969 VW Beetle was over 13-feet-long. My current pickup truck is almost 21-feet-long. My truck width with the side view mirrors out is almost 9 feet. My car’s width is close to 7 feet 6 inches. Most car and truck doors swing out about 3 feet. Do you see where this is headed?

What Size Should the Doors Be?

You’d be wise to incorporate 10-foot-wide garage doors that are 8 feet tall for starters. If you’re going to have two doors, make sure there’s 4 feet of space minimum between the two openings. This allows you to open the car doors and not bang them into the one in the other bay.

How Much Space Should be Next To the Car?

Let’s talk about the sidewalls of the garage. You already know you need 3 feet of space to open a door, but now you need to think about what’s stored on the wall. Garbage cans can be 30 or 36 inches deep or in diameter! Go out into your existing garage and see how cramped it is between the side of your car and whatever is stored along the wall.

You’ll quickly come to the conclusion that you need at least five feet of space from the garage door opening to the inside surface of the sidewall. You may get by with 4 feet, but you’ll eventually shake your head at not going for the five feet. Add all these numbers up and you’ll discover your garage foundation should probably be 36 feet wide!

How Deep Should the Garage Be?

The depth of your dream garage is simple. Once you do some math, you’ll see that it should be no less than 30 feet deep. This gives you lots of space for a workbench, bikes, garden tools, etc. A garage 34 or 36-feet deep approaches dream dimensions.

What Else Should the Garage Have In it?

Here’s a list of other things that will make your garage one that friends and neighbors will salivate over. Install radiant floor heat. You can create the needed hot water with a simple water heater in almost all cases. Be sure the ceiling height is no less than 10 feet. This allows you to put in a small storage loft that hangs out over the hoods of your vehicles.

Consider a narrow 6-foot-wide overhead garage door for the rear wall to give you easy access for lawn equipment going in and out. Install floor drains under each vehicle and slope the concrete floor so snow-melt runs into the drain and doesn’t pool against the garage doors. You’d be surprised how many building inspectors will permit these floor drains. Install on the house wall a hose hydrant with both hot and cold water so you can hose things off with warm water and wash your car indoors in the winter.

Don’t let the space above the garage go to waste. Build the roof using full attic trusses. These create a massive room above the garage. With creative planning, you can easily incorporate a full regular staircase leading up to this room rather than the steep pull-down staircases. This is where you’ll put all those things you’re storing offsite.

Don’t skimp on electric outlets, for goodness sake! Think about where you’ll have a workbench and provide for plenty of power there. Be sure to put an outlet on the wall in between the two front garage doors. This outlet will come in handy when you’re working on something in the driveway. Think about 240-volt outlets in case you like to weld or have other heavy-duty electric needs.

Author's Note:

This column generated fond memories for Gil Stubbert:

"Hi, Tim,

I had the ideal dream garage. I didn't build it, but what an awesome garage it was. The garage was a 5 car, workshop, and had a rough-in area for a toilet and sink, and a floor drain in the single garage. The garage had a double garage door that faced the street going by the front of the house. The back of the garage has access to an alley behind with a double and a single garage door. The front of the garage also had a single 36-inch walk-in door going into the workshop. There was also a second floor with a regular stairway for access. The outside was brick and stucco that matched the house. When I had to have the roof re-shingled I added 3 skylights. We moved out of state and my awesome garage is no more. I miss having that garage."

Column 1356

What is Miasma?

What is Miasma? - Remember, Just Guess

Don't ask Alexa or Siri for help. Trust the Force within you!

IMPORTANT NOTE: After clicking SUBMIT, scroll back at the top and click the VIEW SCORE button to see how you did!

CLICK or TAP HERE to play ALL past AsktheBuilder.com quizzes.

what is miasma - stick people drawing

ADA compliant Shovel Man

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Metal Roof Color Temperature

metal roof color temperature

These were the three pieces of metal I had painted. The black tape is an emissivity target to get accurate temperatures.

Metal Roof Color Temperature - Color Matters Big Time

I used my FLIR infrared camera to determine the temperature of three pieces of metal I had painted three different colors.

The experiment was done at the end of May 2020 in central New Hampshire. I took the photos just a few minutes after solar noon. The strips of painted metal had been in direct sunlight for about 30 minutes to heat up. It was a cloudless day.

One of my FREE newsletter subscribers, David Andersen, had provided great information to ensure the temperature readings were accurate. He's a level III thermographer and had been trained on how to take infrared photos. He pointed out that two things are important :

  • the spot where the reading is taken needs to be a 1-inch by 1-inch piece of black tape. This gives true accurate readings between the three samples.
  • the photos need to be taken in the shade so you're not getting a sun reflection temperature.

I had my camera all set up and then used a cookie baking sheet to create temporary shade for a second or two to take each photograph.

metal roof color temperature

I put the strip on a piece of plywood and tilted it to about a 5:12 roof pitch. This creates a realistic setting. The samples and wood were aimed directly south to get the maximum infrared rays from the sun.

metal roof color temperature

The camera sensor is aimed at the black tape on the white painted metal. It's 104.7 F.

metal roof color temperature

The FLIR camera is aimed dead center on the black painted metal. HOT! 152.7 F.

metal roof color temperature

Here's the green painted metal. It's just a little cooler than the black. 147.1 F.

 

Newsletter Music Gillian Norris The Temptress

Newsletter Music Gillian Norris The Temptress

The Temptress was featured in the May 31, 2020 AsktheBuilder.com newsletter. It's a performance that was part of the Lord of the Dance traveling show that debuted in Ireland in July of 1996. CLICK or TAP HERE to read all past AsktheBuilder.com newsletters.

CLICK or TAP HERE to listen to all the music featured in past AsktheBuilder.com newsletters.

Gillian Norris Lord of The DanceStain Solver, the best and most powerful certified organic cleaner on Earth, is the sponsor of the Newsletter Music.

Show your support. Purchase a small sample size and behold its magic powers.

Stain Solver SS02 Oxygen Bleach

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Echo CS 3510 Chainsaw Review

echo cs 3510

Here's the new Echo saw. CLICK or TAP HERE to get more information or to have one delivered to your home.

Echo CS 3510 Chainsaw - Compact, Light Perfect for Homeowners

I recently assembled and started up the Echo CS 3510 chainsaw. I've used many chainsaws and this one, in my opinion, is a homeowner tool. Most pros who use chainsaws all day long would probably scoff at this handy tool for the same reason you'd want to use a Ford F-250 Super Duty truck as a contractor versus using a small KIA car with a tiny utility trailer.

CLICK or TAP HERE to buy an Echo chainsaw. They come in many different SIZES. You may want a more powerful one.

What Did You Think of the Saw, Tim?

I feel the chainsaw is a fair deal for the price paid. If you know how to use a chainsaw and keep it out of the dirt, it can cut lots of wood just like my monster STIHL with an 18-inch bar. The engine will work well for years if you follow the advice in my Small Engine Care column.

If you want this new Echo saw to start first or second pull every time, CLICK or TAP HERE.

How Big is the Engine?

The engine is only 34.4 cc. That gives you an indication that this is a saw meant for smaller jobs, not torturing timber trees that are 120 feet tall and 5 feet in diameter at the base.

CLICK or TAP HERE if you want FREE QUOTES from local tree companies in case the project you want to do is TOO BIG.

How Much Does it Weigh?

The Echo CS 3510 weighs in at 8.2 pounds.

How Long is the Warranty?

The saw comes with a 5-year warranty for homeowners and one-year for commercial operators.

echo cs 3510

This is what everything looked like out of the box. You need to assemble the bar and chain onto the saw. It's easy to do.

echo cs 3510

May 24, 2020 AsktheBuilder Newsletter

Memorial Day Tribute

Tomorrow is Memorial Day here in the USA. It’s a very somber holiday for me. The day is set aside to honor those who gave the ultimate sacrifice while in uniform and service to their country. That’s the formal definition, but I feel it might be extended to those that perish many years later from service-related injuries.

Each year, I dedicate this issue of the newsletter to all those who placed themselves in harm’s way and tendered their lives for the rights and liberties granted to each one of us in the US Constitution. My father is one of those who paid this high price for you and me.

Your image this Memorial Day may be of someone dying on the battlefront, drowning at sea as their ship slips beneath the waves, or plummeting to the ground in a flaming plane. You may imagine a wounded warrior succumbing to his injuries in a battlefield hospital. Yes, all these things happen.

One of my own thoughts on this Memorial Day is of my dad, who was a medic in World War II. It’s troubling to even consider how many soldiers may have died in his arms.

My dad was part of General Bradley’s Second Corps. He landed at Anzio Beach in southern Italy and eventually was captured by the Huns on an October afternoon while giving aid to injured soldiers. He spent the remaining months of the war as a POW in Stalag II-B.
Tim's Dad's Letter Envelope

Another image I have is of the many brave warriors, like my dad, who died years later from wounds they received during the war. Many of those wounds were physical but the psychological wounds they endured were no less heartbreaking.

A Deeper Understanding of Dad

This past winter, I engrossed myself in a book-writing project. My youngest daughter had asked me to write about my life growing up. She wanted me to put my adventures and advice on paper so she could read about and learn from my experiences.

I wanted to finish the book in time for her birthday at the end of March. This gave me about four months to complete the project from the time I started on it, the beginning of November.

The first thing I did was to create a master outline of all the stories that needed to be in the book. I quickly discovered it would be impossible to complete the entire book in the four-month time-frame. I determined the project needed to come to life as four separate volumes. Volume one was completed in time for my daughter’s birthday. It’s a handsome hardbound book that I’m pretty proud of.

Here's the cover for the book. It's a special hand-drawn map I made and the fictional towns, roadways, and places all come to life within the book series.
Tim's Book cover - Adventures & Advise

The Real Story

My children never got to meet their grandfather. My mother, sister, and I had to send him back to Heaven when I was a young man. The only knowledge my kids had of my dad came from photos they’d seen and stories I might have shared.

Dad was in the US Army and fought in the European Theater. While doing the research for the book, I discovered priceless photos, letters, newspaper clippings, and other mementos my mom had saved. These allowed me to reconstruct Dad’s life in exacting detail from just before World War ll until the day he died.

Things I thought for my entire life to be true about what happened to him in the war, I came to discover were false. His heroism on the day he was captured came to life in a handwritten letter from his tentmate to my mom. You can almost smell the gunpowder of the battle as you read Vance's letter.

Once I knew the real facts of my dad’s story, I devoted the first chapter in the book to tell it. My kids will now know who their grandfather was and how World War ll changed him forever.

If you'd like to share an account about a loved one who served in any conflict or even in peacetime, please do so as a comment under my dad's story. I moderate all comments so it may not appear immediately. Be patient and I guarantee you I'll approve your comment and story.

I love you, Dad, and I miss you every day.

You can read about my dad this Memorial Day by CLICKING or TAPPING HERE.

The Quiz

The quiz this week is in memory of all those who gave the ultimate sacrifice, especially in the great World War II.

I was unaware of a fact about this conflict you’re about to discover. It will make you pause. Of that, there’s no doubt.

You will get a 100 percent on this quiz, I’m quite certain of it.

CLICK or TAP HERE to discover a fact about the great World War II that should NEVER BE FORGOTTEN.

That’s quite enough for today.

I’ll be back in your Inbox in a week, as I’m taking a few days off to reflect on my dad and all that’s really important in life.

Tim Carter
Founder - www.AsktheBuilder.com
Organic Cleaner - www.StainSolver.com
Pure Digital - www.W3ATB.com

Do It Right, Not Over!

How Many People Died in the Great World War II?

How Many People Died in the Great World War II? - Remember, Just Guess

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pfc melvin carter

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PFC Melvin Carter

pfc melvin carter

Author's Note: The following text appeared in Chapter One of the Adventures & Advice book that I wrote at the request of my youngest daughter. I also shared the book with my other two older children. This book is not available to the general public as it was a special gift to my children, my older sister, and a very small select group of my friends.

It's important to realize that my father, PFC Carter, passed away before any of my children were even a glint in my eye. The details of his life in what you're about to read are what he might have shared with my children had he been able to sit them on his lap and talk about who he was and what he did.

I only came to appreciate and deeply love my father years later after he had been worn down by life and the horrors of what he experienced in the great World War II. My mother, sister, and I sent him back to Heaven when I was a very young man.

Grandfather Melvin Carter

pfc melvin carter

 

Your Grandfather Carter looks pretty smart in his US Army uniform, doesn’t he? He’s beaming because he’s sitting next to your grandmother no doubt! This photo was taken in June of 1945 after he returned from the hellish experience of World War II. The photo was taken at Coney Island amusement park in Cincinnati, Ohio. Many people went to Coney Island before Kings Island ravaged and plundered its customer base.

My dad was born on April 10, 1917. That was just four days after the USA entered World War One in Europe. His middle name honored the tiny hamlet he was born in, Mt. Vernon, Indiana. His father, William Columbus Carter was born in 1846. That made him 70 years old at the time your grandfather was conceived!  

Your great-grandfather was a country veterinarian in the middle of nowhere. Mt. Vernon, Indiana is a sleepy town now, so you can imagine what it was like in the early 1900s.

I have no clue when the family relocated from Indiana to New Richmond, Ohio, just fifteen or so miles upstream on the Ohio River from downtown Cincinnati. But before ending up in New Richmond, they must have relocated to Cincinnati not too long after my dad was born because my great-grandfather is buried at the Baltimore Pike Cemetery in Cincinnati.

I do know that my dad’s mother, Ida, married three times. Ida remarried a man with the last name Steinbrecher. This is why all the urgent telegrams she received about her son during World War ll were addressed to Ida Steinbrecher. I don’t have a record of this but Ida’s second husband must have died and Ida, not wanting to be lonely, remarried a third, and final time, to Louis Nitzel. Ida passed away in 1957 and her final resting place is in Spring Grove Cemetery in Cincinnati, Ohio.

Your grandfather, his four sisters, and one older brother lived in or adjacent to a boarding house operated by his mother, Ida Steinbrecher Carter. I was five years old when my grandmother passed away. I have a dim memory of seeing her on her deathbed in a house just off Beechmont Avenue in Mt. Washington. 

Your grandfather's oldest sister was my Aunt Margaret. She dated and married your grandmother’s older brother, my Uncle Louie. Your grandfather must have run into Louie at the boarding house and at some point, Uncle Louie hired him to help collect money from jukeboxes that Louie owned in local bars and other places of disrepute. 

World War II started when your grandfather was twenty-one years old. He enlisted in the US Army to fight our enemies just like millions of other young men. He traveled to at least two Army camps across the US. His first training camp was Camp Pickett in Virginia where he was in Company A of the 6th Medical Training Battalion. He was trained as a battlefield medic and ambulance driver.

Tim Carter's Dad Army

After Camp Pickett, he was sent to gorgeous Camp Carson in the Rocky Mountains of Colorado. He must have been in awe, as my guess is he’d never before seen snow-covered mountains like these. 

Your grandfather was shipped to North Africa from Camp Carson on April 29, 1943. He was assigned to the Medical Detachment 180th Infantry 45th Division and became part of General Bradley’s Second Corps.

US and British troops were fighting the Germans in North Africa and it was also a staging ground for the invasion of Italy at Anzio Beach. I don’t believe your grandfather was part of the invasion force. My research leads me to believe that once the beachhead was established and the Germans were being pushed up towards Rome, his battalion landed some days after the primary invasion.

He worked his way from Anzio to Rome, and was part of the force that liberated the city of Rome from the clutches of the Nazis on June 4, 1944. Based on photos your grandfather took while in Rome, he appears to have gotten some time off while in this ancient city. However, just days later, on June 12, 1944, he was wounded in his left forearm by a Nazi bullet.

The wound was not serious and he was still able to be part of the fighting force. He also contracted malaria while in Italy. An old newspaper clipping talks about how he was recovering from it before being shipped to southern France.

I’m not clear how he made it to southern France as the Allies continued to push the Germans back towards Berlin, but on October 5, 1944, his unit was sent to the front lines. They engaged the Germans the following morning and the battle raged on all day. As sometimes happens in battle, one side can run out of ammunition. This happened to your grandfather’s unit.

The Germans captured your grandfather on October 6, 1944. I have a very dim memory of my mom saying that he could have avoided capture, but he stayed with his injured soldiers to provide aid and comfort for them.

A newspaper clipping that your grandmother saved indicated that his best friend and tentmate, Vance Hallman PFC, was able to somehow escape capture. I suspect that Vance was not sent out on patrol at the same time your grandfather was dispatched with his rifle company.

Vance subsequently wrote a letter to your grandmother dated November 8, 1944, sharing the details of the battle and your grandfather’s capture.

I’ve transcribed the actual letter here:

France

8 Nov 1944

Dear Jeane,

The letter that I’ve been waiting for came last night and it was yours of Oct 24 telling me that the War Dept had notified you of Carter being missing in action. I would have written you sooner, in fact I did write you all about it but I destroyed the letter after thinking it over and decided to wait until you had heard from the WD.

I wrote Mary all about it and told her to write you so you’ve probably heard from her by now. But in case you haven’t I’ll tell you about it and I hope this relieves you and his mother of a great part of the anxiety that you must be in.

First of all I want to tell you that Carter is only a prisoner, and I know that relieves you some because the WD never gets into detail and it’s human nature for us to expect the worst when it involves someone we love. Those three words “missing in action” cover a lot of territory and I can imagine how you all felt when you got the telegram.

Carter was an aid man with one of the rifle companies and on Oct 6 there was a big battle in the forests that (Please excuse the two kinds of paper, I didn’t know I was so near out of the other.) lasted all day and up into the night. The enemy broke through our lines and Carter’s Company was surrounded. There were many casualties so Carter and some of the men carried them into a farmhouse and down into the cellar where he could give them medical attention.

About dark that evening the enemy encircled the house and took Carter and the seventeen wounded men prisoners. Some of the other men that were at the house with Carter made a break for it and got away but Carter chose to stay and take care of his wounded buddies who might have died otherwise. Knowing Carter like I do, I don’t believe he would have left those buddies of his under any circumstances and Jeane, don’t you think any of us has forgot that heroic deed and he will certainly get recognition for it from the War Department.

I talked to one of the men that were in the house with Carter who made a break for it and got away, and he praised Carter very highly for his sacrifice. Jeane, the Germans were seen evacuating Carter and the wounded men from the house that evening with the help of five more of our medics that were captured the same time Carter was. So he has five more of his buddies in the medics that are prisoners with him.

They were litter bearers and were in a jeep on the way up to the house to get the wounded men that Carter was looking after, when they were captured.

Jeane, we’ve had reports from medic prisoners and they say the medics get the best of treatment, and they also get priority on the list of exchange prisoners which is very good news.

Yes, Jeane, I do know that you and Carter mean everything to each other and I can readily understand that, and Mary and I are looking forward to being with you all when this war is over. You’re right, we’re going to have a swell time together after this mess is all over, and I don’t think that’s so long off either. Carter and I already have a trip to the Indianapolis races and one to Florida planned.

I miss him very much, we used to lie in bed at night and talk about you and Mary and make all kinds of plans, etc. He’s a swell guy, Jeane, and I’ll be seeing more of him after this war. A fellow doesn’t find friends like Carter every day. He’s one of the best friends I ever had and I feel as if I’ve known him all my life.

Jeane, I received your other two letters sometime ago and this is the reason I haven’t answered them. I sincerely hope that I’ve taken away some of the worry off your and Carter’s mother and if there’s anything else you want to know or anything that I can do for you please don’t hesitate to call on me, I’m sure Carter would do the same for me.

Sincerely yours,

Vance Hallman

I’d love to know more about this and how terrifying it must have been. Imagine having one or more German soldiers, possibly with their bloodlust overflowing, pointing their rifles at your chest.

Another newspaper clipping recounting the battle and capture, states that he also suffered a head wound from a bullet. He was sent to Stalag II-B in Poland after his capture. This camp was located in the far northeastern corner of that occupied country. The newspaper clipping states he ate potato peels to stay alive and went without bread for weeks at a time.

He received a Purple Heart for this injury. Far greater than the gunshot wounds were the psychological injuries he suffered. These would bubble to the surface once back home and would plague your grandfather for the rest of his life.

melvin carter purple heart medal

rear of melvin carter purple heart medal

Your grandmother told me many years after your grandfather died that he had an unpleasant time in the German POW camp. He lost quite a bit of weight and I remember a story told once at the dinner table about him being hit by one of the guards. Dad had cursed at the guard out of frustration and the guard either knew English or could simply understand what my dad was trying to convey.

In April, 1945 Dad’s POW camp was liberated by advancing Russian forces that were beating the Germans back towards Berlin. Your grandfather shared the story of how on that day he and all the other prisoners awoke to find all their guards had abandoned them.

They heard a rumbling sound and a Russian tank crashed through the prison gates. Dad and all his POW buddies were fearful that they might be killed, but the tank commander opened his hatch, popped his head out, went back into the tank and brought out a 5-gallon fuel container.

The container didn’t contain gasoline. It was filled with vodka and they all had a giant liberation party right there in the POW camp!

us army pow medal

This is my dad's POW medal. Pretty somber black overtone wouldn't you say?

The war ended not too long after this and your grandfather was moved to the coast of France to await a transport ship to take him back home to his sweetheart, your grandmother. Here is the first letter he sent to her once he was liberated from the POW camp. 

Germany - May 6 - 45

My Dearest Darling,

Honey just a few lines to let you know I am well and getting along fine. I know you have been waiting seven months to hear from me and I know you have thought I have been dead but when you are a prisoner you are not allowed to write much but I did write you a few letters whether you got them I don’t know.

Honey here is the main thing you want to hear right now. I am at an airport waiting for a plane to take me to the coast of France where I will (missing verb) the boat for home and I should be there within a month. Well honey right now I am very tired and sleepy so I will close until tomorrow with all my love.

Yours forever,

Melvin

He got back from Europe on June 2, 1945. He was sent to Camp Atterbury in nearby Indiana. They were married within weeks on June 14, 1945.

His experiences on the battlefield, the fear of being killed when his unit was overrun, and then the seven months in a German POW camp caused permanent debilitating injuries to your grandfather’s psyche. He suffered from severe depression that, unfortunately, was made worse by electroshock treatments administered by the Veterans hospital psychiatrists.

Doctors back in the late 1940s and 1950s thought this was the best way to treat depression, just like hundreds of years ago doctors thought that bloodletting was the way to cure sick patients.

Should you want to see disturbing and vivid examples of this electro-shock treatment, watch the movie One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest with Jack Nicholson. Based on what I’ve discovered, each successive shock treatment intensified the depression so the doctors were setting up your grandfather for failure. I don’t blame them, nor should you. They were doing the best they could do at the time.

I don’t have a clear picture of the time period from 1945-1955, but my guess is it was a tumultuous time for your grandmother. She was not alone as tens of thousands of other young wives were dealing with their tormented soulmates. There’s a reason why the three-word saying war is hell rings true.

At one point, my Uncle Raymond, Aunt Thelma’s husband, got your grandfather a job at the massive Cincinnati Milling Machine factory. I have one faded memory of Dad either leaving for or coming back home from the plant. He had on dark blue pants and shirt and was carrying a metal lunchbox.

I also have a sad memory of his escalating torment. One warm summer day, he and Mom were involved in a heated discussion. It was close to my birthday and evidently, he wanted to rescind his promise of taking me and some friends on some sort of birthday outing. It might have been an afternoon at Putt-Putt miniature golf. I was quite young and I remember sitting on the front porch crying as I heard Mom’s frustrated voice. I can’t tell you how that discussion or the day turned out, but I’m sure it wasn’t the only time that things that should have been easy were instead a challenge.

It’s important to realize that back then, at least in our family, these hardships were not discussed. It might have been too painful for Mom to do. She might not have had the energy. She might not have wanted to frighten your Aunt Lynn and me any more than we already were. She might have thought that all of it was nice-to-know but not need-to-know information for our young minds.

The downside of being kept in the dark about my dad was that as I grew older, I began to resent his behavior. I couldn’t understand why he stayed home all day sleeping on the couch listening to country music over and over on the hi-fi while all my friends’ dads went to work each day.

The thought of not working was hateful to me. The animosity between us climaxed while I was in high school. I was working seven days a week at Skyline Chili. Monday through Friday, I worked from 4 until 7 p.m. to help out with the dinner rush. I’d miss dinner with the family and would bring home a pint of chili, a packet of diced onions, and a packet of cheese.

I’d eat it at the kitchen table in my favorite red-glass bowl, and Dad would come in most nights to watch me. I look back now and understand why he did this. He wanted to be with me and discover how my day had been just like how I want to hear about your days now. He’d be smoking a cigarette and the stench of it nauseated me. This just added to the dark cloud hovering over us. I so wish I could go back in time and change my behavior as it wasn’t Dad’s fault he was suffering. I was just too young to understand his pain and his own feelings of shame.

Fortunately, I began to mature as I made my way through college. The resentment faded and your grandfather and I began to become friends. I’d talk to him about what I was learning in geology and he was genuinely interested.

Once I graduated from the University of Cincinnati in June of 1974 with my geology degree, I started my own little remodeling business. Not a year passed before I had purchased my first house at 2865 Minto Avenue in East Hyde Park.

I remember one day your grandfather stopped by to watch while I worked. It was a beehive of activity and he just stood there for about an hour shaking his head in amazement at the scope of the project and what his son was doing.

Mom told me years later he was really proud of me. He knew I was tackling what for him would have been an impossible challenge.

Your grandfather’s health had always been poor. His sedentary lifestyle mixed with his heavy smoking was a recipe for nothing but bad things. When I was in grade school he had revolutionary surgery where they installed artificial arteries from just below his heart all the way down both legs. I remember crying about this in school the day of his surgery because I knew it was very serious.

In the middle of August 1976, he went for a normal doctor’s visit and the doctor listened to his heart. He was in the middle of an arrhythmia episode and the doctor told him to get to the hospital immediately.

Your grandfather didn’t last a week. He was in intensive care, had multiple heart failures, and was brought back to life with defibrillators. Your grandmother, your Aunt Lynn, and I watched one of these terrifying events happen. I’ll never forget it. 

We sent your grandfather back to Heaven on August 21, 1976, while I was living in the starter home in Hyde Park. I remember your grandmother calling to tell me he had passed away. I have many regrets about your grandfather and one is not being by his side as he passed. He died alone in his hospital room and it bothers me to this day. Your grandfather was still a young man as he was only 59-years-old. His final resting place is in Spring Grove Cemetery in Cincinnati, Ohio, near the rear exit.

Not a week goes by that I don’t think about my dad. There are so many things I’ve done that I wish he could have seen. It would have been so cool to have him stop by while I was building the house in Amberley. He would have been speechless at all the carpentry involved in that huge project! I think he’d be really proud of how my life has turned out. I know he’d be proud of you!

melvin and jeane carter

Tim Carter's Dad's Headstone

Tim's Dad's Discharge

melvin carter bronze star

This is the bronze star Dad got for not abandoning his men in the basement of the farmhouse.

ww ii victory medal

This is the WW II Victory medal I imagine all service members got once they got back home.

This column was featured in many of Tim's Newsletters.

November 11, 2018 Newsletter

November 11, 2019 Communique

Memorial Day Tribute - May 24, 2020 Newsletter

Mother's Day salute to my Mom and her Bright Red lipstick.