John Wayne And I

By Judy Dykstra-Brown

 

john wayne

When the Union Pacific Railroad was finally completed on May 10, 1869, it was a cause for great celebration. In 1969 it was decided to have another huge ceremony honoring the 100th anniversary of the “Wedding of the Rails” in Utah.  To that end, two trains set out—one from the easternmost point of the track and the other from the western most point. These trains were destined to meet at the original point of their meeting, but since they were filled with dignitaries, they made numerous stops along the way with celebrations at each point where they stopped.

In 1969, I was attending the college in Laramie, Wyoming. It was announced that John Wayne and Glen Campbell would be on the train coming from Sacramento and that they would do a whistle stop where they would both say a few words before continuing on to Utah.  Now it just so happened that this event coincided with Sigma Chi Derby Days—an annual event that consisted of a number of challenges whereby campus groups could assemble points.  What the prize was I can’t remember, but I do remember that one of the contests was to gain the signature of the most famous person.  And I happened to know that John Wayne himself had been a Sigma Chi. If I could somehow gain his signature, we would have it made in the shade for that particular challenge. 

And so on the prescribed day, we were off, fully laden, with five of us filling the seats of my little red Ford Galaxy. How we would get close enough to the train to gain the autograph, I did not know, but nothing ventured, nothing gained. There was, as may be expected, a huge crowd at the Laramie train station, and we waited in anticipation for the train.  Initially, it came up, sounding its whistle, flags waving.  Several men came out to a small stage that had been constructed just in front of the train.  Finally, Glen Campbell came out, but no John Wayne.  We were puzzled when the speeches started without him.  What could have happened to John Wayne? Finally, I was hit with one of those instant inspirations often depicted by a light bulb going off over someone’s head in cartoon bubbles.

“I bet he got off the train to fly back to California!”  No one disagreed and it was my car, so off we sped to the airport, which was several miles outside of town.  We drove well over the speed limit down the two-lane nearly car less road.  As we approached the airport, we could see no larger planes loading, but there was one smaller private plane.  We went speeding up to the airport.  “I’ll go see what’s going on with that small plane,” I told my friends, springing from the door almost as soon as the car had come to a screeching halt.  I went running out onto the field—not hard to do in a small airport in those years before airport security­—and ran smack dab into a man who was walking toward the plane from the opposite direction. “Well, whoa, there, little lady. Where ya goin?” said the brick wall I’d just run into.

“I’m trying to find John Wayne.  Do you know if he might be in that plane?” I asked.

“Nope, I’m pretty sure he’s not,” said the man, “because he’s standing right here!”

I looked up—way up—and sure enough. There he was with his hands still on my forearms where he had caught me just before I ran into him broadside!

Yes. It was a surreal experience.  And it was even more surreal when I explained about the points and he said, “Well, would it give ya more points if instead of delivering my autograph if you could deliver me?” I said it sure would, and we had reached my car and my somewhat astonished friends had piled four in the back for him to climb into the front seat with me when a harried looking man came running out from the landing field shouting, “John, John!  What are you doing?” 

Long story short, John Wayne did not come back to campus with us.  His manager managed to persuade him it was not in his best interests given that something in CA was important enough to warrant his immediate return.  But, I did get his signature and no, I did not turn it in for Sigma Chi Derby Days.  To this day, it resides in a square of a memory box—one of the kind popular in the sixties and seventies that is made out of an old newspaper print box.

And yes, of course John Wayne was three sheets to the wind, for in keeping with a newspaper report of the original rail-joining ceremony, “It was a very hilarious occasion; everybody had all they wanted to drink...”

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