Anthology of American Folk Music

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April 02, 2007

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Jerome Clark

A few years ago my wife and I drove through the outskirts of Hibbing on our way to somewhere else. Not much of a Hibbing experience, true. Still, Hibbing has been a sort of presence in my life.

I was raised in a small southwestern Minnesota town where -- interrupted by 25 years elsewhere, mostly Chicago, where I worked as a magazine editor by day and prowled folk and blues clubs by night -- I now live again (actually, 17 years this month). In the mid-1960s my younger brother Tom befriended his English teacher and his wife, Hibbing natives Dick and Mona Ostroot (who are long since divorced). Tom was engaged to Mona's younger sister Becky for a time, though they were never to marry. The family's last name is Vincent.

I didn't know the Ostroots well -- I was out of high school by then -- but I did engage them in one serious, memorable conversation. I had fallen under the spell of Dylan a couple of years earlier, and as a Minnesotan acutely aware of Dylan's roots, I inquired if they happened to be acquainted with him. Dick and Mona responded -- entirely matter of factly; these are good, modest people -- that they were his closest friends in high school. Mona went on to say that the two couples, meaning herself and Dick and Bob and Echo, hung out together in those days. She added casually that Dylan had once written a song about her.

("To Ramona" is on Another Side of Bob Dylan. She is also mentioned in a verse of "Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again" on Blonde on Blonde. It's the one that begins "Mona tried to tell me to stay away from the train line," then goes on to allude -- via quote from a traditional song -- to her father's drinking, something I knew about from my brother.)

It happens that I serve on the board of a local organization dedicated to preserving the history of our community, and specifically of its railroading experience. We meet in the (restored) depot where my father -- who shared an occupation with Mona's father -- was employed as a telegrapher for many years, practically up to his death.

At a board meeting last year, the director of our little group reported that she'd invited a woman to speak at our annual summer open house to discuss a book she'd put together of her (deceased) father's railroad recollections.

When I learned that the woman had grown up in Hibbing and was once married to Dick Ostroot, I gripped my chair to keep from falling out of it and landing on my head.

Naturally, I went to see Mona (who now lives in another small town in northern Minnesota) at the gathering. I was surprised that she recognized me instantly, though later my mother (resident in our town's nursing home) related that Mona had called on her the previous day. (I've since been informed that she visits our town regularly in a private capacity, out of friendship with a local woman with whom I am slightly acquainted.) In any event, Mona is still a strikingly beautiful woman, and still soft-spoken, quiet, and unassuming.

Possessed of at least some minimal manners, I didn't erupt into Dylan talk immediately, but in due course managed -- not to her surprise, I'm sure -- to get around to it. She said she is in nearly daily e-mail contact with Echo, now a Californian and in declining health. Dylan remains a part of Mona's life. He phones every few months to chat, and they get together when he's touring Minnesota, usually for a cup of coffee backstage before a concert. Sometimes he will mention her name from the stage.

Presently, while fully appreciating that I was laying aside any pretense to coolness, I donned my dork's hat and burst forth with the appallingly inevitable, "What is Dylan like?" "Shy" was the totality of her response.

In his annotation to songs on the box set Biograph, Dylan remarks that "To Ramona" was written about someone he knew when he was growing up. Her eyes, by the way, are still "watery."

JC

Just wanted to pipe in at how comforting it is to hear the Hibbing stories -- excepting of course the sad news of Echo -- suppose a few prayers sent her way wouldn't hurt?

And thanks too for posting more of the striking photos of Hibbing, (I really like the one of the taconite pellets!) and also Jerome so kindly sharing news of Mona!

Just boggles the mind... this Dylan thing. And I don't know why -- maybe that's the best part of it, right? Your friend in Bob -- JC

NanM

I know Echo Helstom and she told me that the Bob Dylan/Zimmerman she knew wasn't that into poltics...certainly not a communist...he just wanted to sing....

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