Mount Ayr Record News Mount Ayr, Ringgold County, Iowa Thursday, July 11, 2002
The next major building project at the Ramsey Farms at Lesanville project is the recreation of the Lesanville church being
built north of the former Lesanville school building, moved back to the site. Once the church building is up, donations
will be sought for pews and other items to make the church facility that can be used for services. Historical items from county
churches will also be on display at the church, according to present plans. Anyone with items to donate can contact Phil
BURMEISTER in Mount Ayr.
Sioux City Journal Sioux City, Iowa Friday, May 30, 2003
Efforts under way to restore Iowa ghost town into tourism attraction
LESANVILLE, Iowa (AP) -- What was once a ghost town -- a shadow of a thriving railroad community -- will soon be revived
as a restored farmstead and tourist attraction.
Lesanville's history is as rolling as the hills that surround it.
Paul RAMSEY, a New Port, Calif., businessman who often visited Lesanville as a youth, doesn't want that history
forgotten.
"Even though I was born and raised in Des Moines, I spent all my summers there from the time I was six years old to
the time I was in junior high and high school," he said. "I've always had a great feeling for Iowa and Mount Ayr,
even though I've been out here 45 years."
Lesanville, which no longer appears on the map, is about four miles east of Mount Ayr, in southern Iowa's Ringgold
County.
Ramsey often stayed with his aunt and uncle, Jennie and George VANCE, who farmed near Lesanville.
One of the couple's daughters, Helen ANDERSON of Creston, recalls her childhood home as an "ordinary farm, nothing
special." Yet there were moments of simple, homespun entertainment.
"They used to get together and make homemade ice cream," she said. "Saturday night was the night we went to Mount Ayr.
They used to have band concerts in the courthouse square."
Those outings left an impression on Ramsey, who, along with the Ramsey Farm Foundation, is restoring Lesanville to a
1930s-era working farm. The project began two years ago when the Iowa Barn Foundation awarded the Ramsey Farm Foundation
funds to repair a barn on the 140-acre site.
The circa-1920 structure is now a bright red pinnacle overlooking other buildings that have been repaired, moved in from
other locations, or built as replicas. They include a carriage house, machine shed, chicken house, smokehouse, hog house,
sheep shed, corncrib, granary, privy, one-room schoolhouse, church, another farmhouse and "the cave," an underground,
brick cellar once used for food storage and as a storm shelter.
A vegetable garden, windmill, orchard, pond and cemetery are also located on the grounds.
If RAMSEY's vision is realized, a depot, general store and post office will be added to the list.
Lesanville also will have a bed and breakfast.
"It'll be a tourist attraction," said Phil BURMEISTER, president of the Ramsey Farm Foundation. "He (RAMSEY) always
had a fondness for the farm, the barn and cattle."
RAMSEY said part of the program to restore the town is to educate children in urban areas of the history of rural farm
life.
A group of children from Hollywood are currently competing for a chance to visit the town in August.
"One of the things we're doing this year, although it won't be open till next spring, we are bringing the Hollywood YMCA
kids this August," RAMSEY said. "They'll be at the farm for a few days and go to the Iowa State Fair. We intend to do
that with urban centers across the country."
The cost of the field trip is being paid by California businesspeople, RAMSEY said.
Meanwhile, RAMSEY has footed a portion of the $354,000 needed to revive the Lesanville.
The city of Mount Ayr and volunteer contributors have also donated to the project. The Vision Iowa board also
contributed $100,000.
BURMEISTER said Lesanville existed until the mid-1903s. The railroad ran through it, and the town had its own post office and school. Activities at the school and church stopped during the Depression, BURMEISTER said.
Ironically, the prospect of revitalizing the town has brought people, such as Ramsey "back home," BURMEISTER said.
"He is very nostalgic about Iowa," BURMEISTER said. "He says, 'My wife goes to Paris, and I go to Mount Ayr."'
Transcription by Sharon R. Becker, April of 2010
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