Print this story | E-mail story | This story has 5 comments Add your own | iPod friendly | Bookmark this Facebook bookmark del.icio.us bookmark StumbleUpon bookmark Digg bookmark What is this?

Ellis retires after 42 years behind wheel

Published Saturday, December 20, 2008

Nearly 43 years ago, Bennie Ruth Ellis followed in the footsteps of her father-in-law, Ditcher Ellis, and climbed behind the wheel of a big, yellow school bus.

Ellis was a widow with eight children and her “baby” had just turned six and she was preparing to enter the job market. She was going to try driving a school bus for a while and then look for greener pastures.

“I guess I liked driving the bus because I kept on driving,” Ellis said at a retirement breakfast held in her honor by the Pike County School System transportation department Friday morning.

She remembered back to her first days behind the wheel, which she said was a comfortable place to be.

“My daddy was a farmer so I’d been driving farm equipment since I could reach the gas pedal,” she said. “I knew how to work the clutch and shift the gears, so at the end of my first day, I was ready to go off on my own.”

Ellis had no trouble going it alone. With eight children at home, she knew how to handle kids and she knew how to trouble-shoot.

“One day, the bus stopped and I couldn’t get it going,” she said. “So, I looked up under the hood and saw this rod that had come loose. I got out a safety pin and got things hooked up enough that I could get back to the paved road.”

In all those years, Ellis got stuck on muddy roads several times but never went off in the ditch.

“I was in the ditch one time but I didn’t go off myself,” she said, laughing. “The bus was stuck and my supervisor came out to get us going again. What he did was slide us right into the ditch. But that’s the only time my bus got in the ditch and I didn’t do it.”

Back in the early days, Ellis said she earned every penny of her $97 a month, keeping a busload of 55-60 children safely in the ruts of the rural dirt roads and to school and back home again on time.

“I liked my job because I hauled my own children,” she said. “They were the first ones on the bus and the last ones off. And, too, after I ran the route, I could go back home and cook and clean up while they were in school and after the route in the afternoon I was home with them.”

Ellis was a little hesitant to tell about the sighting Big Foot on the Frank Stinson road years ago but, since she had witnesses to the sighting, she told the tale.

“We were going down a lonely stretch of that country road and we saw Big Foot walking across the road,” she said. “I saw him and the children saw him but, when we got to where he was, he was gone. Don’t know where he went but it was Big Foot and he was gone.”

For more than four decades, Bennie Ruth Ellis “hauled” children back and forth to school. She watched them grow up and move on. Some of them won her heart and others she wanted to give a good switching.

“But I loved them all,” she said, with a smile. “Driving a school bus has been a real pleasure and I did it for nearly 43 years. That’s not a record because Nathaniel Larkin drove for 51 years but it’s long enough for me. Now, I’m just going to do some things that I’ve not had time to do but I’ll miss it. After you’ve done something for 42 years, you’re bound to miss it. But it’s time to let somebody else have the wheel.”


WOULD YOU LIKE TO SHARE THIS STORY?

Bookmark and Share






Comments

Posted by alonecitygal (anonymous) on December 21, 2008 at 1:08 a.m. (Suggest removal)

Ms. Bennie Ruth is a wonderful person and did a wonderful job! Thank You Ms. Bennie Ruth!

Posted by White_Lightning1 (anonymous) on December 21, 2008 at 10:59 a.m. (Suggest removal)

Great story about Ms. Bennie Ruth. But whoa nelly! Back it up a bit. She saw BIG FOOT on Frank Stinson road? When was this? I'd always heard about the Walnut Creek monster when I was growing up, but I'd figured it was just some old coot with large shoes wondering around drunk in the woods.

Anybody else know about this Frank Stinson road Big Foot? We may have us some tourism money to be made. I'm just sayin'.

Posted by bluebunting (anonymous) on December 21, 2008 at 9:44 p.m. (Suggest removal)

God Bless you Ms. Bennie Ruth. You have done a great job. We need more like you.......

Posted by jaxon8 (anonymous) on December 22, 2008 at 2:13 p.m. (Suggest removal)

Many people have seen Bigfoot in that area as well as the Walnut Creek monster but nobody talks about it because of what others will think of them.
Congratulations to Mrs. Ellis.

Posted by granny804 (anonymous) on December 22, 2008 at 10:10 p.m. (Suggest removal)

Mrs. Bennie Ruth will be missed very much! She is a wonderful lady and was a great bus driver. God Bless You and hope you have a great retirement.

Post a comment (Terms of Use Policy)

(Requires free registration.)

Username:
Password: (Forgotten your password?)

Comment:



advanced search

© 2010 The Troy Messenger All rights reserved.
A Boone Newspapers Inc. publication.

Contact us | Privacy Policy