BACK IN THE DAY: REQUIEM FOR ‘JUDAS’ JIM MURPHY


Jim Murphy to left of Sam Bass, center, and Sebe Barnes “Sam’s Right Bower (sea anchor)” looming tall at right.

Jim Murphy to left of Sam Bass, center, and Sebe Barnes “Sam’s Right Bower (sea anchor)” looming tall at right.

Last Saturday’s Denton County Heritage Festival was a wonderful event on the lovely Denton Square, commemorating our town’s 1861-1877 post-Civil War years with period reenactments, historical sketches, and stories by costumed forefathers (and foremothers). The “Texas Troubles” leading to our role the Civil War and its aftermath were indeed a “pivotal era” for Denton township, only 3 years old when war broke out in 1860. Our prior articles on the “1860 Prairie Match Mystery” and “Texas Outlaw Sam Bass in Denton” sets the stage for this modest defense of the betrayer of Sam Bass, Denton’s native son, ‘Judas’ Jim Murphy.

Murphy was the second of nine children born to Henderson and Ruth Murphy, who moved to Denton County in 1851 to establish a General Store in 1852 then the Murphy Hotel in 1855, the first in the county, a split-rail two-story cabin near the log courthouse of the prior county seat of New Alton. In what would become quite a spectacle of the day, The Murphys used a team of mules to move their two-story B&B on rolling logs to its new location, over six miles away along rugged dirt paths, while a very pregnant Mrs. Murphy knitted in her rocking chair on the jostling porch. A few days later, their son John was the first Anglo child born in Denton, and the Murphy Transcontinental Hotel was soon a thriving pioneer community center that offered magnificent meals, tidy accommodations, and rye whiskey for neighbors and travelers alike. The wealthy businessman Henderson served three terms as County Treasurer and at least one term as City Alderman as he also acquired vast ranch land and numerous properties around the Denton Square, interests that sons Bob and Jim helped tend.

Denton’s second Courthouse, rebuilt after 1875 fire attributed to Sam Bass associate Henry Underwood. (Photo courtesy of the Denton County Historical Museum)

Denton’s second Courthouse, rebuilt after 1875 fire attributed to Sam Bass associate Henry Underwood. (Photo courtesy of the Denton County Historical Museum)

The effects of the Civil War were devastating, Denton County lost many men. Weary veterans returned in 1865 to desolate fields and untended farms amidst impoverishing economic depression and drought. Indian raiders of livestock, horse rustlers, and stagecoach bushwackers were persistent threats as Denton County slowly recovered under Union Reconstruction occupation. When the 19-year-old Indiana orphan Sam Bass arrived in Denton

in 1870, working as a hand at the Lacy House Hotel and as freighter for Sherriff ‘Dad’ Egan, the affable lad quickly became friends with the Murphy boys and Henry Underwood and Frank Jackson, locals who were close in age. The Texas Cattle Boom would help make the Murphy family one of the richest in Denton County and, as sons Bob and Jim oversaw large open-range ranches while starting families, the charismatic Sam Bass turned to horseracing and gambling with his legendary “Denton Mare,” then eventually into banditry infamy by 1877 with a $60,000 UP Train heist. Trouble is, once Pinkerton Detectives and Texas Rangers pursued Sam into Denton offering a $1,000 dead-or-alive bounty, the Murphys were soon swept up into the “Bass War” scandal as sleepy Denton became a “terrorized armed camp” of bounty hunters and spies.

While many chroniclers of Sam Bass unfairly characterize Jim as an active member of the rotating Sam Bass Gang, there’s little doubt that he often gave the group of childhood friends safe harbor, supplies, and lookout warnings that helped the outlaws evade their murderous pursuers in the Cross Timbers thickets. By then, however, Jim Murphy was happily married to Mary ‘Molly’ Paine with two twin daughters and a promising future soon in jeopardy. Besides Sam, cowpoke Frank Jackson, horse rustler Henry Underwood (accused of burning down the first Denton courthouse in 1857), and tinsmith thug Sebe Barns were close if rough-n-tumble acquaintances who some locals saw as ‘Robinhood’ Rebels giving heck to the Reconstruction Union League and their cozy Railroad Tycoon profiteers. Though a hero to dirt-poor common folk, the moneyed elite were anxious to make an example of such lawlessness. Embarrassed Rangers and government officials ruthlessly retaliated by arresting several sympathetic Denton locals, including Jim and his innocent father Henderson in May 1878, in a unscrupulous dragnet intended to legally intimidate unwilling local cooperation. Dragged in chains and shame to await trial in Tyler for aiding wanted outlaws, even as on-the-run Sam’s shootouts desperately escalated, Jim famously cut a Devil’s bargain with Capt. June Peak and Ranger Major Jones to deliver Sam to capture in exchange for the legal exonerations of himself and his father. Despite assurances Sam would be taken alive if possible and his family freed, Jim had little idea that fate had other plans for both of them.

...some whispered it was murder and still others thought suicide, even after Jim was secretly buried in a still-unknown grave.

What finally transpired is the well-known subject of disgraceful infamy for ‘Judas’ Jim Murphy in “The Cowboy Ballad of Sam Bass” and Judge Hogg’s book. Jim joined Sam’s gang under considerable suspicion from Sebe Barnes, set on killing the suspected informer had not Jim’s bud Frank Jackson bravely faced him down at gunpoint. Deciding to head into Mexico with money from banks robbed along the way, the remaining Sam, Sebe, Frank, and Jim ambled into Round Rock TX to case the bank. Jim’s hasty wire had assembled Texas Rangers to apprehend the robbers but Deputy Alijah Grimes inadvertently sparked a premature gunfight trying to confiscate their sixguns as they were casing town. When the gunfire settled, Sebe was dead and Frank fled with a mortally-injured Sam as Jim looked on. Sam died a few days later on his 27th birthday without giving up any secrets on his pals, and Jim returned to his family in Denton. Jim managed Denton’s Parlour Saloon and attempted to rejoin polite society, but he was now an outcast. The elite rejected him as a Bass cohort, while the admirers of Sam resented his betrayal and would-be gunslingers targeted him as a means to infamy. After spending many a night in the jailhouse for his own protection for almost a year, Jim Murphy gruesomely died of belladonna poisoning in early June 1879 while receiving treatment from Doc McMath for an eye ailment. Family believed it an accident, but some whispered it was murder and still others thought suicide, even after Jim was secretly buried in a still-unknown grave. Regardless, the tragic end to a sordid saga led the Murphys to retire northward of the town they’d done so much to establish.

 

We met Murphy’s descendents at Saturday’s Heritage Festival. They were generously kind but also quite understandably protective of how their kin were caricatured in worshipful Sam Bass mythmaking. We’ve long thought that the stories of these two childhood pals were a fascinating snapshot for coming-of-age in those anarchic Post-War times that made, broke, and changed the fortunes of so many Dentonites. We think that sympathy and pity for ‘Judas’ Jim Murphy should should be thrown his way. Considering that both he and Sam seem less like figures of a simplistic melodrama than epic characters within a sweeping Greek Tragedy. In this tragic tale of two very different Texans from back in the day, their youthful choices in chaotic times made it nigh impossible to change or escape their capriciously intermingled fates.


Back in The Day is an ongoing WDDI contribution from Shaun Treat, an assistant professor in Communication Studies at the University of North Texas and founder of the Denton Haunts historical ghost tour. Doc Treat has written about numerous local places and personalities at his Denton Haunts blog, and is forever indebted to the great work of the fine folks with the Denton County Historical Commission and local keepers of history like Mike Cochran and Laura Douglas at the Emily Fowler Library for their tireless work in helping preserve Denton’s intriguing past.

WHAT WE DID: APRIL 14TH

This was one of those classic Denton weekends. You know, the ones where you get drinks with friends, the weather is nice, and you nosh on food truck goodies all the while making sure to attend the many events around town. On Saturday, the square was hopping with people celebrating our heritage in costume, putting on a show like it was 1861. After having our hearing a little altered from the canons, we grabbed locally roasted beans from the Community Market before heading over to the Redbud Festival to see what the kids are doing to keep their closets sustainable with the Trashion Fashion show. Stuff like that makes Saturdays in Denton awesome. We know you guys were out and about as well, because we say all of your awesome pics. 

Keep having all of the fun, and tagging those pics with #wddi to keep us up on all of your Denton shenanigans! 

East Side Social Club is climbing the ranks of the best graffiti in town. @sara_button made sure to add to the creative wordplay those tables have become. 

East Side Social Club is climbing the ranks of the best graffiti in town. @sara_button made sure to add to the creative wordplay those tables have become. 

The Explorium had a fundraiser last week at Oak St. Drafthouse featuring catapults, Legos and The Waffle Wagon. 

@thepaigles enjoyed some fried deliciousness from the Waffle Wagon. A great way to get in all of the important food groups; fried dough, chicken and maple syrup. 

@thepaigles enjoyed some fried deliciousness from the Waffle Wagon. A great way to get in all of the important food groups; fried dough, chicken and maple syrup. 

We are pumped that @bellandoak has finally launched their online store and started selling their products inside Weldon's Western Wear. Stop by and get some awesome handmade leather goods ASAP!

We are pumped that @bellandoak has finally launched their online store and started selling their products inside Weldon's Western Wear. Stop by and get some awesome handmade leather goods ASAP!

University (and flag) day at UNT. Photo by Naomi Woods. 

University (and flag) day at UNT. Photo by Naomi Woods. 

"Buy a beer get a free shirt from Pan Ector Day" at Lou's is one of our favorite days. We're obviously not alone. Photo by @mkernan. 

"Buy a beer get a free shirt from Pan Ector Day" at Lou's is one of our favorite days. We're obviously not alone. Photo by @mkernan. 

Hey @jadewintersee - we totally support that taco decision! 

Hey @jadewintersee - we totally support that taco decision! 

Burgers and bluegrass Friday evening. Photo by Courtney Craggett.

Burgers and bluegrass Friday evening. Photo by Courtney Craggett.

The Redbud Festival was this past Saturday and the Trashion Fashion program had their runway show complete with winners, dancing and Recyclesaurus Rex. 

Cody Sharp is man enough to go for the ten pepper infused tequila at Mulberry St. Cantina. 

Cody Sharp is man enough to go for the ten pepper infused tequila at Mulberry St. Cantina. 

The 2nd annual Serve Denton Gala. Thanks for serving our community, dudes! Photo by Joshua Piers.

The 2nd annual Serve Denton Gala. Thanks for serving our community, dudes! Photo by Joshua Piers.

Bigfoot got spotted in an original musical at UNT last weekend. Photo by Erin Nicole. 

Bigfoot got spotted in an original musical at UNT last weekend. Photo by Erin Nicole. 

@dimehandmade was feeling good supporting local makers all day Saturday... just as they do everyday. 

@dimehandmade was feeling good supporting local makers all day Saturday... just as they do everyday. 

Nite is playing J and J's on Tuesday as part of CollageDNTN. Photo by Bryce Olcon. 

Nite is playing J and J's on Tuesday as part of CollageDNTN. Photo by Bryce Olcon. 

Sometimes we forget how awesome Rose Costumes is and then we see photos like this. Remember that one OJ Simpson window display they had way back when? Oh you don't? "Who's OJ Simpson?" you say? Now we feel old. Photo by @Coffeecatkid.

Sometimes we forget how awesome Rose Costumes is and then we see photos like this. Remember that one OJ Simpson window display they had way back when? Oh you don't? "Who's OJ Simpson?" you say? Now we feel old. Photo by @Coffeecatkid.

Mother Falcon played Dan's last week and it was awesome. Photo by Corey Van Hunter.

Mother Falcon played Dan's last week and it was awesome. Photo by Corey Van Hunter.

Y'all sick of these rainbows yet? Photo by Darby McFall. 

Y'all sick of these rainbows yet? Photo by Darby McFall. 

Cats and printing. Photo by Nathan Williams.

Cats and printing. Photo by Nathan Williams.

The Community Market was open for weekend #2. Wildflower Art Studio was there. 

The Community Market was open for weekend #2. Wildflower Art Studio was there. 

One of the many reasons we love Scrap Denton is because we can thank them for awesome yarn bombings such as the one you see above. Photo by Rachel Nichelson.

One of the many reasons we love Scrap Denton is because we can thank them for awesome yarn bombings such as the one you see above. Photo by Rachel Nichelson.

Springtime makes the cows look prettier. Photo by Paige Gibson. 

Springtime makes the cows look prettier. Photo by Paige Gibson. 

Paschall's bartender Alphonso Quiñones even makes awesome drinks in his offtime.

Paschall's bartender Alphonso Quiñones even makes awesome drinks in his offtime.

Art sale at Mulberry St. Cantina this past Saturday. One month until the next one. Photo by @buttonupdenton. 

Art sale at Mulberry St. Cantina this past Saturday. One month until the next one. Photo by @buttonupdenton

And some taco porn for y'all from El Taco Rico courtesy of Shaina Sheaff. 

And some taco porn for y'all from El Taco Rico courtesy of Shaina Sheaff. 

CAFE BRAZIL IS OPEN AND STUFF

cafe brazil 4.jpg

Like many of y'all we've checked out the new Cafe Brazil in Denton over on University and Carroll since it opened last Tuesday. This is the same Cafe Brazil you've come to know and love since 1991. There's lots of flavored coffees available for you to mix and match, late nights and a breakfast-heavy large menu. We've always thought of it as a North Texas version of Magnolia Diner or Kerbey Lane Cafe (both out of Austin). 

Our service was adequate at each of our visits - quick, polite, but there were some slight issues (missing items, etc...). The food was just as good as any of the Dallas Cafe Brazil locations. We ordered a few breakfast items, as well as a few non-breakfast foods some of which are shown below. Overall, for a first week visit, things seemed to be going the right way for 'em. We hope to see something take off in this location (don't jinx 'em and call it "cursed"). Between Cafe Brazil, Royal's Bagels and Denton Donuts, Carroll and University may now be referred to as "the breakfast district" in Denton - watch out, Congress Ave! 

If you like flavored coffees, this is the spot for you. 

If you like flavored coffees, this is the spot for you. 

The chorizo nachos featured Cafe Brazil's house-made chorizo which wasn't greasy at all and pretty tasty. It actually was more similar to ground beef than chorizo to us, texture+wise, though. The nachos had plenty of cheese, but at $2.50 for a dollo…

The chorizo nachos featured Cafe Brazil's house-made chorizo which wasn't greasy at all and pretty tasty. It actually was more similar to ground beef than chorizo to us, texture+wise, though. The nachos had plenty of cheese, but at $2.50 for a dollop of guac, we were left feeling a little cheated. 

The fruit "pancrepes" were tasty but a bit overly eggy for us. 

The fruit "pancrepes" were tasty but a bit overly eggy for us. 

cafe brazil 2.jpg

A few other things we tried and really dig are the chicken crepes - which are pretty great and come covered in a tasty creamy sauce and the breakfast relleno. The breakfast relleno is somehow the perfect blend of egg, chorizo and cheesy goodness stuffed into a poblano pepper. We were shocked, and almost a little embarrassed by how quickly we inhaled them... and thought about how we wouldn't go without ordering them again. 

 

Have you been to the Denton Cafe Brazil yet? If so, tell us your thoughts in the comments! 

WHAT WE DID: APRIL 7TH

Between storms and music festivals, spring in Denton is a busy time of the year. We didn't have any music festivals last week, but we had a storm big enough to cover for it. Y'all got hail damage? We sure do. Aside from that, the Community Market is back in swing and The DIME Store celebrated it's 1st birthday party. We're just trying to keep up. 

Thanks for documenting your weekend activities and tagging them with #WDDI. We'll see ya again next Monday with more of the same!

The DIME Store's 1st Birthday Party

 

The CVB has put up a giant chalk board on Industrial to encourage people while the E. Grand Hickory renovations are going on. They'll be asking a new question and they have chalk below for you to put up your answers. So far we're impressed to see ho…

The CVB has put up a giant chalk board on Industrial to encourage people while the E. Grand Hickory renovations are going on. They'll be asking a new question and they have chalk below for you to put up your answers. So far we're impressed to see how clean everyone has kept it. Impressively mature, Denton. Photo by @mbryceo

The DIME Store turned one over the weekend and we were there with a photobooth to take some photos of the attendees on their backyard bash. 

Photo by @mkernan.

Photo by @mkernan.

The DIME Store had a Birthday Bash with some extra special vendors serving up all kinds of backyard fun! We're so happy they're here and a part of our community!! Photo by @wildflowerart. 

The DIME Store had a Birthday Bash with some extra special vendors serving up all kinds of backyard fun! We're so happy they're here and a part of our community!! Photo by @wildflowerart

@savviedesign spent her Saturday at the Backyard Birthday Bash celebrating the one year birthday of the DIME Store! 

@savviedesign spent her Saturday at the Backyard Birthday Bash celebrating the one year birthday of the DIME Store! 

The Storm

Oh man. That storm, y'all. Hail, followed by more hail and a possible tornado, hail for a third time and then an ice cream truck showed up. That's how it went down on Austin St., at least. #TornadoSelfies didn't catch on, sadly. Here are a few photos of the storm, some of the destruction and the ironically beautiful sky that followed.  

The crawfish were right on at the Mudbug Boil at @dansilverleaf this weekend! 

The crawfish were right on at the Mudbug Boil at @dansilverleaf this weekend! 

Kiddos were arting it up at the opening of the Denton Community Market on Saturday morning! Photo by @mkernan.

Kiddos were arting it up at the opening of the Denton Community Market on Saturday morning! Photo by @mkernan.

@shainasheaffphoto and friends raised a glass this weekend at Oak Street Drafthouse. 

@shainasheaffphoto and friends raised a glass this weekend at Oak Street Drafthouse. 

@lcd7383 enjoyed mimosas and board games on that rainy Sunday. 

@lcd7383 enjoyed mimosas and board games on that rainy Sunday. 

New signage uncovered on the square. Photo by Denton Camera Exchange. 

New signage uncovered on the square. Photo by Denton Camera Exchange. 

This was the special at Paschall's last week. Photo by one of our favorite bartenders, @Alph0nso. 

This was the special at Paschall's last week. Photo by one of our favorite bartenders, @Alph0nso. 

@veeveemarie had an impressive looking lunch at Weinberger's. 

@veeveemarie had an impressive looking lunch at Weinberger's. 

@paperlocket shared their love for this town through a square filled photo. 

@paperlocket shared their love for this town through a square filled photo. 

@serynsounds played a fancy house show with @panhandlehouse - and @jadewintersee made sure to gram it! 

@serynsounds played a fancy house show with @panhandlehouse - and @jadewintersee made sure to gram it! 

INTERVIEW WITH ANYAH BRITTAIN MARTINEZ OF THE EXPLORIUM

Photo by Melissa Gill

Photo by Melissa Gill

Did y'all know there's an awesome event at Oak St. Drafthouse on Monday called Sip'nScience? Even better, it benefits a hopeful children's museum called The Explorium. We've previously highlighted fundraising efforts of The Explorium through our crowdfunding column. We're super pumped about Sip'nScience, though. What beats adult and kid-friendly games with food trucks in close proximity? Anyway, we recently chatted with the unofficial director and co-founder of The Explorium, Anyah Brittain Martinez, about Sip'nScience and her hopes and dreams for The Explorium. Read on for more!


WDDI: Hey Anyah! Tell us a little about yourself!

I moved here in 1996 as a Sophomore to attend UNT. My husband and I met in high school, so he moved out the following year. We got married while in college, still managed to finish on the four year track, and fell in love with Denton while attending school.

I got my first job at TWU, he started working as a teacher with Denton ISD,and gradually we became more involved in the community. Our jobs and our church made it easy to find ways to get plugged in. By the time our twins were born, we’d both finished grad school, moved up in our jobs, and I’d completed Leadership Denton and served on the Library Board. I used to do a presentation to the freshmen at TWU called “Denton: Not just a DENT ON the map” because I loved our town and wanted them to love it too. I have a friend that says I’m the Denton encyclopedia. I truly truly love Denton.

 

What is The Explorium and what is your affiliation with it?

A few months after our third child was born I started to really think and pray about what God wanted me to do with my time when the twins started school. I’m the type that needs a project to work on but I also wanted to be available to serve in the community, volunteer at the boys’ school, and still fill the role of a work at home mom and give Creed the same amount of attention our twins had when they were little. One day I was running and this idea just hit me and I thought, “I’m going to start a children’s museum right here in Denton!” I began doing lots of homework, joined the ACM and got their startup manual, filed all the necessary paperwork to establish ourselves, got some friends together to form our first board of directors and create a logo, asked a buddy for some seed money, and we got started. That was two years ago this month. Unofficially I’m the Director and Founder.

 

How much funds are actually needed in order to get this thing off the ground?

There really isn’t a set dollar amount. One major hangup is waiting for our 501c3 status to be approved by the IRS. We applied over a year ago, and until we hear from them, we cannot access the many grants that are available for a project like this. So we are doing what we can in terms of small-scale fundraising, like our popular toy and book swap, selling our t-shirts (which were sponsored), and our upcoming charity Monday at Oak Street Draft House.  Based on the metrics reports and information provided through our membership with the Association of Children’s Museums, our initial operating budget for Explorium Denton will be funded half through grants and donations, and half through memberships/admissions, rental revenues, etc.

 

What are some of your favorite activities to do with your children around Denton?

Photo by Melissa Gill

Photo by Melissa Gill

I’m a huge fan and supporter of our library system. Many of the events and activities they provide are free to the community, which is very attractive to a single income family like ours. In the summer, we usually go to the Wednesday concerts on the square and meet friends for a picnic. We go bike riding and running together almost daily in the spring and summer. In the summer we stop at the Denton Community Market most Saturdays. My boys love going to Minifigs, Bricks, and More to play with Legos. Sometimes we go to a movie but we really enjoy being out and about and spending time with friends. Year-round we spend a lot of time at parks, we’re involved in Denton Boys Baseball, Denton Soccer Association, and attend lots of DISD athletics and fine arts events. Fall is rife with festivals all around town and we hit them all. I take them on dates to get hot chocolate at Zera or cinnamon rolls at Royal’s or let them choose something fun and funky with their allowance from one of the many thrift stores in town. My children come with me pretty much everywhere I go. That’s one thing about Denton that I love, being able to take my boys on adventures as we take advantage of myriad  teachable moments in our community.


Who dreamed up Sip’nScience?

I can’t take credit for that! Alana Presley and Tara Mills, two of our board members, dreamed that up while I was out of town! We wanted a way to make this a super family friendly event, with activities that adults would enjoy as well. Cliff Caster created the flier.

The reality is, we need a building, at least a temporary location, before we can start building exhibits, and that’s going to take a lot of money.
— Anyah Brittain Martinez

 

Is Sip’nScience more for adults or children?

Both! It’ll be family friendly from 4-8. All the activities are for both children and adults, there will be a raffle for a Kindle, a drawing for a t-shirt, and of course family-friendly food trucks will be on site for everyone’s enjoyment. We are thankful to John Williams and his staff,  Waffle Wagon, and Lean Machine, for agreeing to support our project!

 

What are some of the activities that you would like to have at The Explorium?

There is not enough room in your blog for this, trust me! However, I will say that every exhibit will be hands-on, and we are targeting the ages 0-12. It will be a fun and educational place for everyone. There will be tie-ins to Denton: for example I’d love to get Peterbilt to sponsor an exhibit where you could take apart and build a small engine; or a music area tied into the college of music at UNT; or some sort of cool gymnastics area tied into TWU.

 

What would your dream location for The Explorium be?

……..Oh, sorry, did I drool get drool on you? Honestly there are so many places this project would thrive. I’ve been drooling over several vacant/available buildings for the past two years, none of which I can seem to get my hands on until we establish our 501c3. We would ideally repurpose an old vacant building somewhere near downtown. While I have my eye on several places, I don’t want to count my chickens before they hatch. Anyone reading this have a building they’d like to give me?

 

What can we, as citizens, do to help get The Explorium off the ground?

Stop by and see us at our events. Introduce yourself. I’m big on cultivating relationships. Just meeting poeple who echo that thought “this is such a great idea” helps build momentum and keeps me motivated. We’ll be at the Denton Community Market the third Saturday of each month April through November. We’ll be at the Redbud Festival, and have been invited to demonstrate with various groups like the American Heritage Girls.  Currently we have an ongoing gofundme campaign, which seems to be the easiest thing for most people. Just go online and contribute any dollar amount. Support our fundraisers like our toy swap, and our charity nights at local places like OSDH. Buy a t-shirt (they’ll soon be available at Noles General Store, or you can get one directly from me). Write a check and send it to PO Box  52145 Denton, Texas 76206. Just know that your contribution will not be tax deductible at this time.  A HUGE boon would be if someone would agree to be a fiscal sponsor, and that way we could expedite our IRS paperwork and get approved quickly, and start doing large-scale fundraising and grantwriting right away. Like us on facebook. Follow us on twitter. Word of mouth goes a long way in our community. The right person may just catch wind of our project and decide to get involved even in another community.

 

What’s your favorite knock knock joke?

Keep in mind I’m a mother to two six-year-old boys:

Will you remember me this afternoon?

Yes.

Will you remember me tomorrow?

Yes.

Will you remember me next week?

Yes.

Will you remember me next year?

Yes.
Knock knock.

Who’s there?

You forgot me already?!?!?