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- AMERICAN SCENE, Page 11Algona, IowaA Time to Kill, And a Time to Heal
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- Three years after a brutal murder-suicide wiped out a prominent
- family, a grieving community dedicates a hospital wing to memory
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- By ROY ROWAN
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-
- "Tragedy has been our teacher," the speaker tells the
- subdued audience squeezed into the gleaming new hospital lobby.
- "Even though an entire family suddenly ceased to exist on this
- earth, something good has come from that terrible moment."
-
- The speaker is a retired furniture dealer, not a preacher
- or philosopher. As chairman of the Kossuth County Hospital in
- Algona, Iowa, he is welcoming some 700 townspeople to a
- cookie-and-punch open house at the just-completed John and Agnes
- Dreesman Memorial Addition.
-
- Plans were drawn in 1982 for the badly needed hospital
- expansion. But county voters rejected it. Only after the
- tragedy, as Algonans refer to the murder-suicide rampage in
- which the seven Dreesman family members died, did construction
- finally begin. "They were the catalyst," explains Pastor Gerald
- Hartz of St. Cecelia's Catholic Church. "There was nobody to
- prosecute, nobody to put in jail. However, we had to do
- something for those beloved friends."
-
- As small towns go, Algona embodies the American Dream.
- Nestled along the East Fork of the Des Moines River, it is a
- quietly prospering place for 6,015 men, women and children. And
- unlike so many other Iowa communities, its economy isn't
- entirely tied to corn. Algona is the county seat, the home of
- a Snap-on Tools plant as well as some other light manufacturing,
- so it is more resistant to the farm recessions that periodically
- smite neighboring towns.
-
- Ordinarily, except for a twister or two, nothing very
- exciting happens there. Back in World War II, the town did house
- 3,000 German and Italian prisoners of war. The POWs are still
- remembered for the fancy European-style banquets they gave, and
- for the 50-ft.-wide Nativity scene carved out of concrete, which
- today is Algona's sole tourist attraction.
-
- Occasional disputes divide the town. The argument about
- widening Highway 169 from two to four lanes where it passes
- through the business district sputtered on for 25 years. The
- staunchest supporter of the status quo was John Dreesman,
- millionaire farmer, a director of the Interstate Bank and a
- former city councilman who wore his bib overalls everywhere
- except to church. He and his wife Agnes had two extremely bright
- children whose horizons soon extended far beyond Iowa.
-
- Their daughter Marilyn, born in 1939, studied in
- Switzerland and married the son of a wealthy Chinese textile
- manufacturer. Called a jet setter by Algonans, she, along with
- her three children, spent time in Geneva, Hong Kong and
- Honolulu. It was gossiped that she shared Sophia Loren's
- gynecologist.
-
- The Dreesmans' son Robert, born in 1947, was a husky but
- grimly introspective boy who became a perennial student. He took
- courses in pre-med, horticulture and psychology at various
- American colleges, and studied veterinary medicine in the
- Philippines, where he was briefly married. His esoteric hobbies
- ranged from beekeeping to acupuncture. "I'd rather have a loving
- son than a genius," his mother once confided. Though his father
- showed a strong attachment to Robert, it was thought that he
- financed his moody son's quest for college diplomas to keep him
- away from home. When Robert graduated first in his class from
- the Palmer College of Chiropractic in Davenport, Iowa, in 1986,
- the family was relieved that he finally seemed set to embark on
- a career.
-
- For the Dreesmans, as for most farm families whose
- children scatter, the Christmas holidays meant a time of
- reunion. So it was that on Dec. 30, 1987, Agnes Dreesman, a
- superb cook and flower arranger who frequently contributed
- culinary and horticultural creations to church and garden-club
- benefits, readied their house for a celebration. Marilyn,
- widowed in 1984, had flown in from Honolulu with the three
- grandchildren. Robert too would be home for dinner.
-
- When the family sat down to begin the midday meal,
- however, Robert was missing. Agnes left his plate warming in the
- kitchen. Two hours later, police found the family's
- bullet-riddled bodies still seated around the food-laden table.
- There was so much blood it had seeped into the basement.
-
- Police and the Iowa division of criminal investigation
- quickly reconstructed what had happened. A few serving dishes
- had been passed, and the six family members were just beginning
- to eat when Robert appeared in the dining-room doorway, pointing
- a high-powered, semiautomatic rifle. Firing short bursts, he
- swung the rifle barrel right around the table. Nobody had time
- to move. They all died within 30 seconds. Then he stepped back
- into the hallway, picked up a shotgun he had left there, pushed
- the barrel up under his chin, and blew his brains out.
-
- "This kind of tragedy crashes into our world without
- warning, a cruel uninvited guest," sermonized Father Hartz at
- the memorial service for Marilyn and her children. (A Lutheran
- service was held for John, Agnes and Robert.) "We can neither
- anticipate it before the fact, nor understand it after the
- fact."
-
- At first the community was too stunned to react, clamming
- up protectively as the TV vans rolled into town. "It was as if
- we could hide this horror from the outside world as well as from
- ourselves," says Molly MacDonald, then editor of Algona's weekly
- newspaper, and Marilyn's lifelong friend.
-
- Shock turned to grief, followed by the hollow ache of the
- town's terrible loss. For weeks, Algona's ministers counseled
- their congregations. Funeral director Mike Schaaf, who buried
- the Dreesmans, organized a grief-recovery seminar, bringing
- from Des Moines a psychologist specializing in traumatic
- losses. "If the killing had occurred in a crack-ridden city like
- New York or Detroit," says Schaaf, "we would have understood.
- Not in Algona."
-
- The best therapy, though, was the kind Algonans gave one
- another over coffee at the Chrome, a 24-hour truck stop and
- favorite local hangout, where the 1979 tornado struck. "In
- public places like that, you could actually feel the town coming
- closer together," says MacDonald, who switched from editor to
- columnist so she could spend more time with her children. "We
- all suddenly realized how fragile life is, that we better get
- on with the things we have to do."
-
- Still gnawing at the community's conscience are the many
- missed signals of the danger that was lurking in Robert. "The
- Dreesmans were very private people who didn't inflict their
- problems on friends," says Midge Andreasen, wife of a
- state-supreme-court justice and a close friend of Marilyn's.
- "Some of us knew about the black hole of hatred in Robert. We
- should have involved ourselves more with the family."
-
- Steve Mueller, the chiropractor who sparked Robert's
- interest in the profession, sensed how deeply withdrawn he was.
- "I called him Bob and treated him like a pal," says Mueller,
- "trying to coax him out of his shell." Once Robert invited him
- out to the farm to practice firing his .45-cal. Magnum. "I was
- struck by this mild young man's fascination with guns," recalls
- the chiropractor. "He kept shooting at trees as if they were
- people. That should have been a warning."
-
- Today a few Algonans fear their town will be indelibly
- marked by Robert's madness, the way Villisca, Iowa, is by the
- brutal ax murder of eight residents there back in 1912. But
- uppermost in everyone's mind is the hope that the Dreesmans will
- be remembered for all they did, not for the way they died. The
- hospital addition will help, although Robert almost killed that
- possibility too, by assuming he could dispose of his family's
- wealth with his own will, since he would be the last to die. For
- some contorted reason, he left $1 to each of his victims and
- everything else to the World Wildlife Fund, of which he wasn't
- even a member.
-
- Robert's will didn't stand up, and the belated discovery
- of an obscure Iowa statute allowed the executors of the
- parents' will to give the hospital marketable properties worth
- $282,000 in lieu of paying Iowa taxes on the estate. The
- proceeds enabled the hospital to launch its long-planned $1.5
- million expansion project.
-
- As the last guests left the open house, an orange moon
- rose above the seven side-by-side graves in East Lawn Cemetery
- next to the hospital. "Wherever they are," said one of the
- departing guests, "I hope we made them proud."
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