05/20/2026
Louisiana, Missouri, spring 1914.
The little shanty boat rocked gently against the muddy bank just below the iron railroad bridge. It was hardly bigger than a good-sized wagon—walls of weathered planks and tar paper, a tin stovepipe poking crookedly from the roof, and a patched canvas awning over the stern where the family cooked and lived most of their days. Painted in faded letters on the side was the name River Queen, though she looked more like a tired old workhorse than royalty.
Captain of this floating home was Silas McCoy, a lean, sun-browned fisherman of thirty-eight. Barefoot in faded overalls, he sat on an upturned crate mending a hoop net, his hands moving with the patient rhythm of a man who had done this since he was a boy. Beside him, his wife Lottie stirred a pot of catfish stew over a small coal stove, her hair tied back with a strip of calico. Their three children completed the crew: twelve-year-old Elias, already strong enough to help haul nets; nine-year-old Clara, barefoot and quick as a minnow; and little four-year-old Jesse, who spent most of his time perched on the roof watching the big trains rumble across the bridge overhead.
Life on the River Queen was simple and hard. Every morning before dawn Silas and Elias would row out in the skiff to run their trotlines and check the nets. The Mississippi gave them catfish, drum, and the occasional sturgeon, which they sold to the fish houses in Louisiana or traded for flour, coffee, and kerosene. In good weeks they made enough to eat. In bad weeks they ate anyway—river water, wild greens, and whatever the Lord provided.
Lottie kept the boat as clean as any cabin on shore. She scrubbed the narrow deck with river sand, hung laundry on lines strung between poles, and taught the children their letters from a battered McGuffey reader when the weather kept them tied up. At night, after supper, the family would sit under the stars while Silas played soft notes on a mouth harp. The whistle of a passing steamboat or the distant thunder of a freight train on the bridge became their lullabies.
The river was both provider and threat. They had seen it rise in angry floods that forced them to tie higher in the trees, and they had watched it freeze solid in bitter winters. But it was home. No landlord, no factory whistle, no crowded city streets. Just the endless brown water sliding south toward St. Louis and eventually the Gulf, carrying driftwood, dreams, and the occasional body from upriver.
On this warm April afternoon, a light breeze pushed small waves against the hull. Clara dangled her feet in the water while Jesse tried to skip stones. Elias proudly showed his father a fat channel cat he had pulled from the net. Lottie laughed at something Silas said—rare, easy laughter that carried across the water.
For a moment the whole family was together on their tiny kingdom of planks and tar, moving with the river instead of fighting it. Far above them, the steel girders of the railroad bridge hummed as another train rolled north toward Hannibal. The children waved at the engineer, who answered with a long, friendly whistle.
In 1914 the world onshore was rushing toward automobiles and electric lights. But out here on the Mississippi, time still moved at the speed of the current. Silas McCoy and his family asked for little—just enough fish to fill the pot, a dry place to sleep, and the freedom to drift when the spirit moved them.
Tomorrow they would lift anchor and ease a few miles downstream to new fishing grounds. Tonight they would eat stew, listen to the river, and rest easy under the same wide sky that had watched keelboats and steamboats and now these last wandering shanty families.
The Mississippi kept rolling, and the River Queen rolled with it—small, stubborn, and free.