Polo gets $1,000 check for Most Interesting Legend

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Polo library director Ellen Finfrock, library assistant Linda Gall, and Polo Historical Society curator Betty Obendorf hold items related to the community winning $1,000 recently in a Reader's Digest contest. Finfrock shows the page in the December issue of the magazine announcing the win. Gall shows a book written by Henry Spickler, and Obendorf holds the check stub. Photo by Vinde Wells
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However, when emails came asking for her Social Security number, Obendorf balked.

"No one is getting my Social Security number. I began to think it was a scam," she said.

Emails to Reader's Digest officials didn't shed any light on the issue, and she was ready to forget it. "Then I wrote it all off," Obendorf said.

Finally, during numerous communications with magazine representatives, Obendorf mentioned that the check would be going to the historical society rather than her personally, and the impasse was resolved.

Obendorf's winning story and the information about the winning entry was published in the December issue of the Reader's Digest.

Since then, Obendorf has been hearing from former Polo residents and other interested individuals from all over the country.

"Henry Spickler has really put us on the map again," she said with a laugh.

Spickler was unusual for his time, holding a PhD from the University of Chicago, where he played football for renowned coach Amos Alonzo Stagg.

His interests and abilities were varied. He also wrote the music and words to the "Polo Community Song," which praised the virtues of his hometown.

Obendorf's winning story appears below.

Rev. Henry M. Spickler  1867 – 1955

Some people in Polo, Illinois called him the “local loony,”  “crazy” or thought that he had simply “slipped over the edge.”

And yet there were some of us who recognized a unique mind in this interesting person.

Henry Spickler attended and graduated from several colleges, dabbled in vaudeville, was a secretary, stenographer, a Baptist minister, and coached football in Polo.  

He kept in excellent physical condition by biking, swimming, and at one time swam across the Rock River 20 times without leaving the water.

On another occasion he swam up the river for two miles without stopping oblivious of the strong current.  Perhaps this was preparing him for the greatest challenge of his life.

For a free bicycle the editor of Polo Semi-Weekly Visitor challenged him to ride around the world sending newsletters describing his experiences. 

In 1901 Henry and his new bike started out on a 40,000-mile journey around the world visiting 20 countries without a cent in his pocket.

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