Published October 05, 2008 07:53 pm - In the days after Hurricane Ike, Theresa Cass wanted to show her children the force and devastation of the storm. At the same time, Scottie Berg wanted to salvage anything she could from her Ike damaged home.
Ike gives Sabine Pass ornaments a 300 mile ride
By Amy Moore
The Port Arthur News
The News staff writer
SABINE PASS — In the days after Hurricane Ike, Theresa Cass wanted to show her children the force and devastation of the storm. At the same time, Scottie Berg wanted to salvage anything she could from her Ike damaged home.
Though more than 300 miles apart, the two women are now connected through an incredible twist of fate - and wind- that put a few of Berg’s most valued possessions in Cass’ hands.
Cass, a Corpus Christi teacher, and her husband, spent the last few weeks scouring the beach near their home to find usable scrap wood that washed ashore after Hurricane Ike.
“We were seeing all this stuff on the beach and one thing caught my eye. It was a bag with red foil Christmas balls in it buried under the sand,” Cass said. “It was kind of unusual to see.”
Inside the Ziploc brand bag were several Christmas tree ornaments - a small ceramic rocking horse, two wooden nutcrackers and a few homemade ones.
“I opened it (the bag) and they (the ornaments) were wet and sandy. The first one I pulled out was the rocking horse ornament. On the back it said, ‘To Brad from Mrs. Lindsey,” the mother of two said.
Another ornament in the bag, a beaded candy cane, was attached to a tag that had another piece to the puzzle - a first and last name: Brad Berg.
She decided to do what few others would have — she went home and began searching the internet for more clues.
“I found a lot of Bergs in Galveston, but I wasn’t getting many hits on (the name) Brad. There was one in Iowa and other listed in a football article in a newspaper in Port Arthur,” she said.
With that, Cass emailed The News Sports Editor Bob West.
“Dear PANews: I live in Corpus Christi, Texas and found some items washed up on the beach today with the name Brad Berg. I saw online that you have featured a Brad Berg last year in a football article. Do you have any contact information for him or his family? I would like to return these items to him,” her email read.
After a few phone calls by The News staff to Sabine Pass, where the article about Brad Berg said he played football, it was determined that the ornaments belonged to Scottie Berg, Brad Berg’s mother. With a person and address to go along with the name, Cass boxed up the salvaged ornaments and sent them to their rightful owner in the small community.
“When you lose your house, you’re so glad to get back anything,” Scottie Berg said. “Waiting on that box made me forget about everything for awhile.”
Sorting through the box of ornaments, Berg described the origin of each one.