We may have to name an outhouse after him!
Done a long time ago, sort of.
The William Rivers Pitt isn't the only thing named out here.
Last summer, when the prairie archaeologist was making a survey of this property, he explained the nature of certain smaller depressions in the ground, four of them. Such little depressions had always puzzled the ancient elderly gentleman who used to mow the lawn here, and the guy who a couple of years ago took over the chore.
It can make lawn-mowing, or grass cutting, bumpy.
The prairie archaeologist detected minute, but higher-than-usual, traces of lime in these depressions. I'm sure you know what that indicates.
Indoor plumbing was first installed in this house in 1920; in fact, this house had indoor plumbing for 27 years, before it had electricity, and so these depressions, where a hole had been filled in are pretty old.
Those geographic features here, I call "Atman"s.