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Knights of Columbus Volunteers Serve Up Fish Fry Dinners at Cherokee Golf Course

Seventeen Knights of Columbus volunteers kept the fryers running at Cherokee Golf Course last Friday, a community tradition that draws neighbors to the table each week.

Lisa Park2 min read
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Knights of Columbus Volunteers Serve Up Fish Fry Dinners at Cherokee Golf Course
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Patrick Brodersen was among seventeen Knights of Columbus volunteers who worked the Friday fish-fry dinner at the Cherokee Golf Course on April 3, anchoring a recurring community event that has become a fixture on the area's social calendar.

The full volunteer roster included Brodersen, Larry Walker, John Comstock, Keith Wells, Tim Greenwood, Ty Schlichting, Roger Braun, Cory Bouchard, Randy Husman, Charlie Letsche, Jeff Wilson, Curt Stanke, Jeremy Jensen, Bill Anderson, Joe Anderson, Brandon Slaughter, and Buck Letsche. That seventeen names could be assembled for a weeknight shift reflects both the local chapter's organizational depth and the broader culture of showing up that has sustained Knights of Columbus chapters across Iowa for generations.

Fish fries have long served as a cornerstone of civic life in the Midwest. Service organizations including the Knights of Columbus, VFW posts, and parish groups have hosted them for decades, using the events simultaneously as fundraisers, community gatherings, and affordable dining options on a predictable weeknight. In Cherokee, the golf course provides the setting, and volunteers like those who turned out Friday provide the rest.

The scope of Friday's roster also carries a family dimension: Charlie Letsche and Buck Letsche both appear on the list, the kind of overlap that reflects how civic organizations in small communities often run along family lines across years and decades.

With spring arriving, the return of weekly fish-fry dinners at the Cherokee Golf Course takes on extra weight after a long Iowa winter. Friday evenings at a golf-course venue carry a different social energy when the weather breaks, and the Knights' continued presence there each week gives the community a reliable anchor point.

The specific charitable beneficiary of the dinners and the full schedule for upcoming Fridays were not included in the announcement. Those interested in attending or volunteering can contact the Knights of Columbus or the Cherokee Golf Course directly for details.

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