I was about three years old when my grandfather died, so I have only the vaguest memories of him. He was a gentle, smiling man who loved children. He tried to engage me and entertain me with silly games and tricks. Photos of him from this period show a man depleted by a long battle with lung cancer, his small frame wasted away, his head skull-like. His visage could easily have unnerved an adult, but, being such a young child, I kept my own perspective.
Domenico Ghirlandaio - An Old Man and his Grandson - 1480 |
Unbeknownst to me a seismic
shift was occurring in my young life, one that would impact on most of my
childhood years. Devoted to her family,
my mother determined that my grandmother would be visited on a weekly basis. So every Saturday my parents, my siblings and
I would make the hour drive to my grandmother’s home to keep her company. We would arrive in the early afternoon and
wouldn’t leave until quite late – commonly after midnight. When I was very young, I didn’t mind this
routine. My grandmother lived with Pete
the Parakeet and an ornery, gray-muzzled dog named Smokey in a sprawling house with
gingerbread colored, asphalt siding that my grandfather had built himself. Early on, it all seemed pretty magical, but,
as I got older, I grew to resent losing one day of my precious weekend… after
what I considered an endless week of schoolwork. I wanted to be at home with my things, my own
routines and, most importantly, my friends from the neighborhood.
Our visits to my grandmother
attained a routine of their own. Shortly
after our arrival, the children were scooted out to the yard “to play” – as if
once out the door we would spontaneously erupt into fun and games. Watching television was the great Satan of my
childhood, and my parents forcefully encouraged my siblings and me to find less
passive, more enriching activities to occupy our time. So we would usually go out to the large
detached garage that was set at the end of a long cement driveway that flanked
the house to rock in the green wicker rockers that crowded about the structure’s
doorway. When we got bored with that we
might walk to the nearby schoolyard to play on the swings and jungle gym or
climb a tree. As reward for our efforts
we were handed a few bucks and sent to Babbitt’s, a small neighborhood convenience
store, to buy Italian ices. Back at the
garage, we scraped away at their impenetrable skins with small wooden paddles,
carefully working the edges until we could flip the ice entirely and get to the
dense stew of sugar and food coloring which settled on the cup’s bottom. Having served our time, we were granted a
reprieve and were permitted to watch television until dinner. Usually we chose ABC’s Wide World of Sports or repeats of Secret Agent and Mission
Impossible.
A red patterned formica-topped
table sat in the center of my grandmother’s cozy kitchen. An old fashioned, compact refrigerator with
rounded corners hummed away in the corner, hiccupping whenever starting or
stopping. Amid much grunting and
cursing, my father and uncle had cut a large rectangle out of the south wall of
the kitchen and installed shelving on which my grandmother displayed her
knickknacks: figurines and ceramic pieces she’d collected over the years. I especially coveted two china dogs, one
brown and one yellow, that were arranged on the bottom shelf where I could
easily see them. Through the shelves you
could peer into the next room where my grandmother kept a jungle of plants that
were healthy and thriving – in stark contrast to my family’s feeble attempts to
sustain houseplants at our home. Having
matured in a farming community, my grandmother had a green thumb and carefully
tended to all flora both indoors and out in her yard.
The table was set with china
plates etched with a crinkly web of minute cracks and fissures. My tenuous memory tells me that we always had
pot roast and mashed potatoes, but that can’t be true, can it? For dessert, we had oatmeal cookies, stale
from sitting in the tin too long, or jello corrupted with the fruit that my
grandmother added as a special treat for us kids. At my age, I didn’t understand that my
grandmother was a diabetic, that there wouldn’t be a lot of sweets in her home,
the few that gained entry tending to linger there awhile.
After dinner, my siblings
and I would retreat to the living room while the adults packed away leftovers
and washed and dried the dishes. As we
watched Petticoat Junction, The Mary Tyler Moore Show and Mannix, the adults sat at the kitchen
table, my grandmother nursing a small tumbler of ginger ale while the others
drank beer from the smoked drinking glasses that my parents had brought back
from their Virginia Beach
honeymoon. The living room was
sweltering, both summer and winter, and, drenched in sweat, we soon passed out
draped across the sofa or sprawled across the carpet. Eventually we were roused from our sleep and
ushered grumpily to our car for the ride home.
Mannix |
My grandmother would display
the flag on all patriotic holidays.
During one of our visits, she asked me if I would replace the line on
the flagpole that stood in her small front yard. I readily agreed. Since I was still pretty young, my mother had
reluctantly consented to this, but my grandmother was delighted. As we stood around the flagpole, I was given
my instructions, handed the line, then lifted and placed on the pole. The two women pushed me by my bottom as high
up as they could, but after that I was on my own. I was a very active, adventurous child who regularly
climbed trees and got into all sorts of mischief, so this task didn’t unnerve
me at all. I immediately began shimmying
up the pole and was soon on level with the roof of the house. I looked down to see my anxious mother
watching me skeptically, but my grandmother was smiling broadly and cheering me
on. I must admit that as I neared the
top I was a bit surprised to discover how tall the flagpole really was. Nevertheless, I continued to the top. Once there, the process became a little more
challenging because I had to thread the line through a pulley and to do that I
had to release my grip on the pole, something I hadn’t considered while still
on the ground. I froze for some moments
while the ladies waited perplexed below.
Then I got up my courage, embraced the pole tightly with my thighs and
fed the line through the pulley. That
accomplished, I quickly slid down to join my relieved mother and ecstatic
grandmother. After patting me on the
back, my grandmother turned to my mother and said, “Did you see, Marion ? He’s just like his grandfather!” To be compared with my grandfather made my
young heart swell.
Andrew Wyeth - Barn Loft - 1956 |
So many of my memories of
that time are connected with my grandmother’s garage where I had spent so many
idle hours. The structure was enormous
and packed with the dross accumulated over many years past. At the rear there was a glider seat that hung
suspended on four straps. Many a summer
night, I would lie on that seat gently swaying in the dim yellow glow of a
distant house light, half-listening to the crickets chirping and the unintelligible
chatter of the adults gathered in the front of the garage, the aroma of beer
and cigarette smoke infusing the humid air.
There was a square hatch in the garage’s ceiling that provided access to
its attic. Without a dropdown ladder,
the attic remained terra incognita for many years, but bored children will
eventually explore every square foot of a property given enough time. By placing a folding ladder beneath the hatch
and balancing on the top step, I could just reach the lip of the hatch and pull
myself onto the floor of the attic. The
scariest part of the process was reaching up through the hatch and putting my
hand onto the dusty, wooden floor.
Sleepy wasps would gather at the entrance, and more than once I got
stung when I placed my hand directly upon one of them. There was a lot of old things up there: boxes
filled with papers and clothing, screens and storm doors and tall wardrobes (or
chifferobes, as my mother called them).
I was most intrigued by the decorations I found there, remnants from
celebrations long forgotten: welcome home parties, New Year’s celebrations and
wedding and baby showers. On one of my
visits up there, I fanned open white paper wedding bells and hung them from the
rafters. I stretched banners from one
end of the attic to the other. Satisfied
with the results of my efforts, I dangled from the hatch until my foot made
contact with the ladder’s top step, then descended, leaving my indiscretions to
be discovered by the next intruder to that space. Perhaps my most poignant memory of time spent
in that garage dates back more than thirty years. My grandmother could no longer live on her
own, so the house my grandfather had built, that old fashioned structure with
crystal doorknobs, a freestanding bathtub and a terrifying, labyrinthine
basement, was being sold. We were at the
house to pack up what could be saved and dispose of what couldn’t, and I had been
working all day, moving furniture and boxes, sorting through years of
possessions and cleaning room after room.
While out in the garage to take a break, I recognized that this would be
my last visit to this place. The new
owner intended to level the garage, cut down the crab apple and pear trees that
had occupied the backyard since before my birth and divide the property in
two. On the new lot, he planned to build
a large, modern house that would tower over the neighbors’ homes. It was getting late. Sunlight was already creeping along the floor
of the garage. Someone had pulled a
large wardrobe to the front of the structure, and, out of idle curiosity, I
took a look inside and found two uniforms, one from each of the two world wars,
carefully preserved and hanging side-by-side there. I hoped that someone planned to save these
heirlooms from the dumpster, but, being just a kid without influence or a place
of my own to store them, I didn’t pursue the matter. I thought it would be a shame to lose these
tangible artifacts of our family history, a history that I had over the years
learned piecemeal from my grandmother and mother. The story, as I understand it, goes like
this…
Having suffered some
romantic betrayal from a longtime lover, my grandfather determined that he
would remain a bachelor and devote his working life to the US Army. He enlisted with the cavalry and quickly
developed a lifelong love of horses. I
recall hearing that he joined Pershing on his fruitless pursuit of Pancho Villa
in Mexico .
Leopoldo Mendez - Pancho Villa - c1944 |
When America became a combatant in World War I, he
was sent to Europe . I know little of his activities during the
war, except that at some point he was mustard gassed and transported to a
hospital to convalesce.
Otto Dix - Sturmtruppe geht unter Gas vor - 1924 |
At the war’s end, Allied
troops occupied Germany ’s Rhineland with the local population being required to
billet the soldiers. That is how my
grandfather came to be living in my grandmother’s home on the outskirts of Koblenz . As I have said earlier, my grandmother grew
up in a predominantly agrarian community; it consisted of a core village of
homes and outbuildings surrounded by fields, privately owned and independently
farmed. Most households kept livestock,
a cow, a pig and some chickens at a minimum.
A church, shops and opportunities for employment were to be found in a
larger town within walking distance of their small village – a journey
demanding enough to be undertaken only once a week. I would say that my grandmother’s family were
solidly middle class.
(My grandmother is third from right.) |
As these things happen, a
romance blossomed between my grandmother and the American soldier staying in
her home, and they determined that they would be married once the occupation
was over. My grandmother told me how her
family tried to teach my grandfather the language by pointing at things and
supplying their German names: der Tisch, das Stuhl, der Löffel, das
Fenster. I once asked her, “But,
Grandma, how could you agree to marry someone who you couldn’t even talk
with?” With a wry smile and a twinkle in
her eye, she replied, “Oh, there are other ways to communicate.”
When the Americans ended
their occupation, my grandfather was required to return to the States to be
decommissioned. He promised that he
would come back to Germany
to marry my grandmother. Her father
warned her, “He will not come back”, but my grandmother was sure that he would
keep his word. And he did. When he returned to Germany , he
suggested that they make their life together there in my grandmother’s
homeland, but she felt that there was too much resentment and bad feeling after
the war for an American ex-soldier to be accepted by the local population. Instead, they were married and traveled to Holland where they boarded a ship bound for New York .
Initially, they lived in the
City, but my grandmother couldn’t adjust to the crowds and the noise and the
filth. So they moved over the county
border into Nassau ,
which in those days was fairly undeveloped with clusters of private dwellings
interspersed among stretches of open farmland.
There my grandfather built the home that I knew as a child, the home in
which he and my grandmother were to raise their four children. Customary practices were changing rapidly in
those early years of the twentieth century, and some of their babies were
delivered by a doctor at their home while others were born in the hospital. My grandfather was versatile and could
perform a multitude of jobs, but I believe he was primarily a roofer. He joined the Volunteer Fire Department; my
grandmother, the Ladies Auxiliary. They
watched their children grow and prosper, each of them attaining a high school
diploma, which was the norm for middle class kids at the time.
During the Second World War,
they saw their two sons sent to join the fighting, one in Europe
and the other in the Pacific.
Miraculously, they both came
home, alive and uninjured. Upon his
return, one of my uncles planted hundreds of flowers in my grandparents’
backyard, an undeniably sane response to the experience of war. Years later, my mother still recalled the
sight with awe. In the postwar years, my
grandparents’ children married and settled on Long Island, as the surge in
development carried families further and further out on the Island
toward the Forks.
And the years slowly drifted
by, as is always the case, barely perceptibly, with events to celebrate and in
which to take pleasure and others to mourn and regret, though, under deep
circumspection, perhaps, we would be prone to observe that most days pass
unremarked with little occurring to differentiate one day from that which
preceded it or that which will follow.
And so my story inevitably comes full circle to the years after my
grandmother’s house had been sold and she came to live permanently with my
family.
During this period, my
grandmother and I became great friends.
As this entry will attest, I was fascinated with her stories of the past
and questioned her greedily on details from her childhood. When I was in grad school, I would emerge from
my morning painting sessions in the basement to join my mother and grandmother
for lunch. I can vividly recall sitting
at our kitchen table, my head still full of my morning’s labor, tomatoes from
my mother’s garden set on the windowsill to ripen in the sun and my mother and
grandmother rehashing happenings from long past, almost madly obsessed with
establishing an accurate chronology of those events. Whenever I planted anything, my grandmother,
leaning on the cane that the passage of years had forced upon her, would hobble
after me into the yard and watch my efforts.
Once she declared wistfully, “Oh, if only I could get down there with
you and put my hands in the soil!”
Though my grandmother rarely touched alcohol, on special occasions I
sometimes goaded her into doing shots of Jägermeister with me, and, with cheeks
aflame, she would laugh and argue with me while the candles burned down after
our evening meal. I never heard my
grandmother say anything critical of anyone.
She honestly liked everyone she met, but, in particular, she was
committed to her family. Ignoring each
of our faults and indiscretions, she would only recognize the kernel of decency
and excellence that she was certain resided at our cores. She took particular delight in informing folk
(the dentist, barber, podiatrist or the checkout lady at the supermarket) of
how many grandchildren and great grandchildren she had.
I drew or painted my grandmother’s portrait a number of times during the 1980’s. Whenever I asked her to pose for me, she would blush demurely and object, “Nobody wants to see an old lady.” To which, I invariably replied, “Well, I do.” And she would reluctantly sit, I believe, quite pleased with the attention.
I drew or painted my grandmother’s portrait a number of times during the 1980’s. Whenever I asked her to pose for me, she would blush demurely and object, “Nobody wants to see an old lady.” To which, I invariably replied, “Well, I do.” And she would reluctantly sit, I believe, quite pleased with the attention.
Gerard Wickham - Franziska Normann-Young - 1980 |
Of course, once established
in her new quarters, my grandmother had to scope out a new location at which to
play bingo, and luckily my parents’ church provided a convenient venue. My father would take her there in the evening
once a week. When he wasn’t available,
one of us kids would do the driving. On
one occasion when I was the designated chauffeur, I discussed logistics with
her on the drive over. “I’ll drop you
off at the front of the church. You’ll
wait there while I park the car, then I’ll come get you and help you to your
place.” She looked at me defiantly. “I don’t need any help. I can do it on my own.” I pleaded, “Please, Grandma! If you get hurt, it will be me who gets in
trouble.” She grumbled unhappily. She was already over 90 then, and there were
two flights of stairs to be maneuvered to get down to the large room where the
bingo games were held. Once at the
church, I pulled over to the curb and helped my grandmother out of the car. I looked down at her stout frame supported on
her cane. “Now just wait here. I’ll be back in a second.” After tearing through the parking lot to
quickly find a space, I raced back to the front of the church to collect my
grandmother. She was gone. I rushed into the building, sprinted across
the lobby and, upon approaching the stairs, found my grandmother, still on the
first flight, frantically scurrying downward, two hands on the railing, her
cane, hooked over her forearm, trailing behind.
I quickly caught up with her, grabbed the cane away from her and helped
her down the stairs and to her seat. She
huffed a little and fought me a bit but had to succumb to this minor
indignity. I left the building feeling
completely exasperated, but, at the same time, couldn’t help but admire her
undiminished tenacity.
Understanding in her early
90’s that her stay with us was finite, my grandmother began to spend hours in
her room sifting through papers and documents, old cards and letters and
photographs, organizing them in bundles secured with rubber bands. During those last years, my nephew lived at
the house with her. She would invite him
into her room and show him photographs of members of her extended family
overseas until, at the age of two, he could identify each individual on sight,
pronouncing his or her name with a perfect German accent. Apparently, my grandmother was taking stock,
tidying up her legacy, in anticipation of a time when she would no longer be
available to offer information or provide answers to our questions. Being of a similar mind, I asked her one day
to pose for a photograph in the morning light at my parents’ backdoor. She disappeared for about a half hour,
returning formally dressed, bedecked with a necklace and earrings, her hair
carefully arranged.
She died rather suddenly
from complications resulting from extremely minor surgery. I was living in the city at that time and
didn’t get a chance to see her in the hospital before she was gone.
Endnote: I like to visit cemeteries, a habit I
probably picked up in my teens during camping trips made annually with my
parents and siblings along with my aunt, uncle and their children. My uncle would suddenly pull over to the side
of the road upon sighting a particularly old graveyard, and we would all tumble
out of our cars to tramp amongst the graves, studying the headstones, reading
the often unusual names and determining the age of the markers. The practice has stuck with me to this
day. In my own town, I am particularly
drawn to a timeworn cemetery located behind a church built in the early 1800’s,
its confines girded in a low, flagstone wall.
Frequently, while my wife shops nearby, I’ll visit this cemetery and
meander among the markers, each individually unique and commonly quite
elaborate. There are sections of the
cemetery that are very old. Some of the
individuals buried there were born around the time of the American Revolution;
others must have fought in the Civil War.
I construct stories about the dead.
The husband and wife, whose headstones are surrounded by those of their
young children who predeceased them by many years, lost them in a horrible
epidemic. The widow who lived for forty
years after her husband’s death remained faithful to his memory while watching the
world change dramatically: cars replacing horses, electricity coming into use,
a world war consuming a generation of our nation’s youth. The two teens who died on the same day, their
headstones positioned side-by-side, were the tragic victims of an ill-fated, drunken,
midnight joyride. It consoles me to
delude myself that I can recreate the narratives of these individuals from a
few lines of numbers and letters, that their stories, once as vivid as my own, did
not die with them. But that is purely an
emotional response. Intellectually, I recognize
that, for the vast majority of us, the imprint we leave behind will be erased
completely within a generation or two after our deaths. Not a comforting thought, to say the least. Perhaps that is why I made the effort to
record here these impressions of my youth and resurrect my grandparents’ saga
in this spare and flawed account.
As always, I encourage
readers to comment here. If you would
prefer to comment privately, you can email me at: gerardwickham@gmail.com.