Thursday, September 23, 2010

We Add to Our Family










Carl was born three months after my 19th birthday and two weeks after our first anniversary, on August 11 1955. Notice our new clothes dryer, the wooden rack in the background.




Two weeks before Carl was born I answered a knock in the mid morning to two suited young men my own age. With hats in their hands their ties neatly covering the buttons of their white shirts they announced “We’re ministers of the Gospel of Jesus Christ.” My new mother-in-law had told me that the Ward Teachers would soon come to visit and they would check on us to see if we were doing ok. Each month for nearly a year she had said the same thing. I was pretty tired of telling her they hadn’t come.“I don’t understand it! I told your Bishop, I told your Stake President” I asked the two young“What church?” as I had been subjected to a long “visit” by the JW’s. When they told me I replied “Well it’s about time you got here! I’ve been waiting for nearly a year.” Later I was told their meeting down the street had cancelled and they were “hit and miss” tracting on the way back to their bikes which were chained up at the corner. I still thought they were the Ward Teachers and didn’t know they were missionaries. The Ward Teachers never did come but the missionaries came back again. John knew who they were and set me up with questions to ask them: “Where are your horns?” Without a change of expression Elder Clegg replied “I’m a muley m’am I just got dehorned come Spring.” I didn’t understand. John however cracked up and laughed til he nearly cried when I recounted the tale. Six weeks after Carl was born I was baptized.

When Carl was seven months old the Mare Island Apprentice Blue Devils basketball team, on which John played, went to Washington for a series. The trip lasted a week. As the train pulled out my tears flowed like rain. I didn't remember the difficulties we’d been having getting along nor how much I'd looked forward to having a week to myself I just felt all alone in the world.












It seems we hardly had room to be proud parents when we announced the birth, fifteen months later, of our second AND third, identical twin girls. Exhaustion blacked out most of my twenty-first year but I do remember having told my mother-in-law I would never want to live my life over, once was enough!


When I did the laundry (which was nearly constantly!) The playpen kept the twins safe from harm or Carl who liked to pick them up. They grew as fast as weeds and were soon trying to crawl. They kept me hopping.

For identification purposes information was taped on each twin so no mistakes could be made.




Saturday, September 11, 2010

Our First Move




Our first move was into an old house in on Avilla Street in El Cerrito that had been turned into two “flats.”The bathtub was so short we had to draw up our knees to sit in it. At $12.50 a week we didn’t want to stay long.

Thanks to John’s GI Bill and $350.00 of his savings bonds (+ $10,000 @ $68. p/mo) we were able to purchase a house in Castlewood Gardens in the foothills of eastern Vallejo which we watched grow from a field of hay to a bustling community of several hundred homes. We drove 25 miles every night after work to count the 2x4's and nails put in each day then drove home again to our dinky apartment in El Cerrito. We were so sentimental!

John planted the lawn after digging the whole front yard up with a shovel then he had to mow it when it grew with his new push mower, the only one in the world that had been shipped without a handle!

Marriage


We wanted to get married right away but postponed the wedding twice, for two weeks each time.

I made my wedding dress but Jody’s mother finished the piping on it. I made my veil. The Bride’s picture was taken at Jody’s house about 6ish pm.



Daddy & I had to cross the multi-purpose room (basketball court) to get to the ceremony site. They wouldn’t let the marriage take place in the chapel. Someone notified us they were ready for us so we started the long trek. I kept urging Daddy to hurry but he said “You’re the bride. They’ll wait for you.” Later John said he got very nervous when Here Comes the Bride began to play for the 3rd time! Everything finally came together and we were married in the lounge of the Claremont Chapel in Berkeley on the 24th of July 1954.