Our Family (1953)
Dear George,
My dad, Vic
L., took lots of photos of our family, friends, and home town in the 1940’s,
1950’s and beyond. My brother Peter resurrected many of these from Vic’s
negatives, and he mailed postcard versions to family members for several years
in the early 2000’s. I’ve been posting archived batches of these images every
few months. Earlier postings can be retrieved by searching “archive” in
the box to the upper left. I wish I had been as conscientious as my dad
was in recording family history. It keeps our early lives fresh and
accessible.
Love,
Dave
VA Sr.’s and Olga’s family
This is a
family portrait taken about 1939 of my paternal grandparents (V.A. Sr. and
Olga), Vic, my mom, and Vic’s siblings. Standing in the back row from the
left are my mother Doris, my dad Vic, and my Aunt Martha. Seated from the
left are my Uncle Kent, my grandfather V.A. Sr. holding me on his lap, my
grandmother Olga, and my Uncle Karl (Kent’s twin brother). V.A. opened
drugstores in Menominee and Marinette in the early 1900’s, and my uncle Kent
and my aunt Martha’s husband Ralph Buscher operated the respective pharmacies
when V.A. retired in the late 1940’s.
The Tourist Information Lodge
This is a
winter scene of the Michigan state tourist information lodge on Ogden Ave. at
the foot of the interstate bridge in Menominee. We lived a half block
away in my preschool and kindergarten years. The best sledding hill in
Menominee was right behind the tourist lodge, and our moms would take Sally
F. and me there on winter outings. The tourist lodge burned down
sometime in the 1960’s and was replaced by a brand new log building.
Apple Blossoms
This is my
mom and myself somewhere in Menominee County in the springtime, about
1940. A very idyllic scene, though I’ve lost all those memories.
A Young Cowboy
Here is
something else that I don’t remember – my fleeting childhood horseback
career. My mother enjoyed horseback riding from her youth in Omaha, and
she would ride now and then at the stable located near the intersection of
Riverside Boulevard and Highway 577 at Menominee’s city limits. In
this photo I’m wearing a full outfit of cowboy boots, hat, and chaps, so maybe
I had more horse experience than I now remember.
Boswell School
This is
Boswell school in Menominee’s west end, my first grade school. I went to
Boswell for kindergarten, walking four or five blocks each morning with my
five-year-old friend and downstairs neighbor Sally F. I can't remember
anything that happened in kindergarten, though our walks to school were more
memorable.
The First Day of School
Here are my
mother and I at my first day at kindergarten at Boswell. My mother, at
the center of the picture, is talking to one of the teachers, while my slouchy,
head-down posture suggests I was on the verge of emotional collapse.
That’s probably accurate. I had an anxious time entering new, unfamiliar
situations as a child, and I didn’t do much better thereafter.
Skipper Burke
This is my
close childhood friend, Skipper Burke, probably about age 5 or 6. Skipper
and I were in the same grade in school, though he was always taller and more
worldly was than I was. We both lived in the State Street neighborhood in
the early World War II years and were regular playmates at his house or
ours. In some ways Skipper was my first mentor in life, particularly in terms
of instructing me about girls. His family owned a summer cottage at Pine
Beach on Marinette’s outskirts, and our parents would socialize there while we
kids swam at the beach and the pier. Skipper moved with his parents to
Minneapolis-St. Paul when we were in the fifth grade, a sad loss for me.
Father and son in the river
My dad and I
are in the water at my grandfather’s cottage along the Menominee River
shore. In those early days my dad spent more time in the river he did
later on. I think it's because the water for river house came from a pump
near the driveway, making use of the bathtub prohibitive, and so we used the
river for bathing. I doubt if the water was that hygienic, but it was our
best available option. When we eventually got indoor plumbing, it was
only we children spent time in the river.
A Menominee River stump
I’m sitting
on a big stump in the Menominee River. The river, of course, was a major
thoroughfare for the logging industry until the early 1900’s, and, even when we
lived there in the 1940s and 50s, there were many submerged stumps and
deadheads that were remnants of days gone by. One of our occasional
pastimes was to row across the river to the channel and bring back a large
stump to dry out on the riverbank.
Snow at Caley's
This is a
winter picture (circa 1946 or 1947) of myself, our childhood friend Tom Caley,
and my brother Steve. I think the photo was taken in the Caley's yard at
Northwood Cove on the Green Bay shore, just north of the city limits on M-35.
Tenth birthday
This was
taken on my tenth birthday in 1947 at the outdoor fireplace on our front
lawn. I was entering the fifth grade at Washington School that autumn.
The main thing I remember about fifth grade is that the wicked children teased
the teacher unmercifully and made her cry almost every day. She resigned
in the middle of the year, and then the substitute teacher became the new
victim.
Frank St. Peter
Frank St.
Peter was one of my close friends in childhood and adolescence. We played
softball and cowboys and Indians in our State St. neighborhood, rode our bikes,
swam at Hinker’s coal dock in Green Bay, had snowball fights with older kids
from down the block, and went off to YMCA and Boy Scout camps together,
including Philmont Scout Ranch in New Mexico.
At my age twelve birthday party
These are my
three siblings, myself, and my friend Frank on our front lawn, next to the
Menominee River. It was taken at my twelfth birthday party on July 21,
1949. From the left: my brother Steve (age 8), my brother Peter (age 4), my
sister Vicki (age 2), and (in the background) Frank St. Peter (age 12).
Green Bay Sunset
This is a
handsome black and white photo of a Green Bay sunset and sailboat from the
Menominee shore. Color photography in the 1940’s was not yet in vogue,
and, even though Menominee sunsets deserved color, black and white
captured their elegance too.
Arts and crafts
We did lots
of arts and crafts projects at Washington Grade School, and my parents always
encouraged us to continue those activities at home. This is a symphony
orchestra that I made out of miscellaneous materials. Probably because of
parental praise, I carried over those crafts activities into adulthood, though
I haven’t done much A&C for quite a while.
Another birthday group
This is
another of my birthday parties at our house on the river, probably my
eleventh. From the left: unknown kid, myself, Frank St. Peter, Tom Caley,
Bill Caley, Jim Jorgenson, unknown kid in front of him, Skipper Burke, my brother
Steven in front of him. Birthday parties were exciting because of getting
a bunch of gifts. However, they were also anxiety-provoking because the
birthday boy got paddled due to others’ jealousy from his getting all the
presents.
Cartoon collection
Here I am,
about age ten, with some of the comic book-inspired drawings that I'd
done with colored crayons. This was taken in Steve’s and my bunk bedroom
at river house.
Dave and Steve
Steve and I
are looking over a cartoon. I read the latest comic books every week at my
Uncle Kent's Rexall drugstore on Electric Square, and my goal for adulthood was
to become a professional cartoonist. I wish I had my comic book
collection now. It would be worth a fortune.
Peter
Here is my
younger brother Peter at age two or three. Peter always had a sweet
disposition, as well as a good sense of humor and a tendency to occasional
impishness.
Vicki
This is my
sister Vicki at age two. It's a great photo, and she looks very
sweet. I was the first child in the family and Vicki was the fourth, with
a ten-year time span between us. That’s a big age difference for little
kids. Among her three brothers, Vicki was closest in childhood to Peter
who was just two years older than her.
Birthday No. 12
This is another
picture of my twelfth birthday party in the dining room at our house on the
river. Standing from left: Tom Caley, Bill Caley, Skipper Burke,
Frank St. Peter, Jim Jorgenson, Darl Schmidt. Seated: Peter L., David L.,
Steven L. These were important figures in my early life. I think
this was the final birthday party that I had as a kid.
Camping
This is my
brother Steve and myself on a camping trip. This was probably taken at
Mason Park a mile up Riverside Boulevard from our house. I’d say that
Steve is 8, and I’m 12. One of the virtues of living in the county is
there were several good camping places available within a short distance.
I’d hitch a red wagon behind my bike to transport our gear, and we’d pedal our
way to our campsite. I still enjoy camping, in part because it takes me
back to bygone days.
Boswell School - If you would like to see some remnants of the original Boswell School, they can be see on the brick home located at 2020 17th Ave in Monominee. My father purchased the bricks after the school burned. I think he paid one cent per brick. My sister Sally and brother Dave spend countless hours cleaning those brick with wire brushes so they could be re-used.
ReplyDeleteSteve Benesh - Oshkosh, WI
I'm glad to hear that part of Boswell School lives on.
ReplyDelete