Been thinking about our home(s) when I was a child in Boston . I guess it was the immigrant culture, always
a bed for a recent arrival or a boarder.
In the 1920s when we lived right the ocean on the North Shore , Mother’s unmarried sister Pearl lived with us. Daddy’s brother Harry and his wife brought their
baby back from the hospital to our house.
My half-sister Ethel came to us for her last year of high school. And Mother’s youngest sister Ida and her
husband moved in with us as newlyweds.
Then the stock market crashed, Daddy lost his job, the mortgage was foreclosed and we became the
vagrants. We moved in with his sister
Minnie’s family in Buffalo —I slept in the upstairs hall
and went to first grade there. The next
year back to Boston , to “the slums” of Lynn where we shared with Ida’s family,
seven of us by that time, in a four-room “cold-water flat” over a grocery
store.
Then our own apartment in Malden , Aunt Pearl living with us
again--how I coveted that tiny private little room in the front of the house
but I never got it. Daddy’s grown-up nephew
Norman came to live with us and slept on the "studio couch" on the porch. (He owned all
the swash-buckling Raphael Sabatini novels, purple cloth covers; I read every
one.)
Always relatives boarding with us, until when I was 13 we finally
settled in Upstate New York. Along the
way we lived several other places – Lowell (Depression closed down the mill so
that was the end of that job), two
different apartments in Lynn (factory town), five different rented apartments
or houses in Penn Yan and then Rochester, so that by the time we bought the
house out on Keuka Lake and I started high school, I’d gone to seven different
schools.
Nice finish at any rate: Like those in several small towns
around here, the public high school had (has) such an elegant Victorian name. I'm a graduate of
My two girls were delivered at Lowell hospital. By that time, at least one of the mills had been converted into a store and the rest lay empty. Those were hard times for the town. It's now a historic district and very trendy.
ReplyDeleteMy two girls were delivered at Lowell hospital. By that time, at least one of the mills had been converted into a store and the rest lay empty. Those were hard times for the town. It's now a historic district and very trendy.
ReplyDelete