Wednesday, June 20, 2012

I Plan to Know Them

Born in December of 1918, and raised in Appomattox County, Virginia, my mother came from a large close-knit farm family. Proud of her heritage and home, mother took us to visit her sisters, her parents, and on walking tours of the farm. She loved to recount stories of her up-bringing, experiences of hard work, frugal living, and Christian standards.

 The Chilton family on the steps of Lynchburg College, 1938, my mother is front left.

By the time I was born in 1954, my mother had mourned for and buried both of her brothers. Since only one of my mother’s five sisters had married [and my dad an only child], we grew up with only one uncle, Berlin.  Uncle BW, as we called him, married my mother’s oldest sister Nancy. Aunt Nancy became his second wife and step-mother to his almost grown daughter, who seemed, by the time I recognized such things, much older than me. 

BW did his uncle duties when we saw him, and I loved his white hair, his gravely voice, and sweet demeanor, but I always longed for the uncles I had lost before I was born. I perhaps desired them because I couldn’t have them, and in my romanticized imagination, I wished to be tossed in the air, swung in circles, tickled, and loved by these men I only knew from the black and white photos adhered to black paper and held by black, adhesive corners in the pages of the photograph albums belonging to my grandmother and aunts.

With the full head of hair of young men and ready smiles, Uncle Robert and Uncle Chapman grew larger than life in my reveries, and the absence of them made me “different” than some of my friends. I envied those friends who talked of their "Uncle Walter" or "Uncle Mike" – I knew I had lost something valuable, precious, a God gift as my mother's sisters were delightful relatives full of vigor and spit and fun. I created in my mind what my uncles, and the families I expected they would have, would have been like.

 Robert, 1938

Told the story of his death when I asked about it,  I knew that Uncle Robert had been killed in a train accident in July of 1941. Having graduated from college in 1938 at the end of the Depression, he could not find work, and after several attempts at making a living, he was back at home living on “the farm.” Coming home from a dance and driving in the pouring rain, the windows of his car rolled up and the radio playing, Robert approached a railroad crossing in Appomattox -- it was after midnight. The railroad operator, who went off duty at twelve o’clock, was not there to bring down the safety bar, and Robert, peering around the buildings that backed up the road on both sides, did not see the train.

The train dragged his car a mile before it could stop. 

These facts to my young mind were both fascinating and ghoulish, and I know that I heard the story, but that it wasn’t a story that was told too many times. They simply didn’t talk about it to us much.

My mother noted, “the memory[of Robert's death] faded, but for years my heart ached when I came to that railroad crossing. A year or so after he died, I was riding the train home from St.Louis, and as we approached Appomattox, the conductor said, ‘I’ll never forget the wreck we had here. A young boy was coming home late at night and his car hit the train…’”

 Chapman, 1939

Working a night job and attending medical school during the day, only surviving son Chapman, smart and driven, appeared headed for a career as a doctor. Interrupted by World War II, the US Army underwrote Chapman’s last two years of medical school and then shipped him overseas in 1944 for duty, but not before Chapman married Eleanor, a beautiful girl he met while interning in Memphis..

When he returned two years later in May of 1946, his wife, my grandmother, and aunts saw a changed man. No longer confident in his skills at being a doctor, he felt he atrophied during his stint in the army where he dispensed pills and gave out bandages. Bored and restless, the usual busy Chapman didn't adjust well to Army life. He told my mother when he returned: “I’ve forgotten everything I knew.” Believing he would have to intern and start all over, he became depressed. He and his wife rented an apartment in Richmond, a "small, dark one," as my mother noted, and he accepted a position at nearby Stewart Hospital. At one point,  he commented to his wife Eleanor: “ I can’t even write up a chart.”

With all of his family and friends expecting him to succeed, in retrospect, they assumed he carried a weight of their expectations for him, ones of which he felt he couldn’t meet, and in September of 1946, he took his own life.

As Grandma wrote “we are taking the shock very well, I think.” My mother, who said that she and Chapman were very close, did not make it back in time for the funeral. A mix up in preferred seating on the plane from St. Louis, she arrived home late to a "stunned" family.

As happy of a childhood as I had, and I did, the cloud of my uncles’ deaths existed. I wondered about them, dreamed about them, and wished I had known them.It was not until I was an adult that my mother told me that about his death -- I always thought he had been killed cleaning a gun.

As my husband and I attended the 90th birthday celebration for his aunt last weekend, I paused to think of my own family and the “what ifs” of their lives, and it spurred me to write about my uncles, the men I never knew but so longed for in the ways a young girl would.

BTW: I plan to know them --- in God’s time.

ETA: In 1993, my mother wrote a short memoir [about 90 pages] of some of the events of her life growing up on a working farm, her family, and especially her parents. Titled Will and Mimi’s Farm, she writes of the loss of her brothers and the impact it had on her family. I used her summary to write this.

 Robert and Chapman [and Spot, lol], 1923

Thursday, June 14, 2012

To America

In a 2010 article in the New Yorker by Richard Rayner, he discusses his uncovering the information from one of Eisenhower's coterie that Stephen Ambrose fabricated the number of  interviews he had with Dwight Eisenhower for the sake of “narrative panache.”

Never liking to read that an author of “history” has pulled a fast one, I went ahead and completed Ambrose’s last work, To America. The work had been on my list since it came out in 2002. {I don’t need to remind you here that my approach to what I read is based on library availability and which of the eight pages of my book list on which I happen to glance. Not chronological -- not scientific -- just random.}

In this work sub-titled Personal Reflections of an Historian, Ambrose writes short chapters on a variety of subjects of historical interest --  from Thomas Jefferson to immigration to the Korean War. In each of these, his commentary highlights certain aspects of these historical people or events that he concludes interested him or impacted the course of history.  Ambrose is more complimentary than critical. Call it patriotism or my lack of patience with the latter, but I liked these essays --  he reminded me of events I had forgotten:  how Andrew Jackson got the scar on his face or the small steps that led to our full scale involvement in Vietnam.

To America is a gentle, “history” book -- as Ambrose’s approach reads like a series of letters he might have written or a conversation he might have had over the dinner table with a colleague. In these he illustrated his own biases, mistakes, as well as opinions on issues that he’s either changed his mind or developed an even stronger stance.  His own personal life interwoven with these essays makes for an even better read.

Note: In many of his revelations he chats about how he ended up being a writer, and he credits his Professor at the University of Wisconsin who encouraged him as well as made comments on his papers "[that were] sometimes humorous, usually insightful, frequently helpful, often scathing. Many times it seemed he wrote more in the way of comments than we had written in the paper.”

My kind of teacher.
Just sayin’.

*wink, wink*