Happy Thanksgiving!

“Freedom from Want” (1943) by Norman Rockwell

I love Thanksgiving! When I was growing up, we spent many a Thanksgiving and Christmas at Grandpa’s house. Thanksgiving was a much anticipated and happy time. We would often leave home on Wednesday afternoon after dad got home from work. It was a long 7 hour drive to Grandpa’s house in those pre-interstate highway days, so it would be really late by the time we arrived.

My cousin Sue (left), her family, and me (right) on grandpa’s old sofa bed. April 2011. When my cousins and I were all small, our parents would put four or five of us crosswise on this sofa bed for the night.

We all stayed at grandpa’s house, so aunts, uncles, and cousins were stashed in every bedroom upstairs and down, plus on couches, hide-a-beds, and any other place there was room to throw down some blankets and pillows. When I was quite small, they put my brother and I and some of our cousins all in one hide-a-bed in the basement or on the sofa bed upstairs. My cousin Sue now has that old sofa bed (see the photo above). We were stacked in like cord wood.

My parents, my brother and I in Grandpa’s front yard.One of my cousins is on the front steps.

The next day, my brother and I would play with our cousins while the adults worked on Thanksgiving dinner (and/or watched a football game). Dinner was quite a production with a lot of people involved. There was grandpa, his six children and their spouses, plus all of their children, 25 people in all. That was a lot of people to fit around the big table with all the extra leaves, plus card tables set up for the younger kids. We had all the usual fixin’s, plus whatever grandpa provided if he had been hunting and was successful. When we hit our teens, my cousins and I could go along with him. Grace was said or sung or both. Singing grace was a family tradition. I still remember the tune. Our version went something like this:

Be with us at our table Lord.
Be here and everywhere adored.
These mercies bless and grant that we
May feast in fellowship with thee.

Good food was shared. I can still remember finding an occasional piece of shot (from grandpa’s shot gun shells) while eating duck or pheasant or whatever else grandpa’s hunting had provided for the feast. Much happy talk would go on around the table. Past memories and recent events would all be shared. Not all the memories were happy. Grandma died of cancer when I was young. I remember her, but not as well as I wish I could.

Grandpa, Grandma, and their six children.

Grandpa, Grandma, and their six children. My mother is at the upper left.

There was lots of room to play, both inside and out. The basement coal room was a place of mystery since none of us cousins had a house with a coal room.

Uncle Ken and my cousins Sue and Barb.

When I was small, Uncle Ken (Sue’s dad) became the family horse. We took turns riding him around the living room. I didn’t think about it when I was a small boy, but now I wonder how his knee’s held out.

In addition to a big house (at least it felt big at the time), there was a big yard with an arbor, the old car (Model A?) that sat in the side yard, a separate garage with a big depression in the floor so you could work under the car, and the playhouse in the back of the yard. Outside, we were pirates or explorers or whatever else struck our imaginations. My cousins and I made mud pies (garden dirt and water and whatever else we found in the yard) in the playhouse which we actually tasted.

Grandpa and Grandma on their front porch and steps.

The pantry behind the kitchen always had a box of chocolate chips that my cousins and I would secretly get into throughout the day. Chocolate chips worked well to fortify us for the day’s adventures. We were very careful not to get caught. It wasn’t until grandpa’s funeral that my cousins and I learned that our parents were all snitching chocolate chips too. Grandpa let one of my aunts in on his little secret. He would buy several boxes, and hide all but one or two. When one box got low, he would put out another one.

Dad, Grandpa, and Grandpa and Grandma’s house. Late 40s or early 50s.

It was a real joy to be together. After two or three fun-filled days, we would all head home.

Families were much bigger then, and didn’t live nearly so far apart. Back then my Grandpa and Grandma and all of their children lived in the same state. It was a different time.

I still look forward to Thanksgiving and Christmas. Sometimes all of our children are home and sometimes just one or two, or we travel to one of them. This year just part of our family will be here. We will do the traditional dinner with turkey and all the trimmings. I’m particularly fond of cranberry in various forms. We pick up two or three flavors of sparkling juice and almost always have at least two kinds of pie. We talk and laugh and share memories both happy and sad. New memories are added to the older ones. Somehow I’ve gone from being one of the small grandchildren at Grandpa’s house to being a grandfather. How did that happen?

Family Portrait, November 23, 2018.

May this Thanksgiving bring you joy, good memories, and happy times with family and friends.

God bless you!