Arthur Jerome O’Dea

December 28, 2011

scan0003

I was sitting at the kitchen table of an Irish bungalow situated on the back street of a small Irish town when my father’s voice, reciting “Tree” by Joyce Kilmer, came on over the radio.  His translation of the poem into Irish had recently appeared in the local newspaper, and Radio Eire had subsequently invited him to their Sunday afternoon broadcast.  I  sat and listened with the Irish family with whom I was spending the weekend. We were all in the kitchen reading the Sunday papers, but the room suddenly stood still listening to what  must have been a most unusual sound  – Irish spoken with an American accent.  Not sure at all what the response would be  – was my father making a fool of himself here ? – I was greatly relieved when he ended  and Carmel, 16 at the time, turned to me and said “Ah sure, Susan, your father’s a great man.”

In 1920,  Arthur O’Dea  was a freshman at Park High School on Park Avenue in Rutherford, New Jersey.  He was an avid fan  of  his high school  football team. The 1920 Football Schedule was the compliments of Wallach Brothers,  a mens’ haberdashery on Broadway in New York City.  Written over Compliments of Wallach Bros. is Property of Art O’Dea. That would be my father’s writing, when he was just  boy of fifteen. When you open the football schedule, which is  a cardboard card  measuring 5″ x 4″, there is  a list of the dates and the opposing teams for that season. Dad  wrote Skedyouell at the top of this list.  He also wrote in the score for each game. Rutherford had a winning season that year, 10 and 0, according to the  totals he wrote in at the bottom of the Skedyouell.  However, there was a tie on November 20 between Chattle High School and Rutherford at Rutherford (7-7). He also rewrote Property of Arthur O’Dea on the  very bottom of  his Skedyouell.

On the opposite page  is the list of players, starting  with the team captain, and listing the varsity squad.  My father  had some  fifteen-year-old fun with these names. just as he did with the word schedule. The Manager is listed as D. Keep. Next to  Keep’s name Dad has inked your mouth shut.  A member of the varsity squad is listed as F. Lightfoot. Dad has inked in heavy hand.  R. Thorne is followed by  brier, C. Kiel by rudder, and E. Luke by warm.   Some of the varsity players have an asterisk next to their names, and it is noted at the end of this list that this marks the Letter Men. Dad has crossed out Men and inked in children.

In 1924 Dad was a senior in high school and he ran track. The  Official Program from the Sixth Annual Championship Track and Field Meet of the New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association says that this track meet was held in Palmer Stadium at Princeton University on Saturday, June 7, 1924 from 10:30 – 2:00.  Dad ran  as  number 3 in the 100 Yard Dash Class A High Schools, and the 220 Yard Dash in the Class A High Schools.  He received a medal for his performance in the 100 yard dash.  My father started New York University in the fall of  that year, and he was  living at the Zeta Psi House in University Heights.  His high school friend,  “Bres” ,  was  living in Brownson Hall at the University of Notre Dame, and wrote the following letter  to his former high school buddy.

October 23, 1924.

Dear Art,

John informs me that you think I owe you a letter. I’ll favor you with a little news.

Well, the football startled the East by beating the Army. They will meet a worthy opponent in Princeton, but will come out on top.  How did you like the playing of our captain on Saturday? He has certainly landed a place in football history.  NYU is having a a hard time according to the latest scores. They are not as you thought.

You seem to be taking every subject in college. John wants to know if you are taking sewing while Clate would also like to know if they show you how to push the carriage. 25 hours a week must be pretty hard. We are only taking eighteen hours. the quarter exams come in a couple  of weeks. Latin and Biology will give us the most trouble.

I suppose you take your daily beating from the sophs. Well, this is a real school! We have our fun without some one giving it to you. Hogan says that if you bring any more of these sad stories to his ears, he will disgrace you in  public by calling you a liar. John has developed into a hard nut, so hard that he claims he will beat a guy who calls him by his new name.

John feels that it in only right in dissolving the law firm of Weinberger and Falvinavo for the simple reason that his partner is lost in the eternal clutches of the women at St. Lawrence University in the wilds of New York State. So you see, his new name is both fitting and proper.

Now it is your turn to write; and don’t wait a couple   of weeks and then say I have not written you.

I will close now as the stuff that they call food is waiting to be devoured.

Your friend, Bres.

Two years later, in the fall of 1926,   Dad received the following letter from his Zeta Psi fraternity brother, John G. MacKnight.

Sunday. September 10, 1926

My dear Art,

I have your letter and I must confess that it leaves me puzzled. From the letterhead of the Paulist Novitiate and from your inquiry as to your standing in the fraternity, I was inclined to think that you were contemplating entering the priesthood. As this is a very serious step for anyone to take, I was wondering whether or not you had this in mind. I wish you would  tell me if such is your decision and let me know what your plans are.

I was extremely sorry to hear that you were not coming to New York to finish up this year, but after all you are the one who must decide on his future.

Best wishes from all of the brothers at the Phi.

Fraternally yours,

John  G. MacKnight

During his first three months at the Paulist  Novitiate in Oak Ridge, New Jersey, his father would drive the family to visit  him on the weekends. The following letter suggests that  sometime in November he wrote to his mother that the family should be preparing for Christmas in some way during the season of advent.

November 30, 1926

My dear Son,

When I awoke at 6:30 this morning I was so happy in the the thought that my child, my little boy, had already served at a mass for my dear mother. The mass here was at 7:30 and we were all present.

I am sure you would like to hear about my wonderful retreat.  Mother Lynch was my mother and we became great friends. She  is the dearest loveliest woman and was extremely kind to me. I think she assigned me the best rooms and I surely appreciated it.  I told her that perhaps she  thought I was old and decrepit and need a few luxuries in my old age.  She also said I needed no introduction as she knew I was your  mother the minute she laid eyes on me. Who shall take the compliment, you or I?  I could never begin to tell you in a letter all that I think of dear Father O’Keefe. His conferences were a joy never to be forgotten. When I see you I will try  to tell you about them.

In your letter you made the remark that you thought that I should prepare the family during the season of advent for the coming of our lord. Well, I had that very thought and am going to begin by including you. As a good means for this purpose I have asked the family to stay home from Oak Ridge until Christmas Day and all have consented although it will be a hard sacrifice for Helen and Anne. It will be a family  mortification and I hope it will be of great benefit to all.

Dad is as busy as he can be u p on the third floor. As usual he had a few surprises for me when I returned from the retreat. He has an old tin waste basket that was in the cellar for ages painted a vivid green  beside his desk. He also  received the Duraut radiator cover for the Packard (imagine my feelings).  He was so proud of  his artcraft. I am going to mail this on my way to pay the taxes a job which every good citizen make believe they are proud to do. Grandma O’Dea will be so happy to hear form you and I am sure it will make her understand a little better.  I will now close with love from all and may God bless you and keep you.

Lovingly, Mother

On February 8 of the following year, 1927, she writes:

Dear Arthur,

Tuesday is the day of the week in this house for me to look for your letter. When Helen and Nan arrive at home the first question is “did Arthur write?’ and there is a scramble to see who will get it first.  Your letter today was unusually interesting and I quite agree with you that  every    church in the land should have a Paulist book rack.  But my dear boy don’t ask me to approach Father Smith on this subject for I am almost certain he would not do it.  However, if I have the opportunity to suggest it,, I won’t let it pass. Father smith never refused me anything I asked of him, but I am always careful to study him well first.

And so you did see the tracks (of our car) in the ice out where we skidded.  It was well Larry was aware of the situation and got the car out very easily. I started to walk down the hill but changed my mind for I thought I might better roll down in the car than on my head. Dad is working hard to get away tonight, I don’t know just where and I don’t think he does either. He wrote to Mr Wilkins about the matter and I hope all will be stilled and rid  this controversy.

March 3, 1927

Dear Arthur,

I bought the life of Father Doyle and  have read some of it. My usually was you know and last night I started it in earnest and have read about half of the preface. Helen and Nan  would devour it if they got hold of it, but I was wondering if I should allow them to read it Don’t you think they are too young?

March 31, 1927

My dear son,

A year ago today if you  remember you started for Washington and I shall never forget how happy it made us all to see you start.  Usually I worried  a little more or less whenever you took a trip, but not on that occasion for I knew you were in a holy place. And when you came home,  I read your eyes as   usual and then I knew.  I am sure you often wonder if we miss you and while I never say that we do, you may be sure that there are many lonely  hours, especially the evenings. We are getting used to it now, and offer it all up and thank God for his goodness to us.

Dad  is in Buffalo this week giving several talks on the revision of the regulations. I am enclosing a picture of Bishop O’Dea that I discovered in the NCNC paper and while I don’t know if he is a relation I think it is nice to know there is some one making the name so exalted in the church.

I was wondering if you didn’t need socks or a tie and if so , may  I bring them to you on Easter Sunday? Also ask Father Skinner if he will allow us to pay your dentist bill and if we use that blank check  that you have or is you have destroyed it  I will send you another. Dad and I would be happy to send money for you necessities if  permitted, so let me know.

April 26, 1927

My dear son,

Your letter arrived early this morning and so Helen and Nan read it before they left for school. Needless to say the contents delighted them, particularly the fact the you are going to try to preach. If they could only “listen in” We will all be praying for you and all the other novices that the Holy Ghost may inspire you to do very well.

Uncle Ben was unable to visit you last week as he had been very busy and half sick too. He had a very trying case at the hospital and after every means known was used, the young man died. He was only twenty-four and Ben was all broken up over it.  He and Bub are going to Buck Hill Falls over the weekend  for a rest and he needs it. he looks miserable.

The Easter collection here amounted to $2283 and the proceeds form the Passion play the week before was $1000/ I though you might like to know how well we are doing.  The collection East Rutherford was around $1400,a and in Hasbrouck Heights $750.

May 5, 1927

My dear son,

We reached home Sunday at 7:45 as the traffic was heavy through  Mountain View, and Dad had a sour experience. We were all very tired and went to bed early. It is  quite warm here today and every one you see passing  seems to act lazy and tired. Even the children are dragging their feet. Spring fever is catching.

The Ford was towed out of ht yard yesterday for which I am thankful and I never want see another piece of such art ion my premises.  Mr.  brown was here yesterday and he is thinking that he may buy a nother car if he can find a good second hand one, and if he only would their place would look respectable again.

There remains but one letter from his father dated March 9, 1927. The letterhead reads “Hotel Woodruff, Watertown, New York.”

Dear Son Arthur,

A few lines which I presume will surprise you coming  from this place which you will remember so well as our stopping place for the night of August 26. The next day  you will recall from your tiresome ordeal in the part you occupied as chauffeur over the long strange roads to Montreal. There are of course many places and instances the trip brings back to our memory which on the whole was  wonderful for us.

I was home yesterday when your letter arrived. All were glad that you are keeping well and happy and  thus far find no hardships with the Lenten requirements assigned to Romans. It is a welcome period for the Catholic butcher, but as I have had to confine myself to slight  ration more or less for some time I do not find it hard to refrain from the forbidden eats.

I was at Oswego today arrived here this evening,  will go to Sackett Harbor in A.M. and possibly spend balance of week at Watertown.  We had some rain Sunday and remained home all day after Mass except  for an auto ride of 40 minutes in the late afternoon. The radio still offers excellent entertainment at home any evening and on Sunday afternoon.

All are well and filling their usual routine duties, the girls at school, music, etc, your mother with the housework, meals. NY. shopping and occasional town visit. All the other rattled families are well and apparently prosperous of late indicated by new vehicles, house improvement, etc.

My business trips  of the usual touring order, hard to tell when or where I am going next. Fortunately I have not had a call from headquarters to go anywhere, so my itinerary has been left to my own promiscuous selections. It  is well that I have district confines or I might have strayed and been lost in Yellowstone Park or other district quarters worthy of my inspection.

We have visited the novitiate so regularly we will all miss the  trip during the lenten period. I believe your mother and the girls have consoled themselves to is as a Lenten sacrifice.  Of course it deprives me of  considerable practice  necessary to acquire the title of efficient auto pilot – but so long as the mechanism of the chariot behaves itself, I am well satisfied not to exert it.

Trusting that you will remain in good health and be happy and successful with your work, I am as ever,

Your loving father,

D.J.O’Dea

In the summer of 1928, my father went to Haiti with Father Lynahan, another Paulist and friend of the O’Dea family. However, sometime in the next year after his return, my father left the  Paulist Novitiate with three of his Novitiate friends. Together they pooled their money and bought a car and drove to California and back to celebrate their decision. In January of 1931 he received a letter from a Novitiate buddy  who  was now the assistant sacristan at St. Patrick’s Seminary in Menlo Park California.

Dear Art,

I was sure glad to  receive your letter Art and I  am sure you know that this delay in replying does not indicate anything to the contrary. Although you would like to do a lot of moaning about it if you could get hold of me. You still kill the women, you big virile brute, and one cannot blame the  poor damsels for finding a weakness in you as I have often told you before. Your real future lies in Hollywood but I know you. You hate to leave the home talent to despair to satisfy merely popular demand. I was just wondering whether you are laughing or  whether it is down on the table. Sure wish I was there to see you, but please let me know as I know you will in might strong language. All kidding aside I appreciate your telling me about that little affair  and I wish I had seen the girl. But now I know there is another, s o write and tell me about her.  Remember when we used  to talk those things and many others over…There is much more I would like to say but I must bring this letter to a close. By the way, if you still have the negatives of some of those pictures we took on the trip, I would like to have them, especially the one with the indian, and those around the lake, and that one of myself in your back yard.  I have an album now, so please enclose a snapshot of yourself.

In early February  of 1931 my father received a letter from one of his novitiate buddies who was now in Rome.

Dear Arthur,

Well, as I’ve already agreed, our class is certainly well scattered with three of them here; Paul Ward and Bob Murphy ordained and doing priestly work; you  (to be?)a lawyer; Gavigan a professor; Cyril Barker a happy, married man and a father; Brenne far away in California still studying and not far from the priesthood; Slattery off somewhere doing business; Dever on the verge of getting married, happily I hope; Burke is still at St. Mary’s in Baltimore, and not far from ordination. Gosh who would have believed that the class of 1926 would have dispersed so far and wide! I often wonder back to those days and like to think about them. I can still picture you in your cassock and sash and birretta – you of the rosy red cheeks. Well, God is good and if we only be faithful we shall all meet again.

In June of 1932 he completed law school at New York University. In the same month, he received the following letter  from Father Skinner;

Dear Arthur,

Accept my congratulations on your graduation. You are finishing at a time when the country needs men of  sound principles and courage. I trust you will do your share towards the upholding of Christian standards in the troubled world.

May God bless  you

Yours sincerely in Christ,

Robert Skinner

My father always had a large black crucifix hung over his bed, and I remember being told that it had come  from the seminary days.  I also remember seeing  a small stamp sized picture of Christ kneeling in prayer in a garden. It was  a brown sketch on a white background.  It was held around his neck not by a chain but by two white narrow ribbons, almost like flat cords: from the left corner of the stamp sized picture a cord went to his back where another stamp sized picture was held. Another cord ran from the right corner on the from to the right corner on the back. This was also from    his seminary days…and it intrigued me. The cord was yellowed with age, and I sensed my mother did not have much time for it, or perhaps she would have washed it for him. As a  child, I thought he must have been torn between these two worlds if he still hung onto stuff like that. My mother had a such a strong distaste for the dogmatic side of Catholicism that I was suspicous, at times, that this is what my parents had fought about when they were dating during my mother’s junior year of college.  Because of this disagreement, my mother had packed her bags, put on her beaver coat, and returned to her parent’s potato farm  in Limestone.   What my father then did is perhaps best explained in the following letter  from Gene Meade, a former novitiate buddy who was now at the Apostolic Mission  House in Brookland Station in Washington.D.C.

November 27, 1932

Dear Arthur,

I received your card from “nowhere” in Maine.  When I first looked at the card I thought you were in Ireland. I read Limerick instead of Limestone. HaHa.  Anyhow I hope you got your fill of “pomme de terres” up in Maine. Why did you go  up there? Deer hunting, I suppose. Well, Arthur, I am anxious to know how  the bar exam came out. I hope and pray OK.  I heard part of the Army Notre Dame game yesterday. Did you see it? What do you  think of the election? Why not come down here for the Inauguration? Joe Tray is in Rome, so only Kenny, Barker, and I are left of the old guard. Remember me to all. Let me hear from you soon. I ask your good prayer.

Yours, Gene Meade

Arthur O’Dea and Bessie McLaughlin were married in Limestone, Maine on June 14, 1933.

Arboretum continues on July 30.

I’ll Be Home for Christmas

December 25, 2011

From time to time, I have asked my three older brothers and three older sisters to write about their memories of our family. Being a teacher, I am afraid these appeals closely resemble an assignment I would give to one of my writing classes. However, they dutifully respond, and then I am the recipient of a lovely stash of stories. Some of these collections appear elsewhere on Shestories, but for Christmas Day it is only appropriate to record their memories of the house where we were once children – 250 Mill Street, in Westwood, New Jersey. The stories begin with those about the outside and then on into the house. It is my hope that in reading these stories my readers are brought back to their own memories of their own childhood home.

The Brook and the Bridge by Arthur O’Dea

There was a section of the property called “the brook” where there once was intended to be a separate lot that just never got developed because of a drainage ditch along the westerly line of our property. We called that ditch “the Brook”. It was that side of the house where we rode our sleds down a  slight incline. It was also on that side that Pop built the “cabin” at the deepest  northern end of the property. My best memories come from the “Brook” side of our lot. That is where I learned to drive the old Packard that was parked down there when it was taken off the road. If you planned it well you could get it into high gear running along “the Brook” from North to South. There are great memories about building the cabin with Pop and the stone fireplace back there where we had our cookouts and where I learned how to split rocks but the directions from Susie seem to request the one paramount memory, so that must be “The Bridge”.

At the point where the drainage ditch passed under Mill Street there was erected a stone abutment that we called “The Bridge”. On top of the abutment there was a large rectagonal stone probably blue granite about 5″ thick and  32″ wide x 5′ long. There were many special occasions when I sat down on that bridge. I remember one in particular when my Mother came down and sat there with me. She is the only person who knew how special that place was for me. It was the throne from which my Magisterial dreams flowed. I could sit there for a long time alone dreaming and dreaming as I was so inclined to do as a child.

I had a friend who lived next door. He was my best and closest friend. Once we made statues out of plaster of Paris with some help from his Mom. She worked for a dentist. Now and then Harry Locke and I would have a fight over some child’s conflict and we would separate in anger. When one of us decided to “make up” the protocol was to go sit on the Bridge and then the other would come and sit there and a conversation would begin thereby ending the fight.

Harry’s Dad was a chronic Alcoholic. One day I went over to his house to play.  His Mom was in the process moving out. The furniture was gone. There was a lot of stress. Harry’s Mom told him to say goodbye. They went out and got in the cab and were gone forever. They moved to Michigan and I never heard of him again. Harry was very frail, tall, pale white, coughed a lot – as did his Mom. He was  very smart. He was my first friend because he lived next door and we were the same age.

Gradually the Brook got filled in, the trees died and the Bridge is gone.  Pop or someone saved the big Blue Stone that was the Bridge. When I last saw it there was a bench in front of the flagpole made for the stone. I hope it is still there. Perhaps, if it is, I will stop and sit for a few minutes to dream with Harry and Mom.

Storm Windows by Joseph O’Dea

250 was an older house with green wooden screens and white storm windows.  When not in use the screens or storms were stacked in the attic of the garage.  Every spring and fall a Saturday morning was given over to the task of changing the screens to storms and vice versa.  The screens were not too bad as all you did was hose them off and wash the outside of the window which was not too dirty as it had been protected by the storm all winter. They were also light and easy to handle.  The storm windows in the fall were another matter.

Every year we waited too long so it was always cold.  The windows were heavy and always dirty when you took them down from the garage attic.  You then had to wash the inside and out of each storm window.  Once, long ago, someone purchased number tags, little round flat pieces of metal with a number stamped on it.  There were two of each number and one went on the window frame and one on the storm window.  The theory was you could then match the storm window to the house window it served.  Well over the years either through painting the windows or repairs or the evil mind of a prankster the numbers stopped matching.  Some did and some did not. So what you had was a very large puzzle of which storm window went where.  You would find yourself trying window after window looking for a match.  The first floor was simply frustrating the second floor was exhausting.  You see the ladder we had was an old solid wood extension ladder that nearly killed you when you got it down off the wall in the garage.  You then had to raise it hand over hand while someone held the bottom until it leaned against the house just under the window to be replaced.

Before you could start trying windows you had to wash the outside of the house window.  And, Mom was washing the inside and overseeing your work.  When you thought you had it clean she would start tapping to show you where you had missed and needed more elbow grease.

After rewashing every window at least twice you could start the process of guessing which storm would fit. You would carry over the heavy storm and rest it against the ladder. Then grabbing from the bottom you would push/slide the window up the ladder in front of you.  When you got to the window you would try and line up the storm with the opening.  If it did not fit width wise down you went for another window.  If it fit width wise you would slide it up and try and connect the hooks on the windows with the hooks on the window frame. On the top of each window were two strips of medal with slits near the top.  These slits were designed to go over hooks attached at the top of each window frame.   If the hooks did not match up down you went for another window.  When finally the hooks matched you pushed the window shut and hoped it fit lengthwise.  If not down you went for another window.  When finally it matched Mom would grab the interior hook on the bottom of the window and latch it in place.

Mom was always in a good mood when the job was done.  In the fall the windows were like eyes to the outside.  They glistened.  And there was a quiet about the house when it was all buttoned up for winter.  In the spring the breeze would fill the house; the curtains would billow in as the fresh air passed through and the smell of spring and outdoors would permeate the house.

It is one of my earliest memories of the satisfaction of hard work and a job well done.

Grandma O’Dea’s Desk by Maureen O’Dea Feeney

Dad always used this desk in more recent history at Mill Street. He kept all his smaller treasures in the drawers like the tiny jade hearts that were inset into his Claddagh rings, his Teillard de Chardin paperweight, his Giant team statistics and of course pencils and rulers. Frank Lucianna gave Dad a dark green leather desk set with a flip out writing arrangement, a leather ruler, and it was equipped with some tiny leather boxes Dad filled with erasers, matches and things a man needed to have at hand. This sat on the desk until it fell apart a few years ago.

Anna Willis O’Dea ordered the desk from Macy’s and attached is the 1927 letter she wrote to Dad who was in the Paulist novitiate at the time. The picture was taken from the newspaper and glued to the upper corner of her letter. The desk sat in the hallway of 250 Mill Street with a rush seated chair and  it matched the woodwork of the desk. Some sat there when on the phone; others did their homework at the desk.

When the stereo came to the hall, the desk was placed in the den under the bay window with the large green glass lamp on top. Dad reclaimed the desk for his use in the front bedroom of the house where he installed book shelves over the desk and it became his office.

Bogart furniture repaired the desk when it came to me. The top of the desk still has a beautiful deep walnut patina which I covered in glass to further protect the finish. The tiny brass drawer pulls just keep getting brighter and with a yearly polish, the finish of the desk has taken on a burled look. The small drawers are lined each year with lavender paper and house all my needs. I sit there first thing every morning and it is the last stop at night. Owen sits at the desk to dry his hair and do his nails. The kids know where to find chap stick, hand lotion and any little need they may have at the desk. So it is a center to keep neat and tidy for the family. Even the tiniest tot can pull up on the desk and open the drawers to examine polish, lotion or make up, while older grandchildren love to play with all Grandma’s trinkets in the drawers while looking at themselves in the mirror over the desk.

I have a great emotional attachment to the desk; to me it is a connection to my Grandma O’Dea and her love of nice things that were pretty and feminine. Never having met, I am left to my imagination to fill in the details of her person using one or two pictures I have seen in albums and this letter from 1927 about her desk and life in general. I love her in this incarnation, and use her as my own fairy godmother in all my endeavors whenever needed. I like to see her writing at the desk and feeling happy there as I do doing what I do at the desk: clean up, get ready for the next event, daydream, play with makeup, and look at myself in the mirror getting to know each person who shows up each decade.

Her excerpted letter to Dad is dated April 7, 1927 and it is mailed from 183 Mountain Way, Rutherford, NJ

My dear son,

Today March decided to come back and let us know he was still around the corner. Yesterday was a balmy spring day, and all the flowers were requiring to open their buds but now all is changed again.

We planned to drive over to a wonderful florist near Hillman’s in East Paterson to see his beautiful flowers, and perhaps select some for Easter. I think we will go this afternoon.

Larry was here yesterday with his new car, he had it simonized and it really looks fine and shiny. He  wants Dad to have ours done, but Dad says he will do it himself. Do you remember how you used to watch the garage men work on the old Durant and then do it yourself next time. I think Dad has something like that in mind.

We were all so sorry for Father Gillis but then God has been very good to them. His father must have been so happy and proud of his good son, and to be able to be with him all these years.

Miss Lyndham spent the weekend with us and we enjoyed having her. She loves the country, but of course, did not get much of it here. We have invited her to Cedar Lake and are going to bring her to Mt. Paul soon.. Ben and Carrie invited us all over to their house for supper Sunday eve. And we had a wonderful time. The children are so smart, and they all performed for Miss Lyndham. Tommy is dear and says he is your boy. Bub is still a Paulist and is anxious to write you a letter.

Last night Father Murray spoke over W.L.W.L. His text was “Play Fair”, and he is certainly a good preacher. It came over clearly and distinctly.

I am enclosing  a picture of my new library table desk on which I am writing this letter. I bought it in Macys last week and they advertised it in the paper last night so I am sending you the picture. It is made of walnut and I hope it will help keep things out of the sideboard that don’t belong there. I have always wanted one and now I am like the Irishman “I am in the parlor at last.” I have also my long coveted rush bottom chair to match the desk.

Lovingly, Mother

The Dining Room Table 1 and 2 by Anna O’Dea Morris

I am Dining Table 1. I came to 250 Mill Street sometime in the fall of 1939 from my first home in Rutherford, New Jersey. I came with my family; the server, the buffet, the china closet and, of course, my six dark green upholstered chairs one of which had arms and always sat at the head.

I worked very hard as all meals were served on me. Some were special occasions. I would be all dolled up in a linen tablecloth and set with simply beautiful Limoges china. These lovely place settings were white with grey blue tiny flowers adorning the brims of each elegant piece. Green, apple green, long stemmed goblets stood beside each place. It was not until the fifties that Gorham’s buttercup sterling silver climbed aboard.  Dessert plates like you have never seen kept me dressed up t the very end of such an event. They were apple green too, but in the shape of a large leaf, even the edges were designed to be uneven as  a maple leaf might be. As time passed I wore newly acquired things like a really large turkey platter. It was sort of brown in color theme with an outdoor scene on it. It was Johnston Brothers. It sat in front of the place where the arm chair was. As fast as a fancy event was over, I would get cleaned up and for a long time, or until the next occasion, I wore a flannel backed oil cloth type cover.

By 1942 most of chairs were full, or at least promised because we accepted apart timer called high chair to make a very tiny occupant happy. So Mom and baby were at one end, the girls on one side, the boys on the other side, facing the buffet mirror, and Dad at the head of the table, nearest the kitchen. They always sat in the same place.

If I could talk (I can only write) I could tell you so many stories. That was the one perk of working so hard – three meals a day, snacks, a cup of tea long after dinner, birthday parties…sometimes there were so many extra chairs, even benches were dragged to my side. Sometimes I got wet when milk or cider spilled out of a knocked over goblet or glass. I always wore a thick flannel protector under my pretty cloth. I was quite beautiful under these clothes. I was a rich dark wood, maybe mahogany or cherry or walnut. A carved trim was etched all around my edges. My size was for a family of six and I fit perfectly into the Mill Street dining room.

I began to fail, though, as my legs wobbled and my old friends, the chairs, were even frailer. One day we were all taken for a ride. Those years were the best and the most interesting ones a beautiful table like me could ever have.

I am Dining Table 2. I came to Mill Street in a truck with all my friends; china closet, buffet, server, and six gold upholstered chairs, one of them with arms. It was great to leave the auction house. I have a lot of work to do now. I inherited some lovely coverings from the previous occupant, and as time went by I acquired some new and lovely ones. One was a white Swiss batiste cloth with white appliqued flowers on it. Once I was dressed up in pure Irish linen with napkins to match. There were lots of fancy affairs in my time; weddings, anniversaries, graduations, christenings, and parties, parties, parties. I wore Waterford now and sterling silver, a big sugar bowl and always ready to go with a little cup with alphabet cubes in it with numbers. Scrabble and it only took two minutes to see how good you could be at it.

My chairs were reupholstered a couple of times – once by the head of the house. What a tedious job that was! All those tacks that had to be hammered in just the right place! Ugh! We were all quite beautiful. Made of rosewood and walnut burl – something I understand you cannot get anymore except in some already made old furniture- with lovely wood carved designs we were quite large though, and so server went upstairs to a bedroom where it had plenty of room.

In 1993, we all went to different places. China closet now hold a TV console in Manasquan where she is the center of attention. Server lives in basking Ridge looking as elegant as ever and still works, serving hard. I am not sure where buffet is, nor do I know exactly where I am now, but I know exactly how I can find out. Just go to Google.Com, but in my world you spell that O’Dea and then do GPS.

The Dining Room by Elizabeth O’Dea Kennedy

My O my I never shall see a dining room as charming as thee.

A mammoth table is center stage with a hanging lamp by Tiffany.

There’s a buffet table against the wall whose drawers house cutlery, pictures of brides.

A silver domed turkey tray sits on top with elaborate candlesticks at its sides.

A large hanging mirror reflects it all.

Four large windows form a bow, each with a view–it’s quite a show.

In spring the forsythia can be seen.  The next frames a hundred foot evergreen.

Then comes a slope to the erstwhile brook, the fourth a passage, no need for a screen.

A china closet with an interesting drawer filled with bank books, check books, matchbooks galore

Stores glasses and dishes,  treasures for sure.

The tea cup-topped server stands ready to brew from a silver service–magnificent too.

Then a glass enclosed breakfront proudly displays valued possessions, a sight to be praised.

And last but not least adorning the wall, a Parisian scene comes to the fore.

This charming room remains no more but lives on and on in the deep heart’s core.

The Hall Closet by Susan Dorsey O’Dea Boland

It is hard to talk about just one room or just one object when it comes to 250 Mill Street. There was a little round red table in the kitchen where you sat only for a serious one-on-one with Mom.  When you sat at the dining room table with your morning coffee, you could see the rhododendrons through the dining room windows. Rhododendron leaves curl in a direct relationship with the temperature  allowing you to decide which coat to wear to school by how tightly the leaves were curled.  The coffee table in the living room was a large slab of polished Connemara marble which my father shipped from a quarry which he had visited in Ireland.  There was a wall of books in the den which included three or four sets of encyclopedias on the lower shelves and above that a large and diverse collection of novels, biographies, poetry, and short stories.  These are all very dear memories of the house on Mill Street in which my parents raised their seven children. I have walked through this house in my mind trying to find that one thing that would truly summon up for me my experience of growing up as the youngest of their seven children. I have decided that this would be the downstairs hall closet.

If I were to show you a floor plan of this house, you could see that the hall closet was situated in the center of the ground floor. The closet was at the physical core of the house. It was the width of a typical one-door closet, but it was double the typical closet in its depth.  Everyone’s coats, a couple of umbrellas, and numerous pairs of winter boots were in this closet, as well as the vacuum cleaner.  The phone – this was the 1960s and the house had one phone- was on a little table near the hall closet and important phone numbers were scribbled in pencil on the inside part of the closet door.

We all reached an age, usually at the start of our teens, when we wanted to talk to our friends on the phone in private.  When this happened at 250 Mill Street, the only place to talk where no one else could hear you was in the hall closet.  You would have to tell whoever called you to wait a minute while I get in the  closet, and then you would  set yourself up as comfortably as you could way back on the vacuum cleaner and close the door TIGHT before you would say to whoever – OK I can talk now. These conversations would last until someone else expecting a call knocked on the door and said Get off the phone, Susie!

But there was something wonderfully exciting about sitting in the dark on the vacuum cleaner way back in the hall closet.  While in that closet I was creating the new grown-up me on the phone with my high school friends who all knew me as Susan. But when I left the closet and wandered out, maybe into the den where Dad would be watching TV and smoking a cigar, I was once again Susie, the baby of a wonderful family. As I began to make my way through my teens, the hall closet showed me how to move  between these two worlds  as the red kitchen table, the rhododendrons, the Irish marble, and the row upon row of books in the den  were always right there for me to safely return to when Susan’s world wasn’t quite right.  I could always go home.

One day the kitchen door replaced the closet door, when I eagerly left 250 Mill for  so many  far-away places.  On my wedding day, I left 250 Mill Street by the front door on the arm of my brother, as my father had already passed away.  Eventually, life takes all of us away from home to be with our new friends and  on to our own families. But whenever I returned to 250 Mill Street to visit my mother,  Susan remembered what it was like to be Susie growing up within those beautiful gracious  rooms.

If I could walk into 250 Mill Street today, I might just crawl into the hall closet and sit myself down way in the back like I used to, closing the door tight.  I cannot remember one conversation that I had with any one while I sat on the vacuum cleaner, nor would I be trying to.  Rather, I would pretend that upon opening the closet door I could walk back into the kitchen with the little round red table, the dining room windows framed by rhododendrons, the living room with its slab of polished Irish marble, and the den with its row upon row of books.  In the end, though, I think I would be left in the dark to wonder…….why in the world were we all in such a hurry to grow up?

250 by Thomas O’Dea

When I think of “250″ , which is often,  I have only happy memories and realize how much of my adult successes stemmed from spending the first eighteen years of my life in that home. 250 provided me not only with shelter and sustenance as any house can, but more important it provided me with membership in a family. Within that group I felt loved, wanted and deserving.

Whenever I was away from 250 I would  look forward to returning.
Always happy to bound up the front steps after a long walk from the bus stop or returning from a movie or pizza with my grammar school friends in town . Later on when in high school parking the car in the garage and walking in the back door, always unlocked, and Mom and Dad asleep confident that I would do the right thing and arrive home safely. At 250 there was an atmosphere of comfort and security. This was created not by the house but by those living in the house. My parents, brothers and sisters. They liked me and told me they liked me not with words but with loving acts. There was never any deep  hostility or jealousy from any of my siblings.

I noted only respect and admiration. Is it any wonder I felt I could achieve anything  as a youngster? I well realize the nurturing environment I experienced at 250 was created and continued by my Mother and Father. Somewhere in their  past it was instilled in them the value of “family” and the necessity of creating not only a safe and secure environment for one’s family but an environment also filled with love respect and devotion. It is no accident that my brothers and sisters continue to be so close and caring about each other.

In the mid 14th century a man built a home for his family. It was the O’Dea castle in County Clare, Ireland. Built for his family ,its strong walls sheltered and protected his family. The perils may have been a little different at that time but the purpose of that castle was the same. To enable his family to be safe, secure and to give them the opportunity to grow, prosper and pass to the next generation of O’Deas the traditions and values he believed in. Several generations later in County Bergen New Jersey another O’Dea built his castle for the same reasons. We all were a part of it and what a glorious experience it was.

Rainbow Part II

December 22, 2011

December 22, 2011

When I am teaching sentence patterns to my students, I always stumble on this simplest of sentences.

The dress is green.

dress is, of course, a noun, with The being the article preceding  the noun.  At this point in class, we have already talked about action verbs and linking verbs, so my students identify is as the verb, and they know it is a linking verb, as well.

But green, or any color I decide upon that day,bewilders me. In this sentence pattern, if green is a noun, it is a noun complement and  if green is an adjective, it is an adjective compliment. My students have already been introduced to this idea in easier sentences like these:

The woman is beautiful.   Beautiful is an adjective complement.

The woman is a doctor.  Doctor is a noun complement.

But as I stand at the board in front of my class and study the sentence about the color of a dress, my mind starts to generate so many other  sentences using color —- The woman is green (inexperienced).  The woman is blue (sad). The woman is red with anger.  The woman is white as snow.  The woman is black. Color is complex, but my students  just want an answer  – not a theoretical debate – so I usually explain that  green  is an adjective complement because it describes the dress. Sometimes I see just a shadow of doubt pass over some faces, usually my Asian students, most usually Japanese or Korean, who have another  sensitivity to color but who would never question their teacher.

Is color – green, red, yellow -  always an adjective?  The dictionary first gives a string of definitions for green as an adjective, saying that  green is the color of foliage, green is verdant, or green is not ripe, as in This peach is still green. However, the dictionary moves on to define green as a noun, with the first definition getting down to the brass tacks. Green (noun) is the color between blue and yellow on the spectrum, an effect of light with a wavelength between 500 – 570 nm.

Color is a complex phenomena. Each thing in this world is a play of energy and this play consists of electromagnetic waves – waves which flow in different frequencies. All colors are present in each thing in this world, but the colors are unseen because the object – the thing itself –  absorbs those colors.  The one color that an object rejects is the color we see it dressed in. In other words, the dress is green because the dress has absorbed yellow and blue and all other colors in the spectrum, but the dress rejects green. So, it is in this rejection of green that the dress is green.

So I could argue that green,   in    The dress is green    is a noun compliment, as that green refers to the effect of light with a wavelength between 500 – 570 nm!

I have recently found myself in places drenched with color, most usually picturesque places brimming with light and subtle shades. When in these surroundings I have found myself trying to better  comprehend color and its underlying principle, which is new to me, with the underlying principles of  a language, which for me is more familiar territory. Languages are designed over hundreds and hundreds of years by its speakers, and the languages which speakers create  for themselves manifest ideas inherent in their culture.  My students must be taught English sentence patterns which are based on the Subject/Verb/Object  pattern because  in their first languages the pattern may be Verb/Object/Subject  as in Is green dress! But differences between cultures manifested through language run much, much deeper than structure. For example, Gaelic, a language heavily  influenced by the Druids, does not allow for any expression of ownership, as in the Druid world, no one owned anything. So my husband is expressed as the man at me, and  my house is expressed as the place where I am staying.

 There is much I can  understand of another culture through studying  the design of its language, but I find myself struggling to understand my creator through the design this world – specifically, color.  How does this design–rooted in my only being able to see what is rejected- manifest my creator? What is it that this divine spirit is trying to tell me?

On reflection, I know I am guilty of looking at a person and seeing only what they are rejecting rather than trying to see and understand what they have absorbed. The student who aggressively questions a final grade, a young man who wears his pants low, so low that it is way past my acceptance of  decency, a relative who tells jokes I cannot laugh at; I only remember them for what they are rejecting that I have absorbed – and I (arrogantly) feel they should absorb, too.

But then I am brought back to that rainbow on that mountain. Who could witness a rainbow and not believe in the goodness, the inherent goodness of the world in which we live? In that arc of prismatic colors in the heavens created by the reflection of  light in a soft and mellow mist of water – just there  nothing is absorbed and nothing is rejected. The creator’s complete palette is  in plain sight, for a moment, maybe two,  to be witnessed.

 

Home for the Holidays

December 15, 2011

Heading home for the holidays? Out of all my friends and acquaintances, I can count on one hand those who are natives of Tidewater. The rest of us routinely pack up the car for the long trek home for the holidays. I remember doing that for quite some time, but I’d like to tell you why I stopped.

I remember walking the oak-shaded trees of my New Jersey hometown holding my young son’s hand. We would head out from Gram’s house for the fifteen minute walk to Main Street, where we could get a bowl of home-made ice cream. The sidewalks which we followed to town were cracked and buckled, not so much from age as from the huge roots of those oak trees. My son would ask for the same stories each visit. About my best childhood friend who lived in the house across the street whose parents still live there. About the people next door who knew my family before I was born, and still live there. About climbing trees that were big when I was little whose very roots were now ripping up the sidewalk. He would sigh and dream aloud to me about what it would be like to grow up in such a place, where nobody moved, where Gram lived around the corner, where Aunt Reeny’s ear was a bike ride away, where cousins lived in the next town. And he would promise me and himself aloud, that when he grew up, he would raise his family in a place just like this. A place with strong and deep roots.

That’s when I’d start to worry. A mother wants to give her children everything they wish for, especially aunts and uncles who are a part of their daily life. But my life had taken me far away from my immediate family, as it has for so many of my friends. What does this transient lifestyle do to our children? Dragging them around the country, the world – two years here, a year there. Was this fair? At that point those oak trees seemed to come alive, like that scene in The Wizard of Oz, telling me in a deep oak-tree voice that I was making one big mistake. Nature simply did not intend for children to be raised like that.

After years of worrying about this, I found myself in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. There was a magnificent old banyan tree in the back yard of our house. A banyan tree does not have a traditional root system like the oak tree. On the contrary, as the banyan’s branches grow out and up toward the sun, a vine will sprout from the branch and make its way from the branch to the ground, where it will root. Through this natural rerooting system, the vine grows to form another supporting trunk for the tree. As a result of this system, one banyan tree will appear, at first sight, as a stand of trees until you get under it and look up, only to discover it is but one tree.

My handful of friends who are natives of the area are the oak trees, and it really is nice to know that there are still some of them around. But the rest of us, it appears to me, are banyan trees, putting down roots wherever we happen to find ourselves. No rules of nature are being broken; the children will be OK. It won’t be easy, but it’ll be OK. The banyan tree allowed me to understand that, and those big old oak trees up in New Jersey don’t intimidate me anymore.

On a little league bleacher several years ago another Mom and I were swapping stories. Hers will help me make my point clearer. It was a Christmas long ago, and she and her husband were up to three or four kids – all under the age of 8 or 9. Her husband was packing the car for the long road trip to spend Christmas with his folks. The four-year old appeared at the door and said “Daddy, where are we going?” His father responded that they were all going home for Christmas. Then the little boy said “But, Daddy, I thought this was home.” Her husband then unpacked the car.

Because that Christmas it was.

AJ and Annette

December 2, 2011

025

 

Every weekday morning, shortly after I have opened my office door and turned my computer on, I walk down the hallway to the supply room to make myself a cup of coffee. On Tuesdays and Thursdays, AJ and Annette are always sitting at the table just outside the supply room, she reading the newspaper, eating a snack, he strapped into his wheelchair, chatting with her. AJ has trouble speaking. He speaks very loudly, and I had heard his voice quite a lot as it carried down the hall to my office.  I could never understand what he was saying, but I think this was because I walked by too fast or did not listen long enough because I would see Annette watching his face and nodding her head as she spoke with AJ, engaged and in complete comprehension.

Annette takes exceptional care of AJ. She wheels him to his class before it starts, picks him up when it ends, feeds him his lunch, wheels him to the library, and chats with him between his classes. They seem to have quite a friendship and it is beautiful to watch. One fine autumn day the sun was shining, the sky was blue, and the air was fresh. As I walked to another building for one of my classes, I spotted the two of them. She was sitting on a bench overlooking a pond and AJ was pulled up close to her in his wheelchair. Annette was spoon feeding AJ his lunch. I find myself wondering if AJ’s mother knows how well her son is looked after. I guess because I am a mother I have those thoughts.

I can pretty much see AJ’s problems. He does not have control of his arms and legs, so they are strapped down in his wheelchair. I suspect that he also does not have control of his tongue, which accounts for his difficulty in articulating sounds. One cannot walk by AJ without admiring him. With all his limitations, with all his struggles, he gets up and gets on with it each day.

Nobody can see my problems. Sometimes I wish my problems were as visible as AJ’s. Perhaps then people would be kinder, more forgiving, more gentle with me. Perhaps I would even have an Annette who completely understood my burdens and stayed beside me all day. But when I take a long honest look at the students coming and going on my community college campus, I understand that I am not the only one with invisible problems. And with all our limitations, with all our struggles, we all get up and get on with it each day.

I have AJ and Annette to thank for this lesson. So one morning last week on my march to the coffee pot, I presented them each with a bar of chocolate. Annette sweetly thanked me. Then, as clear as a church bell,  AJ belted out “God Bless You”.

God Bless us all.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.