A year ago Mom had just celebrated her 90th
birthday and I don’t think any of us would have really believed that by
Mother’s Day this year, she would not be with us I think that pretty much all that can be
said about mothers and mothers day can pretty much be said but I just wanted to
acknowledge not only Mom, but the two Northen family Grandmothers. To say the least, they all lead hard lives,
but they too were young at one time and as beautiful in their day as many of
the younger Northen women in their twenties and thirties are today. Rather than seeing them as grandmotherly, I
think it is rather nice to think of them as young women who had many hopes and
dreams themselves.
This is a picture of Laverna S. Wilkins – aka Grandma
Wilkins – at 18. I never knew what S.
stands for, so I’m glad if anyone wants to fill me in. We all know about her having to raise eleven
kids and work at Kerr Glass company later in life, to boot. As for being young, Grandma always looked old
to me from the time I was little, but she was like a portrait, as the years
changed and everyone grew older, she never seemed to. When she came to visit me in Buffalo
in the 1970’s her hair was as black as it was when I was a child.
I never met my Grandma Northen, Mattie Lewis. Unlike Mom and Grandma Wilkins who made it to
90, she only lived to be 45. There are
few stories about her, though we all have heard the one about her drowning in
the river In this picture, though she is
in her wedding gown. At 22 she was three
years older than her husband, and as was common in her day, married in her
father’s home.
As I look at these pictures, I wonder what they must have
been thinking, what they thought their lives were going to be like, and what
secrets they kept themselves that we will never about.
1 comment:
Interesting to look back at those pictures in the context of mother's day. Thank you.
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