Tuesday, December 29, 2009
Merry Christmas from the Beales
Here are Meagan, Peter and I in the our "Game Room," with its chilly floor, on Christmas morning. (Several of you have mentioned how nice and cool that floor was in the summer--as indeed it was--but it was a little less welcoming in the winter.) Peter got a chemistry set that Christmas, I got an art set (which had no impact whatsoever on my artistic talent) and I think Meagan got a pink fridge and sink. My sister-in-law Lori found this and 80 other photos among my Dad's things, and she put them on a disc for us. In the year this photo was taken, we only had one tree, down in the game room, but in future years we had two--one up in the living room, one down here--so we could display all of Dad's ornaments. I still have a number of his special ornaments, but I have to admit to having a fake tree. (My argument is, you can display the ornaments better on a fake one.) Among Dad's papers Lori also found a lovely note from Linda to my parents remembering our Christmas tree and detailing her attempts to replicate that tree with her own family. So Happy New Year to you all. We are looking forward to seeing you in August!
Tuesday, September 1, 2009
Mr Beale and Mr Seidel
One day after a family vacation to Cape Cod, Mr Beale wistfully said that he would love to move permanently to the cape and he had found a house near the water on one and a half acres but it was too pricey at $30,000!
On another bus ride into town, Mr Beale lamented that he had run out of ideas after five years, for a client that made religous candles in upstate New York. (How many ways can you make that interesting?!)
The year that the "Complete Book of Running" by Jim Fixx was published, Don suggested to Jack that instead of walking up to Giels, perhaps they should jog. Jack said,"That might be a little dangerous but we could run up the hill behind our houses and then down from Farmview." Picture the men with their wingtip shoes, suits, and HATS!
Thursday, August 27, 2009
Late summer evenings
Sunday, August 23, 2009
Letters to Linda
I found several letters about Jackie’s birthday party. I remembered making the vases as favors for Jackie's party, but forgot that my big brother helped with that. Please disregard my commentary on the brother’s vase. Must have been something I heard someone say (won’t say from whom) since I can’t imagine I had any categories for Freudian vases at that age:
I remember that guests were to draw pictures of Jackie’s inner self. The pictures lined the walls going up the stairs. Here’s mine. Please disregard the bit about worms and realize that I was trying to capture Jackie’s nurturing spirit:
Sunday, August 16, 2009
Chapel Gate Swim Club
As you can see from the picture, Chapel Gate does not look all that different. The clubhouse is much bigger and tennis courts have been added where we used to play volleyball ( I remember that many times the 'old' men would play against us young guys and kick our butts consistently). The high diving board is gone and the entrance to the club is now almost totally hidden from Glen David Drive by trees. There is just one small stone pillar with a sign that says “Chapel Gate Swim Club”. Other than that, it looks pretty much the same. The club was not open at the time I took the picture so I could only get parking lot shots. Anyway, it brought back many fond memories.
Monday, August 10, 2009
Thursday, July 30, 2009
Something funny happened at the museum...
On Wednesday morning, following our wonderful night in Greenwich Village (forgot to mention that that's where the dinner was), Michael and I went up to the Met. We are culture starved in Naples, and just had to get up there to see the Impressionists before heading back to Bristol. So as we are walking into an empty room--empty except for three guards--my phone goes off. My ring tone is "Born to Run" by Bruce, and the guards start laughing and singing along with it. You won't believe it, but it was Janice Anthony on the line--did she know about the mini-reunion? Don't know--I was too embarrassed to talk in the museum. So I will catch up with her. But the NEXT funny thing...
Linda, Nancy, Walter and Wendy meet in NYC
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
Hello from the GVDers in NYC
Dear Wendy,
Thank you, too for everything. I liked Michael a great deal and enjoyed his accounts of Olde New York :). I was really moved by your amazing memory of so many Green Valley things; especially my mother and your interest in and compassion for her experiences fleeing the Nazis. That really means a lot to me. Our condolences on the recent loss of your mother, who was a powerful and dynamic woman who clearly contributed great values and a lot of drive to you, Peter and Meaghan. This reconnection that Linda started among all of us is really very special and I look forward to more reunions--whether with you and Michael or with the whole gang next July on GVD.
Best,
Walter
On Wed, Jul 29, 2009 at 2:06 PM, Wendy Needham
Dear Walter: thank you so much for dinner last night. It was great to see you again after, what, 45 years, and it was a pleasure to meet Tania. I'm sorry I didn't get to talk to her at greater length, but there was so much to catch up on. I hope she had a good time--I know that Michael did, despite his trepidation at being thrown in with the old neighborhood friends.
Looking forward to seeing you at the next reunion, whenever that may be!
All the best,
Wendy
Wendy B. Needham
Monday, July 20, 2009
Green Valley Gazette -July 2009
Fortyish years later, BIG things are still happening. To wit:
Ellen Little called Linda Seidel on her cell phone by accident this past Sunday. They both enjoyed her mistake and Bill Little yelled a "Hi Linda" too.
Mary Ellen Chesley and her family are moving in August to Maryland and a BBQ in their honor is being held at Susan Seidel's house. The guests attending include: Anthony Fisher and family, Linda and Phil, Shelley and John and family. Our Boston contigency will miss them! (This actually is BIG after 25 years in Boston)
Shelley Fisher and Linda kayaked last week in Truro and planned possible activities for the 2010 reunion. HaH! just wait 'till you hear what we cooked up!
Meagan and Linda enjoyed a very long phone conversation in late May.
Nancy, Walter, Wendy and Linda are currently choosing the restaurant in NYC for their mini reunion July 28.
John Chesley is sleeping at the Herman's apt this week in Boston.(While working at the Ropes and Gray Boston office)
The full Thompson clan is getting together in August for a reunion.
Saturday, May 30, 2009
Green Valley generations
It would be interesting to figure out names for the age groupings we had on the street, as a sort of sociological tool – or at least a less bulky way of talking about similarities and differences among our childhoods. Still waiting to hear how the generation that came after us experienced similar and different aspects of living on Green Valley.
I've also found it interesting to hear the perspective of people who bridged the various age groupings. For example, David was very involved with the older kids, but became friends with the next "generation."
Sunday, May 24, 2009
Inside view
I ransacked my dusty mental files for images of our old homes. I hope the rest of you will correct and fill in my sketchy memories.
1. Hall/Thompson: I remember a kidney-shaped dressing table in my sisters’ bedroom, which I associate with playing Quaker school. By the way, someone mentioned our beagle (Frisky?). We also had a long-time terrier named George, which provided endless fodder for teasing by our teachers, "You have a brother named Flip and a dog named George? Our animals had their own Christmas stockings, made of red felt just like ours.
I also remember playing hotel -- posting numbers on all the bedroom doors, and opening our front door and coat closet door to 45° angles to form an "elevator."
I remember Linda and I cutting orange footprints from construction paper and taping them up and down my walls to decorate my chocolate brown and hot pink bedroom.
I remember us girls sitting in that bedroom (Ellen’s and mine at that time?) comparing schedules after the opening day of high school.
Probably my favorite part of our home was the cherry tree in the backyard. In the spring, I looked up through my orange café curtains to see white blossoms against the blue sky.
I also remember sleep-outs in our backyard. I accompanied my parents when they shopped for a caboose, hoping to put it in our camping spot in our backyard, as a guesthouse.
In the woods behind our house was the Fallen Tree. I remember Tom standing there, with surprising patience, coaxing Lynne, Diane (Joseph twins from Farm View), and me to jump from it.
2. Landig/Shug/Bradley: I can’t remember ever being in their house, although I did once see a yellow warbler in a tree in their yard.
5. Burton/Aruffo/Chesley: I remember watching family movies there. I also remember several of us working with the Chesley kids and their dad to dust the house once.
6. Ruby/Mattox: I remember being in the living room while Mr. Mattox was giving a youth group talk, and rudely giggling throughout his message.
9. Beale: I remember the delight of walking into the Beale’s home, from the door along the driveway. It was a refreshingly cool room after being outside in the summer heat. I remember it as being lined with books (but may have it confused with our lower-level room). I remember playing Risk in the living room and wonderful fragrances from Meagan’s baking. It seems there are foods I associate with the houses where I spent the most time. Here, it is peanut butter cookies with chocolate kisses in the center.
10. Seidel: I remember the Spritz cookies kept in tins in the garage, lazing in the hammock reading Archie comic books, and playing ping-pong in the basement (seems to me Ellen and David had a score of 18-12 and tried to remember the name of the war that occurred during that year – could be a trick of my memory because I'm sure they're much too smart for that). I also remember playing Match game, some Barbie board game, and a car game in which we led magnetic cars along roads by using rods with magnets on the end.
I remember the Laura Ingalls Wilder and Frances Hodgson Burnett books on shelves in the bedroom (books I was too much of a tomboy to read until I read them to my sons). It seems to me that the furniture with the shelves once ran through the middle of the room to divide Linda's and Susan's halves.
The foods I associate with this house are post-Thanksgiving cranberry ice, candy cane cookies, and the cut-out cookies we decorated (before baking, unlike my family’s cookies, which were iced and decorated after baking).
11. Fisher: I remember Shelley’s bookshelf (board and brick?) With interesting knickknacks: a painted wooden horse (that looks Swedish in my foggy memory) and angel chimes. I remember an entire dresser in the bathroom filled with brushes, combs, and hair accessories. I remember aspirin for children (St. Joseph's?) in some flavor I thought was delicious, kept in the medicine cabinet. I remember the hall closet with apricot brandy and a can full of money. I remember candles in the parents’ bedroom (and strings of beads?). I remember Anthony's first prize winning artwork on display near the aquarium. I remember the cello in the den. I remember taking turns standing on the picnic table to give impromptu speeches on topics shouted out by the audience. We were way ahead of our time. I remember sneaking in the pool one time when the parents were not home, putting our towels in the dryer so we wouldn't get caught, and getting caught anyhow.
I remember Alan squeezing tomatoes in the kitchen and teaching me how to de-vein shrimp. I also remember him out front, in his bathrobe, hosing a tree (which I remember as an apricot but I think someone has already corrected my misremembering -- in my fuzzy memory -- he was trying to protect it from frost). I remember the birch or birches. I remember Tally (otherwise known as Comment allez vous?)
I remember Jackie's birthday party (39th? 40th?) with little clay pots we made and filled with tiny straw flowers for guest favors. Guests drew pictures that we taped on the walls lining the stairways. We filled the pool with balloons which popped because the hot sun heated the air within them. I remember the long-needled Christmas tree covered with white lights, and the baby pines that lined the driveway (where we once found a baby rabbit).
The foods I associate with this home are NanNan cookies, mice (pie dough dotted with butter and sprinkled with cinnamon sugar, then rolled and baked), lemon squares, cinnamon-flavored hard candies kept in little candy dishes, and the gourmet Noodles and Hunt sauce. There is also a phase when Jackie made us all omelettes. Coke, of course.
Oh, yes, I remember the garage. And the very cool hamper at the bottom of the laundry chute, which looked like a cage or cell.
12. Richards: I was inside the Richards’ home on Halloween, but all I can remember is the Grandmother (having already written about her in the Family Census, I won’t repeat that here).
15. Putzie/Little: All I can remember about this house is the chairs on the front porch and flashing lights from my bedroom window to let Bill know when I had arrived safely home (then he would flash the lights from his room back to me).
16. Ambill/Przybylek/Killen: Even though I spent a lot of time babysitting the Przybylek kids and cleaning the Killen’s house, I remember almost nothing about this split level (except that the Killen’s had gorgeous, old, heavy furniture).
17. Moore: I remember playing with Rich (whom we called Richie then) on their swingset. He had this beautiful brown powder in a jar. He told me it was cocoa, so I ate some. It was dirt, which I spit out on the ground by the swingset, to the amusement of his watching siblings.
By the way, through my class reunion listing, I got the surface mail address for Rich Moore. I sent him a postcard asking him and his siblings to get on the blog.
I remember the day the Walters moved in. My mother thought they were so organized because she saw the painting on the mantle. Annie had just stuck it there, not knowing what else to do with it. Seems to me it was a country scene -- maybe a red barn or covered bridge. As I remember it, my first view of color television was in the Walter’s living room where we watched The Wizard Of Oz.
I remember my family having dinner at the Walters. When Doug and I went down to his room after dinner, Shelley and John were waiting for us. They had sneaked in through the garage.
Thursday, May 21, 2009
Monday, May 18, 2009
Snyder family at Hartwood
Jesse (27), Noah (29), AJ (21), Joel (24)
The day after Dan and Alicia's wedding, our family walked at Hartwood:
This street is your street
"This street is your street,
This street is my street.
From McCracken's sewer,
To Lewis’ sewer;
From Chesley’s pine tree,
To Fisher’s pool –
This street was made
For you and me.
From Fisher’s dogs,
To Thompson's cats.
From Seidel’s gerbils,
To Prezybylek’s brats …
This street was made
For you and me."
[Dan Przybylek, who was Dean at Allegheny Community College, wrote a reference for me (which I just unearthed), thus I can verify the spelling of his name. Disclaimer: I did not call the children of the neighbor -- who wrote such a kind reference for me -- brats.]
Green Valley Weddings
- I had forgotten that, at the end of our honeymoon, we visited Shelley and John at "Tree House," and Linda and Meagan somewhere in Boston.
I remember the earlier double Green Valley weddings (Bill and Ellen; Shelley and John) as having star-studded Green Valley casts, but was surprised by the Green Valley representation at our wedding. In addition to my family, the guestbook includes these Green Valley signatures:
- Susan Seidel.
- David Seidel.
- Patty Seidel.
- Don Seidel.
- Tom Seidel.
- John Chesley.
- Alan E. Fisher.
- Jackie Fisher.
- Shelley Chesley.
- Kevin Walter.
- Douglas D. Walter (and one of my bridesmaids, who later married on to the street).
- Jim Brady.
- Dee Brady.
- Linda Jane Seidel.
Photos indicate the presence of Roy, Annie, and Kevin Walter (I find it impossible to believe the photographer could have bypassed getting pictures of cute Carrie Kay).
The invitation list says that Babuccis were invited, but I don't remember them attending.
The rest of you were sorely missed.
Sunday, May 10, 2009
1966 Talbot
Dave's posting caused me to pull out my copy of the 1966 Talbot. I was the Business Editor and the only Green Valley Drive/Farmview Drive senior. However the other years are amply represented. I have even kept the typos.
Saturday, May 9, 2009
Central Elementary School 1962 - 1963
In its second edition, Tusky In Orbit was the Central Elementary school yearbook for 1962-1963. Wendy Beale was one of the student editors. Student names were listed by their picture. If they held a class office, it was indicated with one or two asterisks (for the semester) and the first letters to indicate President, Vice President, Secretary, Treasurer or Student Council. The following grades (teacher name) and children from Green Valley Drive and nearby are listed as spelled:
6th Grade (Ruth Mucha) - Ann Ammons *P, Wendy Beale, Sue Harbur, Ricky Richards **T.
6th Grade (William Garber) - Linda Hartzell **S.
5th Grade (Carol Gill) - Marilyn Matter, Danny Ruby *VP **P, David Seidel, Patty Winter.
5th Grade (Margaret Forsythe) - Dorris Ammons, Kenneth Hartzell *T.
4th Grade (Catherine Young) - Ellen Thompson **P.
4th Grade (Francis Mander) - Judy Hodil, Bruce Weston.
3rd Grade (Margaret Craig) - Wayne Brady, Joan Ruby.
3rd Grade (Gertrude McSwaney) - Megan Beale, Patty Harbur, Beverly Hartzell **SC, Ricky Winter.
2nd Grade (Rita Carboni) - Shelley Fisher, Leslie Joseph, David Matter.
2nd Grade (Helen Thomas) - Kathy Harbur, Bobby Hodil, Linda Seidel.
1st Grade (Mary Ellen Gotkiewicz) - Diane Joseph, Nancy Thompson *SC, **SC.
1st Grade (Nell Mason) - John Aruffo, Jayne Goerman, Lynne Joseph.
Kindergarten (Pauline Cassell) - Paul Aruffo, Linda Cummings, Anita Harbur, David McNearney.
Kindergarten (Judith Nicely) - Mark Ambill.
Thursday, May 7, 2009
Tuesday, May 5, 2009
3991 Green Valley Drive
Danny and Wendy sitting in a tree
The notification didn't seem to work, so in another attempt here is an item I've been saving up. Wendy says I was her first boyfriend and here is the evidence. Our little photo album had captions, and this photo was annotated with "Danny and Wendy sitting in a tree." Joanne claims it is in my own handwriting. It appears the album was put together a few years later, after we had already moved.
The photo was taken in Northway Village, where the Beales and Rubys lived before moving to Green Valley Drive. I'm not sure what to make of the Jul 59 stamp on the photo. If that is a date, I think it is well after our two families had moved to GVD. Maybe it was printed after it was photographed.