I have inherited my mother's collection of family history - filed somewhat haphazardly into folders bearing the family surnames. Tucked away between the crowded folders were spiral bound notebooks full of her familiar scrawlings - a trove of memories, musings and observations. I share this essay entitled My First Love.
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Florence "Mollie" Beach Sunday, May 7, 1939 |
By Barbara Fish Heimel
I fell in love with my cousin Mollie when I was very young. Her visits were exclamation points in the routine of everyday life. Delicious anticipation followed the announcement that she would be visiting for a few days. Here was an adult who actually paid attention to children, was interested in our lives and our concerns.
Mollie was the one of the older children in a large family, the eldest daughter of my father's sister, Ettie. Her actual name was Florence Spicer, named for her mother's sister. Her father nicknamed her Mollie when she was hardly past infancy because she was always jolly!
I think her life was far from easy. They lived in a house that was little more than a shack, no electricity or plumbing and darned little money. It was hard for me to see how she could be my cousin when she was as old as my mother. I eventually figured it out.
When I was hardly more than a baby, she took me to her home in Hornell for a week or so while Mother and Dad and the two older kids went on a vacation trip. That was the first of several visits.
I knew my Grandmother Fish through Mollie's tales of their relationship. Sadly, I could never make that deaf old lady hear anything I tried to say to her.
Mollie loved to sing and dance and when she was in town, there were people around most every evening, playing cards or singing around the piano. Mollie used to play by ear as she certainly never could have afforded lessons. She would sometimes play old hymns with rolling chords and encourage us to sing along.
She smelled wonderful and often wore an amazing red fox fur piece - a source of endless fascination with its beady glass eyes and magnificent bushy tail. Under the poor beast's chin was a clip that opened to fasten onto one of its dangling little black legs. I'm sure this was the height of fashion in the 1930s and I expect was all she had left of more prosperous days.
She identified herself as a grass widow, which meant there was no Mr. Beach around. She did, however, have a succession of gentlemen friends who were frequent visitors as well. Most of the men were Whitesville folks she had known for a long time, as had my dad. She had one son and never had a desire for any more.
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Mollie with one of her 'gentlemen friends' |
The suffering of childbirth was a perfect example to her of how men victimized women. I understood that to mean that male doctors refused to give any sort of pain relief to laboring women. I never did get the whole story on that. But, while she liked the company of men, she certainly didn't want one of her own. I also assumed that her husband had done her wrong, but I never felt it would be polite to inquire.
Countless times I went to Mollie for comfort when the world treated me badly. I could depend upon her to listen and sympathize and buoy me up, restoring my battered self confidence and wiping my tears. Then distracting me with tales of the exciting thing she had just read the night before and what did I think about it. And I was again a person of consequence when an adult would ask my opinion and listen thoughtfully to what I said.
When the banks failed in 1929, Mollie lost her savings and her home. Thereafter, she lived with different families as a practical nurse, looking after invalids or children. It grieved her greatly that she had no home.
She continued to spend vacations with us and how she and Dad would argue politics! She loved FDR and my Dad thought he was ruining the country. I really enjoyed their squabbling because each defended his or her position eloquently, but there was never any doubt of their affection for each other so the raised voices weren't scary. I still like a good argument, in fact.
In the early 1940s, Mollie. came to live in Coudersport to take care of an elderly couple. Upon their deaths, she was willed a tenant house on their property. She was so grateful and really enjoyed at last having a home of her own. When her own mother suffered a crippling stroke, Mollie brought her to this little house to care forher for the rest of her days.
She took great pride in being a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution and urged me to join also. Always interested in history, she joined the Potter County Historical Society soon after she had relocated to Coudersport and always attended their monthly meetings, often driving here and there to transport old folks who would otherwise not be able to get out for evening affairs.
Mollie eventually moved to Florida to live near her son and other family, helping to look after the 'old folks' in the trailer park. We went to see her several times, the last time in a nursing home, where she was still looking after the old folks. Not paying much attention to me, her face lit up when she saw Joe. "I don't know who you are," she said, "but you're a good looking man!"
She celebrated her 100th birthday in January 1991 and died in July of that year.
(Here's another picture of Mollie from my previous blog post. Brother Steve commented here about some of his memories of his mother's first love!)