Sunday, June 13, 2010

Uncle George


George, circa 1905

Next in line in the family was I think my uncle George, maybe Lawrence was next, I am not sure at this point. Uncle George carries with him an air of mystery. From what I heard from my mother and other relatives he was afflicted in his early years by epilepsy, and he had what was termed “convulsions” as a baby. What the term really signified I don’t know. This facet of his life was well known and talked about. But there was some other secret of which my mother, my aunt Laurine, [and] my sister Vivian knew that was never discussed. Doubtless other members of the family also knew. What this secret was is forever hidden, all the persons who knew are now dead.

I speculate that it might have been something of which the family was concerned that it mot be known to members of the Swedish community. Was it connected with the one term he spent at Gustavus, a disastrous affair romantically, an overt expression of homosexuality? Was it possibly that he was not the child of Emma and Jonas at all but of relatives and illegitimate? Was he perhaps the child of my grandfather but not my grandmother? The Peterson family were a group of persons who developed gray hair, even white hair early in their years. Uncle George didn’t. In life he was an unkempt, often unshaven shambling figure with a shrunken face and rather claw-like hands. He died sometime in his 50s and I was amazed when I viewed him in his coffin as it stood in the parlor at my grandmother’s house. His dark hair was neatly combed and facially he was much better looking than his brothers Lawrence, Serenus and Milton, who ranged in appearance from really odd in the case of Serenus to mundane in the case of the other two. He didn’t look like a Peterson male at all.

During his early life on the farm he was sickly but he did at times participate in the farm labor. I suppose he finished the eight years in country school and as I mentioned he did attend Gustavus briefly. He accompanied the rest of the family when they moved off the farm and lived the rest of his life as more or less a recluse in my grandmother’s house. He did the gardening around the house, mowing the lawn and tending to some chickens in the barn at the rear of the lot. Toward the end of his life I think he stopped mowing the lawn, uncle Carl took over; I have a vague recollection of being assigned the task of mowing the lawn by uncle Carl.

As I have written uncle George spent a good share of each day in his bedroom adjacent the sleeping porch in the upstairs of my grandmother’s house. At mealtimes he would not join the rest of the family at the kitchen table (or the dining room table when guests were present). Instead he would come down to the kitchen, pour himself a cup of coffee from the pot that was always on the stovetop and have a crust of bread. He was very thin and I suspect suffered from malnutrition. Maybe that was what eventually caused his death in his mid-50s. There are some pictures of large family gatherings in which he appears, but as a rule he shunned the company of anyone even close relatives. Occasionally when one of his minister brothers visited they would spend some time with him. Counseling? My sister Vivian has said that my uncle Carl treated him without compassion. Typical of the brusque manner oftentimes of my namesake uncle.

I can recall the day my uncle George died. It was during the summer and for some forgotten reason I wan on the scene at my grandmother’s house. Uncle Carl had left the house to go to the post office. Why was he not off doing his farm tasks? I don’t know. Maybe the family realized that my uncle George was in extremis and uncle Carl had stayed in Gowrie. Anyway I was standing outside the side door to the house and my aunt Laurine came out of the door quite distraught and conveyed the news that uncle George had died. How she knew I am not sure. She asked me in a peremptory way to go and find my uncle Carl. I was minded not to go, after all he had only gone to the post office and would doubtless be back shortly. Which he was as I made the first steps toward downtown. What transpired after that I don’t recall. After the funeral as the relatives and family friends were having the inevitable coffee hour after the cemetery service, my uncle Carl sat in the chair he habitually occupied on the wide front porch of my grandmother’s house in morose solitary silence. Maybe ruing how he had treated his brother in life and was not feeling pangs of remorse.

As a young boy I recall being at my grandmother’s house along with my mother (as perhaps after a meeting of the missionary society when I had been required to attend the junior missionary group) and I would be gently asked to go and play checkers with my uncle. Which I invariably did. I must have played a lot of games with him over the years. He typically won. I recall vaguely that the set of checkers had one piece missing which had been replaced by a button. Where did we play? I cannot remember. Was it on a table in the bedroom? It was in the bedroom that I first saw a pair of nail clippers. My uncle George used them on one of his misshapen fingernails. In the household of my parents, the implement used was always a pair of scissors. I recall having my father ask me to cut his fingernails. He was not at all dextrous with his hands and could not do the job himself. Vincent says that he took played checkers with my uncle George. At a certain age I no longer did. I can recall being told that my uncle George had told my mother that I had stopped playing the game his him. In a wistful way.

What is my reaction now to my uncle? His life was a tragedy in part because of his physical history and disability but also because of the whole milieu of the Peterson household. Did he have the fervent Lutheranism of his siblings? He never showed evidence of it as did his brothers and sisters. In any psychological study of the Peterson family he would play a significant part because of the mystery that surrounds him.

Thursday, June 10, 2010

Aunt Esther


Esther, circa 1905

The second child in the Peterson family was my aunt Esther. She never married, indeed I have no hint that any romance ever entered her life. I seem to recall that sometime in her early adulthood, she made some money as a seamstress. Later on she worked as a domestic servant for the Hubbell family in Des Moines. How she entered this work I have no idea. The Hubbell family was well off economically and I think influential politically in the Iowa of the times. Aunt Esther was the cook for the other servants. There was another cook for the members of the Hubbell family themselves. My impression is that there were maybe half a dozen servants employed by the Hubbells. I have a vague impression that some time in my youth I was taken for a ride in the city of Des Moines and one of the sights pointed out to me was the Hubbell mansion.

Subsequently she worked at the Deaconess Institute in Omaha again I think as a domestic. She was never one of the deaconesses. During her employment there she suffered a mental breakdown and spent several years at the state institution in Cherokee for the mentally disturbed. She recovered enough to be discharged, returned to the parental home where she lived until she and uncle Carl went to the home in Madrid.

In her youth I believe she had some instruction in the piano and later on she was the first teacher that my aunt Ruth had. In her later years she was severely afflicted with arthritis and her hands were pretty gnarled. She used playing the piano as therapy for her condition, how successfully I have no idea. But it shows that she retained her knowledge of the piano to an advanced age.

After her return from Cherokee I believe she would on occasion help my mother with household tasks but I am not certain of this. For example she would come on the days when my mother did the weekly wash and assist her. One time, perhaps on one of these visits she and I were having lunch together. Lunch consisted of potatoes with gravy. There were not many potatoes so she said that she would have bread instead with the gravy. I thought this was odd, I had never had bread and gravy together.

She died at Madrid not long after uncle Carl died. Where my uncle was often a querulous inmate at the home, my aunt Esther was just the opposite — simply grateful for the care she was given.

Of all my grandmother’s children I think her life was the most tragic. Devoid of an occupation that contained any aura of interest, with her outlook on life crippled by her Lutheran belief. Through it all she was an uncomplaining soul.

Monday, June 7, 2010

Uncle Carl's story

After my grandfather died my uncle Serenus took over the farming on the acres. At least it was in sort of a loose partnership with my uncle Carl. Maybe it was during this period that my uncle rented the nearby Woodard place. After my uncle Serenus left the farm to become a minister uncle Carl took over the farming and never left it.

At one time he bought some farmland in Texas. Maybe he was induced to do this by some of the relatives in Texas. It was never a very productive operation. It was in an area where there was the possibility of oil discovery and I understand he did get some royalty income, but nothing ever came of it. I recall him in the fall of the year making a journey to Texas to discuss things with his tenant. Late in life he sold the property and donated the receipts to some church mission.

Although I shared the date August 6 as a birthday with my uncle, and of course as a consequence the same name, I always felt he had a closer attachment to my cousin Eugene than to me. I cannot cite a reason for this. It was just a feeling I have had. Perhaps the relationship stems from the time when Serenus was farming and Eugene was a child. My uncle Carl had a liking for children, mostly young ones he could hold in his lap and tell his one story to. The story about the two little boys who were out in a boat. They were named Pinch Me and Tickle Me. My uncle would say, for example Pinch Me fell out of the boat. Who was left? The child would respond and he would be either pinched or tickled. I have used this story on my three daughters.