My father sold his Chrysler, Plymouth, Dodge, dealership in 1953 when both Chrysler and Plymouth began having problems. He decided to go back to school and finish his Master's Degree and took a teaching position with the U of I.
Part of this had to do with the birth of my brother, Tom, who had serious kidney problems and needed treatment that could be found at a clinic in Champaign, Illinois. I went with my parents to look at houses and I remember a dining room full of people sitting at a round table that seemed to be made of rock! They all were very kind and spoke to me while smiling and laughing.
We moved into that tiny two bedroom rental with a little picket fence around the backyard and a small sun porch off the front of the house. In the beginning my brother slept in a bassinet in the dining room, but when he needed a crib my parents took the closet door off of our bedroom and bought us bunk beds. The room was so small that the ladder to the top bunk ended up underneath the crib!
I loved living in this house. My dad had an office in the basement and he built us a playhouse in the rest of the basement with two big platforms under windows looking out over the rest of the basement. There was a big floor lamp outside his office door and one day, while trying to reach up and turn it on I got a very nasty shock! I still remember the buzz running through my hand and arm!
I was the oldest of three now and my mother gave me a rag and a can of Ajax cleanser and let me clean the bathroom floor. I had a ring just like my mother's engagement ring and like her I always took it off before cleaning, Then, one day, it slipped down the drain! I was inconsolable. My engagement ring from Daddy was gone. He took the whole sink apart and found that ring, making him my hero forever. Another task that my mother gave me was ironing Daddy's handkerchiefs. While the other children napped she ironed and I ironed right next to her with my own little ironing board and iron. Back in those day three year olds played with real tiny irons and even my toy stove could boil water! I remember how seriously I made each fold in the handkerchief while ironing out the creases.
My parents decided we should have a cat and my father brought home a gray tabby from the pound. They named it Pretty Soon, because pretty soon they would know if it was a girl or a boy. One morning I woke up and went into the kitchen where my mother excitedly had me look out the window into the backyard. There were cats everywhere! Cats sat on the roof of our garage, on the fence ledges and even on the swing set and sandbox. Mommy said they had all come to court Pretty Soon because she was the prettiest girl cat around. Then a few months later I woke up to another surprise. When Daddy got home from school he took me down to his office and showed me a whole box of tiny kittens!
Later my mother told me that Pretty Soon had taken a walk in a field full of kittens and picked out the ones she like best to bring home. I dreamed about that field of kittens for years.
One Saturday morning my mother dressed me in my best crinoline slip and fullest skirted dress. She combed my long curls and gave me white gloves to wear. I even had a tiny red and blue plastic shoulder bag with the head of a Scottish terrier in bas relief on one side. I had a date with Daddy! We went to a carnival and he tried to get me to ride the merry-go-round. It looked very fast, even the small one and I refused. On our way out a lady in a very tall wagon gave me an orange sherbet ice cream cone, but it dripped all over me and my father coaxed me into dropping it on the ground, saying he would buy me a hamburger.
On another Saturday my father took me to see the movie Pinnochio. We didn't have a television so this was the first moving picture I had ever seen. I will never forget how huge Monstro was. I have one other memory of going on dates with Daddy and this one was a long anticipated rite of passage. Once more I was dressed to the nines. We went to the pen store (which was probably a drug store.) I saw a carousel filled with ballpoint pens of every color and got to pick out the one I wanted. I picked a sky blue pen with a silver top and thus began my writing. I was so proud of that pen.
I remember one Christmas and one birthday in this house. For my birthday I received a baking set with tiny cake pans, a cupcake pan and small boxes of cake mix. I remember actually making one of the cakes and putting it in my electric stove's oven to cook, although I suspect my parents probably took it out and put it in the big oven when I wasn't looking. I had my first birthday party that year. My mother and I cleaned up all my dolls and stuffed animals. She even drew new eyes on the Dydee doll whose eyes I had scratched off and we lined them all up on the couch on the sun porch. Then my mother had each one knock on the door and I answered it and invited them in. Once they were all in the living room we played drop the clothespin in the milk bottle, but some of the dolls declined to play.
We got our milk every morning from the Milkman who arrived in a yellow truck pulled by a horse! On Easter that horse wore a bonnet that it got to eat later on. Waiting for the milk was a big event in our day.
On Christmas Daddy took us all for a ride in the car to look for Santy Claus. I remember wondering if every cloud might be him up in the sky, but then we went home and he had already been at our house! I had a beautiful dollhouse filled with furniture and people up on the dining room table! I played with that house for many years.
I remember the day my parents put us all in the backseat of the car and my brother threw his clown rattle out the window. We had to drive all around until we found it. Then we went to a store and waited in the car with Mommy while Daddy went inside. There were two little Chinese children and my mother used to tell stories of how we all chatted back and forth in spite of the fact that we spoke two different languages. That night a man brought a television to our house! It was a big, beautiful mahogany, piece of furniture with doors that closed to hide the screen when we weren't using it. Daddy turned it on and a tiny white horse with a man in a white hat and black mask galloped up the hill then reared up. I wanted my dad to open up the top of the TV and get them out so I could play with them!
Those were years where I was noticeably older than my siblings. My brother wore the seats out of all his clothes because he got around by scooting on his bottom, using his legs to pull him forward, but he got around. My parents gave him his first educational toy, a tiny wooden hammer and a little work bench where he could pound pegs in one side then flip it over and pound them back. He used the hammer to completely destroy the front of their radio/record player piece of furniture, leaving little round dents all over the front.
It was also years before infant car seats were more than a seat that hooked over the car seat with a steering wheel and horn. Once you were too big for that, you sat on the grown up seat. In front. And that was how my sister got her first nasty bump on the head. A bicycle drove in front of us and dad hit the brakes hard to avoid hitting him. My sister was thrown into the dashboard like a startled bird into a window.
All of our meals without dad were in the kitchen, but when he came home for lunch we ate in the dining room and I had to have exactly what he did, a cheese sandwich and a bowl of soup. I remember very little about eating in this house except that sometimes at night my dad would bring home a treat. I loved the Cheetos and I loved the strawberry ice cream with little pieces of frozen strawberries in them. I even loved the white coke. It was years later that I discovered this was seven up.
Just before I turned five we moved again. I remember going with my parents to look at houses and one house had a toy room with a stick horse I really wanted, but it turned out this house had been hit by a tornado the year before and my mother was very leery of it. Someone told her tornadoes never hit the same place twice but this house was hit again the next week.
We ended up moving in with my grandmother.