Showing posts with label Pinehurst. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pinehurst. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 31, 2017

17 - A Date With Dephie

     


       Dephie worked for our family for a couple of my pre-school years.   We still lived on Poplar Street in a small two-bedroom house with a pretty basic room in the basement for you-know-who.   My parents were young, my father had just returned from the Navy, and his income was modest.  But in those days in the South, you could be fairly poor and still have live-in help.  

     Dephie was a prime example.   She cleaned house, did some of the cooking, all of the washing and ironing, and still managed to be a full-time nursemaid to me and my brothers.  Unfortunately she fell ill.  Very ill.  She was diagnosed around 1949 with cancer, and in those days you didn't much ask cancer of what, the unspeakable C-word sufficed to say the end was probably near!  

     My clearest memory of Dephie was when I was taken to see her at Moore Memorial Hospital in Pinehurst.  The hospital was then fully segregated with a wing in the back reserved for "colored".  Perhaps non-staff "whites" were not allowed there either, or maybe it was just that children --regardless of race-- were not permitted.   Whatever the case, my Aunt Frances' friend Rose (see Goodbye Rose), then the hospital's head nurse, sneaked my mother and me through a back garden where we remained outside, able to visit with Dephie through an open window.

     She laughed and joked with me, and she told my mother that her treatment was going well.  She said that they might not have to operate after all, that she hoped to be returning to Poplar Street back to her job soon.  

     Only she never did.  Rose later reported that Doctor Bowen had indeed operated and had removed her bladder along with other bits and pieces.  We never heard any more, and she was soon replaced in our household by Ethel.  
  
The Pleasants family, Poplar St. 1944
   I certainly cannot claim that Dephie's absence haunted me or that I gave her that much thought in the years that followed.  But as I got a little older, I guess around 13 or 14, I still remembered that hospital visit.  When I asked my parents what had ever happened to her, they explained that she had just disappeared and had undoubtedly died of the cancer.  I didn't feel they were especially evasive, it was just that they didn't seem to much care.  

     When I was a little older, in a mid-adolescent period of social consciousness, I remember seriously angering my father when I asked if he had paid Dephie any sick or severance pay.  In those days it was an insolent and rhetorical question.  

     So Dephie left our family around 1949.  Now let's fast-forward about 55 years.  

     My mother died in 1999, and my father joined her, at least metaphysically, four years later.  In the South, people drop by for condolence visits for several days after a funeral, almost always unannounced.  2003, the day following my Dad's interment, I was sitting on the porch with Dickie and his then-wife Jeanne when an unfamiliar middle-aged black man knocked on the door.  

     He explained that his mother was past 90, and he wanted to make sure he had found the right address before helping her from the car.  Was I the same Frank Pleasants who had once lived on Poplar Street?  It was Dephie, and she was superb.  I couldn't believe it.  Not only had her bladder been replaced by a pouch decades before it was common procedure, but she had given birth to two boys and outlived two husbands in the interim.  She was almost 93 and sharp as a tack.  A posthumous hats-off to Doctor Bowen would seem well in order!  

     She had been living in the country about 25 miles south of Aberdeen all these years.  She had often thought of us, she said.  She recalled what a chubby little baby Dickie had been, and she said that every once in a blue moon when she would come through Aberdeen, she'd see a fat man on the street and wonder if it might not be Dickie (she remembered fondly how Aunt Ruth had called him her little butterball).  She didn't seem to find it incongruous that Dickie had in fact turned into such a slender adult.

     She recalled a day about ten years earlier when she was thinking nostalgically about our family.  "It was raining and I was real blue.  I picked up the telephone book and said to myself, 'I'm just gonnah' call Miz Pleasants after all this time,'" she said.  She did, and they had their telephone reunion, but I had never heard about it.  Mother was probably already sick, herself, and had other priorities.  

     She recounted her life at leisure, and we spent a couple of hours reminiscing.  I was deeply moved and teared up both when she arrived and when she left.  The happy emotion was stronger than the sadness of losing my father.  

     I took her photo, and when I returned to Paris I sent it to her with a heartfelt note.  I never heard from her again.   It wasn't necessary, the pleasure rests intact.  She loved me as a small child, and her affection remained sufficient to search me out over a half century later as I, too, was fast slipping into old age.
-o-        
        
Your input is welcomed:  frank.pleasants@libertysurf.fr


CROSS REFERENCING … a look at other postings
Doctor Bowen and Moore Memorial Hospital were featured in "Doctor Bowen and Janette" from  Musings and Meanderings No.1;  Rose in "Goodbye Rose," Hotel Musings No. 61. Mother and Daddy and Frances were featured in "Stanley and Frances or the Guardian Angel," Musings No. 2; and Mother was also mentioned in "Hazeline and Josephine" from Musings  No. 8.  Frances and Rose were featured in "A Two-dollar Hamburger Under A Silvery Dome," Hotel Musings No. 4.  Aunt Ruth was featured in "Renata," Musings and Meanderings No. 4, and "Thanksgiving" from Hotel Musings No. 49  (to access, click on highlighted titles).





This is it, at least for the moment!

     With this, my Musings and Meanderings comes to an end.    I hope I'll find some more creative juice in the future for another blog adventure; for the moment I don't know what form that might take. 
   
     Many, many thanks to those who have followed these posts.  Your support and feedback have given me enormous pleasure.   It has been a special treat reconnecting with those who share a Sandhills connection and for whom there may have been a special resonance with my Aberdeen memories.

     So, it is au revoir for now, and hope to see you soon.


 

Thursday, March 31, 2016

8 - Hazeline and Josephine



Hazeline and Josephine, Midway 2003


     Hazeline and Josephine were twin sisters who sometimes looked after me when I was a small child.  They were little more than a dozen years my senior, so they would have still been in their teens then, and their job was presumably confined to baby sitting.  They were the children of Leanna who worked for many years for Renata Fairchild (see musings no. 4, "Renata").  Hazel and Jo sometimes worked for Renata also, helping out in the kitchen.

     Growing up in the Sandhills as black females was certainly no bed of roses in the 1940's.  As soon as they were old enough, they headed North where life was supposed to be easier.  In many ways it was, but they were disappointed to discover that the same racism they had grown up with was just as prevalent in Philadelphia or New York as back in Aberdeen.   Prejudice manifested itself differently, often more discreetly, but it was never far away.          

     They eventually found relative financial security, working in a variety of factory jobs, sometimes taking domestic work. They had several husbands between them, and plenty of children and grandchildren.  When I next saw them in the 1990's, Hazel was already a proud great grandmother.

     For as soon as they were able to retire, they had what seemed to me to be an odd dream --to move back to Aberdeen!   And even odder in my view, the first person they thought to reacquaint themselves with was one of their old employers, my mother.

     Mother was never anything of a liberal, but neither was she particularly retrograde.  During the South's difficult period of desegregation, after the federal laws had long been passed, she tended to say that she wasn't against change, just thought it needed more time.  Most of the blacks felt that a hundred years or more was plenty long enough!

     Things may have been tough when the twins were growing up, but by the time they returned as mature women, life in the South had profoundly changed.  More than the North, they told me more than once.  For people like themselves, of modest means, living in the Sandhills now seemed infinitely preferable to the alternative in a big city ghetto.   I think Mother was as happy to see them as they were to see her, and she enthusiastically  piled them into the car, and off they went to visit all the old ladies --Juanita, Gala, Ulma and the others-- who had once been employers to them or to their mother. Everyone was truly delighted to see them and to welcome them back to the area.

     As children, they couldn't do most of the things that I would have taken for granted.   You tend to  read more about separate water fountains or riding in the back of the bus, but these were ultimately minor inconveniences when you think that they couldn't even go into the drugstore to spend their money.  And of course they weren't allowed anywhere near the town lake!  So it must have been a special satisfaction to return to their hometown with all the rights they were once deprived of.


       We went with my friend Judy (another one of their cares) to a deli in Pinehurst some years ago.   Pinehurst is a particularly chic golf resort a few miles west of Aberdeen, and I hadn't realized what an exceptional treat it would be for them.   Josephine told me that, growing up, she would have never dreamed of  one day going to Pinehurst for lunch.

     Their younger brother, Lacy, had also returned to Aberdeen after a successful career as a brick mason.   He had built a fine home for himself, and when his sisters arrived, he had the means and talent to convert Leanna's old run down  cabin into a  comfortable and attractive home, too.

 

    Hazel's pride and joy was Brandon, her five year old great grandchild.  His mother was dealing with her own problems, and Hazel's big dream was to have him start school in Aberdeen where she felt he could have a real head start.

     Though already  over 70, she and Jo brought Brandon  South to begin first grade in the new Aberdeen Primary  school.   The experiment only lasted a year, but he got a taste of  community life and personalized small town schooling before returning the next year to Philadelphia.  
He was an especially bright and personable little boy, and the year in Aberdeen seemed to be a success.
 
     Unfortunately, the twins were too old by this time to be raising a small child, and they had no choice but to return Brandon to the care of one of his  grandmothers at the end of the year.  It broke Hazel's heart, but she had the satisfaction of having tried.
    
     When Brenda arrived on the scene, they seemed crazy about her, and we always visited with them when in North Carolina.  I never actually remembered their caring for me as a small child, but I developed a special affection for them in later years.

     Josephine had never learned to drive, and she always depended on Hazel for getting around.  By the time the twins reached their 80s, she was feeling more and more isolated living on the outskirts of Aberdeen.   In 2014, a few months before Hazel's death at 87, she moved back to Philadelphia.   The last I heard, she was missing Aberdeen.  I wish I had a more upbeat ending, but then that's life.




Your input is welcomed:  frank.pleasants@libertysurf.fr


CROSS REFERENCING … a look at other postings
Renata is also featured in  "Renata" from  Musings and Meanderings No. 4; Mother in "A Christmas Gift ... or the Little Red Lamp", Hotel Musings No. 51  (to access, click on highlighted titles).