Doctor Bowen was the
archetype of a country doctor: he was chubby, somewhat unkempt, and he
seemed to perpetually have a wet, half-smoked cigar hanging out of
the corner of his mouth. His bedside manner did not always include an excess of tact, and over the years he had his share of
detractors as well as staunch defenders. I never remember him
having any kind of secretary, and his office was consequentially a mess, stacked almost to the ceiling with years'
subscriptions of detective magazines and old medical journals.
Janette was the daughter of Aunt Zadie, my paternal grandfather's sister. Zadie and Janette and sister Louise and their brother Ralph (see Aberdeen Hotel musing) and their extended families all lived in particularly close proximity in various houses on the same block around Aberdeen's Main Street. Janette was the only one of the Leach family who never married, and thereby lies the tale.
Doctor Bowen had done part of his residency at Johns Hopkins in Baltimore, where he had roomed with a Sandhills native. When Moore County Hospital was completed in Pinehurst in 1929, his ex-roommate enticed him into joining the team as a resident surgeon. He subsequently found himself one afternoon at the Pinehurst Country Club in the offices of a certain Mr. Nelson, one of the village's millionaire movers and shakers, seeking advice about an appropriate place to live. He had begun his employment living in the hospital, a situation he quickly tired of as he felt it too close to work to maintain any kind of decent privacy.
It so happened that Janette worked as secretary to Nelson. These were the early years of the Depression, her family had recently given up the Aberdeen Hotel, and she volunteered that her mother would be agreeable to rent a room in the family home in nearby Aberdeen where the new doctor could find a certain anonymity several miles away from the hospital.
Doctor B. thus discovered both the Leach family and Aberdeen where he soon set up a private practice which he maintained for the rest of his life.
I do not know if Janette and Doctor B. were already friends before he arrived in Aberdeen. I suspect not, as the rather draconian rules of propriety prevalent in little Southern towns of the day would have certainly discouraged the bringing of a boyfriend into the bosom of the family, as it were. Still, at whatever stage their friendship blossomed into something more, it appears in hindsight surprising that townspeople never seemed to raise the slightest eyebrow.
After a respectable number of months living with Janette and her family, Doctor Bowen purchased a handsome diamond ring and popped the eternal question.
Janette was the daughter of Aunt Zadie, my paternal grandfather's sister. Zadie and Janette and sister Louise and their brother Ralph (see Aberdeen Hotel musing) and their extended families all lived in particularly close proximity in various houses on the same block around Aberdeen's Main Street. Janette was the only one of the Leach family who never married, and thereby lies the tale.
Doctor Bowen had done part of his residency at Johns Hopkins in Baltimore, where he had roomed with a Sandhills native. When Moore County Hospital was completed in Pinehurst in 1929, his ex-roommate enticed him into joining the team as a resident surgeon. He subsequently found himself one afternoon at the Pinehurst Country Club in the offices of a certain Mr. Nelson, one of the village's millionaire movers and shakers, seeking advice about an appropriate place to live. He had begun his employment living in the hospital, a situation he quickly tired of as he felt it too close to work to maintain any kind of decent privacy.
It so happened that Janette worked as secretary to Nelson. These were the early years of the Depression, her family had recently given up the Aberdeen Hotel, and she volunteered that her mother would be agreeable to rent a room in the family home in nearby Aberdeen where the new doctor could find a certain anonymity several miles away from the hospital.
Doctor B. thus discovered both the Leach family and Aberdeen where he soon set up a private practice which he maintained for the rest of his life.
I do not know if Janette and Doctor B. were already friends before he arrived in Aberdeen. I suspect not, as the rather draconian rules of propriety prevalent in little Southern towns of the day would have certainly discouraged the bringing of a boyfriend into the bosom of the family, as it were. Still, at whatever stage their friendship blossomed into something more, it appears in hindsight surprising that townspeople never seemed to raise the slightest eyebrow.
After a respectable number of months living with Janette and her family, Doctor Bowen purchased a handsome diamond ring and popped the eternal question.
Janette ... once a little girl |
Aunt Zadie was of another era. She
had some doubts that the young doctor's financial means would quite come
up to her expectations, and she counseled that it might be in
everyone's interest to slow down, to wait another year
or so before taking the final plunge. Janette rather obliviously
reported back that she was pleased to be engaged, but that she and
her mother felt it best to put off making any hasty, precise marriage
arrangements.
Doctor Bowen, who had been exceedingly patient up until this point, reflected briefly on the turn of events, then retorted : "So be it. Wear the ring as long as it pleases you, we will be engaged, if that is your wish. But make no mistake about it, it will be a cold day in hell before I ever ask you to marry me again!"
There was of course no cold day in hell, he didn't, and they didn't!
Doctor Bowen, who had been exceedingly patient up until this point, reflected briefly on the turn of events, then retorted : "So be it. Wear the ring as long as it pleases you, we will be engaged, if that is your wish. But make no mistake about it, it will be a cold day in hell before I ever ask you to marry me again!"
There was of course no cold day in hell, he didn't, and they didn't!
From that day on, Doctor B. and
Aunt Zadie maintained an at-best polite, often frosty cohabitation.
He nevertheless did become a permanent fixture within the household. By
the time I came along (he delivered me, as he did my twin brothers) I
never questioned why he was there or quite how he fit into the
family.
The Leaches changed houses a couple of times over the years, always in the same neighborhood, and Doctor Bowen made the move along with the rest of them. In later years, he bought the neighboring house of Ralph (who moved with his family a few doors down), but never lived there. It just sat empty until he decided a few years later to rent it seasonally to a Danish sea captain.
Little Polly was Ralph's daughter and Zadie's grand daughter. Her family lived next door, and as a child she would regale me with tales of Doctor B's eccentric behavior. She used to laugh about watching him pace back and forth in his room clad only in boxer shorts, with the ever-present cigar hanging out of the corner of his mouth. But most memorable for us children was the fact that he always seemed to be counting a seemingly inexhaustible wad of paper money which he would then stash in boxes and drawers around the house.
The Leaches changed houses a couple of times over the years, always in the same neighborhood, and Doctor Bowen made the move along with the rest of them. In later years, he bought the neighboring house of Ralph (who moved with his family a few doors down), but never lived there. It just sat empty until he decided a few years later to rent it seasonally to a Danish sea captain.
Little Polly was Ralph's daughter and Zadie's grand daughter. Her family lived next door, and as a child she would regale me with tales of Doctor B's eccentric behavior. She used to laugh about watching him pace back and forth in his room clad only in boxer shorts, with the ever-present cigar hanging out of the corner of his mouth. But most memorable for us children was the fact that he always seemed to be counting a seemingly inexhaustible wad of paper money which he would then stash in boxes and drawers around the house.
(My grandmother's family had owned
the local bank which in 1934 –along with many depression-hit monetary
institutions across the country-- closed its doors, never to reopen;
and to the best of my knowledge no client's money was ever
recuperated. So it was hardly surprising that those with a steady
income like Doctor Bowen in the 1930's would harbor a lifelong
suspicion of banks.)
By the time he died some 40 years later, nothing had basically changed. Janette never removed her engagement ring, though in later life she would voice to family members her humiliation in wearing it throughout the decades, and she once confided that she felt the need to turn the gem side inwards when they occasionally traveled out of town together.
At the end of his life Doctor Bowen had only one remaining relation, a nephew to whom he intended to leave a modest bequest. However, in the days following the funeral, no will had been located, and Janette saw fate just about to deal her yet another slap in the face.
By the time he died some 40 years later, nothing had basically changed. Janette never removed her engagement ring, though in later life she would voice to family members her humiliation in wearing it throughout the decades, and she once confided that she felt the need to turn the gem side inwards when they occasionally traveled out of town together.
At the end of his life Doctor Bowen had only one remaining relation, a nephew to whom he intended to leave a modest bequest. However, in the days following the funeral, no will had been located, and Janette saw fate just about to deal her yet another slap in the face.
My main source for this part of the
family history is Little Polly. In her recounting, pieced together over the years, the surviving
nephew from South Carolina was virtually in the driveway waiting to
claim the inheritance while Ralph ordered the house
turned top to bottom until the will could be located. Janette had
seen the artisanal document being written, and the family knew it had
to be there somewhere amidst the piles of memorabilia and boxes full
of cash and general rubbish. Rugs and carpets were pulled up,
mattresses up-heaved. Janette, who in later years had developed a
penchant for bourbon, was in a state of both grief and confusion, but her brother was fully
in charge and determined to protect his sister's (and by extension
the rest of the family's) interests.
The will was ultimately located, inexplicably hidden under someone else's mattress, and Janette was declared beneficiary of the considerable estate. A lifetime of unfulfilled dreams of a certain officialization of her situation was finally realized, even though it was too late coming and undoubtedly offered her little satisfaction.
TO PAY OR NOT TO PAY ...
My mother never dared ask other family members if they were billed for his services, for fear of calling attention to the fact that we were not.
For whatever reason, he never charged us for a lifetime of medical attention. Mother would periodically go into a kind of heavy anxiety, fearing he was going to wake up and send us a bill. That he or his survivors might one day present an invoice for all the years of office visits, house calls and various operations (Doctor Bowen was considered an exceptional surgeon) for our family of five !
In those days
it was just another example of living in a small southern town where
intertwining family ties created privileged codes of
behavior. Like many things growing up in Aberdeen, they were
thought best left unspoken.
Your input is welcomed: frank.pleasants@libertysurf.fr
CROSS REFERENCING … a look at other postings
Doctor Bowen is also mentioned in "Linwood and Doris" from Musings and Meanderings No. 14 and in "A Date With Dephie" from Musings and Meanderings No. 17; Aunt Zadie and the Leach family are also featured in "Babe Ruth's 60th Home Run" from Hotel Musings No. 26; Little Polly is mentioned in "The Caldwells Come To Paris", Hotel Musings No. 57 (to access, click on highlighted titles).
I love the new blog, but I can't understand why he never proposed to her again! I wonder why she didn't propose to him? We will never know the answers, but I am glad they remained together throughout the rest of their lives and thank God they found the will.
ReplyDeleteHow refreshing it is to read of life in the old days.....so much slower and uncomplicated. Keep the tales coming.
I am here again enjoying your meanderings. You were most lucky to be looked after by such a nice doctor.
ReplyDeleteYou write beautifully and always evoke a sense of time and place. Very Harper Lee, Eudora Welty, Tennessee Williams.
ReplyDeleteBravo ! It's delightful to read about all your memories and gives me a nice break during my work-day.
ReplyDeleteFrank, I read with great amusement the tales of Dr. Bowen. I remember well, my mother would take Dr. Bowen some money. Never ever got a bill. Loved reading about him. I too have some funny tales concerning him.
ReplyDeleteLoved the piece! It puts an entirely different spin on the story I heard (or concoted). I figured he didn’t need to marry her because, well you know why—they went on summer trips to the beach, etc. (maybe with the entire family). But if after the first rejection he continued to live there and didn’t intend to marry Janette, why wasn’t he kicked out, or why wasn’t she so angry she took off the ring and stopped speaking to him?
ReplyDeleteThanks for your feedback, Anne. I don't suppose anyone has the answers to your questions. All I do know is that at some point he was officially asked by someone in the family (other than Janette) to find another lodging. Needless to say, he didn't!
DeleteGreat job, Frank!
ReplyDeleteA different world, wasn’t it?! I enjoyed your story very much.
ReplyDeleteI once had a creative writing instructor who asked me to write a description of an event and to use as few words as possible. Needless to say, I did not excel. You do!
ReplyDeleteSuch an interesting short story.
Late N LA
What a vivid first tale from Aberdeen. I suspect we could both write memoirs about growing up in the south with the title Things Unspoken. Enjoyed this bizarre little tale. I will be looking forward to your new blog.
ReplyDeleteWell done! Like the way you write.
ReplyDeleteSuch memories and so well written.
ReplyDeleteConnecticut Yankee
Wow! Such memories. In some ways it seems like a hundred years ago and in some like yesterday. I always enjoy your musings.
ReplyDeleteDickie
It must be nice to have a good memory and your ability to write.
ReplyDeleteGlad you have resumed your musings! Am looking forward to the upcoming remembrances, some of which I'm sure will resonate with me.
ReplyDeleteSo glad you are back. Your latest story about your mom's fear of receiving a doctor bill ...I had a similar fear with our garbage man..We lived for 12 years in our first house never to receive a bill. I had nightmares about this huge bill... 20 years later I read a small blurb in the local paper that they had gone out of business. Can't help but wonder if the money part of business was missed!!
ReplyDeletePlease continue to keep me on your mailing list. I love the idea of your new blog! The doctor sounds like a very interesting character, and it seems that your family was blessed to have him for so many years.
ReplyDeleteThe mores of our current era have their own problems (ie the St. Paul's story), but are a damned sight better than all this repression and consequent bitterness, all too often among genteel Southern ladies, drowned in Bourbon.
ReplyDeleteYour news really made my Monday morning, and I am delighted that
ReplyDeleteyou are back in print again - apart from anything else, it is a wonderful
exercise in memory training and I am full of admiration for your dedication
and effort. The result is actually quite moving : an account of times past,
human values, attitudes and habits contained within a way of life that no
longer exists and will never be seen again. I really think that this time
you should consider publication! I look forward to more episodes
throughout the coming months.
Just finished your blog and brought back boyhood memories. I can remember going to Dr. Bowen's office for my early shots. The office always smelled like cigar smoke, and I remember a dog in the office as well.
ReplyDeleteGreat memory. I was not aware of the woman in his life and his connection to her. We were still little when our family moved to Laurinburg, thus a new family doctor. Really enjoy the stories of Aberdeen as after all these years it still feels like home ...
Very interesting. . .and revealing to me of your family history! Enjoyed it.
ReplyDeleteI am happy to learn that I will be reading your blogs again, Frank. I always found them charming and fascinating.
ReplyDeleteCongratulations, Frank, and happy blogging!
ReplyDeleteIt was a fun blog to read mainly because I knew the characters (and they really were characters) as well as relatives. Glad you are writing again.
ReplyDeleteThank you Frank. Good to see you back.
ReplyDeleteI didn't come to Aberdeen till the 12th grade, and the building his office was in was always intriguing to me. We never know whose life has an interesting story . Thanks for the history. I really enjoyed it.
ReplyDeleteI can't tell you how much I enjoyed reading your article about Dr. Bowen. He did indeed deliver me and my three siblings. Who could forget a visit to his office...It always had a special odor (an unpleasant one), a combination of old magazines, his ever constant cigar and a medicinal odor...I of course knew of his relationship with Janette....but never the particular details that you shared...Thanks again for this interesting walk down "memory lane".
ReplyDeleteThanks for the memories. Beautifully done! That was wonderful, Frank. The memories flowed in as I read your words. Dr. Bowen was our doctor as well, and came to the farm when we had measles, chicken pox or anything else that showed up. I also was hauled up to his office a few times and I can recall the clutter everywhere and the smell of cigar smoke!
ReplyDeletePlease post any more musings from Aberdeen.
Looking forward to [the new blog]. Best to you, i always enjoy your posts........
ReplyDeleteWell, judging by this fine example, I'm sure we're in for a treat. Poor Janette! But that's family influence for you.
ReplyDeleteCandy thoroughly enjoyed that, she says when's the book launch!
Bringing back so many good memories,we lived behind him and he was THE Doctor back then, and the Doc and Jannette were a big item then. That is a wonderful blog to start with, keep them coming, cousin !!!
ReplyDeleteReally enjoyed the blog about Dr. Bowen. Mom is with us, and she can't wait for the next story!
ReplyDeleteHow nice to see you back in print!
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteVery enjoyable, Frank. Very amusing and enjoyable to read ... I knew all of those people. ...Thanks for that trip down memory lane....
Enjoyed reading Doc Bowen. He was always around! I am guilty of looking at the picture first and immediately recognized him! Another interesting story might be about Pearl MacMillan, for whom I am named, and Dr. McLeod. I think Pearl might have also worked with Doc. She lived next door to my grandparents on E. Main.
ReplyDeleteSuch great writing. You take us back there so effortlessly. I suspect you paint vivid pictures even for those who never had the pleasure of seeing that cluttered couch and dusty waiting room.
ReplyDeleteDelighted that you have started another series of blogs, something to look forward to at the beginning of each month. I enjoyed the first installment very much. You paint such a good verbal picture of how life was in those days. Rather a sad tale I thought, two lives that might have been so different!
ReplyDeleteLooking forward to the next blog. Chris
So I finally made time to sit and read your latest blog, I didn't want to skim it. I'm amazed that you can recall so much family history. Fascinating tale, beautifully written as ever, thanks Frank.
ReplyDeleteThis was truly a gem, certainly one of your best! What was Dr. Bowen's dog named? Was it Buck? I have missed your musings and feel elated to have them back.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed the Musings and Meanderings about Janette and Dr. B. It's great to have you back!
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed it Frank. Nice rhythm. What an ambiance!
ReplyDeleteRead Dr. Bowen story and enjoyed. Keep up your writing so old Aberdeen folks can share your memories.
ReplyDeleteGreat story Frank! It brings back a lot of memories of growing up in Aberdeen where he was a part of many lives. The thing I remember most about his office in not only the stacks of magazines but pill samples laying around everywhere.
ReplyDeleteOh Frank, how pleased I was to receive your new blog ... feeling pleased as punch and so glad I waited to read it until I had a decent bit of time. Your musings are again a delightful look into times past and was a nice dessert tonight.
ReplyDeleteJust a short note to let know how much I enjoy reading about your adventures, especially liked your post on Dr. Bowen.
ReplyDeleteI remember years ago my Mother telling me a story about Dr. Bowen. She said that when he'd first starting boarding with the Leaches … when they lived in the old house … that one day when he came home for lunch, he found that Mrs. Leach and/or Janette had packed all of his belongings in his suitcase and put the suitcase outside on the front porch. The story goes that Dr. Bowen picked up the suitcase, put it back in his upstairs bedroom, ate lunch, and never said a word to anyone as to why they tried to send him packing !
A good, sad and sweet piece.
ReplyDeleteAberdeen and it's southern small town way of life are never far out of my mind. Doc delivered me at my grandmother Zadie Leach's house, as Mother and Daddy were
ReplyDeleteliving there also at the time. He was just family to me, and his gruff and grouchy voice, coming from around that cigar stub never caused any fear or trepidation from the
day I was born. He gave me strong black coffee from his cup at breakfast (much to Mother's dismay) when I was just a baby. He gave me my first puff on a cigar when
I was an adolescent, and a taste of his favorite cocktail, a Tom Collins. Janette was always a devoted and admiring aunt, just what every young girl needs to keep her
self-confidence from failing as she grows up! Thanks for the revival of so many memories, all seemingly so pleasant from such a great distance of time. Looking forward
to your next musings.
I really enjoyed your piece. You have a feel for this. The people you write about could have come from stories by Peter Taylor (a wonderful writer who spent time teaching at UNC-G - then Woman's College). I look forward to the next one too. You have a great cast of characters.
ReplyDeleteFrank, welcome back! I missed my "musings" with your wonderful and colorful stories! Another winner that flooded my memory with "my family doctor" in a small town in Western North Carolina! Thanks!
ReplyDeleteI loved reading about Dr. Bowen and Janette--all of it is absolutely true. He came to our house often and cooked for us. My favorite was spaghetti which he cooked in a large bucket. He also decorated by birthday cake each year as my birthday was the same as Aunt Zadie's (she made the cake always). I was afraid of the parrot, I do remember that.
ReplyDeleteI Love the first instalment of your new blog! What wonderful eccentric characters such as found in fiction but real life... Excitedly await the next meandering musing.
ReplyDeleteEnjoyed this one very much, Frank. In a way a sad story!
ReplyDeleteJust read your blog re Dr. Bowen. We have truly missed your writing. We wait with fond anticipation of future blogs. Keep them coming!
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed this post. I remember my Dad once mentioned that he had
ReplyDeletenever received a bill from Dr. Bowen and of course all of our family was
treated by him. Dad ran into him one day and said "you need to send me a
bill!" Dr. Bowen replied: "Just keep sending me the Citizen [the local newspaper]". A very
unique fellow.
Your blog about these two characters is wonderful and brings floods of memories of the doc who brought me into the world at Moore Memorial; set my broken arm and a collar bone; took out my tonsils and appendix; attended me when I wrecked the family car on Midland road; gave us all our inoculations in that incredibly unsanitary office(!); and came to dinner often - with and without Janette. Thank you for making me smile!
ReplyDeleteThank you for your piece on Dr. Bowen. It's a wonder we don't all have lung cancer, given the abundance of cigar smoke we inhaled in his office! Most of us figured he slept with a cigar in his mouth so maybe Janette wasn't so keen on that arrangement. Lovely article, and it brings back so many memories of times past in the sleepy little town of Aberdeen.
ReplyDeleteMother always worked...and loved to tell the story that Dr Bowen told her that if she stayed home with the four of us, we would certainly drive her crazy...so she should never stop working. I have to agree.
ReplyDeleteLove This!
ReplyDelete