Thanksgiving Roulette

“THANKSGIVING ROULETTE”

By

 

Gerry Niskern

 

Do you have your genealogy research all done in time for your family’s Thanksgiving gathering? Due to Twenty-three and Me, Ancestory and a few more websites, everyone now has a chance to learn about their immigrant ancestors.

Of course, some went into the search with the expectation of find a distant Prussian General, or at least an English duke in the family tree! Most find out they are descendants of hard working immigrants who poured into America in the l800’s and early l900s. Those early relatives learned about Thanksgiving  Day gradually, as well as about the laws, taxes and social mores.

My own grandfather, from Austria, was recruited to come work in the coal mines in West Virginia. My mother often told of when she started to first grade grandpa had her sit with him at the kitchen table and help him learn  to  read the newspaper. He was very anxious to learn about our democracy and how the government worked.

Grandpa had served the required seven years in the army of Emperor Franz Joseph before he was allowed to come to the United States. My mother often told of how, as he learned to read English, he marveled at our freedoms allowed in our constitution. He reminded her siblings to be thankful they were growing up in a country where there was no King or Dictator.

And of course, Thanksgiving was celebrated, but my grandmother refused to buy a turkey when she had lots of chickens, and besides, she always declared, “You don’t just give thanks on one day, You are supposed to give thanks every day!”

HAVE YOU BEEN TO AN ENCHANTED ISLAND?

HAVE YOU EVER BEEN TO AN ENCHANTED ISLAND?

By

Gerry Niskern

 

I visit an enchanted island every once in a while on a long Sunday afternoon.

When you get out of your car in the Encanto Park lot you don’t need  directions. The Merry-go-round  music beckons you in the right direction, over the bridge.

As I walk across the bridge, kids of all ages pass me,  headed for the fun rides. If they are celebrating their birthday on the island in one of the shady party areas, their parents are pulling wagons loaded with drinks, presents and a birthday cake. Last time, one of the fathers was even pulling a wagon containing a TV. I guess he didn’t want to  miss the big game either!

The train that circles the park toots to let everyone know to watch out at the crossing at the entrance. The merry-go-round is first, but there are airplanes to fly. (some poor kids ride in a boring circle because no one tells them to raise up on the control and they will fly!)

All kinds of cars to drive come next and of course, the fire engine  is the one claimed first. There is a Tilt-a-whirl and a boat ride,  but the most popular without a doubt is the Dragon Roller Coaster.

A munchkin rider has to measure a certain height on the operator’s chart or they can’t ride the Dragon. I hear lots of worried kids asking, “Do you think I can make it this time?”I  remember taking  two great-grandkids years ago, and while I went to the  restroom, their grandpa “talked” them on to the Dragon. I was appalled when I caught up to see the five year swirling  up and down and  his two year old sister riding beside him! And as tradition goes, both hands in the air too!

When I look up I’m always startled to see the high rise buildings between the trees. They weren’t there years ago when I was a kid and we went to the park to feed the ducks and swans and rent canoes to paddle around the waterways.

As I sit on a bench “people watching”, or I guess I should really say “kid watching” I am entertained by all sizes and ages. If you love kids and don’t have any in your family right now, enjoy the ones on The Enchanted Island. It’s a nice way to spend a long Sunday afternoon.

THANKSGIVING MEMORIES

nksgiving Memories”

 

 

 

Thanksgiving is coming and I, like many of my friends around the valley, am remembering past Thanksgivings.

Tension best describes my first memories of Thanksgiving.

My very nervous mother had just cooked her first Turkey dinner. We were standing with our faces pressed against the cold glass of the dining room window straining to see through the snowy veil of a West Virginia blizzard.  Dad had invited his out-of-state boss to share our meal and the guy had  brought his rifle to “get in a little hunting”with my dad, before dinner.

As mom wrung her apron over and over into a tiny knot, she kept muttering, ”If he’s lost in that snow storm, I’m going to kill him!”

# one  son recalled the great Thanksgivings when our extended family always packed their turkey and all the trimmings and headed for a desert picnic outside Phoenix. The kids rode go-carts, flew kites and launched rockets. Grandpa set up tables and the tailgates of pickups served as buffet sideboards. Grandma brought the turkey warm in the roaster, with warm potatoes and gravy in large thermos jugs. He remembers waiting over an hour one year for cousins to arrive with the silverware. Needless to say, Grandma said she would give them another assignment the next year!

A friend told me about the Oklahoma farm Thanksgivings of her childhood.  Sometimes turkey, but often a whole, crackling pig was roasted. They had cornbread dressing, cranberries and sweet potatoes with marshmallows. Cherry, pumpkin and apple pie with a scoop of cream whipped fresh that day with a hand turned beater. There was always a dark chocolate and a huge angel food cake.  “One aunt was the angel food champion. My aunts whispered suspicions that she used more egg whites instead of the standard 12 in her cake.”

The men ate first because there wasn’t enough room for everybody to sit down together. When they were finished and went outside to smoke and “chew the fat”, the women and children ate.   “The best part of the day was playing with my cousins. Hide and Seek in the barn was my favorite, but then the older kids would organize a Crack the Whip game and since I was the littlest they made me be on the tail end. That took the fun right out of Thanksgiving!”

Another friend described Thanksgiving dinner at an aunt’s Maryland farm. The table was set with scalloped edged china covered in large blue flowers and gleaming silverware with a rose pattern.  The prisms hanging from the crystal candelabra cast soft rainbows on the diners. Of course, that was the adult table. She remembers yearning to graduate to the big table and listen to the uncles’ stories and take part in the adult conversation. On one of those Thanksgivings, the turkey had to be carved in the kitchen instead of at the table.  The guests didn’t know that a couple of the family dogs had already helped themselves to one whole side of breast!

My resident historian said that his first memory of Thanksgiving was during WWII. A fourth grade classmate invited him to share a lonely dinner with him and his mom. The friend’s dad was on a destroyer somewhere in the Atlantic.

During the war years, my Mother instructed Dad to “go down to the USO and bring home some soldiers to share Thanksgiving dinner with us and the girls.” Much to our disappoinment,  he always  managed to return with older married guys. Mom always said Dad didn’t “fall off the turnip truck yesterday.”

I asked a seven-year-old in the family what he was thankful for at Thanksgiving time.

“That Christmas is coming”

Well, there’s that too.