Yankee was married to Andy Yankovich, and had two
children. Laureen, my age, and three
year old little Andy. Women gathered for
afternoon coffee in her kitchen.
Children were always in her backyard, running among the chickens, but
never, ever running in her vegetable garden.
A section of the wire fence between our yards was folded back, and we
had the run of both yards.
Events seemed to emanate from Yankee’s back yard, or be
centered there. Summer afternoons
mothers brought kitchen chairs and kids and we ate lunch at a long table—boards
on sawhorses. I’m sure we had a variety of lunches, but I do
remember spaghetti!
She was first generation; her immigrant parents lived not
far away and Yankee and the children were there often, working in her parents’
garden. I was there once, and to a three
or four year old, it seemed like fairy land.
In a standard forty foot wide city lot, her parents grew everything in
neat beds. The wonder was all the fruit
trees growing up the perimeter walls. In
my mind’s eye, all the leaves and branches touched overhead and made a leafy
ceiling that was filled with sunshine.
Yankee brought peaches, plums, figs, apricots, grapes home from her
parent’s house.
Every so often some of the neighborhood mothers would go to
the chicken market at the end of Dan Street.
A little brown glazed brick building full of chickens. They came home with the neighborhood order,
and then the bustle in Yankee’s yard was extreme as the women set to work. Only years later did I realized all those
brown chickens hanging by their feet from the fence were being turned into
chicken for dinner.
In the fall all the children were piled into the back of a
pickup truck, and two or three mothers in the cab drove to the farms and
orchards out on Quick Road. On the way
home we squeezed around bushes of vegetables destined for the canning jar, to
supplement the tomatoes from our own gardens.
Laureen and I started kindergarten together, walking hand in
hand, supervised by the big kids. In a
few days, of course, we didn’t need them anymore! We walked home for lunch one September day
from our morning kindergarten. That
afternoon Yankee took her two to her parents’ to work in the garden. At home my
mom called us in when it began to rain.
I never saw Yankee again. Over at
her parents’, when it began to rain, Yankee reached up to unplug the radio and
take it in from the garden when she went in.
Yankee was electrocuted. I saw
Laureen a few times over the next week, but she never went to school with me
again, and then they moved away.
I heard that Mr. Yankovich remarried. I always hoped Laureen got a good stepmother.
A character like that would be so very missed....and always remembered.
ReplyDeleteJane x
Your neighborhood sounds a lot like mine in Toledo. The world and we as a people have changed and no one can convince me that it's all for the better. Sigh
ReplyDeleteOMG first you take us through paradise and then BLAM electrocuted.
ReplyDeleteOh my goodness, I wasn't expecting that.
ReplyDeleteNeither was anyone in the neighborhood. In an instant nothing was the same.
DeleteHi Joanne, I almost said 'That must have been a shock', luckily I realised before I published it. I'm so pleased that you share all these memories and people with us, they are not forgotten.
DeleteA sad walk down memory lane indeed :-).
ReplyDeleteAnd she is remembered and cherished still. Such a disaster for her family and for the community.
ReplyDeleteWhat a memory of good and hard times. Like you, I hope your friend had a kind step-mother, and that her memories of you are filled with the good stuff.
ReplyDeleteWhat a sad story! I can't imaging losing your mother at such a tender age. When my girls were young, the father of the little neighbor girls died of a heart attack while driving. We told my daughters about it and told them not to say anything to the neighbor kids. Apparently, they thought that meant they had not been told. The next morning, my girls went and knocked on the neighbor's door to ask them if they knew their dad was dead. I was appalled but didn't scold them because it was their first experience with death. They obviously weren't processing it well.
ReplyDeleteOh my, I did not see that coming. So sad for so many people.
ReplyDeleteWhat a wonderful woman. What a tragedy! So glad that you were able to keep the good memories! And I, too, hope that Laureen got a stepmother as wonderful as her own mom.
ReplyDelete