I Googled and Zillowed a street view of the South
Huttig home where my siblings and I grew up. The side yard on the south side, that looked
so wide in my childhood memories could be traversed with a hop, a step, and a
jump. Not an adult hop, step and jump,
but my ten year old hop, step and jump when I weighed 69 pounds and was barely the height of a fence post.
but my ten year old hop, step and jump when I weighed 69 pounds and was barely the height of a fence post.
The two majestic maple trees in the front yard have been cut
down, replaced by a flagless flagpole and an unimpressive spindly tree with a
trunk smaller than the flagpole. The house was recently listed on Zillow as a
two bedroom one bath bungalow for $69,000.
It is off the market so I couldn’t take a virtual tour of the
inside, but there’s no need for that. For seventeen years I lived in that
house. I carry images in my head of every square foot of it, from the dark
basement to the braided cloth covered wires in the attic that wound around
little white ceramic knobs to keep them away from the wood.
With little arrows on
the computer screen I clicked my way up and down the street to see the neighboring
houses. It’s sad to see the houses `looking
so poor and neglected. The house
directly across the street that was owned by the Catholic family that wanted to
adopt me in 1946 looks completely abandoned.
Weeds and small trees are so thick you can’t see the house. The house just north of it, once owned by a
preacher for a short time, is on the market for $49,000 dollars. I was only in the front room of that house once
as a child but now with Zillow I virtually went through every sad
room of the 720 square foot house and wondered if the caved-in couch with the
exposed spring visible on the tour had once been owned by the Holy Rollers that
lived in the even smaller house beside it.
My sister Ruthie and I, as curious youngsters, hid in the
grapevines and watched the Holy Roller Hickman’s one evening in that house from
across the street. Mr. and Mrs. Hickman, and their church friends, worked their way into a religious frenzy. From our
vantage point we could only see the couch against the living room wall, and the
Holy Rollers jumping on and off it, as if they were suddenly appearing from off
stage. I guess they had opened the front
door to cool the place down.
At the time I was
quite interested in Holy Rollers, and caught wind of a Holy Roller Revival
Service being held in the theater on St. John’s Avenue
in the Italian District, where they normally featured spaghetti westerns. My buddy Tom, and I, caught the city bus in Fairmount,
and put our dimes in the anchored cylindrical obelisk that set next to the bus
driver. It had a glass top and required
exact change. The driver would glance
over to make sure you weren’t dropping a washer in it. Tom and I got off near the theater.
We sat in the back of
the ornate theater, not knowing what to expect.
It didn’t take long before a cripple that had to be helped on stage was
healed and started what looked like tap dancing. Not long after that, the Holy Rollers in the
front rows were throwing their eye glasses and hearing aids high into the
air. Tom and I were spell bound watching
the flurry of prescription eye glasses and hearing aids arcing through the low stage
lights near the front. Glued to our seats we waited until the service ended and
the preacher had left, passing us as he came up the ramped aisle. The theater was vacant except for me and Tom,
and a dozen or more Holy Rollers, crawling up and down the dark aisles searching
for their hearing aids and eye glasses. The whole service was more exciting than any
of the spaghetti westerns that Sergio Leone produced.
As an example of my mother’s Christian outreach to
neighbors, no matter what sect or religious faith, I offer up this little
exemplary act of hers. Once Mrs. Hickman became deathly ill, and her Holy Roller
husband stubbornly refused to take her to the doctor. He evidently held beliefs reminiscent of the Christian
Science practice that prayer is more potent than medicine. My mothers spent three days nursing her and
finally figured out her bowels were blocked.
She took the dreaded pink enema bag from our bathroom cabinet, carried it
across the street, and administered a service normally reserved for only a very-very
close member of the family. That
selfless act, in my book, was several steps up the Christian ladder of simply
washing a stranger’s feet. That’s the day my mother out -Jesused Jesus.
I Googled my way past the homes on both sides of the street, all the way north to Kentucky Avenue, then west a block to the Fairmount
Elementary School, where all my siblings and I attended kindergarten through
the seventh grade. Google lists the distance from our home to the school as .03
miles, a leisurely five minute walk. We
didn’t own a car and there weren’t school buses then, so it was always a walk. The few parents who owned cars dropped their
kids off by the school entrance on Cedar. I Googled my way the other direction,
south to 24 Highway (Independence Avenue ),
and arrived at that commercial disruption on the Interstate
Highway called the Fairmount Business District. We always said we were walking “up the
street.” Explain to me why up the street was south and down the
street was north. We say we’re going up to Minnesota
or down to Georgia ,
based on a map. It was just the opposite
on our street.
Distance to the
school north was .03 miles, equidistant to the town of Fairmount
south, also .03 miles according to Google, but listed as a seven minute walk
instead of five. Is that because it was
slightly uphill?
It was very depressing to see the dilapidated buildings in
Fairmount where we once shopped, dined, banked and entertained ourselves. Maybe not the bank so much since our family
was cash only. The dime store, the theater, the drugstore, and the appliance
store all provided jobs for us at one time or another. The Standard State Bank
that looked so solid in the fifties, with its black slate exterior, is now
condemned and may already be torn down.
The iconic Byam Building
that housed the Byam drugstore and the Byam Theater is looking worn, and that’s
an understatement. The whole Google thing was a real- time shocker on how a
once vibrant neighborhood can disintegrate over time. I won’t Google it
again. I don’t think I’ll ever go back
to the neighborhood. It would be too painful.
I prefer to remember it as it was when I was growing up there. I want to leave my good memories intact,
especially some of the best years of my life between the late forties and all
through the fifties.
There are
so many great recollections I carry around from our Huttig Home and the
Fairmount area, (unincorporated at the time). Fairmount had two stop lights
that interrupted the highway traffic coming from the west. In that direction was the Badger Lumber
Company; a little roadside trolley owned by a Greek that sold crusted brain
sandwiches, and then the huge Mount Washington Cemetery where the pioneer Jim
Bridger is buried. I worked there two summers as a teenager trimming around the
gravestones. Not long after the bus stop in front of the cemetery you could see
the Kansas City skyline and the
Power and Light Building
with its art deco top that was constantly changing colors at night.
Going the
other way, out of Fairmount on 24 Highway, you would pass a slummy neon- lit
bar, (for some reason named the Calico Cat); the Studebaker dealership that
donated the Studebaker that was raffled off to raise money for my mother after
the plane accident; the Nu-Way Drive Inn (the fifties edition of Sonic), then
the cluster of warring gas stations that drove prices down to seventeen cents a
gallon. Eventually on the left was Slover
Park where I won a medal in a Cub
Scout footrace even though I was late to the starting line. The Park I used to
play in has now been replaced by Harry S. Truman’s presidential library.
Before my mother married she was an Episcopalian, and taught
a Sunday School Class at the Trinity Episcopal Church in Independence .
Harry Truman’s daughter, Margaret, was in her class. This might have been around the time someone
tried to kidnap Margaret from Bryant Elementary
School , when she was six. Harry always remembered my mother and would stop
to talk to her when they crossed paths on the Independence
Square .
Harry also had
history in Fairmount, where he and his political buddy, F. L. Byam, were thick
as thieves. Before being President, Harry
was a hat salesman, and later a Judge.
He held political meetings at Jerry’s restaurant in Fairmount where a thick
permanent cloudy layer of cigarette smoke hung in the air like a curtain. It was so thick that it masked the features
of the men sitting on the bar stools by the counter. Harry’s meetings there were a little before my
Fairmount days, but on the rare occasion our family ate a sit down meal at
Jerry’s, the cloud was an undiminished feature of the restaurant, constantly
kept intact by the heavy smokers.
I’ve never
fully processed the idea of how a man who started out selling men’s hats and
ties ends up ordering the vaporization of over a hundred thousand Japanese
citizens. I’ve heard persuasive
arguments on both sides of the decision.
One of my
favorite things in Fairmount was the Byam Theater, which featured Tarzan
movies, The Three Stooges, and lots of Westerns. General admission was ten cents; except on
Friday nights and the Saturday afternoon talent show, when entry was raised to a
quarter. Popcorn and candy bars cost a nickel, and colas were a dime.
One summer day, my
sister Sherry was babysitting Butch and Johnny, the next door neighbor boys, in
their house. I was constantly there, so she put all three of us in the bedroom
for a nap and closed the door. Butch and
I felt we were too old for babysitting and escaped through the window
and walked the seven minute walk to Fairmount, and watched a western in three
dimensions. I think it was “Hondo” starring
a young John Wayne. It came out in 1953,
when I was ten years old. I remember ducking behind the theater seats in front
of me when spears and arrows flew out from the screen.
If you left
Fairmount, traveling north on South Huttig , you would
cross over Kentucky and continue up
the hill until you ran out of road. If
you entered the woods and crossed over Rock Creek, you would soon come to the
bluffs that overlooked a looping branch of the Missouri River .
My childhood friends, Tom and Richard, and sometimes Butch, would fish from
“Look Out Point, or roam the shore line looking for the entry to the elusive Jesse
James Cave .
I once caught a large
carp that had one side completely eaten away by the chemicals dumped into the
river. The nearby Standard Oil Refinery
and chemical plants all dumped caustic chemicals and heavy metals into the
river. That’s another story.
I’m trying in this wistful moment to remember only the long
list of good times I experienced in the fifties growing up in Fairmount.. There was very little crime, drugs were unheard
of, and we never ever locked our doors. My mother left for work at five- thirty
in the morning and didn’t return until five- thirty at night, leaving me and
her other children the priceless gift of discovering the consequences of making
bad choices on our own. There will be
more stories.
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