Float in "Priests of Pallas Parade" in Kansas City, Missouri |
Megan’s great Christmas blog, which included Grandma Maude’s
story of the uninvited Christmas guest, prompted me to see if I had any more
stories about my grandparents, particularly Maude.
I found one story about Maude I had never read that includes the Mardi Gras styled Parade mentioned in the title. But before that there's a little more of Maude's history to share.
The first firm memories of my grandparents (Maude and
Plinnie Sherman) were when I was five years old. Grandma Sherman was 73 years old then, and
even though I was only five years old, I sensed the sadness in her countenance
and the unseen weight she carried on her slumped shoulders. Grandpa was 77, and
was still deemed handsome as an older man. Almost everybody inside and outside the family
addressed him by his initials P.A. Other
than a hearing aid he still carried himself sturdily erect, and I would watch
him hard at work refinishing a table or upholstering a chair in his workshop
behind their house.
Income from the shop was still needed but at this point
church had become the focus of their lives, grandpa more so than grandma. Grandpa
was the patriarch of the family and the pastor of the nearby Gudgell
Park church. Maude seemed to prefer
staying home and working on quilts, but I get it. My wife Sharon, who attended
that congregation, said she never saw Maude at church. I speculated that grandma had lost her faith,
but Sharon said she was probably
preparing the meal for the weekly "after church guests" at their home. It may also have had
something to do with lack of Sunday "go to meeting clothes." I never saw grandma in anything but a worn thin
house dress. She was also worn thin from
at least eleven pregnancies by my count and the loss of at least four of her children
by that time, five if you count my father.
Maude, like many women of that era, deserves some special
distinction for the childbearing, childrearing, and the heartbreak and unbearable
suffering from losing children before their time.
After Maude was joined by four other sisters
the family outgrew the small cabin and their father Winfield Gould built a bigger
framed house on their homestead that adjoined his father George Gould’s
homestead.
I imagine it being very scenic and all the
children grew up close to the lake where they played, swam, skated, and walked
around its shores to school.
Grandpa George Gould was always interested in
the children’s lessons and liked to have them read to him. He would pace the floor with his hands
crossed behind his back as they read.
Now and then he would stop his pacing and reach up to take down a piece
of dried smoked beef or ham from its nail on the ceiling and shave off thing pieces
for the grandchildren to eat.
When Grandpa George Gould died of a kidney
ailment Maude was sixteen and she went to live with her grandma, Ella Whiting,
Grandpa George’s widow. Nina says Maude had a nice bedroom of her own with
double windows, a big closet and a rag carpet on the floor. There was a wash stand with a big white wash
bowl and pitcher on it. Nina sounded a little envious.
It was at this point that Plinnie Sherman, my
grandfather, came a courting. Nina says
he was a third cousin, and I will defer to that, always thinking they were
closer cousins than that. I’m not good
with figuring out relationships, so third cousins it is until proven otherwise.
Nina
says he came courting from the town of Maine , Minnesota , and all the
sisters thought he was very handsome.
Plinnie traveled to Independence , Missouri where he had found work. He
soon began writing to Maude and asked her hand in marriage through a
letter. When Grandma Ella Whiting passed
away in her sleep peacefully with a fan covering her face Maude began
sewing. Her dad Winfield, bought her a shiny black trunk and they began
filling it with sheets, pillowcases, towels, and anything else needed for
setting up a new household. Nina
remembers the pretty cashmere wedding dress, and a black and yellow striped
dress.
Maude traveled to Independence by train. Maude and Plinnie were married on
Thanksgiving Day, 1899 in the living room of an uncle. I’ll write about the wedding at some time later.
They rented a little house on River
Boulevard in Independence with a nice
open view across the street of the Mormon Pasture.
I’m going to skip over the many early moves and family tragedies of my grandparents and get to a surprising window into their early lives that I so wrongly assumed was borderline boring.
Nine years younger than Maude, Nina came to
town for an extended visit with her in 1908.
Plinnie and Maude took her to the theater, and several parks where she says
she rode every ride. I wish Nina would
have named the Parks, as there were eight parks in and around Kansas City at that time,
including Fairyland Park , Fairmount Park , and Mount Washington Park . Nina also attended the Church
Reunion for several days and heard Joseph Smith the third preach at the Stone Church .
Nina was betrothed to Orison Tucker, and he
was begging her to come back home to Minnesota . One letter
said “Please Nina, you’ve seen enough for once.”
Plinnie intervened and told Nina that if she
would just stay until October 5th, he and Maude would take her to
see the Priest of Palace Parade in Kansas
City , and if she did he would let
Maude and the children travel back to Minnesota with her.
There were only two children at that time, three year old Joy, and one year old
Ronald.
Nina said she did stay. Maud and Plinnie took her on the trolley to Kansas City and she said
the “Priest of Palace Parade” was “wonderful!”
I had to look it up since I had never heard
of it!
Her beau, Orison, was quite religious and
might not have approved of a festival honoring Pallas Athene, ancient goddess
in Greek mythology. The correct spelling was “Priests of Pallas Parade,” and
the floats in the parade would surpass anything you’ve seen in the Rose Bowl
Parade! Check out additional images on the internet. Crazy!
I just wanted to add this little tribute to
Maude, my grandmother, who looked so sad when she was older. She was one of
those stalwart courageous women who are so often overlooked in history.
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