On Monday, March 20th, my aunt celebrated her 98th birthday. :eusa_clap We've always been a close family, and I credit the majority of the "understanding" I have of life in the 20's, 30's and 40's from her. As a young boy, I spent a tremendous amount of time at my grandmother's house with my grandmother and my aunt (she was never married and lived at home all her life). During my early school years, she would come and pick me up every Friday after school and take me home to my grandmother's. On Sunday, my parents would come up after church for Sunday dinner, and that evening would take me home "screaming and crying".
My aunt Hazel was a school teacher. She graduated high school in 1925, and began teaching in 1928. She taught 3rd grade for 47 years at the same school and in the same room. After my grandmother died (at 101 years of age) she continued to live alone at the old home place for about 10 years, but for the past 15 years or so she has lived with my dad in his home.
We gave her a small birthday party, and the highlight was seeing her blow out the candles on her birthday cake and hearing her remark, "I can't believe I'm 98 years old."
This got me to thinking how time really does "go by". My aunt was born in 1908. She was 4 years old when the Titanic went down. She was 10 years old (almost 11) when WW I ended. She was a working adult during the 1930's. It stagers the mind to think of just how much "history" she has been witness to over the years.
While the majority of us in this forum enjoy the nostalgia of the 20's, 30's, and 40's, I often times feel that we (myself included) do not fully grasp just how far removed these times really are, and that the people who lived then are becoming few and far between.
Here are two photos of my aunt, one in about 1936 and one taken on 20 March 2006. As the song from Casablanca reminds us, time really does go by ...
My aunt Hazel was a school teacher. She graduated high school in 1925, and began teaching in 1928. She taught 3rd grade for 47 years at the same school and in the same room. After my grandmother died (at 101 years of age) she continued to live alone at the old home place for about 10 years, but for the past 15 years or so she has lived with my dad in his home.
We gave her a small birthday party, and the highlight was seeing her blow out the candles on her birthday cake and hearing her remark, "I can't believe I'm 98 years old."
This got me to thinking how time really does "go by". My aunt was born in 1908. She was 4 years old when the Titanic went down. She was 10 years old (almost 11) when WW I ended. She was a working adult during the 1930's. It stagers the mind to think of just how much "history" she has been witness to over the years.
While the majority of us in this forum enjoy the nostalgia of the 20's, 30's, and 40's, I often times feel that we (myself included) do not fully grasp just how far removed these times really are, and that the people who lived then are becoming few and far between.
Here are two photos of my aunt, one in about 1936 and one taken on 20 March 2006. As the song from Casablanca reminds us, time really does go by ...