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While I was growing up during the 1960s-70s, in my hometown of Whittier (California) there was an older gent known by most city residents as "the fiddler". He would walk through town every day until he had selected a spot, at which point he would remove a fiddle from his ever-present saxophone case and perform an impromptu one-man concert. Despite his ragged attire, he played because he loved music and fresh air, and refused handouts. Of course, stories spread about who he was and why he did what he did--he was homeless; he was secretly wealthy; he had played with the Los Angeles Philharmonic orchestra; he walked to Rose Hills Memorial Park every day to visit the graves of his parents--none of which were true. It was only when the Whittier Daily News ran an article about the man shortly after his death in November of 1989 that we learned some of the truths about him. His name was Clifford Elston Johnson. He was born in Whittier in June, 1913. He graduated from Whittier High School in 1933. He attended Whittier College where he studied studied music, and later worked as a groundskeeper. And he started walking and fiddling shortly after his parents died in the early 1960s. He had lived in Whittier his entire life, and although almost everyone knew of him it appears very few actually knew him. But because he was so well known, the city erected a memorial plaque next to his favorite bench.