Springfield Days
At the beginning of 1946 we left Wendling. The mill worker’s union decided that since
the war was over they would go on strike for higher wages. The Booth-Kelly company decided that they
could get along without a sawmill in Wendling and moved everything to their
Springfield mill. The workers housing,
A, B, and C Row, were torn down, and most of the other housing as well.
Dad used the new GI Bill to order a new house built in
Eugene, and until that was finished we were to live with his parents, my
Squires grandparents.
In Springfield I took a school bus across town to Brattain
Elementary School.
On weekends my parents liked to drive up to Wendling to
drink beer and visit with Carldene and David.
The two army veterans, and others who showed up, usually one or more of David’s brothers, enjoyed
talking about their war experiences, and delighted in teaching me various ways
to defend myself. Many of these involved
breaking arms or backs or trachea, which was far beyond anything that ever occurred
to me. However when I began school in
Springfield at lot of the self defense moves came in handy.
Brattain Elementary School was much larger than the Wendling
school, and the quality of education was nothing like the North Texas teachers
laboratory school in Denton, Texas. In
the classroom I was bored, and would often get up from my seat and wander to
one of the displays or bookshelves along the wall to find something
interesting.
On the playground, crowded with kids from mill working or
logging families, I had a hard time fitting in.
A lot of the boys carried knives in their knee high boots, and mumblty
peg was the popular game. This involved
throwing a knife into the dirt in an attempt to make it stick, a skill I still
sometimes practice. I had several
cousins at Brattain who gave me some social life but in general I spent a lot
of time by myself reading.
The Squires grandparents lived on Kelly Street, at the foot
of Kelly Butte. Grandad Squires who was
recently retired from the painting department of the U of O maintenance
department, had built the house himself.
The house was el shaped. At one
end was the kitchen, which had a door opening to the back lawn and fruit trees,
a door off of the driveway that abutted a covered walkway to the garage, a
container in the wall to hold stove wood for the cookstove that had an outer
and inner lid, to keep out the cold. Out
of habit, the old people kept a dipper which they filled with water from the
tap. There was a pump in the back yard
in case the city water ever gave out.
From the kitchen one entered the dining room, which featured
a large oak dining table, a cabinet for dishes and silverware, and at the other
end a bookshelf holding adventure and mystery novels left there by the five or
six children who had grown up in Springfield.
On the north side of the dining room was the grandparent’s
bedroom, separated by a curtain, and a stairway leading to the second floor.
On the south side was a sitting room, creating the el shape,
which contained a big wood stove for heating the house in one corner and in the
other was a table on which sat a large radio.
In front of the radio was a rocking chair, for Grandad, and in front of
the wood stove was a big stuffed chair, for Grandma. In the southwest corner was a long couch with
a small table in front.
The front door was in the northeast corner of the sitting
room. There was a shelf next to the
front door holding a picture of Ronald in his WWI uniform and a picture of my
dad in his WWII uniform.
Upstairs, which was unfinished, was one large room with
several beds where the girls had slept, and around the corner was another room,
which was for the boys, Everett, Freeman, and Bruce. Here there piles of old magazines of a male
nature, usually about boxing or mystery magazines. Bluebook, a magazine for men, was also
available. This was a men’s version of
Redbook, a magazine for women.
The lumber Ben had used to build the home was all cedar,
still red and slightly fragrant.
Their house was on a double size lot, with a large vegetable
garden taking up one half. Every spring
a friend of granddad who owned a team of plow horses would come to plow up the
lot. Ben and Ellen would grow corn and
other tasty plants for canning and eating during the winter. On the open land
north of the house was a large plot of strawberries, growing big and fat and
juicy in the soft loamy soil.
Early in my residence there I discovered a chicken house up
the hill on the northwest corner, with fat hens and a couple of roosters
pecking the soil. To my six year old
delight, the chickens ran when I approached them. I was happily chasing the chickens when I
heard heavy breathing and the sound of pounding feet behind me. My granddad was chasing me! And he was angry! I veered away from the chickens and led the
chase into the house, where I escaped into my mom’s lap. After a few minutes of heavy breathing
granddad calmed down. He urged me to
never chase the chickens, which request I honored. He taught me to find eggs the chickens had
laid, piling them carefully in a basket for breakfast.
Behind the house was a steep hillside, the east side of
Kelly Butte. This was a scene of
exploration. I found a section of mud which
cousin Skip and I slid down one spring day, sliding over and over in the gooey
mud, till we were both barely visible beneath our layer of silt.
I tried the same thing one summer day, but the mud had dried
and I bounced rather than slid, and ripped the sleeves off my shirt, and tore
my forearms as well.
At the top of the butte was a section of exposed rock, where
I had my first rock climbing experience.
I also climbed the trees on the hillside. I was just then reading Tarzan, and found
places where I could leap from tree to tree.
We lived there for almost two years, then in the
spring of the third grade we moved
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