Showing posts with label Grandpa Johnson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Grandpa Johnson. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Remembering

Albin Eugene Johnson
July 15, 1925 - November 17, 1996


I only had one living Grandfather, so it is a good thing that he was a great one! :o) The picture above shows him about 1950 with my Daddy. This is the fish they caught at Lake Hancock, which at that time was accessible by hiking and float plane. From another slide I scanned, it looks like they smoked all this fish to preserve it.


Grandpa had a difficult life. His father was born in Sweden, then immigrated as an infant to Ishpeming, Michigan and later emigrated to Arlington, Washington. His father was 19 years older than his mother and his father's family didn't approve of her. I wish I knew the love part of that story because I only know about the broken hearts at the end.


Great Grandpa Johnson (Albin Sven Johnson 1886-1962) owned a restaurant/billiard room in Arlington, Washington called "Al Johnson Cafe". If you live in Arlington, it's the building on the main drag that had the black marble on front. It has been a hardware store and a thrift store. It may have since been renovated. Al Johnson's Cafe was the first business to open there. One of Grandpa's jobs was to clean the spittoons after school. I'm sure he didn't really like that! Sadly, through this, he was exposed to tuberculosis and had to leave school at 8th grade to be treated in a TB sanatorium in Snohomish, Washington. While he was there he learned how to crochet and one of his crocheted items, a pineapple lace doily, I used in my wedding on the communion table, so that I could have a piece of him with me.


Grandpa's father was an alcoholic and their family split after several of Albin Sr's attempts to quit drinking. Great Grandma then married the milkman! No joking! They left Arlington and Grandpa was sad to leave his sweetheart Evelyn Hiett behind. He worked in Tacoma where his family moved, then felt the need to escape his stepfather and worked in the lumber mills in Raymond, Washington. When he came back to Seattle to find Evelyn, he was too late - she had married and moved away.


Somewhere along the way, he met my Grandma Dorothy. It wasn't discussed a lot since the dates didn't match up and she was separated from her husband when they met. Likely my Daddy was the result of a "fling". Since Grandpa's TB doctors told him he was infertile, he didn't think he had anything to worry about, but in September 1945, my Daddy proved them all wrong!


The hard experiences of his growing up years taught him that a real man fought to keep his family together. He didn't want to be the kind of father that he had. So he stayed with Grandma and after his death, I found out that they were not married until 1949, apparently that was when Grandma's divorce was final and they could legally marry. As a child I didn't know all the undercurrents of the relationship. Every time I watch Fiddler On The Roof (we just did this week), I think of them when Tevya and his wife sing "After 25 years... Do you love me?" There was a lot of affection between them, but they were two of the most stubborn people I've ever known - Grandma Irish/Polish/Slovakian and Grandpa Swedish/English. There were a lot of head butting matches!


Through it all they built a family. I'm sure that it was a comfort to my Grandma, who 15 months before my father was born, held her infant daughter Patrician Ann, who died of pneumonia on the way to the hospital. Likely that caused the demise of her first marriage as well. She brought a six year old son, Larry, to the marriage and Grandpa dug in to the role of husband, provider and father. He worked hard at a job that eventually caused his death - retreading tires. He came home covered in black rubber dust and it was permanently tattooed in his skin.


One of my most vivid memories as a young child with my Grandparents, was Grandpa coming home from work and taking a quick snooze on the floor while Grandma got dinner ready. My brother Danny and I would give him back rubs. We would eat dinner while watching "Bob Barker's Truth or Consequences"! Grandpa literally emptied the pepper shaker onto his food as we all sneezed! After he quit smoking, I remember chuckling because he complained that Grandma used too much pepper! LOL



Grandpa introduced me to the outdoors. My first camping trip was when I was about 3 weeks old with the Johnson family and Grandpa saved his money and bought a lot of land on the Skykomish River near Index, Washington. He would spend as much time up there as possible enjoying getting out of the city and exploring the river and woods. Many of my happiest memories from childhood are from camping there at "the lot".

Through the years he hunted deer, elk and bear to feed his family as well as fished. He loved getting out into the back country and away from people. Most of the time he did this on foot but a few times he went into the back country on horses or with other pack animals. The picture above is somewhere in the Cascade Mountains of Washington and is one of his. I wish he had labeled it so I would know where.

His camera went with him on these adventures and thanks to the old slides I have a glimpse into my Daddy's childhood. It also reminds me of all the things my Grandpa taught me about photography. As a small girl I was afraid of him (and most men), but as I grew older, we had more to talk about and the care of my Grandma who by then had Alzheimer's Disease, bonded us together. One of the last special times Grandpa and I spent together, I brought him some of my framed photography to share with him and he enjoyed seeing what I shot.

After Grandma died, Grandpa reconnected with Evelyn, his first love and they were later married. That was hard on our family because he expected us to treat her exactly like Grandma. It wasn't that we didn't like her but that we didn't want to be forced to treat her the same. She wasn't the same and that wasn't really fair for her or for us. His last year or so was difficult. He had advanced emphysema. Smoking for years didn't help but likely it was caused by all the inhaled rubber dust. He broke his leg shortly before he died. I took him to our Johnson family reunion in his wife's borrowed wheelchair. We had a short time at the reunion because he didn't want to leave her too long in case she had to use the chair to go to the bathroom.

Apparently it was long enough though. At his funeral service, his cousin Ray stood up and shared how he told Grandpa that his life had been changed by Jesus Christ. Ray then asked him if he would like to pray to accept Christ as his Savior too. He did. But he never shared that with us.

One Saturday in November 1996, Mom and Jack drove me down to Renton to see him in the nursing home. He and Evelyn shared a room together. When we walked in her bed didn't have sheets on it and we knew. She had passed during the night. Grandpa was grieving terribly. When he saw us in the doorway, he said, "Oh! You have made my life!" He was so thrilled that someone cared about him and that he had someone to share the burden of grief. We spent a difficult but precious hour or two together and he let my Mom pray for him. Even though my parents divorced 23 years earlier, she was still "his girl"! He loved her fiercely to the end and even walked her down the aisle when she and Jack got married. The next day we got a call that he had died during the night.

My Mother is probably the only reader who knew him or even really is that interested in reading this. But I write this so that I will remember and so that my children will one day know. These writings are like a skeleton sketch of his life. Just a framework with scattered facts and anecdotes. Words cannot capture the strength and depth of character of this stubborn old man I knew and loved.

I remember whisker burns, playing cribbage, his orange hunting hat, his love of German Shepherd dogs, his love of children, his "mountain pancakes", sitting in the pickup truck with him to scope out the deer's grounds, singing songs on the way to Naches (Grandma would say "How about #49 and they would start singing... from the imaginary songbook in their head), watching Lawrence Welk and Truth or Consequences, listening to the Big Band LPs and his father's wind up phonograph, the smell of Folger's in the old aluminum percolator in the mornings and last but not least his old black lunchbox and thermos bottle.

In my memorial rose garden out front there is a thorny red rose I planted in honor of him... Old Smoothie! It is fitting, both in name and his favorite color. I am so thankful that God gave me one Grandpa to know and love. And I am so thankful that He chose Christ, even though he was too stubborn to share that with me.

So, today, Old Smoothie, I salute you on what would have been your 83rd birthday! I love you!

Thursday, May 08, 2008

I Is For...

Well, it's time for the "I" post in the ABC Along and at first I thought that would be difficult but as time went on, many things came to mind.



First, I is for insects and one of my favorite insects is the bee.


This insect is called a Hummingbird Moth and the only reason I know that is because I saw one on Marguerite's blog.





My favorite insect is a Pipevine Swallowtail. This one is probably one of my top five favorites of cards I have made.



I is for Iris. Bearded Iris are new to me, as in my home state one is more likely to see Dutch or Japanese Iris. These photos were taken at High Sierra Iris Gardens near me. I really love flowers that have infinite color variations like orchids, iris and pansies. Each one is a miniature painting from God!


These iris are another one of my cards. I like to take pictures of "twins" in nature.



And this photo brought two songs to mind, first "She wore blue velvet..." Here are the lyrics. My Grandma Johnson loved Bobby Vinton. He has a lovely voice, but he has joined the ranks of those freakily artificially preserved people who though well into their senior citizen years look much younger than me, unless you get in close range! LOL The second song I thought of was Deep Purple by Donny and Marie Osmond... and excuse me, but who allowed Donny Osmond to become a grandfather?! That's just not right! :o)


I is also for Idaho. This photo was taken the summer of 1956. My Dad on the left is 10.5 years old and Grandma Johnson is holding up my Uncle Jerry who was born November 1955.


I is also for Index where my Grandma and Grandpa Johnson had a beautiful lot on the Skykomish River. We spent many happy hours and camping trips there. This is Mount Index. (scanned from a dirty slide)


I is for ice. Look at all those icy and snowy glaciers. The large volcano is Mt. Baker which is "my" mountain, seen both from my home town and my adopted home town, wherever you go. The water above is part of Puget Sound and the San Juan Islands.




I is for Innsbruck, Austria, which I visited in July 1984 with my friend Jutta and her family.



We climbed a church tower and looking down we could see this. The famous Golden Roof is pictured at right.




Another view from the tower. Innsbruck is a beautiful city, though very crowded with many tourists. I would love to see it again as well as more of Austria.





Here is Friedhelm, Jutta's father, checking out a guide book. The architecture of the city is fascinating and I especially enjoyed all the arches.


And lastly, I is for Italy, which I also visited with Jutta's family in July 1984. Here Jutta and Friedhelm look out from castle ruins on a hillside.


The castle ruins from the photo above.



Every hill top seemed to be covered with a castle. This is in Sud Tirol (South Tyrol, which is northern Italy and in the Dolomite Mountains area).

It was so HOT, triple digit heat, but we did a lot of hiking. Here Renate photographs Jutta petting a horse on the side of the mountain.

Jutta, Renate and Friedhelm on the trail ahead of me.


The trail wound around the side of a hill. This is again, Jutta.




Amazing to me, is the European tradition of climbing and hiking and ending up in a restaurant out of nowhere! I never ended a hike in the mountains with a spaghetti dinner before! LOL

This is the city of Merano, Italy. We stayed near here.



The country side was beautiful. This is a zwiebel dome (onion dome) church, typical of the Tirol. This part of northern Italy used to be part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.

Vineyards covered the hillsides and were planted in all different directions. In some places they looked like green quilts on the hills!






Thursday, May 01, 2008

Danny Boy

Daniel Albin Johnson
12/4/1967 to 5/1/1973


35 years later, I would think it would get easier, but it does not. The day he left this earth, sunshine left the room and my heart was broken. God heals the raw pain, but the hole is still there. I do not dwell on it, but some days the grief comes in waves when I least expect it.

So many times lately I have looked at my children and wished I could share them with him. Maybe because my son is about the same age as I was when he left and my girls are almost the same age as him. My brother and I were 17.5 months apart and so were my children. I couldn't get the scanner to scan these photocopies of 126 black and white photos, so I photographed them quickly to share. Sorry for the blurry pics.


This photo is probably Christmas 1968, Danny and I with Grandpa and Grandma Johnson - can you see how he holds my finger. We were pretty close right from the start.


This is at my Grandparents' lot on the Skykomish River, probably 1969. Danny is drinking a pop. My Dad drove pop delivery trucks so we often had wooden cases of pop in glass bottles that went camping with us. It was not something we normally had so it seemed a neat treat at the time.


This joyful smile is what I remember because most of the time he was like this. He had an even tempered nature. It was usually me that had the temper or stubbornness!

This is 1970, since my cousin, the baby was born late 1969. That's Grandma Hopkins holding her and me with my arm around my brother. This is in the parking lot at Paradise at Mount Rainier National Park. I would have been about 4 and Danny 2 1/2 years old.

Oh Danny boy, the pipes, the pipes are calling
From glen to glen, and down the mountain side
The summer's gone, and all the flowers are dying
'Tis you, 'tis you must go and I must bide.
But come ye back when summer's in the meadow
Or when the valley's hushed and white with snow
'Tis I'll be here in sunshine or in shadow
Oh Danny boy, oh Danny boy, I love you so.

And if you come, when all the flowers are dying
And I am dead, as dead I well may be
You'll come and find the place where I am lying
And kneel and say an "Ave" there for me.

And I shall hear, tho' soft you tread above me
And all my dreams will warm and sweeter be
If you'll not fail to tell me that you love me
I'll simply sleep in peace until you come to me.

I'll simply sleep in peace until you come to me.

Tuesday, January 01, 2008

Dorothy Lucille Larimore Johnson

This is my Grandma Johnson with my Dad in 1946. He was obviously teething as any mom would know by that wet shirt! :o) Grandma was 26 here and had already gone through a very, very hard life. I think I get some of my "guts" from her. Alzheimers ravaged her mind and she was sadly taken early at the age of 67. It makes me sad because we were so close and I was just growing in my relationship with Jesus - something I wanted to share with her. I believe she loved God but had not learned how to let Him heal all the broken places.


This is Grandma in the 1950s with my Grandpa Johnson's cousin Ray. This is undoubtedly somewhere near Ingall's Creek in Eastern Washington where my family loved to go camping and elk and deer hunting. Grandpa had permission from the forestry service to build a small A-frame cabin in the forest. They packed in and stayed there, but later it was demolished by an avalanche in the 1960s. This photo was probably taken pre-cabin, when they stayed in tents. These carts were called Merry Riders or Merry Packers...Mom? My Grandparents enjoyed many fishing, hunting, backpacking, horsepacking and other wilderness adventures until Grandpa was stricken with heart/lung disease. He loved photography and I am blessed to have many pictures of their adventures, especially when my Dad was a little sprout.

Grandma was the first baby born in Yakima, Washington in 1920, but grew up mostly in Kirkland, WA. She and I had a very close bond that began almost from the time I was born and lasted until our last meeting, just hours before she died. I wish she could have seen the woman I have grown to be and I sure hope that somewhere in her heart she said yes to God so that I can see her again One Day!

Dorothy Lucille Larimore Johnson

January 2, 1920 - July 12 1987


Sunday, December 30, 2007

I Told You He Was A Keeper

Friday I took a break and got some shopping done. Fun shopping. I had gift cards and was able to buy some things for our home schooling. I also enjoyed some time at my lys since I had earned $20 on my customer card. So, Saturday I sent Hubby off to use his gift card at Barnes and Noble and to do a few errands but most of all to get away and relax a little. Well, did that man buy himself something at the bookstore? NO! He came home and told me he had a belated anniversary surprise for me! He bought me a book called The Secrets of Scotland, which is a beautiful photography book about 12" square. He knows how much I LOVE Scotland! I felt a little bad he didn't find himself something, but he did go online later and use the rest of his card to find some drawing books he liked.

Today we had a wonderful service at church. Our seniors pastor spoke and I always enjoy the years of life he brings and the gentle way he shares the Truth in his sermons. This evening I took some time to scan a few wedding pics as Amy was commenting about it! :o) I really need to get them scanned in better and work on them in PS Elements to improve some of them and get them reprinted. Maybe before my 10th wedding anniversary I will get my wedding album finished!

Here I am going down the aisle. I was so happy, I could have floated. My Daddy looks pretty stern. He wasn't. He just took his job seriously and he was on oxygen. My cousin's then boyfriend, now husband, walked behind us to carry his oxygen tank. I was so thankful for this. A few weeks after the wedding my Dad was given 2 weeks to 2 months to live. He fulled them all and stayed with us another 18 months or so. I treasure the very few pictures I have of him, even though they aren't great. We reconciled when I was in college but a couple years before he died, he asked Jesus to forgive him of his sins. It was then that he began to understand who I was as a person and he was always one of my staunchest supporters. He was so happy for me to marry my Hubby because he knew that Hubby was very good for me and could see how much in love we were. I chose to go down the aisle to the same music as Maria in the Sound of Music. (I did not want to go down the aisle to the strains of "here comes the bride, big, fat and wide!)


Three Generations, me, Grandma Hopkins and my Mom. I love these pictures because Grandma still looks healthy. A few months later, her health began to deteriorate, though she lived about 3 years more. We were 32, 92 and 52 (sorry Mom, but you always look great at any age!).

I probably don't have to explain why I love this picture of Grandma and me. You can see the dark speck on my left lapel (right side when looking at pic). That was my something borrowed, something blue. It was one of my Mom's sapphire earrings which her husband Jack gave her when they married. Since I worse special earrings which Hubby's Mom had bought me for the wedding, I couldn't wear them in my ears. So, I wore one pinned to my dress. Historically women have often pinned special mementos both on and inside their dresses, so I felt it was a fun thing to do. But, I wish I had a dollar for every time someone said, "There's something on your gown." LOL


This is me with my Mom and step Dad Jack. He read the scripture which I put on my December 27th blog post: Colossians 3:12-17. He also gave us LOTS of poinsettias from his job for decorating the church and did a little bit of everything to help with the wedding. (And he often gets mistaken for Santa! HA HA!)

Here we are in the sanctuary. Neither of us had a single gray hair...those came after the children! :o) You can see we are laughing a bit. Our photographer was someone I met only once and she was good at helping us relax. Hubby's Mom died just a few days before our wedding and it was not an easy time. He didn't want to delay or change our wedding though so we went ahead as planned. I worried a little that he would not enjoy our day or that it would be sad for him. But, God filled us with so much JOY because we knew we were walking in His perfect will for our lives. It was very exhausting, but filled with moments we will always treasure.

Here is another shot where the coloring is more accurate. We tried to have special things incorporated in our wedding. The heart necklace I wore was a silver locket with my brother's newborn hospital picture in it. My wedding rings came from my step Grandma, Doris. The Bible on the communion table was Grandpa Hopkins' and the pineapple doily on the table was crocheted by my Grandpa Johnson when he was in a TB sanitorium as a boy. The glass used for communion was an Iris and Herringbone patterned depression glass water goblet that had belonged to my Great Grandma Tisdale (Grandma Hopkins' mother) and the candle sticks were also Iris and Herringbone which I had given as a gift to my Mom. The Unity candle was made by my friend Debi from high school and college and the communion bread was made by my Mom's sister Marilyn. It was a treasure to have the pearl drop earrings that Hubby's Mom had chosen for me, so that we could have a piece of her with us in the ceremony.

This is my Mom's favorite picture of us. It's kind of goofy, but sweet. I am certainly starry eyed for my Hubby! :o) My dress was chosen because Hubby does not like lace and frou frou. Do you know how hard that was? Now there are many dresses without lace but then less so and especially in my size. It has lovely beading and the lace is only on the bottom. I am not really a fancy person, so I had difficulty with choosing a veil and spending $200 on a piece of nothing! So, I made mine with a satin headband. I sewed tiny pearl beads every couple inches along the toule. I wanted to wear the veil in the traditional way and it was wonderful to have Hubby pull it back to claim me as his after we spoke our vows. I thought I would cry in the ceremony, but I didn't. I don't think I could have squeazed one out. I was so excited that I was swaying a little, which probably concerned people. But how could I not be excited? I was standing before God, my family, my church family...at least 300 people proclaiming to them all that I loved this man and I promised to be truly his and wonder of wonders (miracle of miracles), Hubby chose me too!

You might think I'm crazy for this post. But, I think it is good to remember the romance, the giddiness, the things and places and memories and feelings that brought you together as a couple in the first place. Life gets mundane. True love grows in the every day life, not just the fairy tale dreams, but sometimes we need sparkly moments to rekindle the fire. I once worried I would never have this...a godly man who loves me...but I am thankful that I do and I don't want to ever take that for granted.

Thanks Amy for the trip down memory lane! :o)

Normal blogging returns tomorrow.



Sunday, August 05, 2007

They're Here!

When I was a child, my happiest moments in the midst of a lot of turmoil, were the ones spent with my Grandparents. Even though my heart ached in our situation, I don't think I knew it was so horrid or abnormal because all three of my grandparents went to the effort to make me feel loved, wanted and special. It was always an exciting adventure to spend time with them and I am so thankful for all the memories. One of the hardest things about living 850 miles away from home, is that my kids don't see Grandma and Grandpa very often. This year a couple different plans for getting up to see my Mom and step Dad fizzled. It was really disappointing. Then my Mom had her yearly review and she negotiated to have more vacation days rather than a raise. This was good news because it meant that they could begin planning a vacation to see us!

D, in particular, has been very excited and counting the days, because he understands the time and calendar and has already accumulated happy memories with Grandma and Grandpa. J and A remember who Grandma and Grandpa are, but didn't understand the concept of how long it would be until they got here.


As you can see though, when they arrived, everyone was excited! D, A and J piled onto Grandma's lap.

I've never seen my Mom happier than when she is with my kids! :o)

I was not present for this papparazzi session. I was in the shower, but before church this morning, Grandpa was treated to a hat and bib from the dressup drawer and D, A and J joined him.

Here's Grandpa with J. Silly Grandpa!

D and J before church, smiling for Grandma. Some of these pics are a little blurry because Mom just got a new camera and is still in the learning curve.
While Grandma was taking pictures, A said, "Grandma my twin babies are saying, 'Cheeseburger'"! Cheeseburger is what they say instead of "Cheese" for the camera.

"Grandma!" A grabbed her backpack in Sunday School and came running!

And J greeted Grandma with a smile too! They told everyone that their Grandma was here AND there Grandpa too! :o)

A...my little pixie! :o)

J tonight. Grandma and Grandpa brought some neat kitchen additions for their play set. Gr and Gr are really good at garage sales and find us some of the neatest stuff. They had fun "microwaving" their toys tonight! LOL

Today was a bit of a lazy day. We are all a bit tired with all the preparations for coming and travel and arrival. We watched a move, Miss Potter (about Beatrix Potter), which I really enjoyed. The filming is lovely and the story is nice and family safe. And speaking of Grandparent memories. It brought back memories of my Grandma Johnson reading Peter Rabbit to me as a child. I really love her art work even more so than the actual stories. She was quite a talented artist. I enjoyed seeing more of her nature studies in art on the extras portion of the DVD.

Well, this was a tired blog post, but I wanted to put some pics up for family to see. We're off for more adventures tomorrow.