Two
Eleanor Mae was
born in Baltimore.
An Aquarius. Born twenty-two years into
the millenium. The second child and the only daughter, to a British mother,
Jennie and a father, Howard, who enlisted in the Royal Canadian Mounties before
the United States
had gotten into the first world war. It
was there that Grandaddy lost his arm.
Her dashing older
brother was three years her senior.
There was another dashing brother
five years her junior. A couple of
siblings were born interspersed around them. Had they lived, there would have
been seven children in the Hood family.
Mom married at
eighteen. She and my Dad joined the
Army. Mom was in the Women’s Auxillary
Corps (WAC). My memory is that they were both in the military for two years. After their service, they returned to Baltimore.
Somewhere along
the line, Mom ran a lathe. That was typical
of most women during the war years after their spouses left for military
service.
Mom said her
father was an alcoholic, that her mother always crying, always whining. None of it was what I experienced except for
my Grandaddy’s drinking. He was often
drunk. I know that because he often fell
off a barstool. I would spend part of my
summer vacation taking care of him while his six ribs healed from the fall. There
were lots of jokes about his drinking.
One in particular was that he needed something to strap him upright to
the bar stool. That was long before
seatbelts were invented in automobiles.
My memory of my
Nana was that she was loving, wore colorful jewelry (costume, but who cares)
and always had a hat on. She also said, “to
mat toes” for tomatoes. It didn’t make
sense she didn’t pronounced potatoes the same way. It always made me laugh.
Nana, a petite and
warm woman, came to the United States
in the early ‘20s from London,
England. Over time she lost most of her accent except
when she would speak of tomatoes. She
pronounced them “toe matt toes.” It
always made me laugh.
Nana had eloped in
her early twenties to marry her handsome boyfriend from Maryland. He then enlisted in the Canadian
military long before the United
States got into the first World War. That is where he lost his left arm. Nana
later learned his family owned the land on which Cape
Canaveral is built.
Nana says that
there were maids in her home when she was raising her children. An upstairs maid and a downstairs maid. There is also evidence the family was
wealthy.
Grandaddy’s
parents died when he was young. Sent to
work as an indentured servant essentially, a lawyer saved his life. Not in a physical sense but more in an
opportunity sense. When Grandaddy was
seventeen years old, a lawyer came to the house where he was working. He’d been living in a barn and the attorney
told him he came into a great deal of money.
He left both the barn and his employers immediately. After he finished high school he went to
college.
Rumor is that he
was bitter from the abuse of his employers.
That and losing his arm in the war are the reasons our family believe he
started drinking. It is hard to know for sure about that since he rarely spoke
to any of us.
Mom said he was
often abusive to her, both physically and verbally. That she couldn’t go to medical school and
had to go to work to support the family because of his drinking and inability
to work consistently left her both angry and bitter. She never spoke about her
anger but was quick to identify it in others.
Aunt Phyliss, my
mother’s childhood friend, called her “Scrappy.” My brother and I called all of
my Mom’s family and friends “aunt.” It
was a southern endearment. Phyliss was my father’s second cousin. She introduced my parents to one another.
Phyliss was one of
the best people I knew. And very aware
of children, unlike my mother. Phyliss
always offered me a treat when Mom and I visited her in the next town.
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