. . . the way
you four Dobsons looked when we presented our trees was pay in plenty. Ida Jane
Patchen, 1922
December
1936
Together
with her daily chores, baking pork cake had been enough for one day. Ina was
careful to pace herself. She could over-do and have an attack of “nerves.” She
had learned to do less so that she might enjoy more.
As
she rested before the fire this evening, Ina picked up the Good Housekeeping
magazine once again. She liked to try new recipes, so she thought she might bake
one of the cookie recipes tomorrow. However much the virtues of an electric mixer
might be extolled, Ina knew she could mix any recipe with hand tools just as
she always had. But a decision as to the recipe would have to wait, for she was
too tired to read.
Instead,
Ina closed her eyes and began to reminisce about the first Christmas here at
Gilbert in 1896. The two Dobson families lived together in the very small original
cabin in the gulch. Ina remembered it as a difficult time – living in the rough
cabin with little ones. Her Earle and Bertha’s Ralph were just babies and the
girls were two and four. But it was lovely to be working for themselves with
the potential of owning their own farm and home. At that time, Pa and Ma and
the Patchen family [her sister Ida] lived within a mile of them. They were all
working hard but so happy to be together.
Anyway,
Christmas was coming, and Ina just didn’t have much to do with or any reason to
do it. It was winter and her living circumstances were little better than
camping. She had her dreams, though, and she dreamt of a Christmas in the
future when she might prepare a holiday for her family in a warm house with a floor.
But sister Ida Jane, ever clever and capable, had secretly stepped up to the
problem. Ina remembered what Idy had written back in ’22:
But, to come back to Christmas again – I think the
best time I ever had working for that especial time was that very first
Christmas “on the hill” [Gilbert / Russell Ridge] when those little evergreens
inspired me to attempt another something out of nothing and I enlisted Mabel’s
interests and we put in all those long, long afternoons and evenings that
otherwise would have hung heavy on our hands into doing things for the little
folks and you remember how it surprised you and Bee [Bertha] and how after we
had come and gone tramping through the snow. Jack had you light the lamp again
and together you inspected our handiwork. I think there were some funny-shaped
eats in there, too, weren’t there? Well, anyway, it pleased all the biddies and
the way you four Dobsons looked when we presented our trees was pay in plenty. And
last but not least, you kept all those old Christmas things from the “gulch”
time for some time. I want to see them.
Ina cherished this wonderful
memory. Tonight she would rest. Tomorrow would be another busy day. KW
[Doubtless one of Ina's children drew and colored the picture of the fireplace as a Christmas gift.
The ad for a Hamilton Beach mixer is from the December 1936 issue of Good Housekeeping magazine.
The photo is of M. L. Dickson and his family at his home in Idaho. The quality is very poor, but because it's 110 years old it's precious. I can just make out the family (l to r): Bertha Dobson, Ida Patchen, Lucy and Lafe Dickson, our Ina, and the little sister, Mabel. Seated in front are Ben and Frank Dickson.
The cabin is another old family picture, but I'm not sure it was the Dobson cabin. It might have been Ben Dickson's. But one-room rustic cabins look very similar.]
6 comments:
Kathy, I love reading the Christmas memories stories. Thank you. Would that we could all have such great memories in our lives.
The Hamilton Beach looks a lot like a Kitchenaid.
A little trivia here. $19.90 in 1936 converts into $331.17 in today's money. When we wax nostalgic for the "low" prices of the past, we need to think of the cost of living of that time. Buying an electric mixer in 1936 wasn't an easy decision.
Wow, the drawing is excellent. Wouldn't we love to know who did it?? The things we mother's save and don't identify because *we* know who made them.
Love your trivia, Leah. Dan often does a similar comparison on things and it's very eye-opening.
Chris: Even though it's fun to visit the past, it seems everyone giggles about how low prices were then. Well, it's all relative, right? Prices of household "time savers" were often out of reach for the average family.
I also love the wonderful drawing of the Dobson fireplace. It's a treasure.
Molly -- I'm having a lot of fun making up the memories as I go. Hallie will recognize the scenario in today's post. I haven't done this before -- a little afraid to mix fact and fiction for my family's sake. Oh well. They can read the letters for themselves.
I think part of KitchenAid's appeal is it's standard, retro appearance.
And I had hoped that the fact that these "low" prices were out of reach for many families would come out.
Well, maybe Vance drew the fireplace. That's a strong possibility because I have it. Daddy did occasionally sketch something. Myrtle also drew. I know what you mean, Chris. You think you'll never forget -- and lo and behold, you can't remember. Except for the "H's" I find in my cookbooks. I know who did those.
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