When
I looked up my Uncle Earle’s picture in the 1918 Lewiston High School annual, I
was surprised to find his sister Myrtle pictured on the same page. As
noted in a previous post, Uncle Earle, was already 21 when attending Lewiston
High School, but Myrtle, born March 28, 1894, was two years older.
She was 24 when she graduated.
Her
given name was Myrtle Irene, but in adulthood, she asked to be called “Lynn,” so
I called her “Aunt Lynn.”
Under
her picture in the annual is the following: “’Her voice is low and sweet and
dark brown is her e’e.’ Myrtle was a very welcome addition to our class
when she came to us this year. She is noted for her eyes and for her
concentration in study periods.” Her plan was to attend the University of
Oregon, and her ambition was to be an engraver.
Well,
I’m sorry to say that college and a career as an artist didn’t happen for Myrtle.
In the ‘30s, perhaps before, she worked as a photo retoucher for a Portland photographer.
Grandma Ina (her mother, of course) hoped she had found good employment, but by
1933, Myrtle was tiring of it.
“I
hope you can manage to help Myrtle soon,” Ina wrote to Vance, my dad, in 1933.
Exactly what she wanted Vance to do for Myrtle, I have no idea since he was
struggling himself. “That girl is in a serious spot,” Ina continued. “She has
arthritis in her arms now to add to her other ills – colitis, sinus, and nerves.
She can’t stand this retouching any more, not enough of it to hire anyway. Bear
in mind that she sees things differently from the rest of us, and is far from
accurate though just as truthful as you or I. I think she’s unreasonable
sometimes, but she is a splendid girl all the way through.”
I
love that paragraph! Spoken like a true mother! She knows her child's faults,
but she is altogether splendid anyway.
And
yes, Myrtle was splendid through and through. She was intelligent,
artistic, capable, and energetic. She was the type of person who got things
done. She would have made an excellent farm wife, and if she could have
translated her skills into a vocation, she might have been an excellent
secretary. I think that whatever Lynn wanted from life just didn’t happen for
her, and life for an unmarried woman was difficult in those years. She was
basically homeless, and when I was young, I feared I might become just like her.
My
mother told me that Myrtle had never married because she “carried a torch” for the
young man in this picture. He had moved away and married someone else, and
Myrtle didn’t get over it, Mother said. Well – maybe. And maybe she didn’t find
her calling or her calling was out of reach. And I guess she just didn’t want
to be a teacher, which might have been the only realistic path open to her.
After
Grandpa Jack died, Myrtle moved back to the farm as Grandma’s companion and
caregiver. We have Myrtle to thank for writing Grandma’s story. She also
organized Grandma’s recipe box. She was right in her element taking care of
Grandma, the house, and the garden. By the time Grandma Ina died in 1957, Lynn
was 63 -- at retirement age and homeless. Eventually she shared
Uncle Earle’s home in Nezperce until they both needed nursing care, about 1970.
Myrtle died December 28, 1971, at the age of 77. KW
[We have several studio portraits of Myrtle, probably because she worked for a photographer.]
3 comments:
Such lovely pictures of her. Perhaps her life didn't turn out quite like she expected, but she surely didn't shirk her duty.
Do you remember her eyes? What was it about them that made an impression?
It does read like a sad story, but I hope it wasn't.
Her eyes were brown and her look was intense. Grandpa Jack was blond with blue eyes. Grandma Ina had brown eyes. Pearl, Earle, and Shirley had blue eyes. Myrtle, Ethel, and Daddy had brown eyes. I've always called my eyes brown, but they aren't really. I guess I have too much blue in my background.
And Myrtle's brown eyes had an intensity about them. They could flash. She was opinionated.
Post a Comment