The interstate system was still in its'
infancy when I was a child , so the family trips from Cleveland to
Connellsville, Pennsylvania required using the Ohio and Pennsylvania
turnpikes and the low mountains and hills provided us great scenery and
when you are six five cows in the fields tend grab your attention. Most
summers would be an extended stay with my grandparents and quite a bit
of time spent with aunts and uncles, cousins and this group of seven
kids were not that far apart in years and who couldn't get along with
cousins. For all of us. Our grandfather was the most interesting person
that I have ever meet and always entertained with stories and would
create personalized ditties about each of us, but me me he sang:
Donnie Joe cut off his big toe and hung it up
to dry
the girls began to laugh at Joe and Joe began
to cry.
My grandfather did not drive and he walked
everywhere including grocery shopping, fishing and you were always
invited to join in the adventure. We waked past a cemetery and he asked
me if I knew many people in the cemetery were dead and I threw out a
number as if I were to win a prize with a correct guess, and he
answered, “all of them”. At the time I did not understand. The summers
went by quickly and Mom and Dad always arrived on a Sunday to go back
home.
Grand Pap was a farmer, a fisherman and a
volunteer fireman and kept watch over all of us and he enjoyed the
summer visit as much as we did. I was young teenager when we heard the
news of his passing and there was that long ride back to Pennsylvania.
The funeral was on a Saturday and the next day we headed home and in one
of those weird moments that we experience , the song playing on the
radio was “Sunday Will Never Be the Same” by Spanky and The Gang and I
heard my mother say, That is so true”.