Celebrating Family, Aunt Mary and Southern Indiana
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My bag
is packed. Soon I will be on an airplane with my cousin Shirley from Harlem and
my cousin Maxine, who lives in Helena. Our destination is Louisville, Kentucky.
We’ll pick up a rental car, cross the Ohio River and drive the winding River
Road to Elizabeth, Indiana and out into the country toward Laconia and our Aunt
Mary. We go to join with Indiana family to celebrate Aunt Mary’s ninety-eighth
birthday.
When I return
to Indiana, I return to my first home, to a reunion with Indiana kinfolk, and
to refresh my love for southern Indiana. Southern Indiana is different from the flat
land of the industrial north and the agrarian center of the state. Geography
here centers along the rugged hills above the Ohio River, the red clay
countryside, dotted with tobacco fields, small subsistence farms and tiny
towns. The land makes the people and these people are warm hearted and
friendly.
Traveling
with my Montana cousins is a bonus. Uncle Jim was the first of our family to
discover Montana. My Dad, Paul, followed a few years later. My northern cousins
and I did not grow up together. By the time my family moved to Harlem, they were
off to college. I was still in junior high. Our travels to reunions with
Indiana family have given us a chance to know one another. On the road we exchange
our own family stories, compare notes and speculate about our fathers’
growing-up years.
Our
Aunt Mary, a gentle lady, has long been the family matriarch. When she was a
child, her farm family always had food but no money. She wore clothes to school
made from my Grandmother’s dresses and cut-down coats. But she and every one of
her siblings finished high school. Graduation from high school during the Great
Depression was a major accomplishment. After graduation she married my Uncle
Paul. They bought a near-by farm in the hills near the Ohio River and raised
ten children. Aunt Mary is the
repository of our family history. She holds a wealth of community stories, and
is murder at the card table. This week she marks her ninety-eighth birthday.
On
Saturday, family and friends will gather at the grade school cafeteria. All
Aunt Mary’s children, grand-children, great-grandchildren and great-great-
grandchildren will be there, along with many nieces and nephews and their
families. We’ll fill up on mountains of fried chicken, steaming corn on the cob
and Aunt Dixie’s famous coconut cake. We will swill gallons of iced tea,
partake of hugs and kisses all around, pose for hundreds of photos and afterwards
collapse back at Aunt Mary’s brick house on the hill.
There we
will do what we all do best—talk, eat and play cards. We’ll ask questions and
soak up the clues to family mysteries.
Aunt Mary thinks it is her job to feed us more than we can eat. We will revolve
around the card table where sweet Aunt Mary, showing no mercy, regularly whomps
our butts, no matter what the game. Even when we deal from a stack of five
decks, Aunt Mary knows where every card lies, who played what and which card
has not yet been played. During our last
visit we Montana cousins struggled to learn the rudiments of Euchre. This year
we intend to master the game. We’ll talk family. And we’ll talk politics. Or perhaps I should say we’ll listen politics. Aunt Mary knows the history of every president, who was in Congress, what bills were passed, the goofs and the goods on all. This woman with a high school education regularly shames us with her knowledge and her memory.
We’ll
spend time with our Indiana cousins, cementing those bonds more tightly. This
year my Indiana cousin Shirley and I have arranged to spend special time
renewing our own ties. Although only two years my senior, when I was a rather lost
little girl, Indiana Shirley took me in hand and taught me family values of
responsibility and service; basic tenets of life. Through distance and time we drifted apart,
so I am excited to have this chance to reconnect with her.
We will
pile into cars to visit King’s Cemetery where many of the Ashton family
pioneers are buried. It sits above
Tobacco Landing, a post established by our merchant ancestor. We’ll go on to
the Dogwood Cemetery where my Grandmother’s family rests. Far from morbid,
these tours of the countryside graveyards are joyful. They trigger memories and
elicit more stories.
Indiana is the first country I loved. It holds
my first family. It nurtured me. I’m going home for a visit. Happy Birthday,
Aunt Mary.
Sondra Ashton
HDN: Looking out my back door
June 14, 2012
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