Looks like I’m a little late to the blog! So much fun to read about
fond memories of Willard School, and seeing all of the pictures. I hope
the 40th RHS reunion went well. Now, we’re looking at our 50th in a
couple of years. Anyone game? I’d love to see everyone again.
Like
Barbara, I left Ridgewood pretty much after going to college, but was
back frequently to visit parents and grandparents. Eventually, I moved
to California and now live in Northridge, which is part of LA. After
college, I lived in Burlington, VT for some time and worked in the UVM
medical library. I became interested in libraries and subsequently went
back to school to get a library degree. A high point of that time was
reuniting with Barbara Tomkins and meeting her then boyfriend, Jerry
Melnick. Jerry worked at the Harvard School of Public Health and helped
my then boyfriend find a job there. Barbara and I didn’t see that much
of each other during that time, but it was nice to know that she was
nearby.
After that, I moved with said boyfriend, later husband,
to California on a temporary basis while he did an internship in
Bakersfield. Eventually, that marriage ended and I moved to LA and
worked for the VA. After some time, I met and married the love of my
life, Bob McGaughey, and we recently celebrated our 25th anniversary.
Reading
Bobby Elgin’s entries reminded me of going over to his house in the
morning when the family would be having breakfast. I lived across the
street from him and played with his sister, and all of us kids would
walk or ride bikes to school together. I now realize that probably the
last thing his mother needed was extra kids hanging out at that time,
but we would sometimes get a cup of grape juice, which I thought was
very cool. Oh, and we got to watch TV—in the morning no less!
So
many memories of playing at Barbara’s house after school and of her
parents. I remember that her grandfather lived with them for some time,
and that when he died, you could still smell cigar smoke in his room. I
remember going to a birthday party in that room and that her mother
made a really fun game out of little gifts that were tied to pieces of
yarn. The yarn was all tangled up like a spiderweb, and you had to
follow the end you were given to get your gift. Later, Barbara and I
would try to be cool and as teens took the bus to NYC to experience
Greenwich Village. I remember wondering exactly how we would know when
we got there.
When we were all a little older, I remember Mark
Brotherton and, like Barbara mentioned, we would go to wherever he was
babysitting and hang out. He was about the first of us to get a
driver’s license, and I remember him driving his VW. He even let me try
driving once, but I seem to remember having a close call with the curb
on Mountain Ave., and he thought maybe that wasn’t the greatest idea
after all (he was always the smartest one in the class).
I hope that the blog is still active. I hope everyone is well and enjoying life, and I’d love to hear more. Take care,
Betsy Rodie McGaughey.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment