When I was little (we lived in Bethel Park PA) my mother always made a big Thanksgiving dinner for us....don't remember anyone ever coming to visit. She would make the whole works....turkey, stuffing, mashed potatoes, etc. Always had pumpkin pie and whipped cream, a bowlful of nuts for cracking and eating and don't forget the (York) peppermint patties. She always got out her good china and crystal and silverware. The table always looked wonderful...and my Dad was always a nervous wreck. Seven (at the time) kids at the table with those crystal goblets.....I can understand...haha. As soon as dinner was over we immediately had to clear the glasses off the table. Having made the whole dinner
Her twin brother Dave was a priest and her other brother Howard had been killed in World War II...so we had no cousins on her side of the family. My Dad had one brother in Connecticut, he had two children, but they didn't travel much....don't remember them ever coming to PA. So....it was just us.........7 kids and my parents.
However...I loed going to the hill to my friend Ruth's house.....because they always had company coming for Thanksgiving. I would go down in the morning, before the company arrived and play with Ruth and her sisters (Cindy, Mary, Georgie,and Kathy)
until dinnertime. I remember a couple of years their mother would have a big roll of paper, crayons and markers and the kids got to draw a Thanksgiving scene on it. Of course I got in on that! What a great way to keep the kids occupied before dinner!
When we moved to Florida it was the same thing....just the Burtons at the table.....but always in the dining room with the crystal and china. There was one year my parents went on a cruise to Jamaica and Puerto Rico over the Thanksgiving weekend....(.my Mom must have LOVED it!)....Meanwhile back at the ranch....Ellen was in charge
on Thanksgiving...I believe we even ate them at the dining room table...hah minus the crystal and china! Someone made a pie at least! hahha
Of course during the college years Thanksgiving was the BEST time to go home...not just because there would actually be a balanced meal to eat...haha...but EVERYONE else was going to be in town too. Thanksgiving weekend was always the most fun...at the local bar Mac's on Fifth Avenue. You would see everyone there...it was great fun.
The Gators weren't exactly the top team when I was at UF...so the game wasn't a big priority...but I do remember watching OTHER teams on TV....that was the other thing my Mom always enjoyed...watching college football...Michigan especially (my Dad's school). One year I brought a friend Betsy home...she couldn't get home to Chicago...so she came home with us....and survived the weekend! haha.Another memorable trip was my second year (I think) when my friend Liz was driving me home in her MGB GT (?)
Her stepfather owned a car repair shop...so she always had some kind of car...the little sporty car impressed all the guys especially...but it wasn't exactly what it appeared to be. (remember it was a car REPAIR shop...so it was used and while it ran...it always seemed to have some issue...however since my only form of transportation was a Schwinn bike...I was not concerned! haha) well...one year we were setting off for the trip home and we were the first two to depart from Gainesville. At the time in order to get the car going ...you had to push start it... so we figured once we got going we were going to have to keep going until we got home (3 hour trip approximately). We jokingly told my sister Ellen and our friends leaving later that if they saw us on the side of the road they better stop and help. Well we "shoved off" literally...haha and about an hour down the road we got a flat tire!.. AHHH OH...they might REALLY find us on the side of the road! No sweat...
After college.....there were lots of trips out of town/state with John. One year we went up to Tennessee for his sister Sandy and Ken's wedding. That was a GREAT time!
We had snow flurries and everything...after being in Florida for so many years...as a former Pittsburgh er...snow flurries and bare trees were what Thanksgiving was all about! The wedding was in a little church in the valley of the Smokey Mountains...heated by a wood burning stove ( I think) afterwards we celebrated and spent the night in a cabin up in the mountains.....a good time was had by all!
There were lots of trips to Alabama to celebrate with John's family. We would head home with a car packed full of "gifts"
No comments:
Post a Comment