Showing posts with label old family photos of 17th and Topping in Kansas City MO. Show all posts
Showing posts with label old family photos of 17th and Topping in Kansas City MO. Show all posts

Monday, August 1, 2011

To remember and walk on again.....



In A Motel Parking Lot, Thinking Of  Dr. Williams 
                 --by Wendell Berry

I.

The poem is important, but
not more than the people
whose survival it serves,

one of the necessities, so they may
speak what is true, and have
the patience for beauty: the weighted

grainfield, the shady street,
the well-laid stone and the changing tree
whose branches spread above.

For want of songs and stories
they have dug away the soil,
paved over what is left,

set up their perfunctory walls
in tribute to no god,
for the love of no man or woman,

so that the good that was here
cannot be called back
except by long waiting, by great

sorrows remembered and to come
by invoking the thunderstones
of the world, and the vivid air.

II.

The poem is important,
as the want of it
proves. It is the stewardship

of its own possibility,
the past remembering itself
in the presence of

the present, the power learned
and handed down to see
what is present

and what is not: the pavement
laid down and walked over
regardlessly--by exiles, here

only because they are passing.
Oh, remember the oaks that were
here, the leaves, purple and brown,

falling, the nuthatches walking
headfirst down the trunks,
crying "onc! onc!" in the brightness

as they are doing now
in the cemetery across the street
where the past and the dead

keep each other. To remember,
to hear and remember, is to stop
and walk on again

to a livelier, surer measure.
It is dangerous
to remember the past only

for its own sake, dangerous
to deliver a message
you did not get.



I have pondered this poem long and long since reading it over the weekend. I love it too much to weave my own impressions into it. It must stand alone, this poem, like the past it describes. It made me think of a special photo from that past, the one above.

The photo shows my grandparents' beloved home at 17th and Topping in Kansas City, Missouri. My grandmother, Nellie, is the woman standing in the group of three -- there in the middle -- directly behind the woman seated. My young uncles, Jim and Marshall, are standing on the porch. Their baby sister, my mother, would be born some years later after the family had moved to Berkeley, California. 

Have you done this, GoogleMap former residences belonging to your family long before you were born? It fascinates me. Here is a screenprint of 17th and Topping as it looks today. The driving view shows an older neighborhood with someone walking on the sidewalk but even the older homes existing there now are newer than my grandparents' house, which is long gone, and the walker captured by Google has no idea the house or my grandparents ever existed. I do not know on which corner their home and acres of property were situated. I like to think that some of the trees are offshoots of those my uncles climbed back in the early 1900s....



To hear a portion of my Uncle Jim's recorded memories of his boyhood at 17th & Topping, click memories lit the corners of Jim's mind: the old home and a horse named Teddie.

But, as Wendell Berry's poignant poem cautions, we must be with the past for only a moment to hear and remember . . . to stop and walk on again to a livelier, surer measure. Now, if only I could believe that today will be that it would seem easier to leave this moment..... 

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Monday, April 13, 2009

memories lit the corners of Jim's mind: the old home and a horse named Teddie

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In 2004 Mike and I made a project of turning two audio tapes of my Uncle Jim's memories of his mother and father into three audio discs. From the original tapes recorded from my uncle's running narration Mike created tracks for the discs and we named the chapters according to topic, resulting in 17 tracks on disc one, 16 on disc two, and 10 on disc three. I created a fourth disc loaded with 21 separate folders of old family photographs and also created music slide shows for a select amount of the photos. We made some 25 sets of the project for family members which was my contribution to the family story.

With the renewed interest in preserving the oral history of this country (see The Smithsonian Folklife and Oral History Interviewing Guide) I've decided to share some of our family project here at my blog from time to time, and not in narrative order.

James H. Swearingen, Jr. -- my Uncle Jim, the narrator of this "report," as he refers to it in the tapes-- was born in Kansas City, Missouri, in 1901. His memory was fully in tact when, at age 80, he sat in his study and recorded these memories. He died three years later.....of a heart attack, out in his garden in Mill Valley, California.


I wrote introductions for each folder in the photo disc and am including the one describing the shots that accompany this short narrative. My first offering from the family project describes their Early Kansas City days, specifically the horse Teddie.








This memory runs 3:28



The house at 17th and Topping in Kansas City, Missouri. My grandmother, Nellie, is holding Teddie's reins, Jim (the narrator) to her left. Next to Jim is Marshall leaning against older sister, Marjorie. Other sister Pauline is probably the other young woman in the carriage. The woman and the boy standing are unknown.
(My mother, the baby of the family, was to be born years later in Berkeley, California.)



Teddie with my Uncle Marshall left and Uncle Jim (narrator) right.



My grandfather had two daughters from his marriage to his deceased wife, and my grandmother raised them as her own. I adore this photo of Pauline with the family dog, Rastus, and horse Teddie.






I wondered what 17th and Topping looks like today, and studied the cross-street at street view using Google Maps. It shows a mixed neighborhood of older homes in various states of repair/decline, some light business, and a small townhouse development. I think I located the correct corner based on the description in the for sale newspaper ad published in 1913.........





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