Tag Archives: radio tower

My Folks #12: Marriage

My dad was born in November of 1903. Fourteen yeas later, in March of 1917, my mother was born. 

Dad spent his early teens in Atlanta, Idaho, an isolated mountain mining town. He chopped wood and carried water to keep his family’s laundry with the scalding water his mother needed to get the grime of the miner’s clothes. And he picked up a life-long love of music from a young schoolmarm he appreciated for the rest of his life. The family moved to what is now Old Horseshoe Bend Road, one lot south of Hill Road, when he was fourteen. 

Mother’a early school years were spent in the isolation of Idaho’s central desert on the last farm irrigated by the King Hill canal. Thanks to wooden flues that burned whenever a brush fire swept through the sagebrush the irrigation water was unreliable. Combined with potatoes that had not yet been bread for the summer heat and the never-ending stones coming up in the fields, the family lost the farm and moved to Boise when she was thirteen. 

Dad’s mother was a Bible-banging Christian who insisted he go to a Nazarene high school in Nampa. He commuted on the electric Interurban Rail Way for a few days before he came home and declared if he had to keep doing all that praying he wasn’t going to go to school at all. She relented and he got on the Interurban going the other way to Boise High. Because the family had moved so much in his childhood, dad graduated from Boise High twelve years before mother did, at age twenty.

Dad’s mother used her religion to keep two of her five children home so they would be there in her old age. Dad became resentful of this manipulation and, later, of how religion kept his sister impoverished with worries of damnation for the rest of her life. Long before I arrived my father had given up on religious institutions.

My mom was raised a believing Lutheran but not holier-than-anyone. She took we three kids to church while dad was glad to stay home and enjoy the Sunday peace and quiet.

While my mother was getting through twelve years of school my dad got married and — gasp, — divorced. He also played trombone in a band in bars, smoked cigarettes, and was apparently a rather randy young man about town. 

From Boise High my mother graduated into the Great Depression. With her father very ill and unable to work she went to work as a secretary to support the family. She also made sure her younger sisters had the prom dresses and year books that make teen years memorable and which she had missed out on.

In early 1938 the Boise Light Opera company  staged a production of Gilbert & Sullivan’s grand romp The Macado.  Both my parents got singing parts and were soon dating — she, the hard working young lady from a good home and he the free-ranging older man it took to charm her with a different life. They married in 1940. 

My mom’s folks fretted over the history of divorce, drinking, smoking and trombone playing. Dad’s mom squirmed over his marrying outside the Only True Religion. There is no doubt the old folks were talking.

Indeed, when my dad died in 1977 my mother’s mother was still alive. Grandma had never driven so I picked her up and took her to dinner at my mother’s house. Afterward, when we got in the car to take Grandmother home, she immediately folded her hands in her lap, gave a resolved sigh, and observed, “Well. That marriage didn’t last long.” 

“No, Grandmother,” I replied. “Only until death did them part after thirty-seven years.”

She was still convinced it would never work out.

Sawtooth Kidhood 1955: Snowyside Mountain #1

My dad had climbed 9,363 foot Greylock Mountain in Atlanta when he was a kid.

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I have a photo of him sitting atop a radio tower on Shafer Butte, a mile above Boise, when he was in his twenties.

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He had something about getting up and looking around.

In the 1950s he found out that from Snowyside Peak in the Sawtooth Mountains you can see right through the clear waters to the bottom of fifty-two lakes. Yea, there were some “difficult spots” on the climb to the top. But from what he heard the peak was easily reach by following the ridge that rises from the Alice-Toxaway Loop Trail.

At 10,651 feet, Snowyside is the fifth highest peak in the Sawtooths. In 1955, when I was ten, our family of five broke camp at Toxaway Lake, loaded up the pack horses, and set out for the day’s adventure of checking out those fifty-two lakes.

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Mom and my little sister made it to where the faint trail up Snowyside’s ridge gave way to rocks, bigger rocks and then boulders. Mom never was comfortable with heights and my sister’s legs were too short to get over the increasingly large stones so they decided to hunker down out of the wind.

My big sister Vicky, dad, Flip the dog and I pushed on.

I remember approaching the top of several peaks only to have another, higher peak appear just ahead. Those jagged high points before Snowyside Peak were a source of great disappointment and consternation.

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Then we came to a vertical wall that stopped us. Dad considered a way around but the slopes were too steep and covered with dangerous scree. Yet looking through fifty-two lakes was calling and soon Dad was pushing from the bottom and Vicky and I managed to scramble past the obstacle. Dad was tall enough and reached the scramble spot on his own.

Unfortunately Flip was a dog who never did follow instructions. And, to be fair, his lack of opposable thumbs for scrambling made his lack of obedience mote, so poor Flip was left behind. We were sure he’d be in the same spot waiting our descent.

The wall turned out to be part of the final assent to the summit of Snowyside Mountain. Soon our eyes were watching the slope in front of us give way to every increasing open sky without another peak taunting “not yet you haven’t reached the top.”

And right there at the top of Snowyside Mountain was a slobbering, smiling, tail-wagging Flip imploring us to come look-see!