Saturday, March 2, 2019

Going On, Going Forward

Marie and Lewis; Left to right Rose Mary, Irma (my mother), and Minerva
about 1928

Oh, Bobby!  My Bobby!

Those words were never spoken aloud, by Lewis and Marie Cardiff.  They knew if they did, they would never stop crying.  And all the parents in their small town, who had lost babies and children to diphtheria, would never stop either.  The streets would run with tears.

Minerva was a baby when Bobby died in 1922.  Marie hugged her tighter than a tick, afraid to let her go.  Lewis took her and rocked her through the late hours at night.

Another child was born in 1925, Rose Mary.  Marie and Lewis had silently prayed for a boy, but those words also were never spoken aloud.

Life on a farm is about life and living.  Crops were planted in spring, harvested in early fall.  Cows birthed calves, giving milk for them and the Cardiff family alike.  Horses, hogs, gardens:  all were life and living.  Going on, going forward.

Cars were now on the streets, “…dirty nasty things,” Marie Cardiff said some seventy years later.  Electric lines were appearing and some folks had phones.  Going on....

Lewis and Marie with last child,
Vada 1940
From his field south of the town, Lewis heard a sound, one that he prayed he would never hear again.  World War…bombs…planes…sounds that still froze his being.  

A plane wobbled from the south, its wings near to breaking off.  The nose dipped down and landed in Lewis Cardiff’s field.

Marie carried Rose and dragged Minerva to the field. What is that?  A plane? 

The entire town poured into the field and surrounded the plane.  They had never seen one, read about them, but now, here it was.  A plane in Lewis Cardiff’s field.

Robertson Aircraft Company lettered the side of the crumpled plane.  The nose was in the mud and the tail was up in the air.  One wing was punctured and the rudder was askew.

Next thing people knew, the pilot leaped out of the plane with Don Robertson, the owner’s son.  “I tol’ you this heap was a piece of shit, you knew it and I knew it.  You bastard!  Coulda killed us both!”  He stomped to the road and roared, “Where’s the goddam train!” 

In unison the silent townspeople pointed to the station a mile away, and the pilot stomped all the way there, raising his fist at the plane and shouting a variety of obscenities.  Some gasped, some roared with laughter, and the more holy ones smirked inwardly.

Mr. Robertson waited for a second train heading to St. Louis, Missouri, pulled into the station.  The tightly packed crowd moved with him, over one hundred souls.  Like yellow ducklings with their mama, they followed the poor man, who was wondering what the hell his pa would say when he heard about this.

A day later another plane circled the field, where the crumpled wreck sat.  The new plane chose to land in the Cardiff pasture next to the house.  A pale and defeated Don Robertson exited the plane, followed by the new pilot, Charles Lindbergh. 

His name whispered through the re-gathered town.  Daredevil Lindbergh? Air mail?  

early flying years
The town had foreseen that Don Robertson would drag his tail back to the damaged plane. En mass the ladies brought out boxes of fried chicken, pies, more fried chicken and more pies.  Tables were lugged by the men unwillingly straggling after them. The men also set a rusty table up around the crumpled plane. The tables would later be moved to the replacement plane.

Don Robertson and Chas. Lindbergh examined the plane wreck, determining that it was useless. 

Then Robertson shouted to Lewis Cardiff so that all could hear, “This here plane is simply broke.  But,” and he looked at the chicken-eating crowd, “We’re fixing it up.  And, there’d better be every last piece o’ metal and the like.”

Actually, a family reunion photo, but still
fried chicken and pie.
The silent pie eating group nodded in agreement.  Who would do such a thing?  Why, no one we know would do that.

It was determined that Robertson and Lindbergh would fly the plane from the pasture and head to St. Louis.  A mechanic from the company would join them, after Robertson had a meaningful talk with his pa.

When the three returned it was already dusk.  Marie hustled the three men into her house and made up the rooms for the night.  She handed Rose Mary to Don Robertson, a desperate looking Robertson, who seemed glad to hold an infant who would not say one single word to him.

Minerva climbed onto Lindbergh’s lap and played with his collar. 

The next morning while the mechanic worked on the broken plane, Lindbergh remained in the parlor, quietly reading magazines.  

Charles Lindbergh, 1902–1974
Source


By mid-afternoon, the broken plane had been repaired and they all flew back in the two planes to St. Louis.  

Lewis, Marie, and their children were planting corn in the field, as they looked to the sky.  Lindbergh dipped down his wing to them.


After Lindbergh had flown across the Atlantic and was in Paris, he sent to the Cardiff family

a postcard with his photograph printed upon it.  They both read it many times. Well, then.  He made it.  Sure was a nice man.

Nearly seventy years later, Marie said this about Lindbergh:

“He was a quiet man, a gentleman.  Yet he talked about his childhood on a farm, and about his father, who was a Senator.  His mother was a teacher, he said.”


Somewhere in our family history, the postcard was stolen. Who would do such a thing?  Why, no one we know would do that.

For Lewis and Marie, life and living is about going on, going forward.



49 comments:

  1. That is a great story, Susan, and you told it so well

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    1. Thank you! for stopping by! My grandmother told about Lindbergh staying in her house overnight for my entire lifetime.

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  2. Replies
    1. From an excellent writer such as yourself, that is a real compliment.

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  3. Well done! A mesmerizing tale with a bit of family history.

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    1. This blog site is dedicated to telling the stories of my parents' families and of our lives.

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  4. Definitely a story to be told over and over down through the generations. I do believe going on and going forward is the only thing to do. Those sad ones who remain mired in their past, not seeing any way forward, surround themselves with misery more often than not and sometimes don't even notice their friends and family drifting away from them.

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    1. You will never know how very true that is to me.

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  5. What a story, and you did great in the writing of it. I love the insight to Lindbergh. my dad told of something similar but to unknown pilots. SWEET. I always enjoy your writing.
    Sherry & jack

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    1. Thank you, Jack! He landed in two spots in Pike County, one of them being on my grandfather's farm.

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  6. It's great to read some backstory about Lindbergh, especially through the eyes of someone who told you the story herself. Well told!

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    1. My aunt interviewed Grandma about her life and gathered much about her life.

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  7. What an impressive story, Susan. To think it included history of real individuals and touched your own life, made it even more special to read. Lovely story and great writing.

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  8. A beautiful document-- Now that I am a bit... uh... old, I encourage my daughter to ask questions, to pick my brain. There isn't a day that goes by that I don't have questions I wish I could ask the ones who are gone.

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    1. Sometimes, even now that my parents are gone, still want to pick up the phone and ask them something.

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  9. Shame you don't still have the postcard. What a story though! Lindbergh in your field.

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  10. What a wonderful connection your family has to history. Makes Lindbergh seem like a real man instead of just a figure in history. Loved it!

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  11. This is a great family story. It is exciting yet mundane. It is just the way someone who was there would have told it.

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  12. Susan:
    Nicely done.
    An excellent presentation of a simpler time when something out of the ordinary became something extraordinary..

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    1. My gr-parents had no way of knowing how that day would play out.

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  13. Love those family stories, handed down for generations. You have made sure it will never go away now.
    Can't imagine someone stealing the card.

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    1. My Aunt Vada says it was Rose Mary; she saw Rose Mary sneak in and still it after she had gotten married.

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  14. What a wonderful family story. Well done!

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    1. Family stories (especially true ones) are the best.

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  15. A brush with a famous person. What fun for the family's history.

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    1. It is one that will hopefully find my descendants.

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  16. What a great story! You guys really met such an important person in time. A lot of these pics look real enough too. I enjoyed reading Marie and Lewis' adventure.

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  17. The two Lindbergh pics are from Wikipedia (?), but the rest of them are from my own family photos!! I wish I had more.

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  18. This is so interesting, Susan. And what a legacy from your family. Well told. I'm glad you sent us here. (And thanks for stopping by!)

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    1. I enjoyed your site. It amazes me how so many sites (like yours) can be found.

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  19. Wow! I can see why you wrote this post, Susan. What a wonderful, unique piece of history literally landing at the family's feet!

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    1. Our family had been there since the 1820s, so there were many stories to gather.

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  20. Dear Susan i have read books or watched war movies but this story has really strong and deeply touching impact !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    heart melting indeed ,made my eyes teary !

    this is great that you got courage to share your family related history with us ,such a privilege my friend!

    thank you so much!!!!!!!!!!

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    1. Thank you so much. You are doing much the same on your blog. I love that.

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  21. Like that family reunion picture. B&W picture from yesteryear is something which always fascinated me.

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    1. Old B/W photos hold so much story and history.

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  22. Hola Susan. He estado mirando y leyendo tu bloc y me gusta mucho como escribes. Si no te impora, me quedo por aqui.
    Un abrazo desde Blanes (Catalunya).

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    1. Gracias por leer mi blog. Es un privilegio a ver su nombre.

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  23. What an interesting story and memorable experience for your family!

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    1. Even after 80 years, the story still exists in my family.

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  24. Hi Susan. Interesting indeed. Thanks for sharing and for your kind comment on my blog.

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Your thoughts are important to me as a writer!