- He was in the Navy. He was assigned to the U.S.S Colorado according to the letters sent from 1930 to 1932. About every sixth letter he talks about needing to get out of the Navy to be home with the people he misses.
- He was a fiend for run-on sentences. They read fine, because I read them as if they were broken up. So I didn't really notice until I typed a couple of them into my notes. I'd have added paragraph breaks to some of those sentences.
- He uses the words gee, keen, and swell a lot. He often starts sentences (or clauses, in his run-ons) with gee, well, or heck. He used sure as an intensifier, as in 'you're sure swell' or "it's sure keen."
- He always writes 'to' instead of 'too.' (Yes, I do get paid for technical editing. Why do you ask?)
- He leaves the apostophes out of most of his contractions and the few he includes tend to end up before the N rather than after it.
- "I sure have got those blues again . . ." ; ". . .well I should hope to smile."; ". . . well it all counts on twenty."; "I'm an honest square shooting man. . ."; ". . . desperately in love. . .".
- More than a few people called him Red.
- His ship was berthed in Seattle when his son (my Dad) was born in Bensenville, Illinois. He didn't see him until he was 4 to 6 months old.
- He and Grandma called my Dad "Little Pal" (with the quotes) before he was born and for about half a year after.
- In 1931 he usually started his letters to Grandma with: My Honey Bunny Boo.
- I can't send money this week because - things will just be perfect when we finally get together - you're nearly perfect - you're an angel - I almost never leave the ship so I won't be tempted - I get crazy jealous when your letters mention other men.
Saturday, November 26, 2011
Things I've learned about the Grandfather I never met
I'm also going to list things that I probably knew, but hadn't thought about for awhile.