Where did you go to school?
One of my best childhood friends, Jaime.
About 1974. She is holding our Velvet dolls. We always
asked for the same dolls at Christmas so we could play
together with them.
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As the school year went on the dynamic changed. Sometimes Debbie A. and her mom would join us. Sometimes way up on Craigs Road Eric L. and his mom would be walking when we were. By first grade, believe it or not, our parents didn’t walk with us anymore. We walked together. That would never happen today that a bunch of 6 year olds would be allowed to walk to school without an adult, but in 1971 it was a safe and innocent time in our neighborhood.
Me in 1970, at my grandparent’s 50th
wedding anniversary. No more cast. |
One not so happy memory was when I had a cast on my arm during the first part of that year. My youngest brother had locked me out of the house and was teasing me from inside that I couldn’t come in. I had a little temper back then, I’ll have you know. So I banged on the door. The glass storm door. You can see where this is going. My arm went flying through that window and glass and blood were everywhere. I had to have stitches. I remember being freaked out and running around the back of the house. My older brother, who was 18, caught me and tackled me and dragged me across the street to Mrs. Long’s house. She was a nurse. Mom wasn’t home for some reason. I remember the hospital nurses giving me a root beer lollipop while the doctor stitched my arm up. Then they put a soft cast on it. I’m not sure why. Maybe for the same reason they put those cones on animals so they don’t pick at their wound. Who knows.
Having a fabulous hair day for fourth grade
photo day, despite having the
scariest teacher on earth that year.
On my barrette was written, “Jeannette.”
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My first grade was with Mrs. O’Donnell. She was a sweet, grandmotherly kind of woman and I remember she had a gentle voice. Second grade was Ms. McAuliffe. She got married the summer after I had her and became Mrs. Cosma. She was tall and pretty with long dark hair and I remember her Dad and my Dad had some kind of connection with World War II. I don’t remember what. Third grade was Mrs. Rund. She got married during the school year and we were invited to her wedding…all the kids in her class! Not to the reception of course. That would have been insane. But it was the first wedding I had ever gone to. She was such a sweet teacher. She was tiny like Ms. Dalphanie.
Mrs. Belzer, my fifth grade teacher. Apparently, I
circled people in the class picture who I liked a lot
that year.She was my favorite teacher and taught
me to always try to have a positive attitude.
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Fifth grade was my favorite teacher in the entire world. Mrs Belzer. Oh, how I loved her. She was young, reddish hair, round and chubby. She hugged kids every day (when it was still ok to do that). She loved to laugh. She loved all of us kids, and she made us all feel special. I was getting chubby at this point, so looking at her and seeing such a chubby woman who was so happy in life, with a loving husband, made me feel better that it would be ok if I grew up to be a chunk too. A lot of us JFK kids on Facebook found Mrs. Belzer and reconnected with her in 2014. She had just retired and worked at JFK for her entire career. We were her first class after she graduated from teaching school.
Sixth grade was Mrs. Beauregard. She had some tendencies like Miss McCarthy so we were all kind of on edge with this one. It was difficult to go from one teacher who was so loving, to another teacher who you felt wanted you to be dead and just go away most of the time. Sometimes she could be perfectly nice and funny and friendly. But, boy…one thing would happen and someone might act up and she would just flip out. I kept my distance with this one and just did my work and kept out of trouble.
Ninth grade we had moved back to Windsor and I went to Sage Park Junior High (now Middle School) for 9th grade. I had lots of good teachers at Sage Park. A few of them were still there when my daughters attended there many years later. It was a happy time for me and I made Honor Roll.
I was so happy to be back in Windsor! I made friends easily there and I was excited to know that I would be seeing all my JFK friends at Windsor High School the next year for 10th grade.
Then there was Windsor High School for 10-12thgrade. Today it is 9-12th. When I was in 11th grade it changed. We couldn’t believe they were letting those baby 9th graders in. I loved everything about Windsor High School and had a lot of friends and happy times.
I wasn’t in the popular group, but I knew them and got along with them. I wasn’t in the jock group (of course!), but I knew them and got along with them. I wasn’t a loser, either (despite what my kids think!). I was in the middle. Kind of preppy, I guess. But not a nerd. A good student. Involved with the Yearbook. Wrote for the school paper. I really got into my English and writing classes tremendously. I managed the boys track team with Jeanne D. (whose younger sister, Suzanne, ended up marrying my husband’s brother, John). I still don’t know how I got involved with that one. I think she and I liked the same boy who did track and she convinced me to help out. Managing just meant taking down stats on the clipboard, filling water bottles, starting and stopping the stop watch and just over-all helping as needed. I have no interest in anything like that, so it must have had to do with Steve Parks, who was a year ahead of me and who I totally liked. I did a lot of things outside school like going to movies with my friends, going to hockey games, sleepovers, etc. I didn’t get into any trouble. I didn’t drink or smoke. It just wasn’t for me. I just liked to laugh and hang out and watch movies and write.
Jenny,
I want to let you know that your blog is listed in today's Fab Finds posts at http://janasgenealogyandfamilyhistory.blogspot.com/2015/08/follow-friday-fab-finds-for-august-7.html
Have a great weekend!
Thank you so much Jana! You made my day!