Hello Everyone,
Here is the first installment in my Pack Horse Librarian mini novella. I will try to post a short chapter by the 5th of every month while you are working on you Bridle Path quilts. This is totally a work of fiction from my overactive imagination about what I thought life might be like in 1935 delivering books into the hollers of Eastern Kentucky.
While writing this, I drew from my own memories of growing up in the small town of Paradise in Northern California in the 1950's. Yes, the infamous Paradise that burned to the ground in 2018. I refrain from going back to Paradise as I want to remember it as it was, an idyllic place to come of age.
So, grab a cup of your favorite beverage and start your journey with my pack horse librarian, Lexington Ruth MacQuarrie, who has many stories to tell in a folksy manner as she travels the hollers of Eastern Kentucky delivering the gifts of literacy and goodwill.
Chapter 1
Month 1 - NEW BEGINNINGS
September 1935
Dear Grace,
You are
not old enough to read my words now, but before long I hope you will be
thirsting to read anything written by your mother in her own penmanship about
our life here in Cobble Hill, Kentucky. Now that I have a real job, I can
afford to buy a new pencil and a couple of sheets of writing paper. I no longer
must write my thoughts down on an old paper bag that is crinkled and so wrinkled
it looks like your Grammy’s dried apple weathered face. The brown paper bag
that I have been writing on forever is now limp from use and I can no longer
find a space big enough to write my own name or draw you a small picture.
I
know when I was about twelve years old, I loved to read diaries written by
women who set out with their families across the Great Plains into the unknown
during the 1800’s. I found their everyday life, description of the landscape,
and survival of the elements fascinating. Oh, I would have loved to see the
grand vistas of the wide-open prairies, and the majestic buffalo grazing on the
rich bounty of the earth, and the sharp jagged peaks of the Rockies and the
Sierras thrusting up to the heavens. Therefore, I am starting a diary about our
life here in Kentucky so you will know about your heritage and where you first
learned your sense of place and how we will always have an emotional attachment
to this land and each other.
Life
has been hard for us since your daddy died while working in a coal mine. The
plans for our life together melted away like butter on a hot biscuit; the kind
of biscuit that is crispy on the outside and warm, soft, and flaky on the
inside just like the chicken and biscuit dinner we enjoy in the social hall in
the basement at the Protestant church. I guess in a way it is lucky for him
that he no longer must see the anguish in my eyes as he told me stories about
his nights working underground. I find it ironic that he perished during his
graveyard shift; and that is where he now forever rests, in the graveyard.
The
graveyard shift got its name from the cemetery workers who were hired to listen
in the graveyard for sounds from those buried and made noises in their graves. Some
were buried with a string attached to bells they could ring just in case they were
buried alive. I know that’s a horrible
thought, so let’s move on.
Now, many of the coal
mines are shutting down in response to the factories closing nationwide due to
the Great Depression. Life is going to get ever so much harder here in
Kentucky. Many of the men are leaving
the area and looking for work elsewhere leaving many women home and
trying to hold the family together and provide food and clothing. Some of the men were lucky enough to find
employment and send money home. Some men
never returned for whatever reason.
Maybe they are in graveyards pulling strings to no avail.
I must
look at the bright side of life during these challenging times. We live in a cabin that was handed down to us
by relatives, so we don’t have to live in a ‘company-owned dwelling’. It is,
however, so hard to look around and see all the evidence of your daddy’s absence.
His slippers under the bed, shaving mug in the bathroom, his shotgun leaning
against the wall by the front door, his earthy, coal-dusty scent which always
stayed with him even after washing up after a long night toiling underground. Many
a night I have curled up with his favorite flannel shirt wrapped around me. I get great comfort from that as the tears roll
down my cheeks onto the top of your curly head of hair. I also find myself digging
through the pockets of his clothing looking for answers even when I don’t know
the questions. I have gotten stronger through hardship; I am a survivor.
Let
me start at the beginning. My mama was going to name me Grace until she saw the
size of my feet when I was born. She never thought I would ever have graceful
movement from my long lanky body. She decided to name me Ruth instead. The name
Ruth is of Hebrew origin, and it means ‘compassionate friend’. I guess my mama
thought I would make a good friend but never a good wife. Grace means
grace…period. I know you will live up to your name since you have tiny delicate
feet.
My
daddy wanted to name me Lexington whether I was a boy or a girl. When he was young, he visited Lexington,
Kentucky and loved it. The happy memories of his visits to his grandparents’
house stayed with him his entire life. He thought he could call a son Lex for
short….and he was sure I was going to be a boy.
Well, surprise, a little girl with big feet popped out and I became
Lexington Ruth MacQuarrie. Do you know how hard it was for me to learn to write
my entire given name when I was in school?
I quickly changed my name to Lexi Mac.
Of course, there always were a lot of kids in school with the last name
of Mac-something due to the Scottish influence in Kentucky. I eventually had to learn to write my entire
name using the Palmer Method of Penmanship.
Many a time I grumbled under my breath while learning to write my long
name. I swear I still have scars from the crack of the ruler on the back of my
hand by the schoolteacher, Miss Van Asperen. She was Dutch and didn’t much care
for us ‘Mac-somethings’ in the classroom. Oh well, I really have her to thank
for my beautiful penmanship and years of practice writing between the lines
with a flourish.
Fate
has a way of placing us where we belong even though we don’t recognize it at
the time. You and I stopped by Stratton’s
General Store to read the handbills out front on the weathered bulletin
board. Our local newspaper, the Cobble
Hill Quill posted an advertisement about hiring Pack Horse Librarians to
deliver reading material to rural areas in Eastern Kentucky who didn’t have
access to public libraries. I was intrigued
as I read how Eleanor Roosevelt wanted to create jobs specifically for woman. Our
president, Franklin D. Roosevelt, started the WPA program which means Work
Progress Administration with the purpose of putting Americans to work during and
after the depression. Most of the jobs were manual labor such as building
bridges and roads. I could not see myself building a road let alone ride
anything but a horse on one. I have never ridden in a car, and most likely will
never learn how to drive one either. Give me a sure-footed horse anytime over a
noisy car which tends to get stuck in our Kentucky mud.
I
applied for the job as soon as I checked with my mama to make sure she could
take care of you Grace during the day while I was out on my rounds. The interview was terrifying! I was interviewed by Mrs. Jerome Reginald Steiniger
who my mama called a ‘pearl-sucking-prude’. Her glasses slid down to the end of
her nose while she looked at me disapprovingly over the tops of the wire
frames. I’m not quite sure why she hired me, maybe it was my excellent Palmer
Penmanship on the application. Thank you,
Miss Van Asperen!
I
already had a horse, so I didn’t have to pay for one out of my monthly salary.
I was well acquainted with the area and the small communities and cabins up in
the hollers. I was responsible according to Miss Van Asperen who wrote a lovely
letter of recommendation. I was employable and now employed!
Because of the project, I
am now making $28.00 a month as a Pack Horse Librarian. I travel about 20 miles a day delivering
books to folks living in inaccessible areas. At first, I did not have
saddlebags to carry my books, so I stuffed them in a pillowcase for the journey
and tied it around my saddle horn. That poor pillowcase wore out mighty fast,
so I had to use some of the precious money and purchase saddlebags to carry the
treasured books.
At the same time, I
started my job for the WPA, my mama, your grandma, started making a quilt which
she saw in the Nimble Thimble Column in the Cobble Hill Quill. The quilt is called Bridle Path, and
she is making it with scraps from your daddy’s shirts, and other pieces of
fabric from old clothes, housecoats, and leftover scraps from older quilts. Nothing
goes to waste in this household. Mama is making the quilt on her Featherweight
sewing machine and is not sewing it by hand.
I love to listen to the purr and hum of the Featherweight late into the
evening. I was amazed when I saw all of
the tiny pieces in the first nine, star blocks. I’m able to buy the thread for her and help out when I can in the
evenings. She loves cutting out the pieces with her sharp scissors and matching
the fabrics together, and this is something that I can help her with also. She
has much more patience than I will ever have.
Maybe that’s why her mama, your great-grandmother named her Patience.
So, Grace, by the end of
the year, you will have a diary about my travels and my job as a Pack Horse
Librarian. I would do anything to make our lives better, just as Miss Eleanor
promised. We are survivors Grace, even though there were days when I did not
think our horse Starky, our Australian Shepard dog named Blue, or I would survive.
Soon,
Mama
Beautiful!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Donna!
DeleteI have read several books on the pack horse librarians and find it very interesting!
ReplyDeleteThe books inspired me to make this quilt. I loved all of the books about the pack horse librarians.
DeleteWhat a beautiful beginning. Love it.
ReplyDeleteI'm so glad you like it!
DeleteYour writing is as beautiful as your quilts, Lynn. I nearly had tears at the end of your chapter as I could feel myself transported back in time!
ReplyDeleteI'll try to transport you back in time once a month. Beam me back, Scotty!
DeleteI enjoyed chapter 1 of your story and look forward to reading more.
ReplyDeleteGreat story, Lynn! I'm looking forward to the next chapter!
ReplyDeleteWOW Lynn!!! You can add talented writer to your resume. Looking forward to the next chapter.
ReplyDeleteDelightful!
ReplyDeleteThank you for such a great first chapter! I was born in eastern KY in 1955 while my parents worked in a day/boarding school for the mountain children. They moved back to IN when I was 4, but I've visited those hills several times, and love to read about the pack librarians.
ReplyDeleteRuth in VA
You have firsthand knowledge of the area which is what I need. Thank you so much for commenting!
DeleteThis is so interesting!!
ReplyDeleteWhen do you sleep😉
ReplyDeleteSleep is and always has been very elusive. I dream in quilts.
DeleteI never knew there were such people as the pack horse librarians. I look forward to chapter two as now I am hooked to learn more!
ReplyDeleteThere are many good books available about the pack horse librarians if you want to learn more about them. I'm in awe of their bravery.
DeleteI love your writing style. This is going to be a great story.
ReplyDeleteLoving your story. I look forward to the future chapters.
ReplyDeleteHope your legs are healing and you are feeling better each day.
You are so talented. Love the story already! Will you be including a spider bite somewhere in the story??
ReplyDeleteYou are the second person to ask me if I would include a spider bite.....stayed tuned!
DeleteOh wow. Loving the story. I’m doing the BOM thru HoneyBee. I am looking forward to beginning the process as I always enjoy the journey of a new quilt.
DeleteForgot to ask… we’re pack horse Librarians typically ladies? FYI, I was born in San Fran Bay Area and raised there till I was 17 when my parents uprooted us to the Alaska Wilderness where I remain today, however in the city.
DeleteYes, most of the packhorse librarians were women. Very brave, courageous women. Your life in the wilderness of Alaska sounds like it could be a good book.
DeleteJust lovely! And the Aussie makes it perfect.
ReplyDelete