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To: Kimmers


THE OLD MEN
Posted By: Greg Garrison


They wore the uniforms of the oil companies for whom they drove trucks or repaired our cars, their hands bore the stained callous of a lifetime's hard work. Their scent was that of grease, gasoline, paint and tobacco, either Lucky Strikes, Homemade cigars or Red Man chew; their faces were creased by a life outside, and they bore a variety of alterations to their stance, gait, stride or posture that declared a history familiar with hard work. Their smiles were quick but spare; the laugh was as unique as were their life stories, and when they spoke, the vocabulary was typically blunt, direct, at times salty and always interesting to the kids whose lives they touched. Frank Sims was the mechanic at the Standard station at Gem Road and US 40. He cared for every car my dad owned for the better part of 40 years, while Dad "doctored" him and his family through two generations of his kids. Don Princell operated the fuel oil truck that supplied us with heating oil, his smile quick and his greeting decorated with a steady jovial nature that always invited me to go watch him haul the heavy hose up the hill to the house in every kind of weather. Albert Rodebeck painted our house and teased me mercilessly, his rubber face competition for Emmitt Kelly or Red Skelton, and Carl Borger, the farmer up the road, laughed all the way from his shoes when I told him the tall tales of my boyhood exploits. It seemed they were always old, these portraits of the common man, but even so, as each passed from us the loss of character and steadfastness represented by their presence in our lives was palpable.


There was Julius Klein, the former big league fast-baller who was our plumber and my dad's friend for the better part of 50 years; he was big and possessed of a ruddy appearance that bore great testament to his life as a farmer. He defined toughness as he walked up our driveway during hay season one year, the grimace on his face and the twist in his posture evidence that a fall from the wagon had left him with a separated shoulder. "Get your dad, son, I've broken my shoulder—need him to pop it back in place." I did, and he did, and Julius went back to baling. Floyd Smith lived across the road from us. He could weld, carpenter, farm and raise just about anything in the garden or a barn, and like his friend Julius, demonstrated a kind of quiet steadfastness in the face of decades of terrible pain from a back injury that landed him in surgery and then in a hospital bed that his wife had set up in their living room. Took him six months to get back on his feet. Roy Abel drove our school bus, had a huge laugh and that same red face, courtesy of Mr. Sun and a life lived on the farm as well. Albert Hitzman chewed tobacco constantly, wore the obligatory bib overalls, had a knack for spinning a yarn and captivated us with stories of growing up along National Road in Cumberland around the turn of the century. Gunfights in the street, saloon brawls that featured knifings and even a man killed with a pool cue were so powerful that we insisted he tell them over and over. He hunted rabbits with me for many a season, and the pelt of a fox he killed some sixty years ago hangs in my living room to this day.


Of course there were among these old men those who had served in WWII or Korea, and they held a status among the rest of the dads that approached reverence. Charlie Perry had been captured by the Krauts after his bomber was shot down, then spent the rest of the war in a POW camp. Came home weighing about 100 lbs. But having survived it, every day was a celebration to Charlie, and his infectious smile and quick wit, his open countenance and steadfast devotion to his family made him a quiet icon to all who knew him. Some bore scars on face or body, while others never spoke of their experiences at all. Still others would periodically open the door on their memories, usually late at night and only when the women were absent, and at those times, if a kid was lucky enough to be there, the cigarette smoke would fill the air and the place would go silent as the other men listened with reverence and admiration for the courage and the pain that had been the wars.


They were tough, honest men whose idea of good was as simple as it was uncontrovertible. They loved their God and they loved their country; they loved their wives and they adored their children. They had a gusto that was at once understated and the essence of manhood, but they also had something else. Beneath the salty humor and the warm greeting was an inner fiber, something akin to fine steel wire. Those who transgressed what was right, spoke ill of country or flag, mistreated their women or their kids or in any way uttered blasphemy against the Lord could expect no quarter and if the occasion required, quick retribution. We have to wonder how long a band of idiots like those who today insult the memory of soldiers who have died in combat by protesting at their funerals would last if they spewed their invective at the funeral of one of these, our old men. I know it was a different time and ethic then, but there can be no doubt that the first such display would have been the only one, and any of that ilk who survived the experience would have thought hard about repeating the whole thing.


We speak often about "real men" as that term is applied to leaders, actors, athletes and adventurers who still capture the public attention and imagination. Certainly they have their place, and their contributions to society's hungry need for role models is as crucial as it is unpopular with the weenies of the post-modern Left. But the old men were neither jocks nor actors. They had no matinee visage, no audience or notoriety; most of them were not educated men and if you were sitting beside them in a theater or in church the stranger would have no hint of their essence. But theirs was a leadership both subtle and cosmic, straight shooters who bent backs to labor with devotion and pride, spoke seldom and took steps to avoid the spotlight. When their lives have ended and their memories faded by the passage of time, what remains for the ages is that very thing—essence. Jobs well done, faith in God and love of country, devotion to family and friends, all were their hallmarks. And in an age where lesser men seek the ever- illusive thing called legacy, theirs is secure and steadfast. We should all find ways to simplify, to clarify, and to distill out of life its spiritual and personal essence, for younger eyes are watching us, too. Boys seek examples of manhood to emulate, girls fashion their requisites for the men who will be their husbands. And I am made to wonder at this moment—will any of us ever come close to the stature, the quiet steadfastness and the fundamental, honest, courage that was all of them, our old men.


2 posted on 03/31/2006 6:00:15 PM PST by Chickensoup (The water in the pot is getting warmer, froggies.The water in the pot is getting warmer, froggies.)
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To: Chickensoup

I remember those same men (or ones just like them) as a kid.


4 posted on 03/31/2006 6:09:35 PM PST by Ursus arctos horribilis
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To: Chickensoup

My dad was a railroad engineer. I still love the smell of diesel oil.


11 posted on 03/31/2006 6:21:08 PM PST by Bahbah
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To: Chickensoup
Their children and grandchildren are here and just the same. They just aren't noticed and the press ignores them.

There are a lot of very good people that have strong values and take life's spears with silence and humor, but they don't make a point of drawing attention to themselves. For a few seconds after 911 the press noticed them, but then they realized that they could ignore them without being faulted.

19 posted on 03/31/2006 6:36:31 PM PST by fini
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To: Chickensoup

great post, brought back memories ...thanks


27 posted on 03/31/2006 7:26:40 PM PST by pandoraou812 ( barbaric with zero tolerance and dilligaf?)
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To: Chickensoup
I'm lucky ..pretty much typifies my pop and my 3 grandad's (my pop's dad was killed on the rail road he was a conductor Grandma then re-married grandpa's best friend, a widower, who was the engineer on that train that killed grandpa)

All were men such as these..in the article.

30 posted on 03/31/2006 7:53:51 PM PST by joesnuffy (Guest Worker Program Is To Border Security As Campaign Finance Reform Is To Free Speech)
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To: Chickensoup
Perhaps the most encouraging thing I have seen coming out of my year in Iraq is the effect on the yung'uns. (most of "my guys" were young 20's. I'm 53 - older than their parents!)

They ALL re-upped. The majority of the regular army/marines are re-upping.

What we have done and are doing over there is creating an new generation of those who understand what freedom is - by seeing and freeing those who have lived under total oppression. Nothing like seeing what freedom ISN'T, to make you want what freedom IS.

I hope we can spread this realization to the rest of the nation.

Thanks for the post.
31 posted on 03/31/2006 8:43:22 PM PST by sschaloc
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To: Chickensoup
The guy that worked on our cars, now since passed on, as has my father, is also the father of a Major General in the US Army.

My Mom still sees his mom fairly frequently, when his mom goes on her afternoon walks with their mutual friend who lives across the street from his mom. The two of them live four blocks from my Mom. The friend even has the same house number.
32 posted on 03/31/2006 8:48:04 PM PST by El Gato
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To: Chickensoup
Among my father's friends: His best friend had been a Navy man, during the War. The man whose barn we used to keep our horse(s) in had been in the Air Corps. The man who worked on our cars had been Army, I think (the one whose son is a Major General). His friend Rusty was also Navy. Dad was in the Signal Corps, and later an Armored Division, his Division was at the battle of the bulge, but he was back in Le Harve, getting over an appendectomy.

Another "horse friend" had been wounded, but he never talked about it, even though the effect was obvious, and got more so as the years went by. He shook left handed for instance, including the very last time I ran into him by the unlikeliest chance (I lived 650 miles away by then), right in front of Bob's Tavern. ;) In fact I don't know a single one of Dad's friends, except some of the ones too young for WW-II, who did not serve. My maternal Uncle, a lifelong farmer, served on a seagoing Tug in the Pacific. Only the youngest of his three sons did not serve, one each of the others was Army and Navy during the Vietnam era. The Navy cousin is still a farmer, while the Army one is a cabinet maker. My Dad is 1 for 2, I served in the US Air Force, technically in the Vietnam era, but I didn't get my ROTC commission until '73.

34 posted on 03/31/2006 8:59:21 PM PST by El Gato
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