So when I was about eight years old Pappy opened a
plumbing shop across the street from our house at 108 Las Flores Ave., Modesto,
CA. At that time I was beginning to
pressure my mother to allow me to join some of the older boys in the
neighborhood at Dry Creek, which was about a quarter mile from our house. By the time I was 9-10 years old, my life was
full of adventure, alternating between playing with my friends at “the creek”
and hanging out across the street from the plumbing shop. Sometimes I would spend several hours playing
in the neighborhood with a conglomeration of kids of various ages. There were a couple of teenage boys that I
admired who allowed me to “hang out” a bit with them. Both would serve in the Korean War, one as an
air force fighter pilot, who was killed in combat and the other with the 82nd
Airborne. Closer to my age were the
Wilber boys who lived a block away and always seemed to have some kind of ball
game, or adventure of one kind or another planned, or going on.
My first trip to “the creek” was with a boy a
couple of years younger than me to go fishing.
I was nine and had gone fishing with my dad several times, so I knew how
to bait a hook and string whatever fish we might catch. My younger friend Dennis had been allowed to
fish there at such a young age because you could see most of the creek from his
house and also because his parents worked and his elderly grandmother who was
supposed to be keeping track of him, hardly ever did. Luckily for me, I was able to parlay Dennis’s
situation into a formidable argument that I was two years older than him and my
mother was treating me like a baby.
Pappy
was busy and didn’t concern himself with my day to day activities much; unless
of course I wandered over to the shop, in which case he usually put me to
work. Pappy taught me how to thread pipe
with a Ridgid 3-way die and stock miscellaneous fittings in the appropriate
bins. He paid me fifteen cents an hour,
which seems paltry in today’s world, but you could buy a large candy bar or a
soda for a nickel. I could work three or
four hours during the week and have enough money to attend the Saturday afternoon
matinee at the La Loma Theater, two blocks from our house for a twenty cent
admission, pop corn for a dime and candy and soda as previously mentioned. In a couple of years I had advanced in skill
and work ethic to a point where I could command, first twenty-five cents an
hour and then thirty-five cents an hour.
Add a couple of extra hours on Saturday morning and I might have a
couple of bucks with which to maneuver.
A large milkshake at the Foster Freeze cost a quarter. Pappy had grown up in rural Oklahoma in a
large family and was as independent as he was street-wise. He didn’t over parent; he just allowed me to
try whatever I wanted to and encouraged me to approach life fearlessly. That’s what he did…it was a hard standard to
live up to.
Regardless, I could drive a
truck when I was twelve, create lead joints for cast iron plumbing systems, run
a pipe machine and dig a plumbing trench at an even younger age. Simultaneously, I spent as much time hanging
out with my friends and listening to music, reading comic books and going to
movies as I could manage. Although Pappy
didn’t have much formal education, his business grew rapidly. I grew along with it and when it was
discovered that I hadn’t attended school for four months, I was allowed to quit
school and begin working full time at barely sixteen years old. The three years between leaving school and
being inducted into the U.S. Army provided me with social and learning
experiences that gave me enough confidence, ambition and grit to successfully
navigate through my “roaring twenties.”

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