At the risk of losing the handful of readers I can boast...
Here’s a full Sunday’s activities, from my dad's diary, dated March 6,
1938:
Went to Mass. Went to Kennedys this afternoon. Played a marble game. Went to show at Varsity. It was the “Hurricane” with Dorothy Lamour. Fair. Ate supper at Dysarts. Went to Helena’s [there was a Helena Berhens in grandma's line, though she had passed in 1909, who married Wilhelm Schnare... so maybe a daughter?]. Mom went to the mission. Played cards at Helena’s. George and I played Dorothy and Dad. We won two and they won two. It was 11:30 when we got home. Spot and Dummy Dan slept with me all night.
There’s a lot to unpack there. "Hurricane” was Dorothy
Lamar’s second starting role, released in 1937, and she became famous in
“female Tarzan” roles where she wore sarongs and interacted with “civilized
men” in corny love stories. She most famously played a “straight woman”
to Bob Hope and Bing Crosby in their series of Road pictures. Nine-year-old Johnny was not a big fan of romantic
comedies, it appears.
The Varsity theater was on Washington Street, basically
across the street from the Englert. The site was originally the Garden Theater,
which burned down in 1932, with the Varsity replacing it that same year. In September
1968, the theater was renamed The Astro. It closed in 1991 and was torn down to
become part of the U.S. Bank building. It was sort of a dump, as I remember it, but a building down was Barbara's Bake Shop, where I would buy one of their amazing chocolate cake donuts when I had a spare quarter. I have never had a better one.
Dysart's Dairy Store was located at 218 East Washington Street in downtown Iowa City during the late 1930s. I don't know when it closed, but the building was occupied by other local businesses, including Younkers department store prior to it moving to the Old Capitol Mall in 1981, and currently houses a Target.
Grandma evidently went
to “the mission” regularly that year, grandpa much less often. The St. Pat’s parish hall – St. Brendan’s
Hall – was located across the street from the church itself (228 East Court
Street), was a vital hub for local Catholic charity work, and was informally called the mission, at least by my dad.
There was another mission known as the Iowa City Gospel Mission, run by the Mennonite community and located on Orchard Street, which provided Sunday school, spiritual guidance, and essential community support during the 1930s. There may have been others, most connected to a local church.
Our author never specifies a mission name or location, but my best guess is that grandma devoted her time to working in St. Brendan’s Hall. I would also guess that volunteering there provided many local women opportunities to interact and support one another.
Spot and Dummy Dan (a few days later referred to as Dannie) were dogs that dad was quite fond of (well, Spot, at least) and “sleeping with him all night” was a way he measured his popularity with them. There is no record of how Dorothy felt about that. Dorothy was two years older than dad, born in 1926.
"The Kennedys" might have referred to my grandfather's parents, who lived outside Oxford, about 15 miles west. Grandma to our author was Ellen "Nellie" Mahoney Kennedy, married to James Matthew Kennedy Sr. James died in 1949, Nellie in 1968.
But considering the timeline of that Sunday, most likely is that "The Kennedys" here were my father's uncle Dennis and his wife Rachel, who lived in Iowa City, near Longfellow Elementary. They had an 8-year-old son at the time, James Edgar Kennedy (Jim), so marbles might have been a solid choice, and THAT may be the best we can come to ascertaining that my grandfather's birth name was John Edgar Kennedy. Grandpa's brother Dennis Edward Kennedy adds the possibility, however, that the brothers had the same middle name. So, crap.
And now for a few thoughts on my family heritage, which the diary has sparked.
I grew up thinking we were Irish, probably due to dad deciding that was the case (and who was I to know any better?). He sure loved to sing "Clancy Lowered the Boom" in assorted odd keys while driving me and brothers back from the Elks after a long day of golf. He often was a bit tipsy after some time at the "19th hole" (which would be the 10 hole since the Elks was and is a nine-hole course), and there were no seatbelts in the car. I never thought a thing of it, though I would guess my sainted mother might have had any number of choice things to say as we returned late on a summer evening.
And my grandfather John E. Kennedy could certainly claim Irish roots, with last names Fleming and Berry for his great grandmothers. My grandmother Adelaide was a Burke, with her grandmother being an O'Neill. BTW: Cornelius Burke married Catherine O'Neill and both were born in Limerick.
She married a German fella, though, evidently not uncommon when the majority of those farming west of Iowa City were Irish or German. It wouldn't have hurt that the guy had money and land. But my grandfather could boast of a lot of Irish blood.
Today would have been my mother's 99th birthday, and she was born Barbara Fern Guffey. The Guffey clan came to America before the Revolutionary War and were the McGuffeys until about 1800. They seem to have emigrated from Scotland. But my grandpa Champ Columbus Guffey (one of the all-time great names) married Sarah Davis, whose ancestors trace back to Wales.
But my Grandma Estella Lorena Guffey was a Bausman whose mother was a Hurst, with grandmothers named Stoft and Menzemer, and all her grandparents were born in western Germany and mostly from the Alsace-Lorraine region, which regularly shifted from Germany to France due to various wars. It is currently in France, but was in German hands when my ancestors exited Europe for the new world.
Bottom line: my father was Irish/Irish/German/Irish among his grandparents. My mother was Scottish/Welsh/German/German among her grandparents. Add them all up and that leaves me with Irish x 3, German x 3, Scottish and Welsh.
In other words, my siblings and I are mutts. Most Americans likely are.