CHAPTER
23
GRACE
CHURCH, STOCKTON
When we first went to look at the
parsonage at Grace Church I was heavy hearted.
We had been told that the people at Grace were no happier to have us
than we were to be moved. The Pastor
Parish Committee felt that they had been given the run‑around by their
superintendent, Don Getty, and the chairman quit before we even got there. Our predecessors, the Williamsons, had two
loves: their dogs and the antique furniture that belonged to the church. I was unimpressed. The antiques were what mother would have
called "Mid‑McKinley", huge and uneconomical space‑wise
and except for the large dining table and chairs they were not even well‑designed. Besides I didn't feel like being a museum for
other people's antiques.
When we moved in I had suggested to
Bob that he have the movers take the heavy bedroom suite upstairs. But when Bob asked the movers to help him
they promptly informed him that it would be totally impossible and illegal,
etc., etc. I whispered to Bob, "We
need an Uncle..." But Bob endeared
himself to the movers by helping them on several things and they finally
relented and helped him make the shift.
I soon grew to love the house.
Carl Williamson had brought the church almost to the brink of financial
disaster so it was a godsend for the church to have someone like Bob to take
hold of things. Carl had been guilty of
using printed sermons of famous preachers without acknowledging that they were
not his own, so a few people had thought he was a great preacher. But those in the know despised him for it.
Grace was a very special
church. It had had some great history
and had some interesting old‑timers.
Originally a Southern Methodist Church, we were told that on the fourth
of July during the Civil War, the Union sympathizers wanted the pastor to ring
the church bell. When he refused, they
brought up a small cannon pointed it at the steeple of the church and
threatened to blow it off unless he complied.
Fortunately he gave in.
As usual we found wonderful members
of the congregation. Two widows of
former members of the Conference, Iva Colliver and Clara Hay were grand women
and very kind and helpful. There were
other assets. One of our primary
interests of course was Paul's schooling.
He would enter 7th Grade at Webster and readily agreed to try a summer
course in drama. The Logsdons took him
in for the week before we were due to move and he was assigned the part of the
title role in "The Ransom of Red Chief". When it came to a showdown the young teacher
chickened out of actually presenting the final version, which was
disappointing, but still it seemed like an auspicious start.
I could write a book about each of
our 5 sons. But it wouldn't be wise or
accurate. It would only be my point of
view. 1972, the year we moved, was
distinguished by two other major events‑‑the wedding of David and
Priscilla Ellwood in Los Angeles, and Charles and Keiko's wedding which I have
written about in Chapter 26. It was also
the year that Mechi (Wolf‑ Rudiger) and Sibylle came to see us from
And then in 1973 a new demand on my
time appeared. I had a phone call from
Alice Newhall from
But by mid‑afternoon she had
deteriorated to the point where we called the ambulance anyway. I went in to her and said quietly but firmly,
"Bobby, you won't like what I have to say, but we've called the ambulance
and you are going with us to
Within 24 hours we realized that we
were out of our depth and mother required hospitalization. It seemed as if she got worse and worse and
was near death. Later we would laugh at
the fact that, as I leaned over her bed, I heard her use the word
"aint". It seemed so unlike
mother who never used such a colloquialism normally. I knew she was delirious, and, as I listened
to her feverish mutterings closely, I discovered she was saying, "there
aint no joy in Mudville..."
Obviously she was trying to reconstruct "Casey at the
Bat". It seemed touching that even
when Bobby was out of her head, struggling with her very life, she should be
reciting poetry. Dr. Browne discovered
she had an acute potassium imbalance which he could treat. But the hospital
could only keep her 3 days and then we were told she must go to a convalescent
home.
Luckily Hillhaven Convalescent Home
was near us and we were able to get a bed for her there. She couldn't walk and she didn't even know us
when she was admitted. But the administration
there was extremely helpful and I learned a lot. As she recovered slowly they helped her to
walk and they appreciated the fact that she was a good patient. As soon as she showed signs of improvement
she became something of a favorite and within 6 weeks we were able to bring her
home. It gave me a new opinion of what a
good convalescent home could do. I went
to see her every day and most days took an ice cream for her and her roommate
since that was not on their menu. But
other members of Grace Church also visited her.
And I know this helped her recovery.
Little by little she became more like the real Bobby again. Paul and Charlotte came out to see her and
helped by letting us go off for a vacation.
And they came the following year as well.
It seemed as if at the very time
when the older boys were busy establishing themselves, I found myself with a
lot more responsibility for Paul's early adolescence and for Bobby. We remember many sweet times when she was
living with us, but I was aware that it was hard for Paul in some ways. She tended to be critical of some rather
normal 8th grader ways, and I thought it was very much to Paul's credit that he
was never rude to her. She would have
liked to charm him and felt baffled when he drew within himself and she felt
rebuffed.
I remember one especially happy
evening when I played all of our recordings of Chopin's preludes (played by
Arthur Rubinstein), and accompanied it with the comments that Dick Burrowes had
written. She was in seventh heaven. She entered into things and was also discreet
about withdrawing to her room.
There
were times when she would get mixed up.
She had the bedroom next to ours.
There were five other doors that opened off the central hall including
the bathroom door. Sometimes, by
mistake, she would come into our bedroom instead of the bathroom. While Paul and Charlotte were staying at the
house
By the time mother moved to
My condition worsened until I was
forced to have back surgery on March 14.
The day before I went to the hospital, mother phoned to say she was
ill. The doctor forbade me to go near
her and diagnosed her condition as bronchitis.
She was transferred to the hospital floor at
Bob tried to look after me,
entertain Mu (the countess), and visit Bobby at
It was so different from my feelings
when my father had died. I knew that it
was the way Bobby would have wanted it to be.
And I found a deep kind of peace that at last she understood me. Of course she probably always understood me
more than I wanted. But the sense of
feeling known completely was a kind of affirmation of immortality. She had been a wonderful mother and friend
and I would miss her for the rest of my life.
I had been offered a job teaching
art and music appreciation at
I immediately hit it off well with
my new 25 year old boss, Mary McAdams.
Well, not immediately. The
first morning she gave me something to type on an electric typewriter. I had said I was a good typist. But I had never graduated from a manual
typewriter! The machine lurched, I was
nervous. After 15 minutes Mary said,
"I'm in a hurry so perhaps I'd better do that..." I went home thinking, "This will be a
great time to adapt to electric typing and it will help Bob on his sermons
too." So we went out and bought an
IBM Selectric and both began adjusting to thinking electrically.
Mary was ambitious, stubborn,
idealistic. She had been raised a
Catholic and when she was an exchange student in
We had many discussions on religion,
sex, life in general. She ate very
little for lunch but liked to go to lunch with me on the lawn outside the
hospital. We ate and talked under the trees.
Then she would insist on walking for exercise. My leg problems bothered me so much by this
time that I hated walking, but I tried not to let on and she was very good for
me.
Mary had invented "The
Institute on Substance Abuse". She
had worked through the County and with the
When it was discovered that I could
sketch, I was encouraged to make some drawings of the various drug
centers. And one day I went to the