2-Life in Pampa
In 1957, Carl White sold Franks Manufacturing to Cabot
Corporation and they announced that they were moving the entire operation,
except for a service center, from Tulsa to Pampa, Texas.
Dad was an assistant foreman in the assembly department, and
they offered him a job in Pampa but he had to move himself. He didn’t like the area around Pampa but
decided to take the move. Mom, on the
other hand, was excited about moving to Pampa, in large part due to the fact
that we rented a house with indoor plumbing in town. This was a definite step up from our house in
Mannford!
The owner of the house in Pampa wanted Dad to buy the house
we rented for $4800 but Dad declined, saying that he didn’t want to stay in
Pampa that long. Instead we rented it
for $100 per month and stayed in it about 40 months. Hindsight is always 20/20!
As I recall, we didn’t have any trouble fitting in in
Pampa. Our school, Lamar Grade School,
was right across the street and we made a lot of friends in the neighborhood quickly.
One of my best friends in Pampa was Kevin Romines, who lived
just down the street and around the corner.
He and I had a lot of fun and got into a lot of trouble but we always
seemed to be able to get out of it.
My first job was helping the janitor at Lamar School clean
after school. I would run the dust mop,
sweep floors and empty trash. He gave me
a 48-star U.S. Flag which had flown over the school and whose ends had become
frayed. I took it home and had Mom teach
me how to sew it up. I still have that
flag today.
I also delivered newspapers and caddied at the Pampa Country
Club while living in Pampa. Delivering
papers tested my resolve, especially when the snow was a foot deep and the wind
was howling. I had many good customers
on the route and they treated me good.
At one house, the hedge was about eight feet tall in front and the area
between the hedge and the roof of the house was narrow. About once every five days, the woman who
lived there would call and I would have to come down and either dig the paper
out of the hedge or get it off the roof.
The biggest problem with paper delivery was the hamburger stand on my
route. When I went out to collect, I
would spend all my earnings at the hamburger stand. The burgers were 35 cents and were as good as
you could buy anywhere.
Caddying was a lot of fun.
Had I known that, in later years, I would spend as much time on the golf
course as I do now, I would have been a better caddy. As it was, I had a good time and made a few
bucks. We got paid $2.50 for a round of
golf. If we carried two bags, that
totaled $5 and with tips we could make as much as $7 in a day! Big money for back then. I did have a couple of customers who made a
habit of throwing clubs. I learned to
watch them when they flubbed a shot.
One thing offered at Lamar School which was not available in
Mannford was the opportunity to play in the band. I had an old trumpet which Grandmother and
Grandfather Nash had given me so I decided to play trumpet. Gary opted for the French horn. Our little grade school band wasn’t very good
but it did prepare us for the big time – Junior High School.
In 1958, I started to school at Pampa Junior High School,
downtown. Some of my fondest memories of
the next two years involved band. Mr.
Ben Gollehon, our band director, decided that I should play the tuba, since I
was one of the few kids big enough to carry it.
The Pampa School System had just the year before built a new
junior high school, Robert E. Lee, and Lee had been given our uniforms. Mr. Gollehon got us all to dress in matching
gray hooded sweatshirts and blue jeans and we marched in the Christmas parade
that year. Some rich patron saw us and
donated enough money to buy brand new uniforms for the entire band.
Mr. Gollehon had a way of getting the most out of us. We were preparing for the statewide band
contest to be held in Canyon at West Texas State University and he kept telling
us that we stunk! He had us marching
down the field in the form of a treble clef, playing “Say It With Music”. This was pretty complicated stuff for a
junior high band. At the last minute, he
told us that we were so bad that he wasn’t even going to go. Of course, this inspired us to give the
performance of our lives and we found out later that he had hired a 16 mm
camera crew out of his own pocket to film our show.
While we kids were having a great time in Pampa, Dad hated
his job and could hardly stand to go to work each day. He had severe peptic ulcer problems and
couldn’t seem to get them under control.
Mom had a lot of friends in Pampa and they all used to play canasta and
go fishing together during the day. In
spite of this, she was having health problems and was finally diagnosed with
Multiple Sclerosis. Fortunately, she has
not suffered the debilitating effects which most people with MS do. She has had problems at times, some of them
severe, but they have never left her permanently disabled.
One of the scariest things that ever happened to us in Pampa
was when Mom fainted and fell on the
bathroom heater. She got up in the
middle of the night to go to the bathroom and just lost consciousness. She had severe burns on her neck and breast
but they healed and, over the years, became less noticeable.
While I had a good time in Pampa, some of it was at the
expense of other people. I got into a
crowd which did a considerable amount of shoplifting and I did my share of
it. I also discovered the ridiculously
stupid trick of sniffing gasoline.
Fortunately, that was as far as it went.
I also started an addiction to tobacco in Pampa that took me 35 years to
get rid of.
When we moved to Pampa, Dad decided to keep the farm at
Mannford, since he wasn’t planning on staying in West Texas very long. We rented the house out to the Baneys, a
family which had lived around Mannford for a while. Thelma Baney was a Harvison and many of her
relatives are still around Mannford today.
After a couple of years, they moved out and we kept the house empty till
we moved back.
Often, we would load up the car on Friday afternoon and,
when Dad got off work, we would take off for Mannford. It was about a six hour drive up through
Canadian, then to Arnett, Okeene, Stillwater, and home. We would spend the weekend working and
cleaning up around there and go back to Pampa on Sunday evening.
As I explained in the first chapter, Oklahoma remained dry
until 1960. On many a Friday night in
1958 and 1959, we would load up the car and head for Mannford. Dad would always take his tools in the trunk
which would make the car sit down in back.
Almost invariably, we would get stopped by a highway patrol trooper who
was convinced that he was going to find liquor in the trunk
One Friday evening, we were rocking along in Western
Oklahoma and someone asked Dad what time it was. He slowed down, turned on the overhead light
and looked at his watch. About that time
we topped a hill and there was a highway patrolman who waved us over. He wanted to know how Dad had known he was
there since he had been listening to the sound of our engine coming and had
heard it slow down!
It seemed like every holiday that Uncle Albert and Aunt
Beulah Winans would come out to Pampa to see us. They didn’t have any children of their own
and we were about the only family that they had. Uncle Albert was a fine person who loved
children and loved to play with them.
One summer when Uncle Albert came to visit, Gary and I had just gotten
an old used Sears Allstate Moped. Uncle
Albert wanted to ride it and we couldn’t say no, but we were scared to death that
he would break it! Fortunately, he
didn’t.
Every kid we knew had a dream of owning a Cushman Eagle
motorscooter; Kevin Romines actually owned one.
We would go out riding together but our little Moped would not keep up
with his Cushman. We also spent a lot of
time playing at a place we called the “big hole”. This was an excavation about 2 or 3 blocks
west of our house and it was huge! You
could almost not see from one side of it to the other, or so we thought at the
time. I went back there later, after I
had married Louise, to show it to her.
Man, was I disappointed at this little tiny hole in the ground.
Dad finally had his fill of Pampa and gave the company an
ultimatum: either transfer him back to Tulsa to work in the service center or
he would quit. Because of his knowledge
and skills, they decided to transfer him.
We moved in early January, between school semesters. I can remember that Gary and I rode with the
man Dad had contracted to haul the furniture.
I’m sure that Mom did not want to go back to Mannford because of the
condition of the house there and because of leaving her friends, but she did
willingly anyway.
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ReplyDeleteKeep it up and look forward to each one.