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In search of my grandfather's past … and maybe a book deal

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Memories

Aunt Mary V

MaryVThe closest I ever came to anyone connected with the events of this story is the fetal me, in my mom’s belly, when she visited Aunt Mary V.

That’s what everyone called Mary Venezia, who, as I now know, was born Maria Giuseppa Venezia in Pittsburgh, PA on August 5, 1905.

What my mom remembered of her was spotty. She was a tiny, tiny woman who always smelled like lavender. She lived alone the top room of a boarding house-style living facility. She died because some doctor convinced her he could help her retain her mobility (and therefore stay in this independent living arrangement). She died on the operating table in September 1977.

She was a prolific letter-writer and had pen pals from all over the world, many of them children who’d stayed at the Fresh Air Home. She wore a pink peridot ring and, at some point, someone brought her a lovely cameo back from Italy. I have them both , stored with the only baby picture we ever had of any of the Venezia children. I carried it around a lot in my childhood, and one day it went through the wash. Thank god for old paper made from rags or it would have been lost forever.

The library had a history of the Fresh Air Home, published by its benefactors. It included names of notable patients. Interestingly, it noted that, unlike many of the patients, she was a ward of Allegheny County. Most of the other children were placed there by their families. Yet, she was among them, and listed as having tuberculosis of the hip and spine. The Pittsburgh Press article I came across mentioned that Mary had been brought into the Fresh Air Home on a stretcher. She’d spent three years in a body cast.

After learning all this, I’m even more sad that I never met this fiercely independent lady. No wonder she fought so hard to stay on her feet. She figured it was better to go down swinging than become reliant on other people. I respect her even more for that decision.

Here are the things I know

I realized I probably should fill anyone who reads this in on exactly who it is I’m looking for.

GrandpaPhil1

When I was talking about the picture I saw in my head, this was it. I found this picture in the same way I found all the pieces of my Grandpa’s life. They were collected, magpie-like, from Grammy’s house. This picture, taken when he was probably in his late teens or early 20s, was found in a crumbling photo album with those black pages and sticky corners. I have a ring of his. Gold, with an amethyst. I found it in a coffee can under her sink.

He was the produce manager of Donahoe’s Market in downtown Pittsburgh. He’d lived with the Brenckles since they’d adopted him and had worked in their fruit stand in the Strip District for a long time — even after he left their house. He met my Grammy at Donahoe’s and they’d gotten married not long after. He didn’t serve in WWII because he’d been sick as a child and whatever he had, probably strep throat, damaged his heart valves.

He and Grammy had my dad first and then my Aunt Mary Ann. They lived in Hazelwood, then moved to Kennedy Township and the house he built on Ehle Avenue. He lived less than a quarter mile away from his brother, Joe. Their sister lived at the Fresh Air Home in Sewickley until it closed, outlived both her brothers and died just before I was born.

All this digging made me remember that a long time ago, I’d unearthed Grandpa’s baptismal certificate. It was in a strongbox at the bottom of Grammy’s bedroom closet. It had a few closed bank account passbooks, a few other random papers and, I saw, to my awe, the names of my great grandparents.

I went back out to Ehle Avenue this week, where my Aunt Mary Ann lives now, to make a copy.

She was only 13 when her dad died. My dad was 17.

We were in the kitchen, sitting at the kitchen table I’d sat at a thousand times. The smells were all the same. Toast. Puffed Wheat. Folger’s Coffee in a giant can in the pantry. Clorox under the sink.

I asked her the questions I always asked. What did she remember? What was he like?

“You know what Grammy said. He was a piece of bread,” she said. “I don’t ever remember him yelling. He was like your dad, always joking.”

She’d done some remodeling since moving in to Grammy’s old house and I wondered if she still had the concertina.

“Tell me about it again.”

“Well, one night, Grammy heard music coming from down the basement. She thought it was the radio. But when she went downstairs, my dad was sitting there playing the concertina. He was playing ‘Sweethearts on Parade.'”

Then, she surprised me.

“And I remember your dad had this Davy Crockett hat. You know, the one with the tail on it? Well, my dad took it. Then he went down the basement and called her. And when she opened the door (she pointed to the cellar door, next to the stove). He was laying there on the top step. It was on his head but all you could see was the hat. You couldn’t see him. He flicked that tail and Grammy screamed. We all screamed. Until he jumped up and then we were all laughing so hard. We couldn’t breathe.”

I laughed, too. It was so like my dad. My childhood was full of silly pranks and gotchas. I’d never thought about it coming from somewhere other than him. Behind that thought, though, was another. A lot of people come through really hard circumstances. And, well, not everyone comes out with a good sense of humor.

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