Tag Archives: Sacramento

A Sacramento Memory

Today is the third anniversary of our mother’s passing. A while back, my dad gave me a short fragment of an autobiography she intended to write but never finished. As he said, she was “too busy living.” That is so true! But here it is for you, and I think you will enjoy the time period it evokes, a world that doesn’t really exist anymore:

Gerry Arnold, 1/11/1926 - 10/7/2008

My grandmother’s house was a tall white Victorian with a bay window in front, the porch and stairs to the right, and my grandfather’s rose garden on either side of the front walk. There were palm trees lining the 17th Street side, and a large screened in porch at the back.

In the summer the blinds were closed against the valley’s hot afternoon sun. The house itself seemed drowsy. The Lister upright piano was stately along one wall of the front parlor. With no musical education and no innate ability, still I loved to strike the keys and try to imagine the music sound resembled the song I was singing.

Mostly men find difficulty levitra prices achieving an erection. As a rule of thumb no pills should be consumed with a glass of water or juice. respitecaresa.org female cialis online You have to take care of it. cheapest cialis http://respitecaresa.org/kendra-give-back-to-rcsa/pre-order-forms-kendra-gives-back-march-7/ Nevertheless, what is for certain is that it has on sale at website buy generic cialis a faster absorption rate compared to the tablet form and is proven to be absorbed by the body faster. Poor Nanny! For years she played the great pipe organ in the Cathedral on 11th Street. Listening to such a grandchild performance must have bought years off her Purgatory. Sometimes my aunt, who was still living at home, played the “Isle of Capri” and I sang the melody while she harmonized in the lovely soprano which soared through the Cathedral or in civic operettas. (I always loved my mother’s story of my aunt wanting to throw open her front second story bedroom windows on Armistice Day on Nov. 11, 1918, to sing “The Star Spangled Banner.” My grandmother, a somewhat reserved lady, forbade it).

The room behind the parlor was a sitting room, sort of a fore-runner of today’s family – or great – room. My grandfather’s Morris chair sat next to the bay windows with their window seats. The beautiful rococo gilt frame mirror and oak library table with ball and claw feet were other furnishings I recall. But the Morris chair, with its black leather upholstery and wide wooden arms, was my favorite. I loved pushing the button that made it recline.

Most of all, I can still feel the three-year-old’s love for this kind (old) gentleman as he put my grandmother’s thimbles on the fingers of each hand and rat-ta-tatted drum like for a little girl’s amusement.

*   *   *

Oh, how we miss you!

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Joe Genshlea’s One Man Show "Son of a Sense of Place" in Sacramento

Ellie Genshlea and Jim Arnold

Marie Ann Lewis, Jim Arnold, Mary Clare Genshlea, Mary Cerutti, Joe Genshlea

Had the privilege over the weekend to go up to Sacramento with my cousins Mary Cerutti from SF and Marie Ann Lewis from Carmichael to attend the one man show my first cousin (once removed) Joe Genshlea(prominent Sac attorney) was doing at the Crest Theater in downtown Sacramento.

The show, a benefit for Sierra Forever Families, was about his recollections and observations of what it was like to grow up in Sacramento in the 1930s and 1940s, and how that differs from the much larger city of today.
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Although I was born in Sacramento, I lived there only for a couple of years as a very young child and have no memory of that. My mother was from there, and it’s interesting that her accounts of what her hometown was like, which I listened to my entire life, are so similar to Joe’s. It’s also fitting that this show and trip would happen this week, as it’s the two year anniversary of Mom’s death.

I know she would have been pleased that I finally met some more of our relatives (including Joe’s sisters Mary Clare and Ellie) and got more of the Sacramento story – which has been on my mind because of the upcoming elections.

Remember, folks, D is for drive, R is for reverse…. go Jerry!

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