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Title: Memories of an Extraordinary Family and their Home Farm
Author: Paul A. Miller
Date: July 2006
A BAD START
Late boyhood and college years defined my
occupational desire to be a county agricultural agent. This came true in
the spring of 1939 while I prepared to graduate at WVU and then go to
Ritchie County as assistant county agent.
I appeared for duty on July 1, 1939, and spent
a summer of day and night assignments. But I was not so busy as to
overlook the office presence of Catherine (Kitty) Spiker, secretary for a
federal farm program. The happily awaited moment arrived when she invited
me to Sunday dinner at the family farm near Oxford, WV.
I drove to Oxford to find neither Oxford nor
farm. Locals both directed and warned of the disrepair of the nearest
road. But I went on anyway toward the “bridge and, turned left’, as
directed, and over a steep hill to the farm. That largely vacated “road to
the bridge”, filled with weeds, ruts, brush and boulders, is likely the
worst strip of country road in the whole of my experience.
But I made it! Settled on the home porch, Mr.
Spiker asked me about the trip. When I told him the truth, the whole
family erupted in laughter. I would later accuse Jean of falling to the
floor in a fit of guffaws at this greenhorn who obviously knew nothing
about West Virginia roads, and had taken an abandoned lane. The mood could
be felt: How could such a guy be hired to visit and advise farmers?
That first afternoon on the front porch grew
into a catastrophe! The Spikers threw out question after question. What
kind of farm did you come from? Answer: “Well, it was not really a
farm, just sixteen acres as a backup for my father, an industrial worker.”
Sly glances again: This guy a county agent? What church did you
belong to? Answer: “Free Methodist”. More glances, and from
Mrs. Spiker: “Never heard of it.” What are the politics like up
your way? Answer: “Most are Democrats”. What about your
family? And again the truth: “Democrats”. Absolute silence
fell upon the porch. Mr. Spiker cleared his throat and said quietly:
“I think we better eat.”
I evened the score, however. Catherine and I
were married in the next year.
A MOLASSES HOMECOMING
In from Africa and military discharge on
December 12, 1945, I got off the bus in Harrisville, met Mr. Spiker for
the ride to the farm and to see Catherine (and Paula for the first time)
since the past March. Along the curving hilltop road to Pullman a rear
wheel came off, stopped us cold, rolled ahead on the road, and prompted a
walk to a friend for help. I joked with Mr. Spiker that his plan to
welcome me home was surely dramatic. From him: only a slight grin!
But I was soon home, up the stone steps to the
porch and welcoming hugs and tears. The family was in the midst of making
molasses. The task was to boil down the molasses in large kettles over
open fires, this in a field some 200 yards away. These were tended by Mr.
Spiker and some seven or eight neighbors. I was invited to help out and
join in their neighborly talk.
Mr. Spiker’s skills were evident. Rather
slight, thin, muscled, with a stunning shock of gray hair, he was crisp of
eye and movement, little given to nonsense, yet possessed of a quiet
affection that, without notice, could infiltrate and embrace you. The two
or three evenings of neighborly talk around the fires and kettles
revealed the strength of his leadership, his devotion to civic duty, his
view of me as a son rather than a son-in-law, and glad of my safe return
and continuing interest in the farm. Always to be remembered is his
sad-faced habit of telling the family gathered on the porch: “It looks
like rain out there; I don’t want you to hang up on the hill, so get
started.”
No setting in December, 1945 could have been
more helpful as Catherine and I made our decision before the family
fireplace, for me to depart on January 2 for graduate study at Michigan
State University.
THE REIGN OF SILENCE
The summer of 1952 was indeed a nervous one! I
had been granted a leave of three months by Michigan State to work on and
complete a Ph.D. The three of us began a three week stay at the farm in
August. My aim was to outline and begin writing a doctoral dissertation.
Mrs. Spiker took immediate charge, a manner to
which she was accustomed. The stair landing at the top was cleared of its
awkward storage uses and fitted with a desk. And the porch swing at the
corner would come down to free an outdoor work space.
On the evening of our arrival, at supper, Mrs.
Spiker made herself clear, saying firmly: “Whenever Paul is at work at the
top of the stairs or on the porch, we all have to be very quiet.” Such is
not normally the case for farm people during the summer months. So I made
the plea that such discipline need not be so strict and even tried some
humor: “I think, Mrs. Spiker, that you need not go to this length in worry
over the financial future of Catherine and Paula!” Did she smile at this?
No!
She was a take charge lady! Don’t monkey with
Gay Spiker! She had her own plan to manage household and farm, and, like
Jake Spiker, had little time for nonsense. But her plans were fed by
loyalty, energy, frankness and persistence, all anchored in a lovingly and
steadfast interest in every member of her family and, as well, the
community. When a neighbor grew ill, in good weather or bad, roads
negotiable or not, out she went on foot with her medical kit to help, and,
if necessary, stay by the patient’s bedside until improvement seemed
assured.
Well, the outline and a good start on the
dissertation resulted from that experience of working under Mrs. Spiker’s
“reign of silence”. I knew thereafter, as well, to pay attention and get
aboard when she made up her mind.
INTRODUCING FRANCENA
One would find it hard to describe how
strongly bonded were the daughters, sons, and respective in-laws of Gay
and Jake Spiker (though the “in-law” status soon melted away and you
became as son or daughter). Each of that sizable group with a clear
uniqueness, they all found a special joy in being together, living in
support of each other, honoring their parents, shouting affectionate jibes
when an unexpected event made it possible. They and their respective
spouses grew to become and remain genuinely my brothers and sisters.
My first Spiker acquaintance was Lynn. This
began when we were students at WVU, especially as athletes in wrestling
and boxing respectively. We occasionally joined in travel to contests
outside Morgantown.
I learned to enjoy Lynn’s bursts of joyful
laughter and one needed to be prepared for his sly joke at your expense
(as, when learning of my going to Ritchie County for the first time, he
would tell me solemnly : “You will soon meet …”my married sister,
Kitty (or Catherine), who works in the county agent’s office”. And
playfully, he never allowed me to forget that his Lewis County 4-H judging
team beat my Nicholas County team in the finals to win the 1942 state
championship. Lynn Spiker, in a long career, would become one of the most
notable agriculturists and extension workers in West Virginia history.
With Catherine’s death and more time, and when
my thoughts turned to marrying Francena, I walked with Lynn on the
pathways of Jackson’s Mill to share this intention and ask that he explain
the likelihood to others of the family. While his exact words are not
remembered, their meaning lingers to this day: “Paul, we love you and we
will love Francena and invite her to be one of us.”
I have always wondered how Lynn passed the
news along, and I suspect and hoped the discussion traveled finally to the
porch at the farm.
And so it came
to pass that Francena, in her own way, became “one of us”. |