we loved watching the traditional Rose Parade in June. Grandpa arrived ahead of us very early and saved seats for us by placing old blankets on the curb in front of the library. He had a thermos of hot coffee and waited for us. Another fond memory we have is of riding the old elevators in the vintage Meir & Frank department store, with its bars and cords and attendants in uniform clicking a bell for each floor reached. Our first visits with Santa were there, as were wonderful moving Christmas displays in the windows during the holidays.
But my favorite memory is of our walks to the Portland Park Blocks to feed the pigeons. We passed the nunnery where young ladies ran with their black sails flying behind them on their way to class. I remember grandpa buying us triple-decker licorice ice cream cones that eventually melted down the wrist if eaten too slowly. We strolled down the main walkway, through the land marked trees, many park benches and ornamental rows of roses. Although there were over 20 blocks created by the original founders, there are now 12 remaining. We encountered elderly persons hunched on a bench (were they homeless?), high statues of Abraham Lincoln and Teddy Roosevelt to admire.
Hundreds of pigeons awaited us, for we carried loaves of stale bread to feed them. Rain or shine, we loved to listen to his stories on those walks with our grandfather. We loved to drink from the bubbly old water fountain. He talked about working hard for a living, was friendly to all and always had a joke to tell. He worked in a pharmaceutical company since before the Great Depression, had been to China once in his youth, belonged to the army in WW I. He wrote pithy comments to the local newspaper columnists which generated humorous responses...about the local baseball team, politics, or run of the mill events. He sent his jokes to Readers' Digest and I believe a few were accepted. My mother and aunt's grade school and Lincoln High School were adjacent to the park blocks. The park is surrounded by beautiful old Italian style mansions and old churches.
Now the Southwest part of Portland is full of new high tech and entrepreneurial businesses as well as new restaurants and shops. Students from Portland State College spend time in the park blocks on warmer days...still the home of the pigeons and squirrels. However, where my grandparents house once stood, as well as local grocery and other small merchants, now exists a freeway that took a lot of the old neighborhood away for good. But the park blocks are still there. The next time I visit downtown Portland I will again walk those blocks and be taken back to those times we spent with our grandfather. But I doubt anyplace there serves licorice ice creams cones anymore. I will let you know. Kathy
It's funny, we grew up next to each other and I don't think I knew that you also had grandparents in Portland. We spent 2 weeks every summer with grandma and always went to the zoo, which I loved. Remember Rosie the elephant,and the storybook keys? We always took peanuts for Rosie. And we attended the Rose Parade many times, we could have just been down the street from you. And I didn't remember licorice ice cream until I read this, and then I remembered eating that too, would love to find some today. Ahh, memories of our past. When you are here visiting remind me to tell you dad's story of feeding the pigeons!
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