2/4/1923 Hit the Trail of Slumberland

Houston, Texas

Feb 4, 1923

My Dearest Florence;

I have been trying to study some Spanish, Dear, but I was thinking of you about as much as I was of Español. What makes a person do that, do you know? Strange, isn’t it? I just can’t help but to think of that wonderful manuscript that I received from you. Last nite when I got home I went to bed, turned on the desk light so I could see and read it again. I like the way you express yourself in ways. You know, Dear, I just couldn’t help it last night. I know I was not interesting to you at times, but as I told you, I was worried a little. That afternoon at several times I was very sad. But I am feeling pretty good now, aside from that fact.

You don’t know I looked forward to seeing you last night. It had only been a week since I had been out there but it sure seemed longer to me. You know most of the time, I would see you in the middle of the week, which I still expect to do, and this made it seem so much longer. I was sure glad to see you when you came to meet me. Gee, Florence old Dear, but out school work interferes to such an extent that we are not able to do as our desires would so strive to do. Florence, my Dear, you don’t realize what a good time I have at those little gatherings. I sure do enjoy myself. It’s not the only there but when I come out there, it thrills me to a peanut. I don’t know what I would do if I if I did not get to come out to see you. It’s so much better then running around some place. And you don’t know how I like to hear you play. I am just crazy about music. I could listen to good music forever and never get tired, I think. I have always been filled with the anxiety of refreshing my ears with music. Also Dear I have always had a desire to meet a girl of your kind. One that was a musician. And then at the Halloween party, oh Dear since then, you have put so much sunshine into my heart. It is so many things that make me like you so much. Partly the Fates, I do believe.

Gee this is a cold night.  Ike and Skinney just came back from town and they said it sure is cold. We will have our winter weather now. I guess I will get my boots out and get them ready for field work in Engineering.

Well Florence my Dear I must close this epistle and hit the trail of slumberland. It’s about that time. Florence I will be glad to hear from you.

Your affectionately,

Fred

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Fred and Florence get to visit the Goddesses

The amazing authors over at The Goddess Blogs have asked me to be a guest on their blog – check it out!

I am honored that they enjoy Fred and Florence’s story as it unfolds. Many thanks to them for this opportunity.

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1/28/23 A Poem to the Fire Fairies

Read First

Sunday 11:45 am

Dearest Fredibus,

You are going to think I am the laziest thing when I tell you I’m still in bed but considering that I’ve slept only about 8 hours in the past 3 nights, you won’t blame me, will you? I’m horrible tired. I always tell you that, don’t I? But truly it seems that about the time I begin to get rested, something happens. So, Fredibus, next summer (I almost hate to tell you this) I’m going away – somewhere – and I’m going to take a genuine rest cure. Perhaps I shall go to California – or maybe Minnesota + visit some friends or maybe to San Antonio – or perhaps I shan’t go anywhere, if the folks don’t want me to go, but you see, I’ll be thru school and awful tired and there’s never anything doing in this dull old town during summer and then in the fall I’ll come back (perhaps sooner, who knows) and study music so that some day you’ll be really proud of me and you can say that she’s a friend of yours. and then when your name comes out in the American Magazine as one of the —- well, I don’t know just what – but some great man, then I’ll say, he’s my very ownest Fredibus (course, I won’t say that to anybody but myself. I mean call you that – but you will be won’t you? And that’s all in the golden future. When the world will be all ours and we shall demand our just dues. Ah, Fredibus, what could be more wonderful then being true friends all that time. Let’s don’t have any more repetitions of last nite. I’ll try awful hard not to but I was hurt so awfulterribly bad and the way I felt was that the very time I needed you worst was Friday nite and you failed me. I needed a real true friend who would cheer me up. and I found a cool, indifferent sort of human. Perhaps you really weren’t but it seemed that way to me. Now. I wish to Heavens that the line had been busy and I couldn’t have gotten you. I realize now that it was terribly wrong of my to call you – but I needed a little cheering – and I got it, too – looking at a funny paper. and my swollen eyes – and your picture.

Gosh, my feet are paralyzed. My ankle feels slightly strained and uncomfortable but it doesn’t hurt much. and I had the other ankle all twisted up and now my head’s whirling so I’m thinking I had better stop, get up and dress, then continue this foolishness.

6:15

I’ve got the victrola going like fury – and I’m living over being dancing with you, Fredibus. You’re far from being a pest at dancing and you have to learn + I’m trying to teach you and I love to feel your arm – Oh Fred – scuse me, but that music is sending me crazy —- those slow drags that just — well, affect me so strangely — those — blues — I wish u were here.

Now I’ve got to quit before I say something astonishing to you. I need a little mental support tonite – Oh, Fred.

10:00 p.m.

This is a letter in the installment plan. Written at different intervals – I nearly got so inspired – listening to the victrola and watching the flames dance over the logs. Seek their partners, fly away then return in a changeable red and blue and white costume and dance wildly over the logs. I nearly composed a poem to the Fire Fairies and then, I watched the fairies leap up and gather into their flames some secrets I had written and I knew they were safe from the eyes of the heartless public. And if anything happened to me – why someone would read them and find out things that they did not need to know – C?

I’m dreadfully glad you called me. It already seems like an age since I saw you. Then one time, I remember, you asked me why I called your attention to things – wasn’t I interested in what you said. Oh, Fredibus, you’ll never know how very interested I was – I’ve never spent a boring moment with you.

I’d like to know why I’m saying all these things to you. A first, when I wrote you during exams before Xmas, I was terribly careful what I said and only allowed the very commonplace subjects. but I’ve gotten terribly personal – Why, I don’t know. but I think it’s lots of fun to write letters and know you’re not so far away that I can’t see you.

Mama’s kicking about my being up. It’s 10:30 so I guess for her dear sake, I’ll have to hit the hay.

You understand, neus carus, that it is neither lack of courage or lack of vocabulary which stops me (and I need not read the dictionary) but it’s lack of time.

The very sweetest dreams to you, Fredibus.

– well – I won’t say it.

Read Last

Sun. Jan.28, 1923,

3o’clock-pm

Pride of my fading years –

I can not imagine waiting for 4 whole days to answer one of your adorable letters but that seems to be the facts of the case. I’ve never done such a thing before. I’ve always answered your letters right away and sometimes I have written you more then one answer, haven’t I? But, Fredibus, I did it because I wanted to and really enjoyed it. I guess you know that I don’t do so many things I don’t want to. Ha-Ha- But the saints have mercy on me with the things I want to do for I don’t stop to think except that I looked into your eyes and I looked at your DeMolay pin and —- the conclusion is very obvious.

I’m going to start radio talk and u mite have to figure out what I mean but it saves lots of time, movements, patience. U won’t mind, will u?

Fred, I just adore that crowd u had out here last nite. They r so precious. And Mother had such a wonderful time. All day she has been talking about how nice the boys were and how polite they were to her. U kno, Fredibus, Mama is awful sensitive about those things and she feels that if the bunch comes over here and doesn’t have a good time it is simply a crime and I guess that’s the reason we always have such a good time. Mama enters into the fun and is as much a kid as any of the rest of us. It’s wonderful to have a mother like that.

I had a good time under the circumstances and after the news of that horrible accident. Perhaps u noticed that all my gayety was rather forced and how every time I got with u I sort of quieted down. Fredibus, it was surely a relief to have a haven to go to when I felt like I cudn’t hold up another second. Thats what I call a friend and u’ve surely been a wonderful one to me. the thing that I noticed was that Fredibus was sort of worried about something and seemed to be thinking all the time. When u were with me, tho, u seemed to be natural enuf and if anything, a little more precious that usual. I kno u had a gud time but not nearly as gud a time as u usually have. Sometimes u seemed sort of indifferent to everybody, but never to me and I think lots of u for it too. But what was my big athlete thinking of that made him so unresponsive to everybody? Can’t u tell ur old pal and get it off ur mind? honest I won’t breathe it to a single living soul.

Fredibus, those were awful sweet things you told me last nite and I’ve thought of them so much since. I’m terribly glad u feel that way. It gives me a new lease on life.

This morning I was reading over an old diary of mine that I kept last summer and I read the vow that I solemnly made to myself 3 weeks before my 16th birthday. I said that my 16th yr wud be very eventful and wild —- and listen! 2 weeks before my birthday on the 13th Rasoplo proposed — on the 23rd I went to Galveston with a crowd and he was there. Undoubtedly that was the wildest time of my life. I hit the hay at 4 in the morning —- then soon after I met the most fascinating Dr. Mac — then I went to San Antonio and had a marvelous time — I have gotten recognition in the musical world here in Houston —- and then, Fredibus o’ me heart, I went to a Halloween party and met the sweetest Rice soph and he’s been so  marvelous to me. I’ve had such a wonderful time with him and thru him I’ve met so many nice boys and just knowing him has meant the world to me — the girl the folks called “the jazz fiend – the fun-chaser–child of old Father Jazz — wild and wolly—the flirt” and numberless other names. I confess, Fred, that all those names were well deserved and I was wild. Now the wildness has given way to events and the thrills that I used to demand aren’t thrills anymore &&&&&&——$$$$????!!

Luckily for us both, Fredibus, u didn’t kno me then. If u had we wudn’t be friends now for a boy like you wudn’t have liked a girl like I was then —- neither wud I have liked u for long because I didn’t stay with a person long enuf to really be interested in them. I was constantly looking for something new– a new thrill, etc.

Sometimes, as a proof for those statements (if u need any)(and I hardly think you do) I’ll show you a book I kept — “CRUSHES, SQUSHES, and MASHES” — a book of the different boys I – well, I started to say liked but such was not the case for I never let myself go further then the hour’s fascination and I never let my heart become involved until a college boy suddenly appeared –quite took my breath away — and before I quite knew it, my heart was, for the very first time involved and I GAVE MORE THEN I’VE EVER VOLUNTARILY GIVEN.

Then, of course, the car came + I flunked-??

I’ve been writing for nearly 2 hours on this thing and Mama is waiting to use the type so I’ll have to call quits.

I hardly think i’ll ever get such a letter as this from me again because I seldom tell people what I’ve said—-

Just oodles of luck to u, Fredibus —

I think u’re just wonderful!!!!!!!!!!!

Me

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The year they met – 1922

One of the site readers posted a comment about having to wait for days to get responses to letters and how communication has changed so much. It leads you to imagine other changes that have taken effect and how life in general has changed since Fred and Florence met in October of 1922.

Another reader sent me some interesting bits on life in 1922 that I thought I would pass along:

The population of the US, according to the 1920 U.S. Census, was 105,710,620. Texas boasted a population of 4,663,226 of which 138,276 of them lived in the 38.7 square miles that Houston occupied.

(to get a look at Houston in 1922, the northwest map is located here and the northeast map is here)

In world news, Benito Mussolini becomes the youngest Premier in Italy’s history. On November 4, Howard Carter and his team find the entrance to King Tut‘s tomb and become the first people to enter the tomb in 3000 years later that month.  December marked the formation of the USSR.

Stateside, the Teapot Dome Scandal investigation begins, the Lincoln Memorial is dedicated in Washington D.C. and Rebecca Felton is sworn in as the first female United States Senator. Walt Disney incorporates his first film company, Laugh-O-Gram films and Babe Ruth was suspended for a day and fined $200 for throwing dirt at an umpire.

And back in Houston, Texas, the Houston Zoo was founded in Hermann Park, the Independent Insurance Agent Open (now the Shell Houston Open) began and the first motorized fire-fighting equipment was purchased for the city of Houston.

(Thanks, Riqui!!)

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Florence’s Birthday

Today is Florence’s birthday. Were she still with us, she would be turning 104. I remember when I would visit her she would say that she wanted to live to be 100 and have Willard Scott wish her a happy 100th birthday.

This is how she celebrated her 17th birthday in 1923.

Happy birthday, Mimi!

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1/24 Report Cards

I find the history card particularly interesting.

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1/23/23 Hurrah and Cheers forever

Houston, Texas

Jan 23, 1923

My Dearest Florence,

Hurrah and cheers for ever. Your exams are over, old Dear. I sure know how you feel. Isn’t it a wonderful feeling that you have. My heart and soul is with you. I just know you will come out on top. You cannot help but to.

I thought I would write you today so I will have have to make speed as it will not be long before tomorrow. Not many minutes. I received your most wonderful letter this afternoon. A boy was over here in my room and we were translating Spanish. I was half through and a boy brought in your letter. I immediately stopped and let my mind feast on your most extraordinary and very muchly appreciated manuscript. You cannot realize how glad I am to get those and how I look forward to the next one and when I will get to see you again. I cannot help it Dear. It’s just your ways, I suppose. It makes the world so much better to live in when you have such a Dear Friend. Things are so much happier and since I have known you, I have had such a wonderful time. I have known many girls but none like you Dear. I have done with others but Florence my Dearest I have never cared for another like you. I must not try to say more my vocabulary is limited tonite and words will not flow as fluently as I would like them to. So wishing you all the luck in the world. I will have to close & go to depths of slumber. 11:30 pm

Yours affectionately,

Fred

P.S. How about not getting hard boiled on the phone, Florence. I was merely joking with you. You did not understand me, I am sure. But if I said anything to offend you, I did not mean to. Laugh and the world laughs with you. Ha Ha

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1/22/23 The Star Dull Pupil

Fred – Fred, send me some knowlege of Latin – I’ve got my paper up here right in front of my and it looks like my head feels – absolutely empty. I’ve exhausted my store of knowlege on one test today and my brain refuses to function on another. I’ve been gazing out the window at the tall skyscrapers and wondering why in the d– people ever had to have as little sense as to give us as crazy a test as I’ve got. It’s down right pitiful. The things they ask us to translate I am sure is not found in Virgil. And here I sit, the star dull pupil – surrounded by a dumb class of Latin students. Good Gorsh – have the Fates any mercy on us poor suffering mortals. And now I’m thanking my lucky stars that I’ll never have to take another Latin test. this is where [note arrow pointing to equation on letter] I figured how near I’d come to getting a passing grade. 6 questions – each count 16 2/3. One question left out entirely leaves 83 1/3. Perhaps a few mistakes on all the rest would leave me a passing grade. Don’t tell me I’m wasting time figuring all that out for I’m not. I have another whole half hour for the knowlege to fly thru the air from you to me. Will I wait in vain – I can’t send a slime* out there ’cause the slimes here aren’t as good as the slimes there – but I’ll think it so hard that you’ll just have to cast the intelligence of that bright mind of yours over here.

As I gaze on the tall works of mankind – namely the city hall tower, Waddell’s, the Lutheran Church, the courthouse and several other buildings, I wonder which one you’ll have your office in. If the city jail could be seen I’d predict that to be your future office. There’s a large t shaped aerial up in the air. I wonder what station miles away is being heard. there are several flagpoles where Old Glory waves to the breeze. There are lots of other things but the clock says quarter of 12 and the bell rings at 12. Then I’m free til tomorrow morning except of course the studying of geometry. Then Fredibus, I’ll be thru and Friday I’ll know the best or the worst. I’m sure that I’ll pass. Save for the lack of knowlege, I’d be brilliant, wouldn’t I?

Fredibus, I was so thrilled last nite when Dr. Mc called me. Of course, I  know he thinks I’m only a kid – somebody for him to have fun with – but it’s really quite flattering for him to call me.

Gosh – are you thinking of me right now at 11:50? Please tell me, my eye is jumping like Fury. That’s a sign somebody is thinking about you. 8 more minutes, then freedom from this stuffy room. And freedom til tomorrow. Then Fredibus, fun + more study then I’ve done this term but oodles of fun – then in June I’ll be thru forever. At least for a long time ’cause colleges won’t take girls till they’re 18 – and I’ll be free – and I can really have a good time and I won’t have to get up at dawn – or go to bed with the chickens like they do in El Campo.

2 more minutes. I just handed in my blank paper. It was awful – nearly broke my heart – what I haven’t. Will you pardon the foolishness. The town clock is striking 12 and all the whistles are blowing but the bell won’t ring – Oh heavens! Fred – please pray for me tomorrow – math test – good gorsh.

Oh, pardon my slang – won’t you? I’m writing to keep up my happy (?)(?) temper.

That bell —-hurry —

At  last!!

* “Slimes” were what freshman were referred to at Rice University, as in primordial ooze.


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The Letters Project – One month in.

This weekend marked the completion of the first month of the project being up for the world to see. I am excited that this site has had nearly 1000 views so far!

As I work to queue up more of the letters and other goodies that make up this unique collection, I have begun to learn more about Fred and Florence as young people. It is somehow comforting to know that they went through the same age appropriate drama that we went through – though their was played out via conversation and handwritten letters then through texts and emails.

I have also learned and researched a number of idioms, phrases, organizations, etc. The first one that made me laugh was Florence’s reference to “slimes” in “45 Lines of Virgil.” While most likely not recognized now as an acceptable nickname for the freshmen at Rice University, it was the norm at the time.

I am also getting more of a sense of what my grandfather was like and his unwavering dedication to his goal to be a success in his track and field events and in his future career. He was a very focused young man, as you will see examples of soon (teaser!)

Thank you for reading and following along, there is much more to come. Please spread the word if you are so inclined.

Don’t forget, you can also find out when the latest posts go up via Twitter, FaceBook and through RSS feeds.

I also want to give special recognition for the theme that I use on this site. It is absolutely perfect and I can’t tell you how many comments I have received complimenting it… so a huge thanks to InfoCreek web design.

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