The "Time for Some Soup" Edition....

5. Thursday--Hubs cooks or Leftovers
5. Thursday--Hubs cooks
5. Thursday--Hubs cooks or Leftovers
Just an average Gal, older mom, trying to live a simple life & what happens along the way.
The "Time for Some Soup" Edition....
* My Menu post will be up on Tuesday this week instead of Monday as I have a special post for today.
Another Grandma Post! Yes, both my grandmothers were both born in February, 5 years and 6 days apart.
This post is about my maternal Grandmother. If she were alive she'd have been 107 years old today.
Since it's my mother's mother I've got a few more photos of her since moms are more likely to be keepers of family history and photos than dads. ;-)
Lillian Grace Vassar was born 8 February 1914 in Charlotte County, Virginia, which is in South Central Virginia. She was the 5th born of 12 children to my maternal Great Grandparents, John and Lucy Baker Vassar. She was the 4th of 6 girls born to them.
Here's a photo of her taken on the dock of a lake in 1930 when she was 16 years old.
She married my grandfather between 1932 and 1933. Their marriage record has eluded me for years but Lillian graduated high school in 1932 and my mother was born in 1934 and Grandma Lil being the proper Southern Baptist raised gal raised by strict parents she wouldn't have slept with Grandpa before marriage. In all likelihood they drove down to North Carolina to get hitched as did many in that area of Virginia who wanted to wed.
Lil, as my grandfather Harper called her, was a strong woman like my Granny Paul. She was one of 12 kids raised in the country by farming parents. Lillian did well in high school and had a lead role in a school production before graduating.
Lillian played "Bettie Page", Phil, the football hero's sweetheart. Maybe I got my acting chops from Granny Lil? ;-)
Here's a high school photo of Lillian, year unknown.
Once she and my grandfather married Lillian's parents gave them a few acres of land off the old home place to set up housekeeping. It was a piece of undeveloped wooded land. Granddad, who had worked in a sawmill and was a pretty good carpenter built them a log cabin to live in. In 1934 my mother was born and they took her back to their humble home with the well pump in the yard. As it was the depths of the depression, jobs were hard to come by in that rural area. Granddad worked off and on in a sawmill and grandma was a homemaker and they scrapped by until mom was 5 years old.
My grandmother found my mom out in front of the cabin playing with a snake and that's when she made up her mind that they were leaving the country. In the back of grandma's mind was the lure of jobs in the big city of Norfolk, VA for her husband as it was 1939 and the world was gearing up for war. Norfolk was the home of many shipbuilding yards and factories as well.
So Grandma wrote to a relative begging for a loan of $10 or so in order to be able to move her little family to Norfolk for a better life. I'm sure that took a lot of courage to ask for money during the Depression and to move to a place where they had no family and knew no one.
They rented a tiny house and granddad ended up getting a job in the shipyard making decent money. After the war granddad bought a lot and singlehandedly built them a house in the Portlock section of South Norfolk(now Chesapeake). The shipyard job went away after the war ended but granddad was creative and went to work for himself. He ran a barbecue shack at one point and another of his businesses was as a locksmith. When my mom was in high school he had the locksmith business I believe. But his health wasn't great by then. We now know that he got asbestos poisoning in the shipyard and drug the particles home to unknowingly expose his wife and daughter too.
Granddad had to quit working fulltime sometime in the early 1950's and Lillian had to take on the breadwinner position for the family. Being the no nonsense woman she was she got a job with Sears and Roebuck on 21st St. in downtown Norfolk, VA. She worked as a saleswoman in the carpet department all through the 1950's into the 1960's. She was a star at sales, winning awards and a nice paycheck while granddad held down the home front.
In 1951 my mother "had" to get married at the age of 16 and dropped out of school. I think my grandparents were a bit shocked but they understood as my mother was deeply in love with my father. His family lived in the house behind theirs so they grew up together. My mother was friends and in the same grade with my dad's younger sister, Marilyn, who was the same age as mom, so that is how mom and dad got to know each other. It was a neighborhood romance.
My Grandparents knew because they had been and still were deeply in love.
Now that we are living on an annuity and 401K$ withdrawals(some months), I am still going to keep track of our monthly spending and income, and hopefully we'll still be able to live BELOW our means and I'll have some leftover monies each month to tuck aside.
Here's our frugal wins this past week.......
* I already posted my Rite-Aid trip......
* I spent ALL my Extra Care Bucks at CVS on Thursday and purposely didn't earn any more ECBs! With Winter heavy upon us I just can't have ECBs hanging over my head(as the CVSs are not in my town and too far to travel in bad weather)so I am now out of the CVS game. (Plus CRTs have been nonexistent on my account too.)
* I hit the discount grocery outlet yesterday since the weather was nice and I was over near there to hit CVS and get my glasses. No picture of the groceries since they are already put away but here is my receipt..
* I found money!
It was a thin week for finds(well duh! I didn't go out much).......