Before his retirement, my paternal grandfather was a rural route mail carrier outside Edgerton, Wisconsin. As a child, I lived three hours away in Michigan City, Indiana, so if I was to go along, it was always on a Saturday over a weekend when my family and I were visiting. I was too young to understand precisely the roads his route took, but as I look at a map now, I suspect we were mostly on East County Road 59 and M between Edgerton and Milton.
Grandpa
could amaze me with an alphabetical recitation of each of the 50 states and
their corresponding capitals as well as explanations about the then brand new
zip code system and why it was going to revolutionize mail delivery. His driving
and delivery style also was a source of amazement. Situated to the right of
center on the bench seat of his green 1965 Chevrolet Impala station wagon, he
used his left hand to maneuver the steering wheel, his left foot to operate
both the accelerator and the brake, and his right hand to stretch through the
passenger window to pull down the mailbox door, pull the outgoing mail from the
slot, shove the incoming mail into the slot, slap the door back up, and ram the
flag back down into place in what seemed like one fluid motion, before roaring
off to the next house.
Grandpa’s
day started long before I was even awake on the Saturday I remember best, for
he first had to go to the post office to do all the sorting for his route. It
was just before Christmas in 1967, just a few months before I would turn ten
years old. He asked me soon after we arrived on Friday whether I’d like to come
with him in the morning. He said he could really use my help because at
Christmas time, there was a lot more mail than any other time of the year. I
was excited to be his helper so agreed to go.
“It
means you have to be ready at 7:00,” he warned.
“I’ll
be ready,” I promised because I knew what we would do first before setting out
for deliveries.
At
7:00 sharp, Grandpa pulled into the driveway with the way-back of his station
wagon filled high with bins full of first class mail, small packages, fliers,
magazines, and newspapers. He had spent the past two hours at the post office
arranging the mail so that it was in the order of his deliveries to be as
efficient as possible once he began the route. He had used a rubber band to
wrap the first class mail, along with any special catalogs, magazines, or
newspapers, in a bundle for each address, and had memorized which addresses would
also receive a parcel. The fliers were all in their own bin because each house
would get the same thing. These were the coupons for the grocery and department
stores. My job would be to sit in the back seat (no such thing as seat belts at
this time) and systematically go through the bins handing him the bundle for
the address along with the fliers, and any packages.
“Ready
to go?” he asked as he stomped snow from his boots.
“Ready,
Grandpa,” I replied as I slipped my hands into my mittens.
I
clambered up into the passenger seat and pulled the door shut in excited
anticipation of our first stop—Wickes Pancake House. Grandpa ordered eggs,
Canadian bacon, and toast, which he spread carefully with butter and “jel.” He
had coffee, but I had a large glass of whole milk with my short stack of
pancakes with butter and maple syrup. At 8:00 it was time to get started with
the deliveries, and this time when I got in the car I hopped into the backseat
so I could do my job.
One
of the people on the route was Grandpa’s sister, my Great Aunt Bea. She knew
his schedule so well that she was already trudging out to the end of her long
driveway bundled up against the cold, galoshes on her feet that were at least
six inches deep in snow, as we came around the corner and pulled in tight up
against her roadside mailbox. “You can hand Aunt Bea her mail, Honey,” Grandpa
instructed over his right shoulder. I rolled down my window in preparation.
Aunt
Bea poked her head inside. “I was worried ‘bout your schedule today with all
this snow,” she said in her Wisconsin lilt.
“Ya,
it’s been a bit slippery for us,” he answered back with the same Norwegian
accent.
“So,
ya got a helper today, do ya?” she asked, gesturing to me.
“Ya,
she’s a good little helper, our Debbie.”
“Well,
of course she is. You excited ‘bout Santa?” I nodded my head, a smile on my
face. “Oh ya, I s’pose since you’ve been such a good girl helpin’ out on the
route and all. Well, best be gettin’ on I s’pose.” She took the mail from my
hand and then handed me a round tin decorated with snowflakes. “That’s yer
lefse,” she said to Grandpa.
He
gave her a salute with his right hand and said, “See ya Monday night.”
“Oh,
ya, sure, big party Christmas night, see ya then.”
Aunt
Bea’s packet was the last bunch from the bin I’d been working through, so as
Grandpa headed off to the next house, I put the empty bin in a stack I’d
created on the far left of the backseat. I put the tin in the empty bin I’d
placed in the middle of the seat, and then hopped over into the way-back to
maneuver the next bin over onto the floor so I’d be ready in time before his
next stop.
“Jenkins,
with a package.” Grandpa called out. I already had the Jenkins bundle in my
hand along with the fliers, so handed that over the seat to him. I then quickly
scrambled into the way-back and grabbed the next package in the stack. I looked
at the address to make sure it said Jenkins on it, and then scrambled back over
to hand it to him, too. He took the package from my hand, the bundle of mail
already ready, pulled in close to the box, opened the door, pulled the outgoing
mail out, shoved the incoming mail and package in, shut the door, pushed down
the flag, and handed me what had been in the box. We then repeated the same
thing at every house until all the bins were empty.
At
just about every stop that day, when Grandpa opened the mailbox door, inside
there was a wrapped present or an envelope. The envelopes contained money as a
thank you for upholding the postal code, “Neither
rain nor hail nor sleet nor snow nor heat of day nor dark of night shall keep
this carrier from the swift completion of his appointed rounds.” The
packages all contained sweets of one kind or another. I piled the delicious
sugar-infused treats of cookies, coffee cakes, homemade donuts, maple sugar
candies, rum-soaked fruit cakes, and fudge into the middle bin I’d set up and
couldn’t wait to get them back to Grandma and Grandpa’s house where I might be
able to sample some of them.
“You
know what I think is really funny Grandpa?” I asked.
Grandpa
scooted over to the driver’s side and patted the passenger side up front to
indicate it was time for me to hop forward. He glanced over at me and asked,
“What’s that Sweetheart?”
“The
first family on your route are the Amundsons, which starts with an A. The last
family on your route are the Zeiglers, which starts with a Z. That means that
the list of people you deliver to goes from A to Z. I think that’s funny.”
He
smiled indulgently at me and said, “Ya, that’s pretty funny.”
Grandpa’s
been gone a very long time now, but delivering mail with him is one of those
unforgettable memories that I have always cherished. And eating those goodies
he got that day was pretty nice, too.
Copyright DJ Anderson, 2014
Copyright DJ Anderson, 2014
I really enjoyed this & oh do I miss Lefsa!!!!!
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