My Life, as I recall.......

Home
About Me
Favorite Links
Contact Me
Family Photo Album

philin39.jpg


   It's a little difficult to describe the 30's; things were a little out of focus back then, like watching "The Grapes of Wrath" through the bottom of a coke bottle.  Since colored film hadn't been invented yet, all the pictures of my youth are in black and white, therefore, the thirties were rather colorless......I'm sure grass was still green and tulips came in a variety of colors, but I remember everything just being black and white.  Might have something to do with the fact that I was just a baby, but it wasn't a very colorful world.  Money was hard to come by and so were jobs.....anybody working was considered lucky.  Bread lines were still in vogue and there were very few fat people walking around. 
   I was born on Thursday, July 15th, 1937 in Anchor Hospital in St. Paul, MN, the second son of George and Blanche Hunt.  I had an older brother, Don, who was born 21 months before me and I don't think he was too happy to share his world with a little brother.  He made his lack of sibling affection all too apparent and continued to remind me for the next 17 years....."Hey, this is MY house....I'm just letting you live here, OK?"
I can only imagine what the addition of my three younger sisters to the family did to his psyche, but that would come later.
   To give you a better idea of what was going on at the time I was born, let me insert a few facts here.  One week prior to my birth, Emilia Ehrardt dissappeared over the Pacific and cars were allowed on the Golden Gate bridge for the first time.  Five weeks later, Robert Redford was born.  Three months before I arrived, the "Hindenburg" exploded at it's berth in Lakehurst, NJ and four years would pass before the carving on Mt. Rushmore would be completed.  I wasn't aware of it at the time, but war clouds were brewing in the skys over Europe and the entire world would be at war for the better part of my childhood.  But I was oblivious to all that....I was just happy to be here.
   My father was one of the fortunate few who held a regular job, but I don't think we had much to spare, so another mouth to feed couldn't have been the most welcome thing in the world, contributing to the fact that I was never the biggest kid on the playground, weighing in at 117 pounds by the time I joined the service 17 years later.  I don't recall being sickly, exactly, but I sure could have used an extra few pounds for many years.
   Until the time I was about two, we lived in St. Paul at a place I called "the dirty house"....I assume because it was gray.  I don't recall calling it that, but that's what my folks always told me.  Then we moved to Tanner's Lake, a suburb of St. Paul and I spent the next few years making a pest of myself, following my brother along the shoreline on the lake right across the street from where we lived in the whitest house I'd ever seen.  My earliest recollection of life was an image of Don scooping a sunfish out of the lake from the end of a pier, using a small box that strawberry's came in......I was in awe.  I'd never catch another fish that was a bigger thrill than that minnow-like creature from the depths of Tanner's Lake.  I was about two, so it looked like a whale to me.
   Roberta came along when I was three, and shortly thereafter, we packed up the old Ford and headed to South Milwaukee, where a better job awaited my father at Bucyrus Erie.  He would spend the entire war building Sherman Tanks, and I finally got to live in a house with a bathroom.
  
    

.

People shouting at the world over megaphones; Size=240 pixels wide

.

.

Please get in touch with any comments or reactions to my site.