After our marriage on June 8, 1958, knowing we had teaching jobs in the Indianapolis/Southport area, we spent the summer acclimating ourselves to what was to become our new lives together. We spent a week at a lake cottage in northeastern Indiana, then visited briefly in South Bend with my family, staying with my parents, Earl and Goldie Rhoades. With little knowledge of geography, we then set out for Montana by way of Missouri and Oklahoma, and were a bit surprised to realize in Oklahoma that we were no closer to Montana than we had been in Indiana. We stayed briefly at the Ben Markley home in Joplin with my sister Vivian and hurried on to Oklahoma where Margaret’s brother-in-law, Jack Atkinson was a minister at an EUB church. For the rest of the summer, we stayed with Walter and Leona Goldsmith. Walter was the mayor of Harlem, Montana, where they also farmed the 500 tillable acres of their 1000-acre farm about twenty miles from town, just past Snake Butte.
During our stay, I learned a bit about dry land farming, which is done in strips—every other strip lies fallow every other year. We spent a week in Hell’s Canyon where the EUB’s rented a Methodist camp every summer for a week. I discovered what it was like to sleep in a tent on the COLD ground, knowing there were bears around. We set up our tent in a three-sided outbuilding with the opening flap facing the back wall (to discourage any bear that might come along. The cold came up through the ground rather than from the air around us, so every night we put more blankets under us.
Back in Harlem, we became a fixture at the Sunday evening services where Margaret played the organ boldly to allow me to hone my skills at showing off on the piano. I, at least, had great fun. One night after church, however, Leona said, “They really love your piano playing, don’t they? I, for one, can hardly stand it.” She’d like those hymns played the way they were in the hymnal.
To prepare for the start of school, we went back to Indianapolis and found a cute little garage cottage just out the back door and across the alley from the Indiana Central College campus church where we had been married. We lived there for nine months until I forgot to pay the rent during finals week—left the check lying on the desk. Mrs. Rumpke waited until Margaret left for school and ‘attacked’ me about the rent. I was stunned and decided that would be the last check I would give her. Margaret and I went house hunting and spent our entire savings on the down payment on a small two-bedroom bungalow on a dead-end street near a park. We then learned about poverty when I couldn’t even afford the gas to go job hunting. Margaret took a job as a cashier at a nearby grocery, and I finally found work lifting bags of potatoes at the farmer’s market. In the month before school started, I lost 25 pounds and began the weight gain and loss that has been the story of my life. Mrs. Rumpke told me that her next renters moved out in the night owing three months rent and left the little house needing $2000 in repairs—my yearly salary had been $4,090. (First house—1958-‘59)
We lived in this second house only until I found the teaching job in Carthage, Indiana, where they insisted that we move to Carthage and Margaret had to give up her Indy job. (Second house—summer 1959) The first year we lived in another garage home on a corner on South Main Street across from the Friends’ Church, though, actually, we lived mostly at school. (This was home number three—1959-‘60)
The long-time second grade teacher, Gladys Smith, took a job in Greenfield, and we rented her adorable two-bedroom bungalow (she informed us that it was a Sears-Roebuck house). This introduced us to having a fireplace in the living room, a garage, and a full basement. We lived there on North Main Street for a year until the day Lori was born. (1960-‘61) While Margaret was in the hospital, brother Shirley’s son Chuck came for about two weeks and helped us move. The neighbor across the corner taught English at nearby Charlottesville but was changing jobs to teach at Knightstown, about the same distance away—about four miles. She insisted I go after the Charlottesville job, and they also wanted Margaret. This house was a dark brick home with a basement but no garage, and we learned that the hardest move is only three or four houses down the street because you think you can carry everything there on your back or in a wagon. We called this the Donaugh house, and we lived there only until I became the minister at the Charlottesville Christian Church (Home number five—1961-‘62) and we moved into their parsonage for two years, during which time I attended seminary and got good enough grades to have my tuition refunded and won an award as the outstanding student of Reformation Christianity. However, I missed teaching, Margaret was pregnant again with John, and I tried to do both jobs until I thought I was going nuts. The parsonage in ‘downtown’ Charlottesville (that may be a misnomer) was our fifth home. (1962-‘64)
When I resigned as minister, the board members insisted that we stay in the parsonage. “We’ll never find a minister who wants to move here.” However, as soon as school started, they found just such a person, and we had to move. There was a new small factory in nearby Knightstown, and its workers had taken up all the rentals, so we decided to build a three bedroom home in a lovely neighborhood just outside of Greenfield. The contract called for completion in three months, so we moved three houses north and across Highway 40 to the oldest house in town—our first two-story, expecting a short stay. (Home number six—1965-‘66) Our home took a year to build, however, and at that we moved in without the brick exterior, without the brick fireplace, (the hole in the family room wall was covered with sheets of plywood) and without a yard. But we wanted to finish moving before the school began fall classes; so we moved into our eighth home in Bowman Acres. We lived there about six years, during which Tammy and Danny were added to the family. This home had cost $18,500 to build and sold for $30,000. We also sold what had become our rental in Indianapolis for $1,000 more than we’d paid for it, $10,500. (Home number eight—1966-‘72)
Our ninth home was the historical Victorian home on N. Main Street across from the Greenfield Post Office and former home of REMC, Rural Electric Membership Corp. We paid $20,000 for that home which had five kitchens and five baths because it was being used as a rental. We lived in three apartments and learned to love large rooms with high ceilings. We kept two apartments as rentals to help pay the utilities bills. For twenty-five years we remodeled and redecorated to our hearts’ content until we retired in 1995 and moved to Lexington, Kentucky. We chose not to sell the 1868 house, in part because Danny and his spouse were living there and because we had hoped, by keeping it in the family, that it might some day become the Greenfield Baha’i Center. It is interesting to note that Danny is our only child to decide not to remain in the Baha’i Faith. (Ninth home—1972-‘95) So we bought a home in Lexington. (Home number ten—1995-2002) That home had a lovely yard with three decks, a fish pond, and an in-ground pool to which we added a gas heater. We hired most of the yard work done, although Margaret worked in that yard nearly every day while we babysat and helped run Tammy’s store, Dance Essentials, Inc., into which we invested funds for several years until Tammy and Woody moved to North Carolina in 2000 and for which we found a buyer in 2002, when we also moved to Huntersville, NC, into our eleventh home—a three bedroom ranch with 1 ½ baths on a hilly corner lot. We prided ourselves about the nine crepe myrtles that lined our side yard. (Home number eleven—2002-‘05)
When we decided in 2005 to help bring Lori and Sean to Huntersville, they sold their home in Blue Springs, Missouri, and we sold our home on the hill. We sold it for $20,000 more that we had paid on the first day the sold sign was up. Our twelfth home, our shared home, has five bedroom and 2 ½ baths in Cedarfield—a stunning neighborhood with large trees and abundant, carefully groomed entrances to every street and two neighborhood swimming pools, a park and a fishing pond.
Our living room (piano room) has two black pianos—our baby grand and Lori’s digital, which we love because it transposes for you, records your playing, and you can practice with headphones and not bother anyone. This room is decorated with an Asian theme. The family room has become the sitting room, and the introduction of Wii has made the large TV the focal point. Though it has a large sofa, huge chair and ottoman, it is dominated by recliners, afghans, pillows, and books. The dining room, just off the entryway, serves mostly as a mudroom, although it cleans up nicely on holidays to seat more people at the too-large-for-the-room table with armchairs and a very large hutch. Two glass-front bookcases in the entry serve as an extra cabinet for dishes. We have Grandma Goldsmith’s elegant antique china, Margaret’s china, Lori’s china, Tammy’s china and two more casual sets of china along with many fancy pieces of glassware tea service sets and two sets of stemware.
The yard is large with two maple trees, a cherry blossom tree, a dogwood and three large white crepe myrtles. These are enhanced with lovely bushes which are both in our yard and just across the fence in five neighbors’ yards (those back homes are on a cul-de-sac that wraps around us.
And that’s it—twelve homes that make up a lifetime, during which we did a lot of hosting and entertaining and teaching from 1958 until 2005, when I decided being seventy was a good enough excuse to stop doing substitute teaching, where I was getting all the worst possible assignments—special ed, for which I had no training, classes for which no teacher was yet hired and lesson plans that didn’t teach anything and students often refused to do. I had most enjoyed the home ec classes until someone out there decided that home ec subs needed more prep than eighteen years of interior decorating and thirty-six years of classroom teaching.
