Sepia Saturday challenges bloggers to share family
history through old photographs.
This week’s Sepia Saturday photo celebrates Halloween. As
much as I enjoyed dressing as a gypsy for Halloween as a child (year after
year, I might add), there are no photos to remind me of the fun I had Trick-or-Treating.
Soaping windows and pulling pranks were not part of my youth. The emphasis was
always on the TREATS. A full evening of walking the streets and ringing
doorbells was rewarded with a bag full of candy corn, Mary Janes, cheap
lollipops, jawbreakers, and Tootsie Roll pops if we were lucky.
When I was too old to go Trick-or-Treating, I manned the
front door and dispensed sugary goodness to the neighborhood ghosts, witches,
and clowns. In the 1960s, teens were fairly obedient regarding the Halloween no-one-over-12
rule. Oh, a few might have squeaked by at 13, but those of us manning the doors
were not often taken for fools by an over-aged ghoul or hobo. So I knew to be
suspicious when these two came to the door.
Hmm, they are awfully tall, I thought to myself as I
looked at them at eye-level. Must be their last year of trick-or-treating. But
they lingered at the door much too long -- just long enough for me to notice
the dress the girl on the right was wearing.
I had seen that dress before.
It was my grandmother’s dress!
The trick-or-treaters were none other than my grandmother
Lucille Rucker Davis and my cousin Bobbie who was living with her while
attending college. The two of them were quite proud of themselves for fooling a
few of our close neighbors before trying this stunt on me. I had to admit,
those masks were really good!
(By the way, the trick-or-treaters left to right were my grandmother and my cousin wearing Grandma's dress.)
For more tricks and treats, please make your way to Sepia Saturday.
Wendy
© 2017, Wendy Mathias.
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