Genealogists and family historians get a lot of
satisfaction from chasing their ancestors’ stories. Finding a diary, a message
on a postcard, or a photo with a name attached is like the sun coming out after
a storm. One day we will be somebody’s ancestor. We need to leave our
descendants a little bit of sunshine too. So here is my story told
alphabetically, not chronologically: Growing Up in Cradock.
is for Newton’s Nursery and Kindergarten.
Kindergarten was not provided by the public schools when
I was growing up in the Cradock community of Norfolk County (later Portsmouth),
Virginia. Parents who saw the value of early preparation had to pay for it. For
my family, the service was provided at Newton’s Nursery and Kindergarten.
Newton’s was owned by Elizabeth J. Newton, the librarian
at James Hurst Elementary School. Her building was located on Harris Road,
close to her own home. There were two classrooms, the nursery for the toddlers
and the kindergarten class for those heading to first grade the next year. In
the middle of the building were the office, kitchen, and bathroom which had
child-size toilets and trough sinks. A woman prepared snacks and lunch, but I
don’t remember her name. My teacher was addressed in that typical Southern way:
“Miss Sue.” She was actually MRS. Sue Montzingo.
 |
snipped from Google Maps
Today Newton's is a regular house. Aside from new siding,
the exterior looks the same. The nursery was to the left;
the kindergarten was to the right.
The fenced playground was likely a second lot. |
The fenced side yard was huge, providing plenty of playground
equipment and room to run. On rainy days there was even enough room to run
inside. It must have been on such a day that my friend
Melissa and I decided to
hold hands and run in circles, a bit of fun that resulted in a bloody mess when
she let go and sent me flying face-first onto the linoleum floor.
Newton’s Nursery and Kindergarten was invited to
participate in a special event featuring all the children. The Woman’s Club of
Cradock put on a Tom Thumb Wedding as one of its major fund raisers. An American
fad from the 1920s-1970s, a Tom Thumb wedding was a pageant in which the
minister, bride and groom, their parents, bridesmaids, flower girls, ring
bearer and groomsmen were portrayed by children all in elaborate costumes. The
idea was based on an actual wedding between two famous little people, Tom Thumb
(real name Charles Stratton) and Lavinia Warren, who were stars in P. T. Barnum’s
circus. The event attracted a lot of attention back in 1863. Recreating the
wedding must have seemed like a good idea to various schools, churches, and
social organizations seeking to make money from ticket sales. What parent and grandparent wouldn't pay to see their darling in such a spectacle?
On the day that we paraded before the club members who
decided who would be the bride and who would be an attendant, I wore this
pretty little dress:
 |
Wendy 1955 |
Not surprisingly, my friend Alice was chosen to be the
bride. She was (and is!) tall and beautiful, even at age 5. I was one of many bridesmaids.
Our gowns were layers upon layers of tulle forming a full skirt as wide as it
was long; some of us wore blue and some wore yellow. The younger girls from the
nursery were flower girls decked out in pink tulle. I suppose the boys wore
little tuxedos, but I can’t see them in my mind’s eye. The groom did, for sure.
The “wedding” was held in the Cradock High
School auditorium. I can remember lining up and walking down the aisle to the
stage, and I can see Alice and Eddie (the groom) in the center, but there the
memory stops.
Other than that, my only other clear memories of
kindergarten are positioning some mats on the floor for naptime and playing rhythm
instruments while marching around the room. I loved the triangle, tolerated the
sticks, and hated the sand blocks and castanets.
Many of the children in my kindergarten graduation also
graduated with me from high school.
 |
Newton Kindergarten Graduation 1956
I am on the back row, third from the right. |
Lest I neglect the niceties, all neophytes, newcomers and
novices are welcome to navigate the numerous news, narratives, novels and notes
at the A to Z April Challenge.
© 2016, Wendy Mathias. All rights reserved.