Last week, before I time travelled, I went online and did
some research. As I examined my life, I
knew it was necessary to go back to where I came from. Up to now, life has been anticipation: looking forward to what was going to happen;
working toward a future. Now, life is
beginning to be a reflection, looking back at what was and trying to make some
sense of it. Oh, I still anticipate a future. I have not stopped in the present with no
plans for what will be, but where I came from and what I did now seems almost
as important as where I am going.
A few years ago I went back to Alden Street and viewed the lot where the
first house I lived in used to be, so I already knew the house was no longer
there. However, it was not just the
place where I slept and ate, it was the neighborhood where I lived to which I
needed to return. In addition to the
cradle where my infant architectural history was nurtured, I needed to wander
among the other structures and places where I walked as a lad.
Because I had a couple of paper routes in the general
neighborhood, I knew that the big houses across the street were where the rich
lived at the time—an area called Parkwood—and I did some research. What I found piqued my curiosity so I had
reason to fire up the WABAC.
Parkwood was not a departure from other upscale areas of Kansas City, with winding
streets that didn’t form the normal grids with streets at ninety-degree angles
that I was used to. Parkwood had streets
that formed sweeping wyes with semi-triangular islands with flowers and
bushes. This was nothing out of the
ordinary for me. I had seen Westheight
in Kansas City, Kansas;
Mission Hills and the Country
Club Plaza,
so I figured this is just how all the upscale areas were built. However, my research led me to Sid J.
Hare. Sid and his son S, Herbert Hare
formed Hare and Hare, a landscape architecture company. Parkwood was Hare’s first project of
note. Later Hare and Hare laid out
Westheight. J.C. Nichols saw Parkwood
and Westheight and hired Hare and Hare to do a shopping area for him—the
Country Club Plaza. Many years later
Hare did Mission Woods among a plethora of other things, including the University of Kansas,
Wyandotte High
School, Loose
Park, the Truman Library,
ad infinidum. I have been to most of them and I see the
similarities.
So, I set the dials on the WABAC machine and I travelled
back to the day.
Parkwood had fallen into disrepair and become a bad area of
town fifty years ago or more so I was expecting a ghetto. I was surprised to see a number of the houses
well maintained with yards trimmed and landscaping clipped. The islands were all weeded and flowers were
in bloom. There were some houses in
disrepair with elderly cars parked by them but I was surprised by the condition
of the area. There were four
upscale-looking guys on the tennis court playing doubles and there were no cars
around so I am assuming the walked there.
So far, so good.
I drove back down Quindaro
Boulevard and was surprised to find a couple of
blocks of new houses, some under construction, and drove west to 17th Street
and went south toward Alden. For some
reason, many of the streets in the old neighborhood are one way, so I had to
drive around for a while before I could get myself where I could drive north
down Alden. I parked in front of the
vacant lot that used to be the old homestead and took some photos.
A neighbor come out of her house and asked me if I was the
guy who was going to cut down the tree.
I told her I was not a tree trimmer and explained that I used to live
there fifty years ago and was taking photos of where I used to live. She came out and talked to me for a while and
I told her about where my old house was and the garage. Her house, sitting next door to where I used
to live was two years old. There were
three new houses on the block that were not there last time I visited. I told her I was going to walk around the lot
if she didn’t mind and she told me to be careful. I’m not sure of what I should be careful, but
she probably figured I was a doddering elderly person who might fall and not be
able to get up.
Anyway, the yard that seemed so large when I was a child,
seemed miniscule to my elderly eyes. I
walked to the middle of the back yard, where second base had been in our waffle
ball games and looked toward where the outfield fence had been and then home
plate. I remembered it took a mighty
swing to put that waffle ball over the fence when I was a kid, but now I could
almost spit from second base and hit the outfield wall or home plate. And, I have worked on construction sites
where there were gentlemen who could put some serious distance between their
lips and their spittle, their mucus or their sputum, and I was not a guy who
could match their distance, or even spit very far.
I took some pictures of what was now so I could have the
record to compare in my mind to what used to be. Few landmarks were the same. None of the yard was recognizable. There was a large walnut tree where the house
had been. My knowledge of trees was that
walnuts take a long time to grow, so the house must have been razed many years
ago. I was hoping, much like Ponce de
Leon that I had found the wellspring of my youth, but though I stood among the
ghosts of the past, I was still old. I
guess the problem was that nothing was the same. Even the lay of the land was different. The side yard, which used to be a serious enough
slope we could use it for sledding in winter snows, had been dozed to a lazy
grade. The front door of the house was
on the main floor and the back door in the basement opened to a level just
below the level of the back yard. Now
the grade was more uniform. The
landmarks of my youth were gone and things were so changed that it was hard to
determine the exact place they used to be.
After all, it has been fifty years since I walked these grounds. A half a century can erase some memories.
I guess I wanted some moment of epiphany—some recollection
that brought me back to a time when a young boy ran the width and breadth of
this property. It didn’t happen. In one regard it was good to be back but it
was almost like coming home to a place I had never been. There were some good times I had in this
house and in this yard, but there was no house and the yard, for all I know,
might have been six feet below me, forever covered by the bulldozer’s blade.
It was melancholy to be home but just as good to be
going. It was home no more and the WABAC
had other destinations to which it would take me. It was time to travel again and I will detail
those further adventures later.