Saturday, December 24, 2016

The Little Red Lamp


Mother and Daddy at the Fairmont Hotel, San Francisco, circa 1944

        
        When I was about eight, my aunt Frances had given me five dollars for my birthday in September of which I had saved some for a Christmas present for my mother.

       In those days, there were two dime stores in Aberdeen.  Mack's was the oldest and most popular; by the 1950's it was called a "5 - 10 and 15-cent store," and it was there that I went looking for a gift.  

       Mack's was an excellent store to buy candy, dish towels, can openers, baseball cards, and any number of other useful things.   As Aunt Frances (who was a particularly conservative interior decorator) would have been the first to tell me, it was not the best place to find a tasteful gift for the home.


That's me minus a few teeth in 1950

         I was confident I had found the perfect Christmas present there, a little red lamp.  I do mean all red.  Red glass "hurricane" globe, red imitation-crystal droplets, red base.  It cost $1.29, it was my own money,  and I was thrilled with the beauty of my purchase.


       Come Christmas morning when I brought out my prize find, I was proud to see Mother's absolute delight with her magnificent gift.  

       The lamp and her reaction became instant family folklore.  I don't know if she had any advance warning from my father, but she certainly didn't miss a beat.   She explained with great enthusiasm that it  was so special, so beautiful, that she was going to wrap it up and put it away safely in the attic as soon as Christmas was over, and then bring it down every year for the holidays.

        Which she did.  

       I don't know what ultimately happened to my little red lamp, but I do remember it was still out in its prime spot, surrounded by holly and mistletoe, when I returned home in 1997 for what was to be Mother's last Christmas.   

 The parents quite a few years later

   
 
Your input is welcomed:  frank.pleasants@libertysurf.fr

13 comments:

Janet in Aberdeen said...

Thanks, Frank. Your mother was truly a classy lady.

Virginia in Capetown said...

Lovely!

Dickie said...

I remember it well.

NYC said...

Short and sweet!

Marilyn said...

A perfect story of a perfect gift--she loved that lamp because you'd taken care 100%
Mom's are like that. Merry Christmas

Sandy in Atlanta said...

Great story, but your aunt had it all wrong. If Mack's didn't have it you didn't need it and in the 50s, everything was "tasteful," at least in our eyes. Too bad you don't know the whereabouts of the little red lamp. I'm sure it would look stunning in your place!

Bill in Castle Hayne said...

Frank, I believe I remember that Little Red Lamp! Merry Christmas..

Frankie G.K. said...

What a beautiful Christmas memory. Mother's are very special.

Marilyn in Michigan said...

Love the pictures...and the memories

Lucio in Paris said...

Nice story, Frank!

Patsy B said...

Thanks Frank! Brings back many memories.

Kathleen in North Carolina said...

Merry Christmas and thank you for sharing a special memory.

Ann in Charlottesville said...

Happy New Year! Your little red lamp story is close to my heart since for several years I bought figurines for my mother's Christmas and birthday presents at the (guess where?) Aberdeen Five & Dime. Marcie displayed them for some time on a living room shelf before she offered to give them to me to play with (my wish of course!).