Anxiety and apprehension engrossed Glenny’s thoughts
those final days of school. It was late
May of 1950; graduation day was much closer than she had realized. Her mind wandered thinking about the
future. She was ready to leave her home
in the small town of Paynesville Minnesota which she had spent her childhood
years. Paynesville was a farming town
with a population of about one hundred and fifty people, mostly of German
descent. Most of the houses were built
in the early nineteen hundreds. They
all had very large yards with gardens in most.
There were no sidewalks with the exception of downtown. Downtown consisted of three blocks of stores
and one stoplight. The local gathering
place was the diner, which was across the street from the police station. The big business in town was the ice cream
factory where Glenny’s father worked.
Everybody knew each other’s names and business; there were no secrets in
the small town of Paynesville. The
local residents speculated on how many kids would remain in town after
graduation. Glenny had packed her
suitcase and placed it neatly under her bed in anticipation of the next
day. Before long she would embark on a
journey to the big city of Minneapolis Minnesota and a whole new life ahead of
her.
She was daydreaming in her room as she put on her
hat and gown. Her parents went ahead to
the school as she prepared for one of the biggest days of her life. She finished getting ready and headed
towards the school, which was around a mile away. As she walked she reflected on her childhood and the life she was
leaving. Would she miss her home? Would she miss her mother? Will she be okay in that great big
city? What kind of people live in that
city and how would they treat strangers?
Would they help or antagonize a newcomer to the city? In a few hours she would know and be on her
own. Excitement filled the lunchroom
where all her classmates and she were assembled waiting for their graduation
ceremony to begin. They heard the band
strike up “Pomp and Circumstances”, her eyes became misty, and she started to
tremble. It really was time; she would
be leaving behind all the comforts of home and the father and mother who had
always taken care of her every need.
She was no longer a child, she pondered what kind of an adult she would
be. What would become of her life? What kind of an adult would she be? She had seen life at it’s worse during the
years of the great depression. The
economy had bounced back and she knew what one needed to do to survive but she
wanted to live.
She said her good-byes to her special friends from
school and glanced behind her as she left with her diploma in hand. Walking home she imaged all the realities of
being an adult and passed through the many scenarios’ that may come to be. The next morning she took a final look
around her room, gathered her suitcase from under her bed, and went downstairs
for breakfast for the last time as a child.
She could see a melancholy look in her parent’s eyes. She could not understand why they thought she
was not old enough to take care of herself.
After all she was seventeen and she was well versed in life, so she
thought.
She left Paynesville with her sister and
brother-in-law who had come for her graduation. As they started up the small hill by the old oak tree she glanced
back at her mother, she saw a look of bewilderment on her face. The ninety-mile drive to Minneapolis passed
fast as thoughts of her new life in the big city raced through her mind. When they arrived in Minneapolis the tall
buildings seemed to look down at her like a mouse in a maze. There were so many things to do and so
little time to do them in. She needed
to find a job and a place to live. The
thirty dollars she received for graduation seemed to her like a fortune. She would be able to live like a queen. She never even realized that room rent and
food would make it look like nothing in less than a week.
Glenny was very lucky, the first job that she
applied for she got. It was at Dinky
Town Diner working the cosmetic counter.
It was called Dinky Town because it was just off campus from the
University of Minnesota and there were stores of all kinds just like it was a
small town all to itself. She was
surrounded by many young people just starting life as she was. She remembered seeing a sign “Rooms for
Rent” a few blocks from the Diner.
After she received her work instructions and working for a few hours,
she set out for the large rooming house in the neighborhood she passed through
on the way to Dinky Town. A little old
lady greeted her at the door and without much talk about the room she jutted
out her commands. “It’s three fifty a
week, no cooking, no boyfriends beyond the social room and your mail will be
left on the table in the hall in front of your door”. She paid her and went about her business. She opened the door to her room and noticed
she would be sharing it with two other girls.
She hoped they would be friendly like in the small town she came from.