As a young child I grew
up in Western New York. My father, a pastor, had gone there when I was four
years old to start a new church. In addition to pastoring the church, he worked
full-time at Montgomery Wards.
One of my fondest
memories as a young child was when dad would bring home the new Montgomery Ward
Christmas catalog each fall. The employees always got it early and I would
spend hours and hours looking through the colorful pages, dreaming of what it
would be like to receive such wonderful gifts. Dad’s income was meager to say
the least and trendy toys and stylish clothes were outside the realm of
possibility.
Our gifts usually
consisted of things returned to the store because there was a missing part or
some kind of damage. Mom would fix clothing that was missing a button or had a
jammed zipper and give it to us for Christmas. Both mom and dad, raised in the
hills of Kentucky in the years following the Great Depression were proud to
give us our store bought gifts, even if they were slightly less than perfect.
When the Christmas
catalog came out in the fall of 1963, when I was eight years old, something
caught my eye each time a opened the “dream book”…an electric model train. The
catalog had a picture of the train set assembled with the plastic mountains and
trees situated on a green piece of plywood with smoke coming out of the
locomotive’s smoke stack as it rounded the curve in the tracks. In the
background a father and son had their hands on the transformer controlling the
speed of the train. That was what I wanted for Christmas. That’s all I
wanted. I didn’t care if I got anything
else or not…I just wanted that train.
Looking back on it now, I
think what I really wanted was for my dad to help me put it together, stay with
me and play with it and be like the father and son in the picture. I didn’t
understand that then…I just knew I wanted that train.
When Christmas day came,
there was only one gift for me. It was a big square box. When I ripped off the
wrapping paper I still could not tell what the plain brown cardboard box
contained. Dad helped me cut the tape which sealed the box closed. As we opened
the box I could see each of the railroad cars, the miniature cardboard freight
boxes, the plastic trees and telephone poles and even a bottle of liquid smoke
to make the locomotive smoke like the one in the picture. My dream had come
true.
I have no idea how dad
afforded the train set. Perhaps it was missing something or had been returned.
At eight years old I didn’t know to ask and I’m glad I didn’t. Dad was so proud
to be able to give me what I wanted. He spent most of Christmas Day with me and
we set up the train set and ran it all day long. That’s the last day dad ever
spent with me and my train, but it is still one of my prized positions, 54
years later. Every once in a while, I still get it out and set it up. It still
runs. Dad is gone now. This will be yet another Christmas without him. Maybe
I’ll set up the train and remember the day when I got all I wanted for
Christmas.
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