Recently I
ran across a letter to my mother from a friend of hers who lived in Deer Creek,
Indiana. My mother grew up in Onward, Indiana, not far from Deer Creek. This
farm woman sent a crocheted doily she had made along with her letter. It is a
darling piece of crochet I inherited and have displayed in my home for several
years.
My mother's family home near Onward |
The letter
came from the very heart of this friend and thanked my mother for a letter of
comfort she had recently received from her. As I read through her letter I
could actually feel the sorrow she expressed at the recent death of her mother.
She spoke of the tombstone finally being in place at the Hopewell Deer Creek
Cemetery and how she visited there each Sunday.
I’m telling
you about this poignant letter because I can’t bring myself to publish it even
though I went so far as to type it into my computer. Somehow it seems rude of
me to share a letter full of such heartfelt meaning that wasn’t written for me
to read.
My mother’s
friend spoke of how difficult a time she was having coming to terms with her
mother’s death and how blue she had been. She spoke of how crocheting in the
evenings helped her feel more calm and relaxed. She talked about her husband
and how ill he had been, but was still trying to work alongside his son to keep
the farm going.
She wrote that
the men were picking corn long hours every day. She said she and her daughter
would love to get over to see my mother, but since the men were working so hard,
they were trying to help them as much as they possibly could.
I felt the
strain the woman was under and also the sincerity of her words. My mother’s
letter had been a God-send for her in her sorrow, and she expressed her
gratitude simply, but quite eloquently.
I decided I
wanted to share the letter with my husband as he was working on a project in
the garage. As I began to read the letter aloud to him, my tears would not stop
and that greatly surprised me. I said, “Why am I crying? I don’t even know this
person.” My husband said, “You’re crying because hers is a voice from the
past.”
I searched on Ancestry.com, and I actually found a person who I’m 99%
sure wrote this letter. I discovered her and her husband’s last name and their
1986 grave site at the Hopewell Deer Creek Cemetery.
I hope I’ve
given you some sense of the lovely message this letter holds and why it speaks
so clearly to me even though it was written so very long ago.
3 comments:
I love your husband's comment about why you were crying.
Hi Elizabeth, Yes, sometimes he really surprises me with his insight! Thanks for reading and for taking time to leave a comment. Sincerely, Cheryl
Elizabeth had already expressed my thought when I arrived here at the comment section. I remember reading this beautiful story before.
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