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“Remembering the Glen Meade Road Gang” (before the invention of ‘nature-deficit disorder’)

How would any of us survive if it weren’t for the soft and muted golden glow that the passage of time blesses us with? I doubt if my childhood was nearly as idyllic as I now remember it, and in fact, I can still dredge up enough bad memories to give me pause right now, that my dreamy recollections don’t quite fit with Reality.

But then I remember the conversation between Elwood P. Dowd, best friend to a six and a half foot tall invisible rabbit named Harvey (a pooka) and the celebrated psychiatrist.

The good doctor said, “Mr. Dowd, isn’t time you faced Reality?”

Elwood thought a moment and replied, “Doctor, I’ve been fighting Reality for 35 years and I’m happy to say I finally won out over it..”

Maybe that’s the best kind of memory…the kind we want to have.

But I do know this. I know that despite the eternal ordeal of childhood and the conflicts we all face at an early age with family and friends and strangers alike, we did have more time then to be kids. We may have been the last generation of children given the chance to create our own childhoods. In another ramble a few months ago, I recall sharing a new ailment now consuming America’s youth. Doctors call it “nature deficit disorder,” and there’s scarcely a child growing up in Urban America today who isn’t afflicted by this disconnection between kids and the natural world.

I am so grateful I was spared this “sickness,” grateful that it hadn’t been invented yet. There were times when my frequent bouts with poison ivy and chigger bites, contracted out there doing intimate duty with the “natural world,” were so miserable, I might have welcomed the tradeoff. In the end, though, years after the blisters heeled and the swelling went down, I wouldn’t have wanted to miss a single itch.

The American Suburb was just beginning to dominate the landscape when my family moved from a small downtown apartment to one of the first subdivisions to take root in east Louisville, Kentucky, almost half a century ago. Glen Meade Road was a solitary finger of small two-bedroom brick homes in an area that had been farm land for almost two centuries. We were surrounded by dense woods and wheat fields and bottomless swamps and a pumpkin patch. A dirt road ran behind Glen Meade, on the edge of Old Lady Huntsinger’s field and my brother and I often waved to the hobos who made their way along the two-track path from Six Mile Lane and the Southern Railroad tracks, to the L & N Railway in Crescent Hill. In those days, talking to tramps didn’t seem like a hazardous gesture, even to my parents. And when I was all of five years old, and my mother turned me loose to explore The Woods at the end of the street (not to be confused with the Big Woods across the field) I never felt so free in my very short life. I suppose I’ve been pursuing that kind of freedom ever since.

None of us kids realized how lucky we were at the time. Playing in the woods and building tree houses and hiding in the cane breaks and trying to find the bottom of the bottomless swamp was our world. It was all we knew and it was enough.

I knew every tree in those Woods on an intimate basis. We knew which ones were candidates for tree ladders and platforms. We knew which were good climbing trees. We usually knew which trees were wrapped in heavy poison ivy vines and if we didn’t, the hideous rashes that subsequently covered me from head to toe were our after-the-fact warnings.

I remember a piece of cut limestone, at the far northeast corner of the Woods that was a constant source of mystery for us. Why a chunk of rock could have held our fascination for so long, I’ll never know. All little boys love a mystery I guess and this is the best we could come up with.

We wondered who’d put it there and wondered why and wondered how long it had been there. Someone suggested that maybe one of the original Kentucky pioneers had placed the stone obelisk in the ground. Maybe Daniel Boone or James Harrod or George Rogers Clark. Someone …Michael Pottinger? Timmy Kremer? I can’t recall who, tried to dig it up but could never find the bottom of the rock. The mystery took on new dimensions.

The Swamp, in retrospect, was a godawful place. It was a slime-filled garbage dump more than anything else. And yet, for some reason, we felt compelled to wade through the swamp, in search of treasures and, at one end, the bottom. There were those among us who insisted that it was indeed bottomless and I would swear that on at least one occasion, I saw one of my buddies dive under the green slime and the garbage in search of it. That was more courage than I could muster.

Before we even outgrew the Woods and the Swamp, however, Progress began to take them away from us. One morning, when I could not have been more than seven, my father was shaving and I was stepping up on my box to use the toilet. With the box booster I could just barely see out the back window toward Miss Huntsinger’s field and the vast forest, the Big Woods, that lay on the other side. Even then, I found such sights comforting and pleasing to my eye. On this morning however, I was shaken by an ugly and unfamiliar sight. Lined bumper to bumper on the far side of the wheat field, there must have been ten earth movers and graders. I could not imagine what they were doing there and so I asked my father.

He put down his razor and stared out the window with me.

“That’s construction equipment,” he said. “They’re building another subdivision, just like this one.”

“Just like this one?” I said. It never occurred to me that this had once been open land as well.

“But why do they need more houses?” I asked.

“Well, because there are more people who want to move out here, just like us.”

It wasn’t a very satisfying answer, even then.

“But what about all those trees? The Big Woods.”

My father shook his head. “I’m afraid most of them will be cut down, but I’m sure they’ll leave a few.”

Over the next few weeks, I watched the forest get ripped and torn and scraped and bladed until there was not a hint that a great and mysterious forest had ever thrived there. Homes went up, new families moved in who were just as oblivious to what had once been under their feet as we had been to the land under ours. It’s been like that ever since.

A few years ago, my old street had a reunion—the Glen Meade Road Street Reunion. I encountered old friends I hadn’t seen in 30 years. It was incredible and we all shared the same golden memories, even if Time had enhanced them along the way.

Later, my brother and I walked down to what was left of The Woods. The wildness in them was gone, the cane breaks and grapevines and thickets of poison ivy nowhere to be found. Only a solitary line of trees on a manicured lawn could testify to what had once been there. As we followed the edge of our diminished Woods, my brother looked up, gasped and grabbed my arm. He didn’t say a word, just pointed with his eyes.

A weathered piece of wood still clung to the tree trunk, secured with a bent and rusty nail. A remnant of what had once been a rung in yet another stairway to heaven.

“That Timmy Kremer,” my brother sighed. “When he built a tree ladder, he built it to last.”

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7 Responses

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  1. Lawrence Routt said

    My wife Jeannine and I raised four kids on Glenmeade Road..We have attended the 20 year reunion, the 40 year reunion,and the 50 year. Our kids played in Miss Hunsikers field along with the kids mentioned in this article. It was a wonderful time and place for all of us. Many fond memories. That was 62 years ago.

  2. Gloria (Routt) Beswick said

    Jim,
    I’m not sure when you wrote this, but we found it on my father’s 85th birthday. What a wonderful, surprise birthday gift! Can you help me remember the names of the boys in the picture? I’m pretty sure I recognise David Kotheimer, but not sure about the rest. That is you in the hat, isn’t it? Looks familiar. What a great way/time/place to grow up.

  3. stiles said

    Hi Gloria…What a great surprise to hear from you and your dad. Yes, that was a wonderful place to grow up..I doubt many kids nowadays have that kind of option. I’m sure it shaped my entire life in so many ways. As to the kids…in the picture of the Gang (in part) on the front porch at 3723, on the back row, that’s me on the far left, then Pam Kotheimer, then David, my brother Jeff, and Timmy Kremer. In front of us, Peter Caldwell, who was older and wiser. Thanks again for your note. And give my best to your dad. Mine passed away in 2009.

  4. Sally said

    Mr. Routt, I remember some of your kids from when they were preteenager and teenagers back when they lived on Glenmeade. They were such friendly, great kids!

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