Family traditions

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Webster defines a “tradition” as the handing down of statements, beliefs, legends and customs from generation to generation by word of mouth or by practice. This makes for a pretty wide category of activities within a family when you really stop to think about it!

When my family took me out for a great lunch at the Red Lobster in Des Moines to celebrate my 75th birthday we got to reminiscing about some of the interesting traditions that have been established in our extended families over the years. Some of them probably go back well over 100 years, while some have developed within the past generation. I thought it might be interesting to touch on just a few of them for nostalgic reasons if nothing else.

Probably one of the oldest traditions in both the McNeer and Rosenberger families is that of having oyster stew on Christmas Eve, and going to Midnight Mass. I well remember my mother telling about her dad hitching the horses to their big sleigh on Christmas Eve, with the whole family bundled up for a ride of several miles to the rural St. Patrick’s Church in the Irish settlement.

This started long before my mother was born on Jan. 8, 1900, and no doubt her grandparents, Cornelius and Sophie started it way back in the 1800s. Mom used to talk about those moonlight nights when her Dad would take the horses and fully loaded sleigh across the fields on large drifts of hard packed snow. Wish she had written some of those memories so we could enjoy them today.

In the Rosenberger family, Mary’s dad always got out everyone’s Sunday shoes on Saturday night and polished them to a beautiful shine. For years, he thoroughly swept the Church every Saturday. This was one of his voluntary good deeds, never expecting compensation. He was a kind and generous man who started the tradition of playing horseshoes in the back yard. He was the best!

When Mary and her brother Harry were youngsters, a habit developed of seeing who could get the biggest piece of pie for dessert. Harry would even get a ruler to measure for the biggest piece when his turn came first. Crazy kids! Tom loved grandma’s great traditional chicken and dumplings!

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