


For a period of time, Uncle George Barden, a
widower
who lived close by, boarded at our house for the noon meal, that being
the big meal of the day. After each meal, he lay down on our couch in
the
living room to take a nap. My sister Ginna was very fond of him and
curled
up beside him. Jokingly, Uncle George agreed to "marry" her when she
grew
up. So when he married Edith Hunting (Aunt Edie), Ginna was MAD!
Uncle George chewed tobacco. I remember him walking
through his yard humming a little tune under his breath, stopping every
little while to spit tobacco. A despicable habit, if you ask me!
Otherwise,
he was a lovable old gent.
Uncle George's property adjoined Aunt Edie's
property.
When they married, she moved in with Uncle George and rented her home
to
the Seyboths. When the Seyboths moved to a larger house on "G" Street,
closer to town, the Bardens moved back onto Aunt Edie's place. This is
the home I describe in the following story of Aunt Edie's life.


Edith
Barden (1878-1955) Virginia "Ginna" Hanson (1917-2004)
The place...Chicago, Illinois; the day...July 5,
1903. Edith Hunting had spent the day shopping for a new wardrobe. Now
she was riding in the trailer of a northbound trolley on the way to
Irving
Park, happily musing over the prospects of going to Denver for her
first
teaching position and totally unaware of the noise and clatter of the
city
streets.
Suddenly, there was a terrific grinding of wheels
and crashing of metal and glass intermingled with the painful screams
of
the passengers. The trailer of the trolley car in which she was riding
had entangled with the trailer of another can rounding the corner at
the
intersection of Elston, not far from the "Loop." Edith Hunting
looked
about her and saw the cut and bleeding bodies of the men and women
nearby.
She looked above her. The roof was smashed in, almost touching her
head.
For a moment she thought, "How lucky I am to have come out of this
unhurt!"
Then, taking note of herself, she saw that her arms were bleeding, and
drops of blood were falling from her face. She was badly cut; yet she
felt
nothing...only a numbness that had overtaken her entire body as if
every
nerve were dead. The man next to her was screaming loudly for help, but
Edith Hunting, too proud to cry out, determined to wait until aid came
to her. After that, darkness, and she remembered no more until she
found
herself in a hospital bed.
Although her face and arms had been severely cut,
the worst injury was to her spine. This meant months flat on her back
in
bed, and months ore of treatments to repair the damaged limbs. For over
two years she walked dragging both feet, her hands drawn up nearly to
her
shoulders, her fingers crippled and misshapen. It seemed probable she
would
always be hopelessly crippled; yet in spite of this grim prospect, she
never lost faith. Because of her fervent zeal always to be "doing,"
Edith
Hunting started her rehabilitation by making sponge cake, which she
peddled
to a neighborhood grocery. One of Edith's customers, a wealthy woman of
some prestige, greatly admired the courage of this plucky little Irish
lady and recommended her as private tutor to moneyed families of her
acquaintance.
From this beginning, Edith derived the courage to take her physical
examination,
after which she was miraculously accepted for a teaching position in a
Chicago school.
This was three years after her accident. At first
she was very self-conscious of her misshapen fingers, afraid the
children
might laugh, but this fear was soon dispelled when to her surprise and
immense comfort, one of her pupils took Edith's crippled hands into her
own, and without a word, kissed them and caressed them, as if to say,
"I'm
sorry. Do they hurt?" Encouraged, Edith set about to train her fingers
to become useful as they once had been. By the end of the first school
year, she had won the top award for penmanship and had been extremely
successful
in teaching her pupils manual arts. In the ensuing years, she attended
art school and became quite proficient with water colors and oil
paints.
In fact, she trained the crippled hands to do most anything that normal
hands could do.
For 16 years she devoted her life to teaching the
children in the slum areas of Chicago...immigrant children of Swedish,
Polish, Italian, and Jewish parentage. Needless to say, on their first
day at school these young immigrants did not understand a word of
English,
but due to Edith's infinite patience, by the Christmas season they were
able to sing carols in their newly learned tongue.
Most of these youngsters were from impoverished
families, dirty, shabby, even hungry. But to Edith, each was a precious
jewel, requiring only the polish which public education and heart-felt
understanding of a conscientious teacher had to offer. Behind the dirty
faces of these children Edith saw only their eagerness to learn, and in
their eyes she saw the hope of a better America. For as she so often
marveled
in later years, the parents of most of these children stayed in the
slums
only long enough to earn enough money to advance themselves to better
communities.
To Edith the slums represented a constant challenge. Often she washed
the
children's faces before the school-day began. Sometimes she furnished
them
with much needed clothing bought with her own funds. Frequently, she
shared
her lunch with a child who had no lunch of his own. No child was too
slow
or too lacking to merit her undivided attention. She loved them all,
and
they loved her.
After 23 years in the teaching profession, Edith
retired to a little farm in the West, about a mile from Grants Pass,
Oregon,
located in the Rogue River Valley. At this point in her life when
middle
years were crowding upon her, she fell in love with the widowed farmer
next door, a jolly, hard-working elderly man named George Barden, and
they
soon married. This was my first introduction to Edith Hunting Barden,
since
her farm was close to that of my parents.

I was a small child at the time, and along with
my sister and all the other neighborhood children, I learned to love
and
admire this unusual couple who we called Aunt Edie and Uncle George.
Among
my most treasured childhood memories are the Sunday afternoons spent in
their livingroom, sprawled on the floor reading funny papers. It was
like
stepping inside a story book to visit them. The open fireplace, the
high-backed,
over-stuffed chairs, the bright Cretonne curtains, the braided
rugs...all
lent an atmosphere of charm, ever enhanced by the warmth of Aunt Edie's
sparkling laughter.
Holiday picnics, visits to Santa Claus, out-of-town
rides in their old Model-T were all part of my childhood association
with
these people. I recall on one occasion, because I was angry with my
mother
for having given away my pet cat, I packed my suitcase and ran away to
Aunt Edie's house. With characteristic understanding, she allowed me to
stay until my childish wrath was spent before ushering me home.
After 18 golden years of marriage, death came to
Uncle George. To Aunt Edie it seemed as if Life had dealt her a blow
more
cruel than her handicap had been. Lonely and grief-stricken, she
returned
to Detroit to the comfort of her sister's home. Soon she found herself
gravely ill from an incurable ailment. This time there were 17 months
in
bed, and gradually she grew weaker until she weighed only 85 pounds.
The
day arrived when the doctor, who, incidentally, was a Jew, said there
was
nothing further he could do for her. Relatives came home to be at her
bedside.
A Catholic priest administered the Sacrament of Extreme Unction. Aunt
Edie
knew she was going to die, but was not afraid. Having been a zealous
Roman
Catholic most of her life, she philosophized, "I live for God; I die
for
God."
And while we waited for death to overtake her, the
negro maid who had been employed at her sister's home knelt to pray for
her recovery. The Mormon nurse who stayed at her bedside knew that a
miracle
had happened, for unbelievably, Aunt Edie lived! Within a week she was
sitting up in a chair; in a month's time she was going to town under
her
own volition. Truly, she had lived for God!

Only a few short months later Aunt Edie set out
on a quest to regain the happiness she had once known. Without a word
to
her sister and doctor, she conjured all her strength, packed her few
belongings
into a bag, and boarded a bus en route to Grants Pass. Since her long
illness
had left her thin and worn, it was little wonder that my parents failed
to recognize her when she planted her small self on their doorstep five
days later. Although nearly exhausted, this little woman, who always
saw
the bright side of everything, chuckled and said, "I'm back. Are you
surprised?"
This was the beginning of a new era for Aunt Edie.
Despite the fact that she herself was in almost constant misery, the
remaining
12 years of her life were dedicated to the service of others. She kept
house and cared for the children of working others who could pay only a
pittance for her services. She tended the sick, and often used her last
penny to buy them vitamins or some other needed drug. She tutored
backward
children, always without charge. But even more gratifying than her
deeds
were her words of counsel.
Aunt Edie, a strong disciple of St. Francis of
Assisi,
patterned her humble existence after his, seeking, as St. Francis
wrote,
"not so much to be understood as to understand." So it was for this
reason
that many of us poured out our problems to Aunt Edie, who was never too
busy to listen and who always left us feeling encouraged. Despite her
poor
health and advancing years her mind was constantly active, and in her
spare
time she dabbled in paints and children's literature. She read
extensively
and entered dozens of contests, winning notable prizes, among them an
automatic
washing machine, an electric oven, and a wrist watch.
When she was well past 70, she met a kindly
middle-aged
gentleman named David Finley, who had been legally blind since birth.
She
became his constant companion. She proof-read the stories he typed and
offered her constructive criticism. She talked and read to him by the
hour
and tended many of his personal needs. She led him on long walks
through
town. In fact, Mr. Finely agreed, she showed him the happiest years of
his life.
And then, at last, Aunt Edie was forced to relent
to the weakness of the flesh. For six months she lingered, bed-fast,
praying
that each day would bring an end to her suffering, yet accepting each
added
hour patiently, without fear or bitterness. During those last torturous
weeks she told me, "I know this thing is going to take quite a while,
and
I've decided not to complain." Then, setting her jaw in true Irish
fashion
she declared, "I'm just going to take it on the chin!" And that's
exactly
what she did!
On December 12, 1955, Aunt Edie died serenely, and
three days later following a requiem mass, she laid here to rest on a
hillside
grave overlooking the valley she loved. To be sure, she had left behind
very little of the material worth...a typewriter, a set of
encyclopedias,
a few personal things. Yet to my mind and to the minds of all who knew
her, she had left a fortune, for during her 75 years she had etched a
pathway
strewn abundantly with life's most precious endowments...Faith, Hope,
and
Love. Yes, Aunt Edie had died as he had lived...for God!
Harriet Guardino's Addendum
Aunt Edie had a profound influence on my life. In
my mind she was the perfect example of a good Christian. When I asked
her
why she had converted to Catholicism, she gave me an answer I'll never
forget. "It's as if Protestants drink from an earthen vessel," she
explained, and Catholics drink from a golden chalice."
As you know, I was born a Methodist. When Monte
and I were married, I was reluctant, because of my Protestant
background,
to embrace Catholicism. So ours was a "mixed marriage," which meant,
under
Catholic law, I had to allow him to raise our children in the Catholic
faith. For a long time I had been, as the Apostle James described, a
"double-minded"
person, "like a wave of the sea driven with the wind," going from
church
to church, doubting the Word, even rejecting the notion of God. But
there
was always an emptiness inside me, a hunger that would not be
satisfied.
Even though I attended Mass with Monte, the conflict still raged within
me. It was not until after Mary was born that I finally became a
Catholic.
One of the common criticisms of the Catholic Church
concerns its ritual. However, I have discovered that the Mass is much
more
than pomp and ceremony. It is the beautiful expression of God's
relationship
with Man. Every gesture, every accouterment, every word has meaning,
showing
us the way to God and Eternal Life. Yes, it is truly like drinking from
a golden chalice.
Early Words and
Sermons (1): An Online Ministry of Rev. Marilyn A. Riedel
Early Words and
Sermons (2)
Early Words and
Sermons (3)




Dobbie Obituaries and Letters