Site icon Miles to Go.

Oh Father, my Father… this is your success.

 

Joke cards handy in the pocket

I looked through some family pictures on my Birthday, and this one made me think of what my father has given me. He’s given me something more permanent than good hair, and more powerful than money. He’s given me values and meaning, though it took me years to discover that. And when I did, I was drawn to the story of what his father gave him. And the father before him, and the father before him, all the way back as far as Spencer legend will go. This is quite far when you are a Spencer, and you don’t let too many facts ruin a good story, which is the what is about to happen here…

 

It is was actually deSpenser to start, which means the steward or butler in French. Robert Despenser held the office of royal steward, or dispenser, under King William II. aka William the Conqueror and Despenser’s surname derived from his office. He and his brother Urse (catchy!) were from Normandy, as was Big William. A tapestry hanging in Bayeux sums this all up nicely, and if you went there, you could see it. We passed by it on the way to St. Michel, a place of Spencer legend that I’ll talk more about later.

1744 Joseph Spencer

We now fast forward 700 years, because nothing much happened… that we know of… until Joseph Spencer came to America and settled in Penn’s Woods in 1760, the beneficiary of King “Mad” George’s land grant which we know to be referenced in Clearfield County papers as 50,000 acres. From this auspicious start in the new world, we know three things; 1) Joseph was miffed enough at his Brit family to turn rebel and fight for the Revolution in 1776, 2) all that acreage made for fantastic coal mining, and 3) by the next generation or two, ours had been whittled away to a few shaft mines in Barkeyville, PA (yes, that is a town).

1825- Miles Sharpless Spencer

He left his son, Miles Sharpless Spencer, a farm and a coal mine, this we know for sure. But what we can infer from simple research on Ancestry is that he also left him vigor and vitality. Miles it appears, had himself  24 children, the last coming at 74 years of age. When the laughter dies down on that awesome feat of 19th-century vitality, it is fair to point out that he did have 3 wives in that time, none concurrent. His last two kids were Herbert and Byrd, my grandfather and his brother, born to Caroline or “Callie” in 1899. I imagine Miles was big on family values, and quite resourceful if he was to figure out how to feed, clothe and raise two dozen children. He died at 76, which is another feat given the year. My father used both names when naming his second and third kids.

1899- Herbert Spencer

And so four short years after his birth in 1899, Herbert Spencer and his brother Byrd ended up at Robert Spencer’s home. Legend has it that Robert welcomed them to his home, on the condition the four-year-olds began work in the coal mine to pay their way. And so for ten years, Herbert honed his work ethic when most of us are debating whether kids that age are ready for nursery school, pre-K, or Kindergarten. Lucky for him, The Great War broke out in Europe when he was just 15 years old, and his sense of adventure brought him to France to “fight the ‘krauts” as he would say. It was quite amazing to me, the man ended up with a Purple Heart for injuries sustained in battle, yet it was an adventure for him, all the way. When you spend 2/3 of your life in a coal shaft, anything must look good once you see the light, literally. Herbert also had an ability to focus, regularly shooting dinner with a .22 rifle. He honestly said to me on more than one occasion: “Son, ‘possum ain’t that bad if it stews with carrots and potatoes”. I’ve not tried it, as yet. But what impressed us all was his will to live– and then some. According to many versions of the story told while the stew was cooking, Herbert suffered multiple wounds to his legs by a German machine gunner after a mustard gas attack. He came to, face down in the mud, alive but without the use of one leg and badly injured with another. He was resourceful enough to use two fence posts as crutches and made it to a French farmhouse, realizing only when he knocked that he spoke no French. The madam opened the door, took one look at him, and slammed it shut. (And we now speak some French at home). He pressed on and eventually made it to the military hospital at St. Mihiel, then to St. Malo, then home to Fort Lee to begin his life and family with the woman who nursed him back to health, Sidonia. They had ten kids, of which my Father Arthur Spencer was the 8th, in 1932.

1932- Arthur Spencer

( I wrote this just after the last time we gathered at my home, on my birthday. I was able to read it to him on visits to St Joseph’s, so he could hear it from me. He thought it too much- I thought it too little).  And so we arrive at Arthur Spencer, my father, and the legacy he has given me. The list of meaningful qualities could go on and on. Strangely, he holds himself to such high standards, if he read this he would not think it enough, or true. I know better. We all do.

1963- Miles Spencer

I can honor my fathers, all of them, by living and sharing the best of what they gave me. That could be humble Midwestern values, a love for Athletics, a curiosity for Exploration and Discovery, a love of Food and Family, and that Indomitable Spencer will. Dad often confides in me that he feels he hasn’t given me enough. I tell him he’s nuts, but this is the first time I have actually stopped to write it.

2011- Grayson Max Spencer

Will know all this one day.

Exit mobile version