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Mildred Mary
Everyone called her Millie
but for Dad. He called her 'Mil'. She was born in Wilkes
Barre, Pennsylvania, December 18,1920. She was the fourth
of seven children. Mom was a very special lady.
Belonging
to a farm family in Pennsylvania meant a lot of hard work.
I didn't know my Grandpa, he died at 32 of coal-miners lung
disease. He had left the coal mines of PA to raise his family
in the fresh, clean country air. Her two brothers did the
work in the barn and the fields, milking the cows, hunting,
mowing the hay, plowing to plant the crops. Corn, green
beans, potatoes, carrots, peas and onions. But it was up
to Mom and her sisters to do all the planting, harvesting,
cooking, canning, baking, washing and cleaning. It was hard
work.
Grandma made sure that her
children knew that she loved the the Lord and Sunday was
a day to honor Him. The village Church was just a couple
miles from the farmstead, and there was always a big fried
chicken dinner afterwards with all the trimmings and the
whole day was spent together as a family. Mom continued
that tradition with her own family as we grew up. She worked
just as hard as a housewife and mother as she did when she
was a coal-miners daughter on the farm. And she had faith
in the Lord.
This is her testimony.
Mom left
home right after the depression of the 30's with the dream
of making a life for herself in New York City. She had two
friends and they had an apartment on 46th ST. The job that
supported her was head waitress at the Norse Grill in the
Waldorf Astoria Hotel. That's where she met my father, a
sailor on leave in the big port of New York. They were married
in 1946 in the Panama Canal Zone. Dad brought her to live
in Oregon where his family resided. My sister Berni had
been born and with Grandma to help with her, Mom took a
job again at a local restaurant. While waiting on a table,
Mom found herself catching a woman patron who was fainting,
to keep her safe from a fall. Little did she know that the
fainting was from the sudden high fever of Polio.
Mom caught the Polio, too..
Soon, Mom was completely
paralyzed, hospitalized and in an Iron Lung to keep her
breathing. And they discovered she was expecting a baby.
Me! The doctors were not sure whether she or the baby would
survive. The paralysis was complete, and it was only a couple
months into the pregnancy. The family and Mom, prayed day
and night. They could only trust God for a miracle such
as this. It was that same period that the Polio Vaccine
was discovered. Out of the research came new treatments,
and Mom received them! And they worked! God answered the
many prayers, and she was 100% normal, no paralysis except
for a bit in one side of her neck, and just in time to deliver
a healthy baby boy! Me! To her, I was her living testimony
of God's faithfulness.
This is what made
her so special. This is why I miss her so much.
This is why I'm so thankful that I'll see her again in
Heaven because Jesus makes that possible!
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