FAMILY AND GROWING UP
in St. Petersburg, Florida

On the left is a picture of me with my father, taken about 1933. We were staying for the weekend in a beach cottage owned by a friend. How modest everyone was! I was told that it was against city ordinance to appear on Central Avenue in a bathing suit.

In this picture I was 16 years old and allowed to drive the family car. We were lucky to have a car, because this would have been in 1942 (war years with rationing of rubber and gasoline).
MY 'TEEN YEARS
We lived close to Tampa Bay, and my greatest desire was to have a sailboat, but we were too poor to afford much of anything. When I was in the 8th grade of school I determined to build one, but all I could afford was one sheet of 1/4 inch plywood and some 1x1 strips for holding things together. My "Manual Training" instructor at school thought this was a poor idea, but went along with it. I made everything, including mast and sail, and it actually sailed - sort-of. That boat was stolen - maybe a blessing in disguise. I mowed lawns to earn enough money that with a friend we scraped together $10.00 to buy a rowboat. We had a pretty good time with that boat, and I soon bought out his $3.00 share. That boat was stolen too. Then my father bought for me another rowboat for $10.00, and that was better. I covered a lot of mileage with that. Finally I tried to outfit that boat for sailing, but it wasn't much good for that, so I removed the keel I had attached. Finally that boat was stolen too. I had no way to secure a boat from thievery, so that theft is what happened.
Then my father got for me a junior membership in the St. Petersburg Yacht Club. This was great! The Club had a fleet of six fish-class sailboats. That boat is no longer popular, but it was a heavy-duty boat, about 20 feet long, with a lead weight on the bottom of a fixed keel. We often had races with a crew of three. I did very well at that, and really loved that boat. I have some pictures of it in the page of my sailing days. Also at this time, a doctor friend had a 42-foot schooner, and I quickly became permanent crew.
In junior high and senior high school I had first an afternoon paper route, but it was too small to earn much money, so I soon got a morning paper route with the St. Petersburg Times, which involved going to work at 4:00 a.m. This was good experience, with about 300 customers. A little later I began to substitute for one of my classmates whose job was "fly boy" on the press, and I did that about twice a week, sometimes more. To do that, I swapped my large paper route for a smaller one. The fly boy's job was to pick up papers in groups of 50 or 25, depending on size of the edition, from a conveyor belt, "thunk them down" on his leg to get a better grip on them, turn and walk about five feet to a window, and throw them to a person on the other side of a table in an adjacent room. That person again had to manipulate the papers to get a good grip on them, and make up bundles to go to the various delivery sites. This job began at 2:00 a.m. and normally ran for about an hour and a half, but longer on Sundays. It took some training to handle the papers this way to keep up with the printing press, and could be a disaster if some were dropped, because then one might slide all over the floor and you can imagine the results. My biggest memory of this job was one Sunday morning during the annual Festival of States week, with the biggest edition the press could print. There were lots of "web breaks," in which a roll of newsprint would break, requiring that the press be stopped and re-threaded, resulting in a lot of "spoils" coming up the conveyor belt and having to be stacked off to one side. That press run was a real challenge, and I was exhausted. The press foreman told me I had picked up 17,000 pounds of paper in about 3.5 hours, and I lost 6 pounds! Fortunately, weight lost that way is quickly regained.
When I was 16 years old, I had a job taking care of the tools at a public woodworking shop. For keeping all the tools sharp and oiled to prevent rust, plus sweeping the floor, I got a small stipend and free use of the workshop for my own projects. Someone had begun construction of an 8-foot pram sailboat. Somehow I acquired it, finished it (had a professional sailmaker make the sail) and had my own sailboat! But what can you do with an 8-foot pram? They are mainly for pre-teenagers. The nation was still in the great depression, and the business failed. In closing down, the owner gave me a fairly complete set of carpenter tools, many of which I still have.
By the time I was 17 years old, I had completed the basic course in the United States Power Squadrons. With recommendations from the doctor, the local Power Squadron leader, and my high school principal, I was accepted for Naval officer training immediately following high school. My high school annual called me Sailbad the Sinner.
In the years 1940-43 we lived in a three-story apartment house very close to the local airport in St. Petersburg. I slept on the back porch on the top floor, where I could view air traffic and go to sleep at night listening to a bugle playing tattoo and taps at the merchant marine training base. I never dreamed that one day I would be piloting planes to that airport.

This picture, taken in 1947, shows the Indian Chief motorcycle I had for about a year. It was new, and difficult to get because factories were trying to catch up from no production during the war years. I once drove that thing "non-stop" from Chicago to Pensacola. The picture has lost its color; the motorcycle was bright red. At this time I was renting a room in that house while attending Florida Southern College for teacher training.

This picture, and the one below it, shows me with my mother. I'm only 5' 8" so you can see how small my mother was. For most of her life she weighed less than 100 pounds. I think that's why I have such a slender skeleton. I think I was only about 18 in this picture.

This picture was actually snapped several years after the one above. It looks like I've grown a few inches, but It may be that my mother had already begun to lose some height from osteoporosis.

This is a picture of my brother, "Buddy," taken during or shortly after the end of World War II. He was in the "battle of the bulge" in Germany. He was 4.5 years older than I, and died in 2009.

This picture of my brother and me was taken about 1953 when I was an Air Force flight instructor. I served during three wars, but was never sent to combat. During the "cold war," I piloted a nuclear bomber, but never took off with a bomb, not even a practice bomb. However, I often stood alert duty, with the airplane "loaded and cocked."

Here you see my first wife, Bernice with our two children, Maria and Lloyd. At that time I was stationed at Webb AFB in Big Spring, Texas, and we had taken a trip to Monahans Sand Hills State Park in west Texas.

These "little wranglers" were in front of our house on the Base in Big Spring.