| The North American stock market crashed
a year later and placed the continent into a severe economic
depression. My father lost his job with the City of Port
Arthur in 1933, so we sold the big Victorian home and moved
to the country. Mother and father purchased a 100 acre plot
of land, and the family went full speed ahead in the market
gardening business. There was always plenty of food, but
very few spare dollars, and it was during this period of my
life, I learned to snare rabbits, shoot grouse and deer,
trap weasels, and do my share of the country life chores. We
lived only 400 miles from the original Grey Owl country.
There was no class difference living out in the country,
everyone was poor, and I attended a country one-room school
where the teacher taught all grades from 1 to V111.
It was a happy period of my life, because my father taught
me to be a man. I learned much from him and understood that
being self- sufficient by improvising and working steady,
ultimately would lead to a successful standard of life.
At age 14, I graduated from Grade V111 of the one-room
school, and as there were no such things as school buses,
most fathers told their sons you must get yourself a trade
and become a brick layer, carpenter, plumber, or whatever
you wanted to be. I was just 14 when I left home to
experience the trial and error period of life of self
sufficiency.
The whole country was my oyster for the taking of which any
part I wanted.
The second World War was flaming in Europe, and there were
many jobs to be found for the under 18 year-old boys. I went
to work in the shipyards for 40 cents per hour helping to
build the minesweepers and corvettes . I was a man at that
young age, and even went into the beverage rooms without any
problem, to drink up some of the ten-cent draught of good
old Canadian beer.
With all the crooner singers like Bing Crosby and Vera Lynn
flooding the radio waves with patriotic melodies, and the
huge posters plastered on all public buildings saying the
military needs you, I immediately felt that I wanted to
become a wireless operator in the Canadian Navy. I took a
night course in International Morse, but when I completed
it, because of my age, the only job I could sign up for on a
ship was that as a deckhand on a Great Lakes freighter. I
sailed these freighters for the next two summers, steaming
back and forth from Port Arthur to Buffalo New York, to
Duluth Minnesota and numerous other ports. I was 17 years of
age when the war ended. |
Now having to face a change in my future
plans of activity, I took another course in the Continental
Code and hired as a Morse Telegrapher for the Canadian
National Railways. At age 21, I became a Train Dispatcher
(Rail Traffic Controller) and handled the train traffic on
some of the busiest rails throughout western Canada, and
much of it through the use of the Continental Morse Code.
From the feeling of being a grown up gentleman at the age of
14, by the time I was 19 I became infatuated with a young
lady my own age. We married and had three children. It was
really not long before we realized we had come from two
different worlds, and two different needs for living. We
split up and divorced and I took custody of the three
children, our two daughters and son.
There were three more marital episodes in my life which
followed, and the bringing up of four more children. I plan
to describe in my next book "Son of an Orphan", the details
of the happiness, the good times, the adventures, the
fantasy, the infatuation, as well as the tears and sorrow
and stress of blended relationships.
During these years I studied through the Ontario Department
of Education by correspondence, all grades to acquire a
Grade X11 standing. I then sat in a regular classroom with
the Grade 13 children to obtain my senior matriculation and
entrance to university, still working night shifts as a
Train Dispatcher at the same time.
I entered Lakehead College with the plan to major in English
and resign from CN to enter a teaching career. Shortly after
the first year I changed my mind to major in Industrial
Psychology, and transfer to Labour Relations with CN.
Another year later I had health problems that prevented me
from further university work. I stayed with CN Railways as a
Train Dispatcher until I had 35 years service, then took an
early retirement in 1980, at age 52. At this time in my life
I was married to the daughter of world-famous Grey Owl and
Anahareo.
Over the years as an adult, and even from the time I was a
little boy, I was always interested in art. I studied in
numerous work shops with the Federation of Canadian Artists,
and took lecture tours in the big galleries of the United
Kingdom and Spain. Now, nearing the age of 75, I am still
painting seriously and have annual exhibitions around the
country.
I have painted well over a thousand works and have sold over
800. I am still trying to create a masterpiece, but have not
yet succeeded....
BUT I WILL!
Bob Richardson December 2002
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