Seventy-six years ago, September 1, 1935 on a quiet Sunday evening in Amarillo, Texas, Dorothy Alice Beeman donned her new “three piece suit of London fog blue with grey lapin trim and grey accessories,” pinned on her lilies of the valley corsage. She took a deep breath and her father’s arm. They stepped into the living room of 2102 Fillmore where Lewis Nordyke, her college sweetheart, stood waiting along side her uncle Will Buchanan. Uncle Will, a Baptist minister, said the words, they made their vows and turned toon the world—husband and wife.
The newspaper account reports that the young couple promptly headed for Dallas where Lewis worked for the Associated Press. That’s almost right. They didn’t head straight for Dallas . They headed straight for the Herring Hotel in downtown Amarillo . Probably not posh by today’s standard, but the poshest thing in Amarillo in 1935. Once there, Lewis excused himself to go downstairs for a Lucky while she changed.
Years later she told her daughters how she put on her new white ‘nightie,’ hopped into bed and pulled the covers tight under her chin and waited, not quite sure, she told them what would happen next. (I questioned that then, and, having read some of the love letters, question that still.)
She waited, and she waited, and then she waited some more. It was a good thing she’d packed a book in with the nightie, because she waited for over an hour. Turned out, Lewis had “bumped into some old boy, and they got to talking. He forgot all about coming back upstairs to me,” she told the girls.
The younger daughter wondered how mad she got. She didn’t get mad, she explained, “That’s what it’s like to be married to a newspaper man.”
Dottie |
Lewis |
I can't believe you found the clipping! I enjoyed reading the whole thang as over the years I have read long detailed wedding reports. Such fun to see both people and to have a picture of Dottie and Lewis as I continue to enjoy your discoveries in that old suitcase. Maybe it will light a fire under me to dig through the past. I love to.
ReplyDeleteWow!!!! I didn't know the photo in my living room was Granny's engagement photo! And I'd forgotten the anniversary was just two days after you and Dad's! Great story, great newspaper clipping, great memories! Love it!!!!
ReplyDeleteTrilla, how I love this story! I wish I had asked MY mother about her wedding night--at least the preliminaries, where it was spent, etc.--but I fear she would have died of embarrassment! I DO know that she bought me a most glamourous "negligee" outfit, gown and robe, as a gift when Bob and I got engaged! I used to wear it on every anniversary night until I got too big for it. I weighed only 99 when I married. The subtle references to the joys of married love in MY mother's letters to, of all people, her sister in law, tell me a LOT! Anyway, this is a lovely story and your dad running into some buddies and failing to come upstairs for so long--that is a classic, newspaperman, story!
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