June 8th, 2024
The EGG ROUTE 1950’s & 1960’s
The basement of our house was where eggs
were washed, candled, cartoned, and then stored for the weekly delivery to Hammond,
Indiana.
The egg route was the money stream that kept cash rolling
in to support our family. The egg route was a weekly journey north of
our farm to a small vibrant city named Hammond, Ind. Hammond, a city
constructed of row houses & some single family houses all backed by alleys was
our route to deliver eggs.
It was the alleys that my father navigated
to deliver our eggs by the dozens. A labor of love and hard work
to go door to door with a product that was fresh from the farm.
I got to go along on the egg
route when not in school or in summer time
—and I was named the “egg man’s daughter” when greeted by
costumers as they stood in doorways to receive the eggs.
These doors were openings to another world
for me. I remember these houses and the glimpses of other lives.
All stage sets with characters. Some women wore hair in curlers and
were dressed in house robes as the door opened to greet me. Some
houses had kitchens and other rooms that reflected their lives. These all
were magic to my young eyes. Sights, sounds, smells, barking dogs,
cats lounging and men in undershirts.
I had little access to other lives and worlds
beyond the farm. These spaces made a deep impression on me.
We also stopped at bars to deliver cases of eggs and
here we had lunch—the burgers and fries were so delicious–rarely did I
eat out.
The bar in the day time was another kind of set—it was dark and filled with bottles
of gin, whisky etc which lined the shelves. The beer levers stood as sentinels
for patrons choices.
The day light juxtaposed the night life and created the contrast.
It was another kind of mysterious world and
a glimpse into another world that I was let into.
Another stop was the bakery. Here we delivered cases and cases
of eggs some were our cracked eggs—they were good for bakers but
not for consumers…the cracked eggs were hair line cracks that one
caught on the candler—and were set aside for bakery business.
We entered the bakery through the back door and here was a space filled
with huge equipment for making dough.
There was large counter space used to roll out all kinds of breads
and pastry.
And in the front of the bakery there was a kind of pastry heaven.
Glass display cases that held the fresh baked goods—mouth watering delights.
It was here that I ate my first glazed donut and my first jelly filled pastry aka Bismarks.
My first foray into the world beyond my grandmothers homemade donuts.
I can still taste these baked delights from the commercial bakers world.
We got some. These treats were put into a white bag
ready for the trip to resume as we continued the route and made our
way home.
The last stop was the feed store—here we got some chicken feed.
The feed came in cloth bags. The chicken feed “called Mash” gave off an order
that I can still recall. These bags once opened by the sewn
thread were all saved and recycled into pillow cases or kitchen towels by my mother
(by the way).
At this feed store was a coke machine. Coin operated. It was the
cold coke that came in a bottle that was a refresher for the hot times. The sound of
the coin dropping into the machine and the clanging and banging of the
coke bottle dropping down the chute made a kind of event that was
unforgettable. The cold bottle in my hand and the first sip of the coke
down my throat was a delight on these hot summer days.
The times in my dad’s truck on this route
are imprinted in my mind.
There was no air conditioning .
Windows open.
My arm out the window shaped at a right angle.
Me gazing in the side mirror watching time
and space blur.
Thinking of the sights and sounds collected as we
returned home with the remains of the day.
It was another time.
This is not nostalgia it is a snap shot.
Like a photograph or a love story.
No longing and no going back.
It is what it is.