Michael and Charlotte (Bouchard) Landry Family - Circa 1915 |
Halifax, Nova Scotia
I’m thirteen years old and I’m crying uncontrollably. My best friend is gone. Please, it can’t be true, I need her too much. I’m a mess.
The rest of the family is attending the wake and funeral. They thought my constant crying would be too disruptive, so I’m home.
While sobbing, my thoughts turn to this past year. It started off great. Each day my younger sister Elizabeth and I would get up early and help Mom get breakfast ready. Because we have five older brothers, we love having time with Mom. There are actually four boys at home because Leo has gone overseas to fight for our country. Also, there would have been three girls, but older sister Bernadette died two months after she was born.
Following breakfast, Dad, Joe, and Dan head off to work. Elizabeth and I clear the table then head out to St. Joseph’s School. While we’re gone Mom cleans the dishes and does other chores like washing laundry and keeping the house spotless. All of this is done by hand. We didn’t have a dishwasher or a washer and dryer.
When we returned home, Abe and Jimmy head off to school. Girls go in the morning and boys in the afternoon because the boy’s school is being repaired. Mom is spending more time teaching me how to keep house.
Then one dreadful day in June, we got news that Leo had been killed in the Battle of Y-Press in Belgium. This left a big hole in our family and Mom was never the same.
Summer into fall is hard to remember. As the days got colder and colder Mom continually went outside, without a coat on, to hang laundry. When asked about it she’d say she had too much to do to bother with her coat. Our over protective Mom, not wearing a coat didn’t make sense to me. Then she got weak and started coughing. Before long she was getting behind on everyday chores. Our immaculate house was looking a bit disorganized and laundry was piling up. Elizabeth and I were worried and so were Dad and the boys. Mom was hospitalized and diagnosed with Tuberculosis. She didn’t make it. I not only lost my Mom, I lost my best friend.
Note: Great grandmother Charlotte (Bouchard) Landry was 46 years old when she passed away. She sewed the dresses that Anna and Elizabeth were wearing in the picture above. Charlotte was thrifty with money and she raised children who knew how to take care of it and provide for their families. Her love and dedication to her family live on in the current generations.
Landry family picture:
Back row from left to right – Private Leo , Michael (Dad), Joseph, Annie Adams (Dan's first wife), Daniel, Charlotte (Mom)
Front Row: Anna Bella, Elizabeth