The State of My Origin by Merlyn

I
chose to remember Detroit Michigan the way it was when I was a kid.
It
was a great place to live at that time. Everyone had the attitude that anything
and everything we could dream about could be accomplished if we worked at it.
Detroit was the manufacturing capital of the world.
Automotive
pioneers Henry Ford, the Dodge brothers, Packard, and Walter Chrysler lived there.
Union
leaders like Jimmy Hoffa of the Teamsters and Walter Reuther of the autoworkers
lived there and helped bring a living wage to the people.
The
Detroit Theatre District is still the second largest Entertainment and
performing arts center in the United States. (Note: I don’t know if anyone goes
there anymore.)
Detroit
has a total land area of 143.0 square miles
I
was born in Highland Park Michigan. It is a three square mile city that is
inside the Detroit city limits.
Henry
Ford changed the world when he opened the world’s first assembly line at the
Highland Park plant in 1913 and paid his workers enough to buy the cars they
helped make.
Chrysler
Corporation was founded in Highland Park In 1925 the company’s headquarters stayed
there for the next 70 years till 1995.
Sometime
in the 40’s a WWII vet took an old railroad car and made a diner out of it on Woodward
Ave.  
When
I was 16 years old when a black guy named Berry Gordy, took one of Detroit’s
nicknames at the time (motor city) and started Motown Records a not far from
that diner.
The
Supremes, Marvin Gaye, the Temptations, the Four Tops, Gladys Knight & the
Pips, The Commodores, Stevie Wonder and The Jackson 5, Recorded their hit
records there.
My
best friend Denny Morgan and I would go to the diner and watch and listen to the
stars from Motown while they ate lunch and made changes to the songs they were
recording.
Times
have changed and the only people that live in the city now are the people that
don’t have the skills to make something out of themselves.
In
1950 there were 60,000 people living in that 3 square mile area called Highland
Park it was one of the best places to live in the country. Today the population
is down to 10,000 people; 97% black with an average household income of
$16,000.
I
moved to the suburbs of Detroit in 1969 then out of the state in 1979.

         There isn’t any reason to
ever go back there now.

About the Author

I’m a retired gay man now
living in Denver Colorado with my partner Michael. I grew up in the Detroit
area. Through the various kinds of work I have done I have seen most of the
United States. I have been involved in technical and mechanical areas my whole
life, all kinds of motors and computer systems. I like travel, searching for
the unusual and enjoying life each day. 

Place of Origin by Jon Krey

All of my family was born in
the U.S. except for one elderly female cousin to my mother. Aunt Berta. She was
born before WWI in Bavaria. My relatives and parents were of German and English
descent or Pennsylvania Dutch as they insist on calling it. This mixture could
occasionally cause all kinds of ruckus though generally they were kind folk of
humble origins having migrated here well over a century before. None were
wealthy save one uncle on my mother’s side who used his considerable talent and
influence to climb the ladder of success at Allis Chalmers all the way to
president!  He was accorded the rank of
family hero and the one and only person of means. Others were just ordinary folk
tending the land as they had for generations. They came down into Kansas from
Pennsylvania Dutch country sometime around the beginning of the 20th
century living in or around the small farming community of Fort Scott
Kansas.  My how that little town of
memories has changed. Gone are the cobble stone streets now covered with asphalt.
Gone are the sidewalks of the Great Depression. Gone are the great and small
Victorian homes that dotted the narrow streets in the 1940’s. It’s sad that so
much history is buried; too often forgotten now-a-days. None of the young
generation of Ft. Scott seem to care much though many landmarks have been
preserved thanks in great part to my Dad‘s siblings.

But to go on:
With the Great Depression
still breathing down everyone’s neck my parents left the “security” of Ft.
Scott in 1939 hoping Dad could find a more lucrative job in the great
metropolis of Tulsa, Oklahoma. He had no trouble leaving the farming community
behind. Mom bore me at St. John’s Hospital’s “Lying In”, in Tulsa in 1940, not
on the 4th of July but 3 days advanced; the whole world soon to be
toppling on the brink of WWII. 

Our home was a duplex on the
east side of town, across the tracks. Simply called EAST TULSA./ WHITTIER
SQUARE, in particular.   Certainly not
the best place in Tulsa. Some 5 years later my baby sister Barbara was born on
August 1945 on the same date, the 7th as I.  Before and during the war Dad’s job had
protected him ( and his small family) from the draft, staving off destitution .
Luck wasn’t with us, his job in Tulsa came to a screeching halt with the war’s
end leaving my family virtually out of a home. His brother found him work in
Ft. Scott and a subsequent move provided menial work for him as a machinist.
The company had held a government contract which expired suddenly, without
notice, at wars end. Dad was a proud man and refused to live with our relatives
there. He‘d maintained contact with fellow former employees in Tulsa.  New work opened for him in Tulsa with an up
and coming firm known then as Tulsa Winch which as of the mid 1980’s
evolved into the Sperry/Rand Corporation.  Though conditionally accepted, with the return
of GI’s in 1946/1947 it became months before he was gainfully employed. He was
able to find acceptable shelter for us with Aunt Berta in her dilapidated one
bedroom apartment above the Tulsa train station. Crowded was an understatement.
It was late fall, then a cruel winter. The only heat in the entire apartment
was a small gas fired stove on the floor. I remember being hypnotized by the
blue flame, orange glow of the radiant elements and “hush” of gas. Dad was
exhausted. Nothing during that time worked out for him. He had worked as a
house painter in the past as a young man but no work was available. Eventually,
having tried so desperately to support us he had something like a nervous
breakdown. Mom consoled him as best she could. He too often spent days with minimal
sleep, frequently crying. I remember continuous fighting between them. It
certainly didn’t help any of us and did nothing but scare me silly. I thought
Aunt Berta was going to call the police and haul Dad off to…where? It didn’t
help Barbara either though today she doesn’t remember it as I do. There was no
money for a doctor. No work, no medication, no alcohol, nothing! Not even money
for cigarettes. I heard years later there had been a family rumor of her
leaving him for one of his old single friends. Barbara was around 1 year old
then and definitely affected by the discord. 
As with many that age she would break into shrieking crying jags. It
might have been the arguing but Mom’s consistently bad temperament only
exacerbated the situation. I hid in the corners of our room, my heart pounded,
my own anxiety grew. 

In time, after around four
months he finally was back at work; his mood greatly improved.

Both sides of the family
were of Pennsylvania Dutch farming stock, a fact that many in my extended
family hated and never talked about. The ties with a German heritage weren‘t
something of pride then. I later learned that no one admitted any German
connection without being ostracized. Little was ever spoken of our European origins
but I did ultimately find out more. That’s another story.

These 4 wheeled vehicles are
forever changing  my place, my
“origin”!
Years of family automobiles changed over time. We had a 1937
Plymouth for many years. Others had different sometimes bigger ones. All were
hugely interesting. Space-ships like cars; Buicks,Oldsmobiles, Fords, Hudsons,
Studebakers, Chevrolets, Packards. They’re all trasnport mechanisms.  Take you from one place in Space Time from
one party of ORIGIN
TO another. Not many of my relatives had new
post war cars but those that did had things of pure beauty! I loved to pretend
driving them. One aunt on my Mom’s side actually let me “drive” hers with me
hanging onto the steering wheel. WOW what fun!  I WAS THERE, WHEREVER “THERE” IS. HEY LET’S
TAKE A TRIP. AN ORIGINAL TRIP.  THROUGH
SPACE TIME FROM AN ORIGINALLY, ORIGINAL PLACE.

Telephones with private
lines were unheard of in Ft. Scott or Tulsa and 
frequently used years-old wooden crank wall phones up in Ft. Scott to
summon the operator. I still remember the phone number of my favorite male cousin
I had a crush on (1558J). AM radio was all there was. FM was yet to be. Buicks
had radios that thundered with bass and I was hooked and still am.

We all had a large console
type radio with consistently bad tubes. It doesn’t matter where we lived or
live. Most of us had a dad who was the repairman and found new tubes at Rex-All
Drugs, Safeway, or in this day and age; 
RadioShack or Walmart (I doubt any of them still have vacuum tubes
though).
. Among the many thingsJoplin. Joplin. Missouri was a Summer
Place of Origin and of discovery
for me in my youth. Back then in 1953  I finally did get to leave Earth, at
least for 45 minutes.  Who knows, maybe
next time it’ll be to Mars, lol. After all when I was a school kid and into
space travel, my classmates called me MARS MAN!

Maybe my truest place of
origin is WITHIN MY OWN MIND. I’m something of a traveler though.
Always wanted to go from one PLACE OF ORIGIN to another PLACE OF ORIGIN
wondering how to get there from here. 
Wondering what’s just around that corner for me once there.

 Give me liberty or death but first give
me a flying saucer so I can find new places and globs in space from which to
originate. But first I have to get someone to loan me the money to by the
damned saucer  at which time I have no
idea where my origin will be.

So from Germany, England,
Ft. Scott, Kansas, Tulsa, Oklahoma and now Denver, Colorado; all is history but
history moves toward the present. So here I am and where I was and where from
here I will go next. No one origin but many. No one place to live but many.


About the Author

“I’m
just a guy from Tulsa (God forbid). So overlook my shortcomings, they’re an
illusion.”

Stories of Where I Came From by Michael King

Along with everything else
in my childhood, being from Kansas was not acceptable to me. As I saw the
world, I wasn’t where I belonged. From the very limited perspective I had at
the time, my environment had no class, no culture and certainly no elegance. I
didn’t even know how to speak the language correctly, or in my expectation,
properly. And that was the key concept in my mind, properly. I felt I should be
in a world where everything was proper, and I felt embarrassed to be living in
poverty and ignorance. And even though I later learned differently, my concept
of Kansas was just that, poverty and ignorance, a bunch of hicks trying to
exist on farms as sharecroppers. And where I was, that was true.

From my earliest memories, I
saw myself, or at least wanted to see myself, as self-assured, secure,
respected and very proper. Of course none of that was true and I was
embarrassed, ashamed and unhappy.

Later, when I learned to
speak without the poor grammar, mispronounced words and the middle Kansas
accent, I was also moving away from the poverty and hopelessness and the
embarrassment of my childhood. I now see that in rejecting my surroundings and
environment, I also rejected my family.

I now know that someone can
be from Kansas and not be a hick. I was so pleased that when I was 10 we moved
to New Mexico. All I’d ever known was living in a shack on a farm, where my
father was a sharecropper, a mile outside of Nashville, Kansas, population
about 110. Now we lived in a town, Truth or Consequences, New Mexico, population
about 10,000. It was exciting and very different. My vistas were expanding and
opportunities for becoming the me that I wanted to be, seemed possible, but I
also experienced much pain and unhappiness.

I discovered that we lived
in the wrong part of town, got laughed at because I still talked like a hick
and since I hadn’t been around people, I didn’t have the skills to make
friends.

Fortunately I did well in
school and learned to speak correctly. I excelled in classwork and participated
in plays, art contests and exhibits and won a scholarship to college.

I escaped the destitute and
hopeless existence of my early years and in college found the environment and
happiness I had for so long wanted.

Fortunately where one comes
from doesn’t mean they have to stay there. It isn’t the geography or even the
environment that is important. It is the consciousness. It took me too long to
realize that. But, I did, and have accomplished a great deal. I was an officer
in the air force, taught school, worked as an art therapist, a mold maker for
fine arts bronzes, did retail, both as owner and as an employee, and worked in
retirement communities. I have traveled to 44 countries and have seen many
environments much worse than mine. As I see it now, I created much of my own
unhappiness. I am now happier than I’ve ever been and have a life that is
wonderful, a lover that is fantastic and a family where there is love, respect
and kindness.
About the Author

I
go by the drag name, Queen Anne Tique. My real name is Michael King. I am a gay
activist who finally came out of the closet at age 70. I live with my lover,
Merlyn, in downtown Denver, Colorado. I was married twice, have 3 daughters, 4
grandchildren and a great grandson. Besides volunteering at the GLBT Center and
doing the SAGE activities,” Telling your Story”,” Men’s
Coffee” and the “Open Art Studio”. I am active in Prime Timers
and Front Rangers. I now get to do many of the activities that I had hoped to
do when I retired; traveling, writing, painting, doing sculpture, cooking and
drag.