There’s something about Mary

In 1933, at Upper Canada College in Toronto, I was the drum major of the school’s Cadet Corps Band, not on account of any musical ability, but because I could wield the baton.

The big event of the year was the Corp’s annual ball. This was such an important and attractive event that one had to have lined up a girl well in advance, as I had done. However, just one week before the party, she came down with chicken pox.

Sunday dinners were special, with all the family present, and at this particular meal I brought up the dreadful proposition of being without a date for the dance. I don’t remember how she did it, but suddenly I found myself behind the eight ball as my mother declared: “I’ll get you a girl!”

Mother had a patented way of putting things, real clever-like, and there was no way of getting out of this one. I pictured buckteeth, flat feet and an awful figure. But Mom poured on the pressure and I finally, gracefully caved in and accepted the inevitable. I even hoped out loud that the girl would be “nice.”

On the day of the dance, I sent her a corsage, borrowed dad’s car, and arrived at her place. I rang the bell and was met by the Chinese cook. He was impressed with my Cadet Corps uniform, but I forgot he was even there when I looked up the stairs. One look at the gorgeous creature that came down those stairs and I was totalled. Her name was Mary.

Some years later, in June 2000, I was filing the incredible collection of our letters when out dropped Mary’s dance card from that night, Feb. 17, 1933. Of her 16 dances, I had six.

It was a great evening and the start of a lovely story that went on for 65 years, most of which were spent at Lynn Lake.

The author worked at the Lynn Lake base metals mines in northern Manitoba during the 1930s and ’40s. This is the first of several excerpts from a talk given at a Lynn Lake reunion in 2004.

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