Time Travel
All three of
the novels I have written (You Are My
Song, Eli’s Heart, How I Grew Up) take place in the middle of the twentieth
century. How I Grew Up is based on a
true event which took place when I was a junior in high school. Revisiting the
events in that story meant recalling how different my world was then. And it
was a little disconcerting, switching back and forth between centuries ...
while I was spending a lot of time in the twentieth century at the computer, I
did occasionally have to return to the twenty-first, to feed the cat and pay
bills.
My hometown,
Oak Ridge, Tennessee, was unique. I suppose there were periods in the history
of this country where towns sprang up nearly overnight, such as during the
California gold rush, but I’m not aware of any other period in the history of
the U.S. when towns were developed in great secrecy by the federal government,
under the purview of the U.S. Army.
Oak Ridge, Los
Alamos, New Mexico, and Hanford, Washington, were three towns that were created
in the early 1940s with one sole purpose: develop an atomic bomb to defeat the
enemy. As I understand it, there was a great fear that Nazi Germany was well
into exploring the properties of the atom with the purpose of creating a bomb,
and the feeling was the United States had to beat them to it. You can Google
“Manhattan Project” and find a wealth of material about exactly how and what
went on, which is something I did. I also read a couple of books about my
hometown to immerse myself in the era, which was post-World War II.
I grew up
basically in a town that was still under the control of the federal government
in the best way possible. I went through a superior school system, because the
staff and faculties of all schools were on the government payroll and much
better paid than teachers in the rest of the state. There was no unemployment;
for years no one was allowed to live in the town who wasn’t employed either by
the government or had been allowed into the town to provide goods and services
to those people working for the government. It was nearly a classless society,
because all the houses had been constructed under the supervision of federal
employees, and housing was assigned. At that time, all homes were rented from
Uncle Sam. There were no “mansions” or “estates.” Notice I said “nearly”: there
was segregation. It was the South, and it was before the civil rights movement.
People had
moved to Oak Ridge from all over the country during the early years from
1943-45. Where there had been farmland and rolling hills, there was a nearly
instant small city of over 75,000. The town diminished in size after the war;
eventually, it established its own government, houses were put on the market
and people were even allowed to buy land and build homes as time went on. There
was a military presence for years. The work that was being done was top secret
for a long time.
As a kid, I
wasn’t aware of any of that. I just knew it was a great place to grow up. It
was safe. We had wonderful “woods” to play in with lots of tall trees to climb.
We could ride a bus anywhere for free. We had great teachers; my high school
had two choirs, a band (concert and marching), an orchestra, even our own harp,
which I learned to play a little (enough to do showy arpeggios in our
production of Carousel). We had an
auditorium that seated fourteen hundred, and we had state-of-the-art
everything. We had great football and basketball teams. We did a school
musical. I took ballet class, piano lessons, and voice lessons, and lived in a
very comfortable house. We had two movie theaters and a drive-in. We had a nice
little public library and public tennis courts and a good hospital and medical
care. We had a huge community pool with a minimal admission fee and swim
classes for every level that was open all summer. We had an indoor
roller-skating rink. What wasn’t to love?
I had a safe,
happy childhood, until the day my friend Anita’s estranged brother-in-law
entered her home one January night and shot and killed both her parents and
mortally wounded her other brother-in-law. The entire town was rocked. It’s in
the book.
I haven’t been
back to visit in decades, and I’m sure much has changed. But the Smoky
Mountains, which are nearby, still stand, majestic, mysterious, and beautiful.
I’m sure Knoxville is still THE place to go shopping. The green and swirling
waters of the Clinch River still run past the smaller town of Oak Ridge
(Wikipedia tells me the population as of 2010 was slightly under 30,000).
Radioactive waste and pollution from the “plants” continues to be a problem (it
seems that wasn’t given a lot of thought in the rush to refine uranium ore into
weapons-grade U-235).
A high school
friend with whom I reconnected while writing How I Grew Up still lives in Oak
Ridge. She tells me for people of our generation it seems a ghost town: driving
through town, remembering who lived where all those decades ago. Most of them
have either moved away, or are no longer on this earth. I should probably go
back; the high school is still there, only as a new, improved version. I would
think the house I last lived in is still there. I’m sure if I made a visit, I
would be greeted by many memories of times past, and more than a few ghosts.
**********
All of my books
are available on Amazon in paperback and Kindle, and local folks can purchase
copies at the Pocono Community Theater in East Stroudsburg at a discounted
price. I’d love for you to visit my website! www.susanmoorejordan.com
Interesting story of a unique community. I hope your visit to Oak Ridge is a happy one.
ReplyDeleteMy brother Bill and I went back to Oak Ridge for a day trip nine years ago, when we were in East Tennessee for an aunt's funeral. Clearly it's changed...but you can still find the places, the homes and most of the schools, that were there in the 1950s. We had a wonderful day. You're right: it was a magical place to grow up. And don't forget the lightning bugs! The US government paid us kids to collect lightning bugs in jars for them. What do you suppose they wanted them for?
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