A Princeton Road Trip Revisits the Simplicity of Childhood

My dear husband, Andrew, has a brief but storied past relationship with Princeton, New Jersey, and the surrounding areas, having lived in nearby Hopewell for about a year when he was five years old.  His father, Ron, had obtained a job in the area and took a solo trip to the area to secure a place for his young family to live.  

Upon arriving in Princeton, Ron stopped for a bite to eat at PJs Pancake House on the main road in town, Nassau Street.  While there, he discovered some rooms for rent in the newspaper, on nearby Bank street that might be able to host him for a week or so while on his housing hunt.  He made his way there, to the home owned by Ms. Cunningham.  The rooms were generally reserved for students, and her abrupt manner and terse tone might have driven others off.  But Ron impressed her in some way, and perhaps she intrigued him as well, and she reluctantly offered him a room, perhaps given that it was summertime and there was a dearth of students to fill her home.  Almost as quickly, she made it clear that she would do no cooking for Ron while he was in the area.  

So off he went, around the corner and down the block, back to PJs Pancake House, where the food was good and the atmosphere pleasant.  From that first visit to Ms. Cunningham, Ron and his entire family formed a friendship that lasted decades until her death, and long after the family had returned to the Baltimore area.  In the end, Ms. Cunningham served MANY meals to Ron and counted the Schmidt family among her many friends.

PJs Pancake House, since 1962, has been very popular, at times, drawing lines out the door and around the corner.

She was a person that lived a pretty full life, based on the endless interesting stories about the famous, not-quite-famous, and perhaps infamous people she had met along the way.  Among them, she told stories of Einstein, and later, of Walter Matthau, who had played Einstein in a movie that was filmed on location on her street in the 1990s, reportedly offering Mr. Matthau acting tips to be sure to get his character just right.

Armed with a retelling of the many stories and fond childhood memories Andrew had from that year in New Jersey, we decided a road trip to the Garden State should be a part of our summer plans.  We drove into Princeton and made a direct move to visit PJs Pancake House.  He smiled as we stood out front to admire the simple structure, and again when we entered, remembering that which was familiar and noticing the updates and changes made over the decades.  

Our first stop HAD to be PJs!

Part of the kitchen was now opened up to a dining counter with bar seating, perhaps an effort to widen the exceedingly narrow building.  The rest of the tiny space was filled with standalone tables and chairs in the center of the room, and dinette booths along the opposite wall, with heavy wooden tables throughout the space.  As Andrew sat down at our table near the back, I could see his childhood memories flash through his mind, showing clearly on his smile while his blue eyes scanned the room.

The narrow restaurant has been a community staple for more than 60 years.

I had heard stories of this place many times, from his parents and Andy, in more recent years since we married, and way back in high school when we dated initially.  But as his hands gently wiped across the wooden tabletop, I suddenly heard some new information that he had perhaps kept to himself, or only remembered at the moment he sat down.  “I carved our names into one of these tables”, he said quietly.  I looked down at the table in front of us, and it was only then that I noticed that these tables were likely original to the restaurant, founded in 1962.  What likely began as vandalism eventually became an accepted, treasured tradition – guests carving their names, initials, and special messages into every inch of available space on those heavy-duty wood block tables.

Quickly I did the math and searched through my memory banks.  Sure, our families had known each other since the 1940s, and we had met in the early months of our lives in the 1960s, but when did he carve our names into one of these tables if he frequented this restaurant when he was only five years old?  “I was nineteen”, he said, filling in the blank look that must have appeared on my face – and it hit me, suddenly. 

The last time he visited this restaurant was when he was a teenager, but after we had broken up.  Nonetheless, this place was special to him, and so he memorialized our lost relationship at this special place as if it was a tree in the woods where lovers might carve their initials.  He wanted to share this place with me back then, even though we were no longer together.

I sat quietly as the facts settled in.  It warmed my heart, and at the same time, was a melancholy moment, because that had been a difficult time for both of us, each wanting to be with the other, but each not knowing about the other’s feelings.  And so, we didn’t speak, didn’t see each other, and didn’t date again for another 30 years, our carved names lying in wait for our visit on this day in 2022.

My eyes searched our tabletop, and I saw the many layers of carvings, preserved with an occasional coating of what seemed like polyurethane, to seal the customer’s artwork for another 60 years.  He didn’t recall which table he sat at while he carved, and he didn’t elaborate on the circumstances that placed him there, but I already knew.  We were young, and apart from each other, and we still had a lot to figure out about life and love and relationships.

The silver dollar pancakes were among his favorite food memories from PJs, but on this day, he combined both breakfast and lunch into one order, beginning with pancakes, and ending with French onion soup, trying to cram in as many culinary childhood memories as possible into this little sliver of our day.  It wasn’t so much about the quality of the food – it was diner food, sufficient and good, but not a culinary pinnacle.  Instead, it was a place that the Schmidt family of his youth would always remember happily, simply because it represented life lived through the eyes and heart of an innocent five year old boy.

Breakfast and lunch all at once.

As we left the restaurant, we wandered into several little shops that Andrew remembered as well.  His memories fooled him into thinking there had been more ice cream shops on the street back in the 1970s, but the bookstore and other shops still held a vague familiarity.  

As we shopped our way through town, we suddenly noticed that we had arrived at Bank Street.

Just a few blocks down the street, Andrew quickly noticed that we had arrived at Bank Street, where the famed Ms. Cunningham had lived.  We made the turn and wandered down a tiny street lined with old homes in varying levels of restoration or disrepair.  As a lover of old homes, I was immediately drawn to the stories these homes could tell in a town like Princeton.

This little street with historic homes still captured some magic.

Thinking we were close to what used to be Ms. Cunninham’s house, we called Andrew’s mom and quickly confirmed that we were indeed, right outside her front door at 20 Bank Street.  As our memory sometimes alters over time, and because childhood memories can be skewed because of a child’s more limited understanding of the world, Andrew was surprised to see that the home was not the large five-story row home he remembered in his mind’s eye (he remembered many steps inside the home), but rather a simple 1400 square foot, two-story Victorian half-of-a-double home.

Andy called his mom to happily let her know that he was visiting Ms. Cunningham’s house

What was once a home that Ms. Cunningham could afford to keep by renting out rooms to students, is now a slightly run-down version of the same, estimated to be worth three-quarters of a million dollars!  There were even a few renovated look-alike homes on the block having recently sold for $1.25 million.  As we paused to look upon the old home, it seemed that we could almost see Ms. Cunningham sitting on her front steps, queen of the block in her little town of Princeton, telling stories to all that passed in front of her.  

Princeton is a beautiful, historic, ivy league college town, and the old buildings and quaint shops all evoke an academic vibe.  I always loved attending school, and any college campus I ever visit leaves me harkening to those days when I could freely pursue the joy of learning and exploring.  Andrew knew I would find the town interesting, and I was not disappointed.

The architecture of the old buildings was beautiful.

For me, the town immediately brought out feelings from those more difficult years in our late teens when we were apart.  When he was 19, carving our names on a table, I was at college, on a different pretty little campus, thinking of him as well.  We remained apart physically, but now more fully understood that we had kept a bit of each other in our hearts for all those years.  Once again in a loving relationship with each other, our road trip to Princeton was a healing look backward in time to when things seemed simpler, simply because we had experienced and understood so little of life.

We shopped the stores and walked through campus arm in arm and quietly absorbed the feelings of our childhoods and youth.  Without words, we could feel both the ache and the warmth it left behind, the heat of the day ushering us down the street in pretty little Princeton.

Satisfied with our little road trip, we drove back home to our little mobile house on wheels and decided to rent that 1994 movie, “IQ”, that was filmed in part, on Bank Street and Ms. Cunningham used to talk about.  We had never seen it before, but we immediately recognized the streets of Princeton and pretty little Bank Street. Walter Matthau’s “Einstein”, Meg Ryan’s, “Catherine Boyd”, and others strolled down the street in the film – just like Ms. Cunningham had said.

The entire day reminded us that it is those simplest of things in life that sometimes create the deepest memories.  It is often not the vast mountain vistas but instead, a brief moment at the top of a hilltop when the sun shines just right and your loved ones are near.  It is not the trip to the farthest corners of the world, but rather the long car ride there when you have the time to talk about just about everything along the way.  Sometimes, it is simply silver dollar pancakes in a little restaurant and a little street with a little old lady that tells terrific stories to a five-year-old boy that makes a loving, lifelong, lasting impression.

Safe travels, and enjoy the memories of when life was simpler.

2015

Note: For photo gallery desktop viewing, press right arrow

To Know Him Was To Love Him – And Sometimes To Shake Your Head In Wonder

He had a smile and a laugh that could be contagious – even if you realized you were laughing at his antics as much as laughing along with him.

The day after we moved into our fifth wheel trailer to launch our full-time RVing adventure, my dad died, less than a month before his 80th birthday.  It was July 18, 2020.  It was another blow to our family, just about halfway through 2020, a year that will be remembered worldwide as being one heck of a tough year.

It had been obvious for the previous two weeks that the end of Dad’s boisterous journey on this earth was upon us, but his health had been declining for quite some time, a victim of decades of smoking (followed by decades of quitting), a lifetime of poor diet (but no alcohol) and a number of falls that hastened his decline over the years. No matter the resulting health consequence, Dad was unfazed.  Diabetes?  No need to cut back on M&M’s or test blood sugar!  Heart attack?  Don’t tell ME I can’t do the things I enjoy!  Back injuries?  Physical therapy and exercise are for sissies!  Failing heart requiring a defibrillator?  Why the $%@ can’t those !#%$ doctors fix this and get me back to puttering in my yard!?  

We had always joked with Dad that he had as many lives as a cat, and each time he fell from a tree or roof that he should not have been climbing, or survived triple bypass surgery, or crashed his vehicle for unclear reasons, he was one step closer to his demise.  It took decades, but it seems that 2020 was his year, and COPD was the final challenge he would face.

He actually complained less and reminisced a bit more once he became bedridden in the last days.

Thankfully, his final days, laying in bed, losing his independence to weakness, losing his spunky attitude to delusions, losing his consciousness to morphine, were short-lived.  His final days were perhaps his biggest fear, always teasing us that we should just take him out to the field behind the house to shoot him rather than force him to suffer.  Instead, we sat with him and Mom.  Visitors helped us all pass the time.  Hospice workers helped us understand how to help him.  In the end, he was peaceful and as he took his final breaths, my sister, Mom and I said prayers over him (something that he would have cringed about while living, but was just perfect in the moment he passed.

It should be noted, before sounding too harsh or callous, that my dad was a CHARACTER!  He cursed like a sailor and loved to argue all the tricky topics in life – politics, religion and the medical field!  What he lacked in tender loving care, he made up for as a really great dad.

Dad managed to mix work and play – be it cleaning up the yard or building a project for us.

Dad showed his love differently – he was steadfast, reliable and good to his core.  You ALWAYS knew what you were getting from him.  I think WE understood him better than he understood himself.  He showed his love in his actions and in his subtle presence.  We knew Dad loved us, even if he very seldom uttered the words. 

It was a treat to watch him become a grandfather – and see the full extent of his “soft side”, as it were.

He quietly supported us in everything that interested us.  Scouting projects for my brothers, directing Christmas traffic in our church parking lot, and taking unexpected trips to my college to rescue and repair my car following a flood. He could fix just about anything with whatever tools he might have on hand, a roll of duct tape and a little elbow grease.  

Mike, Dad and Britt out on the town together.
This is Morfar, quietly supporting grandson Lorne, at his band’s first gig. (Dad struck this pose as my sister prompted him to look all cool like the young kids!). Hilarious. (note the Huey helicopter t-shirt, undoubtedly a quiet way of supporting and remembering our brother, Steve)

Dad sat quietly in the room, the willing participant of any family gathering or social event, even if such activities were not the way he would ever choose to spend his day.  Conversely, a healthy debate, albeit greatly skewed by his perceptions and undaunted by the facts at hand, was pure entertainment for him and often resulted in exasperation for us all.  If you didn’t “get him”, you could very quickly be offended by him.  But to “know him” was to understand and love him.

Ho, ho, ho and Merry Christmas from the quiet man of the house (but yet the hat declared “bah humbug”!)

He would argue or lash out in anger seldom, but when he became that upset, you knew that he was struggling greatly with the issue at hand.  He was passive by nature, a roll-with-it kind of guy above all else.  Even when frustrated beyond words by something idiotic that we four kids might have done, the worst punishment would be the spewing of a few choice insults, interspersed with some colorful curse words, and the hurling of his wooden Swedish clogs in our direction.  His bark was always worse than his bite, and we grew to toughen our skin to his rough edges and instead see all the goodness, fun and helpfulness that was within him.

His quest for helping was especially true with animals, I think perhaps, because he saw them as the most helpless in a difficult world.  He rescued them, nursed them, built habitats for them, and always, always, stopped to help a box turtle across the road.  Critters found in the wrong habitat (in our house or car), were gently placed outside to “be free” rather than squishing and tossing them.  Over the years, he always took the time to feed the horses in the roadside pasture, visit with the ducks on the pond, or sit and watch the geese fly overhead just before sunset.  Over the years his dogs were his best buddies and his favorite conversationalists, simply because “they listen and don’t give me no lip”.

Dad had many canine buddies, and this little lapdog, Cheetah was among his adoring fans.

Every day, Dad arrived home from work at 6:00 pm and we had dinner together as a family.  He was a small business owner, and I grew up to greatly admire that simple daily act.  He managed to walk away from the endless responsibilities of his business and simply go home.  He would enter the back door, “drop trow” at the top of the basement steps, toss his dirty uniform down the basement so that Mom could add it to her endless laundry pile, and then scurry through the kitchen in his “skivvies” past the hustle and bustle of his family gathering for the evening meal.  Every day, for my entire childhood, I could count on him and knew what to expect from him.

But I think the biggest impact Dad had on me was his willingness to see different places. EVERY summer, he would close his small auto-repair business for two weeks and take us camping.  At a time when there was no paid time off, and little money to spare, he and Mom managed to show their children the world.  By the time I was an adult, I had been to half the states in the US and several countries as well.  We had experiences in those adventures that became a direction in my life – a desire to work hard and succeed in my goals so that I might travel and see even more of the world.

Not many American kids got to say they were able to travel to Sweden, Germany and Canada before they were all grown up and on their own.

Mom and Dad encouraged us when we shared our plans to travel full-time for a while.  “GO!”, they said. “Do it now (before we are retirement age), while you are able”.  You see, their camping days after we kids grew up, amounted to RVing the country about six months out of the year.  The balance of the year they spent at home with family in the Maryland/Pennsylvania area and worked part time jobs to save up money for their next trip.  They were blessed to take some of their grandchildren camping for a week at a time, to tag along on their children’s camping vacations, to travel across the United States for an extended trip out west, and to take annual trips to Myrtle Beach and Florida, two of their favorite destinations.  But their health declined before they were “finished”.  They always wanted “next year” – to the point that up until his final weeks, Dad would still talk about getting their motorhome in shape for their next adventure.  Dad and Mom weren’t quite wanting to be “finished” with traveling, but their health limitations brought their adventures to an end.

Dad would take a “Sunday drive” just about anywhere, and when on vacation, every pit stop and roadside attraction (even “South of the Border, SC”), led to another mini-exploration of the world.
MA and Pa…Holmstrom, hamming it up on one of their visits back to the old “homestead” in Fallston, MD while NOT traveling during retirement.
Camping with the grandkids – sometimes three generations all together, and sometimes just kids and their Mormor and Morfar – made lifelong travel memories (this photo was from a winter trip to Florida).

So it seems completely expected and greatly satisfying to “see” my dad in my full-time RVing travels since we lost him on Day 2 of our adventure.  We  have spent time in Virginia exploring some of the very places he and Mom took me to while camping as a child.  We have sat in our camping chairs around a campfire, just like Dad did, in rural South Carolina and the swamps of Georgia and savored the special outdoor moments you only experience with camping.  

The campfire was always the perfect place for Dad to solve the world’s problems – if only the world would do it “his way”

We have also spent weeks in Florida, at a quiet campground, where I see an elderly gentleman ride his bike every day.  He immediately reminds me of my dad and I wave.  The shaky old-man wave I get in return is just like Dad used to do – a slightly uncomfortable social interaction, but with a pure intent to just say “hello”.

“Hi Dad.  I miss you.  We all miss you.  Thanks for all the valuable gifts you have given us.”

This is not Dad…and it is ot the man on his bike in our campground…but both were just as adorable as this gentleman. (Photo credit: Dunya News

Safe travels, and show your “people” you love them.

Dad built the pool…and the swing set…and the play house…and the fort…and we all (Britt, Mike, Steve (pictured) and Tina all had a great childhood on Upland Road.