Sometimes giving your child a little confidence is all that is needed........
My Dad owned a small machine shop called B.O.K Mfg.
Co. on W. 4th St. in Dayton, Ohio while I was growing up. Among
his employees included his brother and sister and assorted
relatives who came and went during the years and several Hungarian
immigrants who fled their homeland during the 1956 Hungarian
Uprising.
Although Dad had very little education, he learned his
trade as a tool and die maker and was able to support not only our family, but
as I remember, Dad was always helping out relatives, friends and strangers with
some kind of monetary stipend to help them get by.
Dad standing among some of his Bridgeport mills
I loved going to “the shop” as Mom called it, where she
worked as the secretary, bookkeeper and whatever else needed to be done.
I would wander past the machines and watch intensely as Dad’s few
employees would carve out a finished piece from a round bar of stock working
very diligently to obtain the precise dimensions.
By age seven, I could operate the drill presses while
sitting on a metal stool topped off by a phone book so I could reach the levers.
By age eight, I could put a bar of stock into a lathe chuck and slowly turn the
metal as the long ribbon of carvings would drop to the catch basin.
By age nine, I was able to operate a Bridgeport mill
that was designed to slowly remove metal from different angles as you watched
the final product appear.
I would have been happy to follow my Dad into his
respected trade, but he wouldn't have it. I was off to college just like my
older brothers to apply our minds rather then our physical abilities. I think
Dad would have enjoyed me working with him, but he didn't want me losing the
fingers that he did, typical of a machinist, when they were accidentally caught
in the cutting tools. He probably thought I couldn't stay focused long enough to
avoid an accident.
So off we went to college....the 3 Kender
boys......Dave, after graduating from Miami Univ. and then to a career as an
Air Force officer and Silver Star medal winner during the Vietnam War and then later
as a professor at Wright State University where he still teaches
today. Ricky went on to Ohio University and later became a very successful
businessman in Dayton and now travels back and forth from his homes in
Florida and Dayton as he chooses.
And me, ..well...I headed off to the University of Oklahoma and majored in Journalism and later leaving that career in the Newspaper trade in search of a few more dollars. I've had several different ventures
including owning Blue Sky Pool Service which Pattye and I started 26 years
ago.........working for Chuck Norris for 18 years in
Dallas and now, now I can finally begin to write again and chronicle my life
through my short stories I hope to publish soon.
I have always thrown myself into whatever job or
position I have found myself doing over the years. And once again, I owe it to
my Dad, who had the confidence in me to sit me up on that stool
and let me create a usable widget for use in this wonderful
country.
1 comment:
Tom, what a heartwarming tribute to your Dad. I so enjoyed reading about your whole family. Thank you for sharing
Kim
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